Psychoprotective (Youjo Senki/Psychonauts)

Well, next chapter and a half is a Milla's perspective, so y'all are gonna get your wish. It starts off turning back the clock a bit, showing what Mila was doing while Tanya was in Ford's mind, but that's just the first third or so of the next chapter. Which will be posted on patreon on monday. And here on Thursday, as an early christmas present (with the patreons getting the other half of the boss fight at that time, to be released here the following monday)

That will likely be the last chapter of the year, so... look forward to that.
 
You know since we really can't have Tanya's POV next chapter, it would be very interesting to see the tour from Mila's POV as the lead in to the boss fight.

EDIT: Ninja by a while. Why it didn't refresh earlier I have no idea.
 
I really like the implication that as a psychic, Tanya repressing her emotions and feelings is also repressing her sensory experience. She is not experiencing the true spectrum of color the world has to offer and so doesn't see how off set her world view is.
 
Chapter 12
[Camilla Vodello, Psychonauts Agent]

The Psychonauts had always suffered a bit from poor leadership. The modern Psychonauts didn't really form until after the Maligula incident, and of the founders, the Psychic Six… half of them were rendered unable to contribute properly by the fight, and of the other half, Otto was not the administrative type. Still, Dr. Boole was a capable administrator, even if he was considered somewhat unreliable with his need for frequent mental health days. There was a reason Truman was the Grand Head, and not him, after all.

"This is all very troubling, Camilla. I'm glad you came to me about this." Agent Boole said, smiling shyly.

Milla smiled back widely. "Mary's mind… I've never seen anything like it. Initially, I agreed with Sasha's theory about her story being fabricated by a hodgepodge of other people's memories… but now?"

"Yes, Agent Nein has always been too enamored with the power of rationality." Dr. Boole said. "There have always been people who claim to have lived another life before their own, but those claims have common hallmarks that this case lacks." Milla wasn't entirely familiar with those, but there were a few case studies of people thinking they were reincarnated Jesus Christ or roman emperors or other famous figures. "One of the more outlandish theories in Psycho-planar studies was that of multiverse theory. You mentioned that her memories were all very consistent and coherent?"

Milla nodded. "Yes, while her perspective was a little warped by the fact that she was supposedly only nineteen when she died, limited in scope, the sociopolitical details that she did manage to dredge up of her past life were more or less consistent with human nature." After a moment, she added: "She even admitted confusion and ignorance on a lot of the whys, even for the parts that did make sense, which is not something that would happen for an invented narrative."

"So, with the probable ruled out," Dr. Boole observed, paraphrasing the famous quote, "-the impossible remains."

"But if she is correct…" Milla said, her smile vanishing. "...then that means Tanya is…"

"Ah. Well, let's entertain that possibility for a moment." Dr. Boole said as he sipped at the tea he had prepared for the two of them. It was just a memory of tea, but that made it exceptionally delicious. "Let's say that Mary's past life really happened, and that Tanya did everything that Mary accused her of." Milla frowned, but nodded in assent. "In that context, let us think of Tanya not as a child, but instead as a war veteran. Major von Degurechaff, suffers from terrible nightmares, habitual paranoia, exceptionally withdrawn, unable to form strong emotional attachments, even with family members. What is our conclusion?"

"Guilt." Concluded Milla. "Combat fatigue, too."

"Precisely." Dr. Boole confirmed. "If we look at Tanya's mysterious behavior through that lens… much more of her begins to make sense. The continual insistence to her mental privacy, the maturity beyond her years, her response to the unfortunate tragedy…"

"But not everything." Milla pointed out. "Mary isn't exactly an unbiased source, after all. There's aspects to this we're not seeing."

"Indeed. In cases as complex as this, we cannot assume that problems spring from a single source. We must assume that treatment would be a multi-layered process." Dr. Boole stroked his beard for a moment as he gathered his thoughts. "Nevertheless, this allegation by Mary that Tanya is connected to whatever the source of her memories are is still just that, an allegation. Let's move on to other possibilities."

"Sasha's new theory is some kind of programming for psychic assassins." Milla mentioned offhandedly. It really was a silly thought. Who would do that?

"Ah. That dirty business." Dr. Boole said. What? "I see you haven't heard the story. About nine years ago, Cassie, Hollis and I were investigating a Russian black site hidden in the Grulovian hills. It wasn't an attempt to create sleeper agents with psychic conditioning, but instead psychic commandos." How horrible! "Young children, plucked from their homes on the basis of their psychic potential and inundated with aggressive psychic construction until they thought whatever their handlers wanted them to think, with the training to be incredibly dangerous to anyone." He sighed. "Otto was devastated that his published work was used to commit such atrocities."

"What?" Milla said out loud. "What work?"

Dr. Boole frowned. "Ah, I probably shouldn't have mentioned that. Well, it's a bit of a long story, but I suppose it may be relevant to Tanya's case, so I'll get into it." He took off his hat and worried at the brim, taking a moment to gather his courage before telling the tale.

"You don't have to if you feel uncomfortable, Agent Boole." Milla said soothingly. As one of the few psychonauts with a doctorate in psychiatry, Dr. Boole was due a great amount of respect for his wisdom. However, apparently it caused some significant discontent, so he just insists that people refer to him as Agent Boole instead, just like everyone else. Dr. Forscythe followed his lead in this.

"No, it's relevant, so I should say it." Dr. Boole retorted, taking a deep breath before beginning his tale. "Now, the first thing I must say is that the Psychic Six… was once the Psychic Seven."

What? But even death and disgrace hasn't removed members from being considered the Psychic Six… wait. The torch. "Lucretia Mux." Milla whispered.

"Yes." Dr. Boole said, not bothering to ask how she knew that name. "Lucy was a very dear friend, but about seventeen years ago, Grulovia was invaded by a Soviet puppet state. In that war, her husband died." He chuckled a bit, wiping a tear from his eye while sniffing. "She fled the country, becoming an exotic dancer under the stage name 'Wet Wanda'. Otto and Ford found her, and invited her to join them in their Psitanium mining scheme slash research commune." He said, smiling to himself as he recalled what were no doubt fond memories. "The war was not going well for Grulovia. Lucy was Grulovian, and she still had family there, so… after a year and a half of research… she left us."

"To do what?" Milla prompted, fear pooling in her gut as she started to connect to why this could be relevant to Tanya's case.

"To fight." Dr. Boole said, his voice grim. "She used her powerful hydrokinesis at the direction of the Gzar to defeat the invaders, suppress rebellion, and otherwise kill the enemies of the state." He took out a handkerchief out of nowhere and blew on it. "I've mentioned before how we all had psychic scars from our experimentation?" He asked, to Milla's nod. "Lucy's mind was vulnerable, she tended to have mood swings even before she left from the side effects of the Astralathe. The stress of war, and the burden of her position in the Grulovian army… it broke her. I don't know as many details as I'd like on the specifics of what she experienced in Grulovia, but I was plugging away at my thesis at the time. According to Otto, the primal parts of her mind, the fight or flight response, incarnated itself as a powerful archetype that took over her mind whenever she felt threatened, and as you can imagine, an archetype of violence in the hands of a hydrokinetic of Lucy's caliber did not end well for anyone, Lucy included."

"Maligula…" Milla whispered. "So that's the story."

"The Maligula we fought was a madwoman, who took joy in the suffering of others and with complete self-assurance of her importance in the world. Everyone who opposed her was a mere peasant to be washed away, and that arrogance was the only reason we stood a chance against her." He sighed deeply, taking a moment to contemplate that dark day. "Cassie and Helmut were able to stir her true feelings, but it wasn't enough. I'm sorry to say that no matter what they write in the history books, the battle with the Deluge of Grulovia was a catastrophic defeat for the Psychonauts and everything they stand for."

How poetic. Still, he didn't answer her question. "So how does this relate to Otto?"

"Right, right." Dr. Boole said, bringing the conversation back on track. "Afterwards, Otto wrote a paper about traumatic situations and the unconscious formation of damaging archetypes. With psychic power, one can take normal stress responses and create a sub-personality that can not only handle the stress, but thrive on it. He called it 'The Monster'. The Russians took this paper, and instead of using it as intended, to help understand and help people who have been hurt, used it in an attempt to create more Maligulas. He hasn't published a single thing since that mission."

Milla felt a familiar burning feeling, bile attempting to escape her throat. The Soviets always seemed to find new lows in the name of spreading communism across the world.

"Have some tea." Advised Dr. Boole. Milla sipped at the memory once more, and her stomach settled. "It's quite possible that Mary and even Tanya were products of such a program. There are flaws with that idea, of course, most prominent among those being that they were carelessly allowed to come to our attention."

"How would we tell the difference?" Milla asked.

"Well, external brainwashing can make a mind very fragile." Dr. Boole explained. "The children in question all had one symptom in common: cracks in the sky within their mental worlds. The ones closest to personality death had extensive damage in this way. Every time they subsumed themselves to the imposed alternate personality, the damage increased. According to the records of the program, a given child could withstand approximately two thousand hours total before breaking all conditioning and reverting to an animalistic mentality, attacking their guards with fearless abandon until killed." He took another sip. "Here's one of the interesting parts: One of their top spies, still imprisoned in The Vault, was able to use the knowledge on his own, and had no such damage. It's only damaging if it's externally imposed." He sipped at his tea. "Did Mary have any such damage?"

Milla thought back. "I… don't think so." She said. There were a lot of wide open spaces… She would have noticed, right? "I would need to double check."

"One of the survivors is a psychonaut." Dr. Boole said. "On his last checkup with me, the damage had recovered a small amount, after nine years, but it wasn't even half gone. If Tanya or Mary have suffered from that particular variety of brainwashing in the past, that is, the forcible creation of an alternate personality like Maligula, the damage should still be visible." He left the possibility of their youth allowing for that healing unspoken.

"I'll check Mary again today or tomorrow." Milla promised. Distantly, she felt that her caretaker archetype was sending an alert. Something was going on at the camp, and it was related to Tanya! Dr. Boole noticed, of course. "I should go." She said, standing up and placing the teacup on the table that Dr. Boole manifested for their talk.

"I do hope that things turn out well." Dr. Boole said as he waved goodbye.

----------------

The first thing inside Tanya's mind that Milla noticed was the glowing cracks in the sky. Just as Dr. Boole warned. Glowing was something he would have mentioned, so that was probably new. Milla was never exactly sure how old Tanya was when she was placed at the steps of the converted church that was the group home, but the doctors she took Tanya to after her arrival estimated that she was six months old. With poor nutrition or premature birth, there was some wiggle room, but she declared Tanya's birthday to be six months to the day from that time.

