Perry stood at the edge of nothing.
Inches in front of him was pure blackness. The sheer size of the dome seemed to swallow the horizon and blot out the sun when standing this close to it, demonstrating the sheer power of whoever, or whatever had created it.
âYou know, you donât have any family on the other side,â Perry said, glancing over at Heather beside him. âYou donât have to risk getting vaporized.â
âShut up, nerd,â Heather muttered. âIâm doing this because I wannaâ¦save the city or some shit like that.â She shot them a sneaky glance.
âHow magnanimous.â Perry said, taking Heatherâs hand and Natalieâs tiny one. Those two in turn took the hands of the supers on either side of them, who in turn linked with the hands of people further down the line, ensuring they would all land at the same moment, and hopefully not get separated in case the interior was more dangerous than they expected.
Every other super in the chain had loved ones inside the bounds of the black hemisphere, and theyâd taken no urging to dive into possible death head-first.
Because if their families were dead, what would be the point of surviving? If they were alive, could they live with themselves for not doing anything about their predicament?
âAlright, on three.â Conducter Waltherâs voice carried over the assembled line. Through his speaker.
âOne.ââ
Perry took a deep breath.
âTwo.â
Perry exhaled.
âThree.â
âPerry closed his eyes and â
***
âAlright, Natalie,â The host of Hammers of Love said, holding the microphone close to his face and whispering conspiratorially, for the audienceâs benefit.
Perry stood on platform three, his palms sweating like crazy. Heather and him were the only ones still suspended, while all the other dates had already descended back into the audience, sans-rose.
Heather was to his left on number one, sending Perry the occasional death-glance. The amount of roses theyâd accumulated was equal, but this was the tiebreaker.
âWeâre down to the last choice,â Gerome stage-whispered. âAnd because this choice is so important, weâre going to make the Companion bonus for your weapon much more powerful. Instead of a simple stat bonus, weâre going to add abilities.â
Gerome pointed at Perry.
âIf you choose Perry, your creation will have a growth mechanic, and be repairable with any material. Even the dirt on the ground. Boring and simple, like our boy here, but undoubtedly powerful and utilitarian.â
He pointed at Heather. âIf you choose Heather, your creation will have a transformation mechanic, allowing you to turn it into whatever the opponent is weakest against, along with a substantially higher critical hit ratio. Difficult to use, and high maintenance, but very high performance, like a sexy sports car.â
âSo, who will it be?â Gerome asked, pausing as Natalie turned pale and clutched the rose in her hand until she began shaking.
âUmmâ¦â
âRemember, this is the last time you can have someone help you out with your prototype before we move onto adventure mode. The winner of this round will automatically be assigned to your party, while the losers will be on their own.â
âI donât want anybody to be on their own, though?â Natalie said, clutching the one rose to her chest nervously.
âIn life, sometimes you gotta make a decision. You canât choose two companions.â Gerome said with a shrug before turning to the audience, a few hundred people sitting in the bleachers. Here, letâs help Natalie out. What does the audience think? Whoâs the better choice to âhelp outâ our contestant spirit smith full-time?â
Gerome held out the microphone towards the audience and people began to shout their names, the audience seemingly split between chanting âHeatherâ and âPerryâ.
âCome on, audience, youâre really gonna have to speak up if you want us to tell who Natalie should pick.â
The chanting redoubled, but it still seemed to be split, all the while, the tiny blacksmith was growing more and more nervous, wiping her palms off on her sooty apron as she glanced around between Perry and Heather.
âYou can pick Heather,â Perry said over the audience with a shrug. âShe would take rejection a lot worse than I would.â
âBullshit!â Heather shouted. âThatâs reverse psychology if Iâve ever seen it! Choose Perry, heâd the rest of his life moping otherwise. Iâll be the better person here and be selfless by suggesting you go with someone elseâ¦Making me the more appealing choice.â
Perry buried his head in his hand and laughed.
âUmmâ¦â Natalie said, the flower twisting in her grip as she unconsciously wrung it out.
Perryâs attention was wrenched away from the situation by a high-pitched, ululating cry, as a woman dressed in a scandalously tattered formal gown and a huge velvet hat with a giant peacock plume in it swung down from the rafters on a pink rope studded with crimson hearts.
