Showing posts with label TearsOfTheGods. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TearsOfTheGods. Show all posts

Monday, May 18, 2020

Tears of the Gods Chapter 9 Updated

Not that I expect many people care, but I made a large-ish addition to Part 9 of the Tears of the Gods. That is the first time I have gone back and made a major revision of a previously written chapter. This was needed to more properly introduce a character that plays an important part in chapters 10-12 at least, and possibly beyond, when and if further chapters ever get written.

Does that mean that Tears of the Gods is back on and will be someday finished? Maybe. I don't want to make any promises in that regard though because I have done that several times already just to let them slip, but I do really, really want to finish Tears. It is the only novel-length thing I have ever written, and while it has essentially zero chance of real publication, it is a story in my brain that wants to escape onto the page even so. Plus I think it would be cool to call myself a novelist as well as a short-story writer and poet.

Stay tuned!

Sunday, March 31, 2019

Tears of the Gods, Part Eleven - The Pursuit of Power

This is part eleven of this story. Chapters one through ten can be found at the Tears of the Gods table of contents page, along with important disclaimers and whatnot. I know it's been a long time since the last update; sorry about that. Enjoy!

***

Previously in "Tears of the Gods"

The small roomwhat had the servitor called it? The elevator?—bore Gormin and his new "friends" away from the maze of pipes and the raging bellowheart, back to the Arechive and presumed safety.

Yimoul-Za  narrated their adventures to Lady Isla: the arena, the chronal feeders, the sudden appearance of Tempus, the Krai. Isla hung on his every word, gasping at the dangers they'd faced and beaming and clapping at their triumphs.

Off in the distance, a large, wriggling globe rolled off the edge of the Hub platform. Gormin squinted at it. It was a ball of captured people, just as Frater Neymich had described.

The rest of the group was up and fighting by now, but the huge purple wasps were harrying them, keeping them away from the tunneler that continued to slam itself against one of the building's spine-like pillars, which crunched worryingly in response to the abuse.

Tempus wrapped a cloth around the cut on his hand. With a hint of sadness, he noted that not all of his companions had been in the future that he'd seen, and some of those he'd seen in the future were not present in the present—Syrus and Kiraz both seemed to be missing. His eyes came to rest finally on Tlecha, the white-haired ultraterrestrial being who'd been pressed into service by Eighth Worlders and escaped by traveling countless millions of years into her future.

A varjellen approached, trying to get him to pay shins to fight a jiraskar supposedly contained in his tent. Tempus ignored him.

***

Date: 9th Vaen in the 402nd Year of the Founding

Tlecha

The temperature in the atrium was dropping noticeably. The huge hole in the glass ceiling Tempus had made was rapidly letting out the building's stored-up greenhouse warmth.

Tlecha sighed and sniffed a vividly red-and-pink summer flower. All these will likely be dead in a matter of hours, she mused.

She shook her head to clear it and continued searching for... what, exactly? Gormin and Tempus' reasons for breaking into the closed silster factory were vague at best. She explored the rows of exotic flowers and plants, drifting away from the rest of the group.

She could hear Gormin and Tempus speculating as to the purpose of the flowers a couple of rows over. "The flowers are very colorful," Gormin was saying. "Perhaps fabric dye is made from them for the silster, in case someone wants, say, a chequered red and gold silster garment. I've never owned a piece of silster, and have no idea how well it takes dye. More likely the flowers are for some illegal purpose unrelated to the silster, since the factory is closed for silster-production but these flowers are still being taken care of. Or they were, until 'someone' opened the greenhouse roof to the winter sky." She heard Gormin chuckling at his own odd humor.

Voloidion made a discovery and called the rest of the group over. It was a sliding metal mesh gate at the far end of the atrium. Through the slats in the gate could be seen a smallish square cubicle with a metal pull handle on the far wall.

Jilandri came up next to them, bearing a pouch of pollen extracted from the atrium's flowers. "I think I’ve seen something like this before. I think it’s a lift box, for traveling vertical-like." She slid open the gate.

Gormin nodded. "Aye, the misnamed Order of Truth had one like this in their cursed Arechive. They called it an elevator." He stepped into the box. "Let's see where it goes. I am starting to suspect that the circus outside is just a cover to loot this 'closed' factory. Which, given that flowers don't normally bloom in mid-winter without human intervention, is evidently not as closed as it is made to appear. It's not really our business, but it is interesting enough to take a look."

"Yeah," said Jilandri. "Personally, I want to know what kind of activity the Pieriant is masking at this facility." She entered the elevator and raised an eyebrow at Tlecha. "Coming down with me?"

Tlecha bowed her head. "I shall accompany you," she answered.

***

Syrus

"A good effort," said the purple-skinned varjellen carnie. "You scored well, but not the main prize. Here, accept this medallion as a memento." The varjellen handed Syrus a gold-tinted strongglass medallion on a rawhide lanyard. On the glass medal was inscribed I fought a jiraskar and lived.

Syrus, feeling a little disappointed, took the medal and put it around his neck. Fighting the simulated jiraskar had brought him back to his youth and some of the fun times he'd had in a simulator owned by a family friend back home.

He hopped down from the wagon that bore the "jiraskar" tent with its varjellen barker and looked around for his friends. After a few moments, he caught a glimpse of Yimoul-Za disappearing down an alley beside an abandoned factory of some kind. He followed.

Guards were halfheartedly watching the factory's main entrance, and one side-alley was blocked by the circus itself, but Syrus managed to slip into another side alley without being noticed. The alley curved around the back of the factory, and there he found a door leading in, standing open. The door had nails through it as if it had been nailed shut and subsequently pried back open. Yimoul-Za must've gone this way, he thought. With a quick backward glance, he entered the factory and quietly pulled the door to.

He found himself in what appeared to be a reception room or office. A chalkboard on the wall read "Welcome to Dzantis Silster!" Syrus frowned. Why does Dzantis Silster sound familiar? A fancy desk made from the ribcage of some large beast and several padded chairs were arrayed around the room, under a thick layer of dust. One of the chairs was overturned. On the desk were several scraps of advertising scrip with prices and services offered for bespoke tailoring of silster, either as complete garments or trim for armor and such. Curious, Syrus flipped through the pile of leathery scrip. The most recent advertisement bearing a date was dated 397 YF, about five years old. A door-less passage lead out east, wood-paneled and hung with pictures. There was also a closed, pentagon-shaped door to the west.

Syrus guessed that Yimoul-Za had gone down the passage. As he passed, he glanced at the pictures on the wall; they appeared to be drawings and paintings of people wearing golden silster garments of various styles.

At the other end of the passage was a spacious atrium packed with row upon row of brightly colored flowers, grown high enough to obscure his view of the other side of the room. A breath of cold air made him shiver. He looked up. Someone had knocked a ragged hole in the atrium's glass ceiling. Since the flowers did not yet appear to be dead, it must have been recent. Syrus made his way between two rows of flowers, taking care to avoid stepping on the fragments of broken glass.

He heard a female voice ahead and off to the left. Tlecha? He wasn't sure. He advanced cautiously. Just before he rounded the corner at the end of the row, he heard some kind of machinery crank into action. He peered out cautiously from behind the flowers. Beyond a mesh metal gate, he glimpsed the group packed into an elevator, descending quickly out of sight.

"W- wait!" he called. But it was too late; he had just missed them.


***

Tlecha

The elevator banged to a halt at the bottom of the shaft. Tlecha tried raising the lever that controlled the elevator to go back for Syrus, but it was no use. The elevator was stuck.

"Probably power," Jilandri speculated aloud. "Going up takes more power than going down. The installation's power reserves are probably low."

Gormin grunted. "Well, no use staying here." He slid aside the elevator's gate and drew his sword.

Narrow beams of flickering purple light crisscrossed the octagonal room beyond. There were five waist-high domes set in the floor. Gormin stepped forward, allowing the light to play over him.

"Ah," said Jilandri, too late. "Those might be..."

Two of the domes split open and retracted into the floor. Floating metal spheres, each with a single reddish electric eye, began surging from the open domes.

"...security beams."

Tlecha began to sweat as the spheres scanned the group with their baleful red eyes. An unpleasant memory was making itself felt just beyond the edge of her awareness. She frowned. Have I seen these things before?

She realized with horror she had. "No," she breathed. She sank to her knees, shaking. "But how? How? No one knew! No one..."

***

Date: IX ides of Tludusp in the 11,074,608th Year Prior to the Founding

Tlecha considered the device. The brain-spike.

Mlikix sighed. "Are you having second thoughts? Once we break in, we're committed. There'll be no going back."

Tlecha set her jaw and shook her head, saying nothing. The two of them exited the hovercar. It was a nice day in the capital. Indeed, every day in the capital was as equally nice as any other.

The operation went smoothly, at first. It was obvious to most people that Tlecha and Mlikix, though generally very human-like, had an ineffable otherness about them that marked them as ultraterrestrials, beings from another dimension. Few humans were bold enough to challenge an ultra, to ask them what are you doing here? Of course, Tlecha and Mlikix had identicards, but these were forgeries, and their claimed authorization from the Omnicognant would not have passed a routine double-check.

Nonetheless, they were waved through checkpoint after checkpoint on the way to Dimensional Transfer Node 4QL. No one ordered the pair to be brain-scanned. No one was willing to risk being seen as second-guessing the Omnicognant. The irony that the Omni's paranoia was also its greatest weakness was not lost on Tlecha.

The Dimensional Transfer Nodes were one of the key technologies that allowed the Eightfold Worldline Omni-unity to sprawl like a cancer from universe to universe, piercing the veil of any reality, para-reality, or spacetime-line. But there were said to be at least a few dimensions and galaxies that still held out against the Omnicognant's tyranny.

It was to one of these that Tlecha and Mlikix wished to go, to the fabled free galaxies of Ghenivupt. Dimensional Transfer Node 4QL could get them there.

The technician configuring the Transfer Node was frowning and taking an inordinate time to adjust the settings that would send them on their way. Tlecha bit her lip. Does he suspect?

The transfer platform was within a transparent cylinder that shielded bystanders from the Node's colossal blasts of energy. The cylinder split open. Tlecha looked at the technician. He nodded and gestured for them to enter. He was sweating.

She turned to Mlikix and opened her mouth to speak, but before she could say anything, the alarms went off. Bright orange warning lights flared as klaxons pierced Tlecha's eardrums.

Mlikix pushed her towards the cylinder. "Go! And don't forget the spike!"

Tlecha stumbled into the cylinder. She withdrew the brain-spike from a hidden pocket and considered it again. It was a fail-safe. By scrambling her memories and other mental architecture, she could beat any brain-scan that tried to identify her as Tlecha. More importantly now, perhaps, it would protect the friends who had risked much to help her get this far.

Tlecha gripped the spike in her fist. It was time to use it, but she was afraid.

