When Heroes Die

Verism 2.03
A/N: Unsure if I am happy with this chapter, it's undergone several severe revisions but if I didn't publish it I would probably just keep poking at it.


"Whilst Inevitable Doom is a finite resource, Providence is not. That is why one should always spread the ashes of one's enemies across several kingdoms. Heroes will always find a way to claw themselves back, if they are given a chance."
– Dread Empress Vindictive III


In the aftermath of the second fight against the Artist, we all agreed it would be better if we made ourselves scarce from Hedges. We had been fairly out of the way during the fight, but staying in one place was just asking for trouble. We couldn't be sure if our fight was detectable from a distance by any of the more talented Praesi Wizards.

It was much easier for me to maintain esoteric effects related to the idea of absence now. I could maintain a perception field around us without even really focusing on it. It bothered me. If I ever ran into another demon, I would need to be much more careful. I didn't want to accidentally turn myself into a completely different idea.

We departed Hedges and travelled up to Harrow, staying there only briefly. Shortly after arrival, we departed for the Duchy of Daoine. Daoine was nominally a client state of Callow, but nobody actually treated it like that. It was ruled by its own Duchess Keegan, and she enforced her own laws through the Watch. Despite the situation, so long as the Duchy retained the pretence of being a part of the Empire, the Calamities were satisfied. Our first stop was Caith.

We hadn't seen the Artist again, although we were all on alert for him.

It was evening and the air was hot and clammy. All three of us were seated in the wagon. Spring rain fell down from above, which I was actively working to filter out. It was a constant strain on me. I could feel the world pushing back as I did so, and it left me feeling irate.

"Try again, girlie. Shoot your shot. See if it works."

Concentrating, I did as he asked. Focusing on the heavily damaged rat in front of us, I tried to mend its wounds. Cancerous tumours rapidly started to spread.

I tried not to sigh.

It was frustrating. At this point, I had given a lot of rats cancer. Probably more than the number of people that Panacea had threatened to give cancer. It didn't help that even though the rain wasn't falling on us, I felt like a wet cat. I could feel it falling on the barrier I had up around us, like a constant poking sensation against an invisible limb.

Max undid the damage.

"And again."

There was a thump and all of us were jostled as the wheel of the wagon went over a particularly large rock. I winced as my stump knocked the side of the wagon and a splinter was lodged in. Roland mumbled in his sleep. I had no idea how he was sleeping through the weather, but somehow he managed.

Looking at the wound, I had an idea. It was one that should have occurred earlier to me. Something we really should have tested before.

I pulled out the splinter.

"Can you heal this?" I proffered my arm towards him.

Crawling over, Max put his hand on the injury and concentrated on it. Then he shook his head.

"Come to think of it, I should have realized that earlier. Your whole body is fucked, isn't it? I bet you can't actually die, except for if a priest or hero blows you. Not that we're going to try that."

Taking everything else into account, it didn't come as a surprise.

"Yeah, I don't like the idea of testing my mortality either," I replied.

I could certainly still feel pain.

"I think if you get damaged, your body will fix itself over time," he looked at me searchingly for a moment, "I don't think you're ageing either."

"Well, at least I don't have to worry about old age," I feigned enthusiasm.

Just heroes, priests and diabolists.

"Now, back to your training," he admonished.

Mumbling under my breath, I got back to it.

About an hour later, the vague shape of the Caith walls could be made out. They rose thirty feet in the air and, in the rain, seemed to loom. Roland had woken up and was sitting beside us. Slowly, we drew up close near the gate.

It was closed.

I could just barely make out the figure of a member of the Watch on the walls above, lit by a lamp.

"There," I pointed the figure out to Roland.

"Good evening, could you be so kind as to open the gate for us!" Roland shouted out.

I wasn't sure if they would be able to hear us over the downpour.

"No entry until dawn!" A voice shouted back. It was a woman's voice and she sounded irate. Considering the weather, I couldn't blame her.

"I told you we should have stopped at that rest house," I grumbled under my breath.

"I apologise, Taylor. I hope there is no bruising." Roland looked sheepishly my way.

"It's fine," I waved my hand at him absently.

Turning around the cart, we started to make our way back to the rest house. It was an hour away, so now we needed to endure even more of the sheer misery of having to sit outside during the downpour.

As they lethargically plodded their way forwards, our mules looked like I felt.

Another quarter of an hour passed before conversation resumed.

"Say Taylor," Maxime began, "now that we're not in Callow. Could you show me something from your home?"

I looked to my left, meeting his sea green eyes.

"The silk clothes don't count?"

He shrugged.

"They're nice, but you can get them here with enough coin," he grinned at me, "you told us you came from a place that sounds like the gnomes. Show me gnome weapons."

Ever since the fight with the Absence demon, I had stopped thinking of what I could do as replicating powers. It was more like I could… shape matter into anything I had a good enough understanding of. I couldn't actually create anything, even when I threw beams of light, the light came from somewhere. But even if what I was trying to make was abstract, so long as I was familiar enough with it, I could turn something into it.

The others had given me grief for a full on week after I had turned a pile of dust into the feeling of regret just to test if I could. It turns out, you can make a lot of regret out of dust.

I knew a lot about weaving clothes out of silk. Enough to turn things into it. Replacing all of our clothing with clothing made out of silk had been something I had as soon as I realized I could. I didn't think it would offer much protection against any of the real threats in Calernia, but just having clothes properly fitted for me that I liked dramatically improved my mood. Unfortunately, I had needed to match the local styles, but that didn't take away from my sheer joy at the discovery.

It felt like I had something from home.

It was draining to do even though I was familiar with the process, but well worth it in my mind.

There were many small things I knew enough about to make, forks, spoons, general utensils. Modern combat knives were a big one. Dwarven steel was rubbish and kept breaking, but up until recently I didn't have a good replacement.

"Are you sure? Guns make a lot of noise."

"The deluge is so tumultuous that the sound will most certainly be drowned out," Roland stated dubiously.

Considering he hadn't ever heard one, I thought that him commenting on the noise was out of place. We were in the middle of nowhere though so...

Focusing on the idea of a fully loaded handgun, I tried to force one into existence. I had to put a lot of effort into manifesting it. The shape, the individual components. I had handled one enough that I felt confident I could do it and if anything would convince them about my origins, it would. Sometimes, I felt like they were just humouring me.

Soil from the ground rose up and started to change, eventually forming into the shape of a gun. It fell into my outstretched hand. The effort left me fatigued, but I doubted we would be in a fight soon.

"I'm not sure if it's safe to fire this," I admitted, handing it over to max. "I probably don't know enough about a gun to make the barrel shape right."

He took it curiously, then started to move the muzzle towards his eye so he could look down the barrel.

"Don't do that!" I said sharply, grabbing his arm.

"What's wrong, girlie? I was trying to see what's inside." he sounded puzzled.

"That's like putting a knife blade against your eye," I explained.

"How about you show us how it works, Taylor?"

"Stop the wagon, then."

Roland did so, bringing the mules to a halt. They glared at him.

Taking a moment, I concentrated and pulled up a target. The mud twenty feet to our left off the road formed up into a two-foot wide red brick, with rings carved on it. The surrounding grass was short, so it stood out.

"See that target?" I pointed.

It was hard to make out with the rain, so I wouldn't be surprised if they could not.

"We do," they both agreed.

"Can you float this thing away from us, point the muzzle at the target, and then pull the lever. I'm not sure that I can do that much at once," I admitted.

Taking into account the active perception effect and filtering out the rain, it was simply too much multitasking for me to handle. If I dropped the rain filter, I could probably do it, but I had no intention of becoming wet.

"If you would indicate to me where the muzzle is, I shall do so," Roland volunteered.

"The end that Max was about to look down."

"Why not do it ourselves, Taylor?" Max asked.

"Because I have no idea how badly I messed up making it."

"This course of action seems reasonable."

The gun lifted into the air, floated away from us, aimed and then fired.

Bang!

To my surprise, it seemed I had done a good enough job that it didn't fail catastrophically.

A small hole carved itself into the middle of the brick.

"Now let's go inspect the target," I recommended.

All three of us climbed off the cart. I grimaced as my boots squelched in the muddy earth below. Arriving at the target, both of them looked subdued.

The bullet didn't penetrate very far at all, just putting a minor dent in. I hadn't expected it to. For people that had only had mages as a comparison, though, it must have come as a surprise.

"How easily obtainable were these weapons?"

"There were background checks you needed to go through if you wanted one legally, but otherwise they weren't hard to obtain. Guns like these were mass-produced. That's just a handgun. There were much more powerful guns than it."

They asked me a few more questions about them, before we climbed back onto the wagon. I disassembled both the gun and the block. I wasn't sure just how much surveillance the gnomes were doing, but I wouldn't take the risk.

We arrived at the rest house close to an hour later. Roland and I climbed off and made our way to the door, Max would handle the wagon.

Roland opened the door, then called out. "Would you grant us leave to enter your establishment?"

"Fine, fine, all of you come in," a woman's voice responded from somewhere inside.

Entering, I looked around. The face of the establishment was like an inviting restaurant. Oak tables were arranged neatly in a grid, four by four, with space to move between them. Supporting pillars rose to meet the ceiling and on the left, the dull yellow glow of flames flickered from a hearth.

Taking off my muddy boots and leaving them at a rack by the door, I made my way and sat on the chair closest to the fire. Roland sat down on the chair to my right.

That was when the owner walked in.

The girl was dark skinned and looked to be in her early twenties. She was short, only coming up to my nose if I stood up, with long, wavy brown hair and blue eyes. She had breasts that could only be described as voluptuous, practically spilling out of her work outfit.

Before I had even realized it, my head had hit the table.

"Nope," I muttered under my breath.

"Is something the matter, Taylor?" Roland asked quizzically.

"Are the two of you new to Daoine?" her voice took on a sotto tone.

"Indeed we are. We intend to remain here for some time," Roland replied.

At least, we would be looking for answers about me here first. We suspected that the laws that the Calamities had placed on magic would be looser in Daoine, and it would be easier to find answers.

"Well, take heed. There are fell goings-on around Caith during the night. People have been going missing. Best to only go about during the day," she advised.

And there it was. Exactly what I had expected. It seemed we were in a story.

With time, I had come to build up a picture of how being a hero worked in Calernia. Stories were powerful. They were almost like a global master effect, to the extent that it disturbed me. So long as Roland was performing actions that matched his Role, we could count on lucky coincidences to occur.

"Do you have a map of the area?" I asked.

I was willing to bet I had some idea how this story went as well. At this point, I was expecting one of four things. Slavers, vampires, zombies or the Artist. I wasn't even sure if vampires existed, but with how caught up in stories this world was, it wouldn't surprise me if they did.

She frowned at me, irritated.

"I'm afraid not. I think you could purchase one at Azimuth's emporium. It's near the main gate, just inside Caith's city walls. Now, do the two of you want anything to eat?"

And there was the next step of our "quest."

"Three of us," I corrected her.

Her frown turned into a scowl.

If it weren't for the bad weather and the constant sense that I didn't belong, I wouldn't have been as annoyed by it as I was. I mentally reminded myself that just because she was a plot device, it didn't mean she wasn't a person as well. She had thoughts and feelings of her own.

The rules of this world are completely bullshit.

She took our orders and went off, Max came in shortly afterwards and sat down beside us.

"What's the matter, girlie?" Max asked.

"We have a problem."

"Now Taylor, let us not jump to conclusions without more proof," Roland argued.

"I'll bet…something that there is a necromancer in the city killing people and raising undead," I replied.

It was the only version of the story I could think of that fit Roland's role. It could also be the Artist, but he didn't outright disappear people. Unless the people were me.

"Now, that's very specific, girlie. You that certain?"

"Absolutely, it seems like the kind of story that fits."

"Why did you inquire as to where we could purchase a map?" Roland asked.

"So we could try to narrow down where the culprit is. Make a note of where the disappearances happened, find a pattern."

I was betting on the graveyard, if it was a necromancer. It would probably be the undertaker, too.

Our meal arrived soon after. We paid for both the meal and a room for the night, then went to sleep soon after.


Arriving at Azimuth's emporium, I rang a bell hanging outside. "Just a moment!" A shrill voice called out.

Moments later, he unlocked the door.

"Come right in and hurry up, don't let in any of the rain," he groused.

An old, weedy looking man came and opened the door. At the front of the store was a desk stacked with paperwork. Around the store was a sprawling mess of shelves. The items on them almost appeared random, it was hard to tell if there was any sorting system to it.

"An acquaintance of ours assured us that we could purchase a map here," Roland said as he walked in behind me.

"A map, you say? Fine! I should have one in here somewhere, while I find it, take a look around and see if there's anything else you want. Don't try to take anything, I'll know." The man harrumphed, then went off.

The three of us all went to a stack of books on the right and started browsing through them. I doubted there would be anything to help me, but it was worth a shot.

A few moments later, and Roland let out an exclamation of excitement.

"It seems fortune has favoured us. This is a Praesi magical treatise," he exclaimed.

"On what?" I asked.

"Dispersing necromantic rituals," his excitement died out.

"It's a necromancer, then," I declared.

There was another lucky coincidence coming to aid Roland in his quest.

A part of me felt like heroism meant less in this world, because it wasn't truly earned. The luck of heroes actually existed here. Heroes were expected to win, most of the stories I had heard favoured them. Another part of me felt strangely jealous. What would Earth Bet have been like, if it worked the same way?

Maybe the fight against Scion wouldn't have cost us as much as it did.

Maybe we wouldn't have had to fight Scion at all.

The man arrived not long after, and we completed our purchase. Leaving, we made our way to our wagon and then took a moment to talk. Max shrouded us in a ward against eavesdropping, making it impossible for others to listen in.

"You really believe it's a necromancer, girlie?"

"I'm confident in it. Confident enough, I don't even think we needed the map. We should head towards the cemetery tonight and just cut out all the bits in the middle," I replied.

"You're not usually this reckless, Taylor, what's wrong?" Max asked.

He was right. I was being reckless. Why?

"You're right," I frowned. "It's the city. Being in it is off-putting. I can feel the wards from the city walls pushing against my senses. It makes me want to act. Let's do this properly, one step at a time."

I hadn't even noticed how being in a big city affected me. It was worrying. It was just one of the many ways in which Creation was telling me to leave.

"So we continue as planned. Find a place to rent, settle in and start making inquiries for you." Max said.

"That sounds good."

We planned to be in Caith for a while, best not to make a scene on the day we had just arrived.​
 
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The calamities know they are in callow 100%. I bet they are just letting them be since they haven't started ruining city property.
 
Verism 2.04
"One should note that the light at the end of the tunnel comes with strings attached. Rather than accepting them, I chose to remain in the dark."
– Translation of the Kabbalis Book of Darkness, widely attributed to the young Dead King


I opened my eyes as the early morning light shone through a crack in the shutters. We were staying in a somewhat dingy but otherwise serviceable residence. It wasn't as nice as where I would have liked to stay, being in a somewhat middle class part of town, but it drew less attention to us. A few days had passed since our arrival, and we had taken our time properly settling in.

We had made some preliminary inroads into finding out what was happening in Caith, but were being cautious in how we went about it. Unlike when we met the Artist the first time, this city was big and there were definitely Eyes of the Empire operating in it. We were being more thorough in this investigation than the last one.

I focused, exerting effort to clean myself and pushed against the world, then floated my grey silk shirt and trousers over and proceeded to change out of my night clothes.

After putting on my glasses, I was ready to face the morning.

A private bath would have been nicer. Not for the purposes of cleaning, just for relaxation. Unfortunately, that would be a bit too high class for what we were pretending to be, and I didn't feel like taking a public one.

Money wasn't really a problem for us any more. When you could turn piles of dirt into almost anything you liked, it stopped holding any meaning. That didn't mean we acted that way, though. We still took on jobs and put on the pretence of needing it. Living as if money has no value would certainly attract attention.

Leaving my room, I descended the narrow stairwell to the second and then the first floor. The other two were already seated at a narrow table. The entire place felt claustrophobic, like those small British matchbox houses I would sometimes see on television.

"Morning girlie," Max turned my way cheerfully, then gestured to the table.

On the table was a plate containing breakfast. Sitting down on his right, I focused carefully and started mentally slicing up the bacon and eggs. Then I picked up my fork.

"Good morning," I replied.

"Sooner or later, I expect that you will ruin a plate when you handle your food that way," Roland commented.

I shrugged.

"I can always make another plate."

Max guffawed, as if he found it to be a particularly funny joke.

"During the course of today, I shall endeavour to make connections in the criminal underbelly. I would appreciate it if Taylor could make inquiries as to where disappearances have been occurring, and then investigate the local stores to see if they have any texts which may be of use to her. Maxime, would you be amenable with investigating the local cemetery in order to alleviate Taylor's concerns?" Roland pontificated.

I took a moment to translate what Roland said.

"Now that's just insulting. I'm not that old. Sending me off to the cemetery already?" Max joked.

"We're splitting up?" I asked, just to be sure.

"Indeed, although regardless of what interesting diversions you happen upon, all of us should return here before the sun finds its bed," Roland confirmed.

"I don't like this," I denied, "Max and I should at least stick together. It might be a waste of time, but better to be safe than end up regretting it."

"We were informed that the disappearances only occur after dark, making the best use of our daylight seems like the proper course of action."

I finished my breakfast, mentally cleaned all of our dinnerware and then floated it away, putting it where it belonged.

"I'm with Taylor here, Roland. We can look at the cemetery together, tonight."

"I feel like this is a misuse of our time, but if the two of you are in accord then I shall agree to it," Roland acquiesced.

Reflecting on what he said, I focused more on the details of what he wanted us to do.

"You want the two of us to try to map out the disappearances?" I checked.

"Indeed. If you can, also look into who has disappeared and see if you can find a commonality between them."

Well, it seemed I was back to old investigative work.

I floated my black boots over from beside the door and proceeded to put them on. I had cleaned them when we arrived, but I doubted they would stay clean for long.

Exiting the building, Roland split off from us. I allowed a cloud of notice-me-not to fall over the two of us, then prepared to head off. Max and I started to head towards the nicer parts of town, where the Watch patrolled in force. My boots clicked against the cobbled path below my feet as we walked between the tall, narrow buildings lining either side of the road.

"Say, girlie…"

"Yes?"

"Did Roland say how he planned to find the people he's looking for?"

I took a moment to think about it.

In our haste to argue against the part of his plan that involved the two of us doing something reckless, we seemed to have missed that.

"No, he didn't," I admitted. "I don't think going off to meet with them on his own is a good idea, either."

I knew why he wanted to talk with the city's criminal element. If the crooks were willing to deal with us at all, then we could start looking into finding a fence we could trust with finding the books we actually wanted. Finding out more about how I arrived in Calernia would probably involve looking into books on how to summon demons and devils. Even if the Black Knight hadn't put a ban on the selling of magical texts, that would still be outlawed here.

However, the enforcement of the ban was likely laxer in Daoine than in Callow.

"Do you think we will need to rescue him?"

I hoped not. Whatever Roland ended up doing, please let it not cause us trouble.

"Possibly. I should have been the one to make the connections as well," I added.

"No," Max denied. "It fits his purpose."

I wasn't sure if negotiating with thieves did fit the Role of the Rogue Sorcerer, but I could possibly see the connection.

"It might, but I have more experience," I argued.

Conversation petered out as we arrived at a thoroughfare that was busy even at these early hours of the morning. Stalls were set up all around it, and there was both horse and foot traffic making its way through. To our left, the west gate that we had entered through could be seen in the distance.

Scanning the crowd, I spotted one of the members of the Watch. It was a woman clad in hardened leather armour with an open helmet. Her eyes roamed over the crowd, with the careful examination of a predator in search of acceptable prey.

Just the kind of person I was looking for.

"Her," I pointed her out to Max, then slowly began reducing the potency of the effect I had around us.

"What makes you think that dicking with the Watch is a good idea, girlie?"

"I'm not going to cause trouble, just ask her what places to stay away from."

If anyone had a grasp on where to avoid, it would be the Watch. As far as I understood it, they were like elite soldiers. It surprised me that they seemed to be filling the role of the city's police, but I wasn't about to turn down a chance at narrowing down our suspect. I suspected they were only acting in that capacity right now due to the disappearances, it seemed like a task they wouldn't be doing otherwise.

I didn't want to ask about the problem directly, in case that attracted attention. Instead, I would ask about which parts of the city were considered unsafe.

I approached the woman. "Excuse me-"

"Is something the matter? Murder, Rape, Kidnapping, Assault?" She snapped out.

"No, but-"

"Then piss off uraind," she interjected. "I have a job to do, and you're interrupting."

I didn't know what that meant, but it sounded insulting.

"I just want to-"

"Kid, whatever you want, fuck off and ask someone else. You look like trouble on two legs, and I want nothing to do with it."

Well.

It seemed that avenue of investigation was cut off.

Max guffawed loudly from beside me, "I told you that was a shit idea, girlie."

We tried a couple more of the members of the Watch, but they were all equally dismissive of us. From what I started to gather, it was more because of our background than anything else. When the Deoraithe approached them, they seemed positively charming in comparison.

With the first idea shot down, we spent some time asking the locals on the street for the lay of the land. Max suggested we asked around at the local taverns to build a better picture, but that would have to wait until the evening. They didn't see much traffic at this time in the morning.

The little we did learn through happenstance started to paint a more disturbing picture. All the people who disappeared were girls who were younger than twenty. They didn't share any other traits between them that I noticed. We marked down the reported last sightings as we went on the map we had acquired but… They had been abducted from all over the city, even the richer sections. Maybe I had been wrong about it being a necromancer, and it was slavers after all.

That also made little sense, surely they would pick people who wouldn't be missed? I was puzzled.

After a brief stop for lunch, we moved on to my primary goal. Seeing if any of the local stores sold any books that could help me. It was unlikely, but it was best to look first before dismissing the option entirely.

We started from the western side of the city. Arriving at Azimuth's emporium again, I could feel the walls of the city pressing right against me. I rang the bell. At first, there was no response. After the second ring, I heard shuffling from inside.

"You lot, again?" the gregarious man called out as he opened the door, "didn't find all you needed yesterday. Fine, come in, come in."

It's like he's trying to drive away customers.

"We're here to browse the books," I said.

"The children's stories are that way," he pointed a shrivelled finger to a shelf on the far right.

"What?" I was confused.

"It's obvious that's what you're after. Kid on the way, and you want something to keep them occupied."

For a moment, I just gaped like a fish. I wasn't even fat! I was still as thin as a stick, just like I had been the day I arrived here. How did he reach that conclusion?

"The father is that friend of yours who isn't here with you, obviously. Now go on, get browsing."

"Girlie, when were you going to tell me that the two of you were boning," Max cackled.

"Roland and I are not in a relationship!" I stated, somewhat indignantly.

I didn't even like him that way. He was a good friend, but there was no physical or romantic attraction. Despite all the time we spent on the road, he was effeminate, I liked men who had some muscle to them.

Somewhat annoyed, I started browsing the stacks. It quickly became clear that I wouldn't be struck by providence the way that Roland had been. Eventually we did end up buying some children's stories on the Fae, but only because they might actually be useful to me if I ever ran into them again. Stories were weapons against them, and I wasn't sure if my open invitation to the Summer Court was real or not.

The two of us moved from store to store, but no progress was made. Empty-handed, we headed back to our current place of residence and arrived a few hours past noon. Roland was not back yet, so I took some time to continue detailing my past life in my journal.

"Had any success?" I asked as Roland came in. He was grinning, his cheeks flush with success.

"Through a fortuitous encounter, I was able to make inroads with the local Thieves' Guild-"

It's always a fortuitous encounter.

"Wait," I interjected, "they actually call themselves the Thieves' Guild."

"That's right, girlie."

"Is there an Assassin's Guild too?" my pitch of voice rose as I spoke.

"Indeed, but the activities of the Assassin's Guild are not pertinent to this discussion." His lips curled up in distaste when saying their name. "The Thieves were willing to entertain my inquiries for a substantial sum," he looked my way meaningfully, "but were only able to provide the barest of scraps on the disappearances."

Just go with it, Taylor, it's Calernia. It makes sense that there is a Thieves' and Assassin's Guild. Just think of them as a gang. The fact that they call themselves that is completely normal here.

It surprised me after learning that there was an Evil Empire with genuine Legions of Terror that I could still be surprised. I would have thought after I found out that one of their tyrants had tried to steal Callow's weather of all things that nothing would be able to make me blink any more, but clearly I was wrong.

"What books did you ask them about?"

"I raised the subject of acquiring magical tomes, not limited to a single subject," Roland explained.

That…was bolder than I would have liked, but at least he didn't ask them for books on diabolism.

"Seems risky just asking them right out. Some of them are probably Praesi spies. Why didn't you try feeling them out with something safer first?"

"I'm with Taylor here," Max nodded along as he spoke.

"It is quite possible that you are correct," Roland agreed. "However, I deemed the risk to be acceptable."

I…wasn't happy with him making a call about our safety without asking us first.

"And how did you decide that?" I challenged.

"Whilst the nature of our request is almost certain to raise eyebrows, it is highly unlikely we will be seen as heroes, merely ambitious wizards," he explained.

While I could sort of see his logic, I didn't think that made us any safer. It was still attracting unnecessary attention.

"This is not okay. You made a decision without asking the rest of us that impacts all of our safety."

"Taylor was right, this wasn't your call."

Roland looked upset at being criticized.

"I was making an effort on the behal-"

"We know," I cut him off, "and I really appreciate the intent. But maybe ask our opinions before making big decisions?"

Roland nodded stiffly.

"We're a group, we should decide things together. That means we talk to each other about them first. Making choices like this on your own without talking about it with us is how problems start. I know that you're the leader of our group, Roland, but this affects all of us." I paused my speech, taking time to gather my thoughts. Max was nodding his agreement.

Then, out of the corner of my eyes, I noticed that the sun was setting. I could see its dying rays shining through the still open door. Properly talking over the issues I had with this would take a while.

We wouldn't be able to investigate the graveyard if we did that.

I didn't like putting the conversation off, but people's lives were potentially at stake.

"We'll come back to this later, it's important. For now, tell us what you learned about the disappearances."

"I can state with a high degree of certainty that none of the graveyard's staff are part of a necromantic cabal. The graveyard is allegedly run by an elderly lady, not long past seventy summers, who has called Caith her home for the entire duration of her life," Roland expounded.

"I think we should check her out regardless," Max added.

"Anything else?"

"A corpse was discovered in one of the downtrodden locales within the bounds of Caith," his lips pressed into a distasteful frown. "It was exsanguinated."

"Great," I muttered, "now I have no idea what it is."

"What's that, girlie? Admitting your first guess may be off?"

The book had made me believe it was a necromancer. The choices of targets had opened the possibility of human trafficking, and now the corpse made it look like a vampire. All that was left now was for a painting to show up, and I would bet on the Artist.

"Never mind," I muttered, "let's go take a look."

I put in place the strongest perception field I could manage without straining myself, and we made our way out. It didn't take long for us to arrive at the graveyard, where Max and I started poking around. I felt a little guilty snooping through somebody else's possessions like this, but we were doing it for a good cause.

Roland was distracting the lady who ran the place in the meanwhile. Once she had let us in, I had removed ourselves from her perception entirely. At this point, I thought this was a waste. Roland was right, it was unlikely she was the culprit.

Still, I wouldn't drop my guard.

Hours later, we started making our way back to our residence empty-handed. We had thoroughly checked the place, but had nothing to show for it.

That was when we heard a shrill scream coming from somewhere to our right.