The buxom woman was wearing a heart-shaped mask, but it was obviously Sophie.
âThe Musketeer of Love has arrived!â Sophie shouted, swiping at the rose in Natalieâs hand with a rapier and severing it into two halves, swinging back into the audience on her rope before security could catch up to her.
Sophie landed in the bleachers and began running away full tilt, her shredded clothes and peacock feather fluttering behind her.
âUmmâ¦â Natalie looked down at the two halves, in front of her, a stem with a minuscule amount of flower, and most of a flower. She picked them up and sheepishly stepped forward, offering them.
âIâll have the head. You can take the bottom,â Heather said, snatching the flower portion out of Natâs hand.
Does this count? Perry thought, inspecting the stem portion, which was practically ninety percent of the whole, albeit less pretty.
A moment later, Gerome was standing beside them, the dark-skinned host clearing his throat and straightening his immaculate suit. The manâs expression was clouded as he inspected the results of Sophieâs interference, running his fingers through his wavy hair.
âHmmâ¦That was unscripted. Several of my security team got sexily incapacitated by a scantily-clad vigilante. It violates several insurance policies, and goes totally against the rules of this show⦠you canât pick two companions.â He loomed over them, his expression thunderous.
Suddenly the host broken into a huge grin, spreading his arms.
âBut Iâll be damned if it wasnât entertaining! You can both help Natalie with her task! Why not!? Iâll have to offset the boost in power with a little personnel reshuffling later, but improvisation is as natural to me as breathing!â
âThank goodness.â Natalie said, breathing out a huge sigh of relief.
âI wonder if I should make that woman an actual contestant, or if sheâd be more valuable to the ratings as a regular disruption. Maybe I could even make a role specifically for herâ¦â Gerome muttered to himself for a moment before he noticed them watching him expectantly.â
âAh, right. I think by this point, you kids all know your way to the forge, take the winnerâs hand and guide them to the forge.â Gerome said, motioning to the hall that would lead to Natalieâs workshop.
Once they were there, they would pray over her work allowing her to imbue a little of their personality and power into the blades she created. Natalie was a Spirit Smith, after all.
Having gone through so many rounds together on the show, Perry knew that this last sword would be unlike anything sheâd ever made before.
Perry was excited to see how it turned out.
Skin brushed against the back of his hand before Natalie slipped her fingers into his grip, blushing hard. She grabbed Heatherâs hand too, and began awkwardly marching toward the forge.
Together, the three of them walked down the empty hallway in silence, approaching the forge, where Natalie would create a magical crystallization of the three of them.
Almost like a child, in a way.
Thump, thump, Perryâs heart began hammering like Natalieâs hammer on the anvil.
Squeak, squeak, squeak.
Suddenly Perry heard the squeak of plastic on rubber, and spotted a young man rolling a mop-bucket through the back halls of the game show.
He was easily six-foot-six, and built like a bunker, with huge meat-fingers that were almost as big as two of theirs. He was humming contentedly as he pushed the bucket along, dancing with surprising grace as he took the mop out of the bucket and began sliding it across the floor, treating it as his partner.
His ears were stuffed with a pair of earbuds.
âHey Brendon,â
âHey Perry, Nat, Heather.â Brendon said, as he mopped the floor, tugging the earbuds out of his ears. âHowâs the new job?â
âWhat new job?â Perry asked, frowning.
âYouâve been on a lot of gameshows the last couple months. I was figuring you guys were like producers or some kind of professional contestant. The one where the whole city played king of the hill around all of Franklin was my favorite, I think. I love king-of-the-hill.â
âThis Bachelor knock-off with Nat was fun, but I already knew the outcome the whole time, because, I mean, come on, itâs you three, and Sophie kept telling me she was gonna cut the flower in two because, and I quote, âthose dating shows are a cruel mockery of real human relationships, and breed nothing but discontent and drama for the audience to feel pleasure at otherâs miseryâ.â
âWhat?â Perry asked, frowning. âWhat do you mean the last couple months?â
âOh shit, I just realized. I could have won so much money if Iâd bet on this happening.â Brendon then shrugged. âAh well, I guess that would be me taking advantage, and Sophie says thatâs bad, so easy come, easy go I guess.â
âWhat was that about a couple months?â Heather asked.
