Call of the Void chapter 19
After reincarnating Brad, we descended into the pit with no issue. The spikes had all vanished, and the whole place just felt…empty. Which was an odd thought to have about a hole in the ground, but even more than most holes, Brad’s former pit felt like an absence of a thing more than the presence of an absence.
I summoned Brad himself, or rather, Pit of Despair, and gestured down to the empty hole. “Alright, so where exactly IS the arrowhead? Because I’m not sure where you hid it based on the limited space in the pit. I could find it, I’m sure, but I figured it’ll be easier to ask.”
Also, I was deeply wary of trying to examining a broken divine artifact with Dantalion. Especially one tainted by ANOTHER god. He snorted, then hopped down into the pit casually. Kneeling down, he drove his hand into the dirt, coming out with a large, ornate looking glass box with gilded edges. “Behold!” he cried, holding it up.
“You just buried it?” I asked him flatly.
He looked at me like I was an idiot. “I was a PIT. Where did you think I was going to put it?” I opened my mouth to retort…but had no response to that, so I just held out my hands. He tossed it up to me without hesitation, and as I caught it, I felt a low buzz of power roll over my skin.
Divinity. I’d felt divine artifacts before, the scythe back during the trials, but this felt different. More…raw. Like being broken was baring its edge for anyone to see. I went to drop it into my ring…and nothing happened. I frowned, looking over at Dayna. “I can’t put it away,” I said slowly. “Any ideas?”
She rolled her eyes. “Obviously you can’t put it in a spatial ring,” she explained condescendingly. “It’s a divine artifact. And a broken one at that. You might be able to put a complete arrow into a ring, but that’s because they’re CONTAINED. Put it in your Domain.” Which was a reasonable plan since I needed to let the prisoners out anyway. We weren’t going to take them with us, after all. Sure enough, as soon as they were released they all took off in random directions, a few of them shooting us poisonous looks.
Sighing, I pushed the item into the back area in my throne room where I’d met with Azazel and the other ministers before my trial back at the Wish Curse Palace. Once it was gone, I turned to Brad. “Ok, now that we have that finished, we need an exit. I have a strange feeling that you might be the way to do that. Or at least know how. We need to open a hole to the Void Road, preferably somewhere in Verdyn’s territory where Dayne might be able to give us a heading. Do you know of any weak spots we could use?”
He blinked at me. “You’re asking me where to find…a hole?” He glanced down meaningfully. “Because I feel like you might not need much help there.”
“That’s not what I meant,” I said with a groan. “I need…” then I paused. Because…WAS that what I meant? Could I use the former location of Brad’s pit to connect to an area of the Void where Verdyn’s power was ascendant? Because thinking about it, that actually sounded like it might work.
I summoned Dantalion. “What are the chances you would be able to see through the barrier between this space and the Void?” I asked urgently. “And if not, what would you need to make that possible?”
He hummed, staring down into the pit with fascination. “I believe I might manage with a rank up. I’ve been exposed to quite a bit of Void influence, and learned more than a few tricks.”
Nodding, I triggered the Ten Demons Tree, elevating him to tier 8. He closed his eyes, letting his power spill out, and we sat and waited as he soaked the area in influence, drilling down into and through the core nature of the place to gather information. Luckily, he’d already mapped the area most of the way before we engaged, so he was able to start much further along than would normally have been possible.
It only took about an hour and a half for him to penetrate the barrier. “I can see the Void Roads. I don’t know enough about them to hazard a guess as to our location, but the path seems to be ringed with trees, if that matters.”
Dayna perked up. “Void Roads near powerful territories sometimes change to reflect them. If there are trees along the path we should be close to Lord Verdyn’s world. How close is anyone’s guess, but much closer from a relative perspective.” Nodding, I reached for the stored Adherent Fire, and, with a quick sweep of the power, dragged us back into the Void through the gap where the pit had been.
It was surprisingly simple, actually. Once we had landed on the Void Road, I let Brad wander around nearby, enjoying the sensation of being physical. Dan went with him, both curious about the environment and hoping to keep our newest court member out of trouble.
Meanwhile, Dayna was looking around, clearly trying to map…something. When I asked about it, she pointed up at the twisting loops of Void Road crisscrossing the Void. “The Roadsky can be used as a map to navigate. The patterns of the crisscrossing paths and the distribution across the Void can be used to map certain vectors. Of course, it only works in places you recognize, so the location we ended up before was pretty much a mystery to me. THIS one though…”
I perked up at that. “Wait…are you saying you know where we ARE? Like you can get us to Mourne Kayze from here?”
“No,” she said bluntly. “But I can get us to the lodge. And I can get us directions to Mourne Kayze from THERE. It’s not THAT close, however. We’ll need to pass through at least three Hanging Lands to get there. The closest of those isn’t far though, I would estimate somewhere in the neighborhood of five or six hours, given the lack of suppression on the Roads.”
I grinned. “Alright then, sounds like a plan. We just need to-” I froze, head whipping around as I whirled to look behind us. I’d just gotten a VERY bad feeling. The kind the prefaced a huge fight with a very strong enemy.
“What is it?” Dayna asked urgently. “Is something coming?”
I gestured behind us at the empty Road, where the entrance to the shallowing was. Or the exit, depending on your point of view. As we watched, the air began to warp. Not in a stable, subtle way like my flames caused. It looked like someone was digging a claw into the skin of the world and gouging out the space itself.
The line of damage tore itself across the air of the path, then another did the same from the opposite side, forming an X shape. A large, masked form stepped through the hole, staring at us coldly. “Return the object,” said the incredibly menacing B-ranker. “And you may live.”
I was just gaping at him. He looked…savage. A tall, muscular man without a shirt, long hair dragging his shoulders and his face covered by a thick iron mask with a pair of ragged eye holes punched in it. His eyes were steel grey, and sharp in a way that would have told me he was a swordmaster even if I couldn’t see his clearly drawn blade dripping a substance that looked like molten glass.
It took me a second to piece together that the substance was some kind of…blood. Like he had INJURED reality and it was leaking fluid. I’d never seen it before, but I had also never seen someone cut their way into the Void with brute force. Sure, a shallowing would be the place to do that, but still, it was a scary level of combat power.
I let out a breath, reaching for my Domain and pushing it out into the world around us, covering the area nearby with the projection of Gehenna. The man looked around, clearly unimpressed, despite the literal horde of demons surrounding us. “Are you offering me your surrender, or are you resisting. I have no time for foolish games. Surrender the object or die. My followers were ignorant of its existence, but the course of events was clear from their reports.”
I tapped my staff, calling for Mornax mentally as I pushed his rank up to B. The horned bruiser stepped forward, taking up a position between me and the masked man. “Where I’m from, we introduce ourselves before making demands. I’m Solomon, what should I call you.”
“Clarent,” he said shortly. “Baron of the Blade. Pleasantries are at an end, I will ask you only once more, do you intend to surrender the artifact or not?”
“Not,” I admitted, snapping my fingers. A second horned form erupted from the crowd, slamming into Mornax as Asmodeus melded with the defensive colossus and imbued him with a frightening amount of power. Another form stepped up beside him, the towering bulk of Abaddon taking his place beside the defensive bulwark. Behind them Belial’s eyes lit with an eerie green black light, and he reached out to touch their shadows surreptitiously, pushing his corruptive influence into the darkness and through it into their bodies.
Into my body I called Sammael, Azazel, and Glory, my staff extending into a sharp edged flame spear. I stepped up next to the line of demons, taking position next to them. “However you are expecting this to go, I can promise you it won’t,” I told him bluntly. “I don’t know you, and have nothing against you, so I have no reason to want to hurt you. Turn around and walk away, and neither of us needs to do something we’ll regret.”
“I do not know regret,” said the implacable man. “But your choice has been lost. Your blood will festoon the dirt beneath my boots.”
I felt it coming. Azazel told me, Danger Sense told me, my FATE SENSE told me. His attack wasn’t subtle, it wasn’t measured, and it wasn’t hesitant. Overwhelming force unleashed with pinpoint accuracy poured chrome his blade as it cleaved the Void itself, heading right for me.
And cut right through the illusionary double I left when triggering Double Trouble. My staff lashed out, the black flame blade aimed at the hollow at the base of his skull.
I couldn’t afford to hold back against someone this strong. I would feel bad about killing him, but not nearly as bad as I’d feel about him killing me. Unfortunately that wasn’t going to be an issue anyway, because my blow never landed. With a movement so graceful it almost looked liquid, Clarent shifted slightly to one side, turning his head, and the flames skittered off his dark metal mask, raising a cloud of sparks.
Cursing, I triggered Double Trouble again, preparing for a second attack, when a familiar voice boomed across the path. “Hey! Don’t attack my boss, you jerk!”
There was a flicker of power, and Clarent just…vanished. Or rather, a hole appeared where he had been. I stared in shock. The Void Roads were powerful constructs that spanned the length and breadth of the Void itself. Damaging them was prohibitively difficult, and punching a HOLE in one should be almost impossible.
But there I was, staring at a big gap in the Road where Clarent had been standing. Brad ran over, glaring down at the hole venomously, before turning to me with a smug grin. “See?” he said happily. “I TOLD you I would be useful.” We all just stared at him, then back at the hole where the swordmaster had been. Yeah. That WAS pretty damned useful.
2025-12-30 04:04:01 +0000 UTC View PostArriving at the pit wasn’t hard. The orangutans had, I suspected, been sent to bring us there directly after we’d spent hours mapping things out. The pit had become hungry, and was tired of waiting for its food to step into its salivating maw. So the recon we’d been planning, while still necessary, wasn’t nearly as challenging as expected. Especially since when we arrived, the thing was WAITING for us. After a fashion.
“Evening,” said the cheerful older man standing in the center of the clearing where the pit was supposed to be. “Nice to see some fellow humans.”
I raised an eyebrow at him. “Really? Humans? That’s how you’re going to play this?”
He shrugged. “What else would I be? In fact, if you’re so sure I’m not human, why not come over here and check?”
“Because the clearing is a trap,” I said dryly. “YOU are a trap, and are currently attempting to trap us.”
He hummed in consideration. “Certainly doesn’t sound like me. What say you come over here and we shake on it, put our differences aside and you can come over to my farm for a nice hearty meal. You look tired and hungry.”
“See, in order for that to work, you would need to be a real person, with a real farm, and NOT a sumilacrum created by an evil pit trap to lure us into its waiting jaws.” I said dryly.
He frowned in disappointment. “Boy, I oughta come over there and whoop your behind.”
“You ought to,” I agreed. “But you won’t. In fact, you CAN’T. Because you can’t MOVE from that spot. Because you are not real.” I didn’t budge, and I could tell its sad attempts to trick me were wearing thin, even for the pit itself. I suspected it was very NEW to consciousness, because this was an extremely simplistic attempt to snare us.
His expression flattened. “Ugh. Fine. You caught me. You’re SO smart. But honestly, you couldn’t play along for a few minutes? What would it hurt?”
“US!” I said in exasperation. “Because you were planning to EAT us!”
“Only a little bit,” it protested. “Just your arms. And maybe your legs. And your heads. But only the soft parts. In fact, I was going to leave all your bones, and those are like…half your body weight or something. I think that’s very generous.”
I stared at it drolly. “And yet, we are not convinced.”
“Well it’s not like YOU came with good intentions,” he complained loudly. “You’re here to steal my treasure. I need that treasure. Without it, I’m just a normal hole in the ground. Do you know what it’s LIKE to be a hole in the ground? It sucks. Well, only if you’re quicksand, but even for more stable pit traps it’s not much fun.”
“I would be a lot more sympathetic if you weren’t stalling to try to signal your minions to come drag is into you,” I said with a shrug. “Which won’t work, by the way. You can’t contact them. Your messages aren’t going through.” Dan had identified that communication channels the pit used from studying the area, and we’d stationed Murmur nearby to block any contact. “Sorry, but you’re not getting to eat us. Which I realize must be tough for a pit, but hey, we’re at an impasse.”
“Well that’s rude,” he whined childishly. “I put a lot of work into making this body, you know? I based it on the memories of several very nice people I’ve eaten. I even named it. So you can stop calling me ‘pit, and call me by my REAL name. Brad.”
“Your name is Brad the pit?” I asked doubtfully.
He frowned. “Yes? Why? Is there something WRONG with that?”
“No, of course not,” I assured him. “It’s your name. It’s just…it’s a little underwhelming. You’re a pit. An unending maw of consumption. I would have expected something grandiose, like Kalgoth the Devourer or something.”
The pit monster in disguise sneered. “Typical human, always telling people who they can and can’t be. This is why I eat your kind, you know.”
“No it isn’t,” I said bluntly. “You eat us because you’re a pit.”
“Well yes,” he said in a wounded tone. “But you don’t have to be so confrontational about it. I have feelings too, you know.”
Dayne, who had been quietly standing to one side, lashed out with a fist, cratering the trunk of a nearby tree. “ENOUGH!” she snapped. “I’ve had enough! This whole conversation is NONSENSE! Just kill the damned thing so we can get the arrowhead and LEAVE this horrible place.”
“Ok, but HOW?” I asked her bluntly. “Because I’m still not actually sure how we KILL a hole in the ground. It’s a HOLE. How do you kill the absence of space? Void? Maybe? I don’t even know. I was planning to try the Adherent Fire, but my instincts are telling me that won’t work, and I have a limited number of charges, so we’re kind of stuck for the moment.” I frowned. “Or at least…we might be. I feel like there’s a deal to be made.”
Brad snorted. “A deal? If you succeed in your goals I cease to exist. I hardly think I’m motivated to help you do anything.”
I considered what he was, and my own assets. And then…I had an idea. “What if you didn’t?” I asked slowly. “What if I could help you become something else? Something better. Something that can leave here with us, and doesn’t need to eat people.”
He cocked his head in confusion. “I don’t think that’s possible. I can’t leave this place, obviously.”
“But what if you could,” I said again. “What if I had a way to make it possible. Would you be willing to trade the arrowhead for a chance to leave here? To transcend your limits and walk the world as a living, thinking being. Because, let’s be honest, even if we don’t get that fragment, SOMEONE is going to come take it. Hell, if they don’t that might be worse. Like what happens if you eat the current party of people in here? What if no one else ever comes? Can you starve?”
He opened his mouth to respond, then stopped. “I…I don’t know. But how would you help me? You say I can leave, but without the fragment, I’m not a real being. If you take it away I vanish, what can you do about that?”
“Simple,” I said with a manic grin. “I’m going to MAKE you a real being. See, your current personality could be considered a sort of pseudo Domain. And I have a special Domain that allows me to create living beings from pseudo Domains. In fact, I have a perfect vessel for you, assuming you don’t mind sharing your body.”
Brad, despite being a little obtuse, was a special being. Created from a fragment of a divine object infused with the power of a SECOND god. Getting the arrowhead was fine, but I had a sneaking suspicion Brad himself might have been the opportunity I was sent here to pursue.
But before I could do that, I had to make sure that the recipient I had in mind for this shared body experience was willing. I reached into my Domain, pulling gently, and within seconds, a new being faded into existence. A short, stout man with dark hair and dark eyes and a healthy tan. The demon known only as Pit of Despair.
“Pit,” I said with a nod. “Sorry to call you out like this.”
He bowed low. “Of course, my lord. I am happy to serve. What would you have of me?” His eyes contained a powerful intensity that had nothing to do with magic or even abilities. As one of my demons, he was created by me, or rather, by my staff, so he felt an ingrained sense of loyalty.
“I have a task you might be suited for,” I admitted. “But I don’t want to force it. You can say no, and in fact, if you feel uncertain, I ORDER you to say no.” I wasn’t sure if that would actually help, but it was the best I could do. Besides which, I was fairly certain that this little merger would come with substantial rewards, so I wasn’t comfortable actually taking the chance away, I just wanted to make sure he had an out.
After I made that clear, I explained the situation to him, including the nature of the pit itself. This was ultimately a unique opportunity for both of us, so I was actually pretty sure he would be willing, and sure enough, once I explained, his face lit up with enthusiasm. “And by sharing my body in this way, I’ll gain more power?”
I paused, listening to a voice inside my head. “Azazel says yes,” I confirmed. “Not sure how MUCH, but there will be gains.”
After a brief pause, he nodded solemnly. “Then I accept. I’m willing to share my body.”
I turned back to the form of Brad standing atop the pit. The clearing had some kind of illusion or covering that kept it from LOOKING like a pit, but Dan had already showed us the truth before we approached. “You heard him. If you accept, we perform the process first thing. We can retrieve the arrowhead ourselves when it’s done. Does that work for you?”
This was an exciting experiment. Reincarnation was a mechanism to add new skills to existing demons, and given Brad was a pseudo Domain, he would count as much as any of my others. Keeping them separate inside the body would take a little concentration, but I could FEEL that the Domain would allow it. In fact, it was the only way I COULD reincarnate Pit of Despair. He was a tier 6, a powerful demon far beyond my ability to completely alter.
The only reason it was possible to do it at all was because his nature and Brad’s were so closely intertwined. Brad, for his part, looked pensive. He stared at me, then over at Pit, and then looked to Dayna, who had mostly tuned all this out.
Finally, he nodded. I grinned, then gestured to the ground and then to Pit. “Go ahead and peel back that facade, and then my buddy here will be coming over to meet you face to face.”
He hesitated, but did so, removing the grass above the pit, exposing a large, gaping chasm filled with bloodstained bronze spikes. I glanced at Pit, who nodded again, and then…stepped out into midair. And just hung there. He WAS tier 6, so flight was a possibility, but I was pretty sure he just literally decided not to be pulled into the pit, some strange interaction between the two powers.
Walking slowly over to Brad, he held out a hand. “Are you ready?” he asked kindly. At Brad’s affirmative, he signalled for me to begin. Closing my eyes, I called my staff, focusing on my Domain through our connection, and then through that on Pit. I triggered my reincarnation ability.