The implications were horrible. Tanya recognized that it was something odd, possibly by sensing Milla's not-entirely-hidden emotional reaction, and somehow… closed them. Was it a facade? Did she just move them to the other side of the castle? Dr. Boole didn't go into much detail on the symptoms, so she wasn't sure what that meant, that Tanya could remove the cracks.

Tanya's mind was constructed by her into a castle, a classic symbol of fortification and defense. The tour was awkward and stilted, but whenever Milla spotted an emotional baggage tag, she made sure to pluck it for later. The existence of such baggage is an excellent sign of Milla's ability to resolve Tanya's emotional block. She probably doesn't even need to resolve all of it.

The small details of the castle were pretty interesting. You need to be really good at psychic construction in order to control those, so Milla trusted them to be more honest than Tanya's words. The guards had a coat of arms, of a two-headed dragon. Their faces were stylized in a very odd way, with a massive focus on their eyes. Tanya never had any trouble looking people in the eye, and in fact had a tendency to have a rather unnerving gaze, making it difficult for the other children to meet her eyes. Their weapons were, instead of the classical fantasy options of spears or halberds, were instead long rifles that had extraordinarily large bayonets that held an axe head, making them heavily resemble halberds without being them. The weapons seemed functional, if strange. The carpet was the kind that Milla usually saw in office buildings, rather than any carpet Tanya would have regular contact with, as the Psychonauts offices had a different kind of office carpet.

The most interesting part, of course, was all the Japanese. One of the more obscure things about mental worlds that you learn as a psychonaut is that you can't obscure information very effectively by using a different language, as long as you and the psychic reading it understands at least one language in common. By looking at one of the Japanese kanji, she instantly understands what it means in English, to the extent of Tanya's understanding of the translation. What makes the kanji above the entrance of the castle so interesting is that the translation was inexact and loaded with cultural connotations that just flew straight over Milla's head, but was still present. That's not something you usually see in people's non-native languages, although as a polyglot, Tanya does get a little leeway here. Still, why did Tanya name her mind's castle 'Polite Castle'? Why does it have a name at all? It was a mystery.

Another interesting bit was how Tanya's childhood memory room seemed to use her crib and nursery rather than the bedroom she shared with the other girls, which she did for many years more than that. Milla couldn't be entirely certain… but she was pretty sure that the rest of the room matched what it was when Tanya was using it, too. Under normal circumstances, minds usually held scenes like living spaces portrayed as they were during the first six months to a year of habitation, with only small reflections of changes sticking beyond that. That didn't usually apply to nurseries, though, as memories from that time dissolve into uselessness as the infant's mind develops to be capable of holding onto long-term memories. Psychic children could retain more, but it was so detailed... Did it mean something deeper about Tanya's preferences? Was this a reflection of her desire to be doted on? She probably shouldn't take this room literally if that's the case… but she'll keep this in mind.

Still, Milla got a bit nervous when she got to the fourth emotional baggage tag without seeing any emotional baggage. Even when she strained her ears, not a hint of the crying manifestations could be detected. A typical mind in a healthy state usually had a few bits of emotional baggage, about two or three. One that's more unsettled or stressed can get four to six. According to scuttlebutt, the record amount of emotional baggage recorded in one mind was eight. Yet another obscure fact about being a psychonaut is that once you've been in a few minds, you get a sense of the size of the mental world, an idea of how much is left for you to do.

When Lili showed up, they had only gone through about ten percent. Still, the kanji on the very top of that barricaded door was pretty telling… 'Hell'. Well, the cultural context that Milla couldn't quite understand was still present, so she knew not to read too much into it… but it was probably close enough.

They continued on, and Milla gathered even more baggage tags. The hallway labeled 'True' that Lili tried to get into was definitely something to explore… but it was not yet time to push the issue.

By the time Tanya had made it to the 'last' room, Milla had collected a keychain of no less than six emotional baggage tags… without a single weeping baggage in sight. That last room though… Milla had no idea that Tanya was this… creative. Tanya never seemed terribly interested in the arcade's offerings, considered them 'simplistic and boring', but despite that, saw immediate potential in the little shooting galley that Sasha had created for her. According to him, she laughed with genuine joy while fighting the censors he had sent against her.

…In hindsight, that's another point towards Mary's allegations.

But with only one quarter of her mind exposed, Lili seemed to discover an entirely new section through a magic mirror. When she followed Tanya's mad dash after her, she immediately understood what design Tanya used to conceal the thoughts she wanted to hide from Milla's prying eyes.

Behind that mirror labeled 'Oblivion' was an entirely different layer, a castle with what she bet is an identical floorplan to the one she had just gone through. If the layers were of equal sizes, she bet those other two blocked off locations were mirrors just like this one. This place was also very cold, reflecting the fact that for all of Tanya's affinity with pyrokinesis, she mastered the use of cryokinesis at a much faster pace.

Then came the nightmare manifestation. She fully expected to find multiple nightmares, so she was prepared.

It was a nightmare, no question. Those tentacles are a dead giveaway. The name, the 'Heartless Machine'... it's never a good sign when a nightmare manifestation makes claims such as being the true face of the mind, but it appears that Tanya knew all along that she didn't feel emotions in the same way as other people.

Milla's first act after the nightmare consumed Tanya, pulling her into its hollow chest cavity was to grip Lili and bring out her smelling salts to eject her from Tanya's mind. There was very little chance that Lili was going to stay out, but Milla didn't have time to do more than that. She knew she should have left an archetype behind in her body! But she knew she'd need all the power she can muster to deal with Tanya's issues, however they manifested.

She spun out her combat archetypes, the colors on her dress fading as her agent archetype manifested in a green dress and her caretaker archetype manifested in a red dress. Her own dress, previously a pleasing mixture of red, green, and orange, was now only orange.

"Tanya!" Shouted her caretaker archetype with concern before igniting her fists with the flames of passionate rage and throwing herself at the Heartless Machine as a distraction.

"Those mental cobwebs." Observed her agent archetype. "There's some emotional baggage trapped within." Milla looked up at the hanging lump of webs that was above the mysterious desk. What? But… it's not crying.

Mental cobwebs were… a little weird. Much like emotional baggage, they were things that represented loose psychic energy buildup. Also like emotional baggage, it was not exactly easy to get rid of. Otto has made quite a few iterations of devices intended to extract them, but they were fairly unreliable; Milla didn't have one. The 'traditional' method is usually pyrokinesis, but the trick was that you needed to tune the release of flame to something complementary or directly opposed to the psychic cobweb. This was typically an annoyingly difficult task, as psychic cobwebs usually populated the lost and forgotten segments of a mind, and did not easily convey what their natures were.

In a place like this? Where everything was so forgotten that only the barest silhouette was discernible? Nigh impossible. Milla decided to delegate. "Investigate." She commanded her agent archetype while tossing it her keychain of baggage tags before going to join her caretaker archetype in combat.

The mental construct known as the Heartless Machine had retreated deeper into Oblivion Castle, Tanya in tow. There was not a single spot in the place where you could not see a stretch of psychic cobwebs, even if the dense clusters were less frequent. She made sure to note the location of each of such clusters, as it could be important later.

Eventually, the running battle of her caretaker archetype and the Heartless Machine led Milla to a hidden passage within the childhood room's equivalent. The bedroom's silhouette was still recognizably a bedroom, even through the dense cobwebs. It was not, however, recognizably a bedroom that Tanya had ever possessed. The desk chair was more appropriate to an executive's office, and the majority of the desk space was taken up by something that reminded her of an oddly shaped television. The dresser was sterile and utilitarian, rather than the artful oak piece that Milla had found in a garage sale. The closet had a sliding door, and everything was designed to be as economical with space as possible. It reminded her more of a college dorm room rather than the room of a little girl. Or perhaps military barracks.

Inside the secret tunnel was an endless void, the stairs leading back to the bedroom having vanished from sight as she stepped onto the platform. The first two steps were still there, but the rest had vanished behind a veil of darkness.

On the platform floating in the void, there was another set of stairs down, to an underground area. Following the sense she had of her caretaker archetype, she flew down in search of Tanya.

The underground area was a train station, instantly recognizable as such by the presence of a train in silhouette. One set of cobwebs, a much thinner clump than before, wrapped around some emotional baggage in the form of a steamer trunk with dead eyes, utterly silent. Tear tracks were there, thick gouges worn there by erosion and frozen over. What in the world…

…it was situated right in front of the train, the cobwebs scattered in a pattern that reminded Milla of blood splatter.

The Heartless machine was locked in combat with a heavily damaged projection of Milla's caretaker archetype. Tanya's face was displayed prominently within its chest, but she was dead to the world with eyes emptier than Milla had ever seen in her. They matched the steamer trunk.

Suddenly, without a single twitch in her eyelids, the Tanya within the machine put out her arms for a hug. "Mom." She said tonelessly, robotically. "I love you."

Milla's overwhelming disgust with the dissonance of the action paralyzed her, and her caretaker archetype reacted even more strongly, exploding with psychic energy as it couldn't hold its damaged shape together in the face of such a dirty tactic.

If Milla had any doubts that this was the psychic entity that caused Tanya's episode the previous night, they were gone now. The Heartless Machine turned to Milla calmly. "Now, you're not supposed to be in here." It explained, using Otto's voice. "That room is private" It said in Tanya's voice, repeating the statement she said before. After a second, she realized that Tanya's lips were moving with every word.

Could it only project emotion when it was parroting lines? Milla felt sick as she remembered which line didn't have any emotion. Something unsaid and unheard. For a horrifying instant, she had to scramble for a memory of her own of her saying 'I love you' to Tanya, but calmed when she found it. Just this morning. Still, she was a Psychonaut. That title deserves respect in a place like this. "Well, I suppose you're right." She conceded. "But it would be ignoring my duties if I was to leave that unattended." She explained as she slowly walked towards the cobweb-coated luggage.

The Heartless Machine interposed itself between Milla and the luggage. "This is a restricted area." The machine repeated using the voice of that guard. "Stay away from that or I'll tan your hide so badly you'll be on your knees praying for salvation, you little apostate!" She said in the hate-filled voice of Dr. Forscythe's mother. Well, she's never babysitting again.

Milla manifested Psychic Fists and started attacking the machine in close combat, avoiding strikes to the torso where Tanya would put at risk but testing the resilience of the entity.

As expected, the machine was more or less invulnerable to her strikes. Tanya's psychic strength was too great for a psychic of Milla's caliber to overpower her psychic entities, so she'll need to resort to her more useful skill sets to deal with this. Understanding… and empathy.

Milla recalled her agent archetype and unleashed a confusion grenade, stunning the machine and allowing her to walk around to the webbed-up steamer trunk.