The sun had set, and it was clouded over, the only light guiding us was from a spell which Max was maintaining. The glow it gave out was dull and did little to light the way forward, but it was enough that I didn't feel the need to make a light of my own.

"That way," I pointed, then started to run, shrouded in a veil of secrecy.

The footfalls of the others followed behind me. Sprinting down the alley, I came to an intersection. Taking a guess, I went left. There were a few winding turns before I came to a dead end. The three of us retraced our steps, then took the other path.

Soon it became clear that the source of the scream was gone.

"Girlie, can you do something to see around us?" Max asked, "Praesi sorcerers can scry, but we don't know how it works."

Frowning, I thought it over. When I still thought of what I was doing as replicating powers, I had tried many thinker powers and none of them had worked. Eventually I had given up the effort as futile. I hadn't experimented with sensing the world around me, though. I had seen enough that I didn't want to see for one lifetime, to not want to invade everyone's privacy a second time around.

The failed attempts at other thinker powers had at worst given me a headache, so I saw no harm in making the attempt.

"I don't know. Give me a moment, I'll try."

I focused on the impression of seeing everything. Memories of the fight with Scion were still burned into my mind, and I doubted they would ever go away. It wasn't scrying, but it was the closest comparison I could think of. So long as I was able to see a person struggling against an assailant, I would have a lead for us to go on.

To my surprise, instead of finding no purchase, my will struck against a barrier. That meant it was something I could do. If there had been no sense of resistance at all, I would have known that the attempt was futile. I pushed. There was a force pressing against me, it was strong, stronger than with anything else I had attempted. It didn't matter. Even though I hadn't been under the effect of the power for long, the memories were still vivid. I kept struggling.

My attempt went through.

Suddenly, I could see the world around me inside my sphere of influence in perfect clarity. Then, before I could take note of what I saw, my vision rippled outwards.

Distantly, I felt my body fall to its knees. My mind seemed to drift out of it, floating somewhere else.

The others were shaking my shoulders urgently, undisguised concern wracked their faces.

At that point, I realized that I was looking beyond the boundaries of creation. It shouldn't have come as a surprise. Clairvoyant had not been limited to looking into a single world, so why would my attempt to mimic him be?

There were more dimensions than I could count beside me. Some, I assumed, were hells and filled with all manner of atrocities. They were not what I focused on.

I should have been more cautious.

It hadn't occurred to me that I should have been more afraid of success than failure.

Hovering around in a place that was not a place, there was a faceless, implacable sea of figures looming over my shoulders. Their mere presence was overwhelming, so unfathomably suffocating that I felt like I was buried under a mountain.

While they may have been much smaller than the multitude of earths I had once observed, their substance had a depth to it which was not comparable at all.

My body was rapidly growing fatigued from the effort of maintaining the effect, but I couldn't shut it off. There was too much information bombarding me at once, to the point where I felt like I was floating away from who I was. Without a passenger to help me interpret it all, I was simply drowning in data.

Too…much…

The beings didn't seem to be aware of me watching them, and their attention seemed to be focused elsewhere, but that didn't take away the naked fear that their appearance alone evoked.

Angels, they have to be.

Merely observing them, I could feel a wave of compassion wash over me. It was a sensation so rich that it was almost nauseating. The sense came to me that these…entities would almost never move themselves to hurt anyone, despite being capable of crushing most opponents instantly.

It felt like the purest expression of a mother's love.

It was idealistic in a way that I couldn't possibly understand. There was nobody, no matter how awful, that these beings wouldn't offer compassion to. From the smallest insect to the greatest tyrant, all were deserving of their attention. It was a silent promise that they would always be there for anyone who approached. Either as a shoulder to cry on or an ear that would listen. Right then, I knew just from a glance that they wouldn't turn away from me, and it scared me how much I desired that.

… Simply being noticed by an Angel would probably kill me, and despite knowing that, I was still so very tempted to reach out to them.

I clung desperately to my sanity, trying not to give in to the call. The idea that compassion could be addictive had never occurred to me. The sheer craving that the figures evoked was all the evidence I required to prove to myself that it could be. It sent shivers down my body's spine.

It was as if the choir was singing a symphony telling Creation that "this is the way the world should be."

I had never before felt so utterly terrified in response to an impression that was so nice.

The feather-light touch of an empathic aura weighing more than a galaxy continued to engulf me as my body scrunched itself up into a ball and wept at the unfairness of it all. I was like a moth sitting next to a candle, knowing that to have the light I would need to let myself go up in flames.

Moments later, as the strain on my body reached its limit, I felt myself black out.​
 
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Verism 2.05
"Now, I know that you're incensed, but your anger is misplaced. Claiming all of your material possessions to outfit my flying fortress cannot be construed as thievery, it is merely aggressive taxation."
―Dread Emperor Inimical, the Miser



When consciousness finally returned to me, I felt as weak as a newborn babe. I was nestled in blankets, and my body was caked in sweat. I tried to muster my strength to climb out of bed, but found the effort beyond me.

So trapped as I was, I lay in bed and let my eyes roam over the cracked white paint on the ceiling. Max brought me meals, and time passed as I gradually regained my strength, while my mind reflected on what I had seen.

It was the Angelic Choir of Compassion, I was sure of it. Not the Gods. Even that had been enough to shake me.

It gave me an entirely new appreciation for what it was to be good.

I had known on some level that the Gods Above and Below were real, but I hadn't truly understood what that meant. I had been treating them mentally like Scion, an all powerful alien species that for some unknown reason had decided that Earth looked like a good place to experiment. They weren't that. Creation was their sandpit, but it was their sandpit because they made it. If Scion had shown up here, what determined whether he lived or died was how entertaining they found the shapes he made in the sand.

They didn't need to care about him or anybody else, because they could erase it all and start over whenever they wanted to.

It scared me, but I knew with bone deep certainty there was nothing I could do about it. I didn't believe the Gods were nice, even the Book of All Things didn't really pretend they were. They made Creation to settle an argument between themselves. We weren't actually people to them, just tools to determine the outcome of a debate.

One side was in favour of guiding people like a parent would guide their children, the other side was in favour of allowing them to guide themselves. At least, that was how I understood it. From what I had heard, some Angelic Choirs were much more heavy-handed in their guiding. Contrition allegedly favoured mind control and weren't particularly keen on free will as a concept at all.

The memories of compassion slammed into me again. The smothering, all encompassing feeling of acceptance that I had been bathed in. Even now, I wanted it.

It scared me.

Part of me knew that I should be angry at them, that I should be treating this as being under the influence of a master effect. I wasn't. That made me frustrated at myself for not being able to muster resentment against them.

It all came down to what they were.

The Angels weren't hostile or malicious. I was convinced that they couldn't even conceive of the idea of being hostile to begin with. Compassion was just what they were. Being angry at them because I made the mistake of looking in their direction would be like being angry at gravity for pulling you to the ground.

I didn't know how to cope with it, or how much the experience might have changed me.

As I struggled to make sense of my feelings, the world continued to batter away at me.

Out, out, out.

The constant reminder that I didn't belong here had bothered me before, but I had never outright resented it. That was coming to change. If I wasn't returning to Earth someday, and I was increasingly sure that was the case, then I wanted to find a way to fit in. The sensation of not belonging had gone from unpleasant to unacceptable.

I wasn't prepared to spend the rest of my life living in a world that kept telling me that I should leave.



Stumbling downstairs, I sat down between the others. Two days had passed and while I still felt unsteady on my feet, I was able to stand up. I had made the effort to clean myself, but it was just about at the limits of what I could currently do.

"How are you, Taylor?" Max asked, his voice laced with concern.

"Still feel weak," I rasped, "but staying in bed was making me restless."

"Further action on our part has been brought to a halt until you are deemed to have made a full recovery," Roland said.

"That's fine."

"Taylor, can you tell us what happened?" Max was busy whittling away at a piece of wood with a knife as he spoke.

"I looked everywhere when I tried to scry, not just around us. In every dimension. There was just too much information for me to process." I paused, deciding if I wanted to say more.

After that experience, I wouldn't be experimenting with modifying my senses again in a hurry. I hadn't found a way to enhance my ability to process all the information yet, and it was simply too much for me to cope with.

"I saw the Choir of Compassion," I admitted, unable to keep the reverence out of my voice.

Both of the others stilled.

"Did they see you as well?" Max's voice was hoarse.

"I don't think they did, otherwise I'd probably be dead," I replied.

"That is the most likely outcome of being under their scrutiny," Roland agreed.

"Girlie, I think you really fucked up," Max shuddered.

"It seems that way."

"I do not believe there is cause to concern ourselves with them any further, should they choose to act, it is beyond the scope of our ability to respond." Roland reasoned, "Furthermore, none of us are villainous in nature, the Angels should find no fault with our actions."

It was a grim assessment, but likely the correct one. I didn't like deciding not to worry about something because it was beyond my ability to control. Right now, I couldn't think of a better option.

The topic changed back to our argument about Roland making decisions on his own. After it resolved, I made my way back to bed, too raw to do anything else.



A week later and I was no longer feeling like a walking corpse. I was still weakened, but I was able to contribute to the team again.

"Have we learned anything new?"

"My inquiries with the thieves into the possibility of acquiring magical texts have yet to bear fruit, but with regard to the matter of the disappearances, some progress has been made." Roland drummed his fingers rhythmically on the table as he spoke.

"And what did you learn?"

"The heightened Watch presence within the city is as a direct response to our suspected villain. They have yet to apprehend the crook, but ever since their efforts to locate the ruffian began in earnest, the disappearances have ground to a halt. It seems the villain has gone into hiding."

"That's unfortunate," I frowned.

I didn't feel that way because I wanted more people to be kidnapped, but because it removed an easy method to track them.

"Why do you think that, girlie?"

"I could have tried walking around at night while you watched from a distance. Baiting out a damsel story like that would have been an easy way to catch them," I explained.

Now that I better understood what I could do, I was reasonably sure I could put up a solid defence in a fight. While pretending to be a Princess again would be humiliating, it was one of the better Roles to choose. Princesses usually live to have happy endings, after all.

"I thought you two aren't sharing sheets, now you want him to rescue you?" Max teased.

"Taylor and I are not-"

"We aren't sleeping together, and I can rescue myself."

The conversation paused for a moment as Max bellowed with laughter. It took a while for him to stop, but eventually a semblance of order returned to the room.

"Whilst the plan is sound in principle, it would not have worked in practice. Closer examination of the victims suggests that all of them were of Deoraithe origins." Roland brought the discussion back on track, addressing my earlier comment.

That…told us something. I wasn't sure what, but in my mind that ruled out slavers unless they had very specific tastes.

While it seemed like something that a reasonable criminal would do - go into hiding as a response to increased police activity - that wasn't what I had come to expect out of the villains in Creation. I suspected that it meant the villain, whoever they were, had achieved what they had set out to do and had moved onto the next stage of their plan.

"What else has happened recently?" I paused, then clarified, "Noteworthy events only, not trivial stuff."

"During your convalescence, one of the local museums was broken into, and a display piece was stolen. It is but a minor crime of no real consequence."

That…sounded like a lead. Logically, there was no connection between the two crimes, but I was treating this like a story. Roland had lucked upon information relating to a museum theft as far as I was concerned, that meant it was connected. Logic could go sit in a corner, it had no place here.

"What was the piece?"

"A replica of Elizabeth Alban's earrings were spirited from where they are housed in the Caith museum. According to my sources, it was not the genuine piece that was taken, those are still guarded under lock and key."

Vaguely in my mind, I juggled the pieces around. Kidnappings, the theft of a display piece from a museum, the book on necromancy. If this was a story, then all of them were connected. I didn't know what role the earrings played, but I knew one thing for certain.

If the villain needed them, and he had only stolen a display piece, then another attempt on the museum would be made.

"What could a necromancer do with the earrings?"

"As I am not a necromancer myself and only have the smallest understanding of the theory behind it, I cannot provide you with an accurate assessment. If we were to assume that they were after the genuine artefact, there is possibly a sympathetic link existing between them and their former owner. I am unsure on the exact specifics of what they would set out to achieve making use of that, however." Roland expounded.

"Let's assume that there is a connection, and that they will make another attempt at stealing the earrings. I want you to learn everything you can from the book, and we are going to keep watch at the location that the earrings are housed."

It took some time and plans were made and then discarded in the process, but eventually we decided on a course of action.



Staking out the museum after the sun had set made for an unexciting task, but it was one I was well familiar with. The three of us had split up, although we were all in sight of each other. Each of us were on a different roof overlooking the museum, that way it was covered on all sides. They were close enough to me so that I could obscure them, and now all that was left was to wait.

It was the third night spent like this. The sky was clear, and the moon was overhead. It shone brightly, illuminating the building. Down below, the soft glow from the torches of patrolling Watch members could be seen. Idly, I tapped my fingers against the flat top of the roof I was on softly, my gaze locked on the structure.

Time passed.

Hours later, the guards had drifted off. It was close to midnight when something finally happened. A figure slipped towards the museum, then carefully opened one of the stained-glass windows. I let my eyes briefly flicker towards where Roland was sitting and manifested a brief flash of light beside him, then did the same for Max.

It was my agreed upon signal if I was the one to spot anything.

Focusing, I created bridges of force between one roof and another. In the dark, they looked like sheets dangling between the rooftops. The others crossed the bridges, making their way over to me. After previously straining myself, It took effort to do this much, but right now we needed to work together.

The others came across rapidly, arriving at my location minutes later.

"There," I whispered, pointing as I did so.

The others looked where I indicated.

"Shall we move to apprehend the rapscallion?" Roland asked.

It would have been much easier to deal with this if we could just point the Watch at the problem and let them handle it without causing ourselves problems. Unfortunately, we couldn't risk the attention.

"Wait," I hissed, "let them take what they want, then let's follow behind them. We don't know if it's our enemy, or an accomplice."

I was reasonably certain if this was a necromancer, they would have minions that they would send out to do the dirty work, while they sat back in whatever lair they happened to have and cackled maniacally. After being monologued at more than once, I was starting to accept that was just how Creation worked.

I didn't want to catch the minion only to then have to interrogate them, if following them back worked just as well.

"Girlies right," Max agreed.

Roland looked unhappy, but we sat and watched as the theft took place. A quarter of an hour later and the figure started to make their escape, and we pursued them high on the rooftops. They made their way to a single storey flat roofed building near the southern wall, then proceeded to let themselves in.

We made our way across to the building's roof, careful to remain silent. There was a member of the Watch on the walls above, and I had been told their abilities were beyond human. I didn't want to put my perception field to the test against someone who was likely trained to see through effects just like it.

Cautiously, I made a small hole in the roof of the building and looked inside, there was nobody except for our assailant. They descended a set of stairs leading to what I guessed was a basement.

I focused on the building. I didn't get the sense from it that I couldn't enter. That meant the building wasn't actually used as a building at all.

"This isn't anyone's home," I hissed, "I can enter it."

"Are we, following?" Max asked.

"If this residence is not actually in use, I propose that we give chase. They could not have trapped it, for in doing so they would render you unable to enter," Roland suggested.

It made sense. If this place was defended at all, I wouldn't be able to enter it.

"Give me a moment, I'll get us in," I whispered.

Buckling down under the strain, I reshaped part of the roof into an open hole, then fashioned a staircase of force leading down to the cracked brick floor below. The three of us made our entrance.

The entire place was a mess, with dirt everywhere and cracks in the walls. There was broken furniture strewn around, and stale bread left long since abandoned on one table. It was clear that it hadn't been used as a residence in a while.

We still had not been noticed. We made our way towards the staircase quietly, careful not to disturb anything.

It was pitch dark below. I wasn't certain how our assailant was navigating in the darkness, because I certainly couldn't do it.

"Would it be wiser for us to manifest a means by which we can see and risk alerting our foe, or remain shrouded in darkness?" Roland queried.

I thought about it. In a story, if we stayed in the darkness, we would absolutely be ambushed. While our enemies would be alerted by the presence of light, we would see them as well.

"Max, make us a light," I said in response.

A gentle, blue orb appeared behind me.

Following behind our quarry, we descended the stairs. They went down much further than expected. Despite how long it was, the passage itself looked recently excavated. Who would waste the time digging so deep, I didn't quite know. After about a hundred heartbeats, the passage eventually flattened out again and then opened into a wide open cavern.

I gaped.

It looked to be the ruins of a city, underneath Caith itself. If I was to guess, it would be an older version of the city which had been buried by time. Most of it was buried under dirt or rubble, but parts of it were still navigable. Other sections had been cleared out.

Somewhere to the left, a draft wafted in. evidently there was another route leading down here.

A somewhat precarious route to the right was cleaner than the rest. The accumulated dust from presumably centuries of neglect had been moved aside. The figure we had shadowed could be made out ahead, less than thirty feet away.

Cautiously, we followed behind, veiled under my power.

That was when the first of the zombies showed up. From behind the ruins of what I guessed to be a smithy, a corpse shambled out. Unfortunately, it seemed like the stranger effect didn't work on walking corpses, and they headed directly at us.

We started to pull back. The person we were following was still unaware of us and slipped away up ahead, but that was fine. There was only a part of this place which showed signs of use, following them would be easy.

The zombies continued to trail after us. Once I was sure we wouldn't attract attention, I reached out to them and tried to snuff them out. It was easy to do. Easy, in the same way as trying to undo the effects of the Absence Demon. Whatever it was that animated these corpses, the world didn't like it and was willing to go along with my attempt to see it fixed.

"Seems girlie was right," Max muttered.

"Careful, we don't know how many of them there are," I warned.

We continued forward under the pale blue light Max provided, and were attacked twice more, before the cavern sloped down into a much better excavated rectangular chamber. The support beams holding it up appeared to be in good condition, and the room was swept free of dust. On the left, the exsanguinated corpses of twenty-two girls were stacked neatly in rows.

"What manner of monster could do something like this?" Roland asked rhetorically, disgust creeping through.

I walked up to one of them and inspected it closer. The rictus of pain their faces were locked in suggested the draining had been done while they were still alive.

"Is there an advantage to draining them while alive?"

"The heightened emotions could contribute to the effectiveness of a ritual," Roland admitted.

I examined the room further. Opposite the corpses was a desk filled with papers. It was narrow and didn't have space for three people to stand beside it.

"You two take a look at the desk. I'll keep watch for trouble."

It was much easier for me to kill zombies than it was for them, even as weakened as I was.

I turned away from the desk, keeping my ear out to hear what was said in the background. Directly opposite where we had entered the chapter was another path branching off. I wasn't sure how likely it was that somebody came through, but I would keep watch for it.

"Careful, Roland, it might be trapped," Max admonished.

A couple of hundred heartbeats passed and I spotted nothing unusual. The sounds of pages being flipped through was the only break in the silence.

"The necromancer appears to be making an attempt to mass animate the bones under the city, using the link between the blood of the victims as a reagent to fuel the ritual," Roland stated.

"What are the earrings for?" I asked, not turning around.

There was a pause as Roland flipped through pages before he made to respond, "The pages here do not shed light on the matter, although the design of the ritual suggests that they are intended as some sort of spiritual anchor."

"Could you safely interrupt the ritual?"

"With ample time to prepare, I am reasonably cert-"

Which was when an ominous chanting began to echo from further ahead.

Of course, we weren't going to have time to plan properly.

I suppressed the urge to swear and was about to suggest we take a second to plan, when I felt a feint tugging at me from the world. It was as if something or someone was urging me forward, like the drag of a current in a river.

It took me a moment to realize, it was the pull of a story. We had followed through with the investigation and the villain was at the final stage of their plan. All that was left was the confrontation, where the heroes usually won.

I could have resisted the feeling. It wouldn't have been hard either, although it would have been unpleasant. But…if heroes were the ones favoured by fate, why not go along with it?

"Let's move," I said curtly, "Roland, you deal with the ritual. Max and I will kill any zombies. I'll also try to just kill them directly, even if I'm not sure if it will work."

If I was in better shape, I was confident it wouldn't be hard for me to do.

The three of us proceeded down the passage. It sloped to the right, before opening into a circular room. Unlike all the other rooms, this one was actually lit up. Lining the walls were torches, flickering weakly in the dark. At the far end, there looked to be some sort of monument.

In the middle of the room, was a figure clad in black standing on a raised platform, facing away from us. The platform was covered in intricate lines that looked to be painted in blood. They glowed ominously, purple sparks sputtering out of them. Hovering in the middle of the ritual, floated a set of earrings. The air seemed to warp inwards towards them as he continued to chant.

Beside them, stood the person we had been trailing. In the light of the room, I could finally make out what they looked like. It was a girl.

… And as he chanted, bones seemed to rise up out of the ground. They came together in the form of rotting skeletons, moving by magic alone. They spotted us almost immediately and started to approach.

Reacting on instinct, I tried to reach out and kill the necromancer. They rebuffed me. I staggered, before steadying myself.

The man didn't react, continuing to chant. The girl, however, turned our way.

"Confiscate."

The word rang out. As it did so, the ritual was snuffed out. It was as if something imperceptible had been added to Roland and taken away from the Necromancer. The man let out an inarticulate roar of rage.

"How dare you interrupt my ritual! Mirriem, see that they die, then I will complete the working." He shrieked.

Roland paled, "The quantity of magic flowing through that ritual is more than I can safely contest for long."

That put us on a timer.

Mirriem placed herself between him and us, then hurled a lance of darkness our way. With some effort, I contested it, dispersing the effect. Focusing, I started to snuff out the animated bones. Unlike the necromancer, there was very little resistance when I tried to change them. It was as if I was simply sweeping dust off of a table.

"Roland, stall the Necromancer. Max, deal with the girl. I'll deal with the corpses," I ordered.

I didn't like being pest control, but it was much easier for me than them, taking less than a heartbeat each to do it. There were many of them, though, and focusing on them one by one seemed like a waste of time.

So I started to be creative. Focusing, I created a disc of force with a razor sharp edge, then sent it hurtling towards them. It scythed through a swath of them, then slammed into a barrier raised by the girl.

Unfortunately, the faster rate of corpse disposal did not seem to be worth the added exhaustion.

Out of the corner of my eye, I saw Roland trembling beside me. He started going through the motions of casting something, presumably making use of some of the power he had taken. A bolt of lightning danced from his fingertips towards our opponents. It slammed into a metal pole raising out of the ground.

A few smatterings of particoloured light shot back and forth between Roland and the Necromancer. I was too occupied with trying to snuff out animated corpses to follow what was going on.

I heard Maxime muttering under his breath, then ribbons of fire propelled from beside me, only to be dispersed with a gust of wind. Concentrating, I reached out to the girl and bludgeoned her with my memories of the fight with Scion. It was exhausting, but the attempt went through. She froze, then staggered. A moment later, two balls of fire slammed into her, and she went up in flames.

… It seemed like emotional attacks were more effective than I had expected them to be.

With no support left, it didn't take much effort for the three of us to kill the Necromancer. His death did not put an end to the ritual, however, instead the magic seemed to pulse erratically. I tried to suppress it, it didn't take much effort to do, but it was collapsing faster than I was cleaning it up. I feared some sort of explosion

"Roland, do something!" I called out.

I hoped that something related to his name would help.

"The text we acquired from the quaint shop contained details on how to properly disperse a ritual collapse, can you contain it while I manage the process?!" he shouted back.

I wasn't sure how long I could keep the effect under control, but I tried regardless. Max joined in, taking the time to erect wards. The entire region of space within the area painted with blood had become a dancing mess of green and purple lights. They sparked erratically, pulling the surrounding air in towards them. I snuffed them out as fast as I could, but the rate they appeared seemed to be accelerating.

A hundred or so heartbeats later and Roland finished. The effect came to an end.

I walked towards the monument and started to examine the writing on it. It was written in a language that I couldn't read.

"Anyone know what this says?" I asked.

Roland came over and looked at it critically.

"It appears to be a war memorial for souls who gave their lives in defence of Daoine when the Queen of Blades fought here," he explained.

"So I was right, the Necromancer was in a graveyard," I stated.

Both of them looked at me dubiously.

"What, I didn't specify which graveyard he was in."

The three of us started to make our way out.

The fight was almost anticlimactic, for all the work involved in finding the culprit.

And I found myself fine with that.

This was our first major encounter since the last time we saw the Artist, and in the time since our first fight with him, we had learned a great deal. We had a better grasp on stories, how they shaped the world and what that meant for us.

It was a fight against someone that seemed committed to hurting others, for reasons that we never even learned why, and in following a story it was relatively easy for us to win.

Despite how much the narrative driving Creation concerned me, it favoured the heroes. Sure, it was arguably a less earned win, but why should people that want to do Evil have a fair chance? I had seen enough people suffering for no good reason. I didn't know why heroes were favoured in Calernia, but I was starting to find I liked it that way. After all, if people knew up front that Evil lost, they would have much less incentive to do it. That was the way consequences worked, right?

"Say, Roland, what are we doing with the earrings?" Max asked.

"Returning them to their owners would bring us under too much scrutiny. I propose that Taylor should take custody of them." Roland replied.

I felt the light tugging of a different story as he spoke.

"Trying to give Taylor jewellery now, are you?" Max laughed.

"Those were a Queen's earrings, right?"

"They were the property of the Queen of Blades," Roland agreed.

"I'm flattered, but I don't want them."

Taking possession of a crowned queen's jewellery would likely push me into a whole set of stories I wanted nothing to do with.

"Then I shall maintain possession of them until I find someone worthy to wear them, then," Roland declared firmly.

There wasn't even a part of me that doubted that he would.

Conversation died. I took a moment to stare down at the two charred corpses of the people we had killed. As I did so, I reflected on what I felt. Rather, I reflected on what I didn't feel.

I knew that the Angels would have felt compassion for them, but I didn't. They had performed horrific acts and earned their death in the process. Did thinking that make me Evil? I had come to regret what I did in the past with time, but never before had I considered the idea that I might genuinely be Evil.

When confronted with a feeling of compassion that deep, it was hard not to think about it. I had killed a lot of people and never felt empathy for them. Remorse and guilt, but I had never truly felt for them in the way that I had sensed the angels would.

Was I… Broken, in some way?

Maybe it was too high of a standard to hold myself to, but it didn't change how I felt.

For a moment, I thought I felt a gentle tugging on my senses, as if from somewhere beyond Creation. It was like a subtle reassurance that no matter what, I was cared for regardless.

I shuddered.

Was the sensation real, or only imagined?

Or had the Choir of Compassion noticed me looking in after all?
 
Verism 2.0a
"If the Fae offer to renegotiate the terms of your bargain, it is evident that somewhere along the way someone's plans have gone awry. Pray that the mistake is not your own."
– 'Essences of the Fae', written by Madeline de Jolicoeur


Arlen ran through fields of frost, sheets of ice cracking underfoot. Panting, he made his way through the lands of the Fae. Despite his haste, he was careful where he stepped. Glaciers were treacherous underfoot. The light of the moon overhead lit the way, but once he reached one of his other exits, he was free to start anew.

He was safe for now, but he would need to move fast from place to place. This was not to plan, none of this was to plan. Slowly, he was to amass a wealth of souls, then be free of his bargain. He had not anticipated the arrival of the Rogue Sorcerer, and the demon was certainly outside the scope of his vision.

It was not until he had already captured the girl that he realized what she truly was.

It was no matter, they could all be poured into the mould with time. The demon offered so much promise. He had imagined her to be another one of the many characters painted onto the background of the world, if one more disarmed by luck than most. That impression had faded the moment he had laid claim to the essence of her. With her alone, he could have escaped from the deal he made. Her essence was worth more than thousands of souls.

It made him question commonly held wisdom. Both heroes and villains decried the use of demons, claiming them to be the instruments of the utterly mad. But the girl had seemed no less human than anyone else, only she could be put to far greater use.

