Chapter 126: Book 2: Loop 15.1 (5)
Chapter 126: Book 2: Loop 15.1 (5)
Chapter 126: Book 2: Loop 15.1 (5)
"Are you his accomplice?"
Whisper's first question is blunt. It stuns me, too—not because of how direct it is, but because of how utterly wrong that assumption is. She stares at me with her arms folded behind her back, her stance regal; if this had been my first time meeting her, I might have assumed that all was well.
Except this isn't how she acts. Whisper doesn't use pomp and ceremony. She's condescending and sarcastic. Her words belittle everyone she speaks to. Regality is not her.
She's afraid.
Whisper's control of her Firmament is far more precise than Vahrkos's, and so it's no surprise that it takes an activation of Firmament Sight for me to be able to identify what she's feeling. But the moment I do, I see the absolute chaos within her.
There's no single ruling emotion I can pinpoint. There are layers and layers of fear, exactly as I suspected. There is rage, white-hot and boiling in the very center of her soul. There are streaks of grief, anxiety, loss. There is pain, rippling all around the edges, as her helplessness chafes against the ruination of her city.
And there's much, much more. What I'm seeing is nothing less than an obsession falling apart. She's spent so long trying to make Isthanok her perfect city, and now it's being destroyed in front of her.
I feel for the people of Isthanok, but I can't bring myself to feel sympathy for Whisper herself. That died along with Tarin. I don't even know exactly how it happened—I'll have to ask him when I start the next subloop—but right now, no matter what I see from her, I have to fight back my own burning rage at the thought of Tarin's death.
Because I can feel him. He might be dead, but there are remnants of his Firmament still left scattered in the laboratory above us. I can tell he fought. I can tell his death wasn't pleasant. If I wanted to, I could use Guardian of Fate, and it would tell me every last, gruesome detail.
That isn't going to help me stay calm, though.
"Does it matter?" I ask. My voice comes out a little colder than I intend. "Your city is falling apart. Aren't you supposed to protect it?"
All the chaos of Whisper's emotions snap to rage, all at once. "Ask me that again if you wish to die."
I take a step forward. "Your city is dying. Why are you staying up here, protected?"
I'm antagonizing her. I'm angrier than I should be. Ahkelios tightens his grip on my shoulder, as if telling me to calm down, and I...
I try. I take a deep breath. Whisper trembles as she stares down at me, her Firmament flickering wildly as she considers whether or not she should attack.
"Kill me, and your city dies with me," I say.
Her eyes narrow. "Explain."
I don't feel inclined to go into the details. "I can reverse what's been done to your city," I say instead.
"You know where the Trialgoer is." Whisper half-breathes out the words; I have to resist the urge to sigh with relief. I don't know how she's managed to misunderstand the situation this badly, but she clearly has. Maybe it has something to do with something Tarin said to her before he died. "Why would you have any control?"
Before I answer, I feel her skill wrap around me. "And tell me the truth."
"Because I can kill him, and the Trial will reset," I say. I feel Ahkelios's grip tighten a little on my shoulders, and I can't help the slight grin that steals across my face; there's no lie quite as good as the truth.
"That won't be enough." Whisper's words are dismissive, bitter. "This is a raid. All consequences will hold."
"True enough." I keep my voice light and unconcerned, though internally, my mind is racing. She knows that this is a raid, which explains the severity of her reaction— but she doesn't know that I'm the Trialgoer. I'm not going to question my luck there. I'll have to play a different card. "In most cases."
"Most?" Whisper doesn't have eyes to narrow, but she steps forward, and I feel a sharp spike in interest.
"Most," I say agreeably. "What do you think changes if one of our Trialgoers is able to capture this new one?"
"What are you talking abo—" She-Who-Whispers freezes mid-sentence as she makes the connection. I see her entire body shudder, a physical reaction to the mere thought. "Teluwat."
"Quite." I have to keep the satisfaction out of my voice.
What are you doing? Ahkelios's panicked voice echoes down my link. What are you talking about?
I have no idea, I admit cheerfully. But it's working, isn't it?
How?! Ahkelios demands, sounding painfully exasperated. I can practically feel it radiating off of him, in fact.
I'm guessing Tarin said something to her, I answer. Whisper stands before us, her hands clenching and unclenching; something's going through her mind, although I don't know what. Watch. All I need to do is plant the seed.
You aren't even using the Firmament sink, Ahkelios grumbles. What was the point in making that?
I'm sure I'll need to use it later. I shrug. I haven't had to lie so far.
But how'd you know she'd even think about Teluwat? Ahkelios asks.
She's obsessed with everything that happens in Isthanok, I say. I doubt there's anything here that happens that she doesn't know about. If Teluwat has enough of a presence here to send assassins after me, then she's going to at least have an inkling that he's around. And he's the only one that has enough power that he might be able to reverse something like this even without a loop. That I know of.Visitt (.)co/m for the latest updates
Ahkelios falls silent. I can feel him still gripping at my shoulder, but he's lost in thought, and whatever he's thinking about, he isn't sharing. I reach up to scratch gently under his chin.
