Episode Six – Echo of the Fractured Past
Episode Six – Echo of the Fractured Past
“Adder! What are you doing?”
Elena asked with an entertained smile.
Without tilting his head,
Adder lifted his index finger to his lips as he kept his ear against the
laboratory wall. Curiosity got the best of Elena and compelled her to set her
ear against the same wall, but she could not hear anything other than an electrical
hum from another room. She showed her partner a quizzical look, but Adder shook
his head and continued listening to sounds elsewhere in the building. After a
few seconds, he stood upright and excitedly asked, “Did you hear that?”
Elena shook her head quickly,
but Adder smiled mischievously and motioned toward the door. He explained,
“It’s Ockham and Annabel! They’re definitely making out; I’m certain of it. And
here they thought they could get one over on ol’ Adder Neonia, but that’s not
happening! Sure they’re the star scientists of our lab, but I’m the star
detective. And I think our coworkers are conducting an exploration that isn’t
covered by our grant… if you catch my drift!”
“Oh my god can we go check?
Please? They’re so cute together, but I really really want to catch
them. They’ll never live it down,” Elena said with a giggle.
Adder nodded excitedly and
opened the door to their laboratory, letting her leave first. As they quickly
made their way toward the astrophysics lab, Adder accelerated and peeked his
head into the electrical engineering lab. He yelled into the room, “Hey,
Silvia! Altair! We’re about to go spoil Ockham’s fun, if you know what I mean!
Want to come with us?”
But there was no response.
Elena peeked her head into the doorway right beside Adder, but a quick scan of
the empty lab did not show anything of interest. Disassembled circuits and
solenoids scattered the largest workbench, but Altair sat alone in the shadows
with a series of notes spread out on the counter. He had a calculator by his
right hand and an open textbook by his left, but he continued scribbling
equations onto the page without paying any attention to the interlopers. Elena
narrowed her eyes and peered through the fluorescent lighting; she recognized
his differential equation as one that involved both capacitors and inductors.
“Yeah, I think I’d rather be
here. Silvia’s already headed that way,” Altair answered without glancing up
from his equation.
Elena tilted her head,
wondering why Silvia would have already been on the way, but Adder recommenced
his journey before she could ask. She curiously followed Adder toward the
astrophysics lab, but she struggled to keep up; her prosthetic leg kept
dragging on the linoleum floor. But when Adder saw her trying to catch up, he
accelerated and quickly rushed through the doors to Ockham’s lab. Elena
scratched her head, wondering why Adder had not held the door open for her as
he had in the past, but she continued after him.
But when Elena finally
reached the door and pulled herself inside, her four friends loudly shouted
together, “Happy birthday!”
Elena widened her eyes in
shock as Ockham and Silvia cheered and sounded noisemakers. Adder threw
handfuls of confetti into the air, and Elena watched with a bright smile as it
rained down around her. Annabel shouted gleefully in the background as she carried
a chocolate cake with flaming candles. Adder and Elena hungrily watched Annabel
approach her friends with the cake, and after she set it down on the counter,
she warmly embraced Elena.
“I hope your birthday is
every bit as beautiful as you! I baked you this cake, and I really hope you
like it,” Annabel said sweetly to her friend.
Elena smiled and returned her
embrace as Ockham reached into a cabinet for napkins and paper plates. Silvia
placed a cone-shaped hat on her head before doing the same for Adder and
Annabel. Elena opened her mouth and tried to express her heartfelt thanks, but
tears and a breathy sob surfaced instead. She quickly fought to stifle her cry,
but the damage had been done; her friends quickly noticed her emotional
reaction.
“I’m sorry, I’m so sorry! I
don’t mean to cry, it’s just… no one’s ever made this big of a deal out of my
birthday before. Not friends, not family, certainly not coworkers. You guys are
so sweet! My favorite people in the world! I can’t believe you did this,” Elena
confessed between breathy sobs.
As she fought to clear the
tears from her eyes, Elena caught a glimpse of the notes which covered the
nearby counter. While she recognized some relativity equations and a
formulation of the universe’s expansion, she noticed a series of wave equations
with matrices that she could not decipher. But when she smelled the delicious
aroma of Annabel’s chocolate cake, Elena quelled her curiosity and let her
hunger take hold. While Annabel and Ockham searched the cabinets for plastic
knives, Elena turned toward Adder and smiled shyly.
