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[A/N: Releasing on my lunch break today, so that it's not coming in so late for some of you. I hope it helps a bit! By the way, if anyone thinks of things you might like to see here on Patreon in addition to chapters, let me know. Occasional art drops would be fun, but those are pretty time consuming. I have wondered if the  FAQ or extra details about world building stuff that hasn't been mentioned yet might be welcome, or if it would just be filler? Anyway! Thank you for being here. Enjoy the read.]

Alden kept waiting for something to go wrong.

But for the first time in months, nothing did. The car climbed in and out of larger depressions, and it spun its wheels in patches of loose soil a couple of times, but it made it all the way back to the lab. When it arrived, the ramp to the underground entrance even opened for it.

Kibby was waiting for him.

“It works,” she said, sounding stunned as he climbed from the vehicle.

“I know. I can’t believe it either. Also, you’re supposed to be in the vault.”

“You were gone a long time.”

He hadn’t been. It had been almost the shortest possible amount of time the trip could have taken. “I was worried about you, too. Vault. Now. I’ll be right there after I shower.”

Did showering do anything to remove excess chaos residue? Probably not. But it made him feel like he was being proactive.

When he rejoined Kibby, he found she had set up their learning cushions side by side in front of one of the screens.

“I thought you didn’t want to practice anymore.” Alden said. “Wasn’t it making things worse instead of better for you?”

“I am not practicing. I’m teaching. This is your present for returning safely.”

Alden held back a sigh.

He wanted sleep far more than he wanted a class right now, but he wasn’t about to admit it. He was already barefoot like a proper student, so he walked over to join her. Just before he was about to kneel down, he spotted something unfamiliar on his mat.

It was a loop of iridescent white string, meticulously coiled into the logogram for “friend.”

“Like you used to do with my marleck berries,” Kibby said, pointing at it.

“I remember.”

Alden stared at the string. He knew immediately that it was a magic item because his brain was a little hung up on it. Sympathy for Magic being weird again. He’d mostly gotten used to the effect that stat increase had on him, and lately it was rare for something to draw his attention to it so noticeably that it became a distraction. “Kibby, is this…?”

“It’s for you. It’s an auriad.” Kibby used the word Alden had learned just a couple of days before when he asked about the spell Instructor Gwen-lor had erased from the screen before starting her class. “Distinguished Master Ro-den gave it to me with the cushions. It was inside mine so it would be safe until I was ready to bond with it. But I haven’t passed the right test for Instructor Gwen-lor to send my beginner auriad lessons, yet. I have to learn all the hand casting spells she teaches first.”

Kibby examined his fingers. “You should take off the ring before you hold it.”

Crouching, Alden slipped the ring off and set it aside on the floor. He lifted the string carefully and knelt on the cushion. The auriad was fascinating. It flowed through his fingers so smoothly it was almost like it was made of liquid.

“Kibby, you don’t have to give me this,” he said. “It’s so kind of you, but I know the things Joe—Master Ro-den—gave you are important to you.”

“Someone will give me another one,” she replied, eyes fixed on the string. “Maybe even Distinguished Master Ro-den will do it, when I finally get to call Instructor Gwen-lor and tell her I finished her lessons. Or someone else will when I go to school. But…maybe nobody will ever give you one. Maybe they don’t have them on Earth.”

“I’ve never seen one there before,” Alden said.

“Since I’m your instructor, I’ll give you one.” She spoke firmly. “And you will use it your whole entire life and be the best Avowed.”

He smiled at her. “You said it’s a tool that bonds to authority?”

“After you start using it, it does. Then it’s only yours. You have to take good care of it and keep it with you all the time, and it will get stronger so that you can cast better spells with it.”

So Jel-nor wasn’t just wearing one in her hair as a fashion statement that day by the pond. You’re supposed to keep them close.