Reincarnation was difficult. It only really worked on low level demons. The more powerful a demon the more developed, and the harder it was to alter them. In this case though, we weren’t overwriting anything, or even adding a Skill. We were combining Brad’s relatively new consciousness with Pit. Sort of the inverse of what we’d done with the Nine Phoenix Reincarnation Art.
I felt a tug in my gut, and then a sort of suction as energy drained out of me. My soul was put under strain, but I ignored it, focused on making sure this went smoothly.
Within minutes, Brad was gone, subsumed into Pit. I cocked my head at the demon. “You still in there?” I was pretty sure he was, but if not, I wanted to know now. I’d feel pretty bad if this had gone wrong.
To my relief, though, he just grinned, eyes flashing a bright green. “That I am.” He clenched his fists tightly, reveling in the sensation. “Now, why don’t we get that arrowhead and get out of here? I have so much to see and do.”
2025-12-26 19:24:46 +0000 UTC View Post“You know, you scare me,” I said to Dayna conversationally as I stared up at the giant bronze lantern fish pinned to a large nearby tree. This was the third time I’d felt the need to mention that to her, but the pincushion she had made of the giant fish still made my skin crawl. Granted, Asmodeus had helped, but she was still MUCH scarier than I remembered her being at D-rank.
She shrugged. “As I said, I have a special gift for dealing with ambush predators.”
“But these aren’t ambush predators,” I pointed out, struggling to keep a straight face. “These predators am flower.”
She stopped, turned to stare at me, and glared right into my face for a solid minute. Well, into my mask. Finally, she eventually just threw up her hands in frustration and turned to stalk away. I pumped my fist, noting that Bethy might be onto something with this whole zany schtick, it was pretty fun.
I strolled over to Oz and Dan. “So, how we looking, boys?” Beelzebub had joined them, and Dantalion was using the clones as semi autonomous drones to map the forest. They’d been at it for about two hours now, and I was beginning to get a bit antsy.
Dan grimaced. “Apologies for the delay, my lord. The terrain is quite treacherous. Some of the traps appear to have become sentient after the invasion of the mechanical energy. We haven’t identified a clear route, but we HAVE managed to find one with minimal trap presence. The only downside is the sentient pit trap that appears to have mutated at the end of it. We have a good enough idea of how to progress, however, it should be workable, especially with the Minister aiding your steps.”
“Works for me,” I shrugged. “Dan and Beelzebub, you’re dismissed, Oz you’re with me.” A quick snap of my fingers sent them back into the Domain, and another summoned my favorite lime green bird of prey. Who promptly took one look at me, trilled, and flew off to the other side of the clearing to land on Dayna’s shoulder. “Well that just seems unnecessary,” I said waspishly. He scoffed and looked away. “Fine then, be that way,” I scoffed, turning towards the exit to the clearing. “Oz, you ready?”
He nodded, and with a flex of my will…I incarnated him. There was a shift in the world, a sort of fundamental alteration in the balance of my thought process. It was hard to describe, really, because it didn’t feel like anything CHANGED, but it did feel like I had changed my way of looking at things.
A series of memories flooded my brain, and I immersed myself in them. Memories, power usage strategies, there were so many tidbits of information pouring into my brain.
Striding forward, I reached the edge of the clearing, Dayna on my heels, and I called back to her. “Do exactly what I do.” Then, I took off. My wings beat the air, pushing me off the ground with extra force as I danced into the sky. At the peak of my arc, I twisted gracefully, and a series of thunks sounded off to the side as an arrow trap that had been aimed at me missed and the arrows thudded into the trees nearby. I felt the whoosh as they split the air inches from my body and wings, but ignored them. I was in motion.
As gravity caught me at the peak of my jump, I tucked my wings, rolling forward into a spinning dive. I bounced off the ground, my feet barely touching the dirt, and continued into a series of cartwheels finished out by a twisting backflip, flicking my legs out to increase my spin and remove them from the path of a pair of scything axe blades.
Dayne, to her credit, didn’t complain for a second about the fact that I was doing insane acrobatic dance moves with wings. She followed behind me pretty flawlessly, which made sense because we weren’t under suppression and people above D-rank could fly.
We bounded through the traps, the bonds of gravity shattered behind us as we swept across the space in a dizzying ballet of acrobatic skill and dexterity. It was…honestly the most fun I’d had in ages. I’d forgotten exactly how much the suppression of the various planets and worlds we’d been on had held me back. It was like normal gravity. You walked around in it all the time, so it just felt like nothing, but step OUT of that weight and…
I was so intoxicated by the fun of being unleashed, I barely caught the danger warning from my Danger Sense in time. Or rather, Danger Sense warned Azazel, who predicted the attack and showed me how to dodge it at the last second.
My wings snapped like whips, jerking my body back, and rolled in midair to slam both heels into the soles of Dayna’s boots, pushing her back and launching myself out of the way as a pair of monstrous orange forms tore through the spot we’d just been hanging with a speed so great I had to process what they were in retrospect.
Landing on a branch, I stared coldly at a crated on a nearby tree, seeing one of the animals that had attacked us in all its glory.
Well…not glory. Horror. Weirdness. The monster was huge, but deeply misshapen. It appeared to be some kind of orangutan, but its faced had been mutated or corrupted by some weird technorganic plague of bronze gears and smoothly melding metallic plates. One of its eyes was a red lens that glowed with an infernal rage, and the other was bloodshot and mad with pain and hatred. Its teeth were coated in bronze, and several of them appeared to be literal spinning drils, with motor oil drooling from the tips.
The tree it had landed on was shattered and bent, so damaged it was forming an actual platform for the creature to crouch, and its already oversized arms had been replaced with huge beefy bronze smashers, replete with giant grasping hands it used to balance its unusually squat body.
“Huh,” I said dryly. “You don’t see that every day.” I dismissed Azazel, having already seen that this wasn’t going to be a place where prediction was useful. Instead, I called Abaddon into my body. My physical strength surged, amplified by the converted energy of a dozen Zagans pushed even higher by Sammael. Abaddon’s ability to convert energy into raw power was easily my most effective weapon here. With the power filling my body, I cracked my neck, lowering my stance slightly. “Come on then, beastie,” I growled. “Let’s see what you’ve got.”
The techno-orangutan roared its outrage and hurled itself toward me. I waited until the last second, then stepped back, dropping off my branch and grabbing it as I fell. I swung my body up, slamming my feet into its back as it went by, sending it streaking into the distance. I swung through, popping back up and then launching myself after it, determined to hit the thing head on while it was down.
It was pulling itself out of the ground as I landed, and I surged forward, jumping onto its back and hooking my arms under its armpits, locking them behind its neck in a sort of modified hook hold that stole all the leverage from the huge monster.
Tucking my head, I arched my back, bringing the thing up and over in a back bridge and then slamming its head into the ground. And then I did it again. Over and over I battered its skull until I felt the struggling stop. Then I plopped down, hooking its legs with my own, and allowed it to roll as I locked the neck from behind in a move I had been told by Callie was called a “double grapevine”.
I slumped after I got him locked down, panting with effort. “Hello?” I called. “Dayna? Archie? I need some help here.” I paused. “Actually, wait, no I don’t. Belial.” I summoned my most corrosive demon. “Dose this thing up until it can’t move. You can focus on a paralytic, right?”
He nodded casually. “Corruption without purpose is chaos. You know that my main ability is battlefield control. The toxins are simply a vector. Tranquility is a form of control in and of itself.”
“Yeah, that’s lovely,” I grunted as the thing began to struggle. “But this big bastard is really strong, and even with my current enhanced power I’m struggling. Less talking and more knocking unconscious, please.”
He chuckled, kneeling down and placing his hand against the organic side of the orangutans head. Green magmatic cracks flared out, climbing across the monster’s body, and I felt it shudder and shake. Finally, it went limp, and I held it for another two minutes just in case, before releasing the thing and calling for Agares. Twisting it into the most awkward position possible, we created a set of tight chains to keep it at full extension twisted into a pretzel, all leverage stolen.
When we were done, I hoisted it up on my shoulder and carried it back to the where we’d been last, looking around for Dayne and Archie, who had been dealing with the OTHER one last I saw.
I spotted them nearby, Dayne sitting casually atop a batter and unconscious orangutan, the best still breathing despite the multitude of arrows lodged in its flesh. I dumped mine on the ground next to hers. I deincarnated Azazel, calling him out, and then summoned Dan again to examine the monsters.
After about five minutes, the old man winced. “It’s the pit trap,” he said with a grimace. “It appears to have parasitized some of the animals and is using them to heard living creatures toward it.”
“That seems…complex,” I said slowly. “Like maybe I’m crazy, but that doesn’t seem like the behavior of a random barely sentient trap.”
“Because it isn’t,” Dantalion grimaced. “It appears our presumptions about the location of the artifact were incorrect. Or rather, they were originally correct but things have changed. Based on the readings from these beasts, I believe a member of their social group stole the arrowhead and then was devoured by the pit trap. Exposure to the artifact appears to have mutated it into some sort of guardian being.”
I cursed. That fit with what I knew. Integrating a Domain Seed into yourself could give you a Domain early without sacrificing potential, like my great grandparents had done. If this monster had done that, it made sense it would have absurd overpowered abilities.
The question was what KIND of absurd overpowered abilities. Domain Seeds didn’t just give people copies of a god’s Domain, it gave them a fragment they could integrate with their own understanding to derive their own unique Path. My great-grandmother's Enshrining Darkness was RELATED to Strakenthar’s Domain (the Lady of Lamentation’s father and the god whose fragment granny dearest used to become a goddess), but wasn’t exactly the same.
Still, if the pit monster had even STARTED the process, it was going to be a nightmare to kill. Also how did you even kill a hole in the ground? I was already getting a headache just thinking about it.
“Alright, we’d better try to get closer,” I said finally. “Not TOO close, mind, just enough for Dan to do his thing. We need more information before we go at this thing head on.”
They all nodded, and we resumed our trek towards our final destination, the pit where the arrowhead was currently located. Hopefully, once we got it, we could find a spot to slip back into the Void on the Void Roads, and it would lead us to somewhere closer to our destination. After all, this shallowing was made with Verdyn’s power, so there was a decent chance that the roads would lead to his territory. Fingers crossed, I supposed.
2025-12-26 03:44:25 +0000 UTC View PostDespite the unhappiness, they DID leave most of their forces inside my Domain. Dayna and I stepped out with the two leaders (Renier and Edward, or blue and red respectively) into the castle proper. Renier, who had arrived first and was nominally in charge, led us to his temporary base camp, a series of tents set up in a magnificent ballroom.
Looking at the decor as we walked, I could kind of see what she meant about this place. It felt…hybridized. The skeleton was an old time castle, grey stone and accents of wood and sometimes bone that reminded me of a hunting lodge, but overtop of that was a sort of gilding of brass and knobs and gears.
The hallways had been stretched (it felt like that anyway) to accommodate the tracework of brass rails spiderwebbing across the walls, some of which seemed to do nothing and some of which appeared to have things like tiny robot servitors connected to them that whizzed along back and forth, attending to tasks out of sight. Seeing the results of what appeared to be a pair of broken Domain fragments mixing was absolutely fascinating.
I wondered if the Domain seeds that my great grandparents had used to establish their Domains early (without negative repercussions) had been something like this. Were Domain seeds fragments of objects of power?
“Welcome to basecamp,” Renier said sourly. “It’s a bit empty, for obvious reasons, but we have maps of the area laid out in the main tent, and you can use that to get around. I cannot do much in the way of guidance, as I am not familiar with the area. Our scouts would know better, but they’re currently…enjoying your enthusiastic hospitality.”
I sighed. I would have asked why he hadn’t told me that before, but I knew why. He was essentially being held hostage, it would be weird if he WAS happy about it. We followed him inside and he led us to what looked like some kind of modified sand table. Knowing the two of them couldn’t actually help us, and not wanting to watch what I said, I smiled warmly at them. “That’ll be plenty of help, gentlemen, thanks. Say hi to your friends.” I flexed my Domain and they vanished, dropped back inside with the others.
Turning to Dayna, I gestured at the table. “Alright, so we can speak freely now. Is this anything like the lodge? Like can you help us find the right path? Actually, where is the arrow going to BE, like relative to the normal lodge.”
“The rumpus room,” she said with certainty. “Lord Verdyn keeps his treasures there, and they’re all items of immense personal value. Its very nature is to demonstrate his might, and as such, the shallowing will reflect that purpose. I don’t see it on here, but I DO see a few rooms I recognize relatively close together. The archery range, the killing glade, the menagerie, and the trophy room are all here.”
“Wait, I thought the rumpus room was where he kept the trophies?” I asked, confused by the change. “Why does he have a separate room from that?”
She shook her head. “Verdyn is a consummate hunter. He spends all his time hunting, and has killed many beings. However, not all of Verdyn’s trophies are treasures. Only the rarest and most unique of his finds are qualified for the rumpus room. The trophy room is mostly just full of the heads of animals he’s slain. Beyond just trophies, however, the rumpus room contains unusual items of interest he brought back from his travels.”
I grimaced. “I don’t suppose any of those is a sarcastic nickname for something totally innocuous and NOT the death trap that Ascendant’s make out of almost everything?”
“The killing glade is a LITERAL death trap,” she said bluntly. “It’s a huge forest filled all sorts of traps and devices designed to ensnare and destroy prey. Verdyn believes that the only way for a hunter to learn their trade is to first be prey. When we reach D-rank we’re sent into the outer forest to retrieve various items as a test of skill. In order to pass, we have to survive the traps.”
“What happens if you don’t?” I asked, appalled at the casual disregard for their own people.
She stared at me blankly. “If we don’t…survive? We die. What else would happen?”
I rolled my eyes. “What happens if you don’t take the TEST, wise ass?” She cleared her throat, obviously a little embarrassed at missing the obvious.
“Ah, yes,” she said slowly. “We get kicked out. No one is forced to undertake the killing glade. The investment necessary to raise low level Ascendants is relatively paltry, so if a fresh D-ranker or below leaves, it’s no great loss. Refusers are ejected onto the Void Roads and left to fend for themselves.”
“Charming,” I mused. “Anyway, with this map, can you figure out where the rumpus room is? The layout has changed right, is that going to make this impossible or something?”
She shook her head. “Not at all, the rumpus room should be right…there,” she pointed at a corner of the table. “The issue is that this place has been heavily altered by the Stralthrem’s blood. The machines running back and forth, the gears, I’m a little concerned as to what this might do to some of the rooms. The killing glen and menagerie specifically. The trophy room doesn’t connect to the rumpus room itself, but sits caddy corner to the two others, so we can’t go in through there.”
“What do you think has changed about the menagerie?” I asked with interest. “I mean, I think given Dantalion and Azazel’s presence, we can make it through a trap gauntlet, but I don’t want to leave any options on the table.”
“I would avoid the menagerie,” she warned. “It’s not a zoo so much as a nature preserve. Things wander around, and many of them are hostile.”
Since we had a plan of action, we officially set off for the killing glade. I was going to need to do some serious recon, or rather, I had people to do that for me. A quick flex of my Domain brought Dantalion and Azazel out to meet me, and I explained the situation. They didn’t need to be told twice, and before long, we had arrived at a large brass archway with a door made of shiny bronze gears.
The whole thing was a marvel of engineering. Turning one small gear near the bottom set all the gears spinning, and once they’d moved aside, it left a large gap between the gears that could be entered through. Stepping inside, I wasn’t surprised when the door clanged shut, leaving the four of us alone in a strange clearing.
The killing glade had been changed by Stralthrem, just like everything else. As expected, it was a forest, but the changes had altered the core impression of the place. Nature had evolved to something decidedly UN-natural, and I had to whistle at the impression it gave.
Streams of bronze wove through the ground and into the trees, and gears floated on the edge of branches like leaves drifting in an invisible wind. “Well,” I said dryly. “This is pretty. Shame it’s almost definitely going to try to kill us.” I eyed a gilded metal rose nearby, its petals made from what looked like hammered purple gold. “Do you think I could pick one of these? Callie would love this.”
I still had the linked spatial rings connected to my wife, which worked perfectly fine in the Void and adjacent territories, so I could send and receive things when I needed them. Sending my bride a flower to let her know I was thinking of her only seemed right.
“I wouldn’t,” said Azazel cheerfully. “Mostly because that isn’t a flower. Dan?”
Dantalion closed his eyes, power surging from him as he unleashed his information gathering abilities. “Gah,” the old demon spat, flinching back. “That’s horrifying.” He waved a hand and a surge of purple electricity coalesced into a three dimensional image of…something. A colossal giant lantern fish, the stalk of which extended for much further than normal, slimming as it went until it reached the size of a normal flower.
I blinked and glanced at Dayna. “That…doesn’t seem like it belongs in a trap maze.”
She frowned at the image. “It doesn’t. I think the menagerie animals have broken into the killing glade. The good news is that most of them are probably dead. The bad news is that the ones that are NOT dead have most likely been honed by the brutal training ground into a sort of unstoppable super predator.”
“I think your optimism is my favorite thing about you as a person,” I said flatly.
“That WAS optimistic,” she said bluntly. “I don’t think that many of them are actually dead. I was just trying to make you feel better.”
I turned to the demons. “Dan, I need a map, preferably one with notations on where not to step if I don’t want to fall into a spike trap or get lit on fire. Oz, do me a favor and make sure he doesn’t get eaten when he’s distracted. In the meantime, Dayna, we absolutely cannot leave this weird fish thing lurking below us while we sit here for hours letting Dantalion collect data, so we need to kill it.”
“Of course,” she said with a stoic monotone. “I believe I have a plan. If you can lure it out into the open, I can shoot it. I am an expert at identifying vital spots and targeting them directly.” I nodded, then my eyes flicked to one side, and a demonic figure complete with horns and wings manifested. “Asmodeus,” I said in introduction. “This is Dayna, you’ll be backing her up on this. As for MY backup…” I closed my eyes, and my wings unfolded behind me seamlessly.