“You really knew exactly how
to lure me here, didn’t you?” Elena asked with a grin.
Adder answered, “Of course I
did! Don’t act surprised; I know you better than anyone! We planned this whole
thing weeks ago. It was worth it for that smile!”
Elena opened her mouth in
protest, but Annabel interrupted and said, “Before you blow out the candles,
don’t forget to make a wish!”
Elena nodded excitedly and
closed her eyes in contemplation. After selecting her wish, she smiled and took
a deep breath. She pursed her plump lips and blew out air with all her
strength.
But when Elena opened her eyes
to see if she succeeded, she saw the dim daylight of a spacious room filled
with scores of wounded people. She saw familiar faces of nurses and doctors
shuffling between their patients, but their expressions could not hide their
emotions. They had more patients than ever before, hardly any supplies with
which to save them, and nowhere else to run if the Adriatic Empire came to
attack again. Elena nervously lifted her gaze and saw the shape of someone
sitting at the foot of her bed. Still emerging from the dream she had
witnessed, Elena forced herself to remember the disastrous state of the city.
The warm faces in her dream had no basis in reality, nor did any building
contain the machinery she had seen. She shuddered as she considered the
possibility that Romulo’s death had been just another dream, but when she sat
upright and saw Altair’s face, she let out a quiet sigh. Altair noticed her
disappointment, but he did not turn his gaze toward her.
“I think you were in my dream. I
didn’t really see your face, but they said your name,” Elena muttered.
Altair nodded disinterestedly
and answered, “They said my name repeatedly here. I think that may have
percolated into your dream. Believe me; there’s no running from this reality.”
Elena perked up and narrowed her
brown eyes, studying Altair as he stared out over the makeshift hospital. While
Romulo would have been rushing to help anyone he could, Altair stared at the
patients with something in between apathy and animosity. The skin on his left
arm reflected the fluorescent light with a shimmer, revealing a different
texture than the dark skin on the rest of his body. A touch of sweat settled on
his short hair. A pair of bruises speckled his sharp chin.
“I’m so sorry. I know he was
your friend; I know you loved him too. Romulo died trying to protect me, but I
won’t let it be in vain. I’ll find Adder. I’ll make him pay,” Elena muttered
with her tired voice.
But Altair shook his head and
said, “That would be a waste of our resources. As much as you want to fight
back, you must know on some level that you don’t have the skill to avenge him.
At least not yet. Don’t let your animosity get you killed. Don’t let your
emotions rob this world of its only chance for freedom.”
“Only chance for freedom…? That
doesn’t make sense. That makes no sense. I can’t even stand upright on my own;
I lost my leg chasing Adder. Sorry. I can’t save anyone, but I don’t need my
leg to fight back. I can kill Adder if I get close enough. I just can’t run
away afterward,” Elena replied.
“If I can survive long enough,
you’ll one day come to see your missing limb as an advantage; I guarantee that.
It’s the only way I managed to save you in the first place… or don’t you
remember?” Altair asked.
Elena reminisced about the time
she spent hobbling through the rain, pushing her broken body past its limit
just to find her friend. She remembered the horror of seeing Romulo’s head
placed upon a pike for all the city to see, taunting the civilians with the
death of their last hope. But when she had fallen to the cobblestone ground on
her bruised forearms, she fell unconscious but stayed lucid enough to retain a
fraction of her surroundings. Adder Neonia had emerged from a nearby alley,
knowing his trap would lure her back into his grasp. But before the heartless
enemy could come close enough to grab her, Altair appeared and hoisted her into
his strong arms.
“How did you manage to save me?”
asked Elena.
Altair smirked with pride and
answered, “It’s a simple arithmetic; no one runs faster than I can. Besides, I
already told you that there are advantages to having an unusual limb.”
Elena glanced again at the
unusual material on Altair’s arm, but Altair continued, “I got Adder to admit
something before I ran away. He said that he doubted his instinct at first, but
one of his Rampagers detected something special about you. It seems you’re more
permanent than the entities we manifest, but you yourself are essentially a
Rampager. You are an entity conjured from a different reality, just like all
the sorcerers we summon. I believe it’s your permanence that has him desperate
to catch you.”