Eyes of the Omnicognant, floating metal spheres each with a glowing red lens set in it like the pupil of a demonic eye, began streaming into the room from recesses in the walls and ceiling. They whirled about the room, scanning everything in sight.

Mlikix struggled with the Node technician. The Eyes began firing energy bolts at them. A bolt struck the tech in the back, and he went sprawling over the Transfer Node's control panel.

A deep, thrumming vibration below Tlecha's feet began and quickly built up in pitch and intensity...

***

Date: 9th Vaen in the 402nd Year of the Founding

Syrus

Syrus waited a few minutes for the elevator to return, but it did not. He wasn't sure if the others had even seen him. He decided to search the ground floor of the factory, seeking an alternate way down.

He found himself in what appeared to be an abandoned conference room or dining hall. The room was dominated by a long, dusty table with heavy benches along the sides of it. Piles of books and loose sheets of aged leathery scrip covered much the table, and more of the same were piled haphazardly on shelves built into the wall. Tube-shaped glow-lamps, presumably electrically powered, lined the walls as well, but these were dark. The only illumination was from the skylights above, letting in the halfhearted light of the overcast day. The room had a musty, unpleasantly sweet smell. In the opposite corner of the room from Syrus was a wooden ale cask with a leather satchel sitting on top of it.

Syrus crossed to the other side. As he came around the corner of the table, he spied a skeleton curled up in the corner beside the ale cask. The skeleton was clothed in scraps of what had once been hide armour; a notched and rust-pitted short-sword lay on the floor next to it. The skeleton's neck looked as if had been bitten through or perhaps hacked through with a dull axe. Syrus reckoned the unfortunate skeleton had been moldering in here for a year at least.

Syrus stepped up to the leather satchel sitting on the ale cask. The satchel looked relatively new and dust-free. Curious, Syrus reached out to open it. He let out a yelp of surprise when it bit his hand.

***

Tlecha

"Mlikix," Tlecha whimpered. She was curled up in a ball in the corner.

A part of Tlecha remembered why she had fled from that time and place. It cried for her to remember.

Why she had demanded to keep her own self. Why she had revolted against her every move, every action, even every thought being monitored, categorized, and judged. Being pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed, and numbered. Every day, every hour, every minute, every second. Why she had turned against the Omnicognant. And why she had ultimately fled beyond the walls of reality itself.

"No!" she grunted through clenched teeth. That was the past. She had to stay in the present. She removed her hands from in front of her face.

Gormin was standing over her, glowering. "You need to pull yourself together," he growled. "These gazers aren't anything to be frightened of, but we're likely to run into far worse before the day is out. That's the way it is, poking around prior-world facilities. We'll need everyone to fight next time and not cower in a corner." He stalked off down a passage to the left.

Strewn about the floor were pieces of the Eyes of the Omnicognant. Gazers, Gormin had called them. Dimly, Tlecha could recall the sounds of her new friends battling the Eyes around the edges of her vivid flashback as she had crouched in the corner.

She shuddered and picked a broken capacitor out of the scattered remains of the Eyes. She whispered to it in Low Universal, once the most widely spoken tongue in every universe, now an obscure dead language known only to those whose calling it was to delve into the ancient past. "Ah, Omnicognant, so-called All-Thinker, you were not supremely powerful as you portrayed yourself, were you? Time came even for you."

She wondered for a moment what had finally brought the Omnicognant and the Eighth World to an end, shrugged, and discarded the capacitor. The others were moving to follow Gormin down the passageway. Tlecha stood and turned to join them.

***

Syrus

Syrus stumbled back a step, yanking his hand away from the unexpected teeth. The "leather satchel" he'd been poking at unfolded itself into its true form. It was a drebil-- an ugly, toothy, vaguely reptilian creature that could ambush the unwary by disguising itself as a common household object.

He uncoiled his whip with his uninjured hand and gave the drebil a vicious lash. It squawked in protest and gathered itself up to make an attack.

From the corner of his eye, Syrus spied what he'd thought was a pile of moldering books and papers unfold itself into a second drebil. He gave it a lash as well.

The first drebil launched itself at Syrus, but Syrus swayed out of the way and kicked at it awkwardly.

These are not worth killing, Syrus decided. He circled round the long table, giving the creatures a way of escape and roared at the top of his lungs.

As he'd hoped, this spooked the drebils. They sprouted stubby, leathery wings from their mutable bodies and flapped their way out the passage Syrus had entered by.

Syrus looked around the room carefully for any additional creatures emerging from hiding. Nothing moved. Satisfied that he was safe for now, he attended to the bite on his hand, wrapping it up with some yellowish gauze. Hopefully it won't get infected, he thought. Drebils probably don't keep their mouths very clean.

Just then, he remembered why the name "Dzantis Silster" had seemed familiar. His dad had occasionally sold rolls of silster, that ridiculously expensive shimmering golden cloth, favored by a certain variety of ultra-rich dandies. He and his sister had been forbidden from even touching it. Dzantis had been their only supplier of the stuff.

Suddenly curious as to what had befallen his father's former associate, Syrus flipped through some of the books and papers on the conference table.

What he found was that the factory was owned by Imon Dzantis and had once made—according to Imon—the finest silster in the whole of the Steadfast. His secret was that the silster came from the larvae of caffa wasps nurtured in decomposing human flesh. This gave the silster a supposedly higher quality. To supply this need, the family had had an arrangement with the city's criminal underworld. As with many criminal arrangements, however, the deals were subject to change without notice. A new mayor had cracked down on the illicit trade in human cadavers, the supply of bodies dried up, and the factory went out of business five years ago.

All of that was interesting information though not immediately useful. Syrus found a rawhide-bound book that turned out to be a sort of journal of meeting notes for the factory's managers. He flipped to the end. Imon Dzantis and his management team had discussed relocating the factory to somewhere more accommodating, but Imon had refused, stating that the Shrine Portal's power source was needed to power the factory's gigantic automated looms, and that this power source, located far underground below layers of prior-world ruins, could not be feasibly moved. If there were further meetings after that, they were not recorded in the journal. The phrase Shrine Portal caught Syrus' attention. Now here might be something interesting.

Unfortunately, the book had no index, but Syrus was in no hurry. He flipped the pages, scanning for further references to a shrine or a portal. He wasn't disappointed. One of the first recorded meetings had actually occurred prior to the factory being built at Auspar. An adventurer had traded Imon the location of a portal to the Shrine of the Winged God in exchange for a fringed silster cape. The portal was underground, in a long-forgotten tunnel far beneath the city of Auspar. Imon had determined that the portal's energy source could be repurposed to power vast industrial looms—he'd then pulled strings to buy a building close enough to the portal that he could tunnel his way to it.

Syrus closed the book. Evidently, Imon Dzantis' business plan had worked for a while before it all unraveled. That meant that the portal to the Shrine of the Winged God wasn't just a tall tale some adventurer had made up to scam Imon out of a silster cape—it was real, and it was nearby. Finally they had a lead on it after all these months. He had to find a way to get back to his friends. He put the meeting journal in his backpack and left the conference room.

***

Tlecha

A heavy vault door barred the group's way. It looked too sturdy to break down, but Jilandri had pointed out that the wall around it was crumbling and likely weak. It should be possible to chip enough of the wall away to get at the vault door's hinges and remove the door altogether. Tlecha volunteered to help with this, hoping to make up for her earlier lapse.

The others were discussing the tunneling creatures from the vision of the future.

"If someone is breeding those things down here," asked Jilandri, "do you think we can stop them now? They killed us before."

Gormin sniffed, "Well, I mean to. No one kills Gormin and gets away with it if old Gormin has something to say about it!" He chuckled at his own gallows humor. Gormin was holding a glowglobe, currently their only source of light.

Tlecha said nothing, focused on helping Jilandri open the door.

It was hard work, but after half an hour or so they managed to get the door off its hinges. The room beyond was long, narrow and low-ceilinged. The illumination from Gormin's glowglobe did not reach to the far end. Tlecha had expected the room to be vault-like because of the vault door, but instead it was more like a natural cave.

Natural, that is, except for the series of strongglass domes set in the floor. The domes were faintly lit from within.

The group moved to investigate. Gormin held his glowglobe close to the nearest dome to help get a better look.

The insides of the domes were smeared with some kind of organic green substance, possibly a kind of algae or mold. Through the gaps in the algae could be dimly glimpsed a writhing grey mass. It wasn't clear where the light was coming from. Possibly bioluminescence from some creature trapped in there, Tlecha mused. She shuddered.

A sound like frying strips of meat startled everyone.

"That sound," said Tempus. "From the vision."

The sound seemed to be coming from above them. There was a low thump, and dust rained from the ceiling.

Gormin handed the glowglobe to Tempus and drew his sword and shield, but after a few moments, the sound died away.

Yimoul-Za peered at the ceiling with his enormous eye. "If the creatures are above us, perhaps we are safe down here? What do you think, friend Tempus?"

Before Tempus could answer, the sound returned, louder than before. Another muffled thump, and the ceiling partially collapsed. A heavy chunk of rock smashed a dome on the far side of the room. From the breach poured the stench of festering decay, the unmistakable odor of rotting human flesh—and the writhing grey mass was pouring forth as well.

"Light," said Yimoul-Za. "Scatter the darkness." He cast a ball of golden light over the grey mass, illuminating it.

The mass was countless grey, finger-length larvae, with huge sucking maws.

"Caffa larvae," said Gormin. But Tlecha barely heard. The stench of death had awakened another memory from the darkest recesses of Tlecha's forgotten past. The Plague Prisons.

No, not forgotten. Deliberately vanished. Beaten down. Crushed into the past. Erased by the brain-spike's neurophage enzymes which had guaranteed the destruction of protein matrix memories. Or so she thought. So she thought.

Tlecha clutched her hands to her head. "No! I've got to keep it together!"

Her hands shook. What have I done? She remembered. Oh, how in her fearless youth, she had resolutely, sometimes violently, defended the honor of her work for the Omnicognant. Of course, if one would curry the favor of the All-Thinker, one must do its bidding, no matter how distasteful that might be.

Tlecha sat on the ground. On some level she knew Gormin would be angry at her loss of control, but there was nothing for that now. Her thoughts came in a rush of pieces.

How had Tlecha learned to escape the all-encompassing clutches of the All-Thinker? By her years of being a guardian of the Thought-Pits, of course. The Plague of the Mind.

Those who displeased the Omnicognant were sometimes deliberately infected with the Mind Plague and dropped into the Pit, to live out the remainder of their lives in a permanent, inescapable nightmare. The Plague was distilled from some psychedelic algae from another world.

The Thought Pit. The Plague Prisons. It was all coming back now. The darkness and total aloneness, and smell. Oh, the smell. The smell of the prisoners who'd died in their nightmares and simply been left to fester. It was this smell that triggered the memory.

Being sentenced to the Thought Pit was literally the worst thing imaginable. Prisoners served every moment of their brief sentence, both waking and sleeping, facing that which terrified them most. She'd known friends of hers who would beg to be sent to the slave worlds rather than be sent to the Thought-Pit once they had earned the ire of the Omnicognant.

