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“Death is a story told in threes.” Professor Belnor proclaimed with a swish of her hands, reconjuring the humanoid mannequin from before out of thin air. 


“The death of the corpus.” Her voice echoed, causing the standing mannequin to quite literally keel over and ‘die’. 


“The death of the Ure.” The mannequin remained prone, motionless and lifeless, whilst the space above it erupted into a magical holographic display. Within which was an animation of a rapidly-magnifying picture, moving from organ, to tissue, to cell cluster, before finally… zooming into and focusing-in on just a lonesome cell. One that seemed to ‘pulse’ with life, until finally, it stopped.  


“And the departure of the soul.” A shadowy, wispy, ephemeral cloud of ‘smoke’ emerged from the still and lifeless mannequin, rising up higher and higher until finally, it simply disappeared from view. 


“The bodies which our souls inhabit are not merely biological vessels of flesh and bone. Nor is it merely a vehicle through which the irreplaceable soul of a sapient resides. No, these bodies which we call our own, are not at all bereft of the complexities of the soul which we otherwise hold in such high regard. For there is magic in the most fundamental building blocks of our material form, the result of the abstract processes of life, forged through factors both arbitrary and extraneous. We, or rather, our bodies — are both magical and biological. Which results in the phenomenon we now understand as The Three Death Principle.” The professor paused, tapping her feet several times in rapid succession, and prompting the recessed surgical theater to lift up to ground-level. 


“Allow me to elaborate.” She once more gestured towards the hologram, which now grew so large that it took up much of the glass dome of the elevated surgical theater. Within that projection, was the cell from before. Except this time, the clock had been reversed, and it pulsated with life far more vividly than even before. “Within our bodies, comprising our very being, is the fundamental organism known as the Ure. It is within this Ure, that the biological meets the magical. As it is a well known fact that it is only with mana, that life is even possible. The integration of which however, is often overlooked, if not entirely misrepresented by many a misinformed scholar. It is as such, my responsibility to correct those misunderstandings. Starting now.” The professor snapped her fingers, zooming in close enough that the various organelles of the cell could be seen. 


There, we were treated to what was the most prototypical looking eukaryotic cell imaginable, as the EVI began furiously cross-referencing this to our internal databases; highlighting everything that was comparable from the large and universally recognizable nucleus, to the ever-important bean-looking rockstar that was the powerhouse of the cell — the mitochondria. 


[CROSS REFERENCE ANALYSIS] Notifications dotted my HUD, absolutely filling up my available visual real estate with annotation after annotation of nth tier scientific analyses. However, as much as those successful cross references were made, so too were several regions of the cell quickly demarcated in yellow and red circles, annotated in question marks, hinting at what were ostensibly foreign and unknown constructs that were incomparable to any known cell in the database.


It was this region of the cell that the professor began honing in on, as she began pointing at the anomalous cellular components, and describing them simply as: “-the magical aspect of the otherwise biological entity. The fundamental components of the Ure that gave it life, and the sole reason why death is the way it is. For you see, students, life is a careful balance, a marriage of two forces — the biological, and the magical. Your biological processes are one half of the equation, the magical being the other half. One cannot exist without the other, nor can one sustain themselves without the other. These two forces must always be in balance, in equilibrium, in [homeostasis].” The EVI quickly chimed in, providing an annotated comparatively similar descriptor of the professor’s otherwise long winded explanations. 


“Some processes may exist independently, whilst others are intertwined. It is however, with the death of the corpus, the first death, that the biological ceases to be.” The professor once more paused, displaying a great many ways a person can die ‘biologically’ on a second hologram. Most of the examples of a ‘biological death’ were quite bland, consisting of old age, accidents, or some combination of bog-standard deaths. Though some that came up consisted of what I could only describe as scenes pulled straight out of an AMV of some hyper-realistic medieval fighting game. “The death of the biological, however, does not immediately mean the death of the magical. The magical, in fact, manages to persist for some time; its independent processes being the last vestiges of life to persist until finally… it too dies due to the death of its other half.” 


A hand was raised from the crowd at this point. 


It was, surprisingly, Qiv’Ratom.


“Yes, Lord Ratom?”


“Professor, if I may interject, is the corpus not dead at this point in time?”


“Indeed it is, Lord Ratom.” Belnor answered with a firm nod. 


