Chapter 2: Meetings
Fiorekis Claschestu was sitting on the other side of the desk, doing his best to look dignified. Which considering the clammy paleness, bags under the eyes and soggy hair, it didn't amount to much. He had to at least keep a veneer, however.
"Welcome to the Department of Archeology, ladies." He began, quietly noting they were either the beneficiaries of some
intensive body modifications or homunculi. The perfect symmetry without the slightest natural flaw gave away the artifice involved. It would likely make the common rabble quite pliable, but magi (at least those worthy of the title) were better than that. Anything short of the Creation Department's best would never sway them. He did commend the craftsman of the larger of the two, however. That shade of pale gold would give many pause without drawing the attention of the Rail Zeppelin. To tell the truth, he only recognised the trickery because a quirk of genetics had given him similar eyes.
"Please, take a seat." He said with as genial a smile as he could muster in these circumstances. Thank the Root for heir training, as horrid as it had been. It didn't even budge when the counterfeit eyes flickered towards the desk, clearly taking note of how he hadn't been able to provide refreshments for his very important guests. Nor did he visibly relax when even to his trained eyes, she seemed to take it in her stride instead of demonstrating the microscopic twitch distinctive of a magus writing down your name on their lengthy list of petty revenge.
Either the forgiving kind (fat chance of that) or the hour-long wait meant that he was already jotted down somewhere far worse and she had entirely expected this further offense. He just hoped he didn't have to break his own back allaying that.
It was the other one, with the lavender hair, who took the initiative after that brief lull, "It is a pleasure, Lord Claschestu." She brought a hand up to her chest and gently bowed in her seat. "We were not informed on the reason for our summons. So please excuse us for asking: Why are we here, exactly?"
She straightened up from her bow and looked at him in the eyes. Eyes which were very carefully hid his surprise as he
swiftly corrected his assessment. Deferential and confused, not given much if any information, likely not even aware of the Prestissimo code on their paperwork.
These two had been quietly headhunted, then.
Which meant they were valuable but not politically powerful. He had some breathing room, then. The Director would be
displeased if anything untoward happened to them, but he wouldn't get the thumbscrews for the minor inconveniences and faux-passes he'd put them through.
Even without the terrifying old monster's personal expediting code, this would've stank of his doing. For no other reason than his augury hadn't given a single whisper of anyone significant heading his way today, appointment or not. It was the entire reason why he had been so free with… his drink… yesterday…
Oh no.
Oh sweet Akasha, please tell him he hadn't-
Any further thought vacated his mind as he ran a routinary spell from his signet ring to the papers, the arcane cipher confirming he was the Head of Archaeology and skittering across the page to show…
A message in ancient scandinavian which amounted to,
'Enjoy your wish, whoreson.'
It took a not inconsiderable portion of his diplomatic training to keep himself from incinerating the papers then and there.
He shook his head and rested the testament of his poor life choices on the table, "As you may be aware, all of the Clock Tower departments are undergoing one of the largest joint projects in its history."
"Pretend we've been living under a rock for the last decade." The taller of the two– one von Helmont according to the files– said evenly with a voice that further cemented his initial impression. Perhaps homunculi made as a pair, one understated and the other to draw the eye? It was congruent with them being so clueless and furthermore he could rather see the artifact spurring a Hermit to release a couple of his works on the Director's request.
"Sensible. Rumors have a way to spread and shift like fire, do they not?" Fiorekis replied with an easy smile, letting on absolutely nothing of what went on in his mind. Let the potential Hermit-spawn keep their pretenses, he gained nothing by forcing them on the spot. "We are currently involved in the creation of a photonic crystal supercomputer, whose simulation-space will aid us in our understanding of World Textures, Spiritrons and Ghost Liners."
"Hmm." The lavender haired one, Vi Mentis, looked thoughtful, bringing her gloved hand to her chin, "That sounds…shockingly modern, not really the kind of thing one would expect the Clock Tower to partake in. Does it involve summoning Ghost Liners inside the simulation space?" She turned to look at Von Helmont, the two sharing a knowing look.