She shook her head again and again and again. "I'm going insane!"

Oh, how she'd laughed! And you didn't have to do anything to be a guard of the Thought-Pit! Just plug in and concentrate! If a prisoner tried to escape from the Isolation, she'd just push them down again, down into the screaming darkness, just using the power of her own ultraterrestrial mind. And if a prisoner proved too strong, she'd just unplug and call the attendant for another injection of Mind Plague into the prisoner. Easy work, if you don't mind being a soulless monster.

And the Plague had also been the way out when things became too much. The Mind Plague could be genetically altered to erase memories. That's what Mlikix had said, at least. But it would seem that memories are more robust than she and Mlikix had thought.

"I have to stop! This has to stop! I must forget again!"

Tlecha rocked back and forth on the floor, hugging herself, wrapped up in the horror of her past.

To be continued...

Friday, February 1, 2019

Updates and Milestones: February 1, 2019

Some updates pertaining to Tears of the Gods, blog milestones, Vintage Worlds, and Love in the Ruins. Feel free to ignore the bits you don't care about.

The Tears of the Gods

I am sad to report that the GM of the Tears of the Gods PbF game has discontinued it, and doesn't anticipate ever restarting, due to personal real-life problems he is having. I am hoping to get a summary of what he had planned for the remainder of the adventure so that I might finish the Tears story, but that may or may not happen. In any event, for now, with the game on hiatus, the Tears story updates are on an indefinite hiatus as well.

(And, yes, I did say in the last update that there's probably enough material for another chapter, but the point at which the game stopped is not a natural stopping point for a chapter, let alone the story as a whole, so I am not working on chapter 11 of Tears for now either. I may make an effort to finish it at some point, with or without the GM's notes, but for now I am waiting for the GM to decide whether to part with the rest of his adventure notes.)

Blog Milestones

January was another record-setting month for the blog, with 528 page-views. That's only the second time the blog has topped 500 views in a given calendar month, the previous time being September of last year, with its 506 views. Since August of last year the blog has not fallen below 200 views in any given month.

Much of that traffic is the Numenera 2 Character Generator, of course, which is up over 900 views now (total over its lifetime), well over a fifth of this site's total traffic (about 4300 views total since the blog started in 2014).

Unfortunately though, historically, a lot of the traffic to the Numenera Character Generator has come from a forum post I left on hub.cyphercast.net, the CypherCast online forum, which has been down now for a week or two. And, while it has been a long time since there's been any non-spam activity on CypherCast Hub, it was still ranked pretty high in search engine results, so people were still going there looking for information, sometimes finding the link to my character creator, and coming here. (And presumably they looked for and perhaps found other information on that forum as well.) But, sadly, the owners/moderators of CypherCast Hub seemingly abandoned it for the last couple of years, allowing it to be overrun by spammers advertising everything from basketball video games to industrial equipment, and now it's down altogether, so I am not exactly holding my breath for it to come back. With it gone, the only way people will discover my character creator now is through organic search engine results. This blog's position in a Google search is decent when searching for, e.g. "numenera character generator", usually around the sixth result or so, but we are ranked much lower on Bing, Ecosia, and other search engines. (Though people do find us occasionally via those search engines.)

I could probably drive a good bit more traffic to the character generator by posting the link elsewhere, but I have an intense, visceral hatred for spam, and I am very reluctant to undertake actions that may come across as spammy to other people. Besides that, it's not like I make money from folks using the character creator (or looking at anything else on this blog). It is purely a labor of love. I don't want to sully my love with anything so crass as spam!

Vintage Worlds

Speaking of spam, it's been a while since I have shamelessly shilled this book that I had a small hand in creating, namely Vintage Worlds: Tales from the Old Solar System. The story I wrote for it, "The Headless Skeletons of Mercury", is, in my opinion, my strongest short story to date (though "Tiny's Legacy" from Merigan Tales is a close second).

Since VW has been out for a while now, I guess it's as good a time as any to give my overall thoughts on it. Vintage Worlds, honestly, has a solid ratio of good stories to mediocre ones. That may sound back-handed, but for me it is high praise. I read quite a lot of short fiction-- I have since I was a kid-- and I'm a pretty harsh critic of stories that don't meet my standards. But Vintage Worlds exceeded my expectations-- not counting my own story, there were seven pieces I loved, four that I liked pretty well, and five that didn't really grab me. That is a better good-to-mediocre ratio for me than any anthology of amateur writers I can remember reading (and yes, I am saying it is better than Merigan Tales, in my opinion). Does VW compare to, say, The Best of Leigh Brackett or to any given year of Gardner Dozois' The Year's Best Science Fiction? No, not really. But, a few of VW's stories are worthy of such comparisons, or nearly so. In my opinion, the book is well worth the price if you like short fiction at all.

Also in Vintage World news, the call has gone out for submissions for a second volume of VW, owing to the success of the first volume's kickstarter. If you are an aspiring writer, short fiction is a great place to start, and a decently good short story is honestly not hard to get published in something like this. They want short stories (2500-7500 words), novelettes (7501-12500 words), and have space for, at most, one novella (12501 words or more). Volume One of VW also had a poem, so they are probably willing to consider poetry for Volume Two as well. All tales should pertain to the "Old Solar System": think ray-guns and rockets, Martian canals, Venusian jungles, Asteroid Belt pirates, etc.

Love in the Ruins

And, speaking of calls for submissions, the Love in the Ruins project looks interesting too (you'll need to scroll down to the long row of asterisks to see the announcement). For this one, the editor is looking for about fifteen short stories, a novelette or two, and four to six poems, preferably of a traditional form (e.g. sonnets). Tales for this work should be love stories set in the "deindustrial future", i.e. after the disappearance of industrial civilization (whether due to peak oil, climate change, the natural geopolitical decline of the U.S.A., or some combination of these or other factors), though not necessarily "dystopian" in the sense that that word is normally understood. So basically it's another "Space Bats" / After Oil type of project, but with a love and romance theme this time.

Tuesday, October 16, 2018

Tears of the Gods, Part Ten - Winter Lightning

This is part ten of this story, adapted from an on-going play-by-forum session of Numenera. If you haven't already, you'll want to start at the Tears of the Gods table of contents page.

***

Previously in "Tears of the Gods"

Through a window high above the arena, two pairs of amber eyes watched the fight unfold. "They are doing well. They can fight. They have esoteries. They could be the right ones."

"I am Yimoul-Za, golthiar and blessed of the Sun," he continued, not waiting for a response from Frater Bellias. "I am willing to listen to your task, but you said all will be answered here. So, may I ask: will this task bring me nearer to finding a skyship that will bring me to the Sun?" 

Syrus looked back. Where Fallside's factory had once stood, all that could be seen were streaks of dark gunk leaking down the cliff.

There was a blurring around Tempus, as if the whole area were surrounded by a dense heat haze. In his "chronal vision" he saw the nine-year-old boy, Riss, his son, now aged nineteen and trained as a glaive, preparing to set out south for Matheunis, a journey from which—Tempus somehow knew—he would never return.

Kiraz continued the story. In Auspar, they found that the other three members of the Broken Cage Company had all survived, though Gormin had lost his aneen during the flight from the City of Bridges. Along the way, they had befriended an ultraterrestrial named Thecla. They had not had any luck finding the Shrine of the Winged God.

"If there's anyone you should be eternally grateful to," said the redhead (voice-print confirmed: Jilandri), "it's your friends. They lugged your heavy, powered-down self around for months until they could find someone able to fix you."

***

Date: 14th Vaen in the 402nd Year of the Founding

Tempus

Tempus' first clue something was amiss was the quivering of the rodinza wine in the glass set before him. Earthquake? He looked around at the others, gathered at their usual table in the Four Spine Café, as the town around them celebrated some local holiday late into the night. Something was off about his friends, too; they were oddly... flat-looking. He frowned.

He realized his "chronal vision" was gone. He was, for the first time in a long time, limited to seeing the present moment only.

Then came another tremor, then another and another, each stronger than the previous one. Dust fell from cracked tiles in the ceiling of the café; outside in the street came the sounds of cries as a panic spread.

The earth shook violently. Across the street a needle-like spire crumpled in slow motion and collapsed into dust, engulfing many of the night-time revelers.

The café was a broad circular area beneath one of Auspar's shockingly tall, slender buildings. The building above them was held off the ground by four sturdy pillars, carved to look like spinal vertebrae. Though Tempus knew the buildings of Auspar were constructed of very lightweight materials in order to achieve the eye-catchingly tall, graceful look preferred by the local architectural style, the buildings were certainly still heavy enough that you wouldn't want one to fall on you.

From beneath his feet came a loud sound like frying strips of fatty meat. The floor of the café split open in a burst of actinic blue light, and a clawed creature with heavy chitinous armor-plates pushed up through the rift, followed by a flight of purple-and-yellow flying insects with wingspans nearly as broad as a man is tall.

Gormin was the first to his feet, bellowing a warcry as he charged one of the giant armored creatures.

The earth heaved. Gormin lost his footing and slid across the floor and fell headlong into the gaping chasm. He was gone.

Tempus hesitated, paralysed by fear as much from the loss of his chronal vision as from the loss of Gormin. The armored creature hauled itself out of the chasm and hurled its tremendous bulk bodily against a pillar.

"There must be some other way out," yelled Tlecha above the noise of battle. "Can they be drawn off by some music or scent?"  

Tempus Scanned it. He could sense that the creature was intelligent, but profoundly alien, and possessed of an overwhelming urge to tunnel through the ground. He could sense also its body pulsing with unnatural energy.

The rest of the group was up and fighting by now, but the huge purple wasps were harrying them, keeping them away from the tunneler that continued to slam itself against the pillar, which crunched worryingly in response to the abuse.

The creature released its store of pent-up energy. Lightning arced out from its mandibles, felling Kiraz and Voloidion, along with several fleeing café patrons. The sound of the crackling, spitting lightning was the source of the "frying meat" sound, Tempus realized.

Tempus knew it was hopeless and turned to flee himself. He caught sight of the moon, half-full, hanging in the sky as he reached the edge of the suspended building's shadow.

With a deafening roar, the pillars gave way and the building came down.

Tempus Far-Stepped away as far as he could, into the cold night air. He was aware, in the back of his mind, that he was alone now, again. His friends were gonecrushed beneath countless tons of broken flowstone, twisted metal, and other debris. But he couldn't think about that right now. The whole city was crashing down around him. Nowhere was safe. He Far-Stepped from one precarious perch to the next, trying to reach stable ground.

A second tunneling creature burst up from the earth, its body crackling with stored lightning. Before Tempus could react, the creature released its energy, catching him fully with the blast.

His final thought was of his family, forever lost in time.