I didn’t summon Sam, he had other things to do, I just manifested the form directly. Still, it felt…right. I hadn’t had my wings for too long, and letting them spread was like taking a breath for the first time after holding it in for a few minutes. Something inside me relaxed as I called up my staff. “Alright, go get in position.”
Asmodeus erupted into a blaze of flame, flowing into Dayna, and once it faded, she was standing before me, wings and horns prominent and looking like she could take on the world. She spread her wings, flapping off to land on a nearby tree, and drew her bow, giving me a solemn nod.
With that done, I approached the flower. I debated how to do this. I had a plan, but it was a bit simplistic. Still, if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. I stepped back, raising my staff into the air and gripping the very end to maximize the range. Then I tapped into and began channeling Extinction Event.
A sphere of powerful black flame manifested above my staff, first the size of a fist, then a melon, then eventually a wrecking ball. I kept expanding it, pouring the power in, and when I had reached the very edge of what I could control, I started to CRUSH it.
Inch by inch, I forced the absurd amount of power to contract, condensing and amplifying the force until I had a small, eyeball sized sphere at the tip of my weapon, so dark it was stealing the light from around it and smooth as black glass. It was heavy, legitimately hard to handle in terms of soul strain, because it was just so MUCH power.
Grunting at the effort, I began to lower the staff, happy I had chosen to choke up all the way because it kept that thing as far from my body as possible. Finally, the black marble of power touched down on the purple gold flower. There was a sort of ringing chime as it struck, and then a long (or what felt like a long) silence. My grinned as I felt the power began to fluctuate in preparation for the blast. “Boop.” And then all hell broke loose.
2025-12-25 01:49:22 +0000 UTC View PostNo one was amused by my banter, sadly. Their weapons all came up (spears mostly, but made of a weird hooked crystal with an energy sphere floating inside the hook) and they levelled them at me pointedly. “Silence!” screamed one of them. “State your purpose!” I looked at him uncertainly, and he gestured with his spear again. “I said state it!” He screamed, seemingly on the edge of hysteria.
One of the ones next to him sighed and leaned over, whispering to his friend. “You told him to be silent, Dan, so he’s doing that.”
“Fine,” snapped Dan. “Unsilence and then state your intentions here!”
These people were deadly, serious, and generally not messing around…but I couldn’t bring myself to care. They were C-rankers, same as we were, and not late in that rank. I just wasn’t intimidated by people my own rank anymore, and my tendency for sarcasm got the better of me. “I’m Todd, from the accounting department. I’m here because you all forgot to sign the new timecards.”
Dan, for his part, froze. “I…what?”
“The timecards, man!” I shouted emphatically. “We’re changing insurance providers, and none of you resubmitted your worked hours. If you don’t affirm your schedules before the new premiums go into affect they won’t match your monthly payouts. It’s leaving money on the table.”
The Dao of Bethy. When in doubt, be confusing. Violence could solve a lot of problems, but judicious application of the unexpected could prevent things from becoming problems to begin with. One of the other men sneered at me. “Lies and trickery! You’re simply trying to confuse us because we have you surrounded.” Ok…so I wasn’t as good at it as Bethy. Oh well.
“Do you?” I asked solemnly, dropping the pretense. “Or do I have YOU surrounded?”
I snapped my fingers, and the world warped, my Domain projecting over them, sweeping them all into the planes of Gehenna, where my backup plan was waiting. Because while my nonsense HAD been aimed at throwing them off their game, it had ALSO been to buy time so my demons could get in position where I told them to.
Seventy two demons of my court (admittedly only about a third of them were C-ranked) stood menacingly in a large circle around both sets of attackers, teeth, claws, and weapons bared as they stared down the enemies.
“Sabateour!” snarled one of the closest men. “Sneaking an army inside our borders inside a Domain. Do you work for Clarent? Versailles? We won’t allow you to succeed!”
I blinked at him. “Ok, well, I don’t know either of those people, so…no. Look, we didn’t mean to come here, we were traveling through the Void Roads, and we stumbled into your shallowing by accident.” That was a lie, but it seemed like it would calm them down at least. Sure enough, after I made that statement, their expressions went from hostile to suspicious. I held up both hands. “Really, I mean you no harm. My friends stay in my Domain for ease of travel, and you were all being a little menacing, so I decided to bring you in so we could talk like civilized people. I have no idea who you are, who your enemies are, or even where we ended up. Can you tell me a bit about what’s happening here?”
I was here for…something. Something useful was in this place. In fact, I suspected, based on the situation, that the old man’s exit door might not have been as stable as he’d implied. This had the feeling of tampering, and as a god, that was well within his ability.
The man closest to us, who I realized was wearing blue, frowned suspiciously, but eventually nodded after looking around at my court. “This is Debois,” he said quietly.
On the other side, THEIR leader, who was wearing red, rolled his eyes. “This is NOT Debois. This is a pocket realm INSIDE Debois. A pocket realm that is technically unclaimed, despite how passionately Renier and his cronies claim otherwise.”
“So, do you work for one of the people he mentioned? Versailles or Clarent?” I glanced at the red army. “Becuase you seem aggressive enough to be invaders.”
Red leader cleared his throat. “We’re not INVADERS. This place is unoccupied. It’s not like it’s their home or anything. They showed up not long before us. We’re only here because this place is naturally occurring.”
“Wait, it’s what?” I asked quietly. “How is that possible? It’s a shallowing. You have to make those.”
Or at least, someone had made every shallowing I could remember being in. To my surprise, Dayna shook her head. “Not exactly. Naturally occurring shallowings exist. Or rather, the term naturally occurring is a misnomer.” She glanced at the reds and blues. “Could we speak privately?”
I turned my head, glancing at the dark hooded form of Murmur. I gave a quick nod, and he erected a bubble around us to prevent eavesdropping. “Alright, we’re good. What’s up?”
She glanced around suspiciously. “It’s this place. Shallowings are man made protrusions from realspace into the Void. There are ways to use Void taint to stabilize them and thin the connection, even creating access points if its done well, but barring that, they’re the result of pressure on space itself from the realspace side.
“Pressure like that isn’t easy to make, it requires time and effort, but there IS one circumstance where you don’t need it.” Her voice was fast and excited. “When certain items are extant in realspace, they can put undue pressure on the world around them. Items anchored to the Void, normally, and not just any items. There are a lot of requirements, but basically you need something of the Divine grade and it needs to be broken and leaking power.”
She gestured around us. “Natural shallowings are incredibly rare, because despite the number of gods that have existed, objects of power tend to just fall through the barrier into the Void and vanish into nothingness with enough time. But BROKEN objects, ones leaking power, they disperse the pressure, and they drag on the barrier instead of puncturing it. Humans learned to make shallowings from seeing this happen. If he’s telling the truth about this place…”
“Then there’s a broken object of power here,” I said excitedly. “That must be why I felt drawn here. But why would I get pushed into this place now? And why would the old man drop us here? Whose object of power is it?”
“I have a theory,” she said slowly, glancing around as if she could see out of my Domain. “After the vanished gods died, their objects of power scattered. Some were kept in the god worlds and some were retrieved, but some were just gone. This might be one of those, if you believe that we were sent here on purpose by your ancestor. He might want us to reassemble one of the lost objects to use as bartering power?”
I paused to think that through. “Yeah,” I admitted. “That seems like his style. But what makes you think that? I mean just assuming this is a vanished god’s object is a bit of a leap on its own.”
“Because I recognize the castle we landed in when we arrived,” she said grimly. “It took me a moment, because it’s different in a lot of ways, but the architecture is a dead match for Verdyn’s hunting lodge with some of Stralthrem’s modifications done to it. The materials are completely different, but I grew up in that lodge. I can just TELL.”
“Stralthrem?” I asked in confusion. “The god of Dread Fabrication? That mad scientist guy?”
She nodded. “Stralthrem and Verdyn have been rivals for millennia. The god of the blood wood disdains the encroachment of civilization. In fact, seeing his power infecting the lodge makes it pretty clear WHICH item is here. It’s Verdyn’s Arrow. He famously pierced Stralthrem’s mechanical heart with the missile, staining it with his heart’s blood.”
“Ok, so we have an idea of where to go,” I said with a sigh. “Do you know how to navigate this…lodge? I assume the shallowing took the form most familiar to the arrow, so you knowing the place might be an advantage.” I glanced out of the dome Murmur had erected. “Unfortunately, it seems like we’re going to need to figure things out on the fly, preferably once we can separate from these people.”
She frowned. “We are inside your Domain, with the fullness of your forces against them. Could you not just slaughter them?”
“Ok, loving the enthusiasm,” I said slowly. “Super happy you’re so onboard, now I’m going to need you to take it down like…five thousand percent. My general method of operation is that I don’t needlessly kill people. If they attacked us, we could put them down, but I don’t want to just summarily execute people for the sole sin of being in my way. They DID threaten us, but they weren’t too aggressive about it so we don’t have a reason to end their lives.”
She frowned at me, but eventually sighed and shook her head. “My lady was right. You ARE too soft for your own good.”
“Wait, BETHY said that about me?” I said, flabbergasted and a little hurt.
“She did,” said Dayne bluntly. “Though she phrased it as if it were a positive thing. Saying you have a “good heart” but that you would need me to help make sure that someone didn’t rip it out of your chest.”
I grimaced at the imagery. “Ok, gross, and also…that’s good I guess? You’re kind of a huge buzzkill you know?”
“I would much rather be responsible for the death of ‘the buzz’ than for yours,” she said apathetically. “While I am not attached, you are proving to be slightly more interesting company than expected.”
“Gee, don’t I feel special,” I said wryly as I gestured for Murmur to drop the shield. When we reappeared, I noticed that things had gotten extremely tense without us accessible, but that my first minister had stepped in to smooth things over. Azazel, flanked by Dom and Sam, the other two ministers of my Domain (Doom Sovereign and Sammael respectively), stood between the two conflicting parties now.
When he saw me, he bowed formally. “Your majesty,” he said in a way that automatically made this all my problem. “We welcome your return.”
“Wow, thanks Oz,” I told him dryly. “I’m so glad you decided to hold off on solving this problem until I returned to take care of it for you. Anyway, sorry, I got a bit distracted. My name, since I never gave it, is Solomon. This is my Domain, called Gehenna, and it’s where I hold court. I bid you welcome to my territory.” I nodded regally.
Red leader looked unconvinced, but given our numbers, he held his tongue. The blue leader looked relieved, if anything. “Greetings, Lord Solomon. It is an honor to have you inside of our pocket realm.”
“Yeah, about that,” I said slowly. “We’ve decided to take a look around the place ourselves, and to that end, we could really use a guide of some sort. I don’t suppose either of you would be willing to show us around? We’re interested in finding out more about this fascinating natural shallowing you guys have here.”
And stealing it. Or at least the thing that made it. But they didn’t even know it was here, so it wasn’t really stealing. Besides, I was sure between all of my demons I could come up with a way to leave this place intact when I took the arrow fragment.
The two of them seemed unenthused, but after a glance around at the menacing forms of my demons, sighed and nodded. “Lovely,” I chirped. “Seems like we’re all going to be great friends. Now, how about your people stay here and keep my friends company while you and I take our little walking tour.” Oddly, that idea did not excite me. Honestly, I’d even asked nice. There was just no pleasing some people.
2025-12-24 03:35:24 +0000 UTC View PostThe first thing I noticed about the Void was the power. Not like it gave me strength or anything like that. It just returned what so many places in realspace had taken. The Void wasn’t a place, not really. Not was it exactly the absence of place. It was more of the idea of place, but backwards. As such, the Void lacked something crucial. Something fundamental to the way the real world worked. Impact.
Void spawn and Children seemed to have Impact, or something analogous to it, but the Void itself had no weight. No substance. And as such, the suppression that higher ranked places had on Ascendants like me was completely gone.
It was intoxicating. Every step was lighter, freer, and every breath filled my lungs more deeply. The sensation of the still air gliding across my skin as I walked, the feeling, of the ground pushing back against my feet as I stepped, my mind racing in a way I hadn’t ever really experienced before.
Dayna walked beside me, her red eyes solemn and sharp as she watched for danger. She had a mission and wasn’t planning to fail.
“So…are you excited to see anyone back at Verdyn’s world?” I asked as we trudged along the endless road. “Family? Friends?” She glanced at me coldly, then averted her gaze, and I sighed. “Look, you’re my bodyguard slash guide here, but we’re going to be together for a while. Wouldn’t it be less lonely and annoying if we became friends? Found some common ground?”
She snorted. “You are verbose. It is unnecessary.”
“She speaks!” I cheered. “I was beginning to forget what other people sound like. Now we’re talking. A few more stellar insights into the inner workings of your mind and we’ll be best friends. I think Bethy would like that, don’t you? Her minion and her ‘bestie’ getting along?” She ignored me, so I kept talking. “Speaking of which, I’m a bit curious about that. I wasn’t around for a lot of your time together, so why are so attached to Bethy? She just beat you up and now you act like she hung the moon. What’s up with that?”
She didn’t pause exactly, because she didn’t stop walking, but she did…still. Aside from her steps, her breath, facial expression, everything else about her paused for a moment. Finally, after a beat of stillness, she sighed.
“Imagine if you would, you were in an accident,” she said slowly. “And were terribly burned. Not just your skin, but your lungs. The very air you breathed was like acid. Every inhalation was agony, unceasing pain and fear. For me, that was my existence. Verdyn kept me, but I wasn’t powerful or important enough to warrant too much attention. It kept the others from overtly stealing me away to be put in some zoo or put to death, but it wasn’t…freedom.”
I grimaced. “Wow, it was that bad? I knew your people were special, but I didn’t think it would make anyone THAT desperate. I can kind of understand the urge to kill you, no offense, but what’s the point of having you in a zoo?”
She chuckled, in a way that had nothing at all to do with amusement. “It is apparent to me that you are a scion of a powerful bloodline. Abilities, bloodlines, racial traits. They’re all types of power. Power, to those that do not have it, is the ultimate lure. There are methods to subdue a being and force it to your will, to capture a body and puppet it as you would drive a vehicle, or even to strip the identity from a member of a species and infuse it into yourself.
“Consider your wife, or your friend Jessie. They have harmed none, it is true, but that is by your virtue,” she made a face that I was pretty sure was supposed to be a smile but didn’t quite make the cut. “Do you know the easiest source of catalyst for a racial trait? Easier than complex rituals or brilliant skillsmiths? Potions. Potions made from material RELEVANT to the species in question.”
“You’re saying they…” I felt my gorge rise. “They want to cut you up for parts?”
The elf shrugged. “Of course. A single heaven murder elf, if used by a skilled alchemist, can provide the materials for dozens of potions. But more than that, if managed properly, we can be kept alive to provide a steady supply. As I said. A zoo.”
“But Bethy saved you from that,” I said in understanding. “Verdyn wasn’t too involved in your life. You were a possible long term investment, but only to the point of declaring you his. If something had happened he wouldn’t have cared at all. But Bethy had her dad declare you under his protection. REAL protection. And people don’t screw with the Vampire.”
Her smile turned softer and more genuine. “Of course. And suddenly, my days are free of pain and fear. My breath tastes sweet on my tongue and fills my lungs with respite. She didn’t just give me a home. She gave me peace.”
“Sounds like you really care about her,” I said matter of factly. I very carefully did NOT acknowledge that the girl in question was dating my twin sister.
Dayna picked up on it anyway and chuckled. “Fear not, I have no romantic intentions toward my mistress, nor toward anyone else. Growing up a heaven murder elf, I was coveted for my bloodline, and theft of such things can occur in many ways. For those too squeamish for butchery, breeding was an easy alternative to steal my people’s gifts.
“I never had any interest in such things, however,” she shrugged. “I’m not looking for a partner. Just enjoying my time as my own person. It’s a novel experience.”
I could understand that. Actually, a lot of people in my circles tended to pair off. It wasn’t too strange, we met lots of people so it made sense that we’d find someone who suited us if we were looking. Not to mention every Ascendant was pretty good looking, and our lives were stressful and dangerous, so having someone to count on could be hugely therapeutic.
But not everyone was looking for a relationship. Not that I’d been assuming, I had just been momentarily curious if my sister and Gabe had competition for Bethy’s affection. “Well, fair enough,” I nodded. “What do you like to do with your newfound freedom? Paint, read, write? I’m a big fan of cooking, and my wife loves it so it kind of works out for us. Do you have any hobbies?”
“Tattoos,” she said frankly. I blinked at her, and she noticed my silence and explained. “I’ve been training to be a tattoo artist. I enjoy the permanence of art on the canvas of fellow living beings. It’s a complicated and fascinating discipline. There are so many types of people in the universe, racial traits, human form beasts, even special bloodlines that affect the physique. Learning which needles to use, which inks work best with which people, and designing the artwork to ascend alongside the recipient. It requires real skill.”
I hummed with interest. “That actually does sound awesome. Are they purely an artistic expression, or do they like…do things? I know some people seal special effects into stuff like that.”
“An advanced technique,” she admitted. “And a difficult one to master. For the moment, I am content simply learning the methods of applying my artwork. Engraving permanent images on those who choose to become my canvas. Once I’ve reached Master I’ll begin learning to imbue the inks with special abilities. Of course, I’ll need a harvesting medium. Otherwise I would only be able to inscribe abilities I myself possess.”
“I might actually be able to help with that!” I said brightly. “I used to stockpile effects to pay for wishes. I still have a decent amount of them. They’re mostly low level, but that sounds like exactly what you need. Maybe you could buy them off me and use them to practice. I should be able to transfer them over to scrolls.”
My stored attacks, barring Callie’s recently contributed Adherent Fire (which I couldn’t access through the bond) were mostly unused these days. Between Dantalion and the library I didn’t really need them on hand at this point. Helping a new friend with practicing her hobby was a perfectly fine use. I’d honestly have just given them to her, but I suspected she’d be more comfortable with an exchange than a favor.
She shot my a surprised glance. “That would be…very welcome. Thank you.” She opened her mouth, clearly ready to continue, but stopped. “Do you feel that?” Her eyes darted around. “Something feels different. The shape of the Void has been altered.”