A one-two switch to keep interlocutors off-balance, perhaps? No matter, he could more than cope.
"While the Clock Tower magi do have a… reputation, when it comes to recent technology, as of five months ago the Director took the liberty of reminding us this institution was founded on the principle of embracing modernity." The aristocratic faction hadn't taken that well, but between the Director looming over them and Animusphere using the pragmatism of Proxy-Lords Belfeban and El-Melloi II to broker an understanding between the Aristocratic and Democratic factions, it had come to pass with minimal deaths. Even if there were still a number of growing pains as the more modern magi were forced to teach their elders how to navigate technology in these changing times as part of the cooperation efforts.
"It has been an
experience, let's say, but you can rest assured by now nobody will mistake a phone for Atlas artifice." A small chuckle, there. Jokes like that were important in negotiations, to reassure people and make them lower their guards. "As for the summoning… after a fashion. We are doing nothing so crude as that sham ritual going on in Japan. But yes, the enclosed bubble of the simulation allows us to call upon Ghost Liners for a fraction of the cost, which is further helped by the Class Card system which my department, together with Lore, Spiritual Evocation and Summoning have pioneered."
A pause, there. Give the other party all the pieces and let them assemble the picture themselves. Either they figured it out and patted themselves on the back, making them more pliable, or they didn't and you obtained a stronger position by pointing out their mistake.
"I feel sorry for those poor modern magi." Vi Mentis said with a sigh. "I, for one, am interested. But there's a catch, right? You are threading onto completely new territory after all."
Hm, curious, they weren't keeping the switch. Perhaps they had determined Von Helmont's carnal charms would have as little an effect as her counterfeit eyes when she'd leaned forward and his own hadn't budged an inch. Again, no matter.
"Quite. Two months ago, we reached the point where ordinary test subjects were of no more use to our research. Instead, we require volunteers willing to bond with one of these-"
"Lord Magus, the Department of Lore got your message regarding the viable test subjects." A dark skinned man, wearing a suit and sunglasses said as he barged into his office without so much as knocking. This was why Archeology loathed Lore, able to walk in like they owned the place and take away any of their finds, "Excuse my rudeness but the department head expressed that it was of the utmost importance to bring this to you."
'This' being the
class card suitcase, that damned artifact really wanted to break his composure and he wouldn't give it the satisfaction. Therefore, he simply smiled genially, a wave of his hand executing a minor spell anyone of passing importance in the Clock Tower learned, a spectral hand taking the briefcase from the man's hand and depositing it on Fiorekis' desk. "Right in time, thank you. You may go now."
The man didn't have anything else to say and left promptly, small mercies.
The Vi Mentis girl had an amused grin on her face and was trying, badly mind you, to hide it. Von Helmont at least simply gave him a look of commiseration. He supposed that she'd had to deal with a number of people barging into her business to bother her with their simpering.
"Things just seem to fall into place lately. We're unfortunate enough to know it isn't always a good thing." The conceited smile didn't leave Vi Mentis' face for a second.
"That's simply the way of this world, I'm afraid." Even if it was an uppity artifact bedeviling him instead of Alaya. Although anyone with half a brain was rather certain the Counter Force had contributed to the utter dearth of viable candidates.
"Back to business, then?" Von Helmont had the common human decency to extend that olive branch (which didn't stop him from noting the possibility she was softhearted like her deliberate blind eye to how he'd greeted them implied). At least Vi Mentis' gloating told him these two were very much aware something was manipulating events.
"Quite." Fiorekis replied with a smile showing his genuine thankfulness and nothing else, "As I was saying, we are in need of volunteers to bind to these cards," A sonorous opening of the briefcase, there, showing them the pair of golden cards suspended within the mystic code's grasp, "so the next stage of research may begin in earnest."
