***Chemestro***
âYou wanted to see me?â Chemestro asked.
âTake a seat,â Solaris said, motioning to the seat across from his desk. Chemestro gave an inward shrug and sat across from the ruler of Franklin City.
âIâve been waiting for the right time to do this. Every six or eight years, after High tide, I like to do someâ¦clean up. Cut out certain cancerous growths that mightâve destabilized the city if excised during High Tide.â
Chemestroâs heart shot into his throat. He could only assume Solaris was talking about him. He was too close to the super to dodge or deflect. Solaris could literally move at the speed of light.
Is he gonna kill me?
âKid, youâve got what it takes to be an Anchor.â
Chemestroâs brows climbed.
âYou see, Iâve seen a lot of supers go mad and lose touch with reality, seems to come with the territory. My greatest fear is that one day the same thing will happen to me, and Iâll wipe Franklin city out like a childâs sandcastle.
âTo prevent that, I like to keep a handful of supers on hand who have a shot at killing me.â
Solarisâs gaze bored into Chemestroâs eyes.
âYou might be one of them.â
âI thought the Anchors were supposed to replace you if you died.â
âWell, yeah, but an Anchor is pretty much the only way I could die,â Solaris shrugged. âI havenât aged in sixty years. Iâm a hundred and six years old. Iâve been torn in half, decapitated, eaten, banished to hell â not the Christian hell, but close â adventured across magical lands, cursed, flung into spaceâ¦you name it.â
Solarisâs gaze lost focus as he seemingly got lost in his memories. A moment later the super shook it off.
âI got off topic, this is about Post-Tide cleanup. Youâre gunning for Anchor, and youâre so very close to achieving it, but thereâs one little problem.â
âTell me what it is, and Iâll deal with it,â Chemestro said. He was getting one step closer to achieving Fatherâs primary mission.
âAs long as Neuron is alive, I canât give you that kind of political power.â Solaris said, leaning back in his chair.
âExcuse me?â Chemestro asked.
âYou heard me. Neuron has a stable of young, powerful supers, about your age, that he has groomed from birth to obey him without question, making him one of the more influential Thinkers in the cityâ¦â
âBut those young, powerful supers donât actively contribute anything to the defense of the city, simply remaining in cloistered training, desperately competing with each other in order to win favor with Father.â
Chemestroâs eye twitched.
âI think to myself, yes, Neuron has his fingers in a lot of pies, but his businesses are mostly corrupt drains on the city designed to line his pockets.â
âIf the brain were to kick the bucket, there would be a flood of new blood on the streets, along with a substantial correction in corruption-based loss of wealth.â
âNow it might take a couple years to sort out the good ones from the bad ones, but Iâm confident we could handle Neuronâs children and stabilize the city before the next High Tide.â
âLong story short: It wasnât previously the case, but your value in my eyes has surpassed that of your father. If you wish to be in line to run this city, Neuron must be gone and his children allied behind you as a powerful political force.â
âAre you asking me to kill my Father?â Chemestro said, a strange emotion welling up inside him. He clamped down on it. He could talk to Luâann about it later.
âYou donât have to kill him, no.â Solaris said before pausing. âBut you do have my permission.â
***Paradox***
âThe favor is, and I quote: You must invite a woman of red hair and one of black to a grand ball you will host for the local manitians of note, for which occasion you will have studied the history and etiquette so as not to embarrass me, lest I consider the favor unfulfilled.â
âAll one sentence?â Natalie asked.
âOne sentence, one favor, I think was the idea.â Perry said with a shrug. âSo, ummâ¦you guys wanna go to a magical royal ball with a bunch of fantasy creatures?â
Natâs eyes sparkled, her expression lighting up.
âOf c-ân/ô/vel/b//in dot c//om
âHold on,â Heather said, slapping a hand over Natâs mouth. âThis nerdâs required to bring a redhead and a black-haired girl. If he doesnât, heâs technically failed, and his gramma gets another favor. We have leverage.â
âNot that much leverage,â Perry said. âThere are other girls with the right hair color.â
âOh yeah, ones you wanna take to a ball?â Heather asked.
Perry rolled his eyes.