âI canât talk,â Brendon said, stuffing the earbuds in. âGerome is paying me a grand to clean up the entire studio before the transition, and thatâs a hell of a deal, but Iâm on a tight schedule.â
âWai-â Natâs voice died in her throat as Brendon began dancing away from them, pushing the mop in front of himself, walking like an Egyptian.
âCan anyone remember what we were doing before we started thisâ¦datingâ¦smithingâ¦game show?â Perry asked.
Heather and Nat shook their heads.
âDoes anyone know why we care so much about winning this stupid contest?â Heather asked. âI mean, aside from getting Nat as the prize.â
âHow do I know how to blacksmith?â Nat asked. âI donâtâ¦remember how I learned.â
âPenguin soup,â Perry muttered scratching his head.
âPenguin soup,â Heather said, nodding.
âPenguin soup.â Nat sighed.
âHow do we know we actually like each other, then?â Heather asked, pointing at Perry. âSomething in my gut tells me that heâs more suitable as a punching bag than a love interest.â
âYouâre okay, though,â She said, patting Nat on the head.
âNah, nah, Brendon knew all three of us, and treated us like friends. I think we all know him, at the very least, and he didnât seem surprised to see the three of us hanging out.â Perry said.
âSo? What if heâs the Minder?â Heather asked.
âWell, then he wouldnât have let it slip, would he?â Perry said.
âHe said something about a transition.â Natalie said, rubbing her chin.
âHe also mentioned a bunch of previous shows.â Heather said.
âWhich stands to reason thereâs going to be a next one.â Perry said.
âSo if weâre getting mind-wiped, how do we send a message to ourselves?â Natalie asked. âAnd more importantly, how do we get out ofâ¦whatever is going on?â
âIf everythingâs getting reset, thereâs no way. I mean, thereâs the possibility this mysterious Minder can either reset our bodies entirely or bring us to an entirely different location each time, making leaving a message extremely difficult.â
âThe sword!â Perry said, snapping his fingers. âWe can leave a message on the sword! Gerome said he would have to shuffle personnel around to accommodate for the swordâs power âlaterâ, meaning that whatever happens in the âlaterâ will include the sword.â
âYou think Gerome has something to do with this?â Heather scoffed. âNot too freaking likely. Heâs harmless. He fixed up my parentâs relationship. You can imagine how hard that was.
âYeah, I donât think Gerome would do this, Perry.â Natalie said. âHe literally saved my life and my parentâs lives, like, a hundred times.
âHey, Iâm not saying that either.â Perry protested. âThereâs no way I would ever distrust Gerome. I owe him just as much,â Perry held up a finger. âBut. His words indicate that âlaterâ includes the sword. Maybe heâs being manipulated too, but itâs the only thing we have to go on.â
Heather raised a brow and glanced between Perry and Natalie.
âI guess itâs worth a shot.â Heather said.
âAgreed.â
âAlright,â Perry said, leading them in a trot towards the forge. âHeather, you pour your anger and bitterness about being manipulated into it, Iâll pour my stubborn will to resist having my destiny chosen for me.â
âIâll add how much I like you guys!â Natalie said brightly. When they all looked at her, she shrugged. âYou gotta offset all those negative emotions youâre talking about or itâll come out cursed, obviously. This isnât my first Spirit smithing rodeoâ¦although it might be.â
âHow do you know liking us is real?â Perry asked.
âOh, itâs real. I can tell,â Nat said as she adjusted her apron and grabbed a pair of tongs. âHand me that ten-sixty bar of mithril, and the springwood, and the Form-steel, please. Weâre going to focus on corrosion resistance, toughness, healing, resurgence, freedom, and resilience rather than simple sharpness, to fit with the theme of breaking free of control.â
âAlright, ladies,â Perry said as he handed her the materials and Heather heated up the forge. âLetâs pour our heart and soul into making this sword the most excellent Mcguffin that has ever been devised.â
Now I just need to think of a message to send ourselves, Perry thought, thumbing his chin.