"If it is that simple, then why haven't you found any test subjects yet?" Vi Mentis' hands came together with interlocking fingers, resting her chin over them. "Something is causing people to not want to participate." Despite the girl's verbal reservations, her eyes were transfixed on one of the blank cards. It was nothing but a formality at this point, he recognised that look. She had already made up her mind and was merely waiting to hear the price.
"I said it, didn't I? You would have to bind yourselves to these cards. Keying yourselves to them and drawing the power of a Heroic Spirit by allowing them to temporarily overlay your soul, body and mind. You would remain in control, of course, if the cards simply hijacked the host we would simply employ blank homunculi." He explained, keeping a close eye on the growing greed (and recognition, strange) in the other woman's eyes. It seemed that the artifact had truly delivered. "But most magi already baulk at the idea of a familiar being more powerful than them, this takes matters even further, leaving us with no magi of sufficient competence who will compromise."
"Okay." Amanita Vi Mentis said.
"Okay?" Fiorekis' strained composure cracked at the simple answer the Vi Mentis girl gave, only just managing to contain an owlish blink.
"Yes, okay, I'm up for it. We've already come this far." She turned to Von Helmont, "It'd be a waste if we didn't at least try it, right Barbara?"
"Aye. Just one question, though." The Von Helmont girl said, to which he motioned for her to go on, "These are blank cards and the summoning will be by compatibility, correct?"
"Yes. I am afraid…" He trailed off as the overstated probably-homunculus raised a hand, shaking her head softly.
"That's exactly to my preference." She said, but Fiorekis didn't lower his guard for a second. Just like with Vi Mentis, he knew that look in her eye, "Now let's talk employee benefits."
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Amanita opened and closed her gloveless hands as she looked at them. Everything seemed to still be attached inside the simulation, she and Barbara had been placed in the courtyard of a castle done in pure white and festooned with blue, obviously designed to imitate Camelot. They were at one of the highest points, one side of the courtyard overlooking sprawling fortifications and beyond the outermost wall, a shimmering ocean with waves that rippled and turned in unnatural ways, almost like monstrous limbs and heads pushing and writhing against cloth. Amanita caught a glimpse of something in the far distance, but as soon as she spotted it, it was gone. As she peered down into the waters, she could barely make out some kind of structure stretching out from the castle's foundations, but she couldn't make out any details from so far away.
"Is the ocean supposed to move that way? It's kind of unsettling." She asked no one in particular as she waited on the instructions for the summoning ritual. She rubbed her arms, trying to warm them up as the inside of the simulation was just as chilly as the day outside, "Shouldn't have ditched my coat and gloves though."
"Here you go, then." Barbara chimed up brightly from behind her, clapping her coat over the smaller girl's shoulders.
"Thanks." The coat was way too big for her but at least it helped with the chill. Though the sleeves were too long and it was large enough to almost be at skirt level. "Please don't make me feel like a little kid with your clothes. You're way too tall."
"I see, I see, so you don't want headrest or hat privileges, then~?" The towering woman teased, putting that voice of hers to work.
Amanita, looked conflicted for a moment, "I'll keep those privileges, thank you very much." She looked around and saw that nothing was happening. "What are the instructions for the ritual?" At that mention two plinths rose up from the ground, each one with a recess that held one of the blank cards. Indents which, when Amanita went and pulled out one of the cards, greeted them with the instructions. "Looks like we found it."
"Thank Akasha for self-hypnosis, eh? Otherwise no way we'd get this right on the first try." And Barbara did NOT want to know what'd happen if you flubbed the incantation in a ritual like this.
"I'd probably chuckle a bit, heh." Amanita said while reading the chant, "The instructions say to hold the card against our heart when we're chanting. You're going to have trouble with that." She took a deep breath with her eyes closed, and when she opened them once again, there was less of a shine in them. "Okay, I've dulled my emotions, want to do it at the same time?"
"Sure. If we're lucky it may even give us two heroes used to working together." Or they could get a pair who just
really, really, really wanted to beat the shit out of each other again. "Just give me a second here."
After all she had to undo her tie and pop several buttons to get the card where it needed to be.
