Chapter 193
Added 2023-03-13 15:01:41 +0000 UTCIt was a clever spell, one designed to take advantage of the unique terrain of the fifth layer of reality. The light was blinding, and it seared Nymâs body, but the true twist was the mirrored surface below them. The light flashed downward, there and gone in an instant, only to reflect back up and bathe the whole area in brilliant, burning heat.
That was nothing outside of Nymâs capabilities to handle. He could compensate for being blinded with scrying magic, and the heat wouldnât last long enough to do any real damage through the defensive spells heâd slapped in place the moment his echo had attacked. It would be uncomfortable for a few moments, and then it would be spent. It was only as he started to weave together his first scrying spell that he realized the light was also blocking his ability to see arcana.
Then his echo sprang the second part of his trap. Something struck Nym, something bigger than he was and moving at high speeds. It carried him across the sky and upwards into the strange patchwork landscape. Whatever it was his echo had struck him with didnât want to let him stop moving, but he dispersed it with a wave of dispelling arcana. Since he couldnât see what was in it, he couldnât precisely target it to break the spell, so the quick and dirty solution was to just hammer it.
By the time Nym broke the spell pushing him upwards, gravity was twisting around him strangely. He had to shift the way he was flying to both hold him up and down at the same time just to keep from falling one way or another, at about half strength in each direction. He was just getting a feel for the equilibrium of it when his lateral momentum carried him into a different patchwork square of the sky and everything changed.
Nym shot up instantly, propelled both by his own magic and the suddenly many times stronger reverse gravity. He quickly reconfigured his magic to hold him steady, then strengthened it to start bringing him back down towards the mirrored ground. All the while, he searched for his echo, who had disappeared with the initial burst of light.
Using the strange and unfamiliar laws of the world against Nym was a great strategy. It forced him to split his attention, to handle the threat of the environment itself while fighting against his own echo. Even with all the advantages his time spent in Niramynâs sanctuary granted him, he couldnât really say that he was winning this fight.
In a weird way, he was proud of his echo. He was turning out to be a hell of an opponent, with the echo systematically driving Nym into a corner, forcing him to waste time and resources dealing with obstacles and distractions. Though the echo didnât have the breadth of options Nym did, he was still powerful. Every spell it had thrown at him was a pinnacle spell, and that blinding light spell had even washed out his ability to see arcana. That was new.
For all of that though, Nym was confident he would win. The echo wasnât throwing anything his way that he couldnât deal with. It felt like he was just using the attacks as a stall while he built up to something big. No doubt, whatever that was, it would take advantage of the physics of the world in an unexpected way.
The win condition was simple then. Nym just had to locate his echo and defeat him before he could pull off whatever he was doing. And with his scrying spells able to see arcana, it was not hard to spot the echo. Or at least, it wasnât hard to spot the echoâs arcana, which had popped up in no less than six different places.
âMore distractions,â Nym said as he sorted through them. One of them was the real one, or possibly none of them were. But if that was the case, then the echo was doing nothing, or he knew some way to hide his arcana that Nym wasnât familiar with. Neither of those seemed likely to him.
He sent his scrying anchors out in various directions to check on the sources of arcana and, as expected, found temporary arcana batteries there inside illusions of himself. That was an odd touch. He and his echo werenât identical, and it would have made more sense for the illusions to match the echo instead.
âUnless theyâre not distractions,â Nym said. âMaybe⊠bait?â
There was no sign of the echo, meaning he was either well and truly hidden, or he did have some way to hide his own arcana use. Nym didnât think that was the case, otherwise the echo would have used such an ability to far greater effect earlier in their match. Being able to read the spells in the echoâs aura made it much, much easier to defend against them.
Heâd broken three of the illusions when something rippled across the mirror below. Nym looked down and saw what looked like a massive fish swimming inside the ground, heading straight towards one of the illusions. Its jaws practically unhinged and it took the illusion in one bite. Even though the fish only existed inside the mirror, the illusion it had consumed ceased to exist in reality as well.
Nym understood the trick now. More of the fish were appearing, excitedly darting through mirror space to consume the remaining illusions. Nym was saved more because there were so many that they got in each otherâs way than because of his own quick reactions. He chained together several defenses with an emphasis on physical alterations that would reflect into the mirror world, then waited inside a bladed sphere of ultra-dense crystal to see if the mirror fish would be able to batter down the walls of force and earth heâd erected.
A great crash shook the wall when the first fish rammed into it. Its teeth scraped against the wall, but its jaw couldnât open wide enough to take it in one bite. The fish was stymied only for a second before arcana swirled around it and washed out in an explosive blast that sent cracks running through the barriers.