“We only have one auriad spell, so you will have to try very hard and learn it,” Kibby said in a businesslike tone. “I will pause the video just before Instructor Gwen-lor clears the spell from the screen, and you will study the casting diagrams while I read all the logograms to you.”

“Do we even know what that spell does? Or if all of it is listed on the board?”

“It’s all there. It hits things.”

“It hits them?”

She mimed punching something with a small fist. “It does that. But farther away. And harder. And in a square shape. It’s the graduation spell at Instructor Gwen-lor’s school. For the Year Sixes. It says ‘Congratulations!’ on the board beside it and lists all the students’ names and their second schools.”

The tiny children Alden and Kibby had been learning with up until now were the Year Ones, and going by the length of Mother Planet years and the way Artonan kids aged…that was probably the human equivalent of a ten or eleven year old? So it was like an elementary school graduation spell.

“You only have a few days to learn,” Kibby said. “You have to listen and remember everything I say.”

“I will,” Alden agreed. “Thank you so much for the present. It’s perfect.”

He couldn’t help feeling a little excited. And nervous. What if something like the auriad wouldn’t work for an Avowed, and the gift was wasted on him?

She turned on the screen, and their lesson began.


********************************


The auriad lesson became Alden’s main free time distraction now that they were committed to only leaving the vault for Plan-related prep work and other essentials. Kibby read the instructions to him over and over until he could nearly recite them from memory, and then he spent ages sitting on his cushion working out how to use the loop of string.

It was a mix of making the necessary shape sets with the auriad and manipulating his authority to touch the gaps created by each shape. Like a complicated version of the partner-greeting exercise the students learned to start with.

Alden couldn’t usually feel solid objects with his authority when he wasn’t actively using his skill on them. It had never even occurred to him to try. But the auriad invited him to do it. Kibby had called it “sticky,” and that was a fine word for it. He wanted to touch it, and as he worked with it more and more over the passing days, it started to feel like an actual extension of himself.

And on the third day of practice, there was another development.

“It’s not white anymore,” Alden said, surprised. He held up the final shape in the set that formed the spell—a lacework of string with a square at the center—to show it to Kibby.

She was bundled in the coat again, reading lab files on the tablet. She’d been at it for ages. She was taking her role in Plan 2 seriously. Which was good, since Alden didn’t have a prayer of reading the kind of highly technical writing she was going through. He was lucky to pick out the occasional common noun or adjective.

She glanced up. “That’s good!” she said. The auriad had turned a very pale shade of blue. “It means you’ve almost finished bonding with it.”

“It changes colors when you’re done?”

“It turns your favorite color.”

Alden stared at the silky string. I guess I do like blue.

“You should be careful where you aim when you do the final shape from now on,” she warned him. “You might be able to cast with it now that you’re bonding. You could hit stuff.”

Alden grinned. “I want to hit stuff.”

She sighed.

“When I learn to hit stuff, I’m going to go squash the evil vine that’s escaped from the greenhouse!”

“It’s not supposed to be a fighting spell. It’s just to learn aiming and knock things over.”

“I bet it can fight a plant.”

She considered it. “Probably,” she agreed.

“And I bet I get it right next time,” he said, unclenching his authority and letting the string fall from his fingers.

He was wrong.

It took him two more days of obsessive attention to fully bond with the auriad. But when it was over, it was less like he’d gotten the hang of using a new toy and more like he’d gained a third hand that he was still a little clumsy with. The auriad had turned a deep shade of indigo blue, and it retained a faintly iridescent quality. As he worked with it, it had started to feel more liquid than ever, but it had also begun to develop a habit of sticking and catching sometimes when he needed it to do so.

Alden was stupidly in love with his loop of string.

Maybe he was supposed to be. The idea of handing it over to someone else to use or even hold actually gave him a physical sense of discomfort.

Last night, he’d had a dream that something had broken his auriad, and he’d woken up in a cold sweat to pester Kibby with fifty different questions about how to take proper care of it. She was not nearly as concerned about what a terrible thing it would be if the auriad broke as she should have been.