A crackle of broken ice from behind him. He froze stiffly. Turning, he came face to face with the vulpine features of the Prince of Nightfall.

"My lord," he bowed obsequiously, his forehead chilled as it brushed up against the ice on the ground below. It rankled to submit himself like this, but he had no illusions as to the relative differences in their positions.

Eyes to the ground, he could see the shadow of the creature as it prowled around him in circles.

"The terms of our agreement necessitated that you were to provide a single soul a month for the span of a single score of years. You have missed this month's payment. I find you in violation of the terms," the Prince almost seemed to purr.

The Artist knew that excuses would not save him here. He swallowed a gulp. He would need to offer something that cost him dearly to earn the creature's interest, else he would lose his soul.

"Would you be amenable to renegotiating the terms?"

The creature let out a bout of fey laughter. It echoed eerily against the air.

"And what is it that you would care to offer me to stay your fate?"

"A century, not a score of years. This I offer to you for my failure to pay."

It was a steep price to pay, but it wouldn't upset his plans. One soul a month for a century only consumed but a fraction of his time each day, allowing him to focus the body of his efforts elsewhere.

The creature paused in its pacing.

"Five souls a month for the span of twenty years, should you wish to be free from your fate," the Prince offered.

The Artist couldn't help it, he gulped. It would be hard to avoid notice given those terms.

"Perhaps-"

"These terms are no longer negotiable, unless you wish to default," the Prince interjected.

Arlen tried to protest once more, but found his mouth clammed shut. He started to realize just how costly his mistake truly was. Perhaps he could ask for further clarification and maybe find his way free?

"As before, would you be amenable to equivalent payments?"

"Should the wares you offer hold value equal to that of over a thousand souls, I would accept it in lieu of payment," the fox offered.

"Would the essence of a demon qualify?"

"In the event that you manage to trap the Princess again, I would accept her readily as an alternative," the Prince sounded amused.

Princess? Was she perhaps a beast of hierarchy? She was certainly not a member of the Fae courts, he had a sense when one of them approached. It was one of the peculiarities of his Name. An engrained compulsion to submit. No matter, another demon should also suffice.

"Bargain struck, then," the Artist whispered, a sense of foreboding building within him.

"Bargain struck," the Prince agreed. From his position kneeling in the snow, the Artist could hear the creature's grin.

Arlen stood up as the creature walked away. It disappeared moments later. Brushing the snow off of his outfit, he started to move towards one of his many existing exits. The terms as agreed upon were too risky for him to dare meet, but he had plans for how to escape his fate.

The Prince of Nightfall was willing to accept demons as an alternative form of payment. Finding them would surely be challenging, but after his first encounter with one, he was confident in his ability to contain them. Now it was only a matter of beginning his work anew.


Running off into the depths of Arcadia once more, he realized that this time he might have put too much paint on his brush. Were it not for the timely arrival of the Princess of High Noon, his life would surely have been blotted out.

The lands of Summer passed him by as he continued to move between dense jungle foliage.

Much to his dismay, the demon of absence did not share either the malleability or compliance of the demon girl. Arlen had expected it to start shaping the landscape within its prison, much like the girl had. Unfortunately, once the bindings on it had been shattered, it had begun to consume the prison instead.

It had only now occurred to him that perhaps he should perform further investigation into the different types of demons, for it seemed likely that not all types would function the same way. Finding more of the same class as the girl was likely the best course of action. The most expedient solution would be to just recapture the girl. Much to his irritation, it was unlikely she would allow him to do so.

The dense greenery gave way to dead shrubs and frozen ground as he crossed the boundary between Summer and Winter. His jogging slowed to a walk. The lands of Summer were not safe for him to tread, considering the bargain he had made, but in Winter he could freely move.

Provided he did not default on his payments, he could call the lands of the Winter Fae home. It was then that the sound of the breaking of a branch behind him forced him to still his movement.

From just outside his perspective, the figure of the Prince stepped into view. Before he could even react, his head slammed onto the frozen ground.

"My lord, to what do I owe the pleasure?" he croaked.

To his knowledge, he had kept to the letter of his agreement. Why is it that the Prince's visage seemed as cold as a winter's gale?

"Your debts for the past three months are due," the creature declared. "It is good that you have appeared before me, rather than run from fate."

"This is not the case, I have stuck to the terms you offered me," the Artist protested, raising his eyes. It was the truth, he could not lie to this creature.

The being looked down at him, puzzled, then let out a merry laugh.

"A fine jest this is, a gift that is not a gift. But even should you have succeeded, the essence of absence is no Princess. You would not have escaped from your debts."

The artist licked his lips, dry as they were with the cold. He was about to ask for clarification, when the Prince began speaking once more.

"In my eyes you have breached our agreement, and yet in yours you have not. For this and this alone, I shall be merciful and stay your demise."

That was fortunate. Arlen doubted that if it came to conflict, he could beat the Prince in a fight.

"Thank y-"

"That does not mean there shall be no consequences. I believe that an amendment to our agreement is in order."

"What is there to amend?" the Artist asked.

"Three paintings you shall gift to me. Three landscapes, seeped deep in souls. The first shall be a place of loneliness. It should rise up high, peak jutting above the clouds but stand with no kin to console it. The second shall be a place of mystery. Hidden, shrouded, with many secrets to find. The third shall be a place of comfort. Warm, inviting, nestled away in a cavern most dark," the Prince paused.

"What else?" Arlen knew there would be a catch. If this was all the Prince wanted, it would be easy for him to finally be free.

"The full payment owed shall be divided between all three paintings. The task must be done by the end of three years, or the debt will finally be claimed." the Prince finished.

The term seemed ludicrous, impossible. Three years to gather over a thousand souls, divided between three paintings. There was no way Arlen could manage undetected.

"Could the timeframe perhaps be extended. Say thirty years and twice the number of souls?" he choked out.

"I have no interest in changing the terms. Twice you have failed to give what you agreed upon. Twice I have stayed my hand. There will be no third offer. Three paintings you shall gift to me by the dusk of the third year. They shall be handed to me all at once, or not at all. Fail to deliver, and your soul is finally forfeit."

Scrambling for a counteroffer, the Artist recalled the Prince's seeming interest in the girl. "Would the demon girl be an acceptable substitute?"

The Prince's lips twitched, as if he considered it a particularly amusing joke. "The first time I ever stepped into Creation, I found it a brutish, ugly thing. A pale imitation of Arcadia painted with lesser pigments. While my fellows rejoiced across the fresh playground, I began to withdraw."

Arlen said nothing, not knowing what to say. Disrupting the Prince seemed unwise, even if this digression had nothing to do with their existing arrangement.

"I paused after coming across a fox," the Prince continued with a smile. "It had fallen into a trap. A snare that caught its foot. It knew it would die, if it remained there."

"What happened then?" the Artist asked.

"It chewed off its foot, and it escaped," the Fae answered.

"Forgive me, Prince, but what does this have to do with my debt?"

"Provided you capture and bring her to me, you may also walk free of your debts," the Prince of Nightfall answered, grinning at him. "Chew off your own foot, little painter. Let's see what pretty pictures you can paint with your own blood."

A chill ran down Arlen's spine.

The Artist did not have a good idea on how to see it done, but if the opportunity presented itself, he would try regardless. Containing her the first time had seemed trivial at first, but that was before she became aware of the attempt. No matter, catching a single demon was likely easier than painting thousands of people and escaping notice. He would pursue knowledge on the subject, while whittling away at his debt.

As the creature left, Arlen started making his way to one of his gates in Procer. Staying out of Callow seemed like a smart idea until he had recovered from the fight.


Arlen walked between the tents on a battlefield near Lange. He had struck upon the idea of working as a medic's assistant, helping to dress wounds during the ongoing civil war. He was just another faceless member of the masses, and it allowed him easy access to the blood of so many soldiers.

Arriving at his tent, he set out his easel, fixed a canvas to it and loaded up his brush. Then he began to paint. First came loneliness. For this he painted a solitary peak, jutting up high above the clouds. The shape of the mountain was unnatural, with a sheer cliff face. A single path carved through it, a gorge leading from top to bottom. At the precipice, shrouded in fog, the vague shape of a building hid.

Reaching to his side, he grabbed a vial of blood and opened it, then lightly dabbed some of it on the brush. The colour seeped into the unicorn hairs, then seemed to vanish entirely. Turning back to the landscape, he felt the shape of his Name as it rose up within him.

It was a mosaic. His mosaic, painted out of the hopes and dreams of everyone he had claimed them from. Reaching out with his brush, he added lines to the cliffs.

"Impart," he spoke softly.

Something intangible ran down the brush and entered into the painting. It was his first bestowal, the first claim he had made to power. It took the very essence of a person and imbued it into the paint. Someone somewhere else in the camp had entered a dreamless sleep from which they would never wake up.

As he continued to paint, he mused over his dilemma. His plans to canvas the many battlefields of the civil war were making good progress. Many of the deaths were excusable as something else. Even better, by maintaining the route he had sketched out, it was possible he could pay a visit to the same armies repeatedly once enough time had passed between visits. Simply by moving from army to army, it was likely he could meet the demands of the Prince.


Two of the three pieces commissioned by the Prince of Nightfall had been completed when disaster had struck. Arlen was in the process of inking his exit on a tree, ready to move on to the next battlefield, when a feeling of wrongness came to him. Alert, he scrambled to complete the passage, then a word rang out from behind him.

"Shine."

He dove through the partially finished doorway, his precious paintings cradled carefully under his arms as he did so. Panicking, he touched one of his other works and spoke.

"Manifest."

Paint came to life, animated by the force of one of the souls he had taken. He could hear their tortured shrieks as they were forced to obey his whims. The veil that his paintings placed over their eyes was shorn away, and the true terms of their sentence made clear to them. No matter, even knowing they were merely fragments of his mosaic, they would serve his whims regardless.

Three painted tigers launched themselves at the old man that stood on the other side. Another beam of light slammed into one of them. Judging by how the fight was progressing, he would dispose of them quickly. The victory of what Arlen assumed to be a hero seemed all but assured, but he had already succeeded in drafting his escape.

Hurriedly, the Artist slashed his brush across the entrance, breaking the connecting lines. It shimmered for a moment, then vanished. Breathing a sigh of relief, he turned around and took in the snowy wasteland, lit only by the light of the stars. There was no moon out in Arcadia this night. Travel would be dangerous, but it seemed that for once fate had been on his side.

He had escaped with his paintings and only lost three souls in the process.


Arriving in Callow once more, Arlen did little to suppress the frustration that was bubbling up inside. He passed between the gates, ignoring the splendour above him. Usually a scene like this would move him to paint, but the joy had long gone out of the process.

He had made so much progress. After the first commission had been complete, he had quickly progressed on the second. A mountain lake with an island in the centre, covered with mangrove trees and ruins. Darker colours were used, and it was shaded in a way to hint at something hidden deeper within. Despite how many soldiers had fallen into endless slumber, the connection had not been made.

Then the old man had shown up.

He was unsure how the hero had done it, but news of his actions had reached every battlefield. They had all been warned to beware of a travelling artist. Camp followers were carefully checked for the possession of brushes or oils, with what seemed to be a tacit agreement on all sides of the civil war to ban the ownership of both.

He had risked sneaking into some less well defended encampments, but after losing an ear in an escape attempt and almost losing one of the Prince's pieces, he deemed it no longer worth the risk. He had tried the larger cities next, only to find out news of him had spread to them as well.

It was only through careful questioning, he was able to discover the Name of his opponent. The Grey Pilgrim. The man seemed to have great influence with the church, enough to spread news of him from one side of the Principate to the other.

So he had left once more, returning to Callow. Much time had passed since his departure and he was short over three hundred souls. Were there a war in Callow, claiming the remaining lives while remaining unseen would be an achievable task. To his dismay, Callow was stable. The Calamities ruled with an iron fist, and disappearances on the scale he needed would be quickly noticed.

And now the third painting loomed like an executioner's axe overhead, all but ready to descend. It sat incomplete. The finished landscape was supposed to be an underground city carved into the walls of a cave, but only the barest outlines had been done.

Moving from inn to inn, the Artist looked for a place to stay. Moving between armies had necessitated that he put a stop to the previous life of luxury he had lived. It was one more slight among many and meant that he could not afford to stay at the wealthier parts of town. Finally, after half a bell of searching, he found acceptable accommodations in an out-of-the-way inn. It was secluded down a narrow alley that he likely would not have found were it not for the cacophony raised by a bard. Aside from the owner, they were the only other occupant.

He had offered to paint her. An actual painting, not a trap for once, since he couldn't afford to risk his current home.

All she had done is shook her head and give him a drunken grin.​
 
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This isn't the first time we've seen the Bard. Last time she made sure Taylor and Maxime found their way into Roland's backstory, so she's not necessarily trying to get Taylor killed. The trouble is that you can never tell with the Bard because she's always playing a bigger game than you. She might be trying to steer Taylor into a specific role to stop her from messing with her game, or get her to sign on with Compassion, or who knows. It's like trying to second guess the Simurgh.

Speaking of Compassion, I checked the wiki and the gimmick of Compassion is that their heroes cannot kill. We don't see any heroes of this choir in canon, it's just mentioned in passing that they tend to choose healers for this reason. Honestly not that bad a constraint for Taylor, since her band deals with undead so often. The Artist is even conveniently the sort of villain where leaving him alive means the fae will take care of him for you.
 
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Verism 2.06
"A misguided soul championing contradictory causes may be in the process of genuine change, but that makes them no less a hypocrite for it."
– Quote attributed to Tariq Isbili of the Dominion of Levant


After spending over a year in Caith, we had finally left. We had scoured every corner of the place and no progress had been made. Roland and Max had even made the effort to talk to wizards that were too dangerous for me to meet personally. We knew far more than I cared to about how to summon and bind devils, but information on demons was sparse. If I was villainously inclined and actually able to use magic as Maxime and Roland alleged I could, by now I would probably be a reasonably capable diabolost.

Roland's Name had offered me no help at solving my problem at all. Rogue Sorcerers, it appeared, did not help demons find homes.

"World still fucking you over?" Max asked.

"Yeah," I grimaced. The road we were on was especially uneven, and another bump against a rock jostled me from side to side. I was half tempted to smooth it out myself just for a comfortable ride, but then I would have to actively contest with the feeling of nails on a chalkboard.

The longer I had spent in Creation, the worse the feeling of not belonging became.

"How bad? Are the Angels making out with you again?"

"It feels like being hugged, not like being kissed," I told him again. Not that it would do anything except encourage him.

Maxime cackled merrily. With that laugh, he was excellent villain material.

I never should have mentioned that the Angels are watching over me.

It had become obvious in the time that had passed since that the Choir of Compassion had taken an interest in me. If they wanted to, they were able to interact with some otherworldly part of me that wasn't entirely anchored in Creation. Whenever they did so, I could feel a vague sense of comfort drape itself like a blanket over my metaphysical shoulders.

They didn't do it often, usually only when my feeling of estrangement was especially bad. I knew that their intentions were benign, that they were trying to show their sympathy in the only way they were capable of. That didn't prevent me from feeling vaguely like a wild horse that was being taught to become accustomed to touch.

"I apologize once more, Taylor, were it not for my suggestion, your situation would not have degenerated to this extent."

"It's fine Roland," I turned my head to the left, facing him, "I would have tried replacing my arm anyhow."

I turned away quickly, the glare of the morning sun harsh in my eyes.

"This does not excuse-"

"I said it's fine," I cut him off, "besides, it isn't just the prosthetic arm that was the problem."

Trying to graft on a prosthetic arm had been a mistake, although not for the reasons I would have expected. The moment I had attached the piece, the sense of alienation had amplified dramatically. I had removed it almost immediately, but the damage had already been done.

Replacing my arm would have to wait until the larger issue was solved.

My ability to manipulate biology was still not good enough to try repairing my arm that way, but I expected I would have similar complications there as well. The only positive discovery was the confirmation that I didn't appear to be physically ageing. It's so reassuring knowing that you're destined to die young.

"Your belief that the shift in your demeanour is the cause of your distress has yet to be proven."

"We agreed it's the most likely reason. The more I change from what I was like when I arrived, the worse the problem becomes."

Which in theory meant I could undo the damage by regressing. The trouble was, I liked the person I had become.

We passed behind the shade of some large pine trees. The early morning chirping of weaver birds called out from above.

Max looked like he was about to open his mouth. Probably that same old stale joke about invading one of the hells again. I swear, the old man needed some new material.

"No, Max, I don't want to live in the hells. Even if I could clean one up, I want to be around people. I'm not putting myself in a prison locked away from the world."

I'd made friends in Calernia. People that I cared about. I had come to accept that Creation was my new home, even if it hadn't accepted me yet. Despite how backwards the world was in some ways, I didn't want to leave it. That didn't mean that I didn't miss my old friends but… Missing them wasn't the same as wanting to go back to Earth.

This was a world where heroes could win.

"Seems it's going to rain tonight, Roland. Girlie finally admits she deserves to be happy. Now we just need to find her some young lad with firm muscles, and she can retire out in the countryside."

"I don't think I'm ready to retire just yet," I admitted.

"Oh, then what do you want to do?"

"… I think I want to try being a hero again in my own right, not just following Roland around."

It would have to wait until living in the world no longer hurt, but gradually the idea had started to grow on me. This was a world where heroes could win. Not only that, it was the kind of world where idealistic heroes could win. I could try to be the type of person I would have wanted to be as a kid. The person that never compromises with evil and always tries to do what's right.

Idealistic didn't need to mean stupid. I wasn't about to go charging into Callow and try to start up a civil war, that would likely cause more suffering than it ended in the process. To me, it meant finding a solution that resulted in the least amount of harm.

The Calamities did need to go, that much was certain to me. Being less bad than comically Evil didn't make them good. But they weren't the target I had my eyes on. There would always be another hero who rose up to fight villains like them. I had set my eyes upon what I saw to be a larger problem.

"Just want to get up and abandon us, do you?" Max sounded amused.

"No, no, not at all," I said hastily.

"Would you be so kind as to reiterate what exactly Taylor had reflected on during last night's talks?" Roland teased.

Our monthly discussions about past events had continued. I was still holding off about the exact details of what I did in the fight with Scion, but I felt that sooner or later I would be ready to speak on the subject. To my surprise, I found that sharing what I had been through with others was helping me to cope. They forced me to be introspective, to face the parts of me that I didn't like and think about what I could do to change them.

Maybe Lisa was right. Perhaps I should have reached out for help sooner after all.

"Girlie told us she regretted leaving her friends behind."

I flushed with embarrassment.

"I'm probably going to need some rules for myself, so I don't make the same mistakes."

"Don't fuck off without your friends can be the first of those rules."

"Rule two can be, 'ask others for help when I need it,'" I contributed, playing along.

"As a corollary to that, the third principle can be, 'accept help when it is offered to you in earnest,'" Roland suggested.

"That's almost like the same rule," I muttered.

"Not entirely, girlie."

"As a change of topic, would you care to elucidate what you find unsatisfactory about how I aim to improve people's lives?"

"There's nothing wrong with it. I like helping you help people. It's nice to make a difference for them. But I've realized something about Calernia. Heroes have been winning for thousands of years, but villains keep appearing." I explained.

"This is to be expected. Villains are likely to surface until the arrival of last dusk," Roland stated.

The three of had grown more experienced as we travelled, and my opinions on heroism in Calernia began to cement. The idea of stories favouring heroes no longer bothered me, but something else did.

"But it means that even when we win, we aren't actually winning. If we were, there wouldn't be any villains left at all. If I'm going to be a hero in my own right, I want to make a real difference. I want to do something that matters." I emphasized. "Right now, we might as well be tilting at windmills for all the good it does in the larger picture."

"Would you care to explain to me the meaning behind the phrase 'tilting at windmills?'" Roland inquired.

"The term comes from a story in my homeland. It means to fight imaginary enemies. The villains we're fighting obviously aren't imaginary, but they aren't the real problem either."

There was a lot about Creation I wanted to mend. Calernia felt…broken. As if the continent itself was locked in a stasis. Never progressing, never moving forward. It felt like the mental state I was in, shortly after my arrival.

Perhaps I should adjust my expectations. Learn to live with the idea that many things that would be considered atrocities on Earth were seen as normal here. I wasn't willing to accept that. Villains were much worse than they were on Earth. Furthermore, the world wasn't ending. There was no need to compromise with them. I saw no reason to not just see them all gone.

Just because I wanted to stay here, didn't mean that there weren't parts of it that I wanted to change.

When I finally championed my own cause, I wanted the victory to be permanent.

"You sure you can't just retire on a farm somewhere with a handsome man, girlie? You told me you don't want to make new regrets, and this sounds like an easy road to more of them."

I shook my head in response.

"Do you have any notion as to how you would achieve such an outcome? I am not opposed to the idea, provided you have a plan to act on."

"I don't," I admitted. "But when I do, I want us to work on it together. If you're willing to come along, at least."

I didn't know how to achieve a lasting victory. I had no illusions about being smarter than the brightest minds on the continent. The Calamities had been successful villains for over thirty years in a world where villains were expected to lose. That told me all that I needed to know about how capable they clearly were. All I had was a different perspective to them.

That didn't mean I wasn't willing to try to figure it out.

Maybe it was foolish to expect to do better, but this was a world where a close to perfect answer might just be attainable. So I would try to do it, even if I expected it to be nearly impossible to achieve. I wasn't willing to be satisfied with a bunch of comparatively easy wins that would undo themselves a decade after I died.

In a world ruled by stories, surely there was a story that would make that victory stick.

Finding it was something for me to aspire towards.

For now, I stuck to small heroics. Just because I didn't know how to fix the big picture yet, didn't mean that there weren't little things that I could do to help. Helping others was one of the few coping methods I had against the constant sense that I didn't belong.

It was important to me that whatever I did was something I didn't come to regret afterwards. I recalled a talk I had once had with Glenn Chambers. It had been right at the end of the world, and I had admitted to him that I hadn't made for a good hero.

I would try to be a good hero this time around.

"It would be my honour to join you on such a venture."

"We'll both be following," I replied, smiling. "That can be rule four. Taylor isn't in charge. We find the right person to lead us, then help them every step of the way. It would be too easy for me to start rationalizing making bad choices again if I'm the one deciding what we do."

I wasn't sure I could stick to that rule. Most of the authorities I had heard of in Creation were worse than the ones on Earth Bet, but I was afraid that if I was the one in charge that I would start to regress. It was a hope of mine that there was someone out there that I could trust to play second fiddle to, but I wasn't holding my breath.

"What would you do should the leader come to propose a plan that you find morally reprehensible?"

"Rule five: Girlie listens to her conscience first," Max bellowed.

"Here's one for Roland. When your friends tell you to fix an outstanding problem, don't leave for later," I proposed.

He turned away, wincing, but didn't deny my suggestion. "I find that you too would benefit from the wisdom of following that. How about we note it down as your sixth law?"

That was… A fair point.

"I don't like the word law for this. I broke a lot of those, and don't want to get in the habit of breaking these."

"Perhaps you should endeavour to break the law less," Roland chided.

"Which of us is the Rogue?" I said.

"That comparison has no merit. When I cross the law, it is only done for the benefit of others."

"That was what I said, too."

Roland looked as if he had swallowed a lemon.

Rather than provoke an argument, I decided to change the topic. "If we don't find what we need in Daoine, where should we look next? You told me the Golden Bloom is off limits, so we will have to search somewhere else."

Much to my dismay, I had learned that elves in Calernia were not the happy hippies that Earth fiction had led me to believe I would find. They were highly xenophobic racial supremacists who would try to kill me on sight instead.

"In the event that our quest proves to be unfruitful, it may prove necessary to return to Callow proper and begin to take larger risks."

I didn't like the idea of being right under the noses of the Calamities again. But if there was no other option, then I would consider it. At the rate the discomfort was increasing, I would be a miserable wreck within the course of a decade.

I was about to respond to Roland when a particularly nasty pulse reverberated across the essence of me. I grimaced. It was the world pushing back against me harshly. They occurred infrequently, and we hadn't found a method to deal with them yet.

"Need to lie down again, girlie?" Max sounded concerned.

"I do. This one's bad."

"Go sleep then, Taylor."

I moved away from the front of the wagon and lay down near the rear. Closing my eyes, I tried to ignore the knives that were digging in to the back of my head. What felt like hours later, I finally drifted off.


I felt a hand on my shoulder, shaking me.

"Five more minutes," I mumbled irritably, the afternoon sun pleasant against my skin.

"Girlie, wake up," Max shook me more insistently.

"What is it?" I said, opening my eyes.

Suddenly, I heard a shriek from up ahead.

Hurriedly, I sat up and looked. In the distance, it seemed that one of the merchant convoys was under attack by roadside bandits.

"As if the day couldn't get any worse," I fumed.

"Now that you are awake, we need to swiftly settle on a course of action," Roland commented.

"No, it's fine. I'll deal with it."

"Are you sure, girlie?"

"I'm certain."

"How are you intending to resolve this scuffle?"

"I'll grief bomb them," I explained.

They could have a taste of my past regrets. There were plenty of them to go around. It took a lot of negative emotions to completely incapacitate people, but it took comparatively little effort for me to make them. With a view of a full on army, I suspected I could take them all out at once.

"What about the merchants, girlie?"

"They'll recover. It isn't permanent."

I wasn't in the mood for a fight. With time, it had become clear to me just how effective emotional attacks were. I didn't need to be able to tell who was causing problems to douse them all with a heavy helping of misery. Let them all fall over in a puddle of tears, and we could sort it out afterwards.

The other two looked at each other, their faces conflicted, then nodded my way.

"That is an acceptable resolution. I dislike the manner in which it does not discriminate between forces, but it ensures an outcome with minimal casualties."

Reaching out, I drew deep on the emotions I felt after the fight against Scion. From the moment right before I died and landed in Calernia. I shoved the idea in the general direction of the conflict. Some grass beside the road shrivelled and died, then the sounds of fighting drew to a stop.

The effect was only short term, so they would all eventually recover from it. But in the meantime, it would incapacitate our foes without truly hurting anyone else.

We moved in closer.

There was a group of approximately thirty people. All of them were lying on the dirt road, curled into a ball and sobbing. I felt a pang of guilt.

Fuck, was I too harsh here?

The bandits looked like poverty-stricken men who hadn't eaten in days. Their clothes were a mess of rags and I could see their ribs.

"Now I feel really bad," I muttered. "If I could just make them food right now, I would."

"As a seventh guiding principle, I suggest the following: 'try to see matters from other people's perspectives first,'" Roland chided.

It was a sound point, but now hardly felt like the right time to bring it up.

That was when five men carrying whips walked out from between the trees to the left of the road. They were led by a pudgy man in flamboyant clothing.

"What are you waiting for, slaves, I ordered you to attack them," he shouted.

As if through magic, welts started to appear across the slaves' backs.

Whimpering, they began to climb to their feet.

I wasn't just about to let this happen, so I doused the slavers with a heavy blast of emotion as well.

Seconds later, they had crumpled to his feet and was sobbing in the grass.

"Why didn't you just gut them, girlie? They deserve to die anyway."

I shrugged, "I can kill them if we need to, but I'd rather just turn them over to the Watch. They were the ones who attacked, nobody would bat an eyelid for what I did. If we kill them, it complicates everything."

I felt gossamer threads lightly brush against my presence. They seemed lost, though, unable to latch on. As if they were trying to attach themselves to me specifically, but couldn't find somewhere to fit. Odd. Was Creation attempting to fit me into a story? A part of me hoped as much, it meant that maybe there was a chance my problem could be solved.