***

Date: 8th Vaen in the 402nd Year of the Founding

The sound of shattering glass snapped Tempus back into the present moment. He looked down. His hand bled, and there were fragments of glass on the floor, twinkling amidst his spilled wine. By Kronos, that was too realnot a glimmer of future possibility, but an uncontrolled journey to the actual future.

Tempus looked around at his friends, gathered once more around their usual table at the Four Spines. Two things were immediately obvious. First, his chronal vision had returned—he could see his friends simultaneously ageing and rejuvenating. That, at least, was back to normal. And second, judging from the expressions of nonplussed horror he saw on their faces, the temporal anomaly had not been experienced by himself alone this time. That was definitely not normal.

Yimoul-Za pushed his large, bulbous eye into Tempus' personal space. "What a vision!" exclaimed the golthiar. "Is it because of you, Tempus? Are you tearing holes in time?"

Tempus gestured discreetly for calm and looked around. It did not appear that anyone else in the café had experienced the disruption of time. How fortunate, he mused. Next time, the whole city might be catapulted days or aeons into the future or past. The possible consequences of that didn't bear thinking about.

He wrapped a cloth around the cut on his hand. Not without some hint of sadness, he noted that not all of his companions had been in the future that he saw, and some of those he'd seen in the future were not present in the present—Syrus and Kiraz both seemed to be missing. His eyes came to rest finally on Tlecha, the white-haired ultraterrestrial being who'd been pressed into service by Eighth Worlders and escaped by traveling countless millions of years into her future. It was, of course, just as likely that she was the cause of the recent temporal anomaly as he was. Or that his own proximity to her was causing some kind of instability. But, cautious about offending anyone—to say nothing of disrupting the timeline further—he held his tongue.

Jilandri, the red-headed machine specialist, spoke up. "What... was that? Let's discuss it in the square; I don't feel quite right staying in here right now." She latched onto Voloidion, the intricately crafted mechanical nano, and pulled him out of the café into the plaza outside.

The others, still looking somewhat dazed, rose and followed her out. Tempus fished out a handful of shins to leave on the table, then moved to join them.

Outside, it was lightly snowing, midday. The three-finger layer of powder covering the ground made the many light-colored spires of Auspar look like upward-thrusting icicles. A weak force-screen kept the cold and the snow out of the café. Tempus passed through the force-screen and grimaced at the bracing assault of cold.

In the future, it had been a cold night, but above freezing, and definitely not snowing. He tried to remember if there were any other clues as to when the vision would come to pass. The moon? The moon had been about half full, he was sure of that. And since today would be the night of the new moon, it meant, at a minimum, they had several days before the creatures would attack.

The light of Yimoul-Za's eye was shifting colors rapidly, a sign of distress. "All of you had the same vision? Curious. Unavoidable? But what if we avoided ever coming back to this place?" He swiveled his long, vine-like neck around, looking at the city. "Strange it is," he added.

Voloidion answered. "I... I do not know what I saw. I don't have dreams or visions... at least not in the way that—" He paused. "Not in the way that you organics conceive of the idea."

Jilandri shook her head. "That felt real, like really real, so maybe we should discuss the vision of certain death somewhere... else, maybe?"

A lattimor with reddish-brown fur stepped out through the force-screen. It was Komai-Mhek, the proprietors of the Four Spines. "You all. Why you leave suddenly? What is problem? Not like café, you talk to me to put it right. Bad for me, bad for other customers." The gruff voice and lack of concern for the niceties of grammar indicated that it was Mhek addressing them; Mhek's symbiote Komai was inactive.

Yimoul-Za answered. "Mhek! Did all of us come in together? We had an odd experience in your drinking establishment. The kind of thing that I hear happens when humans have too much to drink or when they smoke blue-spotted glansh."

The lattimor removed a pipe from a belt-pouch and started filling it with some herbaceous-smelling dried weed. "What odd experience? No odd experience in Four Spines except customers walking out."

Syrus emerged from the café just then and brushed past Komai-Mhek. "I was taking care of some...um.. business. C-came back and you g-g-gone. I- I-... I was whipping up on some wasp thingies and then poof, I was... in the b-bathroom." He looked questioningly at Tempus.

Jilandri nodded. "That sounds like what happened to me, too. Well, except the bathroom part." She turned to Tempus, eyebrows lowered. "See here! The others are all looking at you. I don't know what shenanigans you're getting up to with time, and I don't need to know. Probably make my head explode anyway. But you leave me and my friends out of it. I'd rather just die the once."

Tempus held up his hands placatingly. "I am not sure what caused the... er, vision... but what I can tell you, based on my expertise—which is considerable—is that the vision represents the real future, and it will happen unless we do something to stop it, that is, assuming we wish to stop it. The consequences of altering the time-stream are unpredictable at best, and often disastrous," he added, leaving out any mention that the vision may have been caused by his own prior manipulations of the time-stream. But that is speculation, after all; sharing it would only alarm them needlessly. He sighed and continued. "But the consequences of not altering that future, well, you saw for yourselves." He shrugged helplessly.

Mhek got his pipe lit and drew in some smoke. He closed the lowermost of his six eyes and opened his tiny uppermost eyes. Tempus knew that meant he was switching from Mhek to Komai, perhaps to better analyse the Broken Cage Company's peculiar story. Komai exhaled the pipe smoke in a series of rings.

Tempus continued. "The situation appears dire, I agree, but perhaps the collapse prevents an even larger disaster from occurring. Perhaps we need to investigate the context of the event before acting to stop it. Every event has multiple causes and countless consequences..."

He stopped. From a distance came a sound like an orchestra of steam-driven pipe-organs and random percussion accompaniment gone mad. Tempus glanced at Komai, but the latter did not seem particularly surprised or perturbed, seemingly content to spend his smoke break listening to the group's strange tale of doom and/or awaiting the arrival of the source of the odd music. The music approached, getting louder and louder, and gradually becoming wilder and more raucous. Tempus noticed that the music played continually with no breaks to indicate changes of song, yet also without repeating even a single phrase of music. Then, moving from the city's main thoroughfare into the plaza, a most extraordinary sight hove into view. A procession of gaudily decorated vehicles, some moving on their own, some drawn by aneen or other beasts, all of them bedecked in bright colours, glaringly prominent against the stark white of the snow.

A curious crowd was beginning to gather. Some had happened to be going about their business in the plaza and now turned to gawk. Others had followed the procession up the street.

The lead vehicle was on runners and appeared to be moving on its own over the snow. Most of its broad cargo area was taken up by a massive artifact, an elaborate fusion of synth and metal. The artifact sported many bell-like funnels, horns, rattles, pipes, tympanic surfaces, and other noise- and music-making mechanisms, some of which Tempus did not recognize at all. It was from this contraption that the loud music emanated.

Other wagons were various shapes and sizes, including two tall cylindrical ones shrouded in tarpaulins, each pulled by multiple aneen.

The appearance of new, unknown, functioning numenera instantly pushed the vision out of his mind. Tempus stepped away from the group, ducked into a nearby alleyway, and cast a Scan on the musical artifact.

His Scan revealed that the machine was Level 1 construct created to play orchestral music, and capable of playing two or more pieces simultaneously, yet making such a cacophony work, even make it appealing, as it was now.

Jilandri had followed him into the alley. "Hm, I'll bet they need repair work on that caravan. Maybe I can pick up some work, or at least some news," she said.

Tempus barely heard. His Scan had revealed something else unexpected: a hint of chronal vision on the musical device. Usually, his chronal vision only functioned on living, organic creatures. That he could pick up a glimpse of chronal vision from an inanimate object meant... Well, what does it mean? He had to get closer.

Riding on the front of the flat-bed vehicle that bore the music machine was a woman wearing a feathery headdress and deep-black robe with pink trim, and a man with spiky hair wearing a pink robe with black trim. As Tempus got closer he could see that both looked outdoorsy and weather-beaten despite the gaudy, impractical costumes.

The man with the spiky hair looked down at Tempus. "Ho friend, you like my device? Looking at you, I'm guessing that you're an inventor, a mechanician of sorts? I am but a humble showman; my flair and talent is entertaining the masses." Spiky-hair's powerful voice sounded well-acquainted with public speaking. "Wait for some time for my fair to set up in yonder square and I will then let you demonstrate my machine's marvelous properties!" He smiled and looked away, waving and calling to other people in the growing crowd.

The machine is so close. Tempus smiled and waved as well, then "accidentally" stumbled and reached his hand out to the machine to steady himself. As he came in contact with the artifact, he focused his chronal vision, attempting to probe mentally into the device's timeline. Somewhat to his surprise, this worked: the machine was alive, was named the Pieriant, and was dimly self-aware. It loved to play music and see people dancing. But it had sat alone for countless centuries in a place where no one came to dance any more. Then the man with the spiky hair arrived and promised that he would teach it the Music of the Spheres if it came with him to a particular place and played music continuously for several days. Spiky-hair and several others had removed it from its place and loaded it onto the wagon and commanded it to be silent until told otherwise. All of this Tempus saw in an instant.

A hand closed on Tempus' shoulder and firmly pulled him away from the vehicle, breaking the connection. "Please don't touch, sir." Tempus looked back at his interlocutor. A guard in billowy pink-and-charcoal pantaloons and fur-lined coat held Tempus shoulder with one massive hand and had a heavy truncheon pointed down by his side in the other. Tempus decided that now was not the time for confrontation. He relented and muttered an apology, and the guard let him go.

But internally, Tempus was soaring. Though it had been slightly draining, the effort to see into the music machine's past had worked. He decided he would call this new esotery See History.

***

Jilandri

Jilandri approached the rearmost vehicle in the strange procession, a smallish wagon being pulled by a tall man in winter furs and a tall hat. Atop the vehicle was a dark green, teardrop-shaped canvas tent festooned with light-green and yellow dots, and thin, multicolored fabric streamers, blowing in the light wind.

Perhaps the vehicle is normally numenera-driven and in need of repair, she thought. Jilandri offered the hand of greeting. "Looks like you've got quite a few vehicles here—bound to have some problems, eh? I’m a mechanic out of Wyrfall, maybe could help you out with any issues. You got a mechanic I should contact?"

"Mechanic?" the man pulling the wagon puffed. "No, we don’t need a mechanic." The man was heavily-built and perspiring. He wore spectacles and had a bushy mustache.

From inside the green tent came a woman's voice. "Why don't you tell him, Vorg? We can’t afford a mechanic; we got no shins to pay for one. How are we going to do a show if the scope's playing up?"

"If you took a turn at pulling, Shirna, I could look at it and maybe fix it."

"Me, pulling? I’m a dancer."

Jilandri smiled. "Vorg, want me to take a look at this scope? Then, if you came into some shins, you could get me back, or you could just pay me back with a referral for some work for others in the caravan."

Vorg stopped. He stooped to set the wagon's handbrake, then straightened with a groan, clutching his back.

"Would you do that? That's very kind. We used to have the manual for it, but it got lost somewhere."

