Snippet Solarium

Pokemon/Xianxia - The Pride Before 1-1
Wrote this a month ago, but haven't written much this month, so thought I'd post it anyway. Have two more after this.

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The Pride Before
Icy Path
Pokemon / Xianxia


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There exists a cultivation chamber deep beneath the Fantasia estate, hidden within the heart of Mount Sonata beneath layers upon layers of earth and stone and age-old seals. It's a secret passed down from clan head to heiress since the tumultuous Warring Clans Era, when the Blackthorns had conquered us with claw and dragonfire and hoarded us alongside the rest of their treasure; it's a sacred place, a shrine by any other name, where my Deino's egg had been lain and where it was expected to hatch.

It's where I first achieved Soul Consolidation, breathing in Dark and Dragon Aura and stabilizing it within myself, becoming a whole person in the eyes of the clan. It's where I broke through to the Second Realm, age eleven and ambitious and eager for ever more responsibility, and where I expected to break through to the Third, the Fourth, and even the Fifth Realms, should my aptitude not level off.

It's where I hid, when the Blackthorn dragonflight came, and razed the world to ashes.

… My mother doesn't know about it. She was the Outguard Head, commander of external affairs, but the chamber was a Homeguard secret. She would not think to return and loot it of our clan's treasures, our stash of gems and gold and Deino eggs in stasis, our Unovan black rose incense or the Dread Plate our founder stole and was exiled for.

The Blackthorns don't know about it, either; nor would they find it, when they searched the wreckage for survivors and valuables in the aftermath of their Outrage. This was hardly the first time the Fantasia clan struck against our overlords, though it was the first the recompense was so complete. If the Blackthorns of centuries past hadn't found it, the Blackthorns of today never could, so certain in the accuracy of the records they let us safeguard.

It was with a sickening kind of certainty that I knew the chamber was still there beneath the ruins of the clan estate, untouched, unspoiled, unguarded. Compared to stealing from Dragon's Den, reclaiming it would be child's play. There would have been a kind of poetry to it: the last loyal scion of Fantasia, wielding the hidden riches of her fallen clan against the tyrannical Blackthorns and treacherous clansmen.

It was with fantasies like this that I scrounged for food and safety in Icy Path both before and after re-Consolidating my soul and forcing a bond with Razor; fantasies like this that haunted me as I followed the red-eyed trainer back into Blackthorn City, into the Rising Gym and Dragon's Den. It would be the clever thing to do, I would harangue myself, the cruelty and self-disdain in my thoughts only feeding into my Dark cultivation. It would be the righteous thing to do. What is a dragon without her hoard?

The worst part was: it's still not too late. Red's mindset was disgustingly Kantonian, but I have begun to take his measure, and I don't believe he would steal from me. He may even refuse all gifts or attempts at recompense, claiming such tools and treasures would, by easing his path, deny him the full challenge of it, and weaken him in the end.

So, why haven't I done it?

O Lord Giratina, I so despise Dark cultivation.

"Stop," Red commanded, and I withdrew from my trance with hidden gratitude. "We're calling it for the day. Any more and you risk a rupture."

I gave him a confused look at the statement, but let it go. I have long since learned that no amount of arguing or reasoning would change his mind. Red was the kind of man who kept his own counsel, scheming and contemplating with no sign on his face or in his voice, and would only reveal his decisions half the time and behind a layer of obscurement as well. Case in point: I had not known we would be camping in Mount Whitegrave's Ice Nexus until we were already halfway there, and when I asked, had said in a solemn tone that keeping Ice Specialists away from their natural habitat was trainer abuse.

I followed him back to our camp in contemplative silence. As always, Red gave me only a few minutes of peace before asking annoying questions.

"Far be it from me to tell you how to cultivate," Red said, then began to tell me how to cultivate. "But how come you're cycling equal parts Dark and Ice? Dark is everywhere, but we won't find this much Ice ever again, not unless we hit up Seafoam. Seems kinda dumb to me."