"Alright then." Amanita paused, "On three then."
Barbara shook her shoulders loose and closed her eyes, focusing on what came naturally. Like muscle memory, a bottle of cava appeared in her mind, the cork popping off in a jet of froth.
Amanita took a deep breath and formed the mental image that activates her magic. A key slid into its keyhole and
turned.
"
Let gold and glass be the essence. Let crystal and light be the foundation."
The ground in front of Barbara buckled, forming into a small hill as some great force pushed up, marble bricks falling away to reveal loamy soil.
"Let mankind be the clan I pay tribute to. Let rise a wall against the winds of change that shall fall."
Red drops began falling from the cloudless sky around Amanita, quickly turning into a downpour and staining the pure white cobblestone of the castle a ghastly red.
"Let the four cardinal gates close. Let the three-forked road from the crown reaching unto the Kingdom rotate."
The hill exploded in a shower of soil and slime, a giant blackened hand dripping sludge and sloughing off broken scales reaching for Barbara.
"This is my vow: If you would come to my side, the seat of my soul will become your temple."
The downpour of blood intensified, the pooled blood began to swirl and churn, quickly creating a vortex of blood around Amanita, rising from the ground near her feet.
"Follow my voice through the gate of The Spirit Tomb. Follow the golden path that lies between and before us."
The earth seized, severing the hand and leaving it to crash inches from Barbara's feet, rotten flesh spraying every which way except hers.
"Answer, if you would be the shining key to this road."
The vortex rose higher and higher, blood clinging to her boots as a black crown appeared above her and began to descend.
"This is my oath: To grasp you, I will gladly reach the highest peaks of Heaven, I will gladly plunge to the deepest reaches of Hell."
Tattered skin and crumbling scale tented and ripped, silver light spilling out as a pure white spectral shape all but tackled Barbara, black and blue fog following its wake and curling protectively around the woman before it, too, sunk into her body without trace.
"From the Seventh Heaven, attended to by three great words of power, come forth from the ring of restraint and enter your new abode."
The bloody black crown landed on her head and the blood gathering around her exploded outwards, ending the outpour leaving everything around her in an eerie silence, shortly before the crown dematerialized.
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Back in the control room, a magus muttered an utterly flat and lost, "
What the fuck."
"Akasha have mercy on our souls, these are our only test subjects." Another said, voice just as dead.
Fiorekis empathized with both of these sentiments, deeply.
____________________________________________________________________________
As the ritual finished Amanita's eye recovered the spark of life they had temporarily lost. "I can't believe this summoning drenched me in blood. I'm gonna need a fucking shower after we get out of this place." She shook her hands, and flicked them around trying to get the excess fluid away from her. Nevermind the squishy feeling coming from inside her boots, "I'm just glad these aren't actually my clothes." She quickly took Barbara's coat off, which protected her from the worst of her summoning.
Amanita turned to Barbara, "And how come you came out spotless from that mess!?"
"I got a very friendly Heroic Spirit, I think. That felt like a warm hug." The taller woman said with a small smile, having a very good idea as to who had chosen her. It had been a bit of a surprise, but certainly a welcome one.
"Yeah, sure." Amanita sighed remembering the crown falling on her head, "I get the feeling my Heroic Spirit is going to be a handful." She turned and saw the last instruction written in the plinth, "Huh, it says that we should put our hand over our heart and say 'Include'. To bring out their Noble Phantasm…if it's an object that is."
"Include" Barbara said
immediately, a golden rectangle glowing over her sternum before erupting in twin streamers of black sludge, leaping to her forearms and coalescing into a pair of strange cestus-tonfa-sword sheath hybrids done up in lilac and bronze. An experimental flick of her wrist had one rotate, bringing the fake blade to point outwards. A trickle of power and brilliant blue light raced along its edge, allowing it to effortlessly slice through a nearby brick, earning a low whistle from Barbara and a glow of pride from somewhere next to her heart.