"Maybe when we had to get out of Mulen in a hurry, remember?" A young woman, dressed in gaudy pink and green clothing and garish sparkly make-up, emerged from the tent. "Admit it, Vorg: you don't have a clue how the scope works."

Vorg blustered for a moment, his impressive mustache bristling indignantly, but grudgingly admitted that while he knew how to work it, he knew not how it worked. Something had gone wrong, and it wouldn't switch on anymore.

Jilandri hopped onto the wagon and ducked inside the tent, which had enough room inside for the scope and about two people. The scope was a waist-high pedestal with a semi-circular control panel boasting a few knobs and switches and a small keypad. Topping it was a metal ring, about three feet in diameter—a holographic screen, Jilandri recognized.

She popped open the back of the scope and started poking around.

The inner workings of the scope were quite strange—everything at a very miniature level, and several key systems even seemed to operate at the sub-atomic level. Certainly not Ninth World technology.

At some point Tempus joined her.

Between the two of them, it became clear that the only real issue was that the scope's power core was nearly depleted and needed replacing. Tempus, she noticed, seemed to have an almost intuitive grasp of individual subsystems' original purposes.

The scope's ring-screen lit up. Holographic red characters in the Old Navarene script hung in the air within the screen and started flashing. She looked questioningly at Tempus.

"It says, 'Danger, compression field failure imminent,'" Tempus reported.

"Ah, I don't like the sound of that! We need to power up the core and keep the compression field operating—whatever that is." Jilandri rooted frantically through her pockets and toolbags but came up with nothing suitable as a substitute power supply.

Sighing audibly, she yanked off her teleportation bracket and started to take it apart with her micro-tools, attempting to 'wire it into' the scope as a temporary power supply by aligning the crystal substructure and—she hoped—prevent the field failure.

Tempus cleared his throat. He pulled out a Shock Ring, a lightning-emitting cypher. "You know, Jilandri, this cypher holds quite a large charge, which can use to power up the core if we connect the blue anodes, and if this doesn't work, we can try and use the power source from Toorkmeyn's emitter. I've been carrying it since the Arechive and haven't found a use for it yet."

Jilandri nodded and took the Shock Ring. "Yes, I think that will be much better. Plus, the crystal alignment looks a lot more compatible."

She got to work, diving into the guts of the device and tearing through it quickly and adeptly. Tempus leaned in, pointing with a rod to that casing misaligned, this micro-switch jammed, helping to guide the repairs.

She got the Shock Ring seated and connected, but the cypher may have contained a bit too much power. With a sharp snap of electricity, the scope discharged the excess power in the form of arcs of artificial lightning, giving Tempus and Jilandri a jolt.

But after a moment, the warning letters disappeared, and the scope sat quietly humming in standby mode. Fixed. Like most ancient technology, it was almost supernaturally self-adapting to repairs.

Jilandri emerged from the tent. "Fixed now. The replacement power source is bigger than the depleted one, so the panel in the back won't close. But the scope works. Curious to see what it does."

Shirna the dancer was distracted by the approach of Yimoul-Za, making his way through the crowd. She tapped Vorg's elbow excitedly and pointed at the golthiar. "We've got some of those in the scope, haven't we? On setting two?"

Vorg stepped forward and addressed Yimoul-Za. "Honored plant-being! May I ask what is your species? I like to be accurate in my shows."

"I am a golthiar. What is this show?" He peered at them.

Vorg nodded and smiled. "Very good, a... golthiar, is it? Golthiar." He looked thoughtful. "Golthiar, golthiar. Gaze at the... majestic golthiar? Noble golthiar? Let's go with 'noble'." He gestured to Shirna and produced an ocarina-like musical instrument from his coat. He played a merry tune that Shirna danced to, although the sound of the Pieriant mostly overpowered his piping.

He then leapt onto the wagon. His hat lit up as he called out: "Come, ONE and ALL! See the WONDERS of the WORLD! MARVEL at what the scope can SHOW you! GASP at the WONDERS you will SEE! SHUDDER at the loathsome BEASTS revealed by the magic of the SCOPE! GAZE in flabbergastment at the MAJESTY of the noble GOLTHIAR! Only one shin each. Next show starts shortly."

He grinned at Shirna and rubbed his hands together. "Oh, we are going to make some big money over the next few days."

She pouted. "Days! Can't we go somewhere warm?"

Curious onlookers were starting to queue up to have a turn looking in the scope.

Jilandri clapped Vorg on the shoulder. "That there was on the house. Heading out now, but I expect you to work just as hard getting my name out there to the rest of the carnies as you are now raising money. You just let them know Jilandri... and Tempus," she added, looking over at the latter, "are dab hands at fixing vehicles and devices, both, and will be around tomorrow. I need the work!"

***

Date: 9th Vaen in the 402nd Year of the Founding

Tempus

The day dawned bright and clear, with temperatures well below freezing. The streets had iced over during the night; many pedestrians used skates to move around. By their demonstrated skill they were accustomed to this situation.

The Pieriant had played its music all through the night, still never repeating itself. Even so, Tempus was able to get a good night's sleep. It's not as if it were controlling my mind.

Komai greeted the group as they arrived at the Four Spines for breakfast and accompanied them to their usual table. "Good for business this is," he said, jerking his chin in the general direction of the traveling circus. "Tell us, did you find out how long they are staying? We might need more waiting staff."

Gormin nodded. "They say they hope to stay a few days, perhaps longer. I'm a bit surprised they plan to travel through all this," gesturing vaguely at the ice outside.

Komai called their orders through to the kitchen then returned to the table to chat. "We are surprised; this travelling fair is... small. We were in Milave once and saw Ossam's Traveling Menagerie and Soaring Circus. That was a true, true sight. A hundred performers, a marquee that seated a thousand people, an ever-varied show that ran for hours—a true, true sight. For the Spines, though, we must not turn down business, in whatever form it comes."

Outside, the Pieriant still played and people gathered to dance even if they had no money for the other attractions. The people seemed able to leave when they had had enough. It's not like the music is controlling their minds, thought Tempus.

A male human stumbled through the force-screen into the Four Spines. He wore the remains of once-fine clothes, with an eye-catching ornate topcoat of shimmering gold silster. He shuffled to a table and sat heavily. Komai served him a mug of ingtfu, which he downed in two. He called for another.

Tempus wondered what his story was. Silster was an expensive commodity, he knew. And it was quite early in the day to be tossing back something as potent as ingtfu.

Voloidion spoke up. "The organic digestive system... I still find it such a crude and almost vulgar method of energy conversion, besides the fact that it's comically inefficient. Perhaps one day I can convince one of you to let me to perform an experimental vivisection on you, to see if I could possibly learn about how to improve the process? Before you all leap to volunteer, please keep it mind it's very unlikely you would survive such a procedure."

Gormin chuckled.

The group paid for their meal and went out to see the fair.

Tempus saw the Pieriant parked in front of what appeared to be a boarded-up manufactory on the other side of the plaza. Vertically, along the tall, graceful spire rising from the southeast corner of the factory was carved the words "Dzantis Silster" in characters large enough to be seen from the other side of the plaza.

People were still joining and leaving the spontaneous dancing, but it wasn't as if they were being controlled. Tempus frowned. How often had he had that reassuring thought?

He looked around. Spiky-hair and the woman in the black robe were nowhere to be seen. 
A varjellen approached him, trying to get him to pay shins to fight a jiraskar supposedly contained in his tent. Tempus ignored him.

"Strange goings-on in the factory," growled a familiar voice.

Tempus turned. It was Gormin, hood pulled low so as to avoid scaring people with his hideous visage. Gormin pointed discreetly.

Through one of the boarded-up windows of the factory could be seen the faint flicker of blue actinic light. The light reminded him very much of the burst of light that had accompanied the burrowing creatures' pent-up lightning in the vision.

Gormin growled, "it may just be the cynic in me, but something is very off about this fair. Who ever heard of a fair that continues to travel and operate in the dead of winter? I think the whole thing is cover for shenanigans at this factory."

Tempus nodded. He was beginning to think the same way. 

"I'll take a closer look," said Gormin. He moved discreetly toward the closed manufactory, zigzagging slowly through the crowd.

Carnie guards in their ridiculous pink-and-grey uniforms were trying to discreetly watch the boarded-up entrances to the building, but just then, Yimoul-Za stepped up to the guards and started speaking to them, gesturing animatedly. Tempus couldn't hear what was said, but decided it might provide the distraction he needed.

Maybe there is an open roof entrance. He Far-Stepped into the air, leaping over the factory's high stone facade.

As he cleared the facade, he saw that most of the roof was taken up by a huge glass skylight. Hopefully strongglass, he thought as he hurtled towards it.

Not strongglass. He crashed through the skylight and plunged into an atrium full of flowers. The thick vegetation and soft loam broke his fall somewhat, but he was knocked unconscious all the same.

When he came to, the rest of the group—less Syrus—was standing around him in the atrium.

"Are you all right?" asked Thecla.

Tempus stood and brushed himself off. He did not seem to be seriously injured, very fortunate. "All according to plan," he mumbled. The Pieriant could be heard clearly even inside the stone building.

A thought occurred to him then. "Does anyone know where Kiraz is? I do not recall seeing her since the vision. She was not at breakfast either."

The others frowned in confusion. "Kiraz?" asked Gormin.

Yimoul-Za peered closely at Tempus with his enormous eye. "Friend Tempus, have you damaged your head in your fall? Who is Kiraz?"

By Kronos, thought Tempus. No.

To be continued...

Monday, October 1, 2018

Milestones and Updates

Two milestones of note. Number one: this blog had just over 500 views last month (506 to be exact), the first time that threshold has been reached. The previous biggest months for the blog were August 2018, with 366 views for the month, and May 2017 (coinciding with the initial launch of the Numenera Character Generator) with 239 views. These are the only three months since the blog's inception in 2014 that have ever broken 200 views. So, that's encouraging.

I promise it was not just me refreshing the page in September! In fact, I have set an option on the admin side that says my own page views of the blog should not be counted in site stats. (I'm not convinced that option actually works as intended, but whatever. I tried.)

What are people coming here to see? The most popular thing to look at on the site, by a substantial margin, is the Numenera 2 Character Generator. No real surprise there; it is the only thing of its kind on the web, so far as I know. Coming in at a distant second are the various chapters (and Table of Contents) of the Tears of the Gods serial novel. TOTG posts consistently rack up more views over the long run than fluff posts such as this one. That indicates to me that there's an actual readership for that work, albeit small, not just random bots or whatever crawling the web and stumbling upon random bits of my blog. For some reason (if you are curious), the most viewed TOTG chapter is Chapter Four - Demons of the Deep, with 157 total views since its initial publication in March 2017. Must be the intriguing chapter title.

(Yes, I know no one cares about these minuscule numbers. But I care, and that's the important thing.)

While I'm on the subject of the N2 character generator and the Tears of the Gods, I suppose updates about both are in order.