“If that is the case… then how is it that the Ure is still, in a sense, alive?”


“That is an excellent question, Lord Ratom.” Belnor acknowledged with a warm smile, before turning to the rest of class. “Is there anyone who believes they may have the answer?” 


A few eyes glanced down towards Qiv at this point in time, many of which were accompanied by the tentative twitching of hands and arms. It was clear there were some who wanted to try their hand at hypothesizing an answer. Though many simply refused to do so, clearly out of a concern that doing so would be an encroachment of the great Lord Qiv Ratom.


Belnor, either not noticing the trend or choosing to simply ignore it, chose to move on. “Well then, I will be more than happy to answer, Lord Ratom.” She continued with that amiable demeanor. “The death of the corpus, is in a sense, a purely biological affair. As despite the magical aspect of the Ure acting as an integral partner in a body’s homeostasis at a [cellular] level, it does not play a vital role in the gross processes of its overarching physiology. Moreover, it is important to note that it is more often than not the biological that fails before the magical. But that is another matter altogether. Now, to round out my point, this is why I specifically selected the term persist instead of survive. As all Ure following the death of the corpus, are no longer capable of survival, but are merely persisting until such a time where they too will die.”


The professor took a moment to highlight several aspects of the hologram once more, showing the cell as it was in its healthy state, before transitioning to a state wherein all of the various biological processes have more or less stopped. Despite that, the self-described magical organelles continued to function, even though it was clear that the rest of the cell was no longer viable.  


“This is not to say that the Ure is truly alive at this point, merely that the magical [organelles] at this point in time, are still functioning. This will be an important distinction to note when dealing with the third and final death.” She spoke as she demonstrated the slow, but eventual cessation of the magical organelle’s mystery-functions, before it too succumbed to death.


“To summarize, the first death is defined by the cessation of a body’s biological processes. Whilst the second death is defined by the cessation of the last mana-based processes of the Ure.” Belnor once more gestured to the hologram, which highlighted the point of those two ‘deaths’. “It is the third and final death however, that truly marks the point of no return; the point of true death. As everything prior to the third death is more than within the capacity for modern healing to rectify, if not entirely reverse.”


The professor paused yet again, gesturing to the ‘operating theater’ behind her, as it was suddenly and inexplicably filled with what I assumed to be illusions of magical healers. Each of them were dressed in what I could only describe as an extremely simplified set of mage’s robes, to the point where they more resembled surgical scrubs with a golden trim, and inscribed with a set of magical scripts; the likes of which ran up and down the length of their clothes. On top of the operating table was someone who just looked outright dead to me, but that the holographic projection above showed was still at the very cusp of a second death. 


“So long as the third death is not yet reached, contemporary healing is more than capable of reversing all of the processes of first and second death.” The professor announced with a charismatic vigor. A proud and wide grin began forming at the edges of her face, as she gestured at the room behind her. “We live in an era of miracles, an era where contemporary healing has seemingly triumphed over most of the forces of death. We bask in the fruits of the resultant efforts of eons upon eons of tireless and ceaseless study, wherein the biological and the magical have become akin to clay and putty in the hands of the skilled and learned healer.”  


The little ‘skit’ behind the professor marched on, as it flipped through hundreds of patients’ worth of grievous injuries and horrible maladies in the span of just a minute, before finally ending on a note of palpable optimism where the presumably-healed patients from before all lined up behind the professor; unscathed and unscarred. 


“These are all the lives I have personally touched following my mastery of healing, all of which would have otherwise succumbed to their injuries if it were not for the skills and knowledge bestowed upon me from those that have come before me.” The professor continued, her chest puffing up with pride, as the lesson quickly shifted to something resembling a sweet old lady reminiscing on both her glory days, and the wonders of ‘modern society’. “We have defeated the two deaths, in more ways than can be covered in a single lesson.” She continued, but soon, started to radically shift her expressions. From one of pride and optimism, to one of worry and regret. This change in expression was matched in equal measures by the change in her tone of voice. “But we have not, nor will we seemingly ever, defeat the third and final death — the untethering of the soul from its mortal and worldly confines.” She spoke with a deep and steady sigh. 


It was at this point that the lights in my brain started coming on one by one, that one word managing to elicit the most recent memories of the fate of the black-robed professor.


Untethering.