I knew better than to dissemble to my teacher about matters such as this, even if he would deserve it. "I want an equal split, not Ice primary. My First Realm is already three parts Ice to one part Dark. Cultivating Dark on a foundation of two layers of Ice would be… slow." I gave him a look, up and down. "I thought you would understand, with a soul like that."

I made it sound like an insult, but it wasn't, not really. Red was a generalist, and his amalgam soul had twelve types in great amounts: Electric, Psychic, Grass, Poison, Fire, Flying, Dragon, Water, Ice, Steel, Dark, and Ground. It was hard to tell, looking upon a soul three Realms greater, but I think the foundation was mostly Electric, which was a notoriously poor foundation for other elements. He even had the other five types contaminating his soul in greater-than-normal amounts. The Blackthorn in me – in truth, the Fantasia in me as well – wanted to judge him for what seemed to be sloppy cultivation, sure to topple or cave in at any moment, but I had felt him break through into the Fourth Realm. His cycling was clean, efficient, his foundation sturdy.

My own soul, before Lance had shattered it, had been equal parts Dark and Dragon at every Realm. I intended to at least attempt the same with Dark and Ice, now, as a matter of convenience; I would be greatly fortunate to encounter another Dragon in the wild of Indigo, but Ice-types were not uncommon, if you knew where to look.

"A worthy goal," Red assented, "But that doesn't counter my point at all. You don't need to cycle equally to have an equal soul, just have the proportions right when you advance. Seems quicker to gather the Ice here, where it's thick, then the Dark later, since it's, you know. Everywhere."

I frowned up at him. "Are we leaving soon? I assumed we would linger until my advancement. It shouldn't be more than two or three weeks off."

He frowned back. "If you try advancing so soon, your soul will rupture and you will be back at zero again. Or die."

We both looked at each other in equal parts confusion and judgement. Eventually, it dawned on me. "…You don't have any stabilizing regents."

"What, do you mean Berries? I'm not made of money."

There are hundreds in stasis beneath the Fantasia estate, I thought, and pursed my lips.

"I've used some before," Red admitted, but his face was still all frowny and disdainful. "They do reinforce an Aura enough that a protracted cycling session won't cause damage. Does jack-all to protect against the mental contamination of that much cultivation, though. If the Blackthorns eat enough Berries that they take them for granted, then no wonder they're all such assholes; Dragon is already one of the five most dangerous types to cultivate, and they're doing it so quickly that they can't acclimate to what they have 'til they pile on more."

"The Dragon's Pride is not contamination," I said in instinctive offense.

"You even have a fancy name for it," Red said in a tone of horrified fascination. "This explains so much."

"Shut up!"

"No, you shut up!"

The argument only devolved from there.

I had always looked down upon those outside the clan with amalgam souls, or who were 'behind' in their advancement. It had, truthfully, never occurred to me that they didn't have access to Aura-rich foods to strengthen and stabilize their souls, or had refused such on philosophical grounds. I had been on such a diet since before I was born, had centuries of development behind my cycling methods, and was set to advance to the Third Realm by my fifteenth birthday; this was normal, I would assume and not think, and everyone else is lazy or untalented.

I wanted to dispute Red's words, in earnest and not just habit. It's hard to find the anger, though, when the rage of the Dragon had been stripped from me with my Aura, and all that remained was the cold and the dark. If I was now who I had been then, I would have already challenged him to an honor duel, all fire and fury and Dragon's Pride.

Maybe the Fantasia and Blackthorn way was wrong, I think, and feel like a heretic.

I did so hate Dark cultivation. If the use of Dark energy is to deceive and trick, then the cultivation of it is to strip all lies away: to be brutally honest with oneself, to look within and despise what you find. If I had not just spent eight hours meditating and breathing Dark and Ice into my soul, I would not be thinking on Red's words so critically, and would be able to dismiss him out of hand. I wouldn't have to be painfully honest with myself.

I still won't give him the satisfaction.

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Red had us leave two days later. "Your soul is getting a little thin around the edges," he said in a tone of great empathy, eyes soulful and mocking. "Any more and it'll leak little drops of Ice out like condensation on glass."