Roland had theorized that if it was possible for me to earn a Name, it was one of the ways I could fit myself into Creation. What kind of story would this be? It didn't feel like the usual chance encounter on the road. What made it more disturbing is that the threads didn't attempt to connect with Roland at all.

For a fight that was supposedly part of a story that was attempting to involve me, it came as a surprise to me how easy it was. That, more than anything else, was cause for alarm. The story hadn't managed to grab onto me. I suspected that if an encounter this easy was trying to attach itself now, then I could be certain that a story more challenging was coming down the line.

"Fair enough. If you ask me, they don't deserve to live," Max spat at one side, "them monsters from Stygia like to inflict their cruelties on others without knowing the taste of the lash themselves."

"I find my opinion in accord with Taylor. The Watch will almost certainly sentence them to hang. There is no need here for us to be the hand that metes out justice, it would merely invite trouble when the law here should suffice."

The three of us approached the scene and started to take charge. It took a couple of hours before a Watch patrol finally showed up and took over. I likely would never find out what happened to the men, but I didn't need to either. Creation wasn't kind to crooks that were caught.

Hours later on the road, the three of us passed time silently watching the stars when Roland called out, "Does the idea of debating the merits of various political systems appeal to either of you?"

It had come out of nowhere, so I was entirely surprised.

"I… don't really think the idea sounds that exciting."

"Come on girlie, give it a go. It beats looking at more grass. Each of us chooses a side on something. Even if it isn't an idea you believe in. It'll be fun."

To me, this sounded more like a way to start team problems.

"There are many insights that may be gleaned from talking to someone almost entirely removed from Creation. Comparing and contrasting our political systems may lead to some fascinating discoveries. Your perspective is unique, after all."

"Fine. You make a good point. I am just stating up front that I see this leading to a fight."

We wiled away the rest of the night arguing the merits of democracy. To my surprise, I had fun. Neither of them believed the concept could even work, considering the local version of it. In a world like this, I struggled to conceive of it working either.

Functional democracies didn't make for good narratives, and so a story was guaranteed to kill one in the crib.​
 
Last edited:
The more I change from what I was like when I arrived, the worst the problem becomes."
Should be 'worse'.
Functional democracies didn't make for good narratives, and so a story was guaranteed to kill one on the crib.
"And so the handsome Shadow Deputy Prime Minister returned from battling the forces of ignorance and superstition and took his place on the Opposition Front Bench once more."
"Will he ever defeat the evil Prime Minister and his forces for good?"
"Perhaps. But that is a story for another night."
 
Verism 2.07
A/N: This will be the last timeskip in this arc. For people concerned about timeskips, there will be 1 more at the start of the next arc and then no timeskips for a very long period of time.


"Whilst children meet all the right requirements for joining the Legions of Terror, they have an unacceptable mortality rate. Adults, at least, know better than to question what I say."
– Dread Empress Sanguinia II, best known for outlawing cats and being taller than her


After leaving Daoine, we travelled to Laure. It had taken us two years of scouring Daoine from one side to the other to finally admit we were making no progress. Laure was one of the larger cities I had seen so far. At a guess, I suspected it had a higher population than Brockton Bay.

It was also undeniably going through a time of troubles. The city was a pit of depression so deep you could see the moon out the other side.

The three of us were renting a small apartment beside a tavern called the Rat's Nest. The place was a dump, but it was the type of place we needed to stay at for Roland to keep in touch with his connections without attracting attention.

The late morning sun shone through the door we sat beside in the Rat's Nest. Max tapped away at the corner table, faintly humming a marching song as he did so. Roland had raised wards against eavesdropping, but it probably wasn't necessary. Aside from the owner, we were the only ones inside.

Absently, I kicked at one of the legs of the table.

Laure had put me in a foul mood.

The governor Mazus was the genuine Praesi article. Every story they told about the Praesi Highborn was true for the man. He hosted extravagant parties one day after another, paid for by bleeding the citizens dry. Half the people I had seen on the streets looked to be suffering from malnutrition, and there was an undercurrent of despair everywhere I travelled.

"Say girlie, mind heading to the market and grabbing us something?" he asked.

"Sure." It gave me a brief distraction from all of my issues.

The food in the Rat's Nest wasn't great, so I couldn't blame him for wanting something a little fresh. Much like healing, food was something else I wasn't good with. That went for most biological material. I bet the first time I tried actually healing someone would make for a barrel of laughs. Welcome to Taylor's clinic. It's like a casino, except with medical treatment. Would you like to gamble on which deadly disease I give you as I try to fix your broken arm?

Standing up, I exited the building and made a brief stop in our residence to pick up a satchel.

I consciously ignored the weight of the world pressing back against me. It felt like glass shredding through parts of my mind. By this point, I was never not being blanketed by Angels and while the presence was comforting, it did nothing to alleviate the pain.

At least I wasn't as compassionate as they were. Being in a place so filled with human misery while being a literal incarnation of compassion would have been enough to make anyone's heart break.

The route to the market was depressing. I had to pass between dilapidated houses and derelict buildings. Slowly, the city became nicer as I left the poorer quarters. A thin veneer of decency painted onto a haven of rot.

My destination drew close. Slowly, I allowed myself to fade back into people's perception.

Looking over the various stalls, I started picking out ingredients. As I was examining a lettuce to determine its relative freshness, a conversation one stall over caught my attention.

"You heard about the ongoing conflicts in Procer?" someone muttered.

"No, damn the snakes and their squabbles. Let them fight among themselves until last dusk."

"They say there's a villain running around there stealing everyone's souls. An Artist of some sort. I wo-"

I felt a spike of frustration. So the Artist had escaped then, and was ruining people's lives on the other side of the continent now.

I was about to leave the market when I caught sight of what seemed to be a butcher's shop nestled in the corner. Good meat was expensive, in theory out of the price range of what we were pretending to be. But I was hungry and in a bad mood. This was an opportunity for me to indulge.

Making my way inside, I spotted the butcher standing behind a table. He was a well muscled man in his early twenties, with his long black hair tied up in a ponytail. Behind him, there were carcasses hanging on racks. He stopped carving up a slice of pork into strips as I entered and looked up.

"What meat you looking for, lass?" he asked.

I started pointing out what I wanted, then settled in to wait. Moments later, I heard a faint humming coming from behind me. Two dozen snakes a knot do make. At least, that's what I thought the tune was.

I turned around.

Behind me, there was a slip of a girl who was likely not even ten years old. She was short, with chubby cheeks, brown hair and dark skin. She wore a scraggly blue blouse with a symbol I didn't recognize sewn onto it. I didn't need to, to be able to guess what it meant. She was one of the local orphans.

Cheeky brat.

That was when two of the local guards entered the store. They looked over the two of us disdainfully, then their eyes hardened as they settled on the butcher.

"Piss off you two, we have business with him. Stick around, you might just be involved in it," the one on the left said. He tried to sound intimidating, but it was hard not to laugh. He had a high-pitched, squeaky voice that made him sound like a parrot.

I took a moment to scan the room.

The butcher had gone rigid with barely disguised fear.

The girl had a look of suppressed anger and helplessness that was radiating out of her. As if she wanted to reach out and do something, but didn't have the power to do it.

You know what, Taylor, fuck it.

I was probably going to be in so much trouble with the others for sticking my nose into the business of the guard. But this looked to me to be a shakedown of some sort, and right now I was frustrated enough that I was willing to intervene. The least I could do was find out what was going on.

"What kind of business?" I turned my attention back to the guards.

"What's it to you, bitch? I told you to piss off," squeaky voice said.

I shrugged, remaining unruffled, then stared unblinking into his eyes.

"Just want to know how much I'll regret involving myself."

As I spoke, I started to mess with their emotions. It was the most subtle method of attack I had and if I was careful enough, they wouldn't even notice I was doing it. I started by making them more eager to talk.

"Charles here hasn't joined one of the Guilds. We're here to provide him with some…incentive. Mazus doesn't want any unaffiliated shop owners. You don't want to anger him. Now leave, before we decide you need some incentive too," the one on the right laughed at me.

It was more or less what I was expecting, and it gave me an excuse to stick my nose in more directly. I was almost certain the Legion of Terror would not approve of what these men were doing if they were around. They had interrupted similar affairs elsewhere. It was a paper thin excuse for me to do what I saw to be the right thing, but I wasn't about to just let this go.

"I think the two of you should leave. If the Legions were here, they would kick you out of the store," I stated.

Both of them snickered. "They aren't here. It's just us. And if something were to happen to you then, well, nobody would say a thing."

I tried being polite.

"I lost this arm in a war," I raised the stump up, indicating, "it got mauled. Rather than stop fighting, I had it burned off. I don't care if Mazus wants you to do this, I'm certain it isn't actually allowed. Stopping the two of you…wouldn't even be that hard for me. At worst, I'd be given a fine for it, and you would have to live with broken bones."

I reached under the butcher's table, then started to lift it up one-handed. I was actually levitating it, but they wouldn't know that. The butcher looked like he was about to start complaining, then paled. I continued manipulating their emotions, heightening fear, pushing down the desire to fight.

"Now see here," the one on the right began, "you can't threaten us like this. We're with the Guard!"

"Who said anything about threatening," I put the table down and started to draw the knife sheathed on my left leg. "We're just having a conversation. You wouldn't want the conversation to end, would you?"

I wasn't happy with this solution. Unfortunately, I wasn't sure how to prevent the situation from escalating without resorting to threats. They seemed like the only language anyone in the Empire spoke.

"Never mind. Come on, Jules, it's not worth it. The bitch looks crazy enough to try shank us. Even if she's hanged for it, we'd still be dead. We can always come back here later when she's not around," the one with the whiney voice said.

Sending one last look my way that was filled with loathing, both of them turned and left.

My attempt at intimidation probably wouldn't have worked without messing with their emotions. Logically, they did have the upper hand in a fight. They had better weapons and there were two of them. Unfortunately, I knew that what I had done was only delaying the inevitable. Unless something was done about Mazus, sooner or later those two, or others like them, would be back.

The butcher muttered thanks my way and I completed my purchase, adding the extra weight to my bag. Then I turned and left. I felt the eyes of the girl follow me as I went. Slowly, I allowed myself to fade from view.

I was halfway to the Rat's Nest when I started to feel an imperceptible tug, like the tug of a story. Annoyingly, I could only just feel it over the lancing pain from the world bearing down on me. I had felt a few stories try to attach themselves to me since the encounter on the road. None of them had stuck. This one was close enough that I felt if I pulled just right, I could take the main role.

Maybe this is finally a chance to earn a Name.

Frowning, I started to look around, trying to identify the source. Behind me, I saw the girl from the shop, carrying a box between her arms. Eyes narrowed, she was looking around as if trying to find something.

I was almost certain the pull came from her.

She rolled her shoulders and came closer. The manner in which she approached was almost skittish, as if she was afraid but forcing herself through. She couldn't see me, but was finding her way towards me regardless.

What kind of story is this?

Clearly it was a story involving her. What did I know for certain? She was an orphan in Callow, and she was young. I suspected she was also upset about the state of Laure. That…almost certainly made this a heroine's story, which would make me the mentor.

Mentors in stories didn't live long.

I was still tempted to take this story, there was a part of me that liked the idea of taking care of a child. Unfortunately, I didn't think I would make for a good mother and I didn't want to be responsible for taking a nine-year-old child and making them into a soldier. That would be a new regret that I didn't want to have to live with. I was already directly responsible for the death of one kid, I didn't want to steal the childhood of another.

Despite that, I still wanted to allow her to come with. She had the… whatever it was that allowed someone to have a Name, and was probably heroically inclined. She would likely be safer with us than staying here. I clamped down on the feeling. I needed to solve my current problems before I took on new ones.

That didn't mean I couldn't give her some advice to help her along the way. I didn't doubt she would find someone who was willing to guide her. Even if that someone wouldn't be me.

As she drew close, I included her in the effect I had up.

"What's your name?" I asked.

For a moment, it looked like she was about to jump out of her shoes and drop the box, before she restrained her reflexes.

I suppressed a smile.

"Weeping heavens," she muttered under her breath, louder than I think she realized. "What's it to you?"

"You were following me, not the other way around."

"Catherine Foundling. Are you a hero?"

"I'm not a hero," I denied.

I started moving again, and she waddled behind me like a duckling. We stopped on one of the piers going out onto the Silver Lake. There was nobody else around.

"Rubies to piglets, you're a hero," she snorted.

I smiled a little, "A hero would unseat Mazus, fight the Calamities, and reform Callow. I just stopped a couple of bullies from beating down the local butcher. That doesn't make me a hero, Catherine."

"Cat or Foundling, don't call me Catherine," she bristled like some sort of angry porcupine. It was cute.

Adopt her.

No, no. That isn't a good idea. Be responsible, Taylor. The Imperial Orphanages are allegedly well maintained, and exposing her to my problems wouldn't be good for the girl.

"Alright, Cat."

"So why don't you stop Mazus then?"

"Because I'm not a hero."

"Sure you aren't," Catherine said, dubiously, "but if you were, why haven't you?"

"Let's say someone killed Mazus. Now what happens?" I asked.

She shrugged, "People don't starve any more?"

"The Empire takes it as a sign of rebellion. So the Legions are sent to stop it, and lots of people are killed. Then a new governor is put in place, only the rules are even stricter than before," I explained.

I was reminded of the explanation given by the Number's Man as to what happened in Brockton Bay. How a single event set off a chain of other events. While it would be wrong to blame the entire sequence of events on me choosing to fight Lung, the lesson still had merit.

I needed to think about the consequences of my actions, before I went ahead and decided to put my foot down.

"Then what about joining the Legion. They follow the Black Knight's rules. If you rose high enough, you could fix Callow that way." It wasn't phrased as a question, but I decided to answer it as one.

That idea sounded just as awful as deciding to infiltrate the Undersiders.

"It's a bad plan. They would teach you to think like them. By the time you could change anything, you wouldn't want to any more."

"Then what do you think a hero should do?" she challenged.

Why couldn't she start with easy questions.

"Being a hero to me is about deciding to do things that are messy and complicated and aren't an easy fix to the problem, but don't hurt others along the way. It's about making choices that you won't regret later. It's about accepting that you don't need to be the person to solve every problem, so long as the issue is solved. You can let other people help you do it or even follow them instead," I paused, considering what else I wanted to say.

Now, if only I could live by my own advice.

"You sound just like those tired old nuns from the house of light," her tone of voice was derisive, as if doubting what I had to say.

Despite her words, the tugging from the story between me and the girl was becoming more insistent. This was a concern, I didn't want to fall into this Role.

… Even if a part of me did.

"I think you should go home and enjoy life for now," I told her gently.

"You really aren't going to stop Mazus?" She asked again, this time sounding mutinous.

"No. Even if I was a hero and I won the fight, what next? Somebody still needs to run the city, and it can't be me."

The fight seemed to go out of her.

"You're a bad hero," she muttered.

"I told you, I'm not a hero."

Not yet, anyway.

"You're a hero from Procer," she insisted, "everyone calls you people snakes. Are you just going to prove them right?"

"I'm not from Procer," I denied.

"You sure sound like it," She muttered darkly, "What's your name?"

"Taylor."

I felt the last threads of the story snap loose.

"You're wrong, Taylor," she declared under her breath. "You're just a bad hero. I'll be a better hero than you. If you don't fix Callow, then one day I will." She finished her tantrum, voice laced with spite, then started stomping away.

Oh, fuck no.

That wasn't what I wanted.

"Cat, wait!" I called out.

She ignored me and broke out into a run, box between her arms. Were it not for the circumstances, it would be comical to watch.

I started to follow, before bringing myself to a halt. What could I do here? She wouldn't be happy with me bringing her along now, even if I wouldn't be a mentor. It would still be killing her childhood, although she seemed determined enough to do that on her own.

Angrily, I started to pace back and forth at the edge of the pier.

I didn't know what was the right thing to do. I didn't want to kidnap her, but it seemed like she was going to do something unsafe. She was a kid, she was going to make a bunch of stupid decisions, but these might actually kill her.

For a moment I considered praying for advice, not that the Gods here ever answered. I had tried it once or twice when the pain became especially bad, hoping that they would help out. The problem I suspected was that I didn't truly have faith, and that was unlikely to change.

Knowing something is real and having faith in it aren't the same thing. I could do the first, but struggled with the second. The most I could do was blindly hope for help.

Think it through, Taylor.

She was nine. If I tried to adopt her, she was guaranteed to be part of a story. If I just left her here, there was a good chance she would forget and move on with her life. It was a slim hope to go on, but it was all I really had.

I started to make my way back to our lodgings.

With nothing to distract myself, the presence of the world eating at me became nearly unbearable.

Stay calm, Taylor.

Killing the governor, I reminded myself, would not solve the problem. It likely wouldn't even make me feel better. Trying to keep a city together when I was sixteen and had localized omniscience had been hard enough. I didn't want to accidentally end up in charge of another, a couple of hundred years in the past and without a proper support network.

The streets became tighter, the people more downtrodden, and my mood continued to sour. By the time I arrived at our lodgings, I was a bundle of frozen rage. Roland was standing outside, whispering furtively with another figure in a black cloak in an alley opposite the door.

"-will be held in Liesse," I caught briefly.

Both of them broke up as I approached.

"Come in, Girlie," I heard from inside.

I carefully wiped my boots on the rug, then took a seat beside Max. Roland came in not long after and sat opposite to me. A ward against eavesdropping went up, then conversation began.

"Well, who pissed in your breakfast?" Max asked cheerfully.

"I got into a fight with some guards. They tried to intimidate a merchant into joining the guilds, and I didn't let it be."

"Whilst I understand what drove you to move to the man's defence, doing so has put us at risk," Roland chided.

"I know, I'm sorry."

"Were it not for your current circumstances, the bruising would be more severe. As it stands, I ask that you be more cautious."

"That wasn't the worst of it, though."

"What else is there, girlie?"

"I ran into a girl. I'd guess she was nine years old. There were the beginnings of a story between the two of us. It looked like she would be a hero. I broke the story but…"

"You find yourself concerned for her wellbeing," Roland inferred.

"Exactly. I don't know what to do."

"Do you wish for an apprentice, Taylor?"

"I do, but I don't think I would be good for her," I admitted.

"Then it is for the best we leave her then," he declared.

That didn't make me feel any less uneasy at the thought.

There was a lull in the conversation before Roland changed the topic.

"The state of Laure is a disgrace."

"It is."

"If you consider the situation as it currently stands in Callow, then how would you propose to deal with this?" Roland had a sincerity to his face that made me take the question seriously.

I thought for a moment.

While starting a rebellion would never end well, and I wasn't about to join the Legions, I suspected the Black Knight also wouldn't be happy with the state of affairs.

"We should write a letter to the Black Knight," I replied.

"This isn't some dainty girl you can win with some pretty words and flowers, girlie." Maxime snorted.

"No, hear me out," I began. "Look at how the Black Knight operates. He's ruthless and Evil. He set the Blessed Isle on fire, burning everyone on it to death, then went on to crucify everyone who disagreed with him after the Conquest. But that's not what's important."

"And what's that, girlie?"

"The man is pragmatic above all else. After taking control of Callow, he built orphanages and schools. Reformed the tax law. Did away with the nobility and regulated anything he felt he couldn't control. He can be convinced by logic." I argued.

"And how does this relate to the letter you plan to write?" Roland asked dubiously.

"The man doesn't want an uprising. He plans to play the long game. He also knows stories. If there's an uprising, there will be heroes that come with it. The orphanages weren't built out of the goodness of his heart. He's doing it to prevent orphans from turning into heroes."

At least, that was my suspicion. I couldn't see any other reason for a man as ruthless as he was to go to the lengths he did.

"Perhaps," Roland prevaricated. "This still does not explain your thoughts behind the approach."

"You see, if we assume that he doesn't want an uprising, what the Black Knight wants least here is for people to be angry. If they are angry, then they might rebel. He doesn't need people to be happy, so long as they aren't angry they are unlikely to cause problems." I finished.

Relying on the tyrant to clean up his own messes upset me, but killing him wouldn't fix anything unless I actually had the right people behind me to replace him. I didn't have an entire government stuffed in my back pocket, and I didn't think throwing Callow into a state of civil war would make anyone's lives better.

"So to my understanding, you believe that by sending a letter, you can bring him to act in an effort to stave off rebellion then?" Roland confirmed.

"If worded correctly, yes. Bring the risk of an uprising to his attention. The Legion has bureaucracy for everything. File the right form and fill it with the right words, and he's almost certain to follow it up." I stated.

There was even rumoured to be a form you could file to get annoying subordinates killed if you had the right justification. This place was a madhouse filled with nothing but the criminally insane.

"Girlie, how do you plan to stop it from just been thrown in a fire?" Max asked.

It was a valid question. The letter would need to be attention grabbing in some way to ensure it landed on his desk.

"The Gnomes hand out red letters, right?"

"You're not thinking of sending Praes a red letter, are you?" a touch of hysteria had entered Max's voice.

"It will certainly grab someone's attention."

I had no idea what a genuine red letter looked like, but I didn't need to. I imagined that nobody at the bottom levels of Legion bureaucracy would know either. If something that looked convincing enough arrived at one of their desks, they would escalate it. I was reasonably confident I could recreate a modern postcard with a view of Chicago on it, as something to bundle with the letter itself.

The contents of the letter could quite clearly state that it wasn't actually a form of Gnomish diplomacy, somewhere near the bottom. I just needed it to capture the attention of someone important enough within the Legions that our complaints about Laure would actually be heard.

It did bring up the obvious concern of people no longer taking the letter seriously once they realized it's a fake, but I didn't have a good solution to that without putting us in genuine danger along the way. Somehow, I didn't think the Black Knight would be willing to sit down over a cup of tea and debate the finer details of how to run Callow.

I wouldn't ever actually deliberately call down the Gnomes on anyone. I wasn't sure if I could by manifesting the right tools, but the very idea of doing so nauseated me. They were a problem I didn't even have the beginnings of an answer to. A disaster of foreign relations that needed to be dealt with.

There aren't any easy solutions, are there?

"That is certainly… One method to call attention down on our heads. I suggest that we table that idea for now and preferably never revisit it. Besides, I dislike that your heroic plot to deal with the unrest within Laure is to bring it to the attention of the villains." Roland looked upset.

"It will work," I insisted.

Just letting the bully remain in charge was not an acceptable solution, but it would have to do until I had a better one.

"If this works, girlie, you will be flashing your tits right at the calamities. There is no way it would be safe for you to stay in Callow, then." Max added.

"We don't need to do it immediately." I replied. "When we decide to leave for the Principate, we leave a letter on our way out."

I suspected it was coming sooner or later. There were only so many places we could check before Praes became the last place to look. As desperate was I was for help, I wasn't willing to go that far.

Yet.

It would be miserable living like this, but it was better living with the world trying to eject me then being captured by a diabolist.

Roland drummed his fingers on the table thoughtfully.

"I dislike everything about this."

That didn't surprise me. It wasn't a heroic solution. In fact, it wasn't really a solution at all. It was me hoping my read on a person I had never met was correct. The problem was this wasn't something any of us could solve easily, and trying to fix it directly myself would likely make everything worse.

"So, it has just been brought to my attention by one of my contacts that there is a rumour-" Roland changed the topic.

Max and I both groaned.

That meant something to do with his Name.

He raised his hands in exasperation.

"-that some of the Wizard of the West's secret tomes are being auctioned off in Liesse." He confided.

It went unsaid that such an auction was highly illegal.

"I think it's a trap." I declared.

"Girlie's right. Put one foot into that auction and all our heads get cut off," Max added.

There was no way the Calamities would just leave something like that on the table.

"I acknowledge that the possibility exists that it is a trap, but consider Taylor," he became more animated as he spoke, "this could be the opportunity we seek."

I thought about it. He was right. Short of trying to steal books out of the Warlock's library, this did seem like our best bet. I wasn't too keen on the risks, but playing it safe for two years had achieved nothing, and I was becoming desperate. This kind of opportunity did fit Roland's type of story almost perfectly. It was magical knowledge that was likely being misused. If we were ever to have a genuine chance at finding the information I needed, this would be it.

Liesse wasn't Praes, but we would still be taking a big risk.

"We will need to plan carefully," I said.

"Girlie, you sure you can't just leave it be?" Max asked.

I shook my head.

"I have to do this," I told him. "Living like this is awful, and I'm…" I trailed off, the rest left unsaid.

He sighed.

"Well, I've come with you this far," he mumbled.

"We'll need to plan our escape route to Procer as well. I doubt we could stay in Callow for much longer afterwards."

It was a tacit approval, but Roland's face lit up.

"Let us begin planning. Once we are done, we can prepare for departure," he smiled.

We didn't leave that night, but we did leave soon after. I suspected that whatever the outcome, we would need to flee Callow in the aftermath. This way, at least we had a story on our side.


"Shall we resume our debate then?" Roland inquired idly.

We were on the road heading for Liesse. We were taking a more indirect route, passing through Vale rather than going near Marchford. There were rumours that the Warlock was currently in residence there, and none of us thought that going near him was a good idea.

"Sure," I replied.

Roland and I had been having an ongoing debate ever since we entered back into Callow. It made for an easy way to waste time. I had taken up arguing in favour of Black's system of Governance in Callow, and he argued for the Principate. I didn't actually like or approve of either systems, but at least our discussions had a way of keeping us entertained on the roads.

There was only so many times you could look at mountains and fields before they all started to look the same.

By this point, we had probably retreaded the same couple of arguments at least over a dozen times. Max had joined in at first, but after the fifth repeat of the debate had decided that he would rather sleep.

"In the Principate, the Princes would never allow a city regress in the same manner as Laure," Roland stated.

I was sure that wasn't true, considering what I had heard about the civil war. But I had only seen a corner of Procer myself, so I would leave that alone.

"If a city became like Laure in Procer, then nobody would be able to do something about it. In Callow, the Governers only have a four-year mandate. If it appears the current ruler is causing problems, they can be removed. Nobody can remove the Princes." I argued.

Not that I expected anyone good would replace Mazus.

"In the event that Mazus is removed, another Wasteland lord or lady equivalent in nature would replace him." He retorted.

"Can't you kids talk about something else?" Max interjected, sounding grumpy.

Both of us grinned. Actually finding a way to draw a reaction out of Max had taken us a while.

"In the Empire, anyone can receive an education. It doesn't matter how poor you are. Sure, you need to pay the Tower back by serving in the army. But in the Principate, only the wealthy have a chance at a proper education at all."

And I'd bet the Callow education under Black was filled with propaganda. Despite this, it was one of the changes he had made which I genuinely approved of. Even if the good in it was partially subverted.

"That isn't a refutation of my point, you are merely deflecting to another topic. Consider how likely is it that somebody who isn't a High Lord ends up in the seat of power."

It would probably never happen.

"More likely than it is than someone in the Principate. You start your calendar from the death of Triumphant. When I was poking around in the necromancer's books, it was implied that she wasn't from the nobility at all."

Triumphant was an exception, of course. It had been made clear to me the first time I had heard her name that she was an exception to everything. The woman who conquered the continent in ten years, then lost it in five. The stories told about her were so horrifying that even centuries later, people talked about her in whispers.

"Using Triumphant as an example of anything is indicative that you are losing the argument." He stated firmly.

"The only reason that you feel this strongly against the system in Callow is because it's run by villains."

He raised an eyebrow at me.

"And you do not consider this a valid reason to hold it in contempt? They brook no disagreement, and murder all who dare speak out against them." He reached behind him and picked up a flask, then took a sip.