“Of course getting wet won’t hurt it.”

“What about knives? Or fire?”

“I guess a hot enough fire. Or a powerful enough knife.”

“Really?” he said, clutching the string to his chest. “How do I make it stronger?”

She looked at him oddly. “It’s as strong as your authority is. It’s protected by you. That’s how it works.”

He finally fell back onto his pillow with a relieved sigh.

“I guess it’s true,” Kibby said in a fascinated tone. “I always heard wizards were like this about their auriads, but since I don’t have one yet…”

“Does every wizard have one? I think I’ve seen video of them using strings a few times and never thought about it. But in person, I’ve only seen the girl at LeafSong with one.”

“A lot of wizards have them. Not all. People who don’t love to hand cast usually have theirs severed after they finish training with it in school so that it’s not as much trouble for them.”

Alden rolled over to gape at her in horror.

“You probably saw people with them and didn’t realize,” she added. “Most people wear them under their clothes, and some use them as ————- or necklaces.”

Bracelets maybe. Or hair ties like Jel-nor.

Wizards did tend to be thoroughly kitted out with the elaborate clothes, magic jewelry, tats, and other tools of the trade. It would be easy to overlook a piece of string or just dismiss it as another weird Artonan thing.

“It’s rude to touch someone else’s without permission,” Kibby informed him.

Of course it is,” Alden said.

What kind of animal would do such a thing?

Kibby shook her head at him in exasperation and went back to her tablet.

“You’ll see,” he said, petting his auriad. “When you get yours, you’ll see.”

“I am happy you like your present. Go to sleep. I’m studying physics and chemistry and magic generators.”

********************

Night turned into a gray dawn. It wasn’t light enough to be called day, but it was light enough for them to see. And that meant it was time. For everything else.

Human Day 186 was the time they’d both agreed on. It was dark still, but not so dark that they couldn’t see. Their sleep cycles were almost properly synched for the plan thanks to the simple expedient of Alden spending several hours carrying Kibby around strapped to his back on Day 185. He’d been doing it as often as she’d let him lately anyway.

It wore him out faster, pushing him into the askew state almost as soon as he picked her up, but he wished she would have let him do it a few more times. It wasn’t like she recovered when she was being held, but it stretched their window.

Over the past few days, everything had been completed. The car was packed with the items they had deemed worth the weight. Ever since he’d returned with it, it had been parked inside a plain-looking metal garage that was theoretically capable of giving it some kind of magical boost. And Alden had finally memorized the function of every logogram on the vehicle’s control panel.

For her part, Kibby had prepped the main lab by arranging all sorts of volatile equipment, chemicals, and supplies in the way she deemed best after her days of research.

“Plan 2,” Alden said that morning as they shared a breakfast of freeze dried food in the vault.

“Plan 2,” Kibby agreed. She was looking strained already, Alden noted. Usually a night’s sleep under the coat helped at least a little.

“We blow the whole place up,” he said.

“———— Yipalck Corporation,” she replied, her face set. “They’re not getting a ————— piece. They can shove the ——— ashes up their ———-.”

Alden blinked. Wow. She must have learned her serious swearing from Joe.

The professor’s magic bomb had come with instructions for Thenn-ar. It was supposed to be used in conjunction with a second one. According to Kibby, it was not designed to make a gigantic boom that would destroy everything, but to neatly demolish just a couple of key areas in a way that would look like it could have been an accident.

She didn’t approve.

Alden had asked her if she could figure out how to make a bigger magical explosion. Maybe some smoke and fire. Anything that might draw the attention of the people who had come to Thegund to clear the chaos.

She didn’t think that was enough either.

And she was the one who could read the instructions. She was the one who’d been hurt the most.

So. Full-scale devastation it was.