Although Elena found herself
skeptical of this conclusion, she tilted her head and asked, “Why would that
matter? I can’t cast spells. I can’t do anything he can’t.”
“I cannot say with certainty,
but the calculation seems simple enough to me. In one way or another, you are
not from this reality. This world has suffered from the Adriatic Empire for
decades, and none of us could stop them. That means if anyone can, then it has
to be you. Call it process of elimination or even Occam’s Razor, but Adder’s
not the only one who sees your potential. To be honest, I never saw it myself,
but Romulo asked me to protect you if anything ever happened to him. You were
my best friend’s last wish, so I have no choice but to believe that there’s a
good reason. I owe him that much,” explained Altair.
“I get it. I think I get it. I
just don’t want you to misplace your hope. I don’t feel like I can save anyone
right now; all I can do is make him pay. Can we… get out of here? I don’t care
if there’s nowhere to go,” Elena muttered.
Altair nodded and then passed
her a cane which lay beside the cot on the floor. After Elena grabbed hold, she
pushed herself upright with a pained grunt and balanced a portion of her weight
on her cane. Despite the pain shooting through her overworked leg, Elena
managed to slowly push herself into motion. Altair wordlessly led her toward
the nearest exit of the makeshift hospital, but Elena paused before she
wandered too far from her cot. As she used her right hand to support her weight
with the cane, she felt along her jacket to make sure she still had her
belongings. She felt a total of five monoliths in her pockets, but her spell
cards were left in a state of disarray. She glanced at them briefly and saw
them shuffled without order. Some belonged to Romulo, and others had been with
her since she first awakened on the shore. Some faced upward while others faced
down. She peered one last time at the mattress to ensure that she still had her
weapons, and then she stepped into the gloomy daylight.
As Elena and Altair stepped
slowly through the crowded urban camp, Elena confessed, “I woke up three times
in the night, and every time I prayed that my memory was just a bad dream. A
bad dream and nothing more. That’s what he always thought, right? That all my
memories were just dreams of a different world.”
“But as lovely as that would be,
I think you’ll find that reality is rarely ever that convenient. The enemy knew
their targets, and they struck with all they had. They scoured my home and
killed our friend; they’ve overtaken this city. Between the monks and the few
soldiers we have left, this is the last part of the city they haven’t occupied.
That isn’t a dream; it’s just a shitty reality,” Altair answered with a sigh.
As she stared upon scores of
forlorn faces, Elena said, “All of my memories felt like a lie whispered by a
fantasy of peace, or maybe… I just never understood the madness of a world at
war. He showed me this world, and he was all I had to hold onto.”
“As great a man as he was,
Romulo had an upper limit. He’s one of the strongest conjurers I’ve ever known,
but he knew all along that he would never be the man to save our dying world. I
think that was why he was adamant that I save you; we don’t yet know your
limits. As irrational as it may seem, it’s always smarter to pick a tenuous
chance over certain failure. Try to remember that,” explained Altair.
Elena nodded nervously and then
gazed across the crowd. Families and friends huddled together, but they hardly
exchanged any words. Soldiers and monks alike stood protectively at the edge of
the camp, protecting both the citizens and the monastery at the center of it
all. Even from a distance, Elena could see that the monks wore gray clothes and
stood intrepidly as protectors, but the same could not be said of the soldiers.
She noticed that even Altair showed signs of anxiety; his shaky grimace widened
as he stared at the hopeless crowd.
“How did everyone get here in
just a single night?” Elena asked.
Altair shook his head and said,
“That’s the thing; you weren’t out for just one night. You kept waking up and
falling back asleep, almost like you’re hiding from the world, choosing bright
reverie over a dreary reality. Romulo’s death really took a lot out of you.”
“…I didn’t know that. I had no
idea! I think I get it then, why you seem so nervous. You’re afraid all your
hopes are pinned on someone too weak to face reality,” she muttered.
“I couldn’t have put it better
myself; that is precisely what I’m afraid of. I know it must seem impersonal-”
But Elena interrupted and said,
“No, no, I get it, I get it. Your city has fallen, you’re at war, and your
enemy has taken everything they want. Your last chance didn’t wake up
for days. Well… that changes now. Please tell me, Altair, what do I have to do
to become stronger?”