At first, I didn’t get what she meant, but after a moment, I COULD feel it. It was like…a faint smell that I hadn’t noticed. But not smell. “What IS that?”
“I…I think it’s a shallowing,” she said slowly. “I’ve never felt one from this side. Despite the godworlds residing in Voidspace, we rarely venture out into the Void itself. We have methods of traversal and we utilize them, as well as treaties with certain Void Children to make such things easier, but the Void Roads are dangerous and unpredictable.”
I nodded slowly. “Let’s go in,” I said after a moment. “Yes, the shallowing is probably unrelated to our route, but the Void is notoriously unstable. If we enter there and then leave, it could drop us somewhere completely different, and potentially closer to where we need to go.”
It sounded like an insane plan, granted. But Azazel was in my head right now, urging me on towards the unknown. Something in that shallowing was useful. Whether it was the travel arrangements or some object we didn’t even know about, there was some kind of reason to enter, and I trust my first minister.
To my surprise, Dayne didn’t eve blink. “Very well,” she said with a nod. When I cocked my head in surprise she shrugged. “As I said, your safety is my concern, but this is the Void. We are almost always in constant danger. Danger here or danger there makes no difference, my job is still the same.”
“Huh,” I said in surprise. “I think that’s the most well adjusted approach to apathy I’ve ever heard.”
“That aside,” she observed. “How are we going to access it? Shallowings aren’t IN the Void. Being able to sense this one means it’s extremely stable and well developed, but it’s still simply an impression from realspace. There isn’t any dedicated entrances, or we’d be able to see it.”
I laughed at that. “Normally that would be a problem, but like I said a minute ago, I make a habit of collecting interesting abilities, and I have one for this.”
Adherent Fire was a spatial flame that could traverse the Void with ease in a short range. Callie’s ability to attack from the Void out of realspace was just a short range rapid Void traversal ability. Which meant it could bring us BACK from the Void, and return us when we were done. I’d have to be careful to reconnect with the Void Roads and not just drop us into the emptiness, but I could use Azazel and Dantalion for that, and worst case we could just leave from the same spot and come back here.
Something inside that shallowing was calling to me, and I needed to find out what it was. After that…well, we’d figure it out from there. Nodding at Dayne, I reached for a charge of Adherent Fire, putting my hand on her shoulder as I triggered it.
We were consumed by blue flames, and as they blazed up, the Void Road melted away, revealing the inside of a huge bronze castle. Full of people. Who were surrounding us. Not like an ambush. More like we’d popped up in between two armies who were about to go to war. As soon as we appeared, they froze, their killing intent faltering as their momentum was thrown off. I looked around to both sides and cleared my throat in embarrassment. “Wait…this isn’t where I parked my car.”
2025-12-23 03:24:07 +0000 UTC View PostI stood among my people. That was really the only way to describe it. I wasn’t feeling particularly noble or leaderly at the moment though, just…safe. I was with family. I was loved. And it was ending. It was time to go out on my own, to do my best for the family, and to try to prevent a war that would absolutely destroy everything I cared about if left unchecked.
Callie was pouting. Her eyes were wet, but also hard and a little angry. Not that I was leaving, but because I’d told her about Uncle Moon.
“I can’t believe you arranged for me to have an S-RANK bodyguard without ASKING me about it!” she hissed acidly. “Especially when YOU are running off to the Void alone to get yourself killed with no backup!”
“He’s not doing that,” said Chelsea flatly as she stepped up next to us. “Firstly because I won’t let him, and second because he needs a contact for more than just the Lady’s followers.” She jerked a chin to one side. “Dayna is going with him. Bethy’s been training her since she joined up, and she’s easily ten times more dangerous than before. She’s much lower in C-rank than you, granted, actually just made it over the line, but her heritage will bridge the gap.”
Dayne nodded at me solemnly. The Heaven Murder Elf was a former worshipper of Verdyn who had been subdued by Bethy a year or two ago in the Screeching Shoals Dungeon. Silvery hair, blood red eyes, sharklike teeth, and pointed ears made it more than obvious Dayna was more than human, but the unnatural stillness as she stood in front of me was what told me she was dangerous.
“I don’t think that’s a good idea,” I hedged. “No offense, Dayna, but I don’t even know you. You could betray me.”
“An absurd scenario,” she said coldly. I relaxed a bit, it was good she was so commit- “I would require loyalty to you to engage in betrayal. Your continued existence is meaningless to me. No act I took against you would qualify as betrayal under those conditions.”
I sighed. “Gosh, that’s a relief,” I said sarcastically. “And here I thought you might be a danger.”
“My lady’s will, however, is my bond,” she reassured me. “She is quite fond of you, and as such your death is counter to my purposes as her agent. I will defend your flank in her name, and will not fail you on this mission.”
Callie nodded approvingly. “Good, at least you’re not going alone.”
“You’re surprisingly sanguine for a woman who was just told her husband is going to be alone on the road with a gorgeous elf girl,” Abel said in amusement. “You’re not…worried about that?”
My wife sniffed derisively. “Don’t be silly, I trust Shane. He loves me and doesn’t have eyes for anyone else.” I nodded in satisfaction at the very accurate response. “Also he’s not going to close our bond for the entire duration of this trip, so I’ll know every move he makes.” I threw my hands up in bewildered outrage and she shrugged. “Trust but verify, hon.” She winked to let me know she was kidding, and I chuckled a bit to myself.
She was worried, and the bond would reassure her. I sent a pulse of love and reassurance across the bond to her, and she smiled back adoringly. Of course, that wasn’t the last of my companions either. “Well, I had no idea Dayna would be coming along, but I was always planning to bring backup. Namely, the fine and fancy free Phoenix that you all know so well, my boy Archimedes!”
I gestured up to the sky, and with a joyful screech, Archie erupted from cover, blazing with life nova flames and doing a wide victory lap. Of course, the flames just HAPPENED to rain down and cover everyone, the good mood mitigating the somber atmosphere somewhat, but that definitely hadn’t been my PLAN.
“I don’t like it,” my mother was in annoyance. “A C-rank elfling and D-ranked bird isn’t enough backup. Elijah, SAY something to him! This is a ridiculous plan. He should be bringing a small army with him!” Her voice was frantic and pleading, and it broke my heart to see how afraid she was for me. She’d known this was coming, but hadn’t expected it quite so soon. My dad shot me a helpless look and I chuckled, stepped over for a hug.
“It’s FINE, Ma,” I said soothingly. “I’ll be fine. I can take care of myself. And I’m more than prepared for almost any situation. Even ZEKE has trouble with Astaroth. I can blend in safely wherever I go. And in case of an emergency…” I held up an ominous looking black scroll.
This was another of my dad’s devil wish scrolls. It was set up the same way as before, I only needed to fill it up and that would pay for any wish he was capable of making. It was a last resort, break glass in case of emergency, type of measure, in case I ran into something really scary, but my dad was no ordinary devil, and the scroll had been imbued with an Onyx Soul to make sure it could pull its weight on top of that.
When activated, it wouldn’t just grant a wish, it would manifest a soul clone of my dad TO grant the wish, and he’d be able to learn my situation once it dispersed, in case I needed further help. With the wish itself to defend me, and my dad having access to multiple S-rankers who could help him get to me if things went wrong, it was probably the best possible insurance.
I turned to my cabinet members. “You all know what to do, right? If you have any concerns, you can approach Davina about them. She’s volunteered herself as a guide if any of you need advice. Otherwise…just do what you do. I appointed you all for your skills. I trust them.”
Looking over at Abel, I sighed. “Just…keep an eye on them too? When you can? Bethy’s the Champion, but she can’t be everywhere. I’d feel better if they had some level appropriate muscle to work with. Family rules do a lot less to protect people from enemies of their own rank, you know.”
He nodded. “Of course, I’m around if anyone needs me. I’m looking into acquiring that theme park Wulf showed us, so I’m going to be pretty busy, but local at least.” He frowned at Callie and my sister. “I…I kind of want to go to the front lines with them. But at the same time I don’t think I have anything to contribute there. Callie is going to be working with Aiden and the Moonlight Pope, and Chelsea will be training with your grandparents. I’ll be working on my combat skills, obviously, but I think I learned enough from Lark to last me quite a while. What I really need is some downtime to digest everything and really integrate it.”
I recognized his expression, the focus, the determination. “You’re going to try to form your Chronicle,” I said bluntly.
He shrugged. “I’m about there, and I won’t be able to function on the same level as you all until I do. Not to mention I’m at C-rank, and I won’t be able to break through to B until I condense one, so I’m kind of on a clock anyway.” He nodded to my Master of Substitution. “Dante has offered to hook me up with some decent fights to help me polish myself up again, and once I’m back at fighting weight…I’m going to go for it.”
“I’m with him,” Mel said with a wry smile. “My idiot would be helpless without me. He’d probably end up opening a food truck or something and forgetting to work on his Chronicle at all.”
I laughed, clapping them both on the shoulder. “No pressure. Callie has her teachers watching her back and Chelsea has plenty of backup,” I nodded to Gabe and Bethy, who were hovering just behind my sister like guardian angels. “You do what you need to do. Just be sure you’re ready when I get back. No clue what we have in store, but I’m sure it’ll be just as crazy as usual.”
I said my goodbyes. To my parents, to my friends, to my retainers like Fade and Donovan. Then I turned and left the suite with Dayna, heading for the library. The old man had summoned me, apparently he was going to be taking me to the edge of the Void Roads personally.
When we arrived, I was surprised to find him waiting there for me, looking bored. “Well, it certainly took you long enough.”
“Yeah, I had people to say goodbye to,” I said with a shrug. “I didn’t drag it out.”
After my little flare up following The Quiet Room incident, all of my fear of the old man was pretty much gone. Not to mention I was the WIshmaster now, and ostensibly his next in line if not his equal. So I’d relaxed my manner of speech somewhat. He wasn’t going to kill me, especially not before a big mission, so a little casual chitchat wasn’t the end of the world. Dayna, meanwhile, looked horrified by nonchalance, though she didn’t say anything about it.
Sure enough, he didn’t seem to care about or even notice my shift in tone. “Well, come on then. I’ll take you to the edge. There aren't a lot of spots that connect to the Void Roads in the Wishworld. I minimize contact to avoid dealing with pests trying to slip in, but it’s impossible to completely block them from connecting. They span the entirety of the Void.”
He showed me into the library, through the massive stacks and around the back. We reached a small turnoff, and stepped into an alcove. A door sat in the alcove, a single glowing sign above it marked “Exit”.
“Seriously?” I asked dryly. “You just have an emergency exit into the Void lying around your core Domain?”
He blinked at me in confusion. “Where else would I have an emergency exit to?”
I had no response to that, so I just sighed. “Where does this let out? How long til we get to the Hanging Lands from there? Which direction? Not sure we have any real idea of where we’re supposed to be going. Dayna knows some of the Void, but we have to GET somewhere for her to recognize it.”
“You’ll figure it out,” he said with a chuckle. “The roads are both complicated and very simple. I can’t give you too much of a heading. Just…follow the stars. The congregate above the Hanging Lands. Getting lost in the Void is easy, but you can always find SOMETHING.”
He pushed the door open, and it led out into…nothingness. I would have said space, but there weren’t really any stars, just darkness. Splitting through the middle was a long, winding dirt path with ridges of stone bracketing either side. It split off in the distance, winding out, and the path went up, down, and even upside down in some place as it diverged into dozens of different roads along its length.
The roads, interestingly, were all softly glowing. Not enough for it to be visible up close, but just a sort of omnipresent ambient illumination surrounding them. That alone acted as a source of light in the Void.
“Don’t step off the road unless you find solid ground,” my ancestor advised. “Because you can only see the paths when you’re on them, barring specific entrances like this. They span the length and breadth of the Void, but are invisible to any inhabitants. Not that there’s no danger on the roads, but they tend to be more manageable.” He paused, then withdrew a small booklet. “Since you’re undertaking this job for the family and therefore for me, I suppose I can give you something to help. No need to thank me.” And with that, he grabbed both of us, shoved us through the door, and slammed it shut behind us. And so began my journey into the Void.
2025-12-19 22:27:33 +0000 UTC View PostI was a long night, and by the time I dragged myself off to bed, my head was ringing with the endless waves of congratulations, ass kissing, and doubletalk. But I still found time (with the help of Piece of Mind) to consider exactly what I could do to keep Callie safe. I wracked my brain, considered multiple options, and eventually came to one inescapable conclusion: there was nothing I could do.
At least, not personally. But if I was running off to the Void to get myself potentially killed, I would make damned sure my loved ones were alright, and so, I called in a favor. Or rather, I had my grandmother do it.
“So I’m expected to play babysitter to your wife for an indefinite period?” the Moonlight Pope asked waspishly. “I agreed to a few hours of training, and those were semi-fruitful, and now instead of gratitude you’re trying to go over my head and have me assigned as a full time tutor and bodyguard?”
“Nope,” I said casually as I leaned back in my chair. “I’m not trying anything. I have SUCCESSFULLY done that.” He glared at me, and I rolled my eyes. “Look, my great-grandfather laid down the law. He’s your boss, and you know it, but this doesn’t need to be contentious. My wife is going to be a pivotal player in the war, and she’ll be surrounded by lots of strong enemies. Taking her as a disciple will ensure you plenty of decent fights on the front lines.”
He stared hard at me for a moment, then sighed. “I suppose you’re not WRONG. But I get the feeling this little request cost you more than just a quick request from Celia. If she had that kind of pull, she’d have used it before now.”
“Of course I’m paying a price,” I shrugged. “But it was one I was already paying anyway. Once grandma told the Revenant about my mission to the Void, he agreed wholeheartedly with my plan. Dispatching one of his trusted popes to watch over an asset that has already been targeted by the Void in a way that nearly shifted the tide of the war is just common sense. The gods are aloof, not stupid.”
That got a nod. “I admit, the fact that they were willing to go through so much trouble for her is…intriguing.”
“Gee, thanks,” I said dryly. “I’m sure she’ll be thrilled you’re so interested. But let’s be real, we both know that you aren’t going to take this seriously if you’re forced into it. So, what do I need to do to convince you to ACTUALLY teach her sword work instead of just doing the bare minimum. Malicious compliance won’t be good for anyone.”
He snorted. “You’re adjusting to your new office pretty well, aren’t you kid?” I stared back at him stoically, and he chuckled. “Fine. I want a favor. Doesn’t have to be immediate, might not even ever call it in, but I want you to OWE me one. I’ll do the job either way, but if you want me to do it WELL I want some quid pro quo.” His tone was casual, and I got the impression he wasn’t taking this seriously. Which was obviously not something I could allow.
“Look, we both know I can’t hurt you,” I said pleasantly, smiling benignly. “You’re S-rank, and a demigod at that. It would take me years to be capable of doing anything to you.” He smiled back, seeming amused…right up until the smile dropped off my face. “But if anything happens to my wife because you weren’t taking this seriously, you’re going to die. Nevermind the fact that we have a soul bond and her death might kill me, I’ll hunt you down personally, and die trying to kill you. And if I die, my parents will try, and if THEY die, my grandparents, and if THEY die, you’ll have to deal with Black Sorrow and presumably your own boss so-”
“Whoa!” He said, flinching back and holding up his hands. “Pull it back, kid, damn. Look, I think you took some our interactions out of context. Yes, I tested you when we met and that was a shitty move, but I’m not your ENEMY. Wasn’t before, and I’m definitely not now. My master told me to guard your wife, and I WILL do that to the absolute best of my ability. If I seem cavalier about her safety, I assure you it’s not because I don’t take this seriously. This is confidence, not complacency.”
He snorted, shaking his head. “You know, your general demeanor is all Nicholas, but that crazy vengeful streak is from your grandmother’s side. Celia doesn’t play around when it comes to her loved ones. Wonder where she gets THAT?” He grinned sardonically.
I deflated a bit. “I…yeah, sorry. Maybe that got a little heated. I just…I can’t lose her, you know? Like I physically can’t. I wouldn’t survive it, even if the bond doesn’t kill me. Do you get that?”
“Yeah, kid,” he said softly. “I get that. Like I said, I’m not going to screw around with her safety. As for the training…if you agree to that favor, I’ll give it my all. She’ll be a saintess of the sword by the time I’m done with her. Celia is a powerful fighter, but she’s also a natural. Her ability to teach is severely limited by her experience and the ease with which she learns. Not that she wasn’t helpful to Calliope’s growth, I’m sure. Any S-ranker taking an interest in someone that early in their development is a boon, but at this point…someone like me, someone who built his power from the ground up, will be a better fit.”
I nodded. I hadn’t really considered that, but he wasn’t wrong. As the daughter of two gods, my grandmother was born with a Mirror Soul Body. She’d literally come into this world with a divine level spirit to work with. I couldn’t IMAGINE the ease with which she’d cultivated to S-rank.
“She’s going to be working with Aiden too,” I warned him. “Nothing too formal. She created her Adherent fire herself, and I doubt he’s going to be able to do much more than give her a direction to develop in, given how unique it is, but I wanted to warn you in case you’re one of those people who resents their students seeking outside instruction.”
He shrugged. “Long as he isn’t teaching her to swing a blade I don’t really care. But…about your whole Void mission. You sure about this, kid? Like you said, if anything happens to you it knocks over a whole bunch of really nasty dominos. I’d prefer you not drag a third of our gods into a blood soaked revenge campaign because you didn’t know your limits.”
“Don’t be absurd,” I snorted. “Of course I’m not sure. Only a psychopath would be confident about something like this. But it’s my job. I firmly believe part of the reason my ascension to the office was so smooth, for whatever value of that word applies after that annoying trial, was because they knew they needed me for this. Especially after the recent attack. We need backup in this war, and I’m the guy who can get it.”
Staring at me heavily, he chuckled. “You’ve got guts, kid, I’ll give you that. When do you leave? I’m guessing it won’t be long.”