"Include." Amanita said after looking at Barbara's show. Instead of an ostentatious display like her partner's, a ball of crimson light came out of her chest and deforming itself to the shape of a bow with six spikes pointing forwards at regular intervals, almost reminiscent of a spine with how it flared along those spikes. The light exploded outwards, revealing a pitch black harp-bow floating in front of Amanita. Following Barbara's example, she aimed at a column and experimentally strummed the bow, each string emanating a crimson light before six invisible 'arrows' flew towards it, carving a sextet of deceptively deep holes into the column, each the width of a finger.
"This is definitely Failnaught. I don't know any other legendary bows that double as a harp." She, of course, kept some information on the TRUE identity of her Heroic Spirit a complete secret. No need to scare the magi. "My guess is that I summoned Tristan." She felt a tiny pang of amusement come from somewhere in her chest.
"Not so easy with my partner, but the shield should be a good lead." Barbara said with a content hum as she practically evaporated a section of masonry with a single punch and flare of azure light. Ahh, sweet, sweet unga bunga. She'd have a fantastic time with her partner, she could already tell.
No sooner did Barbara finish speaking that a gate made out of the castle's marble brick rose from the ground, its frame filled by a stained glass panel made to flow and ripple. It was helpfully labeled as 'Exit' at the top of the arch. Amanita stuck her hand into the portal and it vanished, she pulled it back and it came back.. "I guess that's going to be all for today."
"Ah, pity. But I guess they already have more data then they know what to do with just from this." Barbara said with a sigh and roll of her shoulders, an experimental mental prod letting the Noble Phantasm fade into motes of blue light.
"I'm pretty sure data isn't the only thing they got, five bucks says they got more questions than anything else from our slightly disturbing display." Amanita chuckled, letting her black bow turn into wisps of red light which flew into her chest.
"At least they won't be disturbed themselves, they're
magi. So it'll be productive questions." Barbara said with a wry huff.
Amanita shrugged, "That we will have to see." And walked into the portal. She woke up inside the tool used to get into the virtual reality, a 'coffin'. Which from the outside looked more like a cylindrical cryo chamber from a sci-fi movie…but you stood in it. Amanita looked down and checked herself…thankfully she wasn't covered in blood anymore. With a hiss, the glass front opened slowly, sliding away and then upwards. She quickly stepped out and put on her own suit coat and gloves before doing anything else, still feeling the phantom chill from cyberspace.
Another hiss and a voice of liquid sex spoke up from behind her for the third time today, "Feeling better now?"
"Yeah, I just hope getting covered in blood isn't a common occurrence." She smelled her sleeve and her face scrunched in disgust, "I can still smell it."
"Oh, come on, the smell of fresh blood isn't so bad." Barbara replied with a chuckle, completely aware she was a weirdo who loathed the smell of perfume but loved that of wood smoke.
"You haven't been doused in it. It doesn't take too long before it gets sticky." Amanita complained back.
"That's texture, not smell." The taller woman replied, only not giving her a better texture to feel on account of the handful of magi pululating around the room. It was a messy, cramped place with monitoring equipment crammed on every surface and corner that'd fit it. Made well enough sense, since Fiorekis had said that each department had a terminal like this and they didn't want to invest too much when they were dealing with short-term test subjects.
"Well, the smell reminds me of that." She finished rolling her eyes.
"Oh, chin up, we'll get to enjoy ourselves a presidential suite grade bath once this is over." The wonders of employee benefits, they'd be living like kings with a full complement of pretty ladies playing maid to boot. No more having to worry about home upkeep, wooo!
"I'm looking forward to that, more now than ever." Amanita said with a smile.
It was at that moment that Fiorekis approached them, clapping slowly as he did so. "Congratulations are in order, ladies. That was a magnificent start to the next stage in our research. The data will take a few days to analyze, so you are free to use that time to get yourselves settl-"
He was interrupted by
a man suddenly appearing in between him and the pair. Amanita's eyes widened, how did he- any further thought was cut off as her hindbrain
wailed a dirge of 'DANGER DANGER DANGER'.