A faint smile interrupted
Altair’s grim expression, but it quickly faded as he walked into the crowd. He
waved his hand so that Elena would follow him, so she carefully stepped between
people. Her leg ached already from the movement, but she placed her cane very
carefully so that she would not mistakenly trip herself. Altair guided her away
from the makeshift hospital and toward the monastery. Its white walls
contrasted with the grayness of the overcast sky, and people leaned against its
pillars without anything better to do. A picnic table sat outside the
monastery, but Elena noticed wooden lines on the ground, indicating that the table
had been dragged a short distance to get here.
“Why are we stopping here?”
asked Elena.
“Because you aren’t a good
enough conjurer to even bother learning from the monks yet. I intend to help
change that. You can consider yourself a soldier-in-training, if you like,”
Altair answered.
“Fine, fine, but don’t get me
wrong. I’m not a soldier. I’m not doing this to defend the city; I’m not even
doing this for myself. This is about revenge. Whether or not I ever knew Adder
Neonia, I will be the one to kill him,” Elena declared.
Altair tilted his head with
intrigue, but then he took a deep breath and shook his head. He offered his left
arm and partially crouched, allowing Elena the perfect chance to grab on and
lower herself onto the bench. Once she stabilized herself, she set her spell
cards and her monoliths onto the picnic table. Altair sat down beside her and
sifted through her cards, immediately recognizing many of Romulo’s favorite
spells. He examined many of the cards in quiet contemplation.
After a short while, Altair
said, “You have an interesting collection of cards, that’s for sure. They’re
pretty incohesive; some are downright bad. It almost makes me wish I hadn’t
given away most of my cards to other soldiers, but what’s done is done. It’s
not that they don’t work together; it’s just that the way I’ve seen you play
doesn’t work toward anything.”
“I wanted to ask. I’ve been
meaning to ask. Don’t take this the wrong way, but you have a really high
opinion of yourself. It’s pretty annoying. Why do you need to find someone else
to fight for you if you’re so good?” Elena asked with a mischievous smile.
“Just call it a consequence of
the one fight I managed to lose. The man I fought was an absolute monster; he
was the only one who could ever overcome me in a fair match. As I’m sure you’re
smart enough to understand, this was no friendly match between competitors. His
sorcerer destroyed my arm and almost took my life; it’s practically a miracle
that I managed to survive,” Altair explained.
Elena widened her eyes and
stared at his left arm, noticing that its sleek material merely resembled his
dark skin; it was an altogether different substance. Upon closer inspection,
Elena noticed electric signals flashing deep inside the prosthetic. She
wondered if his prosthetic arm was part of the reason he had managed to carry
her and escape Adder.
“I hope this doesn’t sound mean.
I don’t mean this to sound mean. But if you’re basically undefeated, then why
was Romulo considered this city’s strongest conjurer?” Elena asked.
Altair rolled his eyes and
answered, “It’s because you didn’t let me finish explaining. I can still
conjure the occasional sorcerer, but I’m physically limited from participating
in a full-scale showdown. You’ll see what I mean in time; for now you only need
to know that I cannot fight at full power. I probably never will again, but
even that is more than enough to overcome weak conjurers. In the meantime, I
think it’s best that we discuss strategy. Tell me, Elena. What do you know
about the different-colored monoliths?”
“Well… it’s a little hard to say
for sure. I mean I know they’re limited, like I can only use a violet monolith
to make my Summoner of Cyclones. I can’t do that with another color, but I
could use it to make a different sorcerer instead. I just have to pick
carefully. Once I pick, I can’t pick again. And it takes so long to recharge
the monolith that I’d be dead before I ever get the chance,” Elena answered.
Altair nodded slowly as he let
out a quiet sigh, and then he said, “You’re right, but those are only the
basics. Anyone who’s ever watched a conjurer could tell you that. Think about
violet sorcerers in general. What have you noticed?”