It's only half the reason. A week prior, Red started moving our campsite around the tunnels, bidding me to sleep and cultivate at odd hours. Someone else was using the Ice Nexus, and either Red wanted to evade their detection – perhaps they were stronger, or outnumbered us – or there was some kind of etiquette in play I wasn't aware of. I confronted him on it, and his only response was that my constitution was too fragile for the shock of witnessing a confrontation. I applauded him on his improved vocabulary and paid his words no mind.

We'd been in Mount Whitegrave for a little over three weeks; it was now mid-November. The Indigo Conference runs the last week of December, hosted on the Indigo Plateau, only a few mountains east. Hence my earlier conclusion that we would linger here longer: with appropriate regents, I wouldn't embarrass Red by being in the First Realm when he hit the arena.

I did want to embarrass him, just not in public. Despite my resolve, Red has so far done right by me, and I wasn't so ungrateful as to wish him harm for it. It didn't matter to me, that he has ulterior motives for devoting so much time and care to me. He is the only man in all the world who is supporting me, and I wish to support him in turn, despite my lack of ability.

Even if he made it hard.

"Blue's apprentice is going to antagonize you and try to draw you into a battle," Red was saying, cheerful. "It'll be hard, but try not to look too pathetic in front of my rival, okay? And whatever you do, don't battle. He'll crush you. I'll act all mysterious and knowing, so Blue will think there's something secret and powerful about you, and since he's the cautious sort, he'll tell your rival to cool it and gather intel. You just have to get through that first encounter, then stall until you advance a realm or two and become useful, okay?"

"Yes, big brother," I said dryly.

He snapped his fingers. "Yes, do exactly that. It'll be hilarious."

Red often instructed me on conduct and schemes such as this. It was a funhouse mirror to the lectures Mother and Father would have for me. Where they shaped my behavior and mind into the picture of a clan heiress, perfect and prideful and sharp as a naked blade, Red instead taught me how to solve his friends and rivals like puzzles. He made no comment on how I acted or thought or portrayed myself, as if ignorant to how my appearance would reflect on him. His only concern was for victory.

If he knew I was working to apply these values to him as well, work to decipher him like a coded message and understand how best to speak and act to manipulate his behavior, I think he would laugh.

Those first few days after leaving Blackthorn, I kept waiting for more rules than the two he had given me: to refer to him as family and to refer to myself by his chosen name, Gold. I knew the power that came with naming things, knew that by acquiescing to these two rules I was allowing him to shape our master-student relationship how he wished, but they cost me nothing I wasn't prepared to give. No, I waited with a heavy heart for the more serious rules.

Would I be expected to tithe a portion of any tournament or conquest winnings to him, in recompense for the food, shelter, equipment, and time he has given me? How about reputation: how often and to what extent should I attribute any accomplishments to his tutelage? If he ever started a family or chose another student, what would my duties towards them be? Would I be tasked with managing his mail, raising and breaking camp, the feed and care of his Pokemon, cooking and cleaning, tending house (if he even has one, the vagrant), running errands, battling his enemies?

In these three weeks, I have learned that Red can't speak plainly to save his life. He talks often and obliquely, cracking jokes I don't have the context to understand, straightforward only when the topic at hand is cultivation or training. I'm left to interpret his speech and make educated guesses, which I despise.

From these labors, I can conclude that there are five more rules beyond the two he spoke explicitly and early and must value most:

Rule Three: I must show off and show up Blue's apprentice as grandiously and as often as I can. As a sub-rule, I am to refer to the boy as my rival.

Rule Four: I am to speak to him aggressively and countermand his suggestions frequently. I can only assume this is for the sake of our brother-sister guise, but his motivations are frequently unfathomable to a mind as orderly and logical as mine.

Rule Five: I am not to feed or tend to his Pokemon at all, with the exception of brushing Espeon and Pikachu at night, and even then only if he doesn't do it first.

Rule Six: I am not to put in more work (defined as both labor and time spent) on mundane tasks like cooking and setting camp than he is. An infuriatiangly mercurial rule, as Red seems allergic to following any kind of routine or schedule.