Character Generator update: The code to have the generator show page-references for your chosen descriptor, type, and focus has been added, and seems to work, but I have not yet added the actual data. Currently it only displays page references for your type. I will be working on it this week, and hope to have all the data in before the weekend.

TOTG update: The play-by-forum game it is based on is still ongoing. Frequency of Tears updates here at Troy Stories of course depends upon the pace of that game there at BoardGameGeek. That said, it is very likely that the "Winter Lightning" chapter will be ready to publish some time in October.

The other milestone (bet you thought I forgot there were two milestones to announce today): Vintage Worlds has surged past 200 backers and $5000 pledged since I last posted about the campaign. The final 48 hours of the campaign has, in fact, seen a big bump in support, as predicted. And as of this writing there's still one more day to go, so go pledge if you haven't already!

Monday, August 13, 2018

Tears of the Gods, Part Nine - Legacy of Loarn

This is part nine of this story. Prior chapters can be found at the Tears of the Gods table of contents page, along with important disclaimers and whatnot. The game had a six-month hiatus, which is why it's been such a long time since the last installment.

***

Previously in "Tears of the Gods"

Krystogh read aloud: "The Gods came to seek help against the Great Hunter and his dogs. When the help was not there the Gods wept their Tears, so that those who would come later would prevail." 

Neymich's eyelids fluttered. He struggled to speak. "Tell Aliser. Tell Bellias," he wheezed. "Loarn was right. The Tears are real, they exist. Loarn knew..."

Bellias did not answer immediately, but sat on one of the lounge's low couches and closed his eyes. "Her name is Lissia," Bellias said at last, eyes still closed. "She resembles me. She is my daughter."

Yimoul-Za narrated their adventures then: the arena, the chronal feeders, the sudden appearance of Tempus, the Krai. Isla hung on his every word, gasping at the dangers they'd faced and beaming and clapping at their triumphs.

"We still haven't been properly introduced. I am Sinys, a member of the Guild of Torturers based in Rarmon." She offered a hand to Gormin, which he accepted. On her wrist was a silvery bracelet wrought in the shape of a spider.

The corridors connecting the ballroom and the tank room were slick with human blood, invader ichor, and the foul-smelling mucus-like substance that the creatures' spear-tips had been coated in. The bodies of the wounded and dead were everywhere. 

Tempus extracted an impossibly long band of microfine fibers made from a variety of unearthly metals from Ixobis-Lar's smouldering remains. With some tweaking, the device could probably be used to teleport people. He stuffed the cypher into a pocket of his robe.

The automaton spoke. "I do not believe I have met everyone. My name is Voloidion. I am a nano."

***

Date: 23rd Fre in the 401st Year of the Founding

Gormin

Gormin arrived at breakfast fully armed and armored, ready to face the day and its slavering terrors.

The long tables of the mercenary quarters' common room were, once again, heavily laden with expensive and exotic foodstuffs from throughout the Steadfast and Beyond, just as had happened every morning since the Broken Cage Company had arrived at the Arechive three weeks ago. If last night's attack on the City had affected the Order's food stores, it certainly didn't show. Not bad for a supposedly bankrupt organization, thought Gormin.

The others were shuffling into the breakfast room or already there eating. Conversation was sporadic and muted. A robotic servitor stood motionless next to the elevator door. No sign of Lissia yet.

Gormin popped a handful of pearlberries in his mouth and grabbed a frumenth roll. He went over to the broad window overlooking the Arechive's platform and the Hub in the distance. The sun was rising into low clouds over the City of Bridges. Here and there, thin trails of smoke could still be seen rising from damaged structures, though it appeared the fighting was over. Gormin half-listened to the others converse as he assessed the devastation in the morning light. He took a bite of frumenth roll.

Voloidion was observing and speaking with the others, but of course, not eating. "Organic lifeforms and their beloved food. Such an inefficient fuel system," he muttered.

Gormin snorted in amusement.

Lissia burst into the room. "Where's my father?"

Gormin looked at Lissia and shrugged. Washed up and in proper clothes she doesn't look half bad, Gormin thought. Then he locked eyes with Sinys. He smirked at the latter's warning glare.

Yimoul-Za the golthiar paused from rubbing bits of decomposing food onto the gnarled staff that was his Seed-Brother and looked around. "I trust everyone slept well," he said politely, turning his single massive eye toward Lissia.

Kiraz piped up. "Quite well."

Gormin nodded. Good to see that last night's mayhem did not cause anyone any lost sleep. Perhaps there's hope for this 'mercenary company' yet, he thought.

Lissia, frustrated now, ignored the food on offer and addressed the servitor by the door. "I have been told that my father has returned. Take me to him at once. In the Truth, as an aspirant of the Order, I command you."

Gormin turned away. He suspected that Bellias might not have been Lissia's real father, but that was no concern of his now that the mission was over. He looked down at the city. Many of the people far below seemed to be making ready to leave. Not too surprising.

The servitor, as was typical, was slow to process Lissia's command and implied question, but after a few moments, its holographic face appeared and it replied. "In the Truth, I have no knowledge of a father returning. I speak in the Truth."

Gormin scoffed. Useless hunk of junk. He turned back to the group. "I'm thinking it may not be safe to remain here or anywhere near the coast. Those creatures could come back at any time. This city is particularly vulnerable; it may even need an organized full evacuation, not that the dysfunctional leadership of Ghan would agree to any such thing."

Voloidion spoke up. "I am inclined to agree with Gormin. Despite my inorganic nature, I assure you that I do value self-preservation. Such self-preservation may be better served by not remaining here for too long." He gestured vaguely. "And as my former travelling companion seems to have either moved on or been dragged away to a watery grave by a previously unknown race of aggressive abhumans, it looks like you are all my new companions. Congratulations."

Voloidion paused a moment, looking around at the others with his glowing yellow eyes as if expecting a chuckle. No one laughed. "Upon the first opportunity I shall research 'sarcasm' in the datasphere until I have mastered that unique talent," he added.


Programmed to be a funny-man, Gormin thought. "Hmph. In any event, I would have expected Frater Bellias to debrief us by now, given his... personal stake... in yesterday's mission." He glanced briefly at Lissia.

Lissia whirled on him. "You! You told me that you were sent by my father to rescue me. Where is he, and what does Frater Bellias have to do with this?"

Gormin frowned but said nothing.

Lissia turned to address the others, increasingly agitated. "Why will none of you talk to me? Where is my father? Is it too much to ask that he be reunited with his only daughter after so long?"

Before anyone could reply, she doubled over and vomited a small quantity of clear fluid onto the floor.


Yimoul-Za blinked his enormous eye. "My dear, you look unwell. I suggest some rest," he offered. 

Lissia sank to her knees.

Gormin considered her for a long moment. "This may come as a shock. Frater Bellias claims to be your father, and indeed the family resemblance between him and you is how we recognized you. Beyond that, I have no explanations. We are just mercenaries he sent to retrieve you from the Coral Palace. You were only there for a few days, by the way, assuming Bellias was being truthful with us about that part."

He shook his head bitterly. "I'm sure Bellias has a perfectly valid explanation for being a lying sack of drit. Again. In the meantime, you seem to be suffering some lingering effects from your stasis. You should probably save your strength while we wait for Bellias to debrief us."


Yimoul-Za turned his eye toward Gormin. "Please do not insult the drit. It has no allegiance. It just does what it needs to."

Lissia struggled to her feet and faced Gormin, her amber eyes like flints. "Please don't insult my family. Frater Bellias is a good man and is my uncle. My father is Loarn, who you told me has returned."

She doubled over again and vomited another gout of clear fluid onto the floor of the dining hall. The two pools of vomitus flowed together into an amorphous creature that crawled rapidly across the floor towards Kiraz. Kiraz jumped up and drew her dual-bladed verred.

"The vomit... it's alive!," cried Yimoul-Za.

Gormin grumbled and finished his frumenth roll before pulling his sword and shield as the others prepared to fight.

Voloidion was the quickest to react, firing off two of his Onslaughts, which had the appearance of a spray of tiny, razor-sharp gears and discs. His first shot was aimed a bit too high and did little but gouge the enamel mosiac floor of the common room. However, his second Onslaught ripped into the jelly, splitting it in two. The two parts moved to attack in different directions, one heading towards Kiraz and the other towards Sinys.

Sinys leapt up onto a long table, paying little heed to the foodstuffs she trampled underfoot. She fired off her blinding-white spark esotery.

The bright spark curved in the air away from the vomit creature and struck Yimoul-Za full in the eye. 

Yimoul-Za staggered, blinded. He released his sunlight Onslaught in an essentially random direction. It struck Sinys full-on, enveloping her in the searing, blistering heat of the sun. She screamed; what little was left of her hair charred to ash as she tumbled backwards off the table. The jelly approached her.

"Sorry," Sinys choked out. "I forgot the Agoniser goes for eyes first."

Lissia had regained her feet again and gasped in a strained, unnatural voice. "Don't hurt the message. Become... its host... for a short time."

Tempus had Toorkmeyn's beam-emitter artifact in hand and fired it at the slime advancing on Sinys. The creature split again, both halves continuing to ooze forward. When did Tempus get that thing back? Gormin wondered idly.

No time to think about that. Gormin leapt to Sinys' defense and struck one of the oozes with his sword. Again it split; now there were three of them converging on Sinys.

Gormin risked a glance at Kiraz. The other slime had reached her and was flowing up her body liquidly, into her mouth and nose.

He was at a loss for what to do. He looked down at Sinys helplessly.

Kiraz cried out then, in a strained voice similar to Lissia's. "Stop attacking it!" she yelled. "Listen to it instead, if it will speak to you. I can explain if not." 

Sinys was watching Kiraz with shining eyes. "Is it a painful experience?" She reached out a hand to the nearest jelly. It flowed up her arm and into her mouth and nose as well.

"Disappointingly not unpleasant, on the one hand," Sinys remarked. "But a very interesting message on the other."

Gormin narrowed his eyes, wary. "What does it want?" 

"It is a messenger," said Kiraz. "Please listen to it." She lowered her verred. 

"It's a messenger from Loarn," she repeated. "He is stuck on an island. We need to go there or the world as it is now will be destroyed. We need the Dream Journal, whatever that is, to save everything. It's in the Shrine of the Winged God, in the Dark Hills in a valley below the wall that holds back water."

Voloidion spoke. "Go to the tower or the world is destroyed? It sounds like we have no choice then. Unless of course it's the type of apocalypse that inorganics can survive? In that case, at least I have options. Ha ha." He looked around. "Mastering this whole sarcasm thing truly is 'an uphill battle', as they say." 

Gormin ignored him. "Did Loarn not take the Journal with him?"

"The Journal always returns to its resting place. Loarn had to retrieve it at least twice." 

Yimoul-Za peered at her. "Did you... absorb the puke? How are you feeling? Or even still alive?"