Elena paused for a moment and
closed her eyes, forcing her memory to envision the violet-monolith sorcerers
she had seen in the past. She remembered that Adder had manifested his
Spiritualist of the Deep Abyss, and it enchanted him with an ethereal glow which
fueled future attacks. Before that, Elena fought face-to-face against the
Princess of Swirling Cinders, which materialized a powerful spell when she
entered battle. Shortly before that, Romulo fought against a Guardian Angel of
the Forest which materialized a spell card of its own. When Elena and Romulo
fought for the first time, she manifested her Summoner of Cyclones to create a
series of powerful spells.
“It’s almost like… they create a
resource. Something they can use for later. They can make big changes all on
their own!” Elena surmised.
Altair showed a small smile and
said, “Now you’re getting it. I’ve heard it said that patterns appear even in
chaos; even randomness itself has some structure. Physically speaking, violet
sorcerers have nothing in common; they do not even seem to come from the same
reality. That said, they all serve a similar function in battle. They act as
starters, like they set you up for the course of the fight. Every time I’ve
spoken to another conjurer with an opinion worth anything, they’ve agreed that
your violet sorcerer is the most important. Even more than the black sorcerers.
Do you know why it is that those could be considered the closest competition?”
Elena shook her head since she
had only heard of two black sorcerers since she arrived in Aegea. Illano’s
Knight of Broken Brambles was a powerful warrior who led a powerful assault,
but Romulo’s Typhoon Paladin had repeatedly proven itself as an incredible
threat. Both black-monolith sorcerers had demonstrated themselves as forceful
attackers and agile movers. They both could sustain a heavy strike without
crumbling.
Altair explained, “Black
sorcerers are generally the most dangerous. Conjurers compel them to ruthlessly
dismantle their enemies’ defenses. They hit hard. In the end, a black sorcerer
is often the last one standing in a showdown between conjurers. It’s a simple
arithmetic; your violet sorcerer usually starts the fight, and you use your
black sorcerer to end it.”
Elena nodded excitedly as she
stared upon the black monolith. But when she set her hand upon it, she felt a
soothing sensation like static electricity. She almost felt like she could
detect a gentle vibration from the monolith, even though she had only ever seen
it manifest the Typhoon Paladin. Even though that same sorcerer had unleashed a
devastating storm when she first arrived, she could sense a softness that she
had not seen before. She smiled as she recalled the many times when Romulo had
used that same sorcerer to save himself – even when he fought against her.
Altair reached next for the
green monolith and said, “Green sorcerers tend to be weaker, but it’s not a
universal rule or anything like that. Some are fast, some are slow. Some are
hardy, others crumble in a single hit. But for some inexplicable reason, they
all seem to help support the other sorcerers around them. Take Romulo’s
favorite greens, for instance. His Dancing Wind Priestess would race across the
battlefield and support his other sorcerers, whether in battle or just bringing
them spell cards. Hell, his Quicksand Carrier would even carry his other
sorcerers anywhere they needed to go. Some help protect their allies from
curses or support their magic. They go about it in different ways, but it is
statistically impossible that this pattern is mere conjecture. Make sure you
keep that in mind as you move forward.”
Elena nodded slowly as she
stared upon the green monolith in Altair’s hand, envisioning the two green
sorcerers that she had seen Romulo manifest in the past. She showed a small
smile as she considered that it was now up to her to use his weapons correctly,
but the pain quickly became overwhelming. Instead of caving, she reached for
her blue monolith and held it closely.
“Is there a pattern for the blue
monolith? I know Romulo had a couple he liked, but mine… seems like I usually
make my Underwater Illusionist. I like that one,” Elena whispered.
“I saw you use it against
Romulo, and I must confess it functions nicely. Romulo would often use his Ice
Crystal Barricade, sometimes the Last of the Valkyries. Both decent sorcerers,
of course, but a blue sorcerer gives structure to your entire operation. They
stand on a scale between a fortress and a tank; they serve to defend themselves
and your operation, often dealing a heavy hit in the meantime. Some people use
them as just another layer of support, others use them as a resilient weapon. I
see merits to both strategies. Is that consistent with everything you’ve seen?”
Altair asked.