She plucked the appropriate tag, the one she recalled having picked up from the crib, and attempted to join it to the trunk. Emotional energy flooded Milla's astral form, a greater amount than she had ever seen from any luggage before.

Panic. A sense of falling. An odd tonal sound she couldn't identify. The fear of death. Pain. So much pain. It hurts. A flash of image, of the train as it approached. Another, of a radiant man, old and wizened. Anger, derision. Fear. Death. Eclipsing all of this, an unfathomably large well of… Spite. A promise, ironclad conviction backed by unending, suffocating spite.

Idly, she noticed the cobwebs burst into flames, and a small amount of detail bled into the train station. She was on fire, but the burning sensation she felt was not the flames, but a pale reflection of hate, a desire for revenge so powerful that epics were written to catch a fraction of its potency. The frost that caked the scene melted instantly at her presence.

She already wanted it to end, to stop. What was this? She didn't understand how this level of hostile emotion could be possible. She split off her caretaker and agent archetypes again, to engage the Heartless Machine while she struggled to stand.

After she managed to bring herself back to the matter at hand, she looked at the machine, who was idly deflecting her archetype's attacks without any interest at all. One of the flaws of most mental constructs is that they generally weren't very smart, and had very limited emotional profiles. The Heartless Machine represented Tanya's apathy… artificial or otherwise, so it was, as a result, fairly apathetic. It wouldn't go for the kill quickly like a more aggressive construct would. As long as it had something to fight, it would fight.

Milla noted that she was still on fire, a nimbus of emotional energy that she couldn't completely absorb. Well, Tanya could probably use a bit of this, anyway. She pointed her finger at the Machine. "Tanya, darling?" She asked, smiling sweetly.

The imprisoned Tanya talked again, still a puppet to the machine that held her captive. "Yes, Miss Milla?"

"Burn." She said, unleashing a fraction of the energy to augment her pyrokinesis. This was just a test to see if it would work, after all. Wasting a resource like this could be the difference between victory and defeat.

The Heartless Machine went red-hot, but the interior remained curiously dark, Tanya was left unharmed by Milla's attack. That was interesting, she did attempt to spare her, but she expected a small amount of collateral heat to reach her there. The machine retreated to a different part of Oblivion castle, outpacing her archetypes at least twice over.

Milla frowned as she rejoined her mind into one and started pursuit. It could have escaped her at any time… troubling. Her musings were interrupted by a very high pitched scream. Ah, there's Lili.

Milla rushed through the castle, following the scream, and ended up back at the room with the desk that was just inside the entrance. Lilli was running away from the Heartless Machine, which was calmly power-walking in her direction while occasionally lashing out with a nightmare tendril.

"Lili!" Milla commanded. "Go over the desk and out the door!" Lili, not having any better ideas, immediately produced a levitation ball to bounce over the desk, barely going under the cobwebs suspended above, and then ran back to the exit. When the Heartless Machine moved to vault over the desk to pursue, Milla unleashed the full force of her pyrokinesis, fueling it with the powerful emotion she released from the baggage.

A column of flame erupted, completely covering the desk and incinerating the cobwebs that contained the briefcase hanging above the desk, which promptly dropped on top of the machine, pinning it with its massive burden. Walking up to it, briefcase tag in hand, Milla took the hand of the machine and joined it with the emotional baggage, unleashing the emotional energy into both of them.

Success. Fulfillment. Happiness. Frustration, disappointment, derision. A flash of a Japanese man's face, contorted in fear. A jolt in the back, as if pushed. Horror. Fear. Rage. Pain.

The machine screamed mechanically as the emotional energy tore at them. This time, Milla deliberately saved half of what went into her as an aura of passionate fire. Tanya, within the chest of the monster, regained life into her eyes and looked around in confusion. She was awake!

"Tanya." Milla said hurriedly. "I can't get you out of there. Only you can! I'll clear your path the best I can, but only you can walk it." They were relatively generic platitudes, but Milla didn't know how much time she had, so she had to get to the point quickly. Good thing too, as the machine stabbed Milla in the gut by turning its mechanical hand into a wicked series of knives… but as this was just a mental projection, Milla was launched backwards rather than actually ran through.

Tanya's eyes blanked out once more, as her lips moved with the machine's voice. "You don't know what you're doing, Vodello!" it said with Agent Forscythe's voice. Milla didn't realize that Tanya had overheard that argument. "There are some boxes that are best left… unopened." It intoned in Otto's dramatic storyteller voice.

With the emotional baggage dealt with, Milla could make out a few more details of the desk, even if the rest of the office seemed too spartan to note anything but the shape of the room. It seemed rather nice, with a small screen that was far too thin to be functional on the surface, with a typewriter keyboard in front of it and an unknown device at the right of it, each connected to each other by wires. The desk chair was quite nice, and much larger than the one in the mysterious bedroom. Milla imagined that the chair would be comically large on anyone who wasn't over six feet tall.

The machine sat in the oversized chair, relaxing into it as if it was made for them. "You're fired." It said with a firm, deep, masculine voice that Milla didn't recognize. "Security will escort you out."

The room flooded with dozens of full sized censors, including multiple heavies. Milla split off her archetypes again to fight the massive army of mental defenses.

"Yeah! Violence!" Lili shouted in glee as she burst back into the room, psychic fists swinging. The Heartless Machine twitched at Lili's arrival, but remained seated as the censors continued their best efforts.

One of the little-appreciated facts is that children were actually a lot better at fighting in a mental world than they have any right to be. They're no longer held back by their clumsy, still-growing bodies, and their immense imagination is a potent asset… although only the most powerful child psychics could muster up enough strength to be able to dispatch any but the smallest censors. So despite being three years old, the high amounts of psitanium in the area allowed Lili to bat censors aside and set them aflame with ease, although Milla assigned her caretaker archetype to watch Lili's back during the fight.

After the final censor was destroyed, the Heartless Machine stood back up, having reshaped itself during the battle. Now large enough to fit well inside that oversized chair, with broad shoulders, long legs, and a masculine gait that kept it moving quickly outside the room. For some reason Tanya, still unconscious within its chest, now had glasses. Her lips moved with that same masculine voice. "You are required for a meeting regarding your future in this company. Follow me." Who was it emulating? This didn't make any sense.

Milla took a deep breath as her caretaker archetype used Lili's smelling salts to send her back outside. "The most important tool for a psychonaut is an open mind." She reminded herself as she followed the machine. Mary's accusations and Dr. Boole's theories are distracting her from discovering the truth. This didn't resemble anything in Mary's mind, there was no battlefield or anything like there was in Mary's mind…

…Wait. That man from the first vision… didn't it look an awful lot like Mary's 'vision of God'? Milla wished she got more than a tiny glimpse into it, but emotional baggage needed a lot of energy to convey anything resembling a memory, and all of the mental cobwebs in the area meant that any figments that found their way here quickly got absorbed.

The Heartless Machine led her to another section, corresponding to the room depicting Milla's office in Polite Castle. There was another bundle of cobwebs here. The silhouettes indicated items on shelves, large and kind of round. Urns? Vases? The machine spoke through Tanya's lips again: "Your performance is lacking. At this rate, it won't be long until you bring shame on us all. Step back from your current course, and go-." The voice cut off, but it seemed deliberate, mangling the quote in order to convey a different idea.

The room flooded with purple goop, ensnaring Milla's feet. Doubts? The Heartless Machine manifested a giant hammer, revealing itself to be a nightmare-infected Judge. That… made perfect sense. Doubts were, fortunately, extremely flammable, so she took a fraction of the flames she had stored from the last emotional baggage and burned away the entire swarm of them before ducking the wide swing of the machine's hammer.

The machine was much more relentless than a normal Judge, and resisted any attempt to steal their hammer away, but after some rapid dodging Milla noticed that it fought completely differently this way than it did when it was using Tanya's shape. It fought a lot more like a regular Judge, just with far more aggression, which was… weird.

She wasn't able to maneuver well enough to get past the oddly competent Judge, they usually paused in their attacks for long enough that you could get basically anywhere, but Milla instead led the Heartless Machine to a different cluster of cobwebs, the one in the bedroom.

"This is unacceptable." The machine said using that same masculine voice. "Don't forget, the nail that sticks up…" The judge's wargavel went up and Tanya's body started glowing with psychic power. "...gets hammered DOWN!" The Heartless Machine tripled in speed and charged Milla, easily vaulting over the cluster of cobwebs she had put between them.

Milla unleashed the flames of emotion on the machine, causing it to writhe in pain as its metal became orange hot, the barest hints of red metal in the interior of it. The emotional baggage in this room was a backpack, so she took out the backpack tag and once more shoved it into the machine's hand and forced it to connect to the waiting baggage, clear of the mental cobwebs that now burned to fuel her pyrokinesis.

As before, the emotional energy tore through the steel of the machine's body, its strong association with being emotionless causing the already volatile power to destructively interfere with it. That isn't to say that Milla didn't still make sure that she got enough to repeat the feat for the next cluster of cobwebs… it was effective, and it let her clean up the emotional baggage while she was at it.

Determination. Hard work. Accomplishment. Pride. Love. Confusion. Disappointment. Resolve. Hard work. Accomplishment. Not enough. Hard work. Not enough. Not enough. Never enough. Despair.

Tanya's eyes regained life again, but then closed in pain as she didn't like the emotions any better than Milla did. Well, that did confirm that she was taking in some of the emotional energy as well. She murmured to herself without acknowledging Milla's presence. It was in Japanese, but her intent dribbled into Milla's mind as she paid attention to the words, even if they should ordinarily be too quiet to hear.

"Mom, Dad… Why? I see it now…" Okay… Tanya's eyes shot open and she tried to move. The room had gained a little definition. The device on the first desk was on this one as well, but the TV-like screen was bulkier, more reasonable for a television; although it was still smaller than Milla expected for such a screen. The bed was neat, and there was a poster of some kind of… war movie? It looked like… a boy's room.

"You're no better than X, you machine! Pretender!" Tanya shouted, which seemed to offend the Heartless Machine, as it rose back up and flung itself onto the bed.

"I am a mirror into your true self!" Retorted the machine with each word in a different voice, too quickly for Milla to identify exactly which was which, now smaller, but still larger than when it was emulating Tanya. "You, the greatest pretender of them all! The number one FAKER!"

Ah, it was always awkward to watch someone yelling at themselves, even when you knew that it was valuable progress. Milla slipped just outside the room, double-checking where the other cobwebbed up emotional baggage was. She could probably clear some out while Tanya was beating herself up, but…

Milla always kind of knew that Tanya's problem was some flavor of impostor syndrome, but the truth that was being hidden… Milla still couldn't quite understand it. This castle's aesthetics conformed to what you'd see if you delved into memories long forgotten, and clearing up the emotional baggage seemed to allow Tanya some additional recollection of them, which was in the same ballpark as normal… But the memories themselves didn't make any sense. They were memories of someone completely different than Mary led Milla to believe would be here.