“Tomorrow,” I admitted. “I can’t drag my heels with everything going on. The faster I get there the faster I can end this, or at least change the course of the war. Making sure Callie was safe was the last thing I had to do. Aside from say goodbye to my friends and family, of course.” I smiled wryly. “I’m bumming a few scrolls off my cousin for goodbye messages to my other team members too, just in case.”
“Smart,” he nodded. “Always hedge your bets. But I have a feeling you’ll be ok. Judgement keeps an eye on family, and if you had a death omen hanging over you, he’d have noticed. He’s not infallible, but he IS the oldest.”
“I thought YOU were the oldest,” I said in confusion. I could have sworn someone said that.
He shook his head. “Judgement is older. He’s been with the master longer than anyone, but he likes to keep a low profile. He’s also the hardest to pin down. A lot of people think that’s me, but Judgement has a tendency to vanish for long periods of time without telling anyone. People just don’t notice because he’s so low key. Anyway, you have at least a decent chance at surviving, I’m sure. Just don’t take any stupid risks.”
To my surprise, he sounded genuinely worried, and I had to cock my head slightly. “That almost sounds like you’re concerned about me.”
Rolling his eyes, he let out a sigh. “See, this is the problem with kids. You take things so damned personally. Politics and personal aren’t the same thing, Shane. You’re my junior brother’s grandson, and the child of my favorite niece, not to mention the great grandson of my master. Just because I’m willing to push my limits during political discourse doesn’t mean I don’t CARE about you.”
“It’s hard to take that from the way we’ve interacted,” I admitted. “You get that, right?”
“Politics is part of being an Ascendant.” he said bluntly. “Perception and reality, the manipulation of opinion. It’s our lifeblood. Our essence. It’s easy for you Wyndhams to forget that, given your abilities. You especially have a kind of fated momentum from your bloodlines that I’ve rarely seen in anyone your age. But make no mistake, managing perception and constructing the narrative are key aspects of growth, even for people like me. But it’s not real life. It’s like a game. You make your character, roleplay them where people can see, and build the renown you need. It doesn’t mean the other stuff doesn’t matter, but it’s something you need to think about. Especially when you’re steering a faction this large.”
That was…oddly similar to some of the things Zeke had told me over the years. I let out a sigh. “Fine, I guess. I won’t hold a grudge, as long as you can keep Callie safe, we’re good. Actually good, not just nominally okay. So, should I call you granduncle Moon?”
He grimaced. “Please don’t. Uncle Moon is fine, just like your mother. The last thing I want is THAT catching on with the kids. I’ll lose all respect from everyone in the Church.”
“Somehow, I don’t think it would be all that bad,” I chuckled. “But I can do Uncle Moon.”
His eyes were fixed on me, and the worried light had grown. “Can I give you some advice, kid?” I nodded, curious what he had to say. “Traveling abroad isn’t the same being on one planet for an extended period, especially not in a place like the Void. One of the most important things you can remember when you’re out there is not to react without thinking. If you run into trouble, take a beat, take a breath, and consider your options. It sounds simple, but it’ll save your life.”
I was about to just agree reflexively, but I considered the advice itself and took a moment, thinking it over, then nodded. “I can do that,” I said after a pause. “And…thanks, Uncle Moon.”
“Don’t mention it,” he said with a soft smile. “And when you get back, maybe try to stop by the Holy Dominion again. My master never said anything, but I know he was hoping you would visit. He’s not as unapproachable as his wife.”
That kind of stunned me. “I…I’ll keep it in mind.” I said slowly. Then I stood and offered him my hand. “Thank you. Really. For everything. It means more than you know.” He clapped me on the shoulder, offering me a reassuring smile, and then I left, heading back to my suite. I needed to set up some meetings for tomorrow with my cabinet and friends so I could make sure to say goodbye to everyone, and after that…it would be time to go.
2025-12-19 03:16:28 +0000 UTC View PostChanges. That was the first thing I noticed. Not just the recent ones, but all the changes I’d gone through. It had been years now, since I started this journey, and in those years, I’d changed so much. Rank-ups, abilities, my Domain, and now my new office. I was a completely different person now, and despite that building for so long, putting on the crown felt like some kind of trigger. Like the spark that lit the fuse that burned away everything I used to be in a sea of violet fire.
Wishmaster status. C-rank. Ability: Grandmaster Wish- Nine times a day grant a Grandmaster wish in return for proper compensation. Wish must be feasibly achievable by the candidate's own efforts within a three day period with current statistics.
Grandmaster Path of the Demonbinder- The Domain of a Great King.
Wishmaster candidate points-1000
Might-940,923
Impact-155
Fantasy-825,780
Vitality-831,467
Focus-929,835
Perception-761,873
Creation-712,871
Progress to next rank:5,002,904/10,000,000
Soul strength- Tanzanite Soul Body
Body Forging: Nine Phoenix Reincarnation Art- 1/81 drops- First Layer 1/9
Chronicle: Ten Demons Tome (pages bound:2- 1 Zagan, 1 Leviathan)
wish scrolls stockpiled: 27 (5 in the possession of friends to be used over time)
Bonded companion: Archimedes (Life Nova Phoenix)
Weapon: Ten Demons Tree (reincarnation tree staff that lets him simulate alternate lives to perfect his forms, and when combined with the library lets him simulate and deduce techniques in a process called the "Wisdom of Solomon")
Stored: 10 Adherent Fire, 7 shadow attacks, 10 shadow jump (seven in reserve), 10 Stealth charges,10 triple strength tranq blows (ten in reserve), 10 spider leg attacks (ten in reserve), 3 gravity attacks, 1 shadow clone, 18 scan heals (I-rank ability so Shane can hold more)
Financial resources: 0 B-ranked, 0 C-ranked, 0 D-ranked(worth 100 E-ranked, past master rank is a watershed)
Court of Gehenna:
1.Doom Sovereign- Tier 7
2.Valtek- Tier 2
3.Cooking- Tier 7
4.Inventing- Tier 2
5.Balam- Tier 3
6.Nine Phoenix Reincarnation Art- Tier 2
7.Piano- Tier 1
8.Guitar- Tier 1
9.First Aid- Tier 1
10.Angelic Bond- Tier 6
11.Dust Construction- Tier 5
12. Stone Limb- Tier 6
13.Moonlit Night- Tier 4
14.Consecration of Flame- Tier 6
15.Ripple Running- Tier 3
16.State of Grace- Tier 4
17.Steam Arrow- Tier 4
18.Afterburner- Tier 6
19.Pit of Despair- Tier 6
20.Mountain Stance- Tier 6
21.Heart over Body- Tier 6
22.Mercy Kill- Tier 5
23.Double Trouble- Tier 6
24.Touch of Tears- Tier 5
25.Flurry of Blows- Tier 3
26.Heavy Hands- Tier 2
27.Marked for Death- Tier 4
28.False Fatality- Tier 3
29.Blood Curse- Tier 4
30.Creeping Darkness- Tier 2
31.Final Strike- Tier 6
32.Overlay- Tier 4
33.Song of the Soil- Tier 3
34.Rhythm of the Wild- Tier 2
35.Eye of Revelation- Tier 6
36.Danger Sense- Tier 5
37.Piece of Mind- Tier 6
38.Empty Spirit- Tier 6
39.Belial- Tier 7
40.Abomination Engine- Tier 6
41.Mephistopheles- Tier 7
42.Cosmic Collapse- Tier 6
43.Circle of Damnation- Tier 6
44.Mephisto's Waltz- Tier 6
45.Mornax- Tier 7
46.Zagan- Tier 7
47.Life Nova- Tier 6
48.Genesis Burst- Tier 6
49.Bael- Tier 7
50.Beelzebub- Tier 7
51.Agares- Tier 7
52.Dantalion- Tier 7
53.Sammael- Tier 7
54.Limbo- Tier 7
55.Gluttony- Tier 7
56.Wrath
57.Pride- Tier 7
58.Retribution- Tier 7
59.Murmur- Tier 7
60.Leviathan- Tier 7
61.Behemoth- Tier 7
62.Glory- Tier 7
63.Abaddon -Tier 7
64.Wisdom of Solomon- Tier 7
65.Promethean Fire Soul Body- Tier 6
66.Fate Sense- Tier 6
67.Scent of Truth- Tier 5
68.Damnatio Memoraie- Tier 6
69.Dark Reflection- Tier 6
70. Asmodeaus- Tier 7
71. Astaroth- Tier 7
72. Azazel- Tier 7
I must have been gaping. We’d stepped back on the stage, behind a privacy curtain I hadn’t even noticed, and Aiden was grinning at me. “It’s pretty wild, right? Feeling those connections? Even for a few minutes. But it’s necessary. The crown isn’t just a totem, it’s a focus. Those bonds to the wishes of the family let you absorb the mythology and renown of the Wishmaster more efficiently.”
That made sense. I’d taken in my entire weight in power this time, and while it had felt WEIRD, it didn’t hurt the way it usually did. I’d chalked that up to my strong soul or Domain, but come to think of it, handling those volumes should have been way more uncomfortable. I suspected the main point had been to show me the bonds though, let me know what the old man would have to deal with if he was more involved.
As for the renown of the Wishmaster, I could definitely see it. My Fantasy and Creation stats had SKYROCKETED. I’d gotten pretty solid boosts across the board, but Fantasy and Creation had been the lowest, and the swing had been most noticeable there. My Might had jumped decently, but nothing too impressive, and my Focus had spiked. The Wishmaster had a reputation for being shrewdly intelligent and a brilliant researcher.
It felt…strange. Like I wasn’t in control of my body almost. The crown seemed to have almost purified the income of stats, like I was receiving them through a wish. Looking at the sheer amount of power, if I’d taken that in as normal renown the recursion would have been brutal. The old man had known what he was doing when he made that headpiece. I shot an assessing look at it.
Aiden laughed again. “I know how you feel. It’s kind of surreal, right? That’s one of the old man’s objects of power. Trust him to build something like that instead of a weapon or armor. I guess that’s why he’s a god. Never does things the normal way.”
I blinked, staring down at the dark metal yet again. Knowing that it was an object of power made a LOT more sense. Items that did this kind of thing were unheard of. I hadn’t known it was possible to purify stats like the Wish power did, or to siphon renown directly and skip the waiting period as the legend spread. Or to help acclimate the power. But thinking about it, the Wish power itself did most of those things. The crown was just a physical manifestation of a power the old man already had.
Still, I was blown away, and I knew I’d need a few days at least to acclimate to the changes. Being so much stronger so quickly wasn’t EXACTLY new, I’d had huge bumps before, and even doubled my stats at one point I was pretty sure, but the sensation of that post D-rank and with stats as high as mine already were…I was fairly close to breaking a MILLION with some of my INDIVIDUAL stats.
Callie took my hand and squeezed it. “You ok, baby?” she asked worriedly. “Your head is a big jumble. I can’t tell if you’re upset or happy.”
“Yeah,” I said, shaking my head. “I’m good. Just kind of overwhelmed. I knew the coronation would be a big bump, but feeling all that at once was a lot.” I looked around at the curtain. “I’m guessing that’s not an unusual reaction. How long do I have to get my head right before I have to get back?”
Aiden snorted. “Have to get back? You’re the Wishmaster, kid. You could just go fuck off to sleep and no one would say a word.”
Davina smacked him upside the head. “Do NOT do that,” she clarified. “That’s terrible advice, and is not even remotely applicable to you. Aiden got away with far too much because of his secondary combat ability and his father’s help. As someone who plans to make real changes, bullying the council and swanning around like you can’t be bothered with anyone else is the WORST possible path for you to take.”
I laughed at Aiden’s sulky pout, but he didn’t contradict her. “Noted, so what do you suggest I do?”
“Take twenty or thirty minutes,” she said kindly. “Process the new stats, get your head on straight, then go out and greet your subjects. Make people feel seen. You just announced your intention to massively upset the applecart, and a lot of people will be concerned. Smooth things over, let them meet you. Change is scary, and the unknown is scarier. If you’re going to hit them with the former, make sure to have as little of the latter as possible.”
I turned shot her a wry smile. “Aiden was right, you are MUCH better at this than he is.”
She shot him a warm smile. “My husband has the soul of a warrior. He was…misinformed about the nature of his former position. I’m dreading having him on the council. He’s quickly approaching S-rank, of course. That’s why the succession war was so much faster than usual this time. Once he breaks through he’ll be expected to create a branch of his own and join the elders.”
“Which I’m absolutely not doing,” he said quickly. “I hate council meetings. I’m just going to go bust skulls on the front lines.” He glared at me. “Don’t end this war too quickly. I know you told the old man you plan to find allies among the Vanished gods. If you peace us out before I get a chance to cut loose and cement my push to S-rank I’m going to be PISSED.”
Davina rolled her eyes. “Don’t listen to him. End the war as quickly as possible, he’s not going to have trouble with his breakthrough. Very few people have Chronicles as solid as his. The sublimation into a Saga will pose no difficulty to him. He’s just trying to avoid work.” She raised an eyebrow at her husband. “Come along, dear. We need to let the children settle before they go out to mingle. And you and I need to have a discussion about the responsibilities of being a good role model.”
Something about the way she said that made me think that such a discussion might be relevant to them in the near future. Azazel tossing me a tidbit of information, maybe. Aiden didn’t have any kids, but now that he wasn’t the Wishmaster anymore, I got the sudden feeling that there might be a baby in his future.
Neither of them noticed my insight as she took his hand and dragged him off. I turned to find Callie grinning at me, and just to amuse her I shared my prediction. She giggled at that. “I’m glad. Davina will be a good mom, based on what I saw of her. As for Aiden…hard to say. I wish them both well, though. So, how big was that boost, anyway?”
“A quarter,” I admitted. “I’m halfway to B-rank now.” Her eyes widened, jaw dropping with shock.
“HALF?” she said in disbelief. “That’s…dear gods, Shane, how are you standing after an influx that large. Wait, no, I know how, he explained it. But still.” Aiden had taken the crown with him when he left, but she stared after it in a daze. “Aiden was right though. Trust the Wishmaster to have an item like that.” Her face firmed in determination. “That settles it. I’ve been wondering what to do once you leave on your trip. Now I know. Aiden’s space flame is similar to my Adherent fire. I need to learn, and I need to make a name for myself if I don’t want to get left behind. I’m going to ask him to take me with him to the front lines of god war.”
I knew there were Void spawn there, mixed in with the forces of the vanished gods, but I still felt my blood run cold at the idea of my wife running off to a war zone. I clamped down on that sensation though. She deserved the chance to get stronger. To learn and grow. She was right, if she didn’t, she’d get left behind, and that scared me almost as much as the idea of losing her.
The next thirty minutes went by fast, and then it was time to go out and mingle. The rest of the night went by in a blur after the news of Callie’s plans. I spent them concentrating on ways to make sure she stayed as safe as possible once she left, and the next day, I put those plans into action.
2025-12-18 02:11:48 +0000 UTC View PostWe headed to the terminal to make our way to the back palace. Instead of heading to the same place as the sword dance symposium though, we made our way through the hallways until we got to an unassuming looking stairway. “You’ll be going up there,” my mom said gently. “There’s a staging area, and then you’ll emerge for the coronation when they call you. Aiden should be up there waiting for you.”
I gave her a hug. “Alright, wish me luck,” I said in a determined voice. “Though I guess the hard part is over.”
My dad nodded. “Probably, there have only been like, three assassinations during coronations in WCP history.” My mom glared at him, slapping him on the shoulder, and he coughed in embarrassment. “I mean…none. There have been no assassinations during coronations. Nothing like that has ever happened before and definitely won’t happen now.”
My mother rolled her eyes. “Uncle Moon is here, as is my dad, and the entire council. No one is going to try anything. It would be suicide.”
I chuckled, rolling my eyes at my dad. “I know he’s just trying to help. Callie is coming up with me, by the way. If anyone has a problem with that…they can shut up about it.” I sort of lost steam as I went on that one, but neither of them seemed bothered. My mom just nodded, and Callie walked gracefully over to loop her arm in mine.
She looked…breathtaking. She’d traded her normal gown for a fancier long sleeved velvet dress of dark blue with silver accents. Black patterns flowed across the surface, taking the shape of feathers that sort of blended the dress with her wings and hair to create a harmonious whole that amplified her presence as an archangel. She smirked as she saw me looking her over. “You like?” she flipped her hair dramatically. “Bethy made it for me herself.”
“Looking good,” I complimented her as we ascended the stairs. “Better than me anyway.”
She rolled her eyes, but didn’t bother responding. When we reached the top, I knocked on the door, and it was flung open quickly. A harried looking woman with long silver hair pulled up in a bun jerked us inside. “You’re here! Thank the gods, it’s almost time, get into position. Aiden, are you finished getting dressed yet?” Her dark violet skin set off her swirling silver eyes, flecks of purple dancing within the irises. Silver horns glinted nearly under her hairline.
“So…you’re Davina?” I asked as she dragged my predecessor over to stand with us.
“Hmm?” she said, glancing up distractedly. “Oh, yes, that’s me. Nice to meet you dear. I apologize for my husband.” She glared up at Aiden, who actually wilted a bit. “I’ve heard he’s been an abysmal guide for your situation. I swear, I love the man but he’s the most irresponsible being I’ve ever met. It’s no wonder he and my father get on.”
I tried to remember her dad’s name, and after I did…I swallowed. Azazel. I’d subconsciously associated the name with the demonic because of its history, but I had forgotten the princes of the devil race were ACTUAL demons. In the same way Zeke was Janus, Azazel had inherited the reputation and mantle of the being on which I’d based my final demon. I was really hoping he didn’t mind a little homage.
She smiled down at my arm wrapped in Callie’s. “Well, that’s one way you’re similar. Aiden refused to let them exclude me either. We’d just been married at his coronation, and he marched me up in front of the whole faction and told them they’d better treat me with respect or he’d light them on fire and roast marshmallows for us on the flames.” She shot him a fond look. “I didn’t need him fighting my battles for me, of course. But it was cute that he tried.”