I physically leaned forwards now, something that garnered the attention of the entire gang as it was something I rarely did, if ever, in any other class.


“But perhaps I am getting a bit too ahead of myself.” Belnor continued, as she whisked away all of the illusions and holograms from behind her, leaving only the mannequin and the hologram of the lonesome cell above her. “Let us circle back to the second death, and the point I made regarding the persistence of these magical organelles following the first death. Let us talk about the fundamentals of the soul, and the manifestation of the processes of this third and most final death.” A few swishes of the professor’s hands would cause the mannequin in question to take center stage, as layers of its body would begin peeling away, revealing the organ systems beneath. However, instead of settling into any one organ system, the ‘animation’ simply ‘cycled’ between all of them. “The soul, despite it being the core of our very essence, is nebulous and undefined. There is no one organ system, no discrete point in the body through which its presence can be ascertained. The soul is, instead, bound to our body by virtue of the combined processes of all of the magical and mana-based machinations present within our Ure.”


I raised my hand at that, my mind now running at a million miles an hour. 


“Yes, Cadet Booker?”


“Professor, are you saying that the soul is an emergent property?”


Belnor’s eyes widened at that answer, as she cocked her head, before nodding deeply. “In a sense, Cadet Booker. Though that is the scholarly interpretation of the manner by which it ‘arose’. Nevertheless, that is a valid descriptor all the same. Now, moving on—” The professor quickly gestured towards the hologram of the cell. “—there is likewise no particular one Ure, nor any particular set of Ure we can point to in order to ascertain just where the soul is tethered. Instead, and taking a phrase from Cadet Emma Booker’s vernacular, the tethers by which the soul is bound to our body, are instead the cumulative and intangible emergent property of the sum of our magical processes.”


The whole class furiously began taking notes at this, as the holographic projection behind the professor morphed and shifted once more, this time turning into something completely different.


“Allow me to illustrate.” 


What was now above the professor… was an entire jigsaw puzzle set. 


“Imagine the soul and its tethers as two pieces of a puzzle, completely interlocking, and seamless in its integration.” The hologram above began assembling the jigsaw set, one side forming the vaguely recognizable shape of a humanoid body, and the other taking the shape of what I could only describe as a stylized cloud. “One half of the puzzle represents the body, and the other represents the soul.” The two corresponding halves lit up in a brief display of colors, before finally, they began locking into place. “It is these tabs and divots, these uniquely shaped connectors, that represent the tethers which bind the body and soul.” 


The animation paused for a moment, as the color of its bottom half changed, turning a sickly green before losing all sense of color; more than likely representing the death of the body. “And it is these tabs and divots, these tethers, which are lost one by irreplaceable one, following the completion of the second death.” As if on cue, the little jigsaw tabs between the two halves of the puzzle began withering away, as the top half representing the soul slowly but surely, began dislodging, before finally, floating away altogether. 


“This is the third death.” The professor announced with finality. “The point in which the soul, the very source of one’s being, the very ability for one to regulate the influx and efflux of mana, is finally released. At which point—” Belnor paused, gesturing to the hologram as it reverted back to the mannequin and the magnified cell. “—there is no means of reversing the process of death. As there is no means of A. Retrieving a lost soul, B. Reforging individual tethers, and C. No means of actually reconnecting the soul to the tethers as might otherwise be possible with a simple puzzle. Many have tried, and while many have succeeded in creating entities such as the spellbound, no one has truly succeeded in the complete retethering of a wayward soul following a complete third death.” 


A moment of silence descended on the class, as a million and one questions descended over me, consuming every bit of my very being.


I didn’t know how Professor Belnor did it, but we somehow went from middle school cell biology to a Castles and Wyverns deep lore podcast in a blink of an eye. And whilst I definitely vibed with both, the looming question of Mal’tory’s fate and how it factored into all of this just kept tugging at the corners of my consciousness. 


This growing concern however, was quickly addressed. But not by myself or anyone else in the gang, but by Rostarion of all people.


“Yes, Prince Rostario Rostarion?”


“Professor, if I may… what would you make of the rumors surrounding the forbidden arts of retethering? Or, as some may say, the restoration of life during the third death?” 


The professor eyed the hamster with a severe expression, her eyes eventually glimpsing his notebook which from my vantage point, was filled to the brim with notes pre-prepared prior to class.