Elena nodded enthusiastically
and murmured with agreement, remembering the time she relied wholly on her
Underwater Illusionist to combat the Princess of Swirling Cinders. It fought
fiercely and withstood many strikes to overcome the enemy. But when she shook
herself free from her daydream, Elena realized that Altair glared at the red
monolith with an unwavering stare; he suppressed a faint tremor which coursed
through his body. Elena could see a profound sadness in Altair’s eyes as he
grabbed his fallen friend’s red monolith. He took a deep breath as he prepared
to speak, and he stood up from the picnic table with the stone still in his
hand.
Altair explained, “The
red-monolith sorcerers are hard to categorize as they defy a simple pattern.
They all seem to do wildly different things, but they serve a similar purpose.
They’re problem solvers. They serve primarily to carry you out of a hopeless
situation, or to tip the scales in your favor when you need them most. Many
conjurers strive to access as many red sorcerers as possible… ‘cause with a
wide enough toolbox, you can get yourself out of any situation. I think that’s
the idea. Of course, ol’ Romulo went another way with it. Instead of having
seven sorcerers to handle seven situations, he only ever used one – a sorcerer
with the power to materialize the right spell to save him. To tell you the
truth, I disagree with that approach for more than just the obvious reason. But
at the end of the day, he was loyal to the sorcerer he loved most. I’m sure
you’ve seen-”
“Yes, I’ve seen it; I’ve seen
him many times. The Alchemist of Astroconvergence. Romulo’s favorite. He always
used it when he was in a jam. Although… it’s probably not normal to save the
red for last, is it?” asked Elena.
Altair smiled and shook his
head. After he set the red monolith back down onto the picnic table, Altair
answered, “Now you’re getting it. Most people find that it’s too late for the
red sorcerer to save them if they save it for last. Of course, there are other
reasons as well. In the matches I’ve fought and watched, I can say with
statistical significance that the red sorcerer is transformed more than any
other. Usually this happens when… oh. That word doesn’t mean anything to you,
does it? Elena, do you know about the Scroll of Transformation?”
Elena tilted her head in
contemplation and answered, “It sounds familiar, like an echo or a faded dream.
I don’t know what it is. I don’t know what it does.”
“I cannot say I understand the
mechanics of it. In some ways it seems to violate the laws of thermodynamics,
and I’ve only seen its magic wielded by exceptional conjurers. While sorcerers
generally cast magic through which we do battle, we as conjurers are usually
limited. All we can do is manifest or compel our sorcerers and hope for the
best. It’s no surprise you haven’t seen it, but a truly powerful conjurer can
also materialize the Scroll of Transformation. It takes a toll on your stamina
of course, but it doesn’t matter as most soldiers here can’t do it in the first
place,” Altair explained.
“Okay, that’s pretty awesome! I
want to do that, I wanna learn how! But… I still don’t know what it does,
you know?”
Altair smiled and nodded as he took a deep breath. He set his hand into her pile of spell cards on the bench and slowly fanned them out. She stared at the peculiar flesh on his prosthetic arm as it swept across her cards. He could practically sense her curiosity even from a distance, and she realized Altair enjoyed this explanation. While he had been distant and conceited every other time they spoke, he seemed to be easygoing when he had the chance to educate.
Altair finally answered, “Have
you ever conjured the wrong sorcerer by mistake? Or you got in a situation
where you wished it was someone else? Let’s say your sorcerer exhausted all its
magic or becomes too tired to attack. What if you could rejuvenate it with the
strength of another? You could command a powerful onslaught with a spell like
that. Once you become powerful enough to wield the Scroll of Transformation,
you will have the power to transform one sorcerer into another… as long as it’s
the same color.”
Elena widened her brown eyes and asked with wonder, “How do I get the power to do that?
Altair gazed at the monastery and answered, “By becoming a stronger conjurer. There’s no secret trick to it; you don’t gain it when you’re desperate. Emotional. Calculating. There’s no formula that just spits this weapon into your hand, or if there is, it’s not one that I’ve found. All you can do is practice, and as long as the monks believe that you want to protect the innocent, they will train you. What is your stance on prevarication? Are you willing to lie for a little taste of power?”
“It’s not that I don’t
want to protect the innocent… I would rather them be safe in a perfect world.
But it’s like you said. I don’t belong in this world. I don’t belong anywhere. There
was one thing I cared about here, and Adder Neonia took it away. I don’t care
who he is in my dreams. I’ll do anything it takes to bring him down.”
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