“Damn it woman,” he complained as he adjusted his tunic. “Can you avoid humanizing me in front of the children. I’m trying to maintain an image. Oh, speaking of which, you’ll need this.” He turned and walked over to a polished wood cabinet. The room we were in was old and cramped, full of natural wood furniture and lots of boxes. One of them, which he flipped open, was a hat box. And inside it was…
“Oh gods, there’s an ACTUAL crown?” I moaned, burying my masked face in my hands.
He snickered. “That was my reaction too. It’s ceremonial, and only needed for the coronation. Unfortunately, that’s the only good news. It’s EXTREMELY uncomfortable. Like…abnormally so. I can’t describe it, really. It’s like an itch mixed with a burn mixed with a throb. Combined with a seething headache.”
“Why?” I asked in disbelief.
“No idea,” he shrugged. “Maybe it’s symbolic. Not my monkeys, not my circus. At least not anymore.” There was a rap at the door behind us, and he sighed. “Damn. I don’t want to do this part.” He snapped the box closed, and I shot him a look. He shrugged. “Not time yet, just wanted to get in your head a little.”
I stared at him in annoyance. “Some day, not too far in the future. We will be the same rank. And on that day, I will find you, and I will punch you in the throat.”
He burst out laughing. “Did you hear Davi? That was so CUTE. He thinks he’s threats.”
His wife sighed, pinching the bridge of her nose. “Honestly Aiden, I can’t take you anywhere.” Despite her tone, I saw a warm smile on her lips, and her gaze was soft and happy. It was nice to see that being Wishmaster didn’t have to be hard on a marriage, even when someone like Aiden was one of the parties involved.
We walked to the door, and threw it open. Below it, stretching out for a hundred feet at least, a large palatial staircase led down into a ballroom. The stairs were carpeted in deep purple, and the ballroom itself was made of black and white marble, with purple gold patterns hammered into the floor in dizzying swirls and designs. “Announcing!” boomed a voice from beside me. “His excellency, our chosen representative, the current incarnation of the unquestionable rule of our esteemed ancestor. Shane Wyndham. Also known as SOLOMON!”
I didn’t move, just leaning out to look at the herald and then my wife. He picked up my implication quickly, continuing his announcement to let everyone know who Callie was. Only then did I step out, Aiden and Davina beside me, and descend the stairs in my group of four.
When we reached the landing at the bottom, I realized that while we WERE in a ballroom, the height of the stairs had created a bit of an optical illusion. The ballroom itself wasn’t at the bottom of the steps, instead, there was a large marble platform, like a stage, and then below that the dance floor sat. The purple gold inlays were only on the stage, not the ballroom floor, so once I was on the level it made it easier to tell.
We took up positions center stage, and I looked out at the crowd around us. S-rankers, A-rankers, B-rankers, it was a diverse mix. I could see old friends, family, complete strangers, and even a few enemies. I ignored them. My eyes were drawn inexorably to an area near the back, where all my closest allies were standing. My mom and dad, eyes shining with pride, Zeke, his arm around Stella and his face softer than I’d ever seen it before. My sister, beaming proudly with tears in her eyes, her arm around a bawling Bethy and surprisingly teary eyed Gabe.
I could see crystals floating above the crowd too,. Blue diamond shaped stones surrounded by rings of shifting white power. I recognized them as a variation of the same technology used by Wilkie, my grandparents photographer, during our picture session.
Swallowing, I turned my eyes to the immediate space in front of the stage. The council stood solemnly, staring up at me with regal authority. Desmond nodded lightly, and I turned to Aiden. The former Wishmaster was as serious and authoritative as I’d ever seen him. Apparently even he wasn’t willing to be an asshole during this.
“Shane Wyndham,” he intoned, voice carrying through the room as if echoing from a fathomless canyon. “You have been chosen. Measured. Tested. You have been selected, and surveyed. By the family, by myself, by the council, by the Ancestor. You have been found adequate. You have been accepted. And today, in front of our allies, and the universe itself, I stand ready to lay down my burden, so you might take up my mantle. How do you respond?”
This was ceremonial. I was supposed to say I accepted and move on. But…I didn’t want to. I didn’t want to leave it at that. I looked out over the crowd. “I have been tested,” I agreed. “I have been surveyed. And in that time, I have tested right back. I have weighed and measured. I have learned.”
I expected Aiden to interrupt or get impatient, but he just looked pensive. “And what, exactly, have you learned?”
“We are mighty,” I said firmly. “We are a behemoth. A titan among the stars. The family is and remains strong.” I saw pride and smugness on the more familiar faces. Unfortunately for them, I had to squash that. “But we are stagnant. We have grown complacent, and our enemies scratch at the gates, reveling in our decay. We need to change. Need to adapt. And I will bring that adaptation.
“You asked how I responded,” I continued, my eyes raking the hall. “I accept. And so to should you. Accept that I will bring change. That I will challenge the existing status quo. That I will make things different. Because only through transformation is growth possible.” My gaze locked on the council. “And only through growth can we survive.”
Aiden nodded sharply. “Your response is approved,” he said, his voice crushing down on the hall like a hammer of authority. “May the change you bring be as bold as your words today.” He lifted the box next, flipping it open.
Inside, a pitch black metal circle sat. Along the edges, the skull and lamp motif of the WCP, and on its brow, a single black metal skull, eyes set with the most vivid violet gems I had ever seen in my life. Lifting the crown free, Aiden let the box drop, ignoring the echo of clacking wood as he lifted the crown to my head. “With the passing of this totem,” he said quietly (though I somehow knew everyone in the room could hear him), I grant you my office. My authority. And my right to rule.”
He laid the crown on my skull, and I felt a surge of…heat? Cold? Electricity maybe. I also felt a shift in the air. The crown began to heat up, and the air around me began to swirl, slowly at first, then faster. I could feel the focus and attention, the mythology and renown being pulled in, siphoned from the crowd, from the air, from my own waiting reserves. Power unlike anything I had felt before, carried on the winds of royal authority, poured into me, filling me with strength and purpose.
For just that second, I could feel them. My people. My family. I could feel their hopes, their dreams, their wishes. Because that was part of this. Part of me. The Wishmaster was the MASTER of Wishes. Not just granting them, but understanding them. It was no wonder the old man had retired. I knew somehow that if I lifted the crown off, I would lose this connection, would lose the pressure of all these dreams and wishes. But without us here to provide a buffer, I didn’t think he ever would.
Finally, the power surge ended, and I quickly took off the crown, realizing my hands were shaking and my head was killing me. Aiden had been right. That HAD hurt, i just hadn’t noticed at first. As I opened my eyes, a familiar wave of violet flame consumed my vision, and I bore witness for the first time to what my power looked like after ascending to my office.
2025-12-17 02:58:27 +0000 UTC View PostThe next morning came with a surprising lack of pomp OR circumstance. I woke up, rolled out of bed, and then just kind of…sat there. Today was the day. My coronation. My ascension to Wishmaster.
Despite having known it was coming, having worked for it for years, having fought and bled and almost died to achieve it, it felt bewildering. I was somehow blindsided. All the panic I thought I’d worked through, the fear I had faced and set down, came flooding back into me like a thundering stampede of wild horses tearing through my mind. Until…
A pair of soft arms draped around me, a chin on my shoulder, and three sets of blue black wings encircled me.
All the panic. All the fear. It vanished. Like ice under warm sunshine, all my hesitation just melted away, replaced by the blazing warmth of the love I had for my wife, and the love she had for me. My shoulders relaxed, head falling forward, and I smiled softly. “Morning,” I told her with a chuckle. “Sorry to wake you.”
“Not at all,” she said wryly. “Your existential crisis was very quiet. I just needed a glass of water.”
“Suffer in silence,” I said solemnly. “That’s my motto. Also showers are better than baths. Speaking of which…”
She giggled at that. “There’s no way we’ll be on time for your coronation if I get in with you.”
I shrugged. “I’m going to be their boss anyway. What are they gonna do? It’s not like I could be worse than Aiden.” She raised an eyebrow at me archly and I rolled my eyes with a sigh. “But I guess we have guests and all that. Fine. Rain check.” I sighed, leaning my head against hers. “Remind me again why I need to do this?”
“Because it’s your dream,” she said gently. “Because you feel like you owe it to your family. Because you want to affect real change.”
I sighed, standing reluctantly to start putting on my armor. I slipped into my greaves, then boots, the motions almost ritual after so long wearing the stuff. I traced my fingers over the metal, relieved at the lack of cracks. Donovan hadn’t been SUPER pleased to be summoned back. He’d been mixing with some of the smiths who were visiting for the coronation, and had been spending most his time at the sword dance symposium.
Fade’s blacksmith elder had come with us because he was powerful enough to be relevant, but we hadn’t really needed any smithing, so he’d been doing his own thing. As the smith who forged my armor, Donovan Redfellow was less than impressed with the condition it was in, though he did calm down slightly when I told him about the horrible attack it helped me survive. Professional pride was a beautiful thing.
I stopped to do my morning ritual, condensing my wishes for the day, and then, when I finished I turned to face my wife. “So, before we go, we have those makeup wedding pictures for my grandparents. I’m ALMOST positive they were joking about bringing a crown.”
She laughed at that, and offered me her hands. I spun her lightly, like we were dancing, and then pulled her against me, resting my forehead against hers. “Thank you,” I said quietly.
I didn’t say for what. I didn’t need to. And I couldn’t. Not really. Not ever. There was too much, too many emotions, too much love, too much that we’d shared. But she knew. She always knew what I was feeling, even without the bond. She kissed me softly, and we stood like that, alone together, letting the world pass us by.
Then the spell broke, and we headed out of our room to meet up with the others. Abel, Mel, Chelsea, Gabe, Bethy, Fade, Ellie, my entire cabinet. The room was packed. To my surprise, one of my cabinet members approached with a wry smile, holding up a small glass cylinder. He handed it to me.
I raised a brow at Wulf. “What’s this?”
“My mission,” he shrugged. “You asked me to find that guy, Tim. Well, I found him.” He gestured to the bottle, which upon closer inspection had what appeared to be a very small chunk of rock floating in it. I squinted, able to make out more with my enhanced Perception. Not a chunk of rock. A continent.
“He’s in HERE?” I asked dumbly. “Why? How? How do you even know?”
He rolled his eyes. “Because I ASKED him. I’ve been inside that thing. I wanted to ask him to come out but-”
“Let me guess,” my dad sighed, pinching the bridge of his nose. “He refused. Because he’s-”
“Tim in a bottle,” agreed Wulf. “Yeah, he was really emphatic about that. He’s got a whole country of citizens in there, and he seems to be doing an ok job. It’s a weird place. Very colorful, lots of strange art.”
My mom laughed at that. “Sounds like him. Here, pass it to me. Eli and can keep an eye on it, maybe slip in for a visit. It would be nice to see an old friend. Before that though, we need to get these pictures done so we can leave.” She glanced at my grandmother. “Do you really need the props and outfits?”
Celia puffed out an annoyed breath. “I suppose not. With Shane’s armor recently repaired, it looks good as new, and Calliope is always fashionable.”
My wife preened, and I rolled my eyes, because my mask made it impossible for anyone but her to tell. I muttered “teacher’s pet” in her head to make sure she got the joke. She stuck her tongue out at me lightning fast when no one was looking, and I had to choke down a laugh.
We spent the next hour taking photos. We got some of me and Callie, me and Chelsea, Chelsea Bethy and Gabe (despite what my grandparents had said about focusing on the happy couple, which I was glad to see), my parents, my grandparents, and even a few of all of us as a group. It was a big day, and they were clearly trying to get the most out of the photographer they had hired.
The photographer was actually really impressive. He was B-rank, but he had this incredibly complex camera made of interlocking gears that took images into like a three dimensional crystal prism. When you channeled light into it the crystal could even project the image as a hologram. It was all very interesting, and my grandparents had to make us all get into position for pictures because we all got distracted questioning him about it.
Sadly, good times always had to end. Eventually we finished the last of the photos, and it was time for us to leave. I headed for the door, but my mom, dad, and Zeke stopped me on the way. “Calliope, darling, can I have a moment with my son?” My mom asked kindly. “I promise to return him posthaste.”
Callie nodded, smiling warmly at my mother. “Of course, Sasha. I’ll wait outside.”
“Please dear, call me mom,” my mother chirped brightly. “You mean so much to this family, there’s no need to stand on ceremony.”
My wife blushed a bit, but didn’t say no, hurrying out of the room with a look of conflicted confusion. I could understand her feelings. Unlike her father, who she hated (hence being so willing to accept Atlas as a parental figure), Callie adored her mother. But I know she’d also grown close to my mom and grandmother, and she did consider herself part of the family. I doubted Amelia would care, personally, but I also wasn’t going to push her on it, not would my mother, judging by her expression.
She watched Callie go with a fond smile. “That girl is the best thing that’s ever happened to you.”
“Agreed,” I said without hesitation. “But I doubt that’s what you wanted to talk to me about. What’s up, guys? I’m fine, if you were worried about it. I know this is a lot, but I’ve been through worse. And don’t worry, I won’t embarrass you up there. I CAN be civilized when I put my mind to it, you know?”
Zeke snorted. “I’ll believe it when I see it,” he said dryly. “But that’s not what this is about. If you’re going to humiliate yourself up there, there’s nothing we can do to stop it. Besides, you’re a grown man, it’s not going to reflect on me anymore, so go nuts.”
“What Ezekial is TRYING to say,” my mother said tightly. “Is that we trust and love you, and we have no doubt you’ll acquit yourself admirably up there. We aren’t concerned about the coronation, it’s mainly a formality in any case. No, we’re hoping to speak with you about your trip to the Void. Are you still planning to go?”
“I think I kind of have to,” I said grimly. “Morwenna has shown an interest in working with Hatescream. I mean, sure, she refused originally because of Callie, but who knows how long that will last. I don’t believe her fear of Atlas can outweigh her goals for much longer. We need to shut down some of the war fronts. Making an alliance would be even better, and my inroads at Mourne Kayze are our best shot. The Lady of Lamentation favors me personally, and if anyone can reach out and convince her it’s me.”
I’d met the vanished goddess once, after all, and as the Wishmaster I would nominally be her equal politically. Given the gods themselves would be unable to enter the Void space occupied by her god world, I was the next best option. Someone with a connection to the Vanished Gods and a high enough position that my words would be taken seriously, but who was expendable enough not to be a vulnerability.
“Ok,” my mom said slowly. “If you’re sure, we won’t stop you. But do you know what the Void is like? How it works?”
“I know the Void roads are a thing,” I shrugged. “Paths through the space that connect to…whatever is out there. Different areas where Void children live, I assume. I’m guessing there aren’t too many real people there, given how much the Void hates us.”
My mom chuckled. “You’d think so. But that’s not the case. There are plenty of people in the Void. In fact, the Void children PREFER them being there. God worlds provide better insulation from the Void, and they contain more noise. While most gods are dead, their worlds don’t cease to exist. They simply remain in the Void, broken but still accessible. The Void roads connect this shattered domains, and they’re referred to collectively as ‘The Hanging Lands’.”
“There are many cities and forces in the hanging lands,” my dad warned. “And they don’t fear the five factions at ALL. Any attempts to cleanse them fails, any attempt to bring them under control results in years of attrition. It’s not so easy for a god to claim another god’s world, dead or not. In order to reach this…Mourne Kayze, you’ll need to pass through the hanging lands.”
My mom looked worried. “The hanging lands are…strange. Their relationship with the Void is complicated. You need to be very careful out there. Don’t announce your identity as the Wishmaster. Their information channels aren’t exactly top notch, so using your name should be fine, but be sure to be careful and rely on your disguise form if needed. Ezekiel says it’s quite impressive.”
“It’s a pseudo-Domain,” I began, then trailed off. “Actually, I guess it’s a demon now. That’ll take some getting used to. But warning taken, guys. I’ll be safe. I have to complete this mission to end the war. I have no desire to be in charge during wartime for any longer than necessary.” I winked. “Plus, accomplishing something like this will give me tons of leverage with the council. I might actually be able to push through some reforms.” My mom laughed at that, pulling me into a tight hug, and then we all headed out. It was time for my coronation.
2025-12-16 02:48:26 +0000 UTC View PostAfter I finished talking to the old man, I went home and went to bed. I was…so exhausted. The kind of exhausted where you actually pass tired and loop back around to be being energetic, only with a brain that works hilariously badly for any complex tasks. Like you passed your sleep window and were now “post-sleep” and the entire experience made everything feel raw and painful like a jagged wound.
I dropped into bed and then slept. I don’t know for how long, but judging by the reactions to me waking up, it was a while. I knocked out my scrolls for the day then went to meet my friends and family, who were all having dinner.
After filling them all in, I expected serious questions, legitimate discourse, and maybe a conversation about me rushing into things. Instead, Abel turned to my wife and handed her a chit.
She scoffed. “Easy money. The fact that you all thought Shane would stop getting new powers when he got his Domain is ridiculous.”
“Hey!” I said, feeling offended for some reason. “That’s-” But I didn’t know what to say. She was kind of right. Albeit, I hadn’t actually gained much from the Nine Phoenix Reincarnation Art Yet. But still. Nobody likes being pigeonholed. Phoenixholed? That sounded way worse. “Shut up!” I finally said lamely.
“Piping hot comeback babe,” Callie giggled. “But seriously, it’s a good thing. Your physical limitations have been pretty worrying. This is a good thing. I’m still not sure I get how the whole thing works though. You’re going to condense nine phoenix templates, but like…what do they do, exactly? Like the Life Nova Phoenix I can guess, it heals you. You’ll get enhanced regeneration, right?”
I nodded. “Yeah, the phoenix templates give me a baseline level of enhanced physique when completed. Namely, a multiplier to a stat like you have from your racial trait. They also give me a unique ability specific to them. So, yeah, Life Nova gives me a powerful regeneration factor. I still haven’t picked out the next template though. I need to pick another kind of flame to condense it from, because it’ll take me a while to actually complete the first rank of my Ninefold Phoenix Physique.”