Rule Seven: I am to cultivate a generalist's soul, like Red himself, though I am allowed to maintain an Ice/Dark primary.

This last rule is the only one I almost refused out of hand, only refraining because it's the rule Red takes most for granted. I was taken utterly by surprise when he mentioned swinging by the coast to "cycle that salty Aura" together, knowing that Dark and Ice would be far from the ocean waves. Despite his lax attitude and general permissive mien, I know that there is no defying my master, especially while he is three Realms above me.

What punishment I would be subjected to was kept as mysterious as the nature of the rules themselves were. That makes it all the more terrifying. I will simply have to do the best I can to follow his half-hidden rules- that, and cultivate enough Dark that I can slip away undetected should this arrangement no longer work to my benefit.

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We arrived at Indigo Plateau on the twentieth of November, 81 AU. It is the furthest I have ever been from home.

Nestled in-between cloud-piercing mountains, the Capitol was built more vertical than sprawling, with the League Headquarters at the crown where snow fell year-round. I saw ambassadors, clansmen, Aces, and a thousand other kinds of movers-and-shakers that made the dual – and often fractious – civilizations of Indigo tick, and for every one I saw I saw three Pokemon and ten support staff. The Plateau had been where Kanto and Johto had reluctantly struck the White-Silver Accords under the greedy gaze of Unova in the mask of the Pokemon World League, and in the decades since it had only grown in prestige, influence, and raw commercial capacity.

It wasn't the rival of Saffron or far-off Goldenrod and was entirely lacking in industry or farmlands, but it was here that the beating heart of Indigo lay. Saffron and Goldenrod might be the economic powerhouses of their respective regions, but Indigo commanded both, and in recent years the League had been making inroads to Kalos and Galar, causing an ocean of foreign goods to flow into the Continent. Though the Plateau was the city furthest inland of all (or, I considered, all that mattered), it was here that taxes on those exotic products went, and its here where that wealth concentrated.

Blackthorn was rich in tradition, in reputation, in martial and socio-cultural power.

Indigo was rich in money.

"There's the arena," Red said, pointing like a peasant. I made an appreciative sound.

The Grand Arena was open-air with seating to fit eighty thousand. It was located at the Plateau's lowest point, in the valley between Mt Silver, Ashwick, and Javelin, and I knew from clansmen's stories that there were numerous viewing-towers with telescoped glass walls to artificially boost its capacity to two hundred thousand. Even from here, I could feel its Aura presence, the unleashed might of Pokemon up to the Seventh Realm every year for eighty-one years creating a mixed, violent Nexus.

I couldn't imagine living here, having to feel that every day. The Heart of the Dragon in Mt. Blackthorn was at least consistent.

"I wonder if Blue is already here," Red said cheerily. "He likes to play it up as me just being late, but he's always early to things. If he ever missed a project deadline on his academic degree I think he would throw a tantrum. Hm, maybe I could…?"

To avoid being roped into sabotaging the education of the Indigo Champion's son, I prodded Red down another line of thought. "We could check the Pokemon Center. We could read the update tag on his public profile to see when he last stepped into a Center or Gym."

"My little sister has so many creepy ideas," he said aloud. A passing trainer crossed to the other side of the street. "That part of your spy training?"

It was. "No. It's just obvious."

"Sure," he said, dragging it out obnoxiously. "If you got separated from me, how would you find me?"

His Aura was unique enough I could track it for miles. "I'd follow the explosions."

Red laughed.

The Pokemon Center was identical to the one in Blackthorn City. Indeed, it was identical to the Centers in Hoenn, Sinnoh, Unova, and recently Alola, too, all following the same blueprint, though ours lacked the advanced technology Unova was so slow to share. I hated it like all clan kids did. The Pokemon World League was a farce and they ruined everything they touched; luckily, Red seemed to agree with me about the merits of not being totally honest with the records that we were, by international law, obliged to keep of ourselves.

