Chapter 481: An Understanding
T and Terry were the first ones to the end of the tunnel—as usual—with Rane close behind.
The other members of the unit wereing just after Rane.
Master Limmestare was understandably giddy at the idea of a ss-based lifeform—T could practically feel the man’s soul vibrating with glee.
Master Girt seemed more focused on his friend, Master Limmestare, seemingly ready to snatch the man back if he tried to advance before it was time to do so.
Mistress Vanga’s focus was quite obviously on T—as the vanguard—and the healer’s magics were primed toe to her aid, should T be in need.
Master Clevnis had a hand resting on the sword at his waist and was outwardly calm.
Mistress Cerna was just finishing up a series of floating inscriptions to augment those she’d draped over each of their shoulders. Both sets of magic were designed to dampen and filter sound, given the warnings depicted in the entry hall.
Terry—as was fitting—was faster than T, though she did flicker forward to stand beside him a moment after he stopped at the mouth of the tunnel, using his presence as the source of her aura to move to.
It was interesting to her that he could go wherever he wished, the absence of their aura notwithstanding, but she could only do so with that base of authority.<em>Another thing to work on, just like moving my iron beyond my aura.</em>
He nced her way when she arrived, letting out a contented chirp.
“Thank you. I am trying to use it more often.”
He chirped again, turning to regard thendscape before them.
T did likewise, even though her threefold sight had already taken it in.
<em>Well, to be fair, his threefold perception would have done the same.</em>
The cell was entirelyposed of desert, the sand an odd blue-green color. T could see that it was at least a hundred feet deep, and the cell extended that far up as well.
The whole thing looked to be roughly a mile across, with very little variation in the rolling hills.
As Rane stepped up beside her, he let out a long breath. “It looks like the ocean, held still.”
T frowned… he was right in a sense. It was a bit sparklier than she remembered the ocean being, but possibly on a truly bright, spring day? Yeah, she could see that. “That resonates. It’s beautiful.”
“Indeed.”
Master Limmestare maneuvered himself forward to kneel at the end of the tunnel and put his hand forward. He clearly marveled at the sand that he touched. “No sharp edges. It’s all rounded, all ss. Don’t step out, I don’t know that it would hold you, and you might just plummet straight to the bottom. It wouldn’t be like a fall through the air, but I doubt it would be that much better. More importantly, it would be a pain to get you back out.” His power flexed, but seemed to be rebuffed by the ss. “I can’t do anything with this at all.”
T nodded. “What about with an increased surface area?”
The ss Mage grinned up at her. “Well, given you can stand on <em>air</em> with those magics, yes, I think you’ll be fine with an increase.”
She rolled her eyes, then nodded in return before amplifying the power going to the surface area expansion scripts on her feet and stepping out.
It felt like how walking on syrup might. That wasn’t quite right, though, as it wasn’t sticky. Maybe a viscostic fluid?
Yeah, that was closer.
Not that she’d ever actually done that.
<em>-The swamp in the void-hold?-</em>
<em>Maybe…</em>
There was clearly <em>some</em> coherence to the ss-ball sand, otherwise there couldn’t be dunes, waves, or whatever the rolling hills should be called.
Even so, she had to increase her surface area even further before she felt herself steady, the ss no longer trying to roll around the edges.
She had only taken four steps before the tableau changed.
The whole of the cell began to move, as if it <em>were</em> really the ocean, and it had simply restarted its movement.
The sound would have been deafening without Mistress Cerna’s magic. Their enhanced and reinforced ears would simply have been overwhelmed by the sound to the point of essential deafness rather than actually being damaged, but the effect would have been the same.
T’s helmet helped a bit, but it just wasn’t designed for sound istion.
<em>Bless that woman.</em>
T found that with just a small increase to her scripts beyond the stability she’d already found, she was effectively a buoy, bobbing on the surface.
Thankfully, the motion didn’tst long.
A momentter, a bird rose up from the depths and the whole of the cell stilled, the surface bing a perfectly t, seemingly solid ne of ss.
The bird was… small. It wasn’t the size of a hummingbird—not quite—but it might have been likened to arge sparrow.
Each beat of its wings was apanied by the cascading sound of cracking ss. Those cracks were even visible as waves of jagged white lines within the ss depiction of a bird, though they sealed almost as quickly as they were created.
The effect was very much like the crashing of waves upon a sea-shore.
The movements of the wings were clearly mostly for show, as they were not moving enough to have been keeping the bird aloft.
Terry trilled up at the clear bird, eliciting a grinding, chirp of sorts in return.
He flinched slightly at the sound, but hid it reasonably well, responding with another trill, tilting his head toward T and the unit as a whole.
The bird regarded them for a long moment before shattering, ss pulling up from the ground to join the fragments from the bird, together reforming into the shape of a woman, standing on the still surface.