Life Nova was actually the gentlest flame I could have picked. That had upsides and downsides though. It would make the process easier, but the passive effect was less powerful because of that. I already had decent healing, and regeneration was less useful than something more directly applicable to combat.
Which was why my second choice was Mephistopheles black fire. With that, I would get a modifier to Might, and while I didn’t know exactly what unique ability I would end up with, but it would probably be something related to damage or armor penetration.
Each new layer would be a building block for my final Ninefold Phoenix Physique. The tenth level would be forging them all together into a single phoenix to temper my body. I’d officially BECOME a nine colored phoenix when I finished. I had a long way to go before that, of course. I needed to choose nine flames and condense nine different templates. I hadn’t even properly formed my first yet.
Speaking of which, I finished my last bite of waffle and stood up. “I’m going to go start on my Body Forging,” I told Callie. “Want to watch? It shouldn’t be too painful given the flame I’m using.”
She perked up. “I AM kind of curious.” She stood up and stretched, then winked at the others. “Let’s do it. Bye all, I’m gonna go watch my husband set himself on fire.”
That got a laugh, and the two of us headed to the nearest training room, ready to start. “Alright, so a racial trait is similar to a bloodline, but backwards. With a bloodline you take your power and imprint it on your body, and with a racial trait you kind take your body and imprint it on your power. Since Body Forging is that but slower, the process involves bodily transformation.”
She nodded, strolling over to take a seat against a nearby wall. I stripped off my mask and armor, leaving me in only my pants, and Callie whistled dramatically. “Whoo! Take it off!”
I gave her a flat look. “You’re enjoying this way too much.”
“Beefcakes and pretty colored fire, what’s not to like,” she grinned back smugly. “You think you could do a little dance for me while you’re forging?”
I sniffed loftily. “Hey, I’m not a piece of meat you know. Now keep it down while I slowly grill myself to an even temperature. A quick thought summoned Beelzebub. The tall, grey haired man was unnaturally thin and really pale, and his eyes flicked back and forth as if expecting an attack. I flicked my fingers again and Zagan appeared. Beelzebub bowed, and at my gesture, split into thirteen copies of Zagan.
Then I gestured to them to begin. The thirteen copies of the green haired man all raised their hands, channeling their green flame into spheres in the manner of Life Nova’s use. As they built it up, I prepared, summoning Manny and incarnating him, and then, finally, I told them to begin.
There was an eruption of vital power, waves of green flame exploding from every angle to converge on my body. I’d expected at least SOME pain, but it didn’t come like I’d expected. As the flames struck me, the Nine Phoenix Reincarnation Art revolved. It took the fire, swept it up into a sort of vortex, and then spun it through my body in a complicated pattern I wasn’t sure I could have memorized normally.
Fire surged through me, whirling and singing through every inch of my body, coating every cell in a shifting pattern that outlined a transformation unlike anything I’d seen before. Each time it finished a circulation, the excess life energy poured into me, and it seemed to be collecting in my blood. Power began to fill my veins, just a bit at first, then more, then more. I closed my eyes, letting it wash over me. This was the easiest one. It was the first and most direct temper. I had to do this nine times to complete the first layer, and as my body acclimated to each one it would get harder and harder.
For now though, it was simple. As my body built up power, my blood began to boil. Not in a painful way, not with this flame. It felt…glorious. Like I was slowly ascending to a higher plane. The boiling energy started to converge, driven by the whirling fire, condensing and collecting. I closed my eyes and I could see it within me. Energy racing inward, slowly aggregating inside my heart.
Blood and fire coalescing together in a cacophony of rioting life energy. In my mind, I watched the process complete. The results of the first attempt. A single point where all the fiery green blood energy collected. A single drop of blood.
This wasn’t human blood. After being tempered with the power of the Life Nova and the mysterious pattern of the Nine Phoenix Reincarnation Art, it had transformed, changed. This was a single drop of Life Nova phoenix blood. It collected more and more power, growing and changing, until finally, with a dramatic pause, the energy inside BURST, pouring through my body, changing the blood in my veins, altering it until it was the same consistency as the drop.
The drop itself remained, floating inside one of the chambers of my heart. The flames faded, the noise receding. I opened my eyes, staring down the the glowing green force permeating my veins, and I let out a long, slow breath. The exhalation turned to green steam as it came out of my body.
Callie clapped enthusiastically. “That was VERY pretty,” she said teasingly. “What exactly did you do?”
I chuckled. “Basically, the Nine Phoenix Reincarnation Art harnesses the fire and my blood energy to condense a drop of phoenix blood, which produces a qualitative shift in my bloodline. Once I’ve condensed nine drops, those qualitative changes will be complete and my body will fully adapt to the first template.”
“And you did this in what, ten minutes?” she said skeptically. “Won’t take long to finish.”
I laughed. “This was the first tempering. My blood is just normal human blood at the moment. The amount of fire I need to saturate it is pretty low. The NEXT drop will take roughly ten times more flame energy. Which means ten times as long. I ALSO cheated, because without Manny to operate the Reincarnation Art, it would have taken me like twenty years to learn a pattern that complicated and be able to use it dynamically during forging.”
“Still, pretty cool,” she commented. “You seem…more vital. Energetic. You think you’re already seeing some results from that blood change?”
I flexed my hand. “A little,” I admitted. “I do feel a bit wired. Unfortunately, this is the gentlest possible flame, and is already heavily skewed towards human optimization. That felt really good actually, like a massive energy surge, but my NEXT few flames…” I trailed off. “Well, the old man said the pain would be beyond what most people could endure.”
Still, I was more than human now. It hadn’t actually changed me fully yet, but I was growing and changing. I dismissed Manny, Zagan, and Beelzebub. I considered calling Sammael. My new changes combined with his qualitative boost would probably produce amazing results, but I’d have to look into that later. For now, I just walked over to plop down next to my wife. “So, what do you think of all this?”
Her face softened, her smile becoming something warm and intimate. “I think you’re distracting yourself,” she said gently. “I think you don’t want to dwell on what happened with Roland, or on the coronation, which by the way is tomorrow.”
My expression fell. “Is it that obvious?”
“Only to me, love,” she said quietly, resting her head on my shoulder. “This is certainly an interesting new ability. I’m excited for you. Also kind of curious what the hell our kids are going to be when we have them. Like your mom jokes about it, but half archangel nine color phoenix babies sound KIND of terrifying.”
I burst out laughing. “Oh gods, I didn’t even think about that. Those poor kids. You don’t mind me changing myself like that?”
“Be kind of hypocritical of me if I did,” she giggled. “Just don’t get stuck as a bird and I’m fine. Do you think you’ll get natural wings? Like consistent ones? Or will you still need Sammael to fly in human form?”
“Probably the latter,” I mused. “I think I’ll get an ACTUAL phoenix form, but not anytime soon. The changes are to the bloodline until the Art is complete. Until I finished the tenth level I’m closer to a phoenix blooded human than an actual phoenix. It’s part of the process. But hey, I can turn into a giant flaming bird eventually I bet. That’s pretty cool.”
She eyes me speculatively. “I want a blanket stuffed with your feathers,” she decided. “Not pinions either. Down. The soft stuff.”
I gaped at her. “What? I’m not even a bird yet and you’re already stripping me for parts? Why don’t you try to get down for a blanket from Archie? I bet his feathers are pretty soft, and probably great for getting a good night’s sleep. Maybe as a pillow.”
She paused. “That…isn’t a bad idea. I’ll consider it. For a pillow. But he’s too small to make a proper comforter. You’re going to be a GIANT bird. You’ll barely miss it, I’m sure.” Her tone was smug and teasing, and I let myself fall into the banter, enjoying the back and forth with my wife about something meaningless. Because she was right. Tomorrow was coming fast, and once it got here, moments like these would be few and far between. Best to savor them while I could.
2025-12-12 20:03:30 +0000 UTC View PostPower. A recurring theme in my life for the last few years. More than any other, honestly. Love, family, choice, I’d grappled with some heavy things in my time as an Ascendant. But power was perhaps the heaviest. What it meant. What it required. How it changed you. Because all power changes a person. Or perhaps as Zeke said had said, power just revealed.
And now I was faced with a choice. With the option to obtain more power. And what did that reveal about me? What would this choice show the world, and myself, about what kind of person I was going to be.
The bookshelf was lined with manuals. Some thick and imposing, some so thin they were almost invisible shoved between the larger volumes. I took them out, scanned through them for answers, and all I found was more questions. There was a dizzying array of options, each of them with strong potential moving forward.
Some were elemental, some based on animals or mythological figures. Racial traits were the fast version of Body Forging, and I could definitely see the influence there. But it wasn’t JUST that. Some of them were based on music, or gems, or stars, or emotions. Each of them was complex and profound, touching on concepts I barely understood.
Of course, I had needs of my own here. I needed a demon that would be easy to reincarnate, that could encompass the power of the art I chose. I glanced over to Azazel. “Alright, who do you suggest for this?”
He hummed consideringly. “Well you have a few tier one and two subjects. Those would be the best. Reincarnating them would be simple, and because of their low level no part of them should need to be destroyed in the remaking. Still, if you want to keep them as close to their current selves as possible, I have two suggestions. Your tier one skills are Piano, Guitar, Fire Manipulation, and First Aid. I would suggest one of the latter two.”
I blinked. “Fire Manipulation. I don’t even remember where I learned that one. From Mel maybe? I never bothered to train it, which seems stupid in retrospect. But fire DOES thread a lot of needles for me. First Aid…I could see the utility, but it just doesn’t feel right. Fire Manipulation, that’s the one.”
“That was my pick as well,” added the old man from the side where he was casually leaning against a wall. “The fire based Body Forging techniques are towards the bottom.”
I nodded my thanks, then knelt down and started sifting through. Eternal Sun Body, Stareater Bone Physique, Infernal Torment Body Forging Scripture. I stopped at that one for a second, but it felt too on the nose. Stars and hellfire weren’t right for this. I wanted to create something more meaningful to my journey so far. This was going to represent the continuation of my Path.
Demons were an option, and there was certainly enough demon related material on the shelf. But it felt…nondescript. Like a hat on a hat. This wasn’t going to be just another part of my Domain. This was going to represent my personal physical advancement. My evolution into something greater.
I leafed through one book after another, discounting option after option…until I stopped. I reached down to pick up an old leatherbound book with a red cover. Complex gold symbols were etched into the leather, but it was so old and worn down that it had mostly become illegible. I flipped open the first page.
“Nine Phoenix Reincarnation Art,” I read aloud. Phoenixes. The phoenix was a powerful beast, one that was considered an equal to a dragon in a lot of stories. Dragons were scary enough that their corpses and descendants were already some of the scariest things around. Not to mention I had personal experience with them. Archie, my companion, was a Life Nova Phoenix. I held up the book. “How does this work?”
The old man chuckled, grabbing the book and leafing through it. “I forgot about this one,” he said idly. “The concept is fascinating. You know how phoenixes can rise from their ashes nine times right?” I nodded. “Well, this is supposed to create a Ninefold Phoenix Physique. Essentially, each rank before Divine condenses one of the reincarnations. And the final level merges them into the flesh. Rather than having nine lives, your body has the strength of nine versions of yourself all at once.”
I blinked in shock. “So it makes you into some kind of mega phoenix?”
He waggled a hand. “Not exactly. You don’t become a phoenix, just a ninefold phoenix version of yourself. But supposedly, once it's achieved, the bonuses are equivalent to being a real phoenix. This is notable, because there IS no phoenix racial trait. Or dragon. You can become a hybrid or a rider or learn to channel their power. But a human can’t become a beast so easily.”
That was interesting, but not important right now. What WAS important was simply the fact that this would make my body nine times stronger. Or something. The exact mechanics I’d need to learn over time. But I had an advantage with Archie. I was guessing the reincarnation process was going to be a lot easier with him as a reference. I turned to Azazel. “Call Fire Manipulation over,” I instructed him calmly. “We’ve made our decision.” I looked at the old man. “I assume you want to stay and observe?”
“Or I can leave,” he shrugged. “I’ll see anyway, but if it makes you feel better we can pretend.”
I rolled my eyes, ignoring him as Azazel returned with a person I hadn’t ever really seen before. Fire Manipulation (I was going to call him Manny for ease of remembrance) was a short, red haired kid. He was young, with wide ears that stuck out to the sides and clever green eyes. He looked…excited? Wary? A bit of each. I smiled at him reassuringly.
“This isn’t going to hurt you,” I said gently. “We picked you because you’re still early enough in your progression to change easily. Your essence will be the same, you won’t lose any of who you are.”
That had been a concern from the start, actually. I was worried about destroying one of my demons. Despite not knowing them all well yet, they were my subjects, part of who I was. I wasn’t comfortable erasing someone who worked for me for a new Skill. But luckily, the less power they had, the more malleable they were, especially for something like Fire Manipulation, which could be considered a direct relative of something like the Nine Phoenix Reincarnation Art.
I looked at Azazel. “So…how do we do this? I don’t exactly know how everything works yet, and this is my first demon reincarnation.”
He jerked his head toward the throne room. “We need to consult the tree. In order to properly alter Manny’s essence, we need to have the staff deduce an alternate growth trajectory. Luckily, elevating someone past tier 1 is simple, and we have a catalyst to use in the form of Archimedes.” He frowned. “Actually, where IS Archimedes.”
As if on cue, a loud trill echoed through the air. I grinned, pointing up and out the door. “That’s him now. I called him after I picked the book. Luckily he’s pretty fast.” There was a gust of wind, and the double doors to the palace slammed open, a gale of wind crashing into us as a glowing green form streaked inside, wings spread and green flame burning as my companion announced his arrival.
“Are we sure you’re a phoenix?” I asked him archly. “Because you’re doing a pretty decent impression of a ham.” He screeched at me reproachfully and I shrugged. “I call em’ like I see em’.” Holding out my arm, I let him land on it as he approached. "Let's head to the tree.”
Azazel nodded, then put his hands on Manny’s shoulders and steered him into the throneroom. The old man trailed behind, and we approached the throne, above which floated the illusory image representing the Ten Demons Tree. I glanced down at the throne. “Manny, come sit here,” I said after a moment. He looked spooked, but after I reassured him, he cautiously walked over and sat in the chair.
I stared up at the tree, and I felt..something. A pulse. I nodded. This process was much easier to accomplish at low levels, and now I knew WHY. The easiest way to incorporate new information into a demon, much like into a Skill, was on rank up. Tier 1 demons could be forcibly elevated to the next rank easily (ranking up Minor Skills was absurdly simple), and then the new information could be included as they advanced.
Communicating with Archie, I felt my companion rise into the air, screeching in joyful abandon as he exploded with the flames of life. The tree, waiting for this phenomena, simply activated the Wisdom of Solomon and began the process of reincarnating Manny.
The young demon’s head flew back, slamming against the throne with a resonant thump, and I winced at what must have been a deeply uncomfortable experience. The flames around Archie were ripped away, leaving my phoenix upset and screeching at the tree indignantly. Predictably it didn’t respond. The green flames enveloped Manny, creating a cocoon, and the process began.
“So, how will this work?” I asked the old man. “It’s not automatic right? So why is it so important that he learn it instead of me doing it directly.”
“Think of Body Forging like working out,” he said casually. “You need to exercise to get stronger, but there are right and wrong KINDS of exercise. Doing a perfectly designed professional workout tailored to your physical condition is tens of times more productive than just hammering out random exercises. With your incarnation ability, you’ll be able to utilize the most effective forging methods. Not to mention because of the way your demons advance there won’t be any bottlenecks.”
Azazel, who was flipping through the book that had just dropped out of the air where it was being analyzed by the staff, nodded. “This is a fascinating technique. The hard part is normally creating the phoenix template, but you have that. After that, you have to use nine different kinds of flame to reforge your body into a phoenix incarnation. Archie himself can supply your flames, and then once you complete the first reincarnation, you can advance.
“Like he said, the upgrade capabilities mean that Manny can rank up and condense the next phoenix template before you reach completion of the first layer, meaning you won’t be stuck at the peak of the first rank like almost anyone else.” He shot the old man a concerned look. “Has anyone ever COMPLETED this?”
My ancestor snorted. “Of course not. It’s completely implausible for any weaker Ascendant to master a technique like this, and a high ranked cultivator deciding to pick up a Body Forging technique and cultivate it from scratch would be insane. Not to mention you need nine types of flame to condense the nine phoenix templates, which NORMALLY have to be painstakingly designed rather than copied verbatim from a live subject by a soul based supercomputer. I have to say, I’m extremely intrigued to see what comes of this.”
As he finished speaking, the cocoon dissolved, and the man on the throne opened his eyes. Manny, that is Nine Phoenix Reincarnation Art, the tier 2 demon, grinned at me, his bright green eyes several shades more vivid than they were previously, and an exact match to his glowing green feathered hair. “Hey boss,”
I laughed, offering a hand to help him up, and I was shocked to feel the power in his grip. I was fascinated by the idea of what I’d be capable of once I began working on my own Body Forging. I had a feeling the results would be something extraordinary.
2025-12-12 01:07:26 +0000 UTC View PostExtending my Domain inside the core turned out to be effortless. I’d half expected to run into trouble, given the weird interactions between Domains and the Void. The old man told me I was a moron, because I’d been opening my Domain in the Wishworld since I developed it, and I was still IN the Wishworld.
When he saw how far it expanded, he let out a low whistle. “This is decent work for a C-ranker. The projection is unusually solid. That staff of yours is a treasure. Better hold into it tight.”
“It’s my soul weapon,” I assured him. “No one is taking it from me. Not to mention it’s very persnickety about who is allowed to wield it. Basically just me and sometimes Callie. But I’m well aware how amazing it is. It’s easily one of the most important pillars of my Domain.”
He glanced around casually, following me towards the hall. “I see you didn’t use Wish in the construction. Smart boy.”