I omitted Razor's Pickpocket ability. I wrote down a brief description of Deino's egg but kept what grew within a mystery. No one could prove that I knew. The rest, I was honest with: I had remarkably little to hide, because I had remarkably little at all. I fed the paper into the Public Record machine and contented myself with the knowledge Lance had to do this, too, and must hate it twice as much.

Red had more to write, so I had privacy with the machine for a minute longer. Feeling around me with tendrils of Dark Aura, I made sure there was no attention my way then, quickly, printed out a copy of Lance's profile and secreted it away in the black-and-gold messenger bag Red had acquired for me in Blackthorn. It wouldn't list moves or abilities, that was confidential, but what Pokemon he had and what Realm they were in? Valuable. Even if Lance lied on it, too.

A few minutes later, Red was complaining again.

"Two months! He hasn't been scanned in two months! He got his eighth badge in Violet, so he could be anywhere in Indigo right now and we have no clues, none. He must be in isolation, training day and night with Silver, preparing to defeat me in the Conference, and we can't spy on him at all!"

"How unfortunate," I said as sincerely as I could. "I guess we're out of options then. With no one to ask, there's nothing we can do except go into isolation ourselves to train and prepare." And I won't have to deal with this Second Realm rival you're setting me against.

"You're a genius, Gold," Red noticed. "We just need to ask his father. He should be here, in the Capitol!"

We just need to what?
 
One Piece / Pathfinder 2e - My Soul For A Way Home 0-1
Got into One Piece recently, and, as I usually do, I began theorizing world-building stuff for an AU. The MC of this one is a level three Witch. If I continue, the Straw Hats would be butterflied away from going down the Alabasta route.

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My Soul For A Way Home
Chamber of Ten-Thousand Shadows
One Piece / Pathfinder 2e


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"Ashmodai, Lord of Sin, hear these words:

"This child has turned from God. This child has eaten of the Forbidden Fruit. This child has blackened her soul with tar.

"Ashmodai, Lord of Flies, hear these words:

"This child is ready to die. This child is ready to kill. This child is ready to take that step into hell.

"Ashmodai, Lord of Wroth, hear these words:

"This child will take the devil's bargain.

"Ashmodai, Lord of the Underworld, this child summons thee."

The circle of human blood glowed with an unearthly light. Lisa's breath hitched, despite herself. The radiance cast impossible shadows on the dungeon's earthen walls, twisting and writhing like a beast alive, acting out scenes of horrific wickedness. Then, black smoke rose, thick with the stench of brimstone and burning flesh. Distantly, she heard the screams of the damned and dying, rising louder and louder and louder still-

Then the light faded, the shadows died, and the smoke dispersed. Where before hellish magic had sparked in this material realm, now stood a man, blond of hair, fair of skin, the only hint of unreality being black-on-black eyes. He was dressed in cultish dark robes, stained with soot, blood, and filth. When he smiled, Lisa saw a flash of a forked tongue, long and prehensile.

"You dare summon thee, mortal?" the Devil spoke in a voice like a haunting choir, thirty parts in one. "Your soul will burn in hell before the day is done."

Lisa could feel the Devil's eyes like knives, even through the heavy black robes she wore. "This child's soul will not burn today," she said with admirable strength. "You will still fulfill her wish."

"Arrogance."

"This child has insurance."

Lisa turned around. The candles she had lit earlier flickered with a weak light, and with careful movements, careful not to disturb the Ptolemaic Seal, she lit several more. The Devil growled like a beast as a second circle was revealed, then again when Lisa turned to a new page in her grimoire and began chanting once more.

"Mammon, Lord of Greed, hear-"

In a burning flash of red a second man appeared in the dungeon. Dressed in a crisp tuxedo and sporting a clean, modern haircut, he looked more like a CEO than a denizen of Hell, save for two curling ram's horns peaking out from his dark brown hair. His eyes, blue and bright and glimmering with genuine amusement, crinkled at the corners as he gave her a handsome smile.

Behind her, Ashmodai's growl became a tired groan.