It must be exactly that. Tanya had lived before… and still carried the scars of that life, and of their death. They were embedded thoroughly enough that it frankly didn't matter whether the memories were real or not. She must have spent her entire life suppressing these memories… Well, mental scars were something of a Psychonaut specialty.
 
This is such an obscure crossover, but having recently played through Psychonauts 2 I'm loving it. The latest chapter was excellent, and I think you're handling this deep dive into Tanya's neuroses via video game-esque mechanics really well, here.
 
Wonder how Mary will react if she ever finds out her god ripped a man from his own afterlife just to make Tanya because that man denied him.

I am loving this. Milla being a badass and helping Tanya face their past.
 
Wonder how Mary will react if she ever finds out her god ripped a man from his own afterlife just to make Tanya because that man denied him.
I am loving this. Milla being a badass and helping Tanya face their past.
I feel like that is on the low end of things she is going to react to, assuming she believes any of this and doesn't stick to delusion.
We have:

Tanya is originally from the future (sort of).
Tanya was murdered (possibly by being x).
Her god is a man child.
Her enemy has suffered a lot.
Her enemy was a child (sort of).
Her country started the war.
Politics.
War crimes everywhere.
Arene (seems to be what everyone focuses on).
Brest and politics.
Mary's dad was still alive when she went berserk.
Mary's dad was manipulated by being x into killing himself.
Mary killed tones of allied people.
Being x possible manipulated the war (Tanya's paranoia?).
Tanya and Mary probably died due to being x.
Neither is at peace.
Mary was sent by being x to harass Tanya instead of being with her family.

Milla being cool is nice something we have been waiting for awhile. Feels like we are getting to the meat of the story.
 
I'm curious what they are going to do now that they've basically confirmed that reincarnation is actually a thing. I mean the implications are huge but the way they confirmed it is very concerning.
 
Chapter 13
[Camilla "Milla" Vodello, Psychonauts Agent]

Milla didn't expect Tanya to win against the Heartless Machine. These things worked like a tug of war. Each defeat Milla dealt the mental construct gave Tanya additional strength when it came to overcoming her personal demon, but Milla still has three more baggage tags, this wasn't going to be resolved after two defeats. Will she need all of them?

True to her prediction, the Heartless Machine had re-asserted its suppression of Tanya's will, and charged. "The truth hurts sometimes." The machine said using Dr. Boole's voice. It abandoned their judge gavel and had resorted to fighting with reckless abandon, copying the attacks that Milla used against the censors, but faster. It would have been a horrible mistake if Milla could hurt the thing with her own psychic fists.

Instead, she just had to keep deflecting and dodging as she led it back to the room where it went when it was pretending to be some middle manager. She tasked her agent archetype to attempt to organize and decipher the clues to Tanya's first life, and split off her caretaker archetype again to intercept Lili when she shows back up. Meanwhile, she waited for her moment.

There was this little downward double chop move that Milla used on occasion to finish off weakened mental entities that should never be used against a person under any circumstances. It was a lethal concentration of telekinetic energy, for one. But more importantly, it required the psychic energy to drift away from her actual limbs for extra leverage and reduced recoil, so anyone with even a small amount of martial arts knowledge could do… basically whatever they wanted with a counterattack. Sasha preferred pulling her into a grapple, which was always a fun way to end a spar.

Milla seriously doubted that a copycat like the Heartless Machine would be able to understand such matters, so she faked a vulnerability right when the cluster of cobwebs was behind her, and as expected, it went for the finishing move. A Japanese woman's voice announced the attack: "You didn't win! First loser is nothing!" Which she rewarded with a throw right into the cobweb cluster and a third burst of pyrokinesis fueled by the emotional energy she saved from the previous baggage.

"This might be enough." Milla said to herself as she took out the duffel bag tag and connected the baggage to the machine.

Indecision. Pressure. Confusion. Pressure. Ambivalence. Pressure. Discovery. Understanding. Confidence. Relief. Contentment. A phantom feeling of being pushed. An instantaneous flash of agonizing pain. Regret. Dissatisfaction.

Milla understood this one even less than most of the others. It was vague, less defined by specific events than the others. The emotions must cover a longer timeframe. It did corroborate her guess that Tanya's previous life died by being pushed in front of that train… and she had regrets about her life.

The room's more defined features showed that the shelves were full of trophies and medals. Despite the place still being rather monochrome, she could still see that the trophies were mostly silver, with a small smattering of bronze. Not a single gold. At least seven different sports were there, with several repeats, and there were even some that were blatantly academic, math, essay-writing, science, and… programming? Milla didn't even know what that was.

Tanya once again woke up from the trance the machine had placed her in, ignoring the red-hot interior of the white-hot machine and screamed in rage, a harsh growling sound that resisted rising to the pitch that Tanya's usual voice was kept at. The glasses shattered and her skin flashed with iridescent blue as she tore out the door that was the Heartless Machine's chest and leapt out…

…until the nightmare tendrils returned, wrapped themselves thoroughly around Tanya, and yanked her right back inside, maintaining their presence to keep her bound in the now gaping chest of the machine. It rose once more, and brought its metal fists to the sides of Tanya's head, dazing her and allowing the machine to reassert the trance. Her now-slaved lips spoke with another masculine voice, a new one. "You've ruined everything!" It said angrily. "All of our plans for you, down the drain!" A scoff. "Go, then!" It changed posture, standing tall and placing two fingers on their temple. "-it simply must die." It quoted using Sasha's voice before unleashing a powerful PSI blast.

Milla flew away after getting hit by the fast blast, her mental projection damaged, but not critically so. Curses. She didn't think it could manage one of those, but apparently it could. PSI blasts were normally rather weak, requiring more hostility than most people had access to do anything resembling serious damage to a mental projection. Tanya's PSI blasts, on the other hand, could shatter stone and drill holes into tree trunks. She needed a second or two between blasts, but when you only needed one blast, that wasn't exactly a problem. This projections… not quite that strong, but strong enough that Mila really doesn't want to get hit by a second one.

Milla's agent archetype re-integrated itself into Milla's mind, sharing its conclusions with her. Tanya used to be a Japanese boy whose parents were the opposite of supportive, constantly pushing him to gain first place, which he never managed. He fell into a depression, which led to him becoming an underachieving corporate drone. He eventually was fired, and was shortly thereafter murdered by being shoved in front of a moving train. Tanya's feelings about this are complicated, but primarily regret that she never accomplished anything.

It was an incomplete picture, but Milla was reasonably confident in her conclusions. She went to the central courtyard, where there was a statue of Tanya in Polite Castle. At the time, she thought it was a little strange how the statue was larger than Tanya in reality, but seemed quite small for the size of the pedestal. Here, the statue spot was instead the largest collection of cobwebs, and it was of a much greater size than the Tanya statue. It fit the pedestal nicely. Quite a few of the more confusing aesthetics could probably be explained by another castle's reflection of the room, now that she thought of it.

The Heartless Machine steadily walked into the room with Sasha's gait, copied precisely as it adjusted invisible glasses before launching another PSI blast that Milla ducked behind the cobwebs to avoid. It appeared to have learned its lesson on getting close to cobwebs, going around the courtyard trying to get a clear shot rather than allow Milla to get close now that Tanya was exposed. Milla kept going around the only piece of available cover to make sure it did not get that shot. A stalemate.

"Tanya?" Milla said loudly, looking for a response. "I know that you've had a rough time of things, darling, but sometimes you need to just let things out." Milla ducked as the machine shot at her again. "Cry, scream, get mad! Life's unfair, as you well know." Milla leapt back from the statue as the machine used Sasha's bouncing PSI blast trick.

Well, it appears that the machine forgot the first thing Milla used to deal with it. She launched a confusion grenade, stunning the machine. This time, Tanya seemed to be present enough to wake up. "After all, Tanya, Passion is the spice of life!" Milla released half of the flames she held from the last baggage and burned the cobwebs, taking the suitcase tag out and pressing it to the baggage revealed along with a giant statue of what Milla assumed was Tanya's previous life, a tall, broad shouldered man wearing a business suit and trench coat. She immediately channeled all of the emotional energy at her fingertips into a pyrokinetic assault on the machine, which burned inside and out.

Derision. Contempt. Disregard. Pain. Regret.

A simple set of emotions, but with it came a memory as clear as any memory vault. "You heartless machine!" Shouted an angry man, eyes filled with tears as he left flanked by security guards. The memory jumped ahead. "Hey Deguchiya…" said the concerned voice of a Japanese man, thin and small. "...You did the best you could for him. It was his problem, and you did the right thing, letting him go. But… you should watch your back, okay? He seems like he might do something stupid." The voice that the mental construct had been using, resounding in that special way that indicated first person speech, said the last line of the memory. "That layabout? I'm not concerned."

Absently, Milla's agent archetype updated her theory.

--------------------

[Tanya Dosva aka Tanya von Degurechaff aka Tenya Deguchiya]

It was hot. Not in the sense that she was on fire, although she technically was, but in the pulse-pounding way that was felt after a life and death battle.

Every time Miss Milla burned away the cobwebs, she did… something that heavily weakened the mental construct that had attempted to overwrite her with some flavor of madness. There were worse fates… well, the worse fates were all 'the same thing but done by something even worse', but that still left her inside of a bunch of molten metal that somehow burned with emotions she had not felt since the Great War.

What's worse, is that every time that energy surged… she started remembering. Among the many indignities that Being X had inflicted upon her was to replace her memory of her name with the one he bestowed upon her. She always knew, in her second life, that her name was Tanya Degurechaff. Even before the nuns said it. Who she was before? As far as she could recall… Degurechaff Tanya. She even started referring to her previous life as 'the Salaryman' in order to distance herself from that violation.

She assumed that it wasn't the only thing Being X did to her mind in the transition, but it was the only thing she could tell was obviously wrong. But now? It was aggravatingly close in sound to Tanya Degurechaff… But Tenya Deguchiya was a proper Japanese boy's name, and it did make sense that Being X would pick a name as close to her old one as was plausible.

Unfortunately, that wasn't all she started remembering. She looked upon her old life with rose-tinted glasses when she was in the war, and while it was better in every way… Even if she never had a subordinate as loyal and competent as Visha… Except for Visha, it was better in every way than her second life.

But that didn't mean that she was happy, either. That it was a life well spent. She remembered that transformative lesson on economics that she, at one point, saw as the ultimate answer to human thought, the key that she had missed all of this time… The only difference between Tanya and other people was merely a different set of preferences, they weren't fundamentally… wrong, or broken. But… the truth was… that they were.

