Hidden 2 yrs ago 2 yrs ago Post by Ammokkx
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Chie wasn't naïve enough to think the drones wouldn't come try search and flush her out, but the random spread of bullets flying in every direction suggested the split-off drone didn't know her exact location. A good thing, one would think, except with its sights set on the general location, Chie couldn't exactly move out and fight. Not unless she wanted to be shot through the heart with a drone to blame, in any case. All the chakram-wielding girl could do was patiently wait for her allies to cover her, an opportunity that came once she saw one of Rivka's bolts soaring by. It must've hit something, because whatever the musician had done, it caused the drone to halt its fire on Chie's location.

"Now!" she thought to herself, rolling out of her cover and surveying the status of the area. Selma stood over one wreckage, Aoife had engaged another in combat and that left just one unaccounted for. A slightly distracted drone, which seemed intent on re-aligning its target. Chie had to think and act quick, but finally having a clear look at her opponent, she knew exactly what to do. She de-summoned one of her chakrams, held up her now-freed hand and then violently clutched her fist, shouting:

"Halt!"

Two points of intense gravity rapidly formed, one each at the base of the robot's pair of feet. The intense forces exerted on its primary method of movement left the machine to be the one pinned this go around. Of course it wasn't naïve enough to let Chie do as she pleased; having detected it as an attack, the drone locked on and started firing in Chie's location. Chie, herself, was faster though: she sprinted off before even a single bullet could be fired, running with a trail of bullets firing constantly behind her. With the drone unable to fully turn, it couldn't move and realign its armaments fast enough to keep up with Chie, who had already begun the next stage of her attack.

Everyone in the area could feel a tug coming from the robot's location, though more accurately, from right behind it. The Nox in the area clouded Chie's fist like a dark energy, growing more ever thicker as she increased the intensity of her third gravity well. While she'd only done the bare minimum to keep the robot's feet pinned, this new well was much more severe. The stones of the street started to crack from being compressed against each-other, and even the immediate street light next to it began to noticeably bend. Chie couldn't maintain this for long; rapidly purifying the required Nox to keep up three intense points of gravity had no small amount of strain come paired with it. It didn't need to last long, though. All Chie needed was to get it clearly off-balance, because then she knew it was intense enough.

Chie slid to a halt once she'd ran off further than the drone's line of fire could follow and, while still clutching her magicked fist, gripped tightly onto her remaining Chakram. She took a split second to confirm her angle and tossed it skywards, at a bit of an angle, racing towards the sky above her target. Throwing her chakram directly would be silly; the gravity would dig it into the floor long before it'd ever reach the drone. But she could use that same downward momentum to her advantage. If her Chakram was in the sky, with the drone between its current location and her intense gravity? Well, only one result was to be expected.

Once it got close enough, attracted by the forces below, the chakram rapidly accelerated towards the drone. It didn't have to hit it cleanly, coming in at a bit of an angle, but slicing right through one of the legs before burying into the ground behind. The impact from that caused the robot to soon follow suit, aggressively being slammed into the streets from Chie's meddling with forces that never should be meddled with. The chassis caved in on itself under its own massive weight, crushing the inside circuitry. Most of what kept the machine running was scrapped from the impact. It was a good thing, too; Chie was forced to release her hold on that point, the intensified gravity rapidly returning to normal. It winded Chie a bit, but she was far from exhausted; the sensation was more akin to being unable to continue lifting a weight because one's muscles were too weak than it was of fatigue.

Chie took a small breath and looked over to the rest of her team. She summoned her gladius again, raised one up in the air and slightly unenthusiastically shouted that she "Got one too..." to the crew.
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Hidden 2 yrs ago Post by Inedible
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One after another the machines are dispatched. Aoife’s blade sinks deep into her target, needles of water spearing into the metallic shell along with the deep bite of her Gladius. The mass of metal topples, falls into a heap with a crash and her beside it.

The other’s volley of missiles, aimed for Selma, blossom into a harmless ball of blue-white fire when they’re detonated prematurely by Rivka’s blast. Her next shot blows a chunk out of its shell, a short prelude to its demise at the crushing weight of Crystal’s gravity well. The sound