"What's the sentence for opposing the ruler in the Principate?…" I trailed off, raising an eyebrow.

"Poison for Princes. Being hung, drawn and quartered for anyone else." Max added from behind helpfully.

I turned and smiled at him in thanks.

Both Procer and Praes had problems.

In the Principate, it was highly unlikely you would ever end up in a position of power unless you were born into it. It was taken as a given that only the Princes had the right to rule. A proper education was limited to the nobility, and mages were shunned and distrusted by all but the Lycaonese.

It was still better than Praes, but that wasn't saying much. Being better than the Empire that actively advertises how evil it is shouldn't be seen as an achievement.

Praes was just a mess. While in theory anyone could rule, in practice it was only those born into power. Even if you ignored that, the system was just bad. The history books were littered with examples of tyrants taking over and being terrible at actually running the place. When rulers were decided based on their ability to scheme, backstab, betray and murder their rivals, they didn't typically have the right skills to rule. They had the right skills for scheming, backstabbing, betraying and murdering people.

Funny how that worked.

"You know, I read that at one point in history, slavery used to be considered Good in Calernia." I began.

"Yes…"

"And now it isn't." I continued.

"You understand correctly. I fail to understand where you are going with this." Roland replied.

"Whoever or however it was that came to be changed, the people involved had to have been villains." I finished.

Roland was quiet for a moment.

"This does not necessarily need to be the case. The understanding of Good could merely have shifted over time of its own volition." He denied.

He was probably right.

"One interpretation of The Book of All Things claims that Creation is a bet to determine the validity of free will. The side that claims to be Good is against the idea. If Good opposes free will, then why would they be against slavery."

All things considered, I felt like the biggest hypocrite in Creation. Being the person to argue in favour of free will after using mind control during the apocalypse in order to get my way wasn't much of a ringing endorsement.

I still didn't know if there had been a better option.

Would people have come to the same solution or even a better one faster without my intervention? I didn't think so, but the doubt would always be there.

Would I make the same choice if I was put in the same situation again?

I didn't know the answer.

A part of me worried that I would.

Another part of me worried that I would not.

"Historians make the assertion that this was caused by Good and not Evil." Roland repeated.

"Histories that were written afterwards and were likely biased."

I felt that the argument was plausible, but everything I had seen so far spoke to the opposite.

"And you are making the claim that people performing blood sacrifices and summoning up demons are more likely to have brought about this change? Furthermore, these days only evil polities have slavery or indentured servitude." His incredulity bled through.

"I'm not claiming that."

"Then what are you claiming?" He asked.

"That good and evil aren't the same as Good and Evil. If you think of Creation in terms of the bet, then there are other options. It is possible to be a good person without being Good. It's possible there was a villain who disagreed with slavery and challenged it all on their own."

"Can you name any examples of villains in Calernia that to your knowledge would do such a thing." He inquired.

I couldn't.

All the villains I had read about were truly villainous. The Dead King literally ruled a Kingdom of the Dead from the safety of one of the hells. Traitorous betrayed anyone and everyone he could. Triumphant unleashed demons all over the continent.

Calernia was a broken land full of broken people, and something needed to be done about it.

"Do you think that historians would have recorded it that way? Villains would have shunned them and heroes would have changed the facts afterwards." I argued.

"Taylor, I know you consider every villain in Calernia you have heard of reprehensible. Why are you defending them?" He sounded exasperated at the thought.

Ah, he had become emotionally invested in the argument.

"We should finish here," I said diplomatically.

"I would appreciate it if you gave me an answer this time," he contested.

Fair enough.

"Because…" I trailed off.

"Because Girlie here was a villain once and is worried that if villains in Creation are truly Evil, then maybe she is too." Max interjected.

I wouldn't put it that way.

After seeing the Choir of Compassion, it had been something I worried about for a while. Looking around Calernia had done enough to help me dismiss the idea. Maybe my morality didn't measure up to that of the Angels, but that didn't make me Evil. It just meant I wasn't a Saint.

And I was fine with not being a Saint.

"It's just that… When I was a villain, I didn't think of what I was doing as Evil. I had a goal that I believed was good, even if the steps I took to reach it weren't."

"And so the thought had occurred to you that perhaps there are villains here that share those traits as well." Roland surmised.

"It's something I think about sometimes," I admitted.

"By now has it not been made clear to you that the villains of one land and the other are not the same?" inquired.

It had, but that didn't make me still wonder. Surely not everyone with a villainous name was a monster? Or was it a requirement for the role.

"What else is fucking with your head, Taylor?" Max asked.

Do I talk about it?

If I didn't talk about it now, I never would.

"You remember how I told you about the end of the world," I began.

Max's eyebrows raised.

"I take it you're going somewhere with this?"

"I am."

I paused for a moment. I'd come to value their judgement with time, and I expected I knew how they would react. That didn't take away my fear of rejection, though.

"Stop chewing on it and spit it out, Taylor. It will eat you up inside otherwise." Max pressed.

Fine.

"When the world ended, nobody worked together. Nothing anyone did worked, and it looked like we were going to lose." I started.

"You informed us that you had died during the engagement," Roland interjected.

"I did, but it was after the end of the fight. Before then, I did something."

"Keep talking, girlie."

Roland passed me a flask. Taking it, I thanked him quickly before continuing with my story.

"At the time, I felt helpless. Nothing I could do would make any difference in the fight. So I took a gamble that was reckless. Afterwards, I could control anyone who got close enough to me…" I trailed off.

"And then you took control of everyone." He completed my train of thought.

"At first I only meant to control the worst people, the villains. The longer the fight went on, the more people I controlled."

"And you don't know if it was the right or wrong thing to do." He continued.

"We won at the end, but it didn't feel like winning," I said softly. "So many people died and there were only pieces left."

"And then afterwards, you end up in a place where the gods are arguably having a pissing match over free will. You must be wondering if it's some sort of punishment." Max chuckled.

I hadn't even thought of that. It was nice having even more to worry about.

"Girlie, this isn't the place to worry about that. This is Calernia. We don't have a golden man, but we have Old Bones. If the Dead King came down from Keter to fuck us all over, and you summoned down an Angel of Contrition to fight him, you would be buried as a Saint." He consoled.

"That's part of what worries me," I muttered.

"The rules of whatever land you came from don't work here, so why worry about them?" He asked.

How to explain?

If I had ended up somewhere more familiar, I likely wouldn't have worried so much about this. Here though? This was a world where people would shout from the rooftops that the decision I made was the right one. It was also in almost every measurable way worse off. There were cities on Bet that had a higher population than the entire of Calernia. That was likely true even after the apocalypse.

Being confronted with that every day wasn't something I was comfortable with.

Every day, I came face to face with a world that was run the way I had operated back on Earth Bet. If I took charge and acted like a benevolent warlord, nobody would bat an eyelid. If I was a hero in the process, they would probably even tell me I was doing a good job for it.

And the actual state of the world was terrible in comparison.

Sure, Calernia wasn't falling apart like Bet was, but that wasn't because the system was good. It was because they just didn't happen to have something far outside the scope of the world actively working to bring it down. Aleph existed and operated under largely the same rules as Bet did. It hadn't been falling apart, and it was almost a utopia in comparison to Creation.

Calernia felt to me like the biggest argument that I was wrong.​
 
Kill the gods and topple their thrones! You know you want to, Taylor.
You'll even get front row seat to examples of how it is done with angels if you live long enough.
 
– Dread Empress Sanguinia II, best known for outlawing cats and being taller than her
You'd think she'd be all for child soldiers, in that case...

It was great to see Taylor sidestepping a little orphan Cat, only to regret it after. Her letter plan is also the sort of completely insane out of the box plan I'd expect from an outsider to Calernia.
 
Verism 2.08
"And so Triumphant declared: 'Come, heroes most mighty and Tyrants most dark. None shall be spared from the fullness of my wrath. No powers Above or Below shall save you, even should the Gods heed your call.'"
– Extract from the Scroll of Dominion, twenty-fourth of the Secret Histories of Praes


Arriving in Liesse was different from arriving in Laure. For one, Liesse was like a tourist's destination in comparison. The pale white walls of the city loomed up ahead. For a city so comparatively small, they were a marvel to behold. Topping the walls were ornate crenellations that had been shaped to look like mated pairs of swans.

I hadn't taken the time to draft a letter to the Black Knight yet. But it wouldn't take long to write, and was something that I could do when we were making our exit from the Empire.

"Once we are within the confines of the city, I will see to the stabling of our transportation and then endeavour to establish contact with the local criminal underbelly. If the two of you could make the effort to find us acceptable accommodations for a brief stay, then we can rendezvous back at the city gates at the setting of the sun. Does this course of action agree with you?" Roland inquired.

"Sounds good." I replied.

Max also gave his assent.

"We do not plan to remain in Liesse for the long term, only so long as it takes to acquire our prize. It may be to our benefit if we are seen to have wealth. It is plausible that an auction like this is invite only, and one may not be extended if we are seen as poor." Roland continued.

We had decided that stealing the tomes would attract more attention than simply buying them out. Being merely another bidder with more money than sense would put us in less danger than annoying everyone at the auction, including the people hosting it.

It was highly unlikely that there was anyone who could outbid me.

"If I ignore what we're doing, it's basically a holiday."

"That's right girlie. We're staying somewhere nice for once."

As we made our way through the gates, the wards pressed in on me from either side, stifling my sense of the world.

Max and I split off from Roland, then started to look for a place to stay. Liesse was scenic, with large cathedrals and towers rising up high in the air. We moved to the wealthier parts of the city first and went from place to place. The buildings here had slate tile roofs and sandstone walls, looking far fancier than the ones we had passed while entering. People eyed us distrustfully, we probably should have changed into nicer outfits.

To both of our mounting dismay, it seemed that all the rooms had already been taken.

Slowly, we started moving into the less well-kept parts of the city. Snow fell around us. I kept it away unconsciously, but that did not remove the feel of it from the edge of my effect. Time was passing, and we had little to show for it.

This wasn't sticking to our original plan, but with every residence full, we had no other choice. Regardless of what we wanted, we did need somewhere to stay.

It wasn't the end of the world. We hadn't been staying in pleasant places over the course of our journey. It had been something I was looking forward to for once, though.

As our search dragged on, the feeling of salt poured on an open wound embedded into my metaphysical flesh mounted. It was so bad, that I was only vaguely able to focus on what people were saying around me.

We exited another guest house and were halfway past a tavern when I tripped, landing face first in a pile of mud.

"Fuck," I grumbled as I climbed back onto my feet, then took a moment to clear off my face. I winced as shards cut into my efforts.

"How bad is it, Taylor?" Max asked softly.

"Terrible."

He came closer and laid a hand gently on my shoulders.

"Let's find the first place that has a bed. Doesn't matter how nice it is, you can clean it yourself in a heartbeat. Then you're going to rest," he declared.

"Sounds good," I mumbled back, almost delirious from pain.

That was when a ballad started up in the distance.

"— ere once was a Spider;
In a land far away
Who fought with a Lizard;
At the edge of the bay"

"Do you hear that, girlie?" The two of us paused to listen.

"And in the aftermath;
It found that it was numb
Looking over the fight;
The battle lost and won"

"I hear it," I rasped back.

It was sung to the off-beat strumming of a lute. The voice had a distinctly mocking lilt to it. I could almost hear the grin.

"So lonely, the Spider;
That when met with a Fox
Did not make itself scarce;
Instead, climbed in the box"

The sound was distant, coming from down a narrow alley beside the tavern. We wouldn't have even noticed it if not for the song. Looking, I spotted a run-down building with a sign on the outside. It took a couple of heartbeats to read it, with my vision spinning the way it was. Happy Endings. It looked like the kind of place that Roland would probably be visiting in a day or two to find out more about the auction. I wasn't too keen on staying somewhere like it, but everywhere else had been full.

"Let's check it, Taylor?" Max said.

"Not going to make the joke about the kinds of happy endings they offer?"

"Not the right time."

I didn't like the idea of staying in the maybe brothel, but it was better than returning to Roland empty-handed or staggering around like this much longer. Perhaps we could pay the bard with the money we were saving on rent to shut up. The noise was almost as grating as the feeling at the back of my head.

"Not noticing the plan;
Of the dastardly Snake
The Spider was tangled;
With web of its own make"

"Do you want to go in there, Taylor?" He gestured towards the door.

"Yeah," I replied.

"Alright then, girlie, let's take a look."

"The Eagle was then roused;
From up high in its nest
Summoned forth by its Name;
Blasting down on the rest"

We reached the door. Max reached towards the handle. As he was about to open it, the door opened on its own and a wiry man with greying hair hurried out.

"Calamity did strike;
With the theft of the Owl
The great beast did arrive;
A tragedy most foul"

"Do you have beds available?"

"I do," he affirmed in a warm voice. "You can go in, I'll be right back shortly." I figured he was the proprietor.

The music cut off as he spoke.

The stained wooden floor creaked below our feet as we entered. My gaze roamed over the place, taking it all in. The majority of the floor space was taken up by cosy chairs and tables strewn haphazardly around. Directly opposite the entrance was a door, leading up to another floor.

On the right, was an empty stage.

That was the moment the place went to hell.

"You lot, again! How many times do I have to fight you? No matter. You will find to your misfortune that this time I am much better prepared. " A man shouted from the left, exasperated.

We turned to face the voice. Placed carefully around the fireplace were three easels, each with a canvas pinned to them. The canvas on the third easel was still wet with paint. Between them stood a familiar figure wearing stained patchwork clothing.

The Arcadian Artist.

I started the process of reaching out, planning to strike at him directly. I winced at the sensation of the world fighting back. For a moment, my vision fractured into a sea of broken shards. Max had begun drawing sigils in the air. Both of us were too slow.

"I will make of you a gift fit for my Prince, and then the terms of my bargain will finally be met. Harmonize." He declared, pointing to one of his portraits. Unfortunately, I couldn't see what was on it from where I stood.

Sadly, I didn't need to.

To my surprise, I could feel the intent of the word. It felt like the surface of a lake or the space occupied by a door. The meeting of two disparate places, existing but for a moment in unison.

In under a heartbeat, the world around us warped, melting like wax. The walls stretched further and further away, fading into the distance. The room began to fill with a thick, acrid fog that was dense enough to drink. The distance between us and the painter expanded, and the land poured upward. Like water coming out of a tap, only reversed.

The Artist was no longer in sight. Had he run away?

My blood ran cold. It was just the two of us, Max and I. While I wasn't that worried about my own safety, if we didn't escape then Max would almost certainly die.

"We need to escape from here. Let him get away. It's not worth fighting," I declared.

"You think it's the start of a story?" he asked, thoughtfully.

"Definitely."

I tried to shove against the effect and break out of it, to no success. There were well over a thousand souls pressing back against my attempt, all forced into it by the artist. He was awful at it, but he didn't need to be good at what he was doing to overpower me with brute force.

I did learn something from the attempt. He was in here with us, somewhere up above.

"You pests cannot conceive of the true scope of my vision. Now you will be ground down by it." A voice called out from all around us.

We could no longer see the walls of the place.

Next, I tried to determine if we were trapped inside a painting.

We both were and weren't.

As far as I could tell, the artist had overlapped his paintings with the inside of the building we had been inside and was changing the place to match his conception of reality. The rules it was following were nebulous. I was reasonably confident he couldn't just kill us, but he could mess with the laws of Creation to an absurd degree.

My stomach dropped.

"I… can't break us out of this without killing the Artist," I admitted. The words tasted like ash in my mouth. "We're going to have to try to fight him. Maybe if you stay down here and I go on ahead?"

"Now Taylor," Max sounded almost insulted, "I'm not leaving you to get fucked all on your own. We're in this together."

"That's not what I meant," I shook my head, frustrated. "He's a villain. He can't kill me. Sooner or later, I'll just win the fight. I don't want you to throw away your life for no good reason. You're important to me."

I suppressed another wince.

It was frustrating. I knew why he wanted to fight. He hid it well, but it was something I could read, and it hurt, although it hurt in a good way. His daughter had died, and he hadn't been there to fight for her. He didn't want to not be there a second time, even if it was completely irrational.

"I always knew I would die fighting one day, Taylor. I'm not running away just because it might be today."

I almost told him that he wasn't my dad, but chose to shut my mouth. If we had a major argument here, it might just make him more likely to die to drive home the regret. That seemed like it would better fit a story. I just had to hope that I was wrong.

Once more, I tried breaking the effect, but was met with little success.

… The Artist must have killed so many people to make this work. There was no way he could even hope to contain me otherwise.

We are going to be in so much trouble.

There was no way the Calamities missed a fight between Named within the boundaries of Liesse that involved something like this.

More and more details filled in. We were standing at the bottom of a cliff face. In front of us there was a narrow, sinuous path cut through the cliff, a gorge leading above. The exit had long since disappeared.

The chairs were the last remaining signs of the building we had entered. They were blocking the way.

Then the chairs grew wings and teeth.

As they did so, I felt a slight lessening to the pressure being exerted against me. Each time he summoned one, he was weakening his own defence. Unfortunately, the point he was starting from was so strong it would take a significant effort to be able to win.

They, like everything else the artist had summoned, had the appearance of being painted. You could still see the brush strokes lining everything he made.

I tried to just kill it, but it wasn't truly alive, and my attempt had no effect. Next, I tried to dismiss it.

My will slammed against his. Trying to contest him felt vaguely reminiscent of trying to contest the absence demon, only he was far slower and less unpredictable. Given time, I was certain to win.

I tried out a few more changes in an effort to kill the chair. Paint wasn't alive, so by my will neither should the chairs be. Paint couldn't float, so they should remain still. Each time, he pressed back.

The chair drew close.

Then Max threw a fireball at it.

"No, don't!" I shouted.

The Artist didn't even bother to try to contest the attempt.

The chair caught light. Unfortunately, I hadn't yet informed Max of our little problem. Whilst the Artist's creations were likely susceptible to fire, using it wasn't a good idea here.

Because everything around us was painted as well.

Fuck.

"Yes, why don't you set the very world you exist in alight," The Artist cackled gleefully.

The flames started to spread. Hastily, I reached out trying to smother them, but was pushed back against once more. The chairs that weren't on fire were drawing close.

I stretched out the space between us and them, buying us some time. The Artist didn't try to stop me, but it didn't matter either. The sheer effort of it almost caused me to black out.

"We're committed now and on a time limit," I rasped. "If we don't escape fast, you'll die just from the smoke."

"I'm sorry, Taylor," he sounded chagrined.

"It's okay," I affirmed, "but we need to go now before the fire blocks us off."

"Right, Girlie." He agreed.

The two of us began to run, dashing forward and dodging between more of the chairs. One of them smashed into me. I fell, tumbling to the ground. Suppressing a wince, I reached out with my mind, vaporizing it with a beam of light instead. The Artist scrambled to stop me, but failed.

I felt a slight drain on my reserves. The attack was costly, but less likely to cause me problems than leaving the enemy alive. Unfortunately, I would need to be careful and not overextend myself. This wasn't a fight I could win with brute force alone.

The flames were closing in.

I could feel their heat on my skin. Three more chairs were heading my way, and I climbed to my feet hastily. Dashing past them, I joined Max at the base of the path. He had blocked them off temporarily with a ward. I could already see the pale blue glow of his barrier flickering as the Artist started to break it down.

We began to jog, following the mountain path. Behind us, I could hear the quiet roar of the flames as the landscape was slowly consumed. The road split, going off in several directions. Picking one, we followed it, only to have it come to a dead end.

Backtracking, we chose one of the other branches. The path grew more narrow, closing in around us. Then, from ahead, the roar of a tiger could be heard. Painted claws scraped against my good arm, scoring deep, jagged cuts. I tumbled to the ground. It landed behind me.

I yelped out in pain, then dodged to the side as I sensed it leap once more.

To my frustration, I was too slow.

The tiger crashed into me, pinning me to the ground. On instinct, I tried transmuting it into a cloud of determination. The tiger disappeared.

This wouldn't be an issue if you weren't the person you are now.

I squashed the traitorous voice at the back of my head.

"Understanding. It begins to set in, doesn't it? How far beneath me the likes of you truly are. You do not even warrant an Artist's second consideration."

Among all my other current problems, his voice was starting to grate on me. Couldn't he shut up?

Max offered me a hand, helping me to my feet.

"Are you alright, Taylor?" Max asked, his voice thick with concern.

"No, I'm not," I answered truthfully.

I felt feverish. I suspected that the tiger's claws were venomous. It wouldn't kill me, but it made concentrating even harder.

Max looked at me worriedly.

"We need to hurry."

I could feel the dogged breath of the hells tickling the back of my neck.

We hurried, continuing our ascent. Wary now for attackers, we disposed of two more tigers as the journey dragged on. More dead ends, more backtracking. We were on a time limit and I felt the pressure continue to mount.

My vision started to swim.

"We - we can't go on like this," I said, my voice hoarse.

Max was panting beside me. I didn't know how long we had been inside this nightmare of a trap, but both of us were being worn down.

"This bugger is really fucking us up the ass this time, isn't he," Maxime agreed.

"This place is like a labyrinth. It's designed to waste our time. If we don't find a way through soon, he won't have to fight us at all," I complained. Then, I realized what I had said.

This place is like a labyrinth.

Despite looking like a mountain, we were actually in a maze. And the best way to solve a maze, was not to enter the maze at all. Unfortunately, now that we were already inside, this revelation came a bit too late.

Still, the second-best way to solve a maze was to look over the walls.

Or, in this case, make a path of our own.

I tried to create a platform leading up, but was too dizzy to push through. It felt like trying to grab an eel lathered in oil.

"Max, can you cut a path up the side of the gorge so we can scale it?" I asked, wheezing as I did so.

Everything I tried kept slipping from my reach.

"Oh, the ants finally find an idea between them!" The voice gleefully declared.

"I can try, Taylor." He answered. He didn't sound particularly confident in his assessment, but I didn't think we had another option.

"Then let's try that."

Max started to carve away at the side of the gorge, forming steps leading up. He had to alternate between many effects to do it, as the Artist kept countering his work. It was nerve wracking to watch from behind.

We started to climb.

It was precarious, but it was better than the alternative. This way, we could be sure that we wouldn't find ourselves lost in another dead end.

It's working.

Just ten feet short of the top and disaster struck. From above, a tiger leapt down, slamming into Maxime.

"No!" I shouted, my voice laced thick with horror.

This wouldn't have been a problem if we had run into the Artist a year ago.

The force shook him free, and he went tumbling down into the crevice below. Before I realized what I was doing, I was hastily scaling my way back down. My fingers trembled. Tears ran freely down my cheeks.

He's not dead. He's not dead. He's not dead.

Reaching the bottom, I found the scorched remains of the tiger. I passed it quickly, looking around.

Then I saw him.

His ribs stuck out of his chest at angles they were never supposed to be. His arms were mangled, and his face was mauled. There was a big, gaping chunk that had been chewed out of it. As I drew closer, he wheezed.

He was still alive.

"You're not going to be able to save him, you know. You lack the necessary perspective." The artist gloated.

I drew closer, doing my best to clamp down on my emotions. I couldn't allow myself to feel right now, not while the situation was so dire. In theory, I knew how to heal. I had practised plenty on animals. We had never risked me trying it on a person, though.

I would try it now.

Trembling, I laid my palm upon one of his hands. Visualizing the changes I wanted to make, I started to push.

I was fighting against both the artist and the world in my attempt, but I wasn't going to allow myself to fail here. Not like this.

"Girlie," he choked out, a glob of blood making its way down the side of his mouth.

"Keep quiet while I try to save you," I muttered, shoving my panic deep in a box.

"Promise me that… You will keep…" He hacked out another cough.

"I'm not promising you anything, Max. You're going to live. You're going to live because I am not going to let you die."

The changes weren't taking, no matter how hard I pushed against the Artist. It wasn't just his resistance that was the problem, either. There was just too much to do, and I simply wasn't skilled enough. I scaled back, trying to fix smaller things.

He's not going to die, I won't let him.

It wasn't working. I was healing injuries, moving ribs back into place and repairing his arms. But I wasn't fast enough, I could tell. Cancerous tumours started to well up on him, because of course I couldn't just fix things, could I? Then, his eyes glazed over and his hand slacked.

He was gone.

"Your fate, just like his, has already been pencilled in." The words registered distantly, but I wasn't even paying attention.

Dazed, I sat there, not letting go. This wasn't the way he was supposed to go.

I felt so empty. Like an important piece of me had been taken away.

The scorching caress of the inferno continued to draw close.

"Promise me that you will keep moving forward."

Time seemed to slow for a moment.

His words came back to me. A haunting echo, a reminder that he was gone. He was gone, but I had made him a promise. It was an old one, made back when we first met, but I still knew what he meant.

I would make sure to honour his last wishes.

I wasn't just one person among many aspiring to do better, but rather the Aspirant. Reaching for dreams, hoping for perfection. The impossible was only impossible until somebody had achieved it.

And I would make myself into the person that could achieve it.

In my head, a boundless expanse of nothingness appeared. Inside of it, innumerable figments suddenly burst into existence, almost like stars coming to life. Watching them reminded me of my swarm, from a place in my past that now seemed so very long ago.

They gained substance rapidly, details filling out. Puzzle pieces. That's what they were. More than could ever be counted. Then, strings seemed to attach themselves one at a time to each piece, extending up infinitely to some point far beyond my sight.

Inside my mind's eye, I looked at the shattered fragments of a great mosaic and stared.

How could anyone ever make sense of all of this?

A bitter laugh escaped my lips. I had wanted to be a hero, hadn't I? Seems that I finally achieved my goal. Just like every other hero, it started with an origin story.

That was also how it would end.

I didn't know how I would do it, but I knew what I would do. Search high and low, from one corner of the world to the other. I would find all of these fragments of Creation, then piece them together into a new story.

One where villains couldn't be born.

Because if villains have no origin stories, there couldn't be villains at all.

There was an idealized Taylor out there, one living in a better world with happier people. She was only a dream, but one day that dream would be real.

I hated it, find my answer like this. But Max wouldn't want me to give up on my dreams just because he died along the way.

It did nothing to lessen the ache.

Creation was broken. A broken land filled with people like me, and I would do my best to see that it was fixed.

I couldn't do it alone. I knew that. But I didn't want to do it alone regardless. Carrying the hopes and dreams of the future by yourself was lonely, and I was sure there were plenty of people who would be willing to share the burden. Some of them would be smarter than me, able to guide me to the right answer.

So I would ask them all to help, and have faith that it was offered in earnest.

The mantle finished settling on my metaphoric shoulders and with it, my sense of the world changed. Creation no longer felt like a hostile place, instead it felt like a home I had been invited into. I felt like a guest.

After so long feeling like I didn't belong, it was like a breath of fresh air.

Only cost me my closest friend to earn that.

To my surprise, the Choir of Compassion hadn't left in the aftermath. Instead, they seemed to treat my change of circumstances as an invitation of sorts. As if now that I had a Name and was allowed into Creation, direct exposure to their presence would no longer kill me. Parts of their aura started to seep into my own, changing it ever so slightly.

What are they even doing?

I focused on what they were doing. They sent back a mental impression that reminded me of my mother scolding me for tracking in mud on the clean floor after playing in the rain as a kid.

Rude.

I looked again, more closely this time. If I were to guess, it almost seemed as if they were…modifying the passive effect that I had on the world around me. Changing it so that I subtly influenced people to be more compassionate. The effect was very weak, so weak you would barely notice it at all. It wasn't permanent either, only lasting so long as they were nearby to me.

And I was fine with that.