Tanya reached up and pulled at the melting steel of the mental construct, shaping it around herself into armor… which somehow transformed her into her old body, cast in metal.

It didn't feel right. It felt awkward, and wrong, with everything seeming tiny and insignificant when it shouldn't be. Her limbs were too long and her legs didn't move right. She remembered this wrongness, she felt it so keenly in the first several years of her second life. It went away… eventually. She chalked it up to hatred of being weak and helpless, and she couldn't point to when exactly it fully faded, only that it was after the propaganda shoots, because she definitely still felt it when wearing that dress. But no, that misalignment was completely absent in her third life, even when she was helpless. She walked up to the statue of her old self, and felt anger build up in her chest. It was a familiar feeling, if one that she hadn't felt in a long time. Back in the war, thinking about the General Staff, or the communists, or Being X felt like this. This was what Agent Boole was expecting her to feel, when he brought out the therapy puppet.

The anger built, tears flowing freely from her face as she considered the life of Deguchiya Tenya. "You were a fool." She found herself saying. The words flowed from her mouth before she could fully consider them, unfiltered and raw. Her voice was the deep baritone of her first life, which prompted a shudder as the wrongness of it echoed throughout the room "You were born to a rich family, in a rich country, in a rich era. You were given healthy food and as much education as you could handle. You grew tall, and strong, as genetically lucky as you were economically." After experiencing the poverty of being an orphan and the lower-middle at best lifestyle Miss Milla provided, Tanya couldn't consider her first life as anything but rich. "But you wasted it. Impossible standards were set, and when you merely excelled, you broke. You had so many options to become somebody worth respecting, but you passed them up because you just… couldn't handle it. Focusing on your worst skills so you could give yourself an excuse for failure."

Tanya knew she was being unfair. Unlike now, she was actually a child back then. And those skills did come in handy when managing the 203rd. She also couldn't call them her worst skills anymore, from those experiences. But few things indicated wisdom better than understanding that your past self was an idiot. That was one piece of wisdom that her old grandfather passed on, before he died. She didn't care about the unfairness. No one else ever does. "Never in your life did you possess conviction, surrendering the idea of ambition. Only in death did you find a spine, in front of the most capricious and unfair authority that has ever existed. Even then, you backpedaled and begged for mercy, not like that bastard understands the definition of the word." Tanya spat to the side, which didn't make any sense but it was a mental world so Tanya didn't bother questioning it. "You didn't even grovel adequately, and to think, you thought yourself good at ass-kissing."

Tanya knew that she was substantially more emotional in her second life than she was in her first. She stoked the flames of her spite for years as she grew up in that orphanage, and even the insincere prayers to draw out power from the type 95 didn't diminish that hatred. She made far too many mistakes in her second life by acting without fully thinking through her options, arrogant in her assumptions and analysis.

But now? Being X had lost track of her. For this life, she was free. At least, until Mary's prayer reached the bastard, but the fact that it wasn't immediate was promising. There's no way both Mary and X could resist immediately confronting Tanya at the first opportunity to gloat, so until that occurs…

Well, she should still stay prepared, just in case.

Tanya took a deep breath in an attempt to disperse the metaphorical flames in her chest. Smoke and red-hot embers escaped her metal mouth, instantly evaporating the tears. "I'm not you." She said with finality. The metal armor instantly developed a massive crack on the face. "I'm stuck with you, but I refuse to be you." Her real voice, high pitched with a deliberate roughness left over from her times as a drill sergeant, came out simultaneously with the deep voice of her first life. Another crack. "You are dust in the wind, dead and gone, your only legacy mere scraps of memory."

Idly, she noted that the mental cobwebs that were still visible from her location had started catching fire. No matter. "I will take no action to honor you, for you deserve none." She said harshly, before taking another calming breath. "But neither will I act to spite you. You are someone who refused to reach to the limits of his grasp, who strived for the peace of nothingness." Spending two lifetimes accumulating responsibilities in the name of eventually divesting them… it was so hypocritical. She sees that now. "That peace is the only request I will grant you." The cracks in the metal shell multiplied, and Tanya pounded her chest with a fist to shatter it completely. The feeling of wrongness went with it, and she felt comfortable in her astral form once more. The final nail in his coffin.

"I will live a life of ambition!" Tanya announced, the masculine voice gone for good. "I will harness the power of dreams to create wonders so grand that even your world will weep in envy!" The mountains of cash that usable VR machines would produce… it was more than she could ever spend.

Tanya could feel a slight tremor. Kyomu castle was beginning to break apart. Well, that sounded appropriate. She seized the reins of the castle, stabilizing it for a moment. "Now… rest in peace." She said with finality as she launched a PSI blast at the statue in time with breaking apart the castle.

"Tanya? What are you doing!" Miss Milla shouted over the din of the crumbling stone.

What? Oh. She heard all of that. Whoops.

----------------

After convincing Miss Milla to leave so Tanya could finish reorganizing Kyomu castle, she kept the mirror world theme and shaped it instead into a palace she called Yashin castle. Psychic construction was primarily fueled by imagination and intuition. As long as the system you came up with was both possible and sensible, it just happened. Yashin castle was designed to process all of those first life memories, archiving as much knowledge as possible while divesting it of emotional context, letting the emotional energy on the matter accumulate in a small shrine dedicated to her first life. Eventually, she'll be able to transform the place into a more generalized archive for information, which should improve her retention of engineering knowledge. She'll need that if she wants to accomplish her goals.

Miss Milla had gone ahead and handled the last outstanding emotional baggage in Kyomu while Tanya was talking to herself, which almost certainly cleared out the 'blockage' that Agent Boole had diagnosed. In a happy little accident, Milla seemed to think that Tanya only had the one previous life, which Tanya allowed her to believe… for now. With Mary around, she'll probably have to come clean eventually. Just… not yet. Later. Much later.

In the meantime, one of the experiences from her first life seems to have made a reappearance: she has a hangover, presumably from the massive amount of sweat she was caked in as she tried to stand back up from the floor of the counselor's room. Her head was pounding, colors were brighter, sounds were louder, and… "Lili, shut up!" Tanya snapped. She was quick to lash out.

"Eep!" Lili's eyes widened as she backpedaled away from Tanya like she would an unexploded bomb. Was she really that scary?

Miss Milla whispered, although her voice was clear as day to Tanya's oversensitive ears. "Lili, why don't you read True Psychic Tales number five? I know that one's your favorite, darling." Lili nodded furiously and ran back to the camper's room in the girl's cabin. "Tanya darling, a lot's happened inside your head over the last however long it was. Give it time, and it'll pass." Miss Milla rubbed Tanya's back as she tried to steady her breathing.

"Four raw eggs mixed in a 1-2 ratio of daikon brine, poured over eight hundred milliliters of sticky rice." Tanya muttered, her old hangover breakfast. "Drink one liter of water while it cooks." She continued. "For best results, mix in two hundred milliliters of the brine with the water."

Miss Milla stared at Tanya. "...That sounds horrible." She said, a look of disgust on her face. "Also, you can't drink that much water." She added.

"Right, I need to adjust for weight." Tanya murmured. "One-thirty kilos then, forty-ish now… Just gimme a fourth of everything, this one's not so bad."

"Oh!" Miss Milla said, finally understanding Tanya's request. "So that's a hangover cure?" She asked, amused.

Ow. Ow. "Not so loud…" Tanya whined. "The storm's bad enough, you know." Tanya yelled in pain when the storm decided to make itself known with another crack of thunder. It resounded like an artillery shot that impacted close enough to shred a passive barrier.

"Well…" Miss Milla whispered. "I don't think we have any of those except the eggs… and maybe the rice, but I'm sure Ford will be happy to whip you up a hangover cure of his own. I'll go ask him." She vanished in a teleport, something she usually preferred not to do, but apparently the rain was an exception.

Faintly, Tanya could make out Lili recounting an overblown and inaccurate story about what just happened in her head. "And then the robot was like 'you're fired!' which was weird, but then there were censors everywhere! And I was like bam! Whack! Fwoosh!"

Mary's voice was quieter, but still audible. "So there weren't any guns? Or soldiers? Or prayer? Nothing?" Oh, this was an unexpected benefit.

"Nnnnnope." Lili replied. "Just office stuff. Not even Psychonauts office stuff, it was weird."

"What about the first part?" Mary continued.

"Knights and castle stuff." Lili said after a moment of thought. "And some stuff from the Motherlobe. OH!" Lili exclaimed suddenly, which sent off a lance of pain in Tanya's head. "She also keeps her baby room in her mind, which is hilarious AND appropriate!" Damn it, Lili…

Mary sounded confused at that. "What? That's normal, though. Isn't it?"

"Oh, you too?" Lili said with glee. "No, Milla had her thinking face on when she saw it. That means it was super-weird." Argh! Tanya didn't even consider that. Not like it matters anymore, but it kind of ruins the point of Tatemae castle if it contains hints like that. She should change it to the room she shared with the other three girls in the group home. She had that one longer, even if she was rarely able to sleep while those girls were doing all that loud thinking.

"Yeah, there's nothing like that in either of our minds." Norma corroborated, presumably referring to her sister. "You saw that Sam's mind didn't have that either."

Mary made… a sound of some kind. "I-it must be because I remember being a baby because I was already an adult at the time!" She insisted, which was probably correct. The weird part was probably that it was a clear memory.

"This again?" Sam said skeptically. "No one believes you, Mary." A beat passed. "Except Lili. But she's three."

"I dunno…" Gisu said, uncertain. "It does kind of explain why she can speak Swedish." So that's what Legadonian was. "I asked Agent Nein, and he said that Mary's American, without any family that speaks it. It's real Swedish, too."

"Have you heard what nonsense she's made up about her past life?" Lizzie asked, scoffing. "Being a flying witch soldier in a fantasy world where all the countries have different names."

"England is a stupid name for Albion." Mary insisted.

"You just used a synonym for America!" shouted Sam. "Even the squirrels think that's dumb!" There was some chittering.

"Woah, where did those come from!" Exclaimed Gisu.

"They were cold and wet!" Argued Sam. "And they agree with me." Sam's voice took on a menacing edge. "Right?" Various squeaks sounded out in agreement.

With a small pop, Miss Milla reappeared and handed Tanya some kind of shake. "This should help, Tanya." Tanya then discovered that her oversensitive sensorium extended to smell as well, the nauseating odor from the concoction somehow rivaling the front lines… on a good day. At least it included brine somewhere in its recipe, or perhaps just pickles. She choked it down, long being used to enduring crappy food from her time in the army, followed by the slop the baby care industry calls food. It was a crime against taste, and the only thing that was better tasting in the early 20th century, when the nuns just mashed up real food.