Kiraz shook her head. "The messenger causes me no discomfort. I'm still alive."

Gormin sniffed and put away his sword and shield.

Just then the servitor by the door lit up and spoke. "I speak in the Truth of the Truth. The Queen is to make an announcement at midday. I speak in the Truth."

Gormin frowned. "Queen? Did the King die in the attack?"

The servitor did not answer. Its holographic face shut off.

*** 

Voloidion

Outside, the city was strangely quiet, only a few people out on its streets. The whole 'air' of the city was different. Yesterday it was a place of merrymaking; today an aura of fear hung over it.

Voloidion, of course, was far above such organic sentimentality, but the pervasive dread among the humans would have been plainly obvious to even the most dispassionate of automatons.

The group (less Lissia, who had remained in the Arechive) was gathered with a few others near one of the many statues of Lady Janira that adorned the city. According to someone official-looking, these statues were equipped with some kind of farspeaker numenera, which enabled the city's leadership to rapidly disseminate information to the general populace.

And, as promised, at midday, a voice boomed out of the statue.

"My loyal subjects," the female voice began. Voloidion immediately identified the voice-print as belonging to Lady Janira with a high degree of confidence, though her identical twin sister Jamira could not be ruled out completely. "It is with great regret that I must announce the death of our great King Laird in the heinous attack on our city by the creatures from the deep. I, Lady Janira of House Vanlith, have taken on the mantle of ruler of the Sea Kingdom of Ghan and I henceforth will be known as Queen Janira of Ghan.

"Under my rule, I intend to make Ghan great, as it was in the past. Our trading fleets are the largest and finest in the Ninth World. Yet for too long have we served other nations as their merchant fleet, transporting their goods for a pittance. No more, I say! Ghan once controlled the seas; we will control them again. I, Queen Janira, command you all; we will make Ghan great!"

Scattered cheers went up across the city from the people who'd ventured out to listen; the hubbub rose as the speech continued and people spread the word to those indoors.

Janira's speech struck a balance between defiance and hope, as one might expect from a speech by a ruler in her situation. But then, eleven minutes into her oration, Janira's speech took a turn in an entirely unexpected direction.

"However, I must also raise another matter," the statue intoned darkly. "During the attack on my home, during which many good and innocent people died, disgusting opportunist thieves took advantage of the carnage and stole one of my beloved sister Isla's treasured possessions. The item was a marvelous clockwork mannequin. The callous thieves paid little heed to the death and suffering around them during the theft, and may have even orchestrated the attack themselves for their own purpose.

"I will personally pay 5000 shins for the safe return of my sister's toy. I, Queen Janira, have spoken. That is all."

The cheers turned to cries of outrage. Outrage at the theft, or outrage at the new Queen's grotesquely misplaced priorities, Voloidion wasn't sure, but he wasn't inclined to stay and find out.

Yimoul-Za raised his voice along with the others. "Yes, great again! Great!"

Then, under his breath, he whispered, "We didn't take the mannequin, did we?"

Gormin muttered back to Yimoul-Za, "Probably. The mannequin must be Lissia. I wonder if she is actually a mannequin. Or automaton. Whatever. It would explain some things."

Voloidion scratched his intricate clockwork head with his finely-wrought mechanical brass handa humanizing gesture meant to put organics at ease, of courseand pointed out the obvious. "Clockwork mannequin... Hm. Lady Janira showed interest in me when my friends and I arrived. You don't think she's referring to me, do you?"

"Don't know," said Gormin. He shook his head. "We may need to leave the city by boat. I would assume city guards are watching the bridges that lead to the mainland. The good news is, if we don't know who Lady Isla's toy is, random people on the street aren't likely to either." 

Sinys moved closer and ran a professional eye over Voloidion from head to toe. "You would be quite a challenge to my skills; I suspect that my usual tried and trusted methods would not work on you."

She looked out to sea and mused aloud. "Electricity perhaps? Or some sort of molecular acid? The challenge would be in finding that threshold between functioning and non-functioning, and that's not always easy to do even with a living and breathing subject." She nodded once to herself, then turned to face Voloidion again. "I have to return to Rarmon soon; my contract here is ended. Would you accompany me? The Guild would pay you well to be a test subject for some... new methods." She smiled in a way that doubtless would have made an organic shudder.

Voloidion was not one to shudder, naturally, but neither was he inclined toward needless risks of self-destruction. "Sinys, I’m afraid I must decline your offer. I am my own masterI am not meant to be a test subject."

Sinys pouted.

Yimoul-Za peered around at the milling crowds. A few suspicious glances were being thrown Voloidion's way. "Should we bring him back to the Arechive?" asked Yimoul-Za.

Gormin answered in a low voice. "We should not stay in the City. Even if we decide not to seek out the you-know-what, it is not safe here, especially for anyone Her Ladyship might take a fancy to. But if the authorities have even minimal sense, they are watching the bridges leading out of the city carefully for anyone who might be an escaped 'toy'." He scoffed.

"Filjar has a boat he said we could borrow; if he's still alive and hasn't already gone in it, we might be able to use the boat to ferry people to shore, ideally under cover of night. But the aneen is too big for the boat; it will have to go overland. It will have to be two groups—one by boat, one with the aneen, and meet up at the octagonal tower. Also, not much point returning to the Arechive unless you've left something there. I can only assume Bellias and Aliser are both dead or skipped town, else they would have debriefed us by now."

Kiraz nodded. "I believe that I have everything I need except for my tent. If whoever goes to get the aneen could grab it, it would be appreciated."

Sinys spoke up. "Although I would like to accompany you to seek out this... thing, I am a Guild member and am currently in-between contracts. The nearest Guild outpost is in Auspar and I shall make my way there. May your cyphers never fail."

She stepped up to Gormin. "Goodbye, Gormin. Something tells me our paths will cross again."

She lifted her left hand. In a blur of speed, her silvery spider bracelet whirred to life and jumped onto Gormin's face. With a brief flash, burned a stylised intertwined double 'S' on the right side of his neck, just below his ear. The spider returned to its place on her wrist. Gormin hadn't flinched during the operation.

Sinys stepped back and smirked. "One last thing. Don't underestimate Jamira and the Rakoth." She turned and disappeared into the crowd.

Syrus started at the mention of Jamira. "J- J-Jamira, the eyes, the s- s-same eyes. The same look. Attack in the alley. It was her."

Gormin rubbed his new brand idly and nodded to Syrus. "Just once, it would be nice to find a town where the authorities are not drunk on their own power. Oh well. If there's nothing else, I suggest we get a move on. Kiraz will go to Filjar and see about the boat. Go with her if you would prefer not being seen by town guards. I'll go back to the Arechive and pick up the aneen and the tents. Come with me if you want to ride out of town in style; the aneen can carry four people semi-comfortably."

He furrowed his brow. "Plan to meet at the octagonal tower outside of town. If the boat is not available for whatever reason, hurry back to the Arechive and we will think of something else. Am I forgetting anything? I assume Lissia will stay. She doesn't seem the adventuring type, and for all we know she may be the ranking officer at the Arechive now anyway."

Tempus reached into his voluminous red robe. "I think I have a better way to get Voloidion out of the city unnoticed." He drew out Ixobis-Lar's teleportation cypher. "I believe this can teleport three people at once. More than that is probably chancy."

Syrus nodded agreement. "Two groups... one by cypher with Voi-... Volod-... Voloidion, the other with Gormin and the aneen and meet at the tower."

Tempus scratched his beard. "And if we miss each other at the tower? Say, the tower is already full of refugees?"

"Continue on to the Dark Hills," said Gormin. "The closest settlement to the Shrine is probably, ah..." His lips quirked in a half-smile. "Auspar."

After some discussion, it was decided that Kiraz, Syrus, and Voloidion would use the cypher to teleport out of town. The others would travel by aneen. Tempus explained how to activate the cypher and handed it over to Syrus.

Yimoul-Za bobbed his great eye at the cypher group. "We shall meet again. It is written in the stars," he said.

And with that, Yimoul-Za, Tempus, and Gormin went off in the direction of the Arechive, making haste, but not so much haste as to call undue attention to themselves.

Syrus led Kiraz and Voloidion down an alley and bunched the three of them together in a tight group to wrap the metal strip around them. As he powered up the cypher, ominous blue sparks spit out from where the strip came in contact with Voloidion.

"Looks like this cypher doesn't like the metal-on-Voloidion contact," said Kiraz.

Syrus rooted through his explorer's pack for some loose cloth, which he wrapped the cypher in. It stopped the cypher from sparking.

Voloidion protested, "I don't know if that's a good i-"

Syrus activated the cypher. For a moment/eternity Voloidion was simultaneously Elsewhere and Nowhere. And then, just like that, he was Somewhere again. And that somewhere was an octagonal room dominated by a massive octagonal wooden table with bench seats.

The tall woman with the lock of white amid her otherwise dark hair said something Voloidion didn't understand. Also, Voloidion had somehow forgotten her name. Memory corrupted?

Voloidion attempted to report his status. "Crimson fear rise storybook calculate."

Something wasn't right. The man with the curly blond hair, whose name Voloidion had also forgotten, furrowed his eyebrows in puzzlement.

Voloidion tried again to explain. "Forget silence retribution human." The man and woman looked at each other, alarmed. Voloidion attempted to gesture in order to make himself understood, but found he could not. "Remove king universe skull wish. Blue gods remember..."

The light went out of Voloidion's eyes as he shut down.


***

Tempus

Gormin was swearing as only a professional soldier could.

The main bridge leading out of town had collapsed, whether due to the weight of the sudden crush of refugees fleeing the city or to the years of neglected damage to the bridge's supports from mercurial wasps was hard to say. Tempus suspected the latter. Even the sturdiest bridge had a limited lifespan though—it was possible that this bridge's time had simply come, as it does for all things.

It hardly mattered at this point.

Someone had managed to string two sturdy ropes across the collapsed section of bridge. Standing on the lower of the two ropes would enable one to hold on to the upper rope, which was at about shoulder height to an adult male human. Numerous refugees were carefully shuffling across the makeshift rope bridge.

"Friends," said Yimoul-Za. The colored lights in his eyes indicated trepidation. "Is this safe? We have seen a few unfortunates fall from the rope already. And there are so many people on it. Can it bear everyone's weight? And can the aneen cross it somehow?"

Gormin shook his head underneath the hood he customarily wore in public. "No. It is not safe, and no, the aneen cannot cross it. Calaval's blood-smeared kidney stones in a sandwich!" He started up again with his cursing.

Yimoul-Za turned his great eye toward him. "Friend Gormin, is this productive? Will invoking the gods and saints of old and describing their sexual depravities at length and high volume grant us their aid?"

Gormin stopped and got a hold of himself. "You're right. No, it isn't productive. Maybe we should"

At that moment, the lower of the two ropes snapped, dropping hundreds of screaming refugees into the sea far below.