âWhat are your demands?â
âI want a Mox-feather dress.â Heather said immediately. âObviously I canât wear a t-shirt and leggings.â
Perry still had the supplies, and it was a good request. Grammaâs expectation to ânot embarrass herâ basically translated to âblow everyone else out of the water.â
âThatâs a good idea, actuallyâ Perry said, already mentally drawing up plans. âText me a pic of the dress youâd like, and Iâll make it.â Perry glanced over at Natalie. âYou too, Nat.â
âR-really?â She asked.
âDo you have a dress?â Perry asked.
Nat opened her mouth and closed it.
âNoâ¦â
âAlright, Nat, what are your demands?â Perry said, glancing at Natalie.
âHey, why does she get a dress and a demand!?â Heather asked.
âBecause you wasted yours on something you were probably gonna get anyway,â Perry said, leaning down as Nat motioned him closer.
âIâd um, Iâd like a spirit smithing forge.â She whispered into his ear, her breath tickling his hair.
Perryâs eyebrows rose. If he retained all the skills and memories Gerome had implanted in him, it stood to reason that Nat did too. The only problem was that spirit smithing forges were more than a little difficult to source, hence why Nat hadnât done any since then.
She pulled back, tapping her fingers together nervously. âIs that okay?â
âSure, I can make that happen.â Perry said.
âMake what happen?â Heather asked.
Perry grinned and gave her a wink. âItâs a secret.â
âOh, you suck,â Heather said, barely keeping the smile from blooming on her face. âIâm taking Nat shopping for dresses. Youâve both got terrible fashion sense.â
âGuilty as charged,â Perry said, raising his hands.
Perry had been thinking about wearing one of those T-shirts with a tuxedo pattern printed on the front.
Obviously he shouldnât do that, but manâ¦it was tempting.
Maybe a T-shirt that says âBig Ballsâ with the AC~DC logo on the back?
â¦Nah.
Nat and Heather wandered off to the nearby sofa and began scrolling through their phones, showing each other dresses.
Perry glanced down at his hand.
He couldnât resist.
Light.
3/5
Above his hand, a pale orb of pure light manifested.
In Perryâs soul, heâd implanted two filters abutting AbunâZaul. Each filter only allowed pure Essence to flow through it.
Each filter had each been impregnated with a starter essence: Moonlight and Lunar Lotus.
AbunâZaul, by its very nature, sought to spread into every nook and cranny it could, pushing against the filter and mimicking the essence it found there. Eventually, raw essence of the flavor Perry needed began slowly seeping through the filters, pushed through by Abunâzaulâs insistent pressure.
Abunâzaul would push the starter essence through the filter, then the essence it had created to copy the starter essence would lose connection because of the narrow filter cutting any kind of control.
Abunâzaul would come into contact with this essence it had lost contact with, recognize it as âforeignâ, then try to mimic it and push through the filter. Ad nauseum.
It was a bit like priming a well, except whatever you primed the well with would be what came out.
Connecting the two filters together was the infrastructure to combine the two essences and control them at will. Perry could modulate the brightness and control where the light went, but couldnât change the color.
With the way his spell system was currently designed, Perry would have to undergo a surgery for every new spell he wanted to acquire, and the spells did not share slots.
There was no such thing as universal essence, so every individual kind of essence he wanted to use would require both a filter inserted in his soul, and an example of the essence to prompt Abunâzaulâs spirit to begin copying it.
It was possible that he could make an extra-large filter connected to a storage tank that would go to many different spells. Vivant Root was a very common ingredient that would benefit from centralization.
But that was a problem for the future.
Perry was chomping at the bit to get his next spell installed, but heâd already decided during a moment of rationality that he would wait at least a month before doing any further soul surgery.
He needed to know:
1: Can AbunâZaul corrode/wear away the Spell Frame in his soul? Ditto for The System. If so, it was back to the drawing board.
2: Will the soul surgery have any lasting effects? If so, what kind?
3: How much recovery time is needed between surgeries?
Perry already felt a lot better than he did the night before, but his Stability urged him to take it slow and steady.
Stability was rarely wrong.
Ding!
Ding!
A text from Heather followed shortly by one from Nat caught his attention.
He opened up the texts and studied the dresses. Natalieâs was a bit more attention-grabbing than heâd have given her credit for, but that was probably Heatherâs influence.