I wasn't entirely sure what I was doing to the world around me before, but this was almost certainly an improvement. So long as they didn't give me a halo or make me glow, I was willing to call this a win.

And if they did either of those, well, I knew who to take my complaints to.

Calernia could use a bit more compassion. It was something that it was lacking. Something told me that the Choir wasn't supposed to be doing this. That there were some arbitrary limitations imposed on them from above that they were supposed to be following that determined how much they could interfere with the world. Rules that I had… bent, for want of a better word. An effect like this should only be permissible to someone sworn to them.

I hadn't even considered the idea that long term exposure to a demon could change an Angelic Choir, but the idea worried me.

I didn't want to corrupt the Choir of Compassion.

This wasn't a concern I had expected to have. Evidently, the Gods Above and Below had not designed this system of theirs to account for heroic demons, even if they didn't care if I was here. If it was a problem, I knew they were capable of solving it without me.

It felt weird acknowledging that an issue may exist that wasn't my responsibility to fix, but that was exactly what this was. It was completely beyond my ability to influence. If the Angels wanted me dead, they could just swat me like a fly. So I'd have faith that the Gods responsible for them would handle the matter as required.

For now, I would just take comfort in having their support on my journey as I strove to improve Creation.

And if any villains had an issue with the idea… Well, it wasn't like they could report the empathy engine to its manufacturer for being defective. They might just be smote in the process.

They would probably deserve it, too.

Time sped up.

"Now that we are down to one, it seems almost assured that my victory is inevitable."

The flames closed in and spots clouded my vision, but it didn't matter, none of it did. Regardless of how hot the flames of hell became or what monsters emerged from the dark, I would persevere.

Seven incandescent silhouettes appeared over my shoulders. Three on one side, three on the other and one standing behind me, silently pushing me forward. One of them winked out. My head cleared out, the spots in my vision disappearing, and the wounds on my arm beginning to close.

I tried to see if I could heal my friend. Actually fixing his biology proved to be easy now, as if restoration was a part of my Name. It did help that the Artist didn't even bother trying to block me. No surprises there, considering Max was dead.

It was futile. I could fix his body, but I couldn't bring him back. Slowly, I closed his eyes.

I'd…deal with this later.

I'd promised Max I wouldn't abandon my goal, I'd try not to let him down.

Reaching out, I tried to form staggered platforms leading up. What would have strained me before, felt effortless now in comparison. A staircase carved from light blazed itself into being before me.

The Artist tried to contest the effect, but it was like he was struggling against the current of a river. Creation was on my side here.

I focused on my sense of him and angled my construction in the same general direction. He wouldn't be escaping alive.

Frustrated, I started to climb. I suppressed a pang of grief as Max's body was swallowed by the flames behind me. I hated leaving it behind, but he would have wanted me to go on. Finally, I reached the top of the cliff. There was an empty plateau. In the middle of it was a mansion. It was just barely visible through ominous fog.

Hardening my resolve, I approached. I would win this battle. This one and all the ones that came after it. Then, I would do my best to build a world better than the one that I had arrived in.​



A/N: Seeing as I currently have no plans to give Taylor a mentor who could explain this to her, for the purposes of the people who want to know, this is a transitional name (similar to squire or apprentice).
 
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Well, this is just fascinating. Whatever Taylor is, I wasn't expecting her nature to become this eldritch when I first picked up this story.
 
Verism 2.09
"Two. A hero should expect to face many troubles during the span of their journey. When times are dark, recall that dawn always rises after dusk and take the next step forward."
– 'Two Hundred heroic Axioms', author unknown


I put the palm of my hand on the doorknob and turned it.

For a moment, I debated trying to repair my arm. I was fairly certain I could do it now with no negative consequences. I elected to wait until after the fight. If he interrupted the process, I wasn't sure how badly it could end for me.

While I was confident there weren't many people who could kill me, it was likely I could kill myself.

"So you managed to reach the end of this work, but it does not matter. You have canvassed the breadth of but the first of my masterpieces. Allow me to continue to share my wisdom with you." He declared.

Well, that was ominous.

The door creaked as it opened. Looking inside, I tried not to be too surprised by what I saw.

On the other side of the door was a lake.

Why wouldn't he have a lake?

That was just how the Arcadian Artist fought. He never fought people directly. Instead, he threw minions or environments at them. Constructs he had created by putting paint to canvas, given life through the strength of his Name. He was in the strictest sense a minion master.

If I actually found him, I would have already won.

Experimentally, I tried modifying the water on the other side. It ran golden as I did so. I didn't try particularly hard, since I was doing it more to learn where he was than to actually change the environment. As he pressed back, I felt the impression of him further in.

Fine, I'd follow through.

"So you pass through the mountain and arrive at the lake. Do be sure to share your impressions with me while you die. After all, I do value the critique." It was impressive how he managed to worm further under my skin, considering I already wanted him dead.

My gaze roved, drinking in the vista on the other side.

Pastel blues and greens greeted me. Reeds peeked from the water and the sky itself was clouded over, with a light dusting of snow descending from above. The snow itself looked comical. It looked to be small blobs of titanium white tumbling out of the sky.

Looking back briefly, I noted the progress of the flames. I wasn't sure if they would follow me from one scene to another. I hoped that they didn't.

Then, I stepped through the doorway. My feet sunk into the oily water and squelched against the mud below. I was on the outer edges of the lake, where the water level was shallow enough that I could still stand. Checking behind myself once more, I noted that the door behind me had vanished. I was in a new landscape entirely.

Now, where would I find the Artist?

I took a moment to look around. In the middle of the lake, there was a small island that jutted out. A few evergreens had been painted on to it, their roots soaking in the water below. It had the whole mystical rainforest look to it. If this was a story — and it was, since there were Names involved — then that would be my destination.

I eyed the lake critically.

Swimming there was probably a bad idea. I had a hunch that the moment I tried, some sort of monster was going to come writhing up out of the depths. Considering my opponent, it would likely involve tigers. One giant tiger octopus, with tails for tentacles.

Panning my gaze, I tried to find another solution. It didn't appear there was one.

I wasn't willing to risk an interrupted teleportation to try to cross the distance, for the same reason I wouldn't try repairing my arm. Hesitantly, I tried creating platforms in the air. The Artist pressed back, shutting the attempt down.

… I could break through by consuming one of my projections, but I sensed there was a cost associated with it. I didn't want to pay it if I didn't need to. Better to search for an alternative first.

Suddenly, I felt a heat from behind me. Turning around, I was greeted by flickering flames. It seemed they had followed me from one scene to another after all. The added urgency was just what I needed to help add some excitement to my day.

Lovely.

I wasn't about to go swimming in the lake, and I wasn't prepared to be swallowed by the conflagration either. Shaping my intent, I seized upon the idea of the surface of the lake being solid and pushed. The Artist…didn't bother to contest my attempt. Ominous.

The change rippled out across the lake from one side to the other. The water was still water, but the surface had become as hard as rock. Tentatively, I put my weight on my ad hoc platform. The effect held. Satisfied, I began to run.

Halfway towards the middle of the lake and my fears were confirmed. Some giant squid monstrosity broke through the surface, its tentacle slamming down in front of me. Max would probably make some crass, suggestive comment at this point. A pang of grief shot through me.

Don't think of Max right now, you can grieve later.

"Say hello to my pet, Sparkles, isn't he just the best? He's very happy to see you, you know." The disembodied voice smirked.

I leapt, my feet failing to find purchase on it. Stumbling, I fell into a roll on the other side. I glanced at it briefly.

No tiger parts, at least.

Before I could try to do anything about it, it had submerged itself again. Despite its bulk, it moved fast. Another appendage broke through the surface to my right, the "ground" shuddering as it did so. Paint sprayed everywhere.

Suddenly, I found myself hurtling through the air.

Dimly, I realized a tentacle had smashed me from below the surface. My concentration broke and as it did so, the surface of the lake shifted, turning fluid once more. I crashed into it, finding myself submerged.

It seems I am going swimming after all.

Briefly, I caught a glance of an impressionist's interpretation of a kraken, before I came up gasping for air. The smell of oil was thick in my nose, and it was hard not to retch.

This wasn't working.

Fire had already made its way into this scene and as dangerous as it was, I considered the kraken to be the larger threat. It was also likely that the Artist wouldn't fight me on it. He seemed to like watching the world burn. I already knew that flames were effective against these constructs, there was no point in avoiding using them.

The only problem was how to set it on fire without catching light myself.

Treading water, I tried to firm the surface in front of me once more, only this time the Artist fought against it. I switched my focus to trying to create platforms instead. He scrambled to stop the latter, and the water turned solid as his resistance there gave way.

As the surface solidified, I struggled to pull myself out of the paint with only one arm. I rolled to the side as another tentacle aimed at me, then took it as an opportunity, hurling a luminescent ball of flames its way. It struck, and the creature screeched, flailing around. The tentacle danced in the air like it was at a rave, the flames quickly spreading as it did.

The inferno didn't actually seem to be burning the creature directly, instead it seemed more like the artist was fuelling the creature's continued existence by feeding it with souls. It angered me just how low the villains of creation could sink.

I took a moment to try to dismiss the thing, just to see if I could. It was like slamming into a brick wall. I suspected that even if I burned a ghost on it, that approach was unlikely to succeed. The Artist had invested most of his efforts into making it as resilient as it was. In theory, that should make it easier for me to act on anything else.

Considering I didn't actually care if the beast lived or died, I would focus on trying to avoid it. Fighting it was just giving the Artist more time to plot.

I picked myself back up and sprinted for the island.

Coughing, I looked ahead, trying to make out how much further I had to go. It looked to be just a couple of hundred more feet. Unfortunately, covering that distance while dodging the giant squid monster was turning out to be surprisingly hard.

The smoke from the flames was starting to make it hard to breathe.

My eyes were watering and, blinking, I found myself barrelling through the air once more. This time, the sting of flames singed my skin as I went up. The tentacle was on fire, of course.

I need to try something else.

It was risky, but I didn't want to stay on the surface of the water. Mentally, I visualized what I wanted. Then, with a shove, I told gravity to fuck off.

I was so surprised when my attempt succeeded with no effort at all that I almost lost control of the working. It was so easy to do, too, the Artist barely even resisted my imposition.

Why is this so easy to do?

… Because the Artist was starting to think smarter about how to fight like this. Block some effects, allow others through. The surprise factor alone could prove advantageous.

A tentacle hurtling towards me broke me out of my reverie. Unfortunately, I had a new problem.

How do I manoeuvre like this?

I had made the attempt at the apogee, when my momentum was near zero. Trying to move, I found, had very little utility at all.

Flailing, I was stuck floating in mid-air. As I did so, the surrounding air became a messy smear. I had seconds to get out of the way. Not knowing what else to do, I let the effect fade. A long blotch of paint swiped past my head, missing me narrowly as I dropped.

Manifesting the same working again, I found to my mounting dismay that I kept falling. I just didn't fall any faster. I landed in the lake once more.

Perhaps I should have tried to find a way to dispose of the beast, but just outright avoiding it seemed like a more conservative use of resources.

Platforms, I need platforms.

I hadn't been willing to pay the price before, but I was now.

Hastily, I latched onto the idea. The Artist seemed to like this plan of mine a little less and actively fought back, but it was still something I could do.

Another phantom aiding me disappeared.

A horizontal platform of solid light blazed into existence, floating before me. Climbing onto it, I reshaped the platform as I went. Rapidly, I created a path that continuously sloped higher and higher up.

Keeping an eye out for tentacles, I continued to ascend. I was taking a zigzagged route towards the island. Unfortunately, setting the beast alight had enraged it, and it was now far more proactive than before.

Then, suddenly, I was out of its range.

I looked down on it, taking a moment to catch my breath.

Not so dangerous from up here, is it?

"Really, how rude. Holding yourself above my work like this. And people accuse me of putting on airs." The Artist called out.

A buzzing noise broke my contemplation. Some very poorly painted geese with snake heads entered the scene. Their feathers were blended together, and the scales weren't there at all. They hissed as they approached, coming down from above.

The lake below me was a mess of flame, and I saw no reason to do the same for the sky. The inferno did slowly spread up, but it was far more gradual than if I just doused the sky in napalm.

Improvising, I considered what I could do. Fire worked, but what else would?

Suddenly struck by inspiration, I turned towards the geese. They were winging their way through a puffy grey cloud. I focused my attention on it and willed it to change. Shifting from paint to sparkling mineral oil, the clouds started to run. The Artist was so taken by surprise by what I attempted that by the time he started trying to contest me, the mutation was already complete.

The clouds smeared all over the birds. Heartbeats later, and there was nothing left of the waterfowl. I smiled.

Now if only I had come up with that solution sooner.

Turning my attention back to the kraken, I realized that in its panic to escape the flames, it had partially beached itself. Half of its mass was stranded on the island, near where I could sense the Artist. Fortunately, the half that wasn't on fire was the part which was resting on the land.

It seemed that a direct confrontation with it was almost a certainty.

No matter. I had a weapon that was effective now and didn't rampage indiscriminately after use. I began to slowly descend. A drop of something landed on my forehead. Looking up, I saw the mineral oil falling from above.

Perhaps this is what people imagine when they say weeping heavens.

Okay, maybe it was somewhat indiscriminate then. At least if applied to the clouds.

That was a problem. I wasn't willing to fight the thing while the world I was in went to the hells. Killing it might take too long and wasn't the goal regardless. That meant going around.

Hurriedly moving my platform along, I made my way to the island. Circling around it, I came in from behind. Out of range as I was, the kraken's ineffectual flailing no longer bothered me. As my feet touched the red ochre soil, I started to run.

More and more, it was becoming clear that the Artist's creation was breaking down.

Stumbling over a vine, I found myself planted face first in front of what looked to be a staircase descending into the ground. Another underground villainous bunker, great. How likely was it that he had a self-destruct button? At least he probably didn't have a monster tucked away in a vault, on account of the monster currently flailing around on the beach.

Climbing back onto my feet, I started to make my descent. My feet reverberated on the painted stone tiles below me. I passed through an arched doorway, the keystone engraved with the picture of a brush. Inside was a long passage, torches spread out evenly on either side. They flickered ominously, a dull orange that was barely bright enough to see by.

I tried not to think too hard about whatever it was they were using to light the way.

"The hero scales the cliffs;
And comes upon a lake
But the beast rises up;
And proves she's but a fake

For rather than fight it;
She then chooses to run
Going down into my lair;
Far away from the sun

Painted into the ground;
A place of dreams most grand
Will the hero succeed;
Or is this her last stand?"

The voice of the Arcadian Artist echoed through his creation. He started loud, boisterous and ended trailing off ominously.

Somehow, he became more and more obnoxious the longer this fight dragged on. It impressed me. Surely not all villains in Creation were this bad? Trapping people in painted worlds where you are free to monologue at them from safety while you hide away should not be allowed.

Not even Coil was this clichéd.

Reaching the end of the corridor, I came to a split in the path. I looked left. I wasn't sure what was supposed to be down that path. Most of it had been consumed by flames, and the eye of an angry kraken glared through.

Right, not going that way then.

I bolted down the still existing corridor and came to a room with a chequered floor. The tiles alternated between black and white. The light was too poor to make out any of the finer details, but going by everything else, I was willing to bet the floor was trapped. Not willing to engage with this farce any further, I created a bridge of light from one end of the room to the other.

The Artist wasn't happy with that and fought back, but I didn't care. Another ghost winked out. I would pay the price later, after the fight was done.

Stepping onto it, I dashed across confidently. Behind me, I heard the roar of the beast and what sounded like the crash of a tentacle against stone. At the other side of the room was another corridor. This one was unlit, the light of the torches dying out a few feet in.

As if this doesn't scream more traps.

Creating a diffuse ball of light, I cautiously moved forward. Nothing appeared to happen. Slowly, I made my way to the other side, reaching a door. I opened it and blinked as I came face to face with another scene change.

Just how many of these things did he have?

This landscape appeared to be a world painted entirely underground. A sprawling cavern, stretching out for what seemed to be miles into the distance, with a roof maybe fifty feet up. The place was dimly lit by luminescent blue mushrooms that seemed to pulsate in the dark. Leading out from the doorway was a path that trailed towards a bridge across a river.

I sent out another experimental pulse. I felt a return from somewhere close within.

Not caring to spend much longer in the rapidly degenerating painting, I took a step through.

I turned back. Just like the last time, the doorway was gone. I considered what came next. If this was a story, I had fought the monster and cleared the trial. That meant, in theory, all that was left was the confrontation. Which made this scene so odd.

It appeared at first glance to be completely tranquil.

Reaching the bridge, I crossed it. On the other side, was a small field of what looked to be cultivated mushrooms. Up ahead was a small building made out of what seemed to be wood. How would the people living in a place like this get wood? I guessed it was something the artist hadn't considered when he painted the scene.

I reached the building. After trying the door, I found it unlocked. Opening it, I was met by an almost entirely bland room with a rectangular desk in the middle. Behind it, was a single chair and seated on it was the artist. He looked up at me and smiled condescendingly.

"Welcome to your new home. What are your thoughts on all of your accommodations?"

Not willing to entertain more of his pontification, I attempted to snuff him out. He struck back viciously. My will struck against the full weight of the remaining souls, and I staggered in the process. He winked at me.

Disoriented, I took a moment to recover before I made my next try at killing him. Burning a ghost to do it would be costly, but it was better than letting this drag out. Even with his current protections, I was certain I could find away around them.

I just needed to be creative about how I made the attempt.

"Wasn't it obvious, my dear, capturing you was the goal from the very start? Your defeat was inevitable the moment you stepped from the threshold going from the second to the third scene. You see, the first two battles were a blending of Creation and my work. The third is my work. Watching you traipse around playing hero and fighting the monster was entertaining, I will admit. A bit of an indulgence on my part. But the very moment you stepped into this scene, I owned your soul." The Artist monologued.

That…didn't sound true to me. Ignoring the part where I wasn't sure if I even had a soul, I found it doubtful that it would be hard for me to escape. For him to protect himself like that, he had to give up on trying to contain me. If anything, it felt like he was trying to buy time. Despite the front he was putting on, he seemed to be extremely nervous.

I examined the room closer as he talked. Briefly, I turned around and looked towards the entrance. Next to it was a doorway hidden just out of the corner of my sight that led into a frozen landscape.

So that was what he wanted.

He was hoping the Fae would bail him out.

I wasn't willing to risk that fight. So I turned my attention back on him, preparing to kill him and then leave.

That was when it all started to go wrong. Reality contorted, bending around me. Lines stretched out, each drawing towards a point on a canvas. Then all of them collapsed inwards. It was confusing, hard to watch. Everything became a blend of colours and I couldn't properly focus on the Artist.

I found myself standing in Liesse once more. As I arrived, I briefly glanced around. The building itself was on fire, with most of its front face destroyed. There was no sign of Maxime at all. A pang of sadness welled up.

Deal with it afterwards, Taylor.

Moments later, the Artist appeared as well. Both of us had been forcibly ejected from his construction. I was in the process of preparing to snuff the artist out when I noticed he wasn't looking at me but was instead looking through a hole in the side of the building.

I followed his gaze.

A chariot slowly descended from the sky, pulled by a pair of pitch-black horses. It was heavily warded, to the point that I couldn't affect anything on it at all.

The Sovereign of the Red Skies had arrived.

"Well, it seems I've found the rapscallions responsible for torching the property value in this neighbourhood," he announced.

This was more trouble than I had bargained for.​
 
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Verism 2.10
"The beginning of a new story often necessitates the closing of an old one. When embarking on a journey, be careful with what you choose to let go of, lest it be chosen for you."
– Quote attributed to Tariq Isbili of the Dominion of Levant


I didn't actually know much about what the Sovereign of the Red Skies could do, aside from hearsay. He had the kind of reputation that made it a good idea to not ever come to his attention. He had earned it during the Conquest by raining hell-fire down on the armies of Callow. Literally.

That made him being here something I wasn't too happy about.

But it wasn't the end of the world. I was confident I could deal with fire. So long as he wasn't a ward specialist, I should stand a chance in a fight.

To his credit, the Arcadian Artist reacted to the presence of the Warlock almost immediately. He opened his mouth and spoke.

"Harmonize."

I hadn't even been aware he could use that more than once, but considering I could use my own Grace repeatedly, it made sense. That was when pandemonium broke loose.

I had only the briefest of moments to put up a defence. A shimmering sphere of light surrounded me, before I was sent blasting up into the sky by a narrow ray of frost. Like a pinball, I slammed into the chariot. The momentum sent me off at an angle and my barrier bounced up higher into the sky.

Disoriented, I created a platform beneath myself before bringing my momentum to a halt. It was so easy in comparison to before. The world didn't fight me on it, and the Artist wasn't pitting his will against me either.

Then, I took a moment to look around.

The Artist had overlaid what appeared to be a battlefield from Arcadia on top of Creation. Spreading out from the building I had just been evicted from, was the intersection of Summer and Winter. Verdant jungles met icy tundra and high in the sky above, two familiar figures waged war against each other.

Princess Sulia and the Prince of Nightfall.

They each had about thirty attendants with them. On the Princess's side were winged knights, and on the Prince's side were horned figures riding what looked to be unicorns. They were broadly spread out, with about a hundred feet between each of them, and for some reason were locked in single combat.

Two of them had been fighting amidst the wreckage of the building below.

A raging pillar of flames shot from Sulia's fingers and was nimbly dodged by the Prince, only to smash into a cathedral in the distance. The agonized wails of innocents from the distance burned themselves into my mind.

Hastily, I smothered the flames.

To my frustration, the Prince returned the favour, dropping what looked like a large chunk of glacier at the Princess. She blasted it aside. It smashed into a tower, which toppled into another building nearby.

They closed in on each other, weapons drawn. Lines of fire and frost traced themselves into the sky, painting mesmerizing patterns. If it hadn't been over an actual city, it would have been spectacular to watch.

Roaring infernos and shards of frost were rapidly flying backwards and forwards, with a significant portion of the excess smashing down onto the city below.

I made a few more attempts to intercept projectiles, before conceding that approach was futile.

Neither side was particularly discriminate in how they chose to fight.

The merging of Arcadia and Liesse ended, but the figures remained.

As if the day could get any worse.

The two Fae Royalty were so busy with each other that they hadn't bothered to restrain me at all. I was able to affect most of a mile around me, although nothing within a couple of feet of them, or the Warlock.

The Warlock, who coincidentally had something like eight dense layers of sigils around him, was no longer focusing on either me or the Artist. He had instead turned his attention to the sky. The glyphs snaked around him sinuously, and more of them were rapidly starting to appear. I didn't have even the slightest idea what he was attempting to do.

It made sense for me to try to make an escape here, I knew I was probably out of my depth.

I couldn't.

Letting an entire city be destroyed in a bid to keep myself safe would be a regret I wasn't willing to take on. Not when I was able to help.

So as stupid as it was, I was going to tentatively try to assist the Warlock, even though I knew it was probably a bad idea.

That didn't mean I wouldn't fight back if he didn't honour this unspoken offer of truce.

I would just treat this like an Endbringer fight.

If I were to guess, the Warlock was a much bigger danger than almost any other villain to me. He had a Name with a focus on magic, which automatically gave him an edge.

But saving people was more important than engaging him in a fight. I wasn't sure I could beat him if he did choose to attack, but I wouldn't back down if he did. He was one of the Calamities who didn't actually do anything currently indispensable.

As far as I knew, the Warlock didn't build or maintain infrastructure, and he wasn't involved in running either Callow or Praes either. I didn't know how much he contributed to the mental wellbeing of the other Calamities, but if he did help there, that was arguably the only positive thing he had ever done with his life. "The mass murderer has friends, too," wasn't a very good reason to keep anyone around. In every way that mattered, he was a net negative to society.

The world would go on without him.

I didn't maintain much in the way of hope for trying to negotiate what I wanted with the Calamities, but if I didn't at least try, then I had only myself to blame for it. Killing the Warlock might cut off that avenue entirely, but I doubted it. My impression of the villains in Calernia so far told me that they would happily negotiate with somebody over the corpse of their mother while loudly declaring their eternal friendship with the murderer.

Searching, I spotted a small, single storey building on the ground below and willed it away. I felt a small pang of guilt, but the owner could always replace the building. The same wasn't true for people's lives. In the sky, just a few feet above the tallest steepled rooftop, an inverted parabolic dish with a curled in lip stretched out below the combatants. It extended about a hundred feet in all directions from their point of conflict.

I hoped that any incidental attacks would fall into it and be properly contained.

In theory, it made more sense to try to imprison the two Fae Royals. Practically, I knew that they could break through almost anything I attempted to erect unless I burned a ghost on it. I wasn't willing to go that far just yet. Not when I had other options. This would hopefully halt any splash damage from making its way down to the ground.

The smashing of flames and frozen projectiles into it felt like the pitter-patter of rain against my head, but was otherwise unremarkable.

What next?

I needed people to evacuate, or at least be aware that there was an emergency. As far as I knew, there weren't any emergency protocols in Liesse for something like this, but that didn't mean I couldn't do my best. I took a moment and focused, visualizing what I wanted.

A large section of road vanished and as it did, a sense of unnatural calm fell on everyone within the full mile radius of my aura. Emotional manipulations were the only effects I could actually extend that far without exhausting myself. Normally I wouldn't bother, but right now seemed like a good time to go all out.

Great. There is no way I don't establish the wrong kind of reputation like this. But if it works…

Panic in an emergency was bad. By doing something this overt, it made it clear there was a problem, and that people needed to move without causing a riot. It wasn't much, but this was a way I could prevent more harm while dealing with the threat. Then, I let out the wail of an alarm, shouting at people to leave the area. The fight in the sky was hard to miss, so I didn't exactly need to point out where it was, I just required them to keep a level head and move out of the way.

A towering column of fire smashed into my barrier. The shield shattered into shards, and the conflagration flattened a two-storey building in the distance.

It seems I need a better barrier.

Committing to the loss, the fourth spectre vanished. With only three more left, this was something I was sure to regret later. The more of them I burned through, the higher the eventual cost. I also wasn't happy using them on what was probably the less dangerous enemy, but at least I was reasonably sure the Warlock wouldn't burn the city down to the ground.

A massive, golden, translucent sphere materialized around the two major combatants. It should in theory keep them contained for long enough for the Warlock to finish whatever it was he was doing, while allowing them to continue killing each other.

The prison itself rapidly became a wash of oranges and blues as they continued to trade attacks.

A migraine began to build up in my head. While they were content to fight each other inside of it, the incidental damage that was accumulating was still placing a strain on me.

It also did nothing about the remaining Fae, but they were not beyond my ability to affect.

Fire and hail continued to fall mercilessly out of the sky as the attendants continued to trade blows in their almost hypnotic duels.

This wasn't acceptable.

A wave of hell-fire blasted its way into the sky from behind the Warlock's chariot. Ten of the Winter Fae vanished as a result of his efforts.

Reaching out mentally, I tried to snuff the Summer Fae out. To my surprise, it was effortless in comparison to my previous encounter with the Prince of Nightfall. Four of them vanished into a puff of smoke. Whoever these attendants were, they clearly weren't important.

That didn't stop them from making a mess of the city below.

A detonation sounded out, uncomfortably close to where I was.

That was when a new surprise added itself to the field of combat.

It seems the day can actually get worse.

I hadn't been sure what had happened to the kraken. I could have been quite happy continuing to go on with my life, blissfully unaware.

Looking down from above, I caught sight of a sixty-foot wide squid materializing. It was spread out across the roofs of several nearby buildings and seemed somewhat diminished compared to when I first engaged it. Currently, it was flailing around with half of its body on fire. I suspected it would be more of a threat to civilians than me or the Warlock.