Barbara was no better, suddenly standing ramrod straight and carrying the distinctive flush of fully activating all Magic Circuits short of the crest. She looked tense enough to fling a spell and bolt if someone so much as popped a party favor.
Fiorekis' eyes were wide open in surprise and fear, only managing to stutter one, "D-director?"
"Fiorekis, a word." With a snap of his fingers, as suddenly as he appeared, the world around the four of them vanished. Replaced by a black void where they could only see each other.
Barbara, of all things, minutely relaxed at the display of overwhelming, inhuman power. There was no fighting or fleeing this man, so why worry? If he wanted them dead they would've never even registered his appearance.
(Of course, there was the possibility he wanted to play with his food, but she was trying very hard not to dwell on that.)
Amanita's legs gave out, only avoiding falling by her ludicrously wound up friend who caught her and very pointedly didn't let go, clutching her like a lifeline. There was only so much a flimsy self-suggestion could do in the face of someone making every cell in her body scream and strain to get away.
Amanita knew she could make a self-suggestion strong enough to endure her current fear, but she just couldn't muster up the will to even begin the process. The fact that Fiorekis has managed to stay on his feet spoke volumes of a Clock Tower Lord's mettle.
"I do not appreciate my authority being undermined." The Director began, each word like a tombstone on the shoulders of all present, "Would you know why there are three Prestissimo priority codes I don't remember issuing all being reported by your office?"
Fiorekis teeth were clattering, "You see sir-" he began, only to be interrupted again.
"And do be kind enough to also explain why the transfer papers for Amanita Vi Mentis and Barbara Von Helmont had…" He paused for a second for emphasis, arching an eyebrow as he enunciated, "
'Enjoy your wish, whoreson' yes, that would be the correct translation to English."
Fiorekis paled to the point of near-translucency and then spoke like a man staring up at a guillotine, "Last night I got drunk in my office," He visibly gulped down a justification there, knowing it wouldn't be appreciated, "And in my stupor I thought it a good idea to access vault A-A5M7 and wish for suitable test subjects, thinking it would only draw a sliver of mana from its massive stockpile to expedite the process." The man wobbled then, but to his credit got the next sentence out with a steady voice despite looking like he was dying from poison with every word, "Unfortunately I do not remember my wording for the wish."
"I regret to inform you that it completely drained the artifact of any charge it may have had." Fiorekis finally fell to his knees and bowed his head, awaiting his sentence for the squandering of such an asset. The Director turned to the shaking Amanita and Barbara, "Ladies, you two are from another worldline." He didn't ask, there was no denying the facts.
Regardless, the pair managed to nod.
He set his eyes down at the disgraced Lord, "Your punishment will be a light one. These two are now your responsibility. Their actions will reflect on you and you will make sure that their every need, both mundane and magical, within reason, is fulfilled."
The fact that this was Fiorekis' second chance and there wouldn't be a third went unspoken but most definitely not unheard, if the Department Lord's audible gulp and shaky nod were anything to go by.
The Director waved his hand at Fiorekis and the blonde vanished without a trace. Immediately oppressive presence the man all but disappeared, leaving him feeling almost normal. Almost. He waved his hand once more, making a small round table with three chairs appear before the pair. The Director took a seat, gesturing to Amanita and Barbara to follow suit.
Amanita took steadying breaths, her hands so weak she couldn't even clench them to stop their trembling. Even now, she could hear her own heartbeat pounding in her ears as the organ did its level best to jackhammer through her ribcage. She tried to take a step forward but her legs still wouldn't respond. It took a momentary surge of will to get her self-suggestion going. She took a few tentative steps and then collapsed on the chair.
Barbara, for her own part, had flickers of light playing along her spine as vital energy was consumed and invested to make her limbs loosen from how they'd locked up after she spent what few dregs of composure she had catching her friend. She didn't have any more grace than Amanita in her crumbling on her seat.
"Now then, ladies. Let us talk about your home." The Director said.