âAlright, I can copy these. So I take it you both are going, then?â
âYes, it sounds amazing!â Nat said.
âSure.â Heather said.
âGood!â Perry reached under one of his workbenches and retrieved the abridged book of manitian royal etiquette. It weighed about twenty pounds.
The tome hit the surface of the table with a satisfying thud, and Perry placed his fingertips on top of the leather cover.
âThis is the abridged book of manitian royal etiquette. Since you are representing me, youâll be joining me in studying itâ¦exhaustively.â
Heather turned and ran for the exit, but she was too slow.
âLCC Lockdown.â
The doors of Perryâs lair shut in front of her, causing Heather to come to a screeching halt before she pancaked on the heavy doors.
âDamn,â Heather muttered, slinking back towards them.
âI thought you were a straight-A student.â Perry said innocently.
âDoesnât mean I like boring shit,â Heather muttered.
âIt sounds really interesting to me!â Natalie said âItâs like a puzzle, every rule lets you guess about some facet of the history of another planet! How is that not cool?â She said, struggling to lift the book and open it up.
âLike this!â she pointed to a random line in the book. âYou shalt not take Bregthor beast to a formal dinner.â
âOne went mad when it saw a familiar person with an unfamiliar hairstyle and tried to tear off their face. Needless to say they were no longer allowed in the queenâs presence.â Perry said.
âThatâs pretty metal.â Heather said, nodding. âWhyâs it in English?â
âItâs not, itâs just enchanted so anyone can read it.â Perry reached up to the back of the cover and slightly drew out one of the enchanted pins in the spine.
âWhoah,â Natalie breathed as the text squiggled like it was alive before reforming in Manitian. Perry pushed the pin back in and it was English again.
âItâs also worth more than my lair, so donât set your drink on it.â
âCome on, Iâll sit on your lap and read it to you,â Nat said, dragging a reluctant Heather back to the couch.
Perry half-listened while Nat read the preamble and began listing things not to do, the majority of which were intended for non-human company such as how to wear your gills.
Perry felt like it was safe to half-listen until the actual chapter on royal conduct.
In the meantimeâ¦Perry flipped up his phone and snagged the two pictures off his text messages and put them on his computer.
He looked up the style of dresses and a pattern for how to sew them.
Looks pretty easy.
Making fancy dresses wasnât rocket science, and Perry already had that down.
Just making a beautiful dress seemedâ¦a little lackluster. Below the level of Paradox. Below grandmaâs level, for that matter.
Not to mention, there was definitely going to be some kind of battle at the ball.
That was just how life worked in Franklin City.
âCan I add sleeves to Natalieâs dress?â Perry asked.
âSure, I guess.â Nat said, glancing up from her reading.
Alright, so I want to include Paradoxâs Fabulous Earth Armor, obviously, but Iâd like to go above and beyond on the material of the dress itself, and if I add sleeves to Natalieâs dress, I can add contracting fibers to add a couple hundred pounds to her upper body strength.
â¦except it wouldnât affect her grip strength or lower body strength. Obviously I canât make it a full suit, either. Damn.
Perry glanced over at the tank where he grew the matte-black carbon nanofibers that formed the bulk of his Mk. 4âs armor.
He glanced over at where he grew Heatherâs hyperweave.
Yeahâ¦that could work. Maybe I can make it a full suit. Just a little tweak and he could make the hyperweave transparent.
âNylonâ gloves and stockings attached to the dress could make the whole thing an actual suit. A super suit.
Muahahaha!
Plus Nat was very small so this prototype wouldnât cost him that much.
Oh, I forgot, one more thing!
***Sophie***
Sophie was minding her own business, bent over the counter, leaning on her elbow and doing data entries for the motel when she sensed someone approaching behind her.
She shifted her stance in a way that she knew would make her vacuum-sealed butt look good, and added a little wiggle for good mea-
âOW!â Sophie yelped as a sharp pain bloomed on her scalp.
âThanks for the hair, Sophie! This is for work!â Paradox said, waving three of her long blond hairs back at her as he left, not paying her a second glance.
Sophie huffed and fixed her hair back in a bun, pouting at the retreating Tinker.
I know my goal is to get the three of them together, but being completely ignored like this is damaging my confidence.