"Oh, joyous day! A new summoner!" Mammon leaned half-over the Ptolemaic Seal, the tip of his nose smoldering slightly. If anything, the proof of the Seal's magic only made the Lord of Greed smile brighter. "And one practicing the ancient magics! I didn't know there were any still around in this world. Hey, Ash, have you been keeping this cute little thing all to yourself? Tsk, tsk, brother."

"The guise of capitalistic enterprise may be more effective in this current era, but forsaking old, proven methods entirely would be a waste," Ashmodai said, haunting voice replaced with something more human. "Besides. Her family goes nuts for the aesthetic. Can you believe that is genuine human leather binding her grimoire? In 2022? I've contracted every single one of her maternal ancestors for the past two hundred fifty years or so, and half of them didn't have an actual wish. They just wanted to participate in 'real Satanism.' Easiest contracts of my unlife."

Mammon gave an envious sigh. "That sounds nice, Ash. I haven't gotten to play the whole 'wicked, shadowy Devil' role in decades. My current gig basically prints contracts and I get to wear this sweet suit, but I miss seeing that fear and horror in their eyes when they sign on the dotted line, you know? Like, I'm a Prince of Hell, not a used car salesman."

"That's most of why I do it," Ashmodai admitted. "There are easier ways to make quota, but few so nostalgic. Sometimes I leak summoning rituals on the Internet, or copy an old text and hide it in someone's inheritance, but most who do summon me off that method don't go the extra mile like humans did in the bad old days. For every summoning like this one there are nine more with pig's blood in a bathroom or behind a high school cafeteria."

"Damn, that sucks," Mammon said with genuine feeling.

"Honestly, once the occultic families like this one die out or stop believing, I think I might request a transfer to a lower-order world."

Lisa fidgeted awkwardly. Suddenly, the frankincense candles, long chanting, and weeks of bleeding into a Hydroflask all seemed very cringe. She both wished they would ignore her forever and finally get to the bargaining so she could get out of this basement and scream into her pillow.

Eventually, the two Devils' shoptalk came to an end with a promise to meet up for drinks after they bought her soul. They turned to her, Ashmodai's full-black eyes and Mammon's kind blue trained on her form, and Lisa flushed bright red. The occultic rituals gave her a structure to follow so she could talk more-or-less normally, but she just knew she was going to start stuttering if they expected her to speak more than one or two sentences.

"I suppose you have a desire strong enough to trade your soul for?" Ashmodai said more than asked. "Your crude attempt to leverage supply and demand has failed. Neither of us will accept less than your soul. All you've done is make a scene."

Lisa quietly died.

"Now, now, brother of mine," Mammon said in a chiding tone. "I may not have much use for her outside her soul, but I like her verve, and, being honest, winning a contract out from under you is as nostalgic a prospect for me as this occultic summoning was. I can be convinced, given her wish is small enough and her offer earnest enough."

Ashmodai sighed. "No honor among Devils, as always."

Mammon held his hands out in a welcoming gesture. "Well, darling summoner? Your wish is my command."

Lisa had half a mind to banish them both and start over with the third Devil whose True Name lies recorded in her family's grimoire. If she did it soon, then Belial wouldn't have any way of knowing about tonight's summonings. She had already drawn… maybe too much blood recently, though, and she wasn't fool enough to summon a Devil without a Ptolemaic Seal. She may not be under any kind of time pressure, but if she put off this wish any longer than she would burn with guilt.

So. She just had to put her embarassment to the side, speak clearly, and hope her oh-so-clever double summoning didn't ruin her chances of keeping her soul intact after this was all over.

"I want my sister back," Lisa said quietly. "She was abducted two weeks ago, and the police haven't made any progress. I don't know if she's still alive. I would trade my soul for her safe return, or, if she's… if she's dead, her resurrection, but she w-wouldn't want me to make that trade. So. I can offer anything and everything besides that."

"True Name and blood sample?" Mammon asked. "I can ask the World Network for her location with that. If she's in this world or passed on, I'll be able to tell you. Free of charge."

Lisa's heart leapt. She had a small bottle of her sister's blood – her family being what it is, they all had samples of each other's blood in case of emergencies like this one – and within five seconds she had grabbed it with trembling figures off the floor besides her and gently tossed it to the Devil.