“Mortals will do everything in their power to defy death, Prince Rostarion.” The professor began. “It is also worth noting that such an act, retethering as you put it, has in fact been attempted countless times before; more often than not without the approval of any guild or council. For the purposes of this class however, I wish not to comment on such atrocious acts. As in order to attain the ends which they seek, they must sacrifice more than what is morally acceptable, and even so… what appears on the other side, is often never the same.” 


“Thank you, professor.” Rostario responded with a deep bow. “I merely wished to address a curious topic which would otherwise consume the class following such a riveting lesson.” 


Many murmurs were heard following that, as despite not knowing what Rosatrio’s social game was here, I couldn’t deny the fact that he had in fact addressed the elephant in the room.


It was following that exchange however, that another question from before finally reemerged. One that I felt compelled to follow up on.  


“Professor?”


“Yes, Cadet Booker?”


“You said at the beginning of this lesson on death that you’d be explaining why plants and animals in the Nexus don’t just despawn-, I mean, harmonize.” I quickly corrected myself, but found that the EVI had managed to successfully implement a stutter between that little self-correction; saving me from the awkwardness. 


“Indeed I did, indeed. We are just getting to that, Cadet Booker.” The professor answered with an encouraging smile, as she gestured once again to the hologram of that dead and lifeless cell. “The third death, despite its finality, is a slow and gradual process; typically taking minutes if not hours depending on the species and specific state of the individual in question. Even in its shortest timeframe, environmental mana would find itself seeping gradually into the body through the gradually deteriorating manafield projected by the loosening soul. It is exactly because of this gradual exposure to environmental mana, that the body does not harmonize. Moreover, when factoring in the opposing internal ‘pressures’ of the already-existing mana present within the Ure’s magical [organelles], harmonization becomes even less of a likelihood.” 


I nodded along carefully, jotting down notes, as another thought suddenly slammed into me.


“I have a hypothetical question, professor.”


“Yes, Cadet Booker?”


“Seeing as gradual exposure to mana is what prevents harmonization, does that mean in instances where a manafield is compromised, that the rapid and uncontrolled influx of mana is what causes liquefaction-, er, harmonization?”


“That is correct, Cadet Booker.” The professor nodded. “That is why I prefaced this entire lesson on death by categorizing it as typical deaths. Deaths that supersede the Three Death Principle, does indeed exist. One of those, being the compromisation of a manafield, thereby leading to uncontrolled mana influx and thus complete harmonization.”


I nodded along, my eyes narrowing further in thought. “And, as a hypothetical question, Professor. Would that mean that… in the case of a living being without a manafield, that there would be a chance for survival provided that mana is exposed to them slowly and gradually?”


That question prompted Belnor’s eyes to squint as well, followed quickly by a rapid sigh. “It’s not about tolerance in that case, Cadet Booker. Moreover, survival would be outright impossible considering the inherently destructive nature of mana on the biological aspects of a living being. What you are hypothesizing is a creature, a bastardized interpretation of life, lacking in the very components that allow it to merely exist. If such a thing, dare I even call it living, were to be exposed to the lowest amount, confined to even a single form of mana… then their Ure which have not adapted to resist mana, would either suffer irreparable damage outright, die, or liquefy instantaneously.”


“Is this something that’s been tested before, or simply a matter of hypothesis, professor?” I drilled further, digging deeper into the very-relevant topic.


“Ancient experiments, Cadet Booker. Homunculi, not life, forced to exist momentarily in a manaless vacuum, before dying either due to exposure to mana as described, or due to its own maladaptive form being unsuited for life. I would, however, wish not to dwell on such abominable experiments. My answer to this question is final, is that clear, Cadet Booker?”


A part of me wanted to once more defy these assertions outright, here, and now. 


However, that same part of me was tempered by the two previous attempts of this. One of which required constant and consistent undermining of deeply-entrenched worldviews nearly a week straight, in order to truly break through. The other, being poorly received, before being swiftly censored by the shadowy apprentice.


Moreover, there was that mystery meeting I still had with the Dean that could be on this exact topic after the class.


I’d have to play this smart, and consider careful and consistent moves.


“Yes, Professor, thank you for answering my questions.” I nodded, as I knew I’d already won something of a victory today by virtue of the comment regarding cells. 