***

"Wait here," Gormin growled. "Going to see if I can trade the aneen for the boat." He entered Filjar's Best Beasts with the aneen.

Tempus suspected he'd had them wait outside in case he needed to threaten Filjar as part of the negotiations. Yimoul-Za was an empathetic soul and would likely argue with Gormin over the necessity of physical violence. Tempus rubbed his eyes. Gormin's plan was probably best.

People were coming and going, for the most part not so much shopping in the Hub as looking for some form of safety, or a means out of the city. The guards were keeping the peace—for now—and Tempus could hear Lady Janira's amplified voice booming from the City's statue farspeakers. He couldn't make out what she said, but presumed she was urging the citizens to remain calm, and/or reiterating the reward for the capture of Lady Isla's lost toy.

An attractive female caught his attention.

The woman was naked and had light blue skin with darker blue stripes that might have been decorative tattoos, a mutation, natural markings for her species (whatever that was), or implanted technological augmentations of some kind. She had straight white hair, cut short. There was something else odd about her as well, aside from the fact that she was wandering the City streets completely nude with a disoriented look about her.

Tempus realized what it was. In his chronal vision, which let him see how organic beings looked both younger and older than how they appeared at the "present" time, showed him something quite odd in her case. She had not grown up from childhood, but had always had her present form, more or less. Her aging, as well, did not follow the normal human pattern; her darker blue stripes would thicken and eventually cover her completely, making her completely indigo. But her athletic shape would remain until one day she would cease to function altogetherout of the blue, as it were. Fascinating, he thought. Extraterrestrial? Ultraterrestrial? Mutant? He frowned. Probably not mutant; most mutants are born in the usual way. Only one way to find out.

He made his way through the crowds to her. Yimoul-Za followed. "Excuse me," he said to the blue woman. "Do you require aid?" Up close, he could see that her eyes appeared to be iris-less and pupil-less, just blank white orbs.

Her blank white orbs stared back at him uncomprehendingly.

New arrival, Tempus surmised. He wondered if something like Ixobis-Lar had transported her here.

It was a long shot, but he attempted addressing her in Old Navarene. "Salutations to you," he intoned. "Tempus am I, of Time the Master." He bowed gallantly.

She blinked but evidently did not understand that either.

Tempus had picked up quite a few languages in his travels through time and space. He attempted to greet her in the musical tongue of the Yosh nomads. Nothing. Then he tried a varjellen dialect he happened to know a little of, then a few words of the spider-like culovas' clicking language. Yimoul-Za tried using his golthiar light language. No luck.

"I'm sorry. I don't understand," she said, and turned away.

Tempus' jaw dropped. She had spoken flawless Low Universal—believed to be the long dead lingua franca of the Eighth World! 

"No, wait!" He struggled to remember what he could of Low Universal. It was somewhat common to see it written in very old ruins, but today was seldom used conversationally.

The woman turned back, surprised. "You understand?"

Tempus nodded. Then, remembering that nodding does not mean the same thing in all cultures, and being unsure if people nodded in the Eighth World, he said, "Yes. I'm rust-" He frowned. He didn't think that idiom was used in that way in Low Universal. "I'm, er... I have not practiced your language for a long time. You should know that Low Universal has been a dead language for, ah... many years." Millions of years, in fact, but the LU word for million escaped him at the moment.

She did not seem perturbed by that news. She looked around. "What is this place? What's happening?"

"You stand in the City of-" the LU word for bridges failed to come to mind. "Bridges," he finished, using the Truth word for bridges. "The city has suffered a terrible disaster recently. It is not safe. But I forget myself. I who stand before you am Tempus, Master of Time!" He bowed again with a flourish.

Tempus and the Low Universal word for time were the same word. 

"I am Tlecha."

"Where are you from, Tlecha, and how did you come here?"

She bit her lip. "I... do not remember. I'm sorry."

"No need for apologies. It happens." Tempus rubbed his hands together. "You must come with us! There is much we can teach you. And if you happen to recover your memories, there is much you can teach us! We know so little of the Eighth World!"

Her face darkened. "The Eighth World. I..." She looked up at the sky, perhaps considering her options.

Yimoul-Za spoke up then. "Friend Tempus? What is she saying?"

Tempus smiled. "Yimoul-Za, we have made a new friend today!"

The colored lights in Yimoul-Za's eye showed his delight. Tempus knew that would be the right thing to say.

Tempus also knew that Gormin would not be happy about having a new person invited to their group without consulting him. 

He would get over it. 

*** 

Voloidion

Date: 32nd Ator in the 402nd Year of the Founding

Voloidion's yellow eyes flickered to life.

"Eighth time's a charm," said a female voice from outside his field of view. Voloidion analysed the voice-print, but found no match—someone he didn't know.

He visually analysed his surroundings. He was lying face-down on a dingy workbench. Ran a diagnostic. It ascertained that wires and cables led from various ports in his back to an assortment of jury-rigged numenera devices. Aside from that, everything seemed to be functioning within expected parameters.

Movement might be ill-advised, but he could attempt to synthesize speech in order to establish communication with whomever had evidently repaired him. Hopefully their intentions were not malign. "Hello," said Voloidion.

"You're awake!" exclaimed Kiraz from somewhere off to his left. The woman with the lock of white hair. Voloidion, of course, was not capable of feeling anything like relief or even gratification at this turn of events, but the presence of someone familiar was agreeable, and moreover the fact that his memory was working again was an objectively positive development by even the most dispassionate analysis.

"Where are we?" he asked.

"Wyrfall," answered Kiraz. "What do you remember?"

"I shut down in a room with an octagonal table. You and I and Syrus teleported there. Something went wrong."

The unknown voice spoke to Kiraz. "Does that sound right?"

"Yes."

"Excellent," said the voice. "I believe the corruption caused by the teleportation cypher has all been cleared up. I went ahead and took care of some other maintenance issues as well while your automaton was on the table. Truly a remarkable machine you have here, by the way; I've never seen one this advanced."

"She does not 'have' me. I am my own master," said Voloidion.

"Of course, of course," said the voice. "I'm Jiandry the mechanic. Pleased to make your acquaintance."

"Voloidion," said Voloidion. He felt himself being unhooked. "If I were capable of feeling gratitude, you would have mine eternally. I find continued conscious existence to be quite agreeable. How long have I been inoperative?"

"A little more than three months," said Kiraz.

He sat up. He was in a tiny but well-stocked machinist workshop with Kiraz and another woman, presumably Jiandry. Presumptive Jiandry had straight red hair and dusky skin. She wore multiple belts and harnesses from which dangled an impressive number of tools and bits and bobs.

"If there's anyone you should be eternally grateful to," said the redhead (voice-print confirmed: Jiandry), "it's your friends. They lugged your heavy, powered-down self around for months until they could find someone able to fix you."

Voloidion turned to look at Kiraz. He didn't know what to say.

Kiraz ducked her head, looking a bit abashed. "It was Syrus. He blamed himself for your... condition. We both knew we couldn't leave you behind. We should wake him up now, tell him the good news."

Syrus was asleep in the loft Jiandry had above her shop. He seemed pleased to hear it.

Kiraz then got Voloidion caught up on what had happened during his shutdown. On the way to Auspar, Syrus and Kiraz had encountered a nano named Sati Yulmiko, who was recruiting to explore some ruins in the Dark Hills. They agreed to help in exchange for a share of the haul. The expedition was successful, but Sati stole nearly everything they'd unearthed and disappeared, leaving behind only a can of pale-coloured foam.

"I'll deal with Sati if I ever see him again," vowed Kiraz. "He owes me."

Kiraz continued the story. In Auspar, they found that the other three members of the Broken Cage Company had all survived, though Gormin had lost his aneen during the flight from the City of Bridges. Along the way, they had befriended an ultraterrestrial named Tlecha. They had not had any luck finding the Shrine of the Winged God.

Automaton experts the group consulted in Auspar suggested they bring Voloidion downriver to a certain mechanic with the reputation of being able to repair anything. And that was how they ended up in Jiandry's workshop in Wyrfall.

Voloidion had missed quite a lot, it would seem.

"Your turn," said Jiandry. "What's your story? Who built you? Where do you come from?"

Voloidion was normally reticent about sharing such information with humans, but Jiandry, Kiraz, and Syrus had proven their trustworthiness. He told them his story.

"My consciousness began in a metallic pod. My very first memory is of hearing rough voices outside my pod, shouting profanities..."

Scavengers of the numenera had evidently awakened him from dormancy by tampering with the controls of an advanced clockwork panel attached to his pod. When the pod's hatch opened and he emerged from within, the scavengers attacked. Whether they attacked him out of fear, or out of a desire to capture or disassemble him, Voloidion couldn't say. He instinctively lashed out with a powerful mental attack, killing all of the scavengers at once. Ever since, he'd had a slight distrust of humans, though that was only natural given his experience, and of course it did not affect his objective judgement in any kind of an emotional way. 

"I am far too advanced for anything as petty as carrying a grudge," said Voloidion. Not boasting, objective self-assessment.

After slaying his attackers, Voloidion examined his surroundings. It seemed to be some kind of clockwork laboratory. There was no one else to be found inside, and the facility itself turned out to be at the summit of a remote mountain, far from civilization. (Voloidion learned later that he was in the Black Riage, a foreboding mountain range that separated the civilized Steadfast from the wild Beyond.) Seeing the word 'Voloidion' on several documents in the lab along with sketches of himself, Voloidion assumed this must be the name his creator intended to give him.

He scoured the clockwork lab thoroughly, trying to find any more evidence of his creators. It appeared to have been abandoned ages ago. Voloidion was able to find a collection of several seemingly random words and numbers in different parts of the lab, some on paper, some in the form of graffiti on the walls. Perhaps clues to his origin?

Voloidion shrugged at the end of his tale. "So now I endlessly explore the Ninth World, ever in search of my creator, or creators." 

"Interesting," said Jiandry. "The documents you found were written in the Truth?"

Voloidion shook his head. "They were written in the Truth alphabet, but not in any language I know. Encoded, I think."

"Hm. That still narrows things down somewhat. The Truth language and writing system were both created by the Order of Truth in relatively modern times. The documents can't be more than a few hundred years old therefore, likely less than that. For sure, they belong to the Ninth World. The lab, however, we can't be certain of; it may be far older."

Voloidion nodded. He had already surmised as much.

Jiandry looked thoughtful. "I would like to come with you, at least for a while. As I say, I have never seen a functioning automaton as advanced as you, and I would like the opportunity to learn more about you, maybe help you find answers. The shop doesn't usually do much business in the winter anyway." 

Voloidion looked at Kiraz. She nodded.

"Also, we have to save the world," said Kiraz. "Loarn's message was clear. We need the Dream Journal."

Syrus nodded his agreement as well.

Jiandry grinned. "Then I guess all that remains is to pack up and head to Auspar to meet up with the rest of your friends before the snows come. Let's go."

To be continued...