A dress of woven ss fibers unspooled to drape around her. Her actual form was of solid ss, though, which seemed like a strange choice from T’s perspective.
The ss-woman opened her mouth, and the sound of breaking, cracking, grating ss intensified even as the waves of white cracks radiated around each movement. Through Mistress Cerna’s spells, T was able to pick out the likeness of words.
<em>-I’ll clean that up, one moment…. There.-</em>
With t’s help, T was suddenly able to hear the woman properly. The alternate interface even processed the ss-woman’s words back to the start of what she’d been saying, “Greetings, Archons of Humanity. Long have I slumbered in this ce of my authority. If you do not know, I am Lupe. By yourck of obvious pain at my voice, you havee prepared. I am grateful for that. I do not like harming your kind.”
Her eyes swept them, clear interest in her eyes, but then her gaze jerked back to focus on T.
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“You… you contain echoes of one of my kin, yet you are not as I am. How can this be?” Lupe’s throat whitened with each syble, healing quickly enough to visibly whiten again as she continued to speak. It made an oddly beautiful disy that T could <em>not</em> focus on at the moment.
T nodded, having anticipated the potential for something like this. “So, you are rted to the dasgannach?”
“I am—or was—such a creature, a curse at my very core. That which eventually became me strove and struggled, gathering unto myself my material until, one day, I was simply more than I had been. I believe there were sapients nearby when this happened, but whether they had a hand in the change, I never learned. What are you to my kin?” While it was hard to determine expressions precisely on the see-through face, T had rather a lot of practice doing something simr given her threefold sight. If she read Lupe correctly, she was intensely interested in the answer.
<em>-Yup, you have to be a master sleuth to have deduced that.-</em>
<em>You know, you could just let me feel special…</em>
<em>-I could</em>—<em>and I do</em>—<em>but only when it is warranted.-</em>
T didn’t respond to t, instead choosing to address Lupe, “Two dasgannach were twisted by arcanes and confined in a cor around my neck. Their purpose was as a deterrent, to contain and control me. When I fought back against my captors, the dasgannach were released into me. One took all it could, fled my body and died. The second would have killed me, so I did what I could to keep it close. We eventually came to an understanding.”
“An understanding. Truly?” There was the definite light of hope in the ss-woman’s eyes. “Is this something you could offer others?”
“What we came to could not work between us.” T answered quickly, not wanting Lupe to get her hopes up. “It was an enfolding and intermeshing of desire and purpose.” T allowed a misting of iron dust to manifest and float around her in intricate shapes.
Lupe gasped, eyes widening in a very good imitation of the human facial expression. It was apanied by the sound of cracking and scraping ss, but Mistress Cerna’s workings continued to reduce the ear-rending sound down to merely ufortable. The Refined nature of the unit likely contributed to that reduction as well.
It was odd seeing the ss face whiten all across its visage from microcracks, and T had the fleeting concern that every crack was painful for Lupe. Though, given the bird form’s somewhat unneeded movement, and Lupe’s almost overdone expressions, that was unlikely.
Regardless of the potential pain, the imprisoned didn’t hesitate in expressing her surprise, “Such a strong purpose… It is no wonder that you are so far on your way to Paragon. Around eighty percent if my interpretation is correct.” She had an odd, humorous, knowing look as she said that. “If I understand human advancement, having such a powerful drive underlying who you are would be an incredible boon. If what you did were repeatable by others…?”
T shook her head, even while she took in the contemtive looks of her unit members. “Unfortunately, I don’t have the knowledge or ability to replicate what I did for others.”
“That is understandable. Before my istion here, I was asked if such was possible, and I answered assuredly no. I am d that while I was mistaken, I was not overly so.”
<em>-Well, that does exin why you are advancing through Paragon faster than people who seem… more grounded than you.-</em>
<em>…I’d be offended if you weren’t so correct. So, Paragon requires an eternal goal, understanding who you are and who you want to be, </em>and<em> a powerful drive?</em> That… that was really obvious now that she articted it. For most Refined, immortality was at hand, and they had no real need to advance for any reason. Sure, they were still pursuing advancement, moving onward slowly, but it wasn’t urgent to them. There wasn’t a <em>drive</em> for most of them.
<em>Wait… Rane was the prodigy all along?</em>
<em>-Always has been.-</em>
<em>And we’re just a miracle of circumstance? </em>T added a faux despondence to her thought.
t chuckled. <em>-I wouldn’t go that far. You have worked incredibly hard, survived much, and came out ahead. But we should probably discuss thister.-</em>
<em>Right.</em> T refocused on the cell around her. Thankfully, due to her enhanced cognition, barely a moment had passed while she considered internally. “Regardless, Lupe, I do believe that you and I <em>could</em>e to an understanding of a different sort.”
The woman straightened, sending a quickly healing cascade of cracks through her entire being, which made her look frosted for the briefest of moments. “I listen.”