Breadcrumbs, leading to parties truly interested in hearing more approaching me first, as was the case with Etholin. It’d be easier to convert adjacent realmers who were curious on their own volition first, before attempting to deal with the likes of the more bull-headed like with Qiv and Auris.


A moment of silence punctuated our exchange, which was suddenly and abruptly filled by the harmonious sounds of what I’d begun to associate with the classroom bell. 


“We have covered the material which should serve as a solid foundation from here on out, students.” Belnor announced, effortlessly switching towards a winding down of the otherwise consistently intense class. “In summary, healing will be focused primarily on addressing common injuries and illnesses of the corpus, and on methods in preventing the first death. Some lessons will focus on a reversal of the first death, whilst a handful will focus on the theories behind healing and its role in dealing with second death. With that, you are dismissed.” 


The band entered almost immediately following Belnor’s dismissal as the same tunes from the past three classes echoed throughout the hall. 


We waited our turn to leave the room, which at this point was seventh amongst the top ten groups. 


However, upon departure from the hall, something peculiar happened.


As I noticed several groups starting to clump around us, all of which were either outright strangers who’d rarely interacted with us before, or familiar faces such as with the likes of Etholin and Gumigo. 


“Is it true you have seen the microverse with your very own eyes, newrealmer?” Viscount Gumigo spoke first, his flighty and boisterous personality carrying through even in spite of the more inquisitive stance he currently had.


“How is it that you managed such a feat?” Another voice erupted from one of the members of the crowd.


“You claim to be manaless, but it is clear you are simply mana-deficient, just how is it that a weak-fielded race such as your own managed to independently develop advanced mana-imbued microscopy?” A tall, otherwise oftentimes silent member of Etholin’s group spoke in a surprisingly well-put and eloquent manner, throwing me off as even more questions bombarded me all at once.


“How do you manipulate light through lenses without the sufficient manipulation of manastreams to either forge or actively shift the quality of lenses?”


“Is it an artifice?”


“An artifact?


“Was it a wild guess you just ran with, and just found confirmation in this class?”


“Was it a bluff, newrealmer?”


“No, of course it wasn’t, she was the one who described the concept prior to Professor Belnor’s full explanations, you imbecile.” One of Gumigo’s smaller alligator buddies spoke up defiantly, daringly meeting the two skeptics’ arguments. 


“Maybe she learned of it in the week leading up to class from the library she so often frequents-”


“As Lord Ratom said himself, she would’ve called it an Ure, not a Cell, you buffoon!” 


Infighting soon erupted between the gathered students, as I struggled to quell the rapidly developing situation. “Hey hey hey! There’s no need to bicker and argue here. I can answer your questions but it’ll have to be a one question at a time sort of deal.” I practically shouted, finally eliciting the attention of the gathered group as they each nodded to varying degrees of acquiescence. “Alright then, let’s start with the first question. Viscount Gumigo? To answer your question, yes, yes I have indeed seen the microverse with my very own eyes. In fact, it’s quite common for people of my realm to be able to peer into said microverse. With the way things are set up in our education system, it’s a guaranteed fact that almost everyone would have at least glimpsed upon this small and mysterious world once in their lives.” 


“This sounds like a sort of ritual.” Gumigo shot back with a set of narrowing eyes. “Is there perhaps one monumental artifice that peers into the microverse in your realm? A relic of the past that you now all worship?”


“What? No. Sorry, let me clarify. Learning about the microverse is something that’s a standard thing in my world. That’s all I meant from that, and what I was implying by the fact that all have peered into it at least once.” 


“But what purpose is there to learn about such-”


“That’s enough questions from you, Viscount! The newrealmer promised all of us answers! Now step out of the way before I—”


“Ahem.” Another voice suddenly entered the fray, a familiar one, that the EVI conveniently labeled as Apprentice Arlan Ostoy. “I am afraid I will have to borrow the newrealmer student for now. She has… prior engagements planned and I would be remiss in my duties if I did not remind her of her obligations.” 


I stood there, refusing to even acknowledge him for a moment, before turning to refocus my entire attention on the much smaller man. I didn’t respond to him right away, merely glaring down at him with unflinching and unfeeling lenses as I could just about make out a small fearful quiver that resulted from the staredown. 


Then, and only then, did I respond. 


“Let’s make it quick.”

Comments

Oval Pot

Ok so she's (theoretically) able to expose herself to extremely small amounts of mana to not liquify immediately?