“I would have rendered myself ineligible for the Wishmaster positions,” I responded immediately. “Besides, the Wish power still has plenty of utility. Barring a big dramatic power play to break through a rank like my dad did, I wouldn’t give up the modifier so easily.”
He nodded approvingly. “The Wish power is the most effective support ability in the universe, and it isn’t close. There’s a reason I was able to build a whole clan around it, not to mention a world. The choice to alter it is not one to undertake lightly. For those in the family aiming for divinity, it’s normally inescapable. They can never achieve godhood with the bloodline. But for those like yourself and Aiden, maintaining its optimal form and taking advantage of your unique advantages is the prudent choice.”
We arrived at the palace. Without any action from me, the doors swung smoothly inward and we found Azazel standing inside, waiting with Sam and Dom on either side, my three ministers standing together to greet the Deity following me inside.
Which brought me up short. “Actually, how are you in here? You’re a god, shouldn’t I be like…exploding?”
He rolled his eyes. “First of all, only if I were astonishingly sloppy about it. Second of all, no, because I’m not really here. We’re inside my Domain. This is a manifestation of my former body inside the borders of the Wishworld. I can manifest nearly anywhere in or around my world. But this isn’t my true form. More like the version of yourself that interacted with the library when you entered your soulspace, back before you condensed your Domain.”
I nodded in understanding. There was so much to know about cultivation, and any given random bit of information from a literal deity was bound to be worth its weight in some high rank equivalent to gold.
The old man, finished his explanation, glanced around at the others. “So. These are your demons. Fascinating. Living embodiments of Skills and techniques with the growth potential of Skills and the self determination of beings. One of the biggest problems with spreading ourselves so wide as talented Skillsmiths is a like of depth. This is a unique response to the problem, even in my experience.”
“Really? You think they’re unique?” I asked somewhat smugly. I’d known that, of course, but hearing it from Azazel wasn’t the same as hearing it from the old man. With most of my anger at him retreated in the wake of finding out he’d actually HELPED (though he was vague on how much), I was back to being mostly in awe of him. I still wasn’t really happy about how things happened, but the fact that he was a genius in matters of cultivation was indisputable, and his feedback here was valuable.
“Of course, I’ve seen other variations of the concept,” he corrected. “Skills made manifest, sometimes as animals or companions. Summons could be considered an adjacent discipline, but it’s not the same. These demons have their own discrete system of advancement and ranking. They’re independent entities. Or will be. I assume they can’t leave the Domain for long?”
I shook my head. “Not at the moment. They rely on the staff too much. The upside is they can’t die, since they’re part of the Domain, but no, they also can’t leave.” Except…maybe that wasn’t true. I frowned, glancing at Azazel, who was hesitating. “Right?”
“Well, we recently became aware that two of us might not be quite so bound,” he hedged. “Leviathan and Zagan.”
It only took me a split second to understand. “The pages,” I said with dawning realization. “Those are two Skills that I bound into pages in my tome. You think that gives them the ability to operate freely outside the Domain?”
“For a period of time,” he cautioned. “We have no way of knowing how permanent that is. Besides which, they’re both Tier 7. Based on my predictions, I suspect that were they to rank up they would require another page. The anchor point of the Ten Demons Tome allows them to operate outside the confines of the Domain, but it’s not a perfect solution.”
The old man nodded. “That sounds about right. Of course, it’ll still be important information to have. Based on the construction here, you’re playing fast and loose with soul strain. Temporary bumps to a higher rank are fine, but if too many of these demons surpass you in rank…well, I don’t think it would go well for you. This entire Domain is balanced on your soul, basically. It’s a testament to its freakish strength and resilience that you can withstand this, even with help from the staff, but there are limits.”
“But you think the pages might be a way around that?” I asked eagerly. “Like if I bind some of them and let them leave the Domain it’ll relieve the pressure?”
“I believe so,” he acknowledged. “Rather than a foundation, I believe the pages serve as a tether. Once they’ve been tethered and left the confines of your Domain, the pressure they represent will lessen dramatically. It won’t VANISH, to be clear, but as some of the stronger ones rank up, it may become necessary. Unfortunately, you’re going to have a bigger problem than that soon enough.”
I froze. “What do you mean? What problem?”
“Your body,” he clarified. “Your soul is strong. Abnormally so. Between your soul physique, all the training, and your connection to the soul tree, you might have the most powerful soul of any C-ranker I’ve ever seen. But that’ll only carry you so far. Specifically, when you reach S-rank, you’ll need to merge your Saga with your physical body. And based on what I’ve seen, yours won’t be able to hold up.”
That…hadn’t occurred to me. “So you’re saying my body won’t be able to contain my Saga? So I need to what? Pour everything into Might?”
“Not that kind of issue,” he corrected. “Impact will help, you have more than most. But it’s a factor of quality more than quantity. Your soul has been forged and polished in ways most people can’t even dream of. Your opportunities are legion in the spiritual realm. You need to focus on the physical. There’s two ways to do that. You could farm Impact, but we both know how difficult that is, especially at lower levels. Or you could forge your body another way.”
“Like a racial trait?” I asked him with interest.
He waggled a hand. “To some extent. Racial traits are more…direct. Think of it as the difference between working out and having someone rewire your muscular system. There are ways to achieve similar effects at a more measured pace, and with more control. But they’re prohibitively time consuming and difficult to make progress in. Body forging Skills are almost unheard of in the modern day for those exact reasons. Racial traits provide exponentially better results in a fraction of the time, so why bother?”
He gestured around us. “But that kind of thing is PERFECT for you. If you create a demon out of a Body Forging Skill, it can slowly increase proficiency with it while you go about your life. And make no mistake, Body Forging is MUCH more customizable. Racial Traits use special bloodlines or concepts to alter the self for dramatic effect, piggybacking on existing mythology to leverage renown into instant results. But barring something like your wife’s case where both yourself and a literal god custom refines a racial trait for someone, it’ll never be as compatible with the user as a forged body.”
“I’ve never heard of anything like that,” I said slowly. “I mean, it makes sense, I guess. Modification of the body through Skills is possible, even if short term. So Body Forging is something like a form, but permanent?”
“And slower,” he cautioned. “It’s a gradual process. But it affects the soul, so the Skills are extremely rare.”
I frowned at that. “Can you make one for me? In exchange for the chance to study my Domain? You said it’s unique, that must have value, right?” This had been an issue I’d been considering for a while. Namely, how to become something different. Racial Traits were great, but they were also kind of invasive. I’d have needed to give up my Wish power or merge whatever I picked with my Path of the Demonbinder. Neither felt like the right call. “Also, do I need to merge my Body Forging technique with my main ability like a racial trait would require?”
“No,” he answered bluntly. “That’s one of the biggest benefits. Like I said, it’s customizable and highly suited to the user. A forged body gives options that quick and dirty solutions like a racial trait can’t compete with. But there are downsides. Aside from the time it takes, Body Forging is also agonizingly painful. Even with your demon learning and improving the method, you’ll still need to USE it. The changes are gradual but they’re still changes, and they have to be applied to take effect.”
That really was pretty much perfect for me. Pain and automation, two things I was uniquely suited for. “Are you going to custom make it? Or just give me one you already have?”
His lack of answer earlier had been its own answer. If this little visit hadn’t been enough to warrant a Skill he’d have said so. He shrugged. “Either works. But personally, I’d suggest the latter. Given your own interest in tinkering, starting with something more standardized and altering it yourself as you go would produce better results. Wishes create technically perfect products, but technical perfection doesn’t always give the best results. There are plenty of wildly unbalanced methods that can be compensated for, achieving results beyond what a Wish skill can manage.”
“Alright,” I said, blowing out a breath. “What do you suggest?”
“I suggest you find a low rank Skill with some commonalities with one of my body tempering methods,” He snapped his fingers, and a bookshelf appeared next to us. I blinked at that, because I hadn’t know he could make things appear in my Domain, though since this was his world I supposed it made sense. “I’ve collected a decent number of them. I assume you’re planning to repurpose a demon for this?”
“Reincarnation,” I agreed. “That’s what it's called. But yes. So having some overlap might help.” I didn’t know exactly how reincarnating demons worked, having never done it before, but I couldn’t see a situation where commonality would be a bad thing.
He nodded. “Well then, better get looking. I don’t have all day.” He gestured to the shelf.
Almost giddy with anticipation, I walked over to the shelf, beginning to browse through the books. The titles were wordy and complicated for the most part, but each one sent a shock ofg excitement down my spine. This had so much potential, and I couldn’t wait to explore all of it. I had so much to learn.
2025-12-11 02:29:53 +0000 UTC View PostWe emerged from the portal back out of the council chamber, into the same hallway we’d entered from. The council was waiting for us. As were my parents, my grandparents, and several other people, including the Moonlight Pope and Uncle Sam. As soon as we stepped out, my mother rushed out of the crowd and scooped Callie and I into bone crushing hugs, one arm each. “You’re ok! Oh gods you scared me out of my wits. You couldn’t have been more descriptive?”
I shrugged. “Sorry ma, character limit.” I pulled back and withdrew a small booklet of black stone from my ring, engraved with a list, and tossed it over to the nearest S-ranker without even looking at who it was. “Might want to check up on everyone on there,” I advised.
He nodded, and I turned to look at the others. “Look, I’m just…this was a lot. I know there are going to be questions, but can we keep it to the absolutely necessary stuff? I just want to sleep for ten and a half weeks.” My head was still fuzzy, and the longer I went like this, the more exhausted I became.
“Good and bad news on that front,” said Desmond. “We won’t be needing to ask you anything. But someone will.” He jerked a thumb at where Aiden was waiting nearby.
The blood drained from my face. Not because I was worried about talking to Aiden. Because I knew he wouldn’t have wanted to question me. No, if he was here to get me, it was to take me to see someone else. “Twice in as many weeks,” I croaked, my voice shaky. “Must be some kind of record.”
“Don’t you just feel like the luckiest kid in the world?” Aiden grinned ruefully.
I turned back to my parents. “Seems like I have some facetime to get to with the old man. Don’t wait up, ok? I’m sure Aiden will get me back safe and sound. Just…” I glanced at Franklin and Callister. “Don’t let them get killed before things are sorted? I made promises, and if I’m going to fail to keep them I’d at least like to be around for the fallout.”
My mom nodded solemnly. “Anyone who wants to hurt them will go through me. By which I mean they’ll have to go through your grandmother. And woe betide any lunatic stupid enough to pick that fight.”
I barked out a laugh. “The old man himself would think twice. Thanks ma.” I leaned in and gave her another hug, then turned to Callie, wrapping my arms around my wife. “Thank you,” I murmured in her ear. “I’d have been dead without you.”
She smiled softly, leaning her head on my shoulder. “I took a vow when we got married. To keep your dumb stunts from killing you. I’m paraphrasing, of course, but that was the spirit of the agreement.” She winked at me, then stepped back, her face turning solemn. “Answer whatever questions you feel comfortable with. Nothing else. When you’re done, just leave. I don’t care what he’s the god of, I won’t have him pushing you further than you’re ready for.”
Her tone was iron, and I knew every person here understood the implicit threat. If the old man pushed me, we had gods in our corner too. I wasn’t actually sure what Atlas could DO if push came to shove, but considering what my mother had been able to do to an S-ranker when channeling that gem, I had to wonder what kind of power my S-ranked grandfather could wield doing the same.
Aiden chuckled. “Wow, she’s even scarier than my wife. Don’t sweat it, kid. The old man doesn’t take care of things like that by hand. If he wanted Shane dead, he’s got dozens of ways to make it happen without anyone ever finding out. He just wants to talk. He has questions. If it makes you feel better, most of them don’t have anything to do with this little kerfuffle.”
I reached down and squeezed her hand reassuringly, then followed Aiden down the hall and into a maze of corridors, not bothering to remember the route as he led me to the library where we’d found the old man last time. The core of the Wishworld.
Pushing through the doors, we entered that same immense chamber of books, and walked to the same table we’d met the Wishmaster at last time. Sure enough, he was still there, surrounded by books. He was writing in a pair of empty bound titles, each hand moving independently as he told two different stories, but he stopped as we approached.
“You can go,” he told Aiden bluntly. “I’ll summon you if I need you.”
There was no kindly old man or absent-minded scholar in that voice. Only power. Certainty. The assumption of obedience. Aiden nodded, then shot me an apologetic smile and left.
Once he was gone, the Wishmaster’s gaze pinned me to the spot. “You killed one of mine. Spared another who my charter said should die. Took responsibility for a pair of traitors. What exactly do you have to say for yourself?”
I stared at him. At my ancestor, the original Wishmaster. At a god in human form. I expected to feel awe, fear, maybe gratitude, but all I felt was…anger. My hands shook with it, the hot roiling mass of it rose in my stomach, scraping the back of my throat as I spilled up my neck like bile before erupting from my mouth in a furious hiss of molten rage. “FUCK YOU!” I spat so hard I was afraid my teeth would crack.
“Interesting approach,” he observed idly. “Show your work.”
“Bite my ass you self righteous piece of shit,” I hissed. “How DARE you? How dare you do…THIS, while we all fight and suffer for you. How dare you speak of Roland’s death like you aren’t complicit! Like it wasn’t YOUR fucking fault I had to kill him! How dare you sit in here while we all scramble to react to problems you could solve with a snap of your fingers.” I was crying. And shaking, and my hands were clenched so tight if I hadn’t been wearing gauntlets they’d probably be bleeding. But I just couldn’t care.
He’d just…sat here. The whole time. Watched it all happen. We were in HIS world. He could have stopped it. Could have intervened. But he did nothing.
I was so sick of it. So sick of apathetic gods who ignored their descendants and worshippers and left us to fend for ourselves. Of lofty immortals who treated us like errand boys and tools without caring about what we felt or thought. They weren’t human, I knew that, but I was sick and tired of watching them act like we weren’t either.
He stared at me for a long minute. I seethed. “What?” I demanded. “What do you WANT from me?” I was crying so hard I could barely speak. “What does anyone want from me? Why can’t you all just leave me alone? Why do I have to deal with so much?” I fell to my knees, palms resting on the floor as tears blurred my eyes. “Just…make it quick,” I said tiredly. “I don’t care anymore.”
“Hmm, you got there early,” he observed lightly. “Usually takes another couple centuries. Admittedly, you’ve ended up under an outsized amount of pressure. Makes sense you’d fold quick.”
I sniffed, glaring up at him. “If you’re going to smite me or whatever at least have the courtesy not to make me listen to your fucking mockery.”
He sighed wearily. “I’m not mocking you, Shane. I’m empathizing. Or trying to. I’m out of practice, I’m afraid.” He leaned back, staring down at me. “Tell me,” he said softly. “What makes you think I didn’t intervene?”
I yanked my mask off, spitting on the floor as I angrily swiped at my tears. “Because you didn’t!” I snapped. “Someone would have noticed, even if wasn’t me!”
“Really?” he said idly. “Who?”
I froze. He hadn’t put any special emphasis on the word, or stressed the sound in any notable way, but I could HEAR it. Under the comment. The sound of a familiar creature making a familiar sound.
“The OWL?” I sputtered. “That was you?”
“Well honestly,” he scoffed. “Who else did you think it was?”
I frowned. “But I thought The Quiet Room was godproof. No one is supposed to be able to intervene or sense what happens in there. Not even you.”
“Ah,” he said sagely. “That was a lie. I don’t build things that inhibit ME. I’m not an idiot, Shane.” He leaned back, and to my utter shock, I saw him cringe, adjust his body to favor one side in his chair. He saw me noticed and gave me a wry smile. “Taking on two gods who have prepared so thoroughly is no easy task,” he said with a sad smile. “Not even for me. I admit, I was a tad sedentary about my observations of the palace. But since the battle, I’ve been recovering.” He leaned back, lifting his shirt a bit to reveal a patch of horrifically burned skin weeping a strange red pus. “They sucker punched me with that toxic muck. I don’t know where they got divine souls, but there was a drop of divine energy in there. Must have found soul shards from some dead god or other.”
I felt all the rage and scorn drain out of me as I looked as the festering wound. I wished it would come back. I felt small without it. Fragile. “But…but you’re white Wishmaster. You’re a god.”
“So was Raxus,” he said patiently. “So was Suvaya. That is not dead which can eternal lie, and with strange aeons, even death may die.” He said, with the air of someone quoting a favorite passage from a book. I didn’t recognize it, but I understood the gist.
I wished I didn’t. I’d been happier thinking he was apathetic. Knowing he could be hurt. Really hurt. Or even be killed. It made this all too real. There was no barrier keeping this away from me. The war was at the gate, and I could be swept into it at any time. Had been swept in. “If I arrange things with the Lady and Verdyn,” I said slowly. “Will it hold up? Can I make an alliance? Will the rest of the six honor it?”
He nodded. “Once you take office, you speak with my voice. The youngest will do as they’re told, and the Queen and Emperor won’t gainsay me without compelling reason. Of course, their worlds must remain in the Void. They can’t be anchored to realspace, otherwise this whole war has been for nothing. However, there ARE other options. There are places in the Void where a world can be anchored. You’ll be visiting some on your journey. Keep an eye out for potential locations. I’m not against aiding a campaign to capture a few stable pockets of space.”
That was…interesting. I wondered if that had always been an option, or something about the birth of the Void god had changed the game. Either way, I was just relieved. There was a chance this could all turn out ok. For some values of that word.
“Feeling a bit better about all this?” he asked me with a chuckle. “You certainly seem to have relaxed.”
I nodded. “I am. Not GOOD. But better. I’m just…I’m tired. Can I go?”
His expression changed, going from somewhat kind to a wolfish grin. “Oh not yet,” he said quickly. “You aren’t going anywhere.” He gestured for me to sit down, and I did, climbing slowly to my feet as I suspiciously pulled a chair out. Once I was done, he steepled his fingers, elbows on the table as he stared at me intently. “Now, with the big stuff out of the way, why don’t you show me this Domain of yours.”
2025-12-10 02:12:25 +0000 UTC View Post