If I knew where the Artist was, disposing of it would likely be as easy as killing him. Unfortunately, I had lost sight of him on account of the much larger threats.

I felt control of my prison begin to slip away, as if someone else was trying to wrest it from me. It took me a moment to realize what was happening. The Warlock wanted control of it. I let him have it. The extra mental toll it added on wasn't worth the effort of being the one responsible for containing the combatants. If he wanted to contend with the Fae, he was more than welcome to.

The relief I felt as possession of the sphere passed to him made it much easier to focus on the fight.

Turning my attention to the remaining lesser Fae, I snuffed them out almost disdainfully. They weren't in Arcadia, they were in Creation, and right now the rules were on my side. All that remained was the octopus, the Princes, and the Warlock. Time for me to choose a new foe.

I looked briefly to my left and saw the Warlock in his chariot, surrounded by a dizzying array of magics. He was half a hundred feet away, floating in the air, much like myself. So far he had not taken a shot at me. For now, I would leave him be.

The Fae were a problem I couldn't deal with, but the kraken was one I likely could.

Where is Roland? The city is going to the hells and I need help!

One of the squid's tentacles smashed into the side of a two-story building, demolishing it and sending debris hurtling towards the Warlock. The Warlock's Chariot ascended, being missed by only a hair's breadth.

The tentacle wrapped around some shrieking civilians. Reacting on instinct, I coated it with a layer of rime. Before I could do anything else, it squeezed, sending viscera spraying all over the area. Frustration at my failure to save them reared up, but I mentally batted it aside.

Fuck.

I wasn't about to let this slide.

Once more, I started to ascend. There was no reason to remain within the construct's range. Layering panels of hardened light in the sky, I rose up, gaining a better view of the fight.

I tried to dismiss the thing, but it had been stuffed with what seemed like every last soul the artist had. This really was his attempt to go out in a blaze of glory, wasn't it?

The Warlock reached into his robes and then tossed what I guessed was salt into the air. It vanished in a cloud of coloured smoke. Then his large working finished, and eight rings of darkness snapped into place around the barrier he had stolen from me. The hues inside the sphere almost seemed to wash out, as if the contents were partially displaced from creation.

The sigils floating around the Warlock compressed into a minute, intricate sphere that began to orbit his left hand.

One tentacle slammed down on another building, and another swerved towards the Chariot. The building that the kraken was on had caved in entirely, its mass falling through into the rooms below.

Nimbly, the Warlock moved his chariot out of the way once more. He had started up another major working, but I wasn't sure what it was.

Concentrating on the squid, I focused my attention and honed it to a point. Then, I transfigured the remains of the surrounding building into a mass of mineral oil. What was good for the goose should be good for the kraken, after all.

The creature let out an unholy shriek, flailing like a toddler. Two more people were sent hurtling into the sky. Carefully, I suspended them and started lowering them to the ground. I wasn't sure how injured they might be, but there wasn't much I could do about it right now. At least, not with all the larger ongoing concerns.

Looking back at the kraken, I frowned. That hadn't been what I was aiming for when I attacked it this way.

I was about to try working on a method of containment for the beast when two sinuous snakes of fire headed my way from the Chariot. It seemed that despite the ongoing disaster, the Warlock was willing to engage me as well. It didn't really surprise me. Expecting people to work together in defence against shared enemies would be far too reasonable.

If it didn't happen when the world ended, why would it happen against all of this?

I tried to dematerialise the snakes. To my mounting frustration, my will found no purchase. Who used wards to throw fire at people? He had weakened the boundaries of creation in a line trailing towards me, and the flames were simply fire from some other dimension leaking through. I tried containment next. Snow was pulled out of the surrounding environment. It snaked up into the air and formed a sphere around the snakes. Collapsing inwards. The snakes disappeared.

I sent a helix of light spiralling towards the chariot in thanks for his gift of snakes. It returned to me as a flock of flaming swallows. Already having an effective method of containment, I encased them in snow. Problem dealt with, I turned my attention back to the ongoing disaster.

This isn't going anywhere.

This part of the city looked, smelled and sounded like it had been through an Endbringer attack. Most of the buildings within sight were either frozen, on fire, or in the process of being crushed by the beast. Explosions rang out, and hallow screams of despair could be heard in the distance.

Smoke rose up everywhere, making it difficult to keep track of what was going on.

I started trying to restrain the kraken. Debris disappeared, and chains of light started to restrain the creature. Heartbeats later, the chains broke.

… Well, if I can't contain it directly, what about indirectly?

I carved out a chunk of the city centred on the squid, then sent it levitating up into the air. At that point, I slowly started to reshape it into what would hopefully be an effective prison.

A tentacle slammed into the flying chariot, sending it crashing into the ground below. Idly, I looked down and caught a proper glimpse of the Warlock. He was a dark skinned, broad shouldered, bedraggled looking man. Dusting off his burgundy and gold robes, he stepped out of the wreckage.

I was snapped out of my reverie by another tentacle coming down from the island above.

Maybe raising this thing in the air wasn't the smartest idea after all.

The tentacle almost pulped me. I had mere moments to surround myself in a stronger barrier. That didn't stop the pane of light I was standing upon from shattering under the force of the impact. I was sent careening towards the pavement below.

Despite the cushioning of my shield, I still found myself bruised as I climbed out of the wreck beside the Warlock. I hacked out a cough. The acrid taste of the smoke was cloying this close to the carnage.

The Warlock spared a glance in my direction, then turned away and focused on the squid.

I tried to attack him with a beam of light once more, but it slammed against one of his barriers.

The kraken continued to flail above. It hadn't attempted to leave the island yet, despite my efforts to contain it having failed. One of its tentacles slammed into a building on its platform and sent it flying off into the distance. It smashed against the city walls, causing parts of them to crumble. The structure must have contained something highly flammable, as it had ignited in a blaze of green.

That part of the city burned against my etheric touch. I yelped.

A look of annoyance briefly crossed the Warlock's face. "Only I am legally allowed to send this city to the hells," he declared.

Well, isn't that ominous.

That was when he pulled out a silver knife and slit his right palm. Three drops of blood fell onto the pavement. At that moment, the second major working he had begun finally drew to a close.

"Up you go," He said, sounding positively cheerful despite the ongoing fight.

The kraken appeared to be picked up off of my floating island, as if hoisted by an invisible hand. Seeing no reason to keep it up there any longer, I gradually lowered the chunk to the ground. The squid rose higher and higher, floating up in the sky. Flailing about, it seemed to strike invisible barriers around it. Wards. He was containing and lifting it with wards.

He waved his bloody palm absently in the direction of the beast, and then said only a single word. "Crunch."

The surrounding air stilled, as if the world was holding its breath. Then the wards around the cephalopod began to compress. As the sphere grew smaller, its outline became visible. An intricate gold latticework that was slowly closing in. As fascinating as it would be to watch the beast implode in slow motion, I suddenly had much more pressing concerns.

The Warlock turned my way, his eyes narrowing.

"Aspirant, that's a Name I haven't seen before. I'm sure I'll learn something fascinating once I have your frozen corpse on an operating table."

Suffice to say, I wouldn't be too happy with that arrangement.

"Can't we just pretend I wasn't here?" I asked. I tried dropping a large rock on him from above while we spoke. If I wanted to have a chance here, then I needed some way past his barriers, since I couldn't just affect him directly.

"I think not," he replied, amused. Without even turning to look at the rock, he detonated it into a shower of splinters.

With his right hand, he started working on another staggeringly complex spell.

The intricate array from his earlier spell continued to orbit around his left wrist. Dagger still in hand, he fired a beam of frost from his index finger my way. Scrambling, I dived to my left. The cool air overhead warned me how narrowly I had avoided being iced. I responded in kind. I fired a particoloured beam of light in his direction while starting to dash away. The ground was precarious, the roads a mess after all the conflict. I made patchwork changes to it while trying to make my escape.

I floated the shard of a broken mirror in front of me, giving me a way to watch him as I ran. Considering what I had seen his last two major workings achieve, sticking around didn't seem to be smart.

The Warlock ignored my attack disdainfully, and it fizzled out once more against his shield. He didn't seem to even bother trying to attack me, instead working on completing the more intricate effect. Then he started to chant under his breath.

Ominous.

Right, it seemed that line of attack was a dead end. It didn't really surprise me, but it was best to be sure.

Hoping to buy myself some time, I shrouded him in clouds of billowing darkness and continued to run towards the end of the alley. It lasted about ten heartbeats before a weird green acid like substance started to eat its way through the effect.

Beside me, I noted a boy whimpering in pain. His features were badly scorched, and he looked no more than ten years old.

Fine, I'll help the kid.

It wasn't the sensible option, but I couldn't just leave the kid when it would only take a moment to help him out. I stopped, then focused on healing his wounds. The process was effortless.

Of course, it's easy now that Max is dead.

Pulling in some rubble from beside me, I did the same for my eyesight and my arm. Now that I was out of the painting, I was willing to take the risk. With the help of my Name guiding me, it took only a couple of heartbeats and barely any effort at all.

Not that having those fixed did much for me here. This wasn't a fight I would win with two arms.

I started running away once more.

Do I risk teleporting away?

Doing so would almost certainly tire me out. Teleportation was hard to do, although I could do it to anywhere within both my line of sight and my presence. The problem was, if the Warlock came after me after teleporting, I wouldn't be able to defend myself for long.

I didn't know how effective illusions would be against the Warlock. It was clear to me, though, that nothing else I had tried so far had succeeded. If he placed a ward around me, I probably wouldn't escape. Focusing, I manifested the most distracting image I could think of. A not insignificant chunk of road vanished from my left, and a massive vision of the Brockton Bay skyline blossomed into existence around us.

Illusory skyscrapers manifested from nothing, overlapping the increasingly damaged city of Liesse. Parts of a fake building imposed themselves between myself and the Warlock, cutting off his view. After everything else that had happened, it was a significant mental drain. Despite this, it was still much less of an effort than attempting to teleport. I took a gasping breath, then started to run once more.

Then, I felt a ward slam down, locking me in place.

It pinned my movement, preventing me from moving anywhere outside a very small area.

The illusion fizzled out.

The Warlock hadn't even looked up from his working.

This is bad.

The ward hadn't limited my ability to act within it, but that didn't really matter at all if I couldn't leave.

Letting the mirror fragment drop, I turned back and faced the Warlock. I would need to find another way to resolve this before he brought the fight to a close.

The pitch of his voice rose. His spell was nearing its end.

What else could I try? Maybe I could use a vacuum offensively? I created an opalescent sphere around him, about eighteen feet in diameter. That way, there was no interference from his wards. I made the effort to evacuate all the air out of it.

Briefly, I found purchase before he twisted my sphere in some way and the air came rushing back in. To my dismay, I found that he was exceptional at working with barriers.

His larger, more complicated working continued. The sibilant chanting from the Warlock drew to a stop.

He opened his mouth once more, only this time it was to converse with me. His voice was deep and he spoke loudly. I could hear him clearly, despite the distance between us. "Would you care to enlighten me as to how such a thing as you earned a Name at all?"

I didn't answer. I was running out of ideas on what to do. How about modifying the temperature? I superheated the air outside his protections, then was forced to duck behind the remains of a building as he sent the air billowing away.

I felt another ward fall in place, cutting my range in half.

He didn't seem to be sure of exactly how to contain me, but that didn't matter much. He was working it out fast.

The Warlock started to funnel the heated air up into the sky absently, so I removed the excess heat again and converted it into an attractive force centred on him.

Parts of the chariot's wreckage nearby came hurtling towards him. Without even sparing it a glance, he blasted it, sending it careening through a stained-glass cathedral window in the distance.

What else can I do?

As far as I could tell, he had limited my movement horizontally, not vertically. I didn't know if it was possible to climb high enough to escape the trap. But I would give it a try.

Running on spiralling radiant platforms back up into the sky, I transfigured some debris around the Warlock into sand, then turned the grains into glass. Levitating the shards, I sent them hurtling his way rapidly in an undulating cloud. He reacted quickly, trapping the glass in a spatial deformity that caused it to loop in on itself. It was only a couple of heartbeats before the glass vanished somewhere else that was beyond my ability to affect.

Another ward locked into place, cutting off my ascent.

What other options did I have left?

… I should have teleported out while I still had the chance.

That was when the spell the Warlock was working on finished.

The world as I knew it began to distort. I didn't know what the effect was doing to me, but I didn't want to find out. Scrambling, I pitted my will against his. I had no luck. As I expected, it was a ward. A monstrously complicated ward.

Fuck.

In the moments I had spent inspecting it, he had taken an already complicated spell and pushed it far beyond what I even had a hope to understand. Feeling it out with my mind, it was like I was inside an intricate knot. No matter how I moved, it felt like I was tied down.

It reminded me of the feel of the banner when the three of us had fought the absence demon, only this time from the inside.

… The Warlock wasn't just trying to contain me. He was attempting to bind me.

A sliver of dread slid up my spine and panic started to set in. I wasn't willing to spend however long serving as this monster's slave.

"You would be a proper nightmare to fight with another twenty or so years tacked on," he added absently.

I tried feeling my way through the effect. It wasn't stopping me entirely from affecting the world just yet, although I suspected that was still to come.

Instead, it was trying to chain me to the will of the man. Force me to obey his every command. More and more, my actions became sluggish, as if my body no longer followed my own commands.

Find something, Taylor. Anything!

In a bid to distract him, I turned my attention to the ground beneath his feet, vanishing it. He stumbled for a moment, but his grip on the spell remained firm.

"What are you anyhow? There are twenty-three kinds of demons and girl, you aren't one of them. You aren't a person either, that is for sure," he continued to talk conversationally. He walked as he spoke, coming to a stop leaning against the wall of one of the now ruined buildings nearby.

"Whyyyyy don't you tell meee, se you're so talkative? Therrrre's only sooooo long before I you down," I slurred out a taunt. The effect was ruined by how hard I needed to struggle just to speak, but I doubted he would be impressed regardless.

More and more invisible strings started to latch onto me. I felt like a mummy, wrapped tight in linen cloth.

A part of me hoped I could distract him by drawing him into a monologue. The villains around here seemed to love those. I wasn't sure what I would do with the distraction, but any extra time would help.

"You couldn't even hold your own against an oversized fish, girl. Don't bother pretending that you're in my league." He replied.

He reached into his robes, pulling out more spell components as he talked. My efforts to distract him were proving to be futile. Whatever he was doing in his bid to bind me, he was doing without seeming to pay much attention to it. From the moment he had started to actually engage with me, it had quickly become clear just how outclassed I was.

What else could I do? I could try to send more direct attacks his way, but I doubted it would do much. Fireballs, lightning, and beams of ice all had the same problem, and the moment he finished binding me, it was over.

Do I risk it?

I wasn't sure if anything I could do could break through his wards directly, but if anything could, it would be something that I hadn't been able to do before. There was a chance it knocked me out in the process, but I would rather risk it then just give in and accept being this monster's slave.

Turning my attention towards some debris, I put all of my attention into transmuting it into sand. It took three tries, and tears of frustration pooled at the edges of my eyes as I worked.

Come on, Taylor. You can do this.

I didn't want him to catch onto my plan before it went into effect, so I sent it swirling around him as is. Despite appearing non-threatening, he made the effort to disperse it regardless.

It seemed I was going to have to take a gamble on it working from a distance then.

Please let this work.

Struggling, I suppressed hysteria as I repeated the sand generation a third time. Then, I focused on my impression of Fléchette's power, digging deep into persevere. Doing something like this was beyond me without a Name, but I wasn't so sure now. Straining, I imbued the effect into the sand. The fifth ghost vanished.

Mentally, I commanded all the sand to move.

I didn't discriminate, I didn't care what it hit along the way. I just wanted this man gone.

It swirled towards him, a violent, destructive sandstorm that annihilated anything with mere touch alone.

His eyes widened in shock. It was the first time anything I had done had actually drawn a reaction. He spat out an incantation faster than I could hear, and it seemed as if the very dimensions between him and the incoming sand rapidly contorted.

For a moment, it was as if there were multiple realities overlapping where the dust storm was.

From what I could tell, he was attempting to send the cloud somewhere else. I tried fighting back against him, making the effort to ensure that my plan worked.

The result was somewhere between both of our goals, which meant that in the end I lost out.

The cloud of dust went spiralling through the broken remains of a nearby cathedral, shredding what little was left of the place.

My shoulders sagged in despair.

Moments later, reality folded in on itself, and my attack vanished to somewhere that I couldn't affect.

That plan had failed. Worse, he knew to expect it now.

This wasn't happening. I wasn't willing to accept this. I would try again and again, forever and ever, if need be. Eventually, he would slip up.

That was when I felt my perception gradually start to shrink. The horizon crept in. It started slow, at a snail's pace. The effect wasn't limited to just one sense, either. It was as if a bubble had been placed around me and was inexorably closing in.

Much like with the octopus.

I tried to imbue something at the horizon with the same destructive effect to break the ward, but found that the Warlock had corrected his previous oversight. He had done something to interfere with my senses. The result significantly hampered my ability to fight back.

My attempt fizzled out.

Panicking, I tried directly pushing back against the working in a clash of wills. I didn't really expect it to work, but it was better than doing nothing. At first, I had no luck, and my mind just slid into a complicated knot. But as the effect grew closer, it became easier for me to understand what was going on.

I'm not going to be this man's slave! I won't allow it!

So I began to innovate, creating a defence of my own.

It took some effort, but eventually I was able to shape my will into a crude shimmering boundary and use the meeting point between his many gossamer threads and my barrier to stall the jaws of the trap. It was an attempt at a counter-ward of sorts, albeit without any of the Warlock's finesse.

They latched onto my shield, but they weren't latching on to me. It bought me a moment's reprieve. Time that I desperately needed if I wanted to break free.

I kept tinkering on my defence while I thought. I didn't have much hope that I would succeed, but I wasn't prepared to just give up.

In the background, I saw the Warlock start up another spell.

Please hold.

His efforts to contain me slowed. After a while, the two of us came to a draw. There were thousands of threads wrapped around my kludged together shield, but they were unable to press in any further. The Warlock scowled at me.

"You've made a fine mess of this city, and I mislike being made into a janitor. Your first act of civil service will be cleaning up this carnage." The man declared. Soon after, he completed his new working.

Three golden rings manifested into Creation. They locked into place around my prison. Then, the sphere started to rise even further into the air. I remained positioned in the centre as it began to ascend. Another, smaller ward manifested inside the first. To my horror, my ability to resist was limited to the latter.

My counter-ward winked out.

The horizon started to creep in again. Even more of my control over myself started to slip away.

It was reaching the point where it felt like there were two people in my body. Me, and the part of me that had to follow his rules.

I scrambled against his working. My answer had not been good enough, I needed a better one. There had to be a way to bypass the wards around the Warlock entirely and then just snuff him out. I wasn't willing to simply accept being put on a leash or stuffed into a box. I turned my attention to his protections more fully, trying to work out exactly what it was that the Warlock had surrounded himself with.

Gradually, I started to make sense of his aegis. There were many wards, far more than there first appeared to be. They were closely layered and overlapped on a minute scale, but something told me that while they existed in this dimension, they didn't exist in all the others. So what if I navigated through the void and attacked him on the other side?

The half of my mind that I still had control over focused on the part of me that cohabited with the Choir, then started trying to circumvent the barrier he had put up. My plan was foiled almost immediately. The Warlock realized what I was doing and a new set of barriers fell into place.

"Enough of this." He cracked his knuckles below.

"Link." He stated.

My heart flopped around somewhere on the ground beside the Warlock. I didn't know what he was about to do. But I knew that whatever it was, it couldn't be good.

The meniscus of the inner sphere seemed to change subtly. It wasn't something I could see visually. I couldn't hear or feel it either. It was just something I could sense. As if there was now a connection between the bubble and somewhere else. That place wasn't pleasant. I could taste the crackle of fire and brimstone. A world made of nothing more than lava, ashes, and dust.

One of the hells, it has to be.

It made sense. If he decided that he couldn't safely bind or kill me, just stuffing my somewhere else until he had a better answer would work.

"Nah, we'll be having none of that," a familiar voice said, butting in. It tickled the back of my memory, but I wasn't sure where I had heard it before.

The Warlock turned around in surprise. I struggled to crane my neck.

A fair skinned woman who looked to be in her early twenties with red hair and a heart shaped face was leaning against the ruined axel of the chariot. It was more or less the last part of the wreckage which hadn't been either destroyed or moved somewhere else.

I blinked.

How is that wheel balancing without the chariot supporting it?

I let out a rasping laugh, thick with hysteria.

The woman was about a finger's length shorter than me. She was just outside the area I could currently affect, and wore a dishevelled green shirt and trousers. In her left hand she was holding a flask and in the other, a lute. Standing on the broken remnants of a road, she raised the flask as if to salute, then took a deep gulp. After swallowing, she gagged.

"This stuff is vile," she stated, then glared at me. I wasn't entirely sure why, but the look she gave me made it feel like she held me personally responsible for the contents of the flask.

"A bard," the Warlock said. "By far the most irritating type of Name ever inflicted upon us by Creation." He paused. "On the other hand, I have been meaning to dissect one of those. I thank you for the sacrifice you've volunteered to undertake on behalf of the Empire."

I couldn't place where I should know her from. It was annoying me, like a frustrating buzz at the back of my head from a fly that needed to be killed. If I wasn't busy trying to find a way out of the Warlock's trap, I was sure the answer would be obvious. Unfortunately, between the screams from injured people in the distance, the smoke, and the bindings I was struggling against, I was fresh out of attention to give.

The Warlock started to turn away from her. "Nonetheless," he continued. "Please wait in line, I'm busy rehousing my latest acquisition first," he emphasized and pointed at me.

"That got personal for the both of us really quickly," the Bard replied, affecting mock offence on my behalf. "I mean seriously, look at her. She's just a perfectly normal girl who isn't really there up here," she tapped the side of her head. "She isn't yours at all. Fortunately, both of us are totally going to escape."

Thanks, I guess?

I wasn't entirely sure if that was more or less offensive than being called an acquisition by the Warlock. I wasn't about to say as much, though. It didn't seem like a good idea to interrupt her, seeing as she seemed to be holding the man's attention. Why she had decided to take my side in what was increasingly seeming to be a suicidal act wasn't entirely clear to me.

If I weren't currently tied down, I would probably give her a hug. Right now, I greatly appreciated any support at all.

"Do get on with explaining how you will be managing that," the Warlock asked, amused.

"Oh no, see, I didn't have to actually do anything. I was just the distraction." The bard replied, taking another pull.

From behind me, I heard a voice that renewed my hope.

"Confiscate."

The spell orbiting the Warlock's arm flickered out. It was only the first to go.

All the wards surrounding me fell next. The relief at suddenly feeling full control return to me was all the encouragement I needed to turn tail and leave.

Run, Taylor!

Taking the opportunity, I spun around as I fell. I spotted Roland on the ground below me. He looked as lethargic as I was. Turning my gaze as far away as I dared to aim, I teleported blindly and included him in the effect. I didn't know where we ended up. I didn't exactly care. So long as it wasn't near the Warlock, it was good enough for me. I felt exhaustion dig deep into my bones.

To my muted embarrassment, we were high up in the air wherever we arrived. Roland yelped. The two of us began to fall. Not wanting to become closely acquainted with the ground from up high, I formed sloping barriers of light beneath us.

Behind us, I heard the detonations of fire and shattering of frost as the fight between the Fae phased back into Creation once more.

"Run, Roland!" I shouted. I didn't know if he heard me, but this wasn't a fight we would win.

It was time for us to heel and toe our way out of this mess.

"I will, Taylor," he affirmed.

It was the shortest sentence I had ever heard him say.

Then, I took a brief look over my shoulder.

The Prince of Nightfall was ducking and weaving his way behind buildings, using them as cover from Sulia's onslaught while he mustered up his own responses.

There was… a lot of incidental damage as a result.

Taking my own advice, I ran on my golden bridge as we vacated the battlefield.

Under us, I noted crowds of people. Far more than I would have expected, considering everything else that had occurred. Why hadn't they left? Staying close to a fight of this magnitude was certain doom. Was it some weird disaster tourism hobby shared by all the locals?

It took me a few moments for me to catch up to Roland. Side by side, we continued to make our way out.

"Would you care to explain what manner of idiocy possessed you to pick a fight with the Warlock?" Roland berated from my side.

"I didn't pick the fight!," I shouted back, my voice shrill.

What I had seen of the Warlock so far convinced me that if we stuck around to fight him, it would almost certainly end badly for us. Not only that, but it would end badly for everyone else as well. I wasn't willing to see myself repurposed as a tool for the man.

And I thought the man was supposed to be good with fire.

I felt a pang of guilt at abandoning the defence of Liesse, but squashed it. The Warlock had shown that he was fully capable of managing the defence of the city on his own.

My earlier decision to stick around was certainly a mistake.

"Then why were you engaged in conflict with the man?"

"He found me."

It was then that a sense of inevitable doom began to ripple through my aura. A premonition, a warning of an oncoming storm. I had the gut feeling that whatever it was originated from where the Fae were sparring, and was utterly terrifying in nature.

The two of us both froze simultaneously.

"Everything burns," a voice whispered from on high.

It was as if the world itself held its breath. Silence fell across the battlefield, movement stopped, only the lazy trailing of smoke into the sky broke the stillness that had set in.

"Harmonize."

A third time, another merging of Arcadia and Creation. The Artist was really asking to die today. But If he also felt the same sense of dread and was trying to make an escape, I could understand his choice.

There wasn't a single part of me that wanted to be near whatever was about to occur, either.

I didn't have time to look around and see where we were. Acting on instinct alone, massive ruined chunks of cityscape below us vanished. A huge dome of hardened light materialized between us and the horror that I sensed was approaching. My vision began to swim. My makeshift defence was centred on me and extended fifty feet out. The sixth ghost disappeared.

There was an almighty flash above, as bright as a dying star. The sky turned a brilliant white.

I couldn't look, I closed my eyes. Whatever it was that Princess Sulia was calling upon had an otherworldly touch to it. As if the Gods themselves were weighing in.

My hair started to smoulder, it felt like the very air caught light. Spots appeared in my eyes despite being shut. In mere moments, the world around me became drier than a wasteland.

Blinking, I opened my eyes and looked up. A seemingly endless torrent of flames poured almost languidly from above. The cataclysm descended deceptively slowly. Roland and I were only on the outskirts, far away from the epicentre.

Licking my cracked lips, I tried to wish it away. My will found no purchase.

There was nothing I could do.

A pit of despair sunk its claws into my chest.

This… Did nobody on Calernia understand restraint?

I could almost taste the hopes and dreams of a city dying as the onslaught continued to fall.

Even as far away as we were, the flames dripped like treacle, but arrived like an inexorable flood. I couldn't help it, I whimpered as I felt the edges of the conflagration make contact with my aegis. The cascading rain of molten light rolled off my shield, pooling in the city below.

Three heartbeats later, my barrier shattered.

This is ridiculous. We just wanted to buy a book!

It was a poor consolation prize, but the miracle had lost most of its momentum by that point. That didn't stop the dregs of the inferno from crashing into the city below.

Eerie flaming whirlwinds swept across the landscape. They billowed one way and then the other, letting out a shrieking cacophony that sounded much like the wail of anguished souls. Watching them was like observing professional dancers proceeding through a choreographed routine. It was a mesmerizing mirage of misery, played out for the amusement of the Gods Below.

The heat on my face was scorching, and I could taste the ash in the air.