Nul Atlas

DAMMIT I HAVE TO WAIT TILL NEXT WEEK. thank you jcb for giving me something to look forward to at the end of this week.

I Dare Korval

Well, ... this should be an interesting conversation. If the headmaster tries to forbid her talking about Earthrealm, and one of the main points of Emma's mission is to be an ambassador, suppressing the truth about Earthrealm is going to be a big sticking point. Ordering her to lie will not go well.

Jcb112

Nope! That was what Emma had assumed at first from Belnor's explanations, but Belnor confirms that manaless creatures without cellular adaptations for mana would simply not be able to survive due to irreparable damage sustained from mana exposure to their cells which were not evolved to deal with any sort of mana exposure! :D

LumiOak

Was kinda hoping for a star wars reference about midichlorians, but Disney has it not, maybe best not to?

Swan

I was curious if gene-modding could fix that, but from the description the needed modifications of the cell sound quite severe so idk if that'd work (Idk though, I don't know shit about gene therapy tbh)

Tainted_But_Thriving

I want now desperately to learn of the harmonization of the first human. Did they examine his or her cells and find the magical organelles missing? Do we have such organelles but only attuned to the 30th tainted mana type? Or did the mana so sufficiently destroy the biological that the nexus couldn’t glean much from the harmonized corpse? And then, the early experiments with homunculi, I don’t know if we will ever find out if life on earth was created by some trickster god or magician experimentalist or instead by abiogenesis and just happened to evolve without mana. Will these questions be answered?

Kevin Neely

"Make it quick" and painful for you.

ArdenW

Too bad to learn that there's no way Emma will be able to develop a tolerance to mana and will be able to exist outside of the suit beyond the confines of her tent, but then that's no different from a person living in a colony on Luna or Mars, now is it?

Canpinter

Emma needs to get that fabricator up and running and start pumping out small gifts for people. "Hey man have a digital watch, it comes with a built in shattering of your world view."

Willow Arkan

I have a bad feeling about the fate of the charming courier assistant that Emma was so adamant they take care of and was promised as much, considering what seems likely necessary for whatever they did to retrieve Mal'tory's soul.

@Alphamoonman

I was literally chanting "mitochondria is the powerhouse of the cell" and then when I saw it in bold text I damn near cheered

Ciberj1

So then, what WOULD happen if emma say, cut her hair or took a blood sample of herself and took it out of the tent? Red blood cells don't have either core nor much of anything inside so would they liquify? What about white blood cells and T-cells? Would her hair even harmonize since it's just a bunch of keratin? What about clothes or other materals. Since the tablet and other components on her armour seem fine enough were would the line be for harmonization? Would it work with viruses? Bacteria? Or must it be a more complex organism?

Alex Heilgeist

There being mitochondria is interesting, that heavily implies that there is common ancestor between humanity and the nexus races. Mitochondria originated as a seperate microorganism that was encapsulated but not consumed by cells, and created a symbiotic relationship. As far as we know, mitochondria has only ever developed once, in contrast to other biological functions which have arisen independantly into analogous systems. For mitochondria to develop a second time, let alone the multiple times neccesary for it to be a basic fact of nexus races, seems incredibly unlikely, amd thus points to a common ancestor of all the races that had mitochondria

Relvezz

That seems similar to life's first interactions with oxygen. It took millions of years for life to build resistance to oxygen. Before that, life had no means of tolerating oxygen and would pretty much promptly die if too much built up.

Michael Halpern

what a way to crimp a ship, though it sounds an awful lot like radiation poisoning which at low levels should be treatable

Michael Halpern

So does Emma have a field X-ray machine? sure even today there are better medical scanning equipment, but for field conditions you want simple, relatively easy to use and reliable, they could reduce x-ray bleed problems by using X-ray lasers, rather than using lead.

Michael Halpern

more likely they used some of the slaves, anything that could earn a small amount of trust from Emma would be valuable given how much intrigue was already around her, so a third party that has earned said trust but is not a student or faculty member of the school would likely be more valuable than Maltory.

Blake S

Single celled organism seem like they would allso harmonize because it seems like nexian cells or ure filter mana radiation on an individual level. Otherwise how would nexian singles celled life exist.

Blake S

Presumably they souped and no visible soul popped out and the nexians were hecking confused.