They watched a soap opera. Klee-pak and the purple daisies again. Then they both ate and drank as much as they could stand, and they headed out. Before they exited the main lab, Alden examined Kibby’s handiwork. He couldn’t understand most of it, but in addition to all the stuff she’d arranged herself, she’d had him dolly in some heavy plastic drums and random pieces of still-functional enchanted equipment for her.

The bomb, still in its protective case, looked like a glass football full of swirling silver mist with three deep depressions in the top. Kibby had set it right at the edge of one of the floor tiles she had told Alden he must never, ever touch.

She bent over it.

“You sure?” he asked.

“I will not die in the vault like a grasshopper.” She stuck her three middle fingers into the depressions and held them there for a while. Then, she removed them. “We have a human hour and fourteen hour fractions now.”

Seventy-four minutes.

To calm his nerves, he ran his fingers over the auriad. He was wearing it around his neck, triple looped and easy to hide under the collar of one of his turtlenecks or the Hawaiian shirt he was wearing over them.

They headed across the chilly compound as they had so many times before. Kibby hopped over the evil vine without looking at it, but Alden had to pause and admire his handiwork. His new spell had squashed it nicely, and he’d been able to practice his aim.

It hit things with a perfectly square-shaped hammer of force. Approximately sixteen inches across on the diagonal.

They weren’t crushing blows, but they were certainly harder than Alden could physically punch or kick. And if they didn’t hit anything, they traveled pretty far before they faded. He’d been able to throw up piles of gravel from about thirty yards away.

They entered the garage and climbed in the car. Alden took the driver’s seat and pressed the buttons that would take them to the coordinates marked on the homemade map they’d glued to the car’s ceiling.

If nobody came to check on the explosion, the map was Plan 3.

Please, somebody come, he thought. Plan 3 is the worst.

The car started and began to roll. To cover his sigh of relief, he smiled at Kibby. “We need driving music.”

She winced. “Do not sing, Alden. You are not good at it.”


Comments

Avery Theron Murphy

If I had to pick a low impact superpower, it would definitely be the ability to read fiction from the future. I can't take anticipation

ReignTorrential

Sleyca! The discord has a crucial question. What time zone is Anesidora?

Obbu

Seeing Kibby (the actual child) calmly observe Alden's immediate child-like attachment to the Auriad is fantastic :)

Yomuashi

Nah. The power to make authors never have writing blocks or disappear is my low impact superpower

Obran

I keep wondering if Aiden will be paid for all his time stuck here. And if so, there goes, Bti-qwol‘s budget.

focus2x

Look, I'm not saying I'm going to lose it if Kibby dies. All I'm saying is that some daisies are gonna get stomped and i ain't even gonna lock myself in the closet over it.

Andri Gschwend

I like plan 2. B is the second letter, B like Bomb. Must feel really nice to be able to blow up the place where you were trapped for way too long. Ultimatively, everybody should donate to the protect Kibby fund.

Amit Gupta

Great writing Sleyca! For additional patreon benefits, you can consider these: 1. Bonus/Side Character POVs: JL Mullins/Aila Aurie/ErraticErrata do this, Patron only bonus chapters where the world/MCs are seen from the perspective of an NPC, in order to flesh out the universe. 2. Names of Minor Characters: Aila Aurie had that benefit where Patrons can name/vote on new minor/auxillary characters as long as the name made sense/fit. 3. Art: SelkieMyth regularly commissions Artwork for patrons. I'm okay without it though and would prefer world enriching stuff like Maps, Character Sprites over plain art. 4. Polls on Arcs: Macronomicon & pirateaba do this, where patrons vote for which Arc/Character they should write/focus on next. Pirate still writes/incorporeates other arcs but the voted on arc gets precedence. Works rather well with multiple parallel storylines. 5. AMAs: DD Webb holds monthly AMAs with their 10$ backers, where they discuss the writing techniques, worldbuilding, inspirations etc. Might be cool to do that. Pirateaba does not hold AMAs, but has another channel on their discord where they speak with high level backers about story-stuff. 6. Additional Stories: Aila Aurie does this, essentially one-offs that you get inspiration to write, either related to the story or totally unrelated. For example, your response to a Writing prompt you saw on reddit, some story knocking around in your head etc. Pirateaba also does it for in-universe stories like Last Tide, Gravesong etc. That's all I can think of for now. Will leave another comment if I can think of something else.