...I'm not a pet, you know, he grumbles, after a solid ten seconds of scratching. I stop, and Ahkelios immediately protests. I didn't say stop.
I snort and continue.
He trails off, and there's a long beat before he continues. "You want me to try to fuse with him?"
"You can do it, can't you?"
"I think so." Ahkelios shifts a little on my shoulder, clearly uncomfortable with the idea. "I don't think I'd be able to do it with most people, but Guard is... he doesn't have the protective layer of Firmament most people do. It's just his core. So I could."
"You don't want to," I say. To my surprise, Ahkelios shakes his head, staring at Guard's body.
"I want to help him," Ahkelios says. He sounds a little like he surprises even himself with the words. "But as he is, he can't defend himself."
"Don't force it," I suggest. "Just... offer. See if he accepts."
Ahkelios nods slowly. "I can do that," he says. He steps forward, standing on Guard's chest, and reaches a hand out to make contact with the automaton's Firmament core.
Guard's acceptance is so quick it surprises the both of us. Temporal Link fills out the metaphorical space between our minds, allowing us to talk to one another with a freedom we've never actually had before. In an instant, he learns who I am, the situation we're in, and what I've been trying to do.
And I learn about him. Who he was, who he is, and who he's still trying to be.
You don't need to save me. That's the first thing Guard tells me. I can hear the sheer exhaustion in his voice. I've lived for far longer than I should have.
To be fair, I'm not sure most of that could be called living, I say dryly. It's a little snarkier than I intend for what's technically our first proper interaction, but to my surprise, Guard actually chuckles. There's a bitter tinge to his amusement.
I cannot disagree with you, he admits. I suppose it's hardly important at the moment. Isthanok is in crisis.
I have to admit, I'm impressed that Guard's first thought is still the safety of Isthanok and its people. If I'd been trapped in my own body, puppeted around as a guard for an entire city, I doubt I'd be feeling nearly so charitable.
Tarin spoke to you, I say.
He said you wanted to save me. Guard says the words, and I feel a warmth flow through the connection we share, along with a series of impressions. He's... letting me in? Letting me see who and what he is.
Guard is incomplete. He's half a soul, held together by Firmament and by Miktik's artifiical core operating like makeshift neurons for an ephemeral consciousness.
But he's no less of a person. He feels, and he feels strongly. I can feel his exhaustion, his willingness to let go—and I can also feel the fire within him, the part of him that wants to live.
Perhaps more surprising is the fact that that fire appears to have been stoked by meeting me. It's not a conscious memory anymore, but I sense the subconscious impressions. Fleeting images and thoughts of a Trialgoer being shaped by his Trials, surprise at my resilience, an odd fondness as he catches on to what I've been doing through the loops.
An imprint written into his Firmament. He's so weak, lacking even the most basic of protection, that the events of the loops stay written into his Firmament. He remembers. Not so long ago, it was a lucid memory—when Whisper still controlled him, he could remember everything, even when time rewound. But as he lost more and more of himself, he remembered less and less.
But the impressions remain. The feelings, if not the memories themselves. Fragments. Observation, then admiration.
A Trialgoer willing to defy the Integrators. A Trialgoer clinging to morality.
He doesn't want what happened to Whisper to happen again. He wants to live. He wants to help.
I do want to save you, I answer quietly, and then equally quiet, I add, but I don't know how. I would wait until after this raid to figure it out, but...
Guard knows it just as well as I do. Whisper set him up to be able to control multiple bodies; even now, Guard's proxies are scattered all over the city of Isthanok. Whisper's been straining herself loop after loop, even if she isn't consciously aware of the fact that she's doing so—she can't push herself to keep control of every one of those bodies to protect the city.
But Guard can. He's my best answer on how to minimize the casualties here. If I can figure this out within the few loops I have, Isthanok might be able to emerge from this... well, not unscathed, but less scathed than it otherwise would have been.
I take a breath. What condition do you have, exactly?
My Firmament is unstable, Guard replies. Your friend told me you'd be able to figure out more. Maybe even fix it.
Fix it? I frown at the thought. It implies this is something I know how to do already, but it's not like I've spent any of my loops practicing with the medical applications of Firmament—
—but I have been practicing with Firmament. Quite a lot. More than would be reasonable for most Trialgoers. The thought strikes me and I reach out with my Firmament sense, almost unwilling to believe it could be so easy, but for once, things go my way.
I'm right.
It's the layers. Guard's foundational Firmament is so strong that the outermost layers of it have peeled off, leaving it raw and exposed; it's no longer able to keep itself together.
But I've practiced with almost exactly this. The process of finding a way to keep power locked within layers of Firmament without leaking through is exactly the process I've been working with when it comes to imbuement.
This is going to take me a while, I say. And you're going to need to trust me.
I do, Guard says. Sincerity echoes through the link—he means it.
"Ahkelios?" I speak out loud. "Make sure Whisper doesn't mess me up."
"What?" Ahkelios protests. "How am I supposed to stop her?"
"Tell her that Guard will die if I get interrupted," I say dryly. "That should make her rethink doing anything stupid."
novelnext