Michael Halpern

which points to Earthrealm being the source of biological life, as Earthrealm life has mitochondria, but not the magic organelles, which seem to be ubiquitous in the Nexus and adjacent realm races, implying that those organelles evolved later

Michael Halpern

actually I wouldn't rule that out, it would require very intensive gene therapy, but given they have people regularly living well over 100, and still being fit, active, and viral/fertile, that means they are regularly doing full body telomere replacement, adding novel organelles would be much more difficult, but within the realm of plausibility, for all we know they may have cosmetic gene modification similar to how we today have tattoos for safety in this case they would likely have to change the gollands as well, meaning it could be artificial speciesification so not something to do lightly, but its plausible with what we have seen

I Dare Korval

Well that was the contents of one of the book that got burned. So something pretty big was discovered.

I Dare Korval

Adding new organelles might simply be a case of using a virus to insert them into the cells rather than changing the persons DNA. Of course a study of Nexian cells may allow them to determine that just modifying the mitochondria RNA is all that would be needed. Also this also tells us that people with taint can trigger a fast acting body wide shutdown of the part of the cells that allows for magic control. Is that process could be analysed and scientifically duplicated, it would make on heck of a weapon for Earthrealm against the Nexus. The Nexus may even have a magic version already and it's part of how they put down Adjacent Realms that rebel.

I Dare Korval

I agree that they would harmonize. It seems like the extra organelles probably work to protect the cell membrane (by creating a kind of energy field) from being disrupted and causing the cell to liquify/dissolve.

I Dare Korval

I'm hoping she has a gene sequencer. It would be mighty interesting if she could analyze the unknown organelles and see if the have RNA like the mitochondria does.

Eris Nihila

69th heart Nice

Michael Halpern

i could see her printing the gene sequencer, rather than bringing it, less potentially immediately useful thus not carried in the limited space they had for premade stuff but files included as it would be a useful scientific instrument

UC-79

Demoted from Newrealmer to Homunculus 😞

Michael Halpern

a theory regarding taint is that it opens up portals to Earthrealm, the dangerous parts is that in doing this it can drain someone's manafield. "taint" is the +1 manatype that Emma's armor didn't block out, yet Emma wasn't affected by it, so it's likely the "quintessence" known to Earthrealm, this is supported by all the information seepage between Earth and Nexus/adjacent realms surrounding "tainted" people and objects,

Natalie

Politically, this seems like a terrible idea. Comedically, she absolutely should.

ghost01173430

If only humans could create artificial energy fields around their bodies, to make the need to wear bulky armor to survive In mama radiation possible...

ghost01173430

She just needs to make an energy barrier. Of course, that would only work if humans have that sort of technology

Ciberj1

So essentially any organic component would harmonize no matter how simple or basic.

Evaisa

That might explain why.. was it elves? supposedly look so similar to humans if true(?

Michael Halpern

energy barrier requires energy, and wearing equipment that would be about as practical as her armor for intercourse,

Michael Halpern

the fab is up, she needs new raw materials to make much beyond necessary spare parts though, start out simple, say a small demo model steam engine, a microscope, a telescope, typewriter, Curta Calculator, flashlight (with built in crank generator) simple enough not to necessarily trigger the Inquisitors, but advanced enough to hint at more, not to mention when they do the math and realize she didn't bring these gifts,

ShadePrime1

if "taint" was quintessence emma would have mentioned/noticed that by now with how close proximity she has been to Thacea one of her mission goals is to look for other possible sources of quintessence if I remember correctly

Sigma1204

So humans would be considered soulless by their definitions. Sweet, so Gingers really are soulless!

Thisisanick

“Let’s make it quick.” Around our planet, around Earthrealm, high above atmosphere, there is a giant ring artifice, vacuum pipe being integral part of it, used to accelerate particles (like smallest Ure of common matter) from sub-microverse to speeds approaching light, which then unravel substrate of reality, space-time itself, that being recorded, processed and later shared among whole population as educational data, using an intangible network of "special light" tethers connecting everyone with everyone and more.

Michael Halpern

i am willing to put that down to convergent evolution for now, though Emma probably wants a DNA sample to see if there's a common ancestor.