Giving a True Name was more dangerous. Mammon had specified there would be no cost, and while the Ptolemaic Seal enforced truthfulness, it didn't prohibit dishonesty. If she was going to give this Devil power over her sister's soul, she needed more insurance than that.

"I will trade you my sister's True Name. In exchange, you will trade me complete and honest information as to my sister's location, as well as a promise that you will never utter the name except in the case of future bargains, nor will you share it with another through other means."

"I accept this bargain."

Since she knew there would be two Devils in her basement, she had made sure to have paper and ink nearby to subtly share knowledge like this. She wrote her sister's Name in a shaky hand and, making sure not to let Ashmodai see it, revealed it to the Lord of Greed.

She always knew, intellectually, that she would one day watch a Devil perform hellish magics. She had already caught a glimpse earlier, when Ashmodai had made his arrival much more dramatic than Mammon, but this was different. …It was as mundane and casual as the rest of her ritual had been since Mammon's summoning. No hand gestures, magic circles burnt in the air, or ominous chanting; he just stared at the wall with a glazed look for seven or eight seconds before straightening.

"In accordance with the bargain, your sister's soul is in transit between worlds, Heavensward."

She took a shaky breath. Grace was dead, then.

"I can resurrect her," Mammon said, "but her soul's made it pretty far. It would cost me a fair amount of my power. That power would be more than made up for by taking a bite out of your soul, of course, but you claimed you wouldn't trade that. If you had summoned me closer to her death, I might have traded for favors or a promise of ritual murder, but as it is…" he shrugged.

Lisa was desperate. "I had a relative trade for wealth, once- I can offer eighteen million dollars."

Mammon smiled. "Do you think I require human money?"

"I can promise years of servitude. Ritual m-murder, too- I will do that."

"Servitude is an interesting offer, but I have hundreds of thousands of employees on starvation wages. I haven't traded for servitude since the eighteenth century. And a hundred souls offered through sacrifice aren't worth one given freely with consent, and you, my dear, don't have the will nor the wit to kill half so many."

Ashmodai cut in. "You're building up to something. Cut to it, Mammon."

"That's sabotage, brother!" Mammon cried, ignoring Ashmodai's muttered 'turnabout is fair play.' "But, yes, I do have an offer to make. See, I lost something of mine a while back, and am willing to trade your sister's resurrection for this treasure returned to me. How much did that adorable book tell you about the nature of Creation?"

"Very little," Lisa admitted. Her heart was beating fast, hopeful.

"Creation is comprised of countless worlds, some full of people and some empty, some large and some small. On one end of Creation, Hell and its agents, us Devils- on the other, Heaven and its jerkwad Angels. We're locked in a war as old as time, feuding over the fates of these worlds and the souls of the people within them." Mammon's voice had taken on an almost theatrical tone. "I used to be assigned to one of these worlds. Indeed, the very world of my birth: Saphiron, though few who call it home now would recognize the name."

"This is a foolish trade, Mammon," Ashmodai interjected. "Empowering an extradimensional portal for a slim chance of recovering your remnant is not cost-effective."

"Spoken almost like a CEO, Ash! Are you angling to switch rackets? I don't think you can work the suit like I can, I'm afraid." Mammon's smile was bright, earnest, and for once, sinister. "I don't except you to understand this need I have. You were able to recover all your Fruits before His Wickedness transferred us to Earth. I can still feel mine, like an itch I can't scratch, or a cut that won't heal. Worse, I can still feel the mark it's left on my Sin, that terrible absence. I am willing to expend quite a lot of effort having it returned to me and, well. I can ensure that our lovely little summoner goes to quite the effort fulfilling her end of this bargain."

Ashmodai turned and gave Lisa a dismissive look. "Enforcing her obedience is a trivial matter; it's her competence I question. Saphiron is quite near to Hell. If you expend a great deal of power translocating her halfway across Creation only for her to instantly die to a Devil candidate, I would laugh at you for decades."

"So judgmental! Have you ever known me to make a hopeless trade?"