Still, enduring such things didn't usually end up with her convulsing from the horrible sensation. It was just… so terrible, her stomach rebelled as her sinuses burned, Tanya couldn't quite explain why this was so much worse than the other things. It was somehow the most disgusting thing she had ever put in her mouth. Even worse than the foulest of Germanian sausages and K-Brot.

Miss Milla giggled at Tanya's plight. After she managed to fully resist the urge to vomit up what she just drank, Tanya glared at the counselor. "This is one of those hangover cures that's meant to get you to swear off drinking, isn't it?"

"Maybe." Miss Milla replied impishly. "Are you feeling better?"

Tanya stretched as she stood up, wincing as even that had intensified to be vaguely painful. "My head's stopped pounding, at least." She admitted. "Everything's still too loud, though." She added.

"About that." Miss Milla said. "I took a peek at your senses with clairvoyance, and everything seemed normal." Tanya stared at her in confusion. You could do that? "Meaning, your senses haven't become oversensitive, they've just been impaired until now." Ah, her dress was too bright. Tanya closed her eyes and rubbed at them. "I suspected it when I noticed how dull the colors were in your mind, and how everything seemed slightly muffled, but this just confirms it." After a moment, she added: "You should also experience an increase in intelligence and psychic power, as any depression strong enough to psychically inhibit your senses should also impair your thinking in a more general sense." Miss Milla snorted. "If you weren't a genius before, you sure are now."

Ah, right. "So… what happens now?" Tanya asked. "Now that you know… enough." There wasn't a single soul that knew about her first life until now. It was new territory… fear creeped in as her supposedly improved mind concocted scenario after scenario.

Miss Milla hummed at that. "I think… that things haven't changed as much as you might think." She eventually said. What? "You're dedicated to starting your life over, and while normally I would say that you're being a little extreme… These are extreme times, darling. Your schooling situation would need to be adjusted, and we'll need to have several conversations later about this…" She patted her lap. "But I'm still willing to be your mom if you're still willing to be my child. Remember, no one should be without a loving family." Tanya's chest felt like it was going to burst as Miss Milla echoed that line, the first rule of the group home she ran.

Tanya found herself taking Miss Milla up on the unspoken offer of a hug with no hesitation. Her traitorous tear ducts worked overtime as the simple act, done hundreds if not thousands of times, suddenly felt like clinging to a rock in the middle of a raging storm. All of the tolerance she had painstakingly built up to the addictive experience, gone. As if cued, a rumbling approach of thunder reminded everyone why they were inside.

How did it come to this?

----------------

Eventually, Tanya ended up falling asleep, exhausted from the events of the day. She woke up from her nap when dinner time came around. The storm was still going on, but it wasn't that difficult to create a barrier large enough to act as an umbrella for everyone. Like before, everyone used Levitation to avoid touching the muddy ground, even if Lili and Gisu had to be carried/restrained in order to prevent them from jumping into the storm for fun.

"Come on girls, she can't hold all of us!" Gisu shouted, pumping her fist like a communist as Tanya's giant telekinetic hand around her legs kept her elevated.

The audacity! "I can, and I will." Tanya said dangerously, growling in annoyance. With the intimidation being successful, the campers went to dinner without complaint.

Mary had sat down in front of Tanya after she was seated, waiting for Agent Cruller to deliver the food. Pizza, apparently. Tanya didn't know how he managed to install a brick oven while it was raining, nor how he was able to acquire the ingredients, but didn't question it. She assumed teleportation was involved. "So…" Mary said, buying time.

Annoyance spiked, bringing a scowl to Tanya's face, but she smoothed out her expression and took a deep breath. That was an overreaction. "In case you were wondering, the cause of the incident with the emotional baggage has been diagnosed and treated. It shouldn't happen again."

"Oh!" Mary said, visibly cheered at the news. "Does that mean you'll be helping Mr. Cook and Mr. Janitor too?"

Tanya nodded. "I'll certainly try. Tomorrow, maybe the day after." She said, rubbing her temples to emphasize her point. "There may be some side-effects of the treatment, it could impair my performance."

"Is that why you cried yourself to sleep?" Mary asked, coughing awkwardly.

"Yes." Tanya said immediately. "It was part of the treatment." It was a small misrepresentation, but it was close enough to the truth. Speaking of, Tanya drank the diluted pickle brine that she requested from Agent Cruller. Delicious. Dehydration was an insidious malady, but at least it was easy to treat and prevent.

"I guess that makes sense…" Mary said, looking away. "...Do you think I'm crazy? Do you believe me?" She said, a pathetic look on her face.

Tanya choked as her heart tried to leap from her chest at the idea of denying Mary's request. She was supposed to be immune to the kawaii eyes! Tanya checked to see if anyone else was listening in: Lili had decided to bother the siblings tonight, and everyone else was too wrapped up in their own interpersonal nonsense. She considered admitting about all the lies she's fed that adorable little girl. Before she realized she was talking: "Yes, I believe you." She said tiredly. "You really did have a past life in an alternate world, I'm sure of that much." She added, to mitigate the disaster. Curse the return of her impulsiveness!

"Thank you, Degurechaff." Mary said, sniffling.

"Don't push your luck, May." Tanya warned, responding in kind. "You're still crazy, just not about reincarnation."

Mary took her napkin and blew her nose with it. "Sasha was talking about getting me to skip grades if I already had the education, and I was thinking about how I wasn't getting good grades in school, and… If I really did go to school before, why is it so hard?"

Tanya rolled her eyes. It was obvious. "What year did you say you were from?" She asked, leading her to the proper conclusion.

"I died in 1929." Mary replied despondently. At least she missed the Great Depression. The stock market crash was, surprisingly, on schedule, and it contributed to how disastrous the logistics situation was on the Eastern Front.

"It's been fifty years." Tanya pointed out. Closer to sixty since she was in the same grade, really. "Educational standards have increased, and if you were a child soldier like you claimed, you probably weren't that great of a student then, either." Tanya couldn't exactly comment on the state of public education in her second life, but Mary was in America. She didn't have a notice of future conscription to justify her decision to enlist. No one with a bright academic future would make such a decision.

"So I'm just stupid?" Mary said, even more miserable as tears fell from her eyes.

Tanya's traitorous tongue refused to agree with her accurate statement. Damn those kawaii eyes… How to end this… "You have knowledge you've never learned in this life. How to maintain a firearm, how to dig a trench…" Or at least, Tanya assumed she had to go through basic training. Also, the math knowledge should come in handy at some point, assuming she didn't just pray her way out of needing to know what she was doing. "How to speak your native tongue. Whether other people believe that you learned these things in this life or not is irrelevant. The knowledge is real. Thus, the memories are real." There, an unassailable logical premise. She was excellent at giving advice.

"Thank you…" Mary said again, sniffling. "You're a lot nicer than I thought you would be."

Why did Tanya get the feeling that this was going to explode at the worst time?
 
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I wonder if a story getting a decent number of likes but no comments is a sign of it being very good, the chapter's quality speaking for itself and not needing comment there being no misunderstandings etc, or the opposite?

Whatever the case chapter gud, very gud.
 
Tanya glared at the counselor. "This is one of those hangover cures that's meant to get you to swear off drinking, isn't it?"
You know that actually seems a bit cruel to do. It's not like they were actually drinking, they're just experiencing similar side effects from a huge purge of psychological problems.
 
Milla does not have enough control over Ford to be more specific than 'hangover cure' in her requests to him. Well, she did also specify 'no hair of the dog', but as to why she had the response she did, Tanya's question didn't have any kind of accusatory heat to it, it was more of a 'inviting sympathy' kind of tone. Inviting her (and the reader) to laugh at Tanya's suffering to make it seem not so bad rather than an expression of hate or pain. It's the kind of thing you do with family or close friends that would end up completely different in tone if it was some stranger that did it.
 
I mean, she literally asked for it, drank it of her own free will, and went on to ask for (diluted) seconds.

Rather than just asking for water and an aspirin.

Possibly, having such a weird concoction as her first true taste has warped her irrevocably. Next thing you know, she'll be drinking mustard from the bottle and asking for surströmming on toast.
 
I mean, she literally asked for it, drank it of her own free will, and went on to ask for (diluted) seconds.
What Tanya described and what Ford sent back were two very different recipes. Pickle brine is a great source of electrolytes, and the Japanese love pickled vegetables, as a rule. Notice how she specified daikon brine: that recipe is exactly what the hungover Salaryman would prepare for himself and consume the morning after some vigorous karaoke. He was a big lad, thus the portions. Delicious and effective. Fresh white rice, as in still too hot to eat fresh, will cook the eggs as you pour it over. They're real runny that way, but it's safe and, I'm told, delicious.

My brother swears by diluted pickle brine as a dehydration cure, as an aside.

What Ford whipped up was your typical college comedy 'hangover remedy', utterly disgusting with half of the ingredients not helping at all towards helping with the hangover. The recipe is spoken of in whispers, and the victim will dance around entertainingly as they process the utter drek they just put in their mouth.

That said, the other half of the recipe constitutes an effective hangover remedy, so it still works, it's just needlessly complicated and designed to inflict suffering on those who abuse alcohol.

It's called a Bob's Your Uncle. Compton invented it at Green Needle Gulch, and it was named because the first time it was created, the night before Bob had just told everyone about how his favorite nephew had agreed to attend Bob's wedding, the only member of his family to do so.
 
Chapter 14
As the activity planning done for the camp was clearly inadequate, the counselors had to improvise. Fortunately, the rain was over, and after breakfast, it was announced that today, everyone will get the chance to do some swimming.

Tanya did own and thus brought a swimsuit, as did all of the other campers. It wasn't anything exotic, just a solid blue one piece along with white swimming trunks that she wore with them. The cut on her arm from Agent Crueller's tantrum had healed enough to no longer need a bandage, so Tanya had no excuse to avoid the activity.

Not that Tanya would have avoided it even if she had the chance. There was nothing wrong with enjoying a bit of swimming. The other campers agreed, and within minutes there was laughter and merriment in Lake Oblongata.

"How are you doing that?" Gisu asked Tanya.

"Levitation." Tanya replied, laying down on the water like there was a layer of plastic stopping her from sinking. "Fundamentally, it's a matter of neutralizing gravity. Traditional levitation balls use this to counteract your weight, but with training it is possible to negate it directly. Currently, I weigh two percent of my real weight, and the water's surface tension can support that. There are insects that are naturally light enough for this." One of the many advantages of approaching psychic powers through magic is the numerical precision that it allows for. If she makes herself too light, she'll end up floating upwards in the air like a helium balloon. It's a narrow margin that permits floating without psychically touching the water.