“I have a soulbound storage that is such that it does not automatically force a bond to any sapient who enters it. Moreover, partially due to the dasgannach that I bound to myself—”
Lupe gasped, sudden realization seeming to strike her. “You expanded my cousin’s authority and sovereignty to include anything in your expanded space, as well as iron regardless of where it is found?”
T held up a finger in correction. “Over what is <em>mine.</em> Yes.” The word ‘mine’ resounded through the cell, seemingly echoed by every bit of ss contained within. “That is how it works.”
Lupe shivered in obvious resonance of the concept. “I am listening.”
T smiled. “The Mages of Humanity have agreed to allow me to take on keeper-ship of cells which are suited to less stringent security. In your case, you came to us and asked to be contained. Even now, you make no move to attempt to gain your freedom. If I were to devour this cell, I could keep you from iming more material and give you a bit of normalcy. You could never leave the expanded space which is bound to me, but you would be able to leave <em>here.</em> You’d be able to interact with others, do whatever you’d like.”
Lupe was already shaking her head. “I think I understand what you will be asking, and if I am right, I will decline. I will not give up what is <em>mine</em>.”
T felt a tingle through her whole body at the final word, clearly sensing a kinship with the idea. Thankfully, T had expected the ss-woman’s response. “I hear you, but I believe that you misunderstand my aim. Do you hold sway over this cell? The air around you? The edges of Existence which contain you? Are any of those yours? Are any of them <em>you</em>?”
Lupe frowned, her brows whitening briefly with the motion and the disquieting sound of splintering reached T’s ears. “No…”
“Then nothing would change. I would not ask you to give up any of who you are. I’ve seen you be discontinuous already. Am I correct that you can separate?”
“I can, but if it is for too long—say, more than a week as humans measure such things—I will diverge and be two.” Her frown deepened. “I am asrge as I am because I had to hunt down all my willful spawn who did not understand the danger we posed to Zeme.”
That made T pale slightly. Lupe had hunted down divergent versions of herself because she felt so strong about preserving Zeme. That sparked a realization in T, and she felt the need to check. Even so, it wasn’t a question. “You aren’t the original, are you.”
Lupe gave her a long, <em>long</em> look. “No. So, that is something we share.”
T jerked back slightly, as if pped. “What do you mean?”
“You bear hallmarks simr to that found within my own copies. Though, from what I can tell, you had no divergence. Since divergence is a part of <em>my</em> nature, I would not have expected it in you, regardless.”
She really didn’t know what to make of what Lupe had said, so she decided to ignore it for now.
<em>-Because that’s a healthy way of dealing with things that has worked so well for you in the past.-</em>
<em>I don’t like you sometimes.</em>
<em>-It is expected for the weak-minded to be jealous of the brilliant.-</em>
<em>…We are the same person.</em>
<em>-And self-loathing is better than jealousy inspired-dislike?-</em>
T grimaced internally. <em>…Moving on.</em>
Before t could say anything further, T smiled at Lupe. “So, given that, your mass can be sequestered either off to one side of the space or in a separately maintained ce, and you can explore the rest of the area at your leisure,ing ‘home’ to yourrger self every day or so.”
Lupe still seemed concerned, at least for a moment. “But I’ll strip your expanded space of—” A considering look came over her as she paused herself mid-sentence. “No, I won’t, not without concerted effort. It would be like oveing a divergent versus meeting up with one in passing. So long as I don’t actively choose to contest you, that just might work…” There was a light in the ss woman’s eyes. “You might even be able to oppose me if I <em>do</em> actively try to im more in a moment of weakness.”
T could literally see a light kindling within the ss structure of the eyes. <em>Where is thating from?</em>
<em>-Nowhere that I can perceive. Must be… T, do you think it might be magic?-</em>
<em>Rust you, t.</em>
<em>-Hey, hey. We already talked about self-loathing.-</em>
T sighed.
Lupe turned away from T for the first time in their conversation, her eyes resting on Master Limmestare even as she pointed at T. “Mage of ss, do you trust this one?”
Master Limmestare was takenpletely off guard, but he still responded with care and tact, “Though I have known her only a short time—on the scale of such things—she has continually shown herself to be dependable, yes.”
Lupe nodded, looking to Mistress Cerna. “You have the aura ofmand. Are you an authority here?”
“I am.” Mistress Cerna answered with a slight bow of her head.
“And you support this decision?”
“The n seems solid enough, yes.”
“And if you were me, would you take the deal?”
That seemed to give Mistress Cerna pause. Even so, the mature Refined responded with a smile, “Absolutely. At the worst, it would be no different than here, and at best, it will be so, <em>so</em> much better.”
Lupe smiled, the edges of her mouth whitening briefly before the fractures healed. “Indeed. Very well, Mistress T. I agree.”
T grinned. “Excellent.”