Ashmodai's nod of concession was grudging.

"Anyways." Mammon turned back to Lisa. "Unlike a battleground world like Earth, Saphiron has long since fallen to the forces of Hell. An Angel hasn't sailed its waters in centuries. The metaphysics are fairly complicated, but in a nutshell: the closer to Heaven a world is, the tighter and more numerous its physical laws are; the closer to Hell, the looser and fewer. Worlds Heavensward of this one often prohibit deception, or nonconsensual physical contact, or certain words. Saphiron is the opposite: there, its physical laws are more like… suggestions. This gave us some exciting methods of trading for souls that we haven't been able to use in this world for a long time."

"Fruits… like Eden?" I wonder.

"Exactly! Essentially, a Devil would take some of their Sin and infuse a fruit with it. Then, if a human ate this fruit, they would be trading their soul for the power of the Sin inside it. Not only would the Devil who made the Fruit be able to claim the soul of the user after their death, but the Sin would corrupt and darken their soul, setting a beautiful foundation for Devilification. The power it granted in life would linger after their death, and the warlike nature of Saphiron would sharpen their wills and harden their hearts. It's well known across Creation that Saphiron produces some of the most powerful, wicked, and clever Devils. Even better, the Devil Fruit would regenerate after its user died, meaning this method of soul-collecting and Devilish propogation was entirely passive! I loved being assigned to Saphiron. I never had to do anything."

"So… you want to send me to this world. Find the fruit. Ritually offer it to you. And you'll resurrect my sister?"

"No. I'll resurrect your sister right now." Mammon smiled, and Lisa saw his forked tongue. "If you find and retrieve my Fruit, then I'll return you to Earth, to this very basement. The two of you can live your happy human lives together, souls intact and untouched. If you fail, your soul belongs to me. I'll eat your soul if you die pathetically, and make a Devil out of you if you show potential. Understand?"

"I do."

The thought of going to another world, a Devil-described hellworld, navigating dangerous seas no angel dared to sail to retrieve a remnant of a Devil's power was terrifying. Lisa was a sheltered rich girl who never had to work for anything because of the lingering effects of her ancestor's bargains. A part of her knew that Mammon's trade was just Ashmodai's with extra steps: her sister's resurrection for Lisa's soul. The transdimensional voyage was a shot in the dark by Mammon to get something more valuable to him than a single soul, and a cold comfort to Lisa that maybe, maybe she could fulfill her years-old promise to her sister that she wouldn't trade her soul for anything.

Lisa painted those Ptolemaic Seals with her blood with the promise that she wouldn't trade her soul in her head and the understanding that she absolutely would in her heart. Perhaps Mammon knew that; perhaps he didn't, and this more convoluted trade was his way of taking a soul that wasn't for sale. Clever, if so. Lisa wanted to hate him for it, but all she could feel was the relief that her sister would be back and alive and she could hug her and apologize and watch anime with her like she had always promised she would and never did.

So. Really, there was no need to stall and mull the offer over any. She knew what she would say, Mammon knew, and Ashmodai knew.

"I will ritually offer your Devil Fruit to you, offering my soul as collateral should I fail. In exchange, you will resurrect my sister and return her to this house today, as well as transport to Saphiron and a means of locating the Devil Fruit, and returning me to this house should I succeed."

"I accept this bargain."

Mammon's blue eyes gleamed, and Lisa could feel something cold and dark grip her everything, seeping through her skin and grasping her heart in a vicegrip. With the bargain made, Mammon could now cast magic on her so long as the spell was in accordance with the bargain. She was being transported to Saphiron- right the fuck now.

She was still in her cultist robes. She didn't have any weapons or food or supplies. She hadn't said goodbye to Grace yet. She didn't word the bargain correctly-

"Why would he provide you closure when such a thing would only make you fight less hard to return home?" Ashmodai asked condescendingly. "Idiot."

"It's called the Gum-Gum Fruit," Mammon said with an air of great amusement. "I do hope you succeed. But if you fail, that's fine too. Good luck!"

Lisa fell.
 
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