"Cool…" Gisu whispered, which created a light and floaty feeling in Tanya's chest. "I thought it was hydrokinesis."

"Cannonball!" Shouted Lili. A spike of annoyance interrupted the mysterious emotion, and Tanya created a hand of water to catch the little girl.

"This is hydrokinesis." Tanya pointed out. "You can tell the difference because the water beneath me is still moving and rippling like uncontrolled water is." To demonstrate, Tanya had the hand start tossing Lili up and down, rotating her, and otherwise treating her like a small toy. "If you'll notice, while the fingers ripple, it does not propagate to the wrist of the structure. Hydrokinesis resembles psychic reinforcement in that it allows the water to resist forces far beyond its natural durability." Each psychic technique had its own little idiosyncrasies, Tanya had noticed. Hydrokinesis and Herbaphony both involved psychically moving other things as if it was your own body, but you needed to use completely opposed methodologies to link it to yourself, and that was fascinating in a way that captured her interest as much as strategy games did in her first life.

"Whee!" Lili shouted in delight as Tanya used a second hand of water to catch her after a throw. "I'm an acrobat!" There was that feeling again! Why did it feel so familiar?

Gisu was staring at the water, and held up one of her own hands, focusing on the water. After a moment, she turned to Tanya. "Teach me!" Her face was set in determination.

Tanya blinked. These weren't kawaii eyes… Why was it working just as well! "Alright." She said, her cheeks warming. "Hydrokinesis requires that one be forceful. You seize the water with your mind, diving straight into it and gripping it firmly to shape it as you desire. If you are gentle, your power will bleed away and you will create ripples at best." Tanya held out her hand and clenched it into a fist. "As a starting exercise, you should shove your hand into the water and pull it out with a gauntlet of water. Like so."

Tanya increased the weight reduction from her levitation and sat up, the lower weight compensating for the smaller profile. Raising her fist, she confirmed that Gisu… and apparently Adam had shown up at some point, were paying attention. Then, she drove a knife hand into the water before drawing it back out, showing off the half meter long sword she had shaped out of water, her forearm as the base. "Naturally, you shouldn't expect to be able to create something sharp on your first go, nor should you try, but if you can manage to get the water to cling to your skin, that's a good first step."

"Okay Tanya, I'm done now!" Lili shouted. "Stop please!" Tanya briefly considered ignoring her pleas. It would certainly be in character for a twelve year old to harmlessly torment a younger child like that. Tanya gut churned at the notion, so she instead caught Lili and gently deposited her in the water.

Tanya reviewed the camper's first attempts at hydrokinesis. Adam, true to his boasts, had managed to create some kind of water-flower in his hand, a sphere of water as the base with a stem and petals coming out of the top of it. He froze the flower and presented it to Tanya with what he probably thought was a rakish grin. "A flower for a beautiful flower."

He really, honestly thought… Tanya tried to think of a response but those damnable emotions warred with each other to decide her course for her. What was the worst part of this? The revulsion from receiving a romantic overture from a boy? The disgust from having to think about an eleven year old in a romantic context? The urge to destroy the boy by dismantling that ugly gift? Anger from the boy not getting the hint the first time? The vicarious embarrassment for that shitty pickup line?

Tanya decided a measured response was required. She used pyrokinesis to make the flower explode into steam, then glared at him until he got the picture. Only after Adam recoiled in abject terror, swimming to shore in full retreat did Tanya remember that her glare was refined to make hardened soldiers think twice before crossing her and should probably not be directed at children for anything but the absolute worst offenses. Great job, Tanya. No wonder you were cal- PAIN.

"AH!" Tanya screamed as a sudden lance of pain shot through her head. Spots of light sparkled in her vision as the migraine introduced itself to Tanya's pain receptors. For just a moment, the sky seemed to crack open with the sound of church bells before the hallucination faded as quickly as it came. She promptly dropped into the water, even the tiny amount of focus required for levitation consumed by the pain.

Agent Nein, who was writing in a notebook while playing lifeguard, immediately lifted Tanya out of the water telekinetically and pulled her to shore. "Are you alright, Tanya?" He asked politely.

Giggles suddenly leapt from her throat, preventing Tanya from answering immediately. What was so funny? She didn't know, but the bubbling bliss that followed the agonizing pain… She was lost in the euphoria, despite the migraine's presence. "I don't know!" She said honestly through her giggles. Was she crying? That must just be lake water irritating them.

Agent Nein frowned at the response. "Your eyes are glowing." He observed. What? That's not good.

Focusing, Tanya brought out her mage shell and shut out all distractions. She went through the mental exercise she developed in her second life when she started getting tempted to use the type 95. Mental energy responded extremely similarly to her mana did, so it still worked. All of her mental energy was concentrated to a single point, everything else falling away from her perception. Once accomplished, she allowed the mental energy to flow in a trickle throughout her body once more, bit by bit in a circuit moderated by her heartbeat. Once the energy was properly cycling throughout her body, ready to be directed into her computation orb, or rather, her psychic abilities at the first notion of danger, she opened her senses once more, ready to take on armies. Reluctantly, she also tuned her mage shell to become permeable to telepathy.

"An interesting meditative methodology." Agent Nein observed. While she was meditating, He had placed her on the ground and continued to observe the campers. "I couldn't tell precisely what you were doing, but usually you see meditation used to control psychic energy. That was clearly using psychic energy control to meditate." He extinguished his cigarette and used a quick telekinetic wave to disperse the smoke. "Agent Vodello was uncharacteristically cagey as to what exactly she saw in your mind…" She was? Huh. "But she was clear that you should be experiencing mood swings as your emotions stabilize. What happened?"

What did happen? She had just snapped at Adam, then suddenly… "I think it was a migraine."

"That's a potentially very serious problem for a psychic." Agent Nein said, his tone grave. "What, exactly, did you feel?"

"Ah…" Was she suddenly a research subject? How many psychics get migraines? What's his sample size? Would he deliberately trigger it if he thought he could? Probably. "I can't quite remember what I was thinking before it happened." She lied. "But it was a sudden pain, like a stab in the brain." She tapped her left temple. "Behind this eye, I think. Maybe a little higher."

"Any other symptoms? Nausea? Flashes of light? Hallucinations?" Agent Nein asked.

"No, yes, and yes." Tanya replied. "I heard bells, and my vision…" She should probably not mention the cracks. "I can't describe it."

Agent Nein hummed. "How about now? Did meditation calm the symptoms?"

…It did. "Yes." Tanya replied. "There's still a little bit lingering…" But it was more of an echo than anything noteworthy. Phantom pain, like she experienced in the months after Norden. "But it's nothing."

"I don't think it was a migraine, then." Agent Nein said. "Instead, I believe that Milla missed a piece of emotional baggage or two when cleaning your mind's metaphorical pipes. I wouldn't normally suggest that, as Milla has always been one of the Psychonaut's best when it comes to dealing with emotional energy, but she seemed overtaxed nonetheless last night." Miss Milla did seem rather frazzled after Tanya woke up… "There are some rare cases where manpower shortages forced treatment to lay incomplete for several days, and some of those cases exhibited vaguely similar symptoms when exposed to certain emotional triggers."

Tanya suspected a different cause, but perhaps Lili could be manipulated… No. It would certainly involve a trip to Yomi castle, and exposing Lili to that place would be horrible. Tanya winced as the pseudo-migraine's remnants flared up, although it was a minor thing. She still meditated some more to settle the symptoms.

Agent Nein fetched another camper from the water, depositing Morris onto his abandoned chair. "Did you enjoy getting in some exercise, Morris?" Agent Nein asked idly, leaving Tanya to her meditation.

"Yeah." Morris replied, gasping for air. "Stayed in a little too long." He took out the plugs to his flotation devices and slipped them off. "I can't wait until I can float effortlessly like you can, Tanya."

Finishing her meditation with a cleansing breath, Tanya stood back up. "That reminds me, Morris: Is your problem neurological, or just muscular?"

"Dwarfism, the serious kind, with early signs of progressive muscular dystrophy." He confirmed. "I'm actually kind of lucky, most kids like me get really screwed up skeletons, but mine looks pretty normal, if you ignore how I look like I'm half my age."

Memories of sitting on a stack of books during meetings with the General Staff flash through Tanya's mind. She knows what that's like. "Perhaps psychic reinforcement could allow you to move normally, if it's merely weakness instead of a greater issue?" Tanya mused.

"Psychic whatnow?" Morris asked.

Agent Nein, always ready to give an educational lecture, cut in: "As you may have surmised, Tanya is a prodigy among prodigies when it comes to using the physical side of psychic abilities. She has taken the Psychic Fist technique, where telekinesis is guided by physical motion to attack, to new heights." Agent Nein telekinetically fetched a small boulder, probably weighing about a hundred kilos. "Observe."

As prompted, Tanya lifted the rock with only minor effort. "As you can see, she used telekinesis to amplify her every motion, effectively granting her tremendous strength." Tanya tossed the small boulder, somewhat less than twice the size of a basketball in every dimension, from hand to hand. "It may be a goal for you to work towards, in the future when you've grown into your full psychic strength."

"How long will that take?" Morris asked, impatient.

"The brain is considered fully developed by about age twenty-five. It is no coincidence that psychic strength seems to plateau at that age." Agent Nein responded. "Tanya is also gifted with tremendous amounts of psychic strength, not seen since Ford Cruller or Maligula. Even with her mastery, she couldn't toss around that rock quite so casually without that raw power on her side."

"Man, some people just get all the luck, huh?" Morris said, chuckling.

"If you do become a Psychonaut, Morris," Agent Nein said somberly. "...one thing that you will learn is that psychic powers being weak in childhood is a blessing in disguise." When he glanced at Tanya after that statement, she winced at the headache returning. Grumbling, Tanya sat back down to cycle her mental energy again.

Fittingly for a mind reader, Morris immediately understood that this was not a subject to pursue further. "So how do you start learning how to do that?" He asked, curious and eager to change the subject.

Tanya had no idea how to properly answer that question, so stalled by finishing her quick meditation. She was getting faster with it, but it didn't seem to reduce the effect. "...math?" She said after she finished. The reinforcement formula was the first one she managed to cast without an orb, specifically to survive basic training. "No, that won't work." The only reason that worked for her was because all she needed to do was focus on the memory of using the physical reinforcement formula to replicate it, it wouldn't help him form that first memory. "The difficult part is the first time." She said to continue the thought. "Once you've managed it, you can use the memory of doing so to guide future manifestations of that psychic power." It was why the Psychonauts basic training tended to emphasize not forming bad habits, from what Tanya glimpsed of it.