Everywhere I looked, the city was broken. Up close, it was a blending of either frozen tundra or verdant jungles, and both parts were currently alight. Further away, it was just torched buildings without the Arcadian addition.

Distantly, I could make out the figure of the Prince of Nightfall in the sky. I wasn't sure how he survived, but the effect hadn't tolled his doom. His fight with Sulia continued and much like her, there was plenty of inadvertent damage to Liesse from him as well.

Large chunks of ice jutted out of the distant landscape, and frozen blizzards carved their way through peoples' homes. The water from the lake bubbled and spat furiously, a churning mess of sparkling light contesting Sulia's flames. I wasn't entirely sure what was happening there, but I wasn't prepared to stick around and find out.

The heavens above were a clash between a furnace and a freezer, with a rippling aurora at the intersection of the two.

It left a bitter taste in my mouth to admit it, but this was beyond my ability to fix.

Not only that, but if I was chained down again, I would likely do far more harm than good.

"We should make haste to depart," Roland whispered.

"Yeah," I replied, my voice hoarse. Broken out of my shocked reflection, I turned my attention to the fastest exit from the flaming carcass of Liesse.

I wanted the Artist dead, but I wasn't willing to risk containment to do it.

The fight between the two members of the Fae Royalty continued in the sky. A rapidly progressing patch of contorted space started to climb its way towards them from below. It appeared that the Warlock had turned his attention back onto the Fae once more.

As one last act of support for the city, I did my best to snuff the flames around me out. It wouldn't do much, but I hated to just leave.

As we made our escape, I sloped my platforms back towards the ground. Not only do people in the sky stand out, but I was far beyond winded. Continuing to exert myself seemed unwise.

I ducked under the smouldering remnants of an Arcadian tree that was planted on a rooftop, then pushed aside the leaves of another. Crossing over from Summer to Winter, it became easier to navigate our way back down.

I looked over my shoulder briefly. The movement of the two Fae Royalty seemed much more contained. I wasn't sure exactly what had happened, but it felt as if there were three or four worlds folded in on each other at the location of the fight.

For a moment, I agonized over what else I should do. There were many ways I could try to improve our chances of our escape. Finally making up my mind, I focused. The last ghost faded from behind me. An overpowering veil of secrecy enveloped the both of us. It was the strongest shroud I was capable of.

I had no idea if it would help, but everything else had failed.

Fleeing while hidden seemed like the smarted option.

I looked around, suppressing the urge to pant. As soon as I could, I would need to rest. We were approaching the edge of both the Artist's melding of Creation and Arcadia and the city itself. The gates loomed ahead. Large chunks of the walls had been demolished during the onslaught, and their previously white faces were blackened with soot.

That was when the effects of the Artist's ability faded.

The outcome was much worse than I would have expected.

Rather than finding myself on an ordinary street, this time I was left in the snow. I looked around. A wintry wasteland spread out on my right, with sparse evergreens dotting the landscape. Footprints marked out a meandering path leading further into the snow.

To my left, there was a lush jungle. Verdant trees, rich soil and the sound of life clamoured for my attention that way.

Roland was nowhere in sight.

I looked up. Above me was a moonless sky. A bitter wind raked its cold claws through my hair. I was stuck in Arcadia.

As far as I could tell, I was entirely alone.

This wasn't a place I wanted to be.

Taking a chance, I tried to form a portal, hoping to be able to break my way back to Creation. My will slammed against a force harder than iron. I had the sense that I did not have the right to shape the world in that way. Perhaps if I wasn't so drained, I could have pressed my way through, but right now I was running on fumes.

I don't know what to do.

Of course, that was when I felt the veil I had only just erected break under the scrutiny of Arcadia itself.

It took me more effort than I would have liked to suppress the scream of frustration that had built up inside of me.

What else is going to go wrong?

Refocusing, I turned towards the footprints in the snow. I didn't know who the markings belonged to. It could be the Artist, or it could be Roland. It could also be just about anyone else. Either way, so long as it was a person, following them was my only real hope.

Right now, I just didn't want to be alone.

Considering I hadn't really seen the Fae doing much walking around, I was willing to bet on it being a person. They seemed to prefer flying, or riding on mounts.

If it was Roland, we could regroup. If it was the Artist, well, I wasn't letting him get away again. Once he was dead, I could use the brush to escape. If it was someone else. Well… They were just as unlucky as I was.

I started staggering after the trail.

It was almost nostalgic when the first painted tiger roared.

The Artist, then.

It jumped out at me from between frosted trees. Warily, I fumbled against the world until I succeeded in dousing it with mineral oil. Once it was gone, I continued forward. As I travelled, I was confronted by two more of the beasts. They weren't particularly threatening once you knew their weaknesses.

It still took far more effort than it should have.

By the time the fourth arrived, my well had run dry. I drew the dagger on my side and dodged forwards as it leaped over me. Pivoting, I jumped onto its back and hung on tightly. It started to shake from side to side in an attempt to dislodge me.

Despite my lethargy, I clung onto it like a limpet.

It pranced in circles and swung its head frantically, gnashing its teeth, and attempting to bite at me. It was disorienting. My head rag dolled from side to side and my breath came out in ragged snorts as I made my attempt to end the creature.

Its attempts were ultimately futile. I wasn't willing to let go.

Gritting my teeth, I stabbed the beast repeatedly where I guessed its painted heart would be.

It took far more work than I would like, and I was shaking from exhaustion by the end of it, but the beast finally came to rest.

Climbing off the now still painted corpse, I panted my way after the Artist. For a while, the erratic thumping of my heart was the only sound I could hear.

Then, that changed.

I began to hear the snap of branches up ahead. Shortly after, the sound of footfalls on the snow. I was drawing close. It sounded like the painter was desperate.

Good.

I couldn't make him out properly from between the dead foliage. The noise was enough for me to guess roughly where he was, though. It would be convenient if I could just kill him at range, but I was entirely out of steam.

I broke out into a last ditch sprint.

Moving forward as confidently as I could considering I felt like I had been run over by a dragon, I pushed my way through the brush. My breath fogged the air before me. I wasn't going to drag this out, or give him the chance to pull out a new trick. All of a sudden, he was right before me. He hadn't even turned around before I struck. My knife sunk into his side. Once, twice, three times.

The Artist let out an anguished wail as I began my onslaught. A bunch of rolled up canvasses under one of his arms dropped onto the snow. I ignored them.

Feebly, he started to turn around, but I kicked out ruthlessly at his legs, sending him sprawling to the ground.

Distantly, I heard him whimper as he pleaded for his own life. Mentally, I was too far away to take note.

The lassitude that had embraced me was so deep that the edges of my vision had gone dark. There was only the next task. Nothing else mattered at all.

Crimson drops stained both my hands and clothes as I pinned him down and continued to twist the dagger home.

A few moments later, and he let out a final, bloody gurgle. His movement came to a stop.

Sighing, I fell back into the snow behind me.

After everything else, the act of killing him had been almost anticlimactic.

What… Next?

Escape… I needed to… Escape. Arcadia wasn't a safe place for me to stay.

That meant I needed to do what? Find the brush. Yes. I should find the brush. The Artist would presumably have it, I just needed to search his corpse. Then, I could make an exit of my own.

Straining, I pulled him out of the snow. I started to check his pockets, trying to find the brush. A mounting sense of dread rose after I realized the truth. It wasn't on his person. Frantically, I started to check the surroundings. I looked between the bushes and in the snow. I even backtracked, carefully going over all the places the two of us had passed during his flight.

By that point, my eyes must have been bloodshot. I felt like a scraggly, wild animal, and almost certainly looked like one as well.

It was over an hour later before I was forced to concede that I wouldn't find the brush, or anyone else.

I was here alone.

I wasn't sure how I was going to escape.

What would a hero do?

The Artist probably had other exits, I didn't know where they were, but I knew they must exist.

A hero would put their trust in blind luck.

It was an awful plan, but my thoughts came sluggishly. I wasn't willing to rest. Not in Arcadia, at least. The outcome would certainly be disastrous for me.

That did nothing to alleviate my problems. A fog had settled over me and was weighing me down. I no longer had enough mental bandwidth to connect whatever dots existed and find my way out on my own.

I made one more cursory check of his corpse for anything else of value, my hands shaking as I did so. Then I firmly shut my eyes and shambled around in circles until I no longer knew which direction it was that I was facing. I started to feel the gentle tug of fate, guiding me. Coming to a stop, I opened them again. Then I began to stagger my way forwards, hoping that the hand of providence led somewhere safe.

Two hours later, and my movement had slowed to a crawl.

I started to hear the call of a hunter's horn. Shortly after, the sound of hooves from behind me.

Why… Can't I just have… Peace?

There was only one thing it could be in the lands of Winter. The Wild Hunt.

If I were human, there was no way I could outrun them. And definitely not in the state I was in, either. But I wasn't really a human, as much as I thought of myself as one. I also wasn't about to give in. So, despite the screaming of my muscles, I started to sprint.

Every part of me protested. My world had already narrowed to a point, but now it narrowed even further. The sense of my body floated away from me, as if it were distant. A part of me, but not me. Only the smallest piece of the whole.

The glaciers look so pretty.

Despite how desolate it was, the environment was still breathtaking. My mind had long since wandered away. All that was left was the goal. The sun rose and set and rose again, and still I went on. For a while, it sounded like they were gaining on me. I didn't let up.

My eyes began to droop. I had lost all sense of time entirely.

Passing through dead forests, I followed the strings of fate as they guided me onwards.

I'm really burning the candle at both ends here.

The thought made me want to laugh for some reason, so I did. My voice echoed against the otherwise empty landscape.

Gradually, the noise of pursuit started to fade.

I need to stop tempting fate.

I wasn't sure if it would prevent catastrophes from happening, but enough had gone wrong that going forward I was willing to give it a try.

Eventually, the sound of my feet crunching against the snow was all that was left that I could hear. The place I was in was uncanny. Thick banks of fog had appeared out of nowhere, clouding over the sky. Even if I could see it, time in Arcadia was fluid, and I had no way to properly measure it at all. This was what I imagined being the only person alive in the world would feel like.

It was so very lonely.

Saying my supplies were limited was being wildly optimistic. I had no food or water, and I was too tired to try transmuting any either. Not that it would be a good idea regardless. I didn't know what consuming parts of Arcadia would to do me, but it certainly wouldn't be good.

I had reached the point where I was relying entirely on my inhuman biology to survive. My clothing was both burned and torn. What little coin I had was in a pouch at my side, not that it would help me, and I had my blood crusted dagger sheathed on my left leg.

I kept trudging on.

I don't know how long I kept walking for. Time had long since lost meaning and the world became nothing more than a blur. I couldn't go to sleep, I just wouldn't let myself. In Arcadia, it wouldn't be safe. The world had closed into one narrow corridor. Trudge, trudge, trudge. The crunch of snow underfoot, the mist before my face, it all blended together. No matter what, I would go on.

My eyes closed.

I hoped Roland had survived. I wasn't willing to bet on it, though. Why couldn't he have landed in Arcadia beside me? Actually, that was probably worse. He wouldn't be able to survive this place for long at all.

That single clash with the Warlock, as brief as it had been, was enough to convince me that he was far out of our league. The bard was almost certainly a wet smear on the ground. I didn't see any way that she could have made it out alive.

Phantoms of my past started to haunt me as I travelled. My dad. The expression on his face so very lost during the negotiations with Alexandria. His eyes, so sad, staring through his glasses. Then the moment when it dawned on him that his little girl wasn't his little girl any longer.

The ghost faded away.

Lisa came next.

You never asked for help.

Her voice called out to me, bitter, tired. As tired as I felt. Her bottle-green eyes looked on from beyond the edge of reality, judging me while I walked. She faded away next.

My mom, Brian, Rachel, Alec, Aisha, Theo. More and more people. An endless crowd of faces parading past me.

One by one, I watched as they watched me or said their piece, then proceeded to vanish into the void.

Then, even their support was gone. Except for the warm embrace of the Choir of Compassion, I was alone once more.

It was comforting, but did nothing to drive back the cold.

The icy claws of the Arcadian Winter dug into me. My ragged breath raked erratically over my face. The scorched remnants of my hair had long since frozen into frigid clumps.

My fingers and toes were numb. There wasn't a single part of me that wasn't tinged in frost.

Strings dangling puzzle pieces illuminated up the path before me. I followed them blindly, not paying attention to anything else. The fragments rotated, spinning in the air. A glimpse of a way forward. A hint of what was to come.

Don't give up.

The embers within me flickered weakly.

The sound of wood echoed underfoot, but I was too exhausted to take notice.

Tired.

I was so, so very tired.

Almost absently, I registered the burbling of a voice. Someone was talking. Words. I think there was anger, irritation, fear and maybe a bit of concern? No matter. People meant safety, right? I could rest. Finally, I could rest. I let myself go. As I finally stopped maintaining focus, I collapsed onto the floor.

I'll… do… better… this… time.

I… promise.


Darkness.​
 
Verism 2.0x
"Heroes can always be relied upon to act in the manner which they believe will achieve the most Good. This makes them eminently controllable. You need only create larger problems than yourself, then ensure the blame falls on somebody else."
– Dread Empress Malicia the First


Amadeus of the Green Stretch put down the letter, face expressionless.

Complications in the Principate were to be expected. It was only possible to string along the civil war for so long before one side or the other won. His plans accounted for that eventuality. The time that the civil war continued to buy Praes was being used to strengthen the Legions. Marshal Grem One-Eye had long since been tasked with fortifying the Red Flower Vales for the eventual confrontation with the Principate. In terms of skill, Grem was without a doubt the best military strategist on Calernia. He may have less experience than Klaus Papenheim, but the Lycaonese as a rule did not concern themselves with the politics of the lower Principate. They were too busy holding off the Chain of Hunger or the Kingdom of the Dead to bother with the happenings down south.

Which was why news of Constance's Scar came as such an unpleasant surprise.

Finding out that a two-mile wide city had materialized in the Principate and shortly thereafter been destroyed by the Gnomes had upended years of scheming on Malicia's part. In order to extend the conflict for as long as possible, they needed at least three major contenders. With only two major contenders, if one side ever weakened, the other could seize the opportunity and strike. With more crowns in play, each Prince would have to concern themselves with the actions of the others in the event that they tried to capitalize.

Princess Constance had been one of those three.

She had also been his preferred candidate as well. If she had seized control, her grasp on power would have been the most tenuous. None of the other Princes respected her. It was likely the Principate would devolve back into infighting shortly after, if she seized the reins. More importantly, she didn't have the hearts of her peasantry either. Her soldiers pillaged and burned fields, killing the common folk as they went.

In the aftermath of her demise, the principality Aisne had turned on itself. It had become a nest of political infighting so venomous it would make even the Praesi high lords proud. With the death of their leader coming so suddenly and unexpectedly, the knives had slid out, and anyone with even a hint of a claim had risen up at the opportunity.

Deft as she was, Malicia had adapted. She had extended offers of loans to Prince Amadis Milenan of Iserre through the Pravus Bank in support of his bid for the seat of First Prince. The man had accepted them, but Black had his concerns. Prince Amadis may be as proud as a peacock and arrogant to a fault, but he was still a shrewd manipulator. He had been deftly arranging events in the background inside the Principate. Playing off against all three of the forerunners in the race for the seat of First Prince. Prince Amadis was more dangerous than either of the others.

Plans needed to be recalibrated to take these events into account. A war that had once seemed decades on the horizon was now possibly looming close, the heat of its breath felt on the back of the neck. Most concerning of all, the rate at which heroes were showing up within Callow had just risen from one to two a year.

The parameters he had set could not reasonably account for intervention from the Gnomes. Whilst reading about events like the fall of Kerguel made for grim research in abstract, seeing the force that they could actually deploy made for a much more pointed lesson. Calernia was a backwater on the greater stage of Creation. That they had interfered in the Principate rather than Praes didn't make it much better.

Whilst the massacre of Princess Constance's forces was being correctly blamed on the Gnomes, the appearance of the city was not. Teleportation on such a scale was far beyond the ability of even the most talented Praesi practitioners. Wekesa claimed it was not the action of a sorcerer at all. The resulting Keter's Due from such an event would have left most of Bayeux a desolate wasteland.

This did not change the fact that in the eyes of the people on Calernia, the foremost experts on magic and thus the most likely culprits were the sorcerers from Praes. Blame would be placed squarely at their feet. The strategic advantage of having the ability to move objects or people on such a large scale would be considered unacceptable by all the other political entities on the continent. Claims that they did not have such an advantage would not be taken seriously. The word of the Dread Empire of Praes could not be trusted in the eyes of the heavens. That meant war was a certainty, and with possibly more than just the Principate. Praes needed to be prepared for the calling of a crusade.

The cogs in his head slowly started to turn. Forces would need to be redeployed. The First, Third and Tenth Legion were all garrisoned at the Vales, but with the threat of a Crusade looming there was no guarantee this would be enough to stem the tide. New Legions would need time to harden before they could be deployed, which meant that old Legions would need to be moved. Still, with the threat of an oncoming war, new Legions would need to be raised.

Something was amiss.

It was like a grain of sand had slipped between the cogs of the machine, and Black couldn't tell where it was. There were too many unknowns. Subtle investigations by the Eyes of the Empire into the events leading up to Constance's Scar had been unable to turn anything up. The city had just appeared in the Bayeux heartland, and nobody had been able to determine why.

There was another player who had entered the stage, and Black would find out who they were.


Amadeus of the Green Stretch stood on one of the balconies at the palace in Summerholm. His green eyes scanned the horizon, watching the sun set. The latest news from the Eyes of the Empire had flagged three travelling wizards as potential villains. They were fleeing the Principate after allegedly having raised undead.

Some of Scribe's helpers had been sent to Beaumarais to verify the story. After arriving, they had learned about the sorcerer named Roland leaving town to chase down a Praesi warlock. Careful investigation of the events rendered that explanation unlikely, and the one provided at the border fortress had been taken as the truth. It spoke to a level of shrewdness that amused Black, villains escaping persecution from the House of Light by spinning a heroic tale.

Background checks on the other two proved to be more interesting. Maxime Redflame was noted to be a formerly retired War Wizard who had served with several Fantassin companies before settling down after the death of his family. The man had a terrible reputation and was known as both a drunkard and troublemaker. A note was placed to keep watch on him more closely. The third figure was an enigma. Taylor, allegedly from off the continent, had no information to go on at all. It was as if she had appeared out of the void. That was cause for concern.

Out of the three, she was earmarked to be watched the closest. Someone with no visible background and no ties to anyone else was almost certainly Named. The others had an existing history. Connections to people they could possibly call friends. Taylor did not.

The group had been given a medium priority and left for monitoring by the Eyes. At first, they continued to exercise caution, keeping their heads down. After months of doing nothing but selling their services in an entirely legal manner, they were downgraded to a lower priority. They didn't ask questions about the Calamities or try to raise trouble at all. From all outward appearances, they were proper citizens of the Empire.

That made the most recent reports all the more unfortunate.

Up until just recently, they had remained within the rules of the Empire, just barely skirting the edges of them. There had been attempts to integrate other villains into the current structure of Praes before, but they always chose to overreach. One of the members of the eyes had reported some unusual activity in a nameless town out in the middle of nowhere. A scuffle with a painter, which indicated they might have higher ambitions.

She had been ordered to link up with other members of the Eyes near Hedges and find out more.


Black was reviewing the latest set of reforms he had planned for the guilds in Callow when Eudokia came in.

"There have been concerning developments near Hedges," she stated. Ink stained hands placed a letter on the desk beside him.

Reaching to his left, he picked up a bottle and silently poured a glass of wine, proffering it her way. Then, he picked up the letter and started to peruse its contents.

Complaints had come from senior members of the eyes in the region, requesting clarification as to why they were so understaffed. Upon further investigation, it appeared they had always been understaffed. The system he had set up in Callow did not allow for a discrepancy this large to occur, without something major as the cause.

The cogs in his mind began to turn, slowly grinding away at the problem. Hedges was near the location of one of Triumphant's Hell Eggs. More specifically, the one used to house a demon of absence. It would not normally be the first explanation he would reach towards, but in this case it seemed the most likely.

"I'll contact Wekesa and ask him to investigate the area for signs of demonic corruption."

"Should I prepare the Eyes for a purge?"

"Possibly."

An empty glass was placed down beside him, along with another letter. Silently, Eudokia lit another candle and placed it on the desk, then left soon afterwards.

Picking the letter up, it was pleasing to note that the potential villain that the eyes were investigating was continuing to keep her head down. The two men were no longer considered villain candidates as they both showed signs of physically ageing. Taylor, however, had been marked down as a certainty. Physically, she had remained the same since she had first entered the Empire.

The group had passed through Callow into the Duchy of Daoine and there had been no notable negative reports from them at any step of the way. Black maintained a much more hands-off approach with dealing with Daoine, but in this case that was unlikely to be a problem. This villain hadn't upset the Empire. What she were after was unclear and would take a much more careful line of investigation to determine, but right now she wasn't considered a threat.

There was a chance, however unlikely, that she may be able to be integrated into the Empire after all.


Wekesa's investigations into the events at Hedges had proved alarming. He had confirmed that the banner was no longer present, and that an encounter with the demon had taken place on site. The largest discrepancy was the presence of what at first glance appeared to be a magical imitation of the tabula rasa effect. It was as if someone had overlapped an extraordinarily close mimicry of creation on top of it, following similar but not entirely identical rules.

Wekesa's investigation was still ongoing to determine the exact source of the effect, but it was the other details surrounding the event which were occupying Amadeus's attention. The eyes had reported an Artist displaying unusual behaviour. The Artist was registered as having appeared intermittently at locations in the Empire separated by such vast distances that it was not physically possible for him to have travelled the intervening space in the time. Furthermore, whenever he left, there were strange deaths that occurred in the area soon afterwards.

Direct action would be taken the next time the Artist appeared. Loosing a demon within the confines of the Empire was not behaviour that would be tolerated.

Then there was the other isolated villain in the Empire. Taylor's name had not been determined yet, but the activities of her band had finally started to skirt the edges of the law. It was no surprise that a band of ambitious sorcerers containing a villainous Name began investigating lore on how to summon devils. It was still a disappointment.

Taylor was both paranoid and cautious, almost to a fault. It appeared she had an Aspect similar to Scribe's Fade, she would often disappear from tracking for extended periods of time before eventually resurfacing. At first, this had been a cause for concern, and he had considered taking action. To her misfortune, there was no way for her to obtain the information she appeared to be searching for without risking engaging actively with Eyes of the Empire. It had been simple enough to slip a tracking spell onto a purchased tome that completely bypassed her protections.

It was unfortunate, but Wekesa had informed Black that an eavesdropping spell would have proven too easy for the wizards to detect. Using an enchanted book to listen in on their conversations would have made observation substantially easier.

The engagements that her band were observed participating in were against foes that would have been dealt with by the Legions were they on site, never against individuals of value to the Empire. Furthermore, they remained outside Callow proper and inside Daoine instead. Were any issues to arise, Black would anonymously inform the Duchy about their problem. They would eagerly solve it themselves. For now, Taylor would remain under observation.


Matters within the Principate were proving to be more optimistic than Amadeus had initially expected. Despite his fears regarding Prince Amadis, another protracted draw had proceeded to develop. Malicia had proven her deftness once again, succeeding in tying up the Principate in war. Prince Dagobert of Lange had been trying to strong-arm the Lycaonese into supporting his bid for First Prince. Predictably, it was proving unsuccessful. He was currently engaged in a stalemate with Prince Fabian of Lyonis, and it seemed unlikely that progress would be made any time soon.

Prince Amadis was trying to talk them into pretending to sign an alliance with Dagobert and then backstab him on the field of battle. Princess Aenor of Aequitan decried both, arguing that they should remain out of the conflict and stay firm in upholding their duty up north. Piece by piece, the Principate was splintering. Hatreds were becoming more and more entrenched.

Less notably, two years on and the Principality of Aisne was still embroiled in internal conflicts. It amused Black to see them continue to connive, much like Praesi High Lords. The fact that Praes had nothing to do with it made the irony all the more sweet. If the situation there dragged on much longer, it may kill the idea of Aisne existing as a part of the Principate at all.

This had bought him more time to prepare. A fourteenth legion was in the process of being raised. When the news of Gnomish activity had reached the High Lords, politicking in Praes had, for about the span of a day, taken the back foot. Ater was quiet while they tried to decide how best to leverage the information, and news of the outcome proved to be enlightening. Spies within Wolof had informed him the Sahelians were trying to find a method to achieve a similar scale of teleportation ritual. This served to once again reinforce his belief that all of them needed to die. The Sahelians, of course, never knew to leave well enough alone. If a new kind of demon was discovered that wiped out half of Calernia, they would try to leash it instead of exterminate it.

That left one more outstanding problem. Cordelia Hasenbach. It had been over a year since she was first crowned Prince of Rhenia, and recently she had been trying to raise awareness about the Pravus Bank. The ongoing civil war was key to the Empire's strategy, allowing them to buy the necessary time to prepare before the inevitable Crusade. Malicia had been funding the civil war indirectly through Mercantis. The City of Bought and Sold allowed the trade of almost anything if you had the gold. Were it not for the ongoing investment of Praesi coin, the Princes of Procer would have long since ran out of the capital required to continue fielding more mercenaries in their bitter feud.

Assassin had tried to have her killed, but her cousin, Agnes Hasenbach had at some point come into an oracular Name. Her ability to see the shape of the future had rendered all attempts made thus far unsuccessful. Efforts were being made to learn the extent of the Augur's abilities. Sooner or later a weakness would be determined, and they would be able to strike. The only question that remained was whether it would be before or after she had succeeded in bringing the war to an end. Malicia was optimistic, Amadeus was not.

Taking into account his most pessimistic projections, Amadeus estimated he would need to agitate the Chain of Hunger within the next two to three years. It would serve to destabilize Rhenia and shift the focus of Cordelia Hasenbach away from the southern principalities, right as she would begin to involve herself with the civil war. Breaking her momentum at that pivotal moment would crush attempts to reunite the Principate for at least another year, buying Amadeus additional time to prepare.

If nothing were done, the cries of Rhenia would be the clarion call that brought the crusade to bear. Amadeus could feel the shape of it in his bones. It had been twelve years since the Conquest of Callow. How many more years would he have, he wondered, until the hours tolled for war.


Amadeus finished his final review of the up-and-coming soldiers for the fourteenth legion. Whilst the troops themselves were green, it seemed likely they would prove capable once hardened on the field. Unfortunately, it appeared there was a dearth of sufficiently talented officers to man the legion within the Empire itself. The daughter of Istrid of the Red Shields, Juniper, had potential, but she was also years away from being ready to take command. Efforts would have to be made to extend his search and possibly consider recruiting from Callowan stock. Integrating them into the Legions would further bind them to Praes, making it harder to untangle the two nations for any would be heroes down the line.

Making his way to one of the nearby offices, he sat down and started perusing the latest reports from the Eyes. His eyebrows rose. Reports from Daoine indicated that the villainous band led by Taylor had left the confines of Daoine and re-entered Callow proper. She had kept her head below the waterline for over two years now. Amadeus considered it likely that she would remain that way, but he wouldn't settle for possibilities, only certainties.

He would need to ask Wekesa to set an appropriate trap. Bait of some sort that would lure her out should she be inclined to overreach. It would be a pointed lesson, with a visit from Assassin at the end of it as a reminder of why she should continue to stay as she was.

Black viewed her avoiding the trap being the more likely outcome, in which case a more direct visit was in order. He had considered it unlikely that there were any other villains who were directly compatible with their rule, but it seemed that wasn't necessarily true.​
 
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