Anonymous

Okay, some death flags have been raised in this chapter. - Kibby giving Alden the Auriad that was meant for her. - the mention of Klee-pak's episode again, about how he shouldn't have reaped more life while grieving his friends' death. Frankly, I'm getting worried about how this is going to go.

focus2x

Hey thanks for the epub version as well! It's appreciated :)

leafinthepond

While I agree there's serious cause for worry, I remain optimistic, mainly because it would just be too much if Kibby died. For Alden, who already lost his parents as a child, to now lose the person he has spent 6 months trying to protect and bonding with would just cast such a depressing tone over the whole story that I think it would be hard to recover from. This isn't a happy-go-lucky story, but it's also not that dark--there's a lot of humor and wonder and I just think Kibby dying wouldn't fit with the tone we've had so far. But I guess we'll find out soon.

Anonymous

I agree as well. Maybe my teen angst and paranoia are getting to me, even though I'm 22 already lol

RedPine

I doubt Kibby will die, because that would be boring. There are plenty of much more entertaining ways to make characters suffer.

Sly Bayesian Fox

Yeah, I'm also waiting for the other shoe to drop. We need our little sister/instructor!

Sashani

By my math, day 186 is August 28th. Is this right? I’m not sure I’m counting the days correctly in LeafSong.

Rubeno

@mental psychotic, I would say that paranoia is a healthy outlook for life as being a teenager means being excessively naive. Regarding Kibby, I don't see a need for her to die. Her death would serve no purpose. At most she will get benched so that she may "train" so that she may be used in the future.

Francis

I want more casual references to episodes of the Klee-pak show..

HumbleBee

I think maybe it is forshadowing. Like ripping out the flowers and then get punished for it is a metaphor for bombing the lab and then maybe be punished for that. Maybe a long shot though.

Ano Ano

I hate the mention of how an Auriad can be cut away from its owner. Makes me wonder if the Artonans will try to cut away Alden's. :(

Bryan Thew

Please tell me he remembers to bring back some berries

The Ox

It depends on how Artonans view it in light of the Chaos storm. Like its illegal to break and enter someone else's backwoods cabin, but you probably won't be charged with anything if it was in the middle of a blizzard and you were trying to stay alive. Especially since everything is essentially abandoned infrastructure that is totally getting wrecked by the chaos anyway.

The Ox

I hope they can't tell that he's wearing it. I'm sure he won't mention he has one voluntarily.

The Ox

He might not need them, he already had a bagful when he was trying to teleport out with the kids, so he technically already completed the quest. Not his fault that System went down that exact moment.

Gail

Sounds like its a voluntary thing some wizards do. I mean, if an Auriad only has one power and then you outgrow it it'd make sense to cut the connection and get one that does something less trivial.

DANTE

why would they do that? teaching Awoved magic is a possible quest reward and even if they find issue, I doubt they would cut the connection just because they dont like it

Bryan Thew

the quest was still ongoing. It would really really suck to get rescued and have and "Quest Failed" pop up. It would also cover Joe's/his own ass as the berry's were the public reason for the quest. Plus the scene where he jams the berries in joe's face, screaming "Here's your stinking berries!!" is too good to pass up. Revenge, distraction, and a oh no the rabbit broke will make it sell well. Face it best case scenario with the rescue is they drop him at the embassy and inform the government that he's not dead. USA gives him his 90 day countdown, a friendly Avowed bodyguard (for the ptsd breakdown), and a councilor (for the ptsd).