"Yes, but what should I do for that first use?" Morris said, somewhat annoyed.

Tanya took another moment to figure something out. "...Ask Mary." She eventually said. "She can do it too." Agent Nein raised an eyebrow at the assertion, but left it be.

"There is a method that can be used to directly transfer knowledge…" Agent Nein admitted. "But it cannot be done on a mass scale. In this case, perhaps it is warranted. It cannot be done now… or anytime soon, but it's not yet decided whether or not we'll be open to the public next year, so if you return when we do another test run, we'll revisit the possibility."

Ah, he means a nugget of wisdom. Tanya has three of those that she noticed when building the castle. Could she refine one to solely teach psychic reinforcement? Was he intending on learning it himself?

Tanya felt more or less recovered, so she crouched down before leaping high up into the air, over a dozen meters high and over the center of the lake before announcing her malicious intentions at the top of her lungs: "CANNON BALL!"

Was it even remotely a good idea to use a combination of psychic powers to strike the water like a naval cannon? No.

…But it sure was fun.

----------------

After the swimming was concluded, another round of showers was called for, as Lake Oblongota was filthy with mud, leaves, and lungfish mucus.

"Finally decided to join us, eh Tanya?" Teased Lizzie. "Yer mom decided you had to play with the other kids?"

Tanya shrugged. Yes, Miss Milla brought both Lili and Tanya into the counselor's bathroom previously, but there was a very good reason for it. That reason no longer applied, so it was back to the barracks showers.

"There's not enough showers for everyone here." Observed Gisu.

"That's easy to fix." Sam said. "I'll skip out, no problem! Thank me later."

Tanya grabbed the filthy girl's swimsuit. "No you don't." She gently shoved the girl into one of the shower stalls.

Norma's face had become a permanent squint, as she wasn't wearing her glasses, but she reflexively moved to adjust them as she acted the voice of reason. "Well, Mary's the smallest, so she'll need to share with someone."

Tanya snorted. "Just take a shower." Tanya seized a portion of the water from the two running showers, hydrokinetically collecting it into a ball above the stalls. Once she accumulated a few gallons, it was brought close. Turning to the staring girls, Tanya glowered before smoothing out her expression. "Get to cleaning."

Once all the stalls were operating, Tanya telekinetically grabbed some soap and started the efficient cleaning routine one learned in basic training. Afterwards, Tanya jumped into the ball of water and put it on a spin cycle. After seconds, Tanya left the now-filthy water ball and tossed it out the bathroom door. The rough treatment did itch at her skin, but even with her new sensitivity, it was ignorable.

"You're done already?" Mary asked incredulously as she left her stall. She had also apparently learned how to quickly wash in the army. At least she kept one iota of discipline…

Tanya shook her head, going in behind her and quickly applying conditioner to her hair with a similar method. "Now I'm done."

"Damn Imperial efficiency…" Mary grumbled as they left the showers, Mary in a thick and fluffy towel and Tanya in her swimsuit, which, after some pyrokinetic heating to get rid of the stubborn dampness, was as clean and dry as if it was properly laundered.

"Chores are far less boring when you use psychic powers to do them, Mary." Tanya said, nodding sagely.

Mary groused even harder at that advice. "Lucky devil… wish I got to…" So… cute… "Hey!" Mary said, swatting away Tanya's ruffling of her hair. It was wet, so Mary spent the rest of the trip to the cabin failing to fix it.

After a few minutes of hairbrushing and other mundane tasks, Lili entered the cabin with Miss Mila from the counselor's door. Miss Milla immediately narrowed her eyes at Tanya's perfectly dry and clean swimsuit.

"Tanya, did you psychically spin-cycle yourself again?" She asked, not bothering to hide her annoyance.

"There weren't enough showers." Tanya retorted, an amused grin fighting her innocent expression.

Miss Milla rarely appreciated the efficiencies Tanya frequently found when trying to apply non-basic psychic powers to mundane tasks like Agent Nein or Agent Mentalis did. She visibly debated internally whether she should assert authority, argue logically, or let the matter slide. Or maybe that was just Tanya's telepathy picking up on her surface thoughts. It wasn't always obvious when that was happening, after all. Either way, Miss Milla was perfectly capable of concealing her thoughts, but didn't bother. "Just take turns next time, please." She eventually said, settling the matter with authority without contesting the action directly. "Also, put on a T-shirt at least."

Well that was reasonable enough.

----------------

After lunch passed without any further migraines and everyone was dismissed to unstructured play, Tanya found herself once more teaching the campers how to properly utilize hydrokinesis.

"As I said before, water's natural state is to flow and settle into the lowest possible state." Tanya gestured to the buckets each of her new students had. Their expressions of concentration… oh! Tanya remembers this feeling now. It was the combination of pride and joy when seeing dutiful students. Her 203rd was always so attentive to what she had to teach them… Even if she terrified them. Because she terrified them, to be honest.

It was a nice feeling, if bittersweet. "Water can and will slip away from your psychic fingers just as readily as it will your physical ones, so you must be decisive!" Tanya slammed her fist into her open palm. Time for the drill sergeant voice. "Do not allow compromise from the water! You are mostly water, so the bucket is outnumbered! It will act to your will like all of your other water! You are the master of this water, it exists in its peaceful state at your sufferance alone, and at your will it becomes more, greater than it could be on its own."

Psychic power development was always a very personal experience. Shouting metaphors at people until they latch on to one and succeed is one of the faster ways to get a group of people to learn a psychic power… if you were willing to let half to a third of them fail utterly. But if she wanted to get at least some of them to get the hang of it within an hour, it was the best option.

Mary, for example… could not get even a ripple from the water. "Why do all of your metaphors have to be so brutish and violent, Degurechaff?"

Tanya snorted. "Still on that? Pyrokinesis and Hydrokinesis are very violent expressions of psychic power, Mary." She gestured to a nearby set of brush and gently coaxed one of the local vines out from the undergrowth. "If you tried to apply that advice to Herbaphony, you won't have any chance of success." You might, however, learn what the plant tastes like when it explodes into goo right in your face.

Lili lost her concentration on the hand of water she was controlling. "What!? Since when could you do that?"

"Mr. Park Ranger gave me a few tips." Tanya said smugly. "Picked it up yesterday."

"I still think it's skitsnack that you can learn how to do things by literally plucking it from their mind." Mary complained, tactfully using Legadonian when swearing.

"I was doing him a favor." Tanya said dismissively. "It's only polite of him to repay in kind." More importantly, Agent Nein was quite clear that sharing a nugget of wisdom held no drawback beyond opportunity cost. Holding one gave no benefit but the ability to gift it.

"So you'd be willing to share your own, then? If we did you a favor?" Mary asked.

"Children don't have enough life experience to form nuggets of wisdom." Tanya pointed out. "It's not enough to know how to do something, you need to have used it enough to have a complete insight into what you're conveying."

Mary lit up at that fact. "So if I had a nugget of wisdom, it would be proof that I'm not a kid?"

Tanya wiggled her hand in a 'so-so' gesture. "Agent Nein wasn't very clear on exactly how much experience was required. Do you even have a honed skill?" Tanya wasn't even sure if she knew how to operate a computation orb without praying at it, so the idea that Mary had a nugget of wisdom was… questionable.

"Sure I do!" Said Mary defensively. "Like shooting things, and flying, and…" She took a moment to think about her previous life. "I was pretty good at choir singing."

Tanya shrugged. She was pretty good at choir singing too from the church orphanage, but she didn't have any nuggets of wisdom to that effect. "Maybe? I suppose we could… look." For a second, Tanya thought that this was a bad idea. But then she realized the value of being able to spy on Mary's interactions with Being X, and deemed it an acceptable risk.

"You? Inside my head?" Mary asked, suddenly growing pale at the notion. Tanya glanced at the other campers, who all abandoned their hydrokinetic practice in the name of watching the drama unfold.

"If you're not comfortable with that…" Tanya offered.

"Wait…" Mary said, thinking hard about it. "That's it! You just don't remember being Degurechaff! You're definitely her, but if you don't remember being her… Let's do it!" Well, that was one hell of a 180.

Tanya chuckled at her sudden enthusiasm. "Well, I could use a safer mind than Agent Cruller's to test the waters…" And it was an opportunity to confirm the girl's words vis a vis Being X. "Class dismissed." Tanya announced to the other campers.

Was this some kind of trap by Mary? Definitely. Will that stop Tanya? Not a chance. A familiar feeling pulled at Tanya's cheeks as she marched to where she stashed the backup psychoportal. She only had a few seconds to hide it… and it has rained since then… There!

"Is that safe?" Mary asked as Tanya wiped off the mud from the psychoportal.

"Agent Mentalis is a firm believer in robust engineering." Tanya said, giving up on manual cleaning and resorting to hydrokinetic washing. "More to the point, this thing doesn't use electricity." Agent Mentalis's other inventions operated with highly refined psitanium, to Tanya's understanding. Potent psychic imprinting was used to impose a specific function on it, with the carved structure of the psychically reactive rock being what kept that imprint from drifting as it got exposed to environmental psychic energy. As long as it wasn't cracked or anything, it would work just fine. The psychoportal should work the same way. After a quick inspection of the parts, Tanya nodded to herself, satisfied. "It's in fine condition."

"Are you sure?" Mary asked skeptically.

"You've clearly never seen Agent Mentalis' testing chamber." Tanya said dryly. "A little mud or water is nothing."

That seemed to satisfy the berserker concealed within a little girl. "Alright. Where are we doing this?"

"The psychoisolation chamber should suffice." Tanya said, glancing in the structure's direction. "Do you have your smelling salts?"

"Yep." Mary said, brandishing them.

"Good, because I left mine in my other shorts." Tanya said as they walked, snatching them from her hand. They're going in her mind, she doesn't need them.

"You've done this more than I have." Mary admitted. "Is there anything else we're missing?"

Tanya took a moment to think. "...We should take a trip to the restroom first." She said, nodding sagely as she turned ninety degrees and moved towards the facilities.

"Good idea."
 
Not it really isn't. Gotta make you winder what warning bells that is triggering.
I'd imagine it's a sign of active psychic ability use. Even if it's subconsciously done.

Or in this case, maybe Tanya verging on out of control emotion-fueled overload of psychic energy? Something like that.

I think there's examples in Psychonauts where glowing eyes were a thing? I'm blanking on context, though.
 
Given that the Psychonauts universe operates on a practically toon-based understanding of cranial anatomy, eyes glow because the brain is glowing with psychic energy. The light goes out of the ears, too, but the eyes are more noticeable.

There are several possible causes for this, but if it just happens, it's about as worriesome as a random nosebleed. It could be nothing serious, but it probably is serious.
 
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