Thisisanick

Would say Emma already has a real time view made from multi spectrum composite and all data from whole range of sensors is merged by AI from far future.. For short range scanning she could have multi beam ultrasound spectroscopy combined with positron annihilation lifetime spectroscopy (PALS) and for medium range, she could even have optics advanced enough too just optically zoom into micro-verse - looking at the current rate of miniaturization of smartphone telephoto cameras and pixel density and usage of a whole matrix of sensors to go beyond signal to noise ratio, one can only expect miracles from future optical sensors :) Unless obviously Emma has old junk to make sure potential enemy won't get the juicy stuff ;)

Adam Jeschke

So are we talking like Elephant Foot levels of radiation damage, or standing next to an atomic detonation levels of radiation damage, when talking about a “small amount of mana”?

Michael Halpern

in Emma's case "old junk" isn't just about tec sec, but ease of replacing with the limitations of her manufacturing equipment, take the holo projector, design over 100 years old because it could be serviced more easily. same reasoning why they didn't include the self deploy functionality in the tent, even though the units it is derived from where designed with that capability day 1.

Logan

Since this is a multi-dimensional setting, it could very well be a self-selecting coincidence - Only those dimensions with compatible natural laws can interact to the degree seen. Or maybe the Nexus just doesn't invite the more unrecognizable lifeforms to their reality.

Eris Nihila (edited)

Comment edits

2024-06-18 03:46:37 The way they describe these magical organelles within the cells as being interlinked, functioning as one whole and containing the soul, reminds me a whole lot of our description of neurons, right up to the description of the "second death" (brain death, the first being the heart stopping). Makes me wonder a lot about the anatomy of the average nexian, and if they (quite literally) have brains in their heads. Perhaps their intelligence is contained throughout their entire body, with each of these magical organelles acting like a single neuron, connected with all the others. If this is the case, they may be far more susceptible to physical injury than us, as any physical wound would thus result in brain damage.
2024-06-17 21:33:00 The way they describe these magical organelles within the cells as being interlinked, functioning as one whole and containing the soul, reminds me a whole lot of our description of neurons, right up to the description of the "third death" (brain death, the first being the heart stopping). Makes me wonder a lot about the anatomy of the average nexian, and if they (quite literally) have brains in their heads. Perhaps their intelligence is contained throughout their entire body, with each of these magical organelles acting like a single neuron, connected with all the others. If this is the case, they may be far more susceptible to physical injury than us, as any physical wound would thus result in brain damage.

The way they describe these magical organelles within the cells as being interlinked, functioning as one whole and containing the soul, reminds me a whole lot of our description of neurons, right up to the description of the "third death" (brain death, the first being the heart stopping). Makes me wonder a lot about the anatomy of the average nexian, and if they (quite literally) have brains in their heads. Perhaps their intelligence is contained throughout their entire body, with each of these magical organelles acting like a single neuron, connected with all the others. If this is the case, they may be far more susceptible to physical injury than us, as any physical wound would thus result in brain damage.

David

With the way they're going with Star Wars cannon right now/with the Acolyte. Midichlorians may not be cannon in a decade. 🤷

Willow Arkan

perhaps, but it would make for some juicy drama. Emma would be incensed, rightfully so, but depending on the situation she may be powerless to do anything about it.

Cole

Also agree with the theory that they would harmonize. That being said, it would be a relatively safe way to test the slow environmental mana radiation theory.

Thisisanick

Her old is our far future. Funny thing is older technologies are often more problematic to print than more contemporary ones, like printing cathode-ray tube(CRT) monitor would be more much complicated than LCD, LED matrix of pixels. Or vacuum tube vs transistors.

Michael Halpern

you also would have trouble printing an integrated circuit, some contemporary technologies will require more specialized equipment to produce. to make everything with the generalist toolkit it has to be simplified.

Michael Halpern

printing thermionics is easier than transistors due to the large format they just wouldn't last that long unless you put them in tubes that could hold vacuum and handle the heat.

Michael Halpern

I would just declare Earth as a Peer realm at some point, bring up a certain MAD concept, and go from there.

Michael Halpern

well meeting in the courtyard could be seen as neutral ground, or at the very least away from the spies while still being public enough to not be suspicious

Michael Halpern

so would the merchant assistant being turned spy. Also as a practical storytelling matter, Emma needs contacts outside the school and library preferably someone who can get the ground truth of various issues rather than what gets filtered on its way to the nobility