Ano Ano

We know from Alden's costume that avowed learning real wizardry is politically contentious. Spell impressions can be a quest reward, but that is an ability to cast a spell carved directly into an avoweds soul. Actually learning how to use magic like a wizard does? It's a different can of beans and Alden is going to be in some dicey water once he gets off chaos moon.

Ash

"She winced. “Do not sing, Alden. You are not good at it.”" this should virtually guarantee that they are singing "I'm gonna be" by the Proclaimers before the end of their journey.

DANTE

if the issue is political contentious, wich it could be, that also means Alden would have a something approaching an equal amount of hard support (who would like to champion him and use him as a statement) and hard opposition (who might want to cut the connection), while the majority would just not care enough to do anything about it either way, be it that they personally approve or disapprove of the matter, if someone is going to find issue with it, its probably the same bunch that wanted to remove the original 300 skills and think Awoved are the doom of Artonans, its probably a somewhat influential faction since they can alter skill description but I doubt is a popular or majority movement between Artonans, seeing how Awoved are seen and treated in their society, the continuous spread of the Contract and the generally benevolent/neutral attitude of the Artoanans twords the contracted species, at the same time the faction who would hard support/champion Alden for having an Auriad is probably the one who sees Awoved as their saviors, wich is probably in a similar position, seen as in the end, no matter how respected, Awoved are servants, even if extremely respected one, and they get no help and even counterintuitive option in their class and skill choices and their System progression is not geared twords maximizing the Awoved potential, they also have to either figure out by themselves or find someone like Joe who is willing to teach them the intricacy of the system. Overall id say its like trading the Chainer class, more paranoia than an actual problem, good to be cautions just in case but Alden is probably going to be just fine anyway.

da Finnci

Are any berries still alive? Does the demon variety count as well?

Chong Go

Joe definitely owes him an upgraded coat!

The Ox

@DANTE are the v's and w's reversed on your keyboard?

The Ox

I argue that he already completed the quest. He had the kids and a bag of berries and the teleport countdown had started, which means the System had acknowledged quest completion. And even if he shows up without berries, Joe never wanted the berries in the first place, so who gives a rip. Maybe he just doesn't get full pay for that trip?

DANTE

nope, juat poor english, I basically leg it and hope its right, it seems this time i was particularly unluky XD

Obran

I keep wonder if, considering now he has that little bit of wizard string, is he now enough of a wizard to summon Avowed too?

Bryan Thew

shrug... With upcoming shenanigans with the system reintegrating I would try to have all my bases covered.

Jasus

Even under the Artonan wizards only the elite are allowed to summon Avowed, so no.

The Ox

Summoning Avowed seems to be less of an actual spell vs a priviledge of System access. Joe had a lot of his permissions to summon taken away from him, despite being a powerful Wizard. The chances they'd ever give a Human Avowed Wizard-class permissions to use the System seem vanishingly small.

Gail

its gunna be hiliarious when Alden gets back to society, speaking near-fluent artonan but still having a couple weeks practice with the system at best.

Obran

It seems to me that showing up at a party dressed as a Ryeh-b’t wizard may have been more foreshadowing than anything else.

Obran

I have to admit, as interesting and important as this diversion has been, I can’t wait for him to get back to Chicago

Aezy Ken

He's said he's gonna keep his Artonan fluency a secret for tactical advantages.

kaalveiten

WRT more lore that's non-story, I'd be really interested to hear the history of earth since the Artonans/Avowed arrived. How did the Cold War end? DID it end? Any Avowed dictators around anymore? Famous supervillains and supervillain events? I imagine most of this will be covered at super school but I'm really curious about the history overall and how Avowed have influenced it.

The Ox

Yes, there is a lot of interesting alt-history that is worth learning. Especially why all Earth govts seem to support segregating the Avowed on Anesidora. Also, the rationale for building Anesidora on Point Nemo, which is literally the ass-crack of nowhere.

Anonymous

I'm getting worried that Kibby is going to die (narrative trope: the whole become the best for me thing gets amped up with death).