The spell drew more of the fish. If they were anything like the first one, they were going to quickly tear through the defenses heâd put up. So Nym let them gather up around him, let them weaken the wall, and then when it was about to fall and as many as could possibly fit were next to it, he triggered the spiked crystal cocoon. Lances of razor sharp, arcana-infused crystal exploded in every direction through the empty air. And those lances were reflected in the mirrored ground below.
The fish died by the dozens, each one leaking rainbow blood that obscured everything else in the mirror. Nym couldnât even see himself anymore, and he still didnât know where his echo was. His scrying anchors flitted around, searching in every way he could, but the echo was nowhere to be found. He supposed it was possible that the echo had fled when his trap had failed, but that didnât really fit.
The echoes represented parts of his personality, sharpened and magnified by the nature of the reality they hailed from. The fifth layer echo was proud, and violent. He seemed to loathe the idea that he wasnât the original core Nym, and wanted to prove he was stronger. It seemed silly to Nym, since really, they were all the same being in the end.
So no, he didnât believe for even a moment that his echo had run away. Despite that, there was no sign of him. The only Nyms anywhere around were himself and his own reflection a thousand feet below him. Nym glanced down, saw his own feet and his own face looking back up at him, and the aura of arcana from his spells surrounding him.
Except now that he looked closely, those werenât the spells he was currently holding onto. He laughed to himself. His echo had once again exploited the world of the fifth layer against him and was hiding in his own reflection. Now that Nym had finally spotted him though, the fight was over.
A combination of teleportation to pull his echo out, greater telekinesis to physically lock him down, and a concentrated shock of crushing psychic force was enough to daze Nymâs opponent. He took a moment to slide his own arcana into every single construct the echo still had going and then blasted him with a storm of arcana injections to cripple his soul wellâs capacity for the next few minutes.
âI think you can agree that Iâve won,â Nym said when the psychic shock wore off.
The echo didnât say anything, but the twisted scowl on his face was enough of a sign to Nym. He started the spell that would bind them together, for the fifth and final time.
* * *
Niramyn was frustrated. No matter what he did, it was two steps forward and three steps back. Myzalik had discovered his return far too quickly and was proving remarkably adept at putting obstacles in Niramynâs way. Heâd barely finished clawing his way back up to the tenth layer before heâd been discovered.
Someone had betrayed them, someone who thought they stood to gain more in the rival Exarchâs service than they did in Niramynâs. Heâd been careful about who heâd brought back into his power, both because heâd been wary of this exact scenario and because until he regained access to his full power at the twelfth layer, he was vulnerable to treachery of a more direct sort. The last thing he needed was to find himself pushed out of the timestream for a decade or two, only to come back and find ascendant society fully under Myzalikâs control.
His new home lacked the view his palace on Vislarg had boasted, but the arcana-infused wine was still good. He sipped at it idly while he surveyed the rather dreary looking hall heâd found himself in. It belonged to some petty mortal king of some country or another. Niramyn couldnât remember what the humans called it.
It would do, for now, but it was seriously lacking in amenities. Unfortunately, one of his former vassals had clued Myzalik in to how Niramyn constructed several of his defenses and how best to go about turning them against their owner, so for the time being, this was what he had.
An ascendant appeared nearby and bowed at the waist. âMaster,â she said. She was tall, thin, blonde hair. Valicin, he thought her name was.
âWhat is it?â he snapped. âGood news on our little project, I hope?â
âOf a sort,â she said. âI⊠still havenât found him, but his echoes have disappeared from the fourth and fifth layer.â
It was nice to know that his offspring, for lack of better term, was still moving forward. That was one weapon he still had hidden away while it was being honed. Though if they couldnât figure out where the boy had gotten off to, it wouldnât do him much good.
âYou need to find him before he begins his ascension. If he transcends the boundary and heâs not firmly under my control and sheltered from other ascendants, everything Iâve invested in him will go to waste. If I lose my investment, I will punish you.â
Valicin knew better than to flinch in front of him, but he could see past her blank expression. She was scared. Good. It would motivate her to correct her error in losing him in the first place.
âIs there anything else?â Niramyn asked, idly sipping at his wine again before releasing the goblet to float in the air next to him.
âNo, Exarch. I will continue to look for him.â
âDo so. Report back to me in a week if you havenât found him by then.â
âYes, Exarch.â
Then Valicin was gone. If she hadnât found the missing boy by then, heâd have to attend to it himself. And if he had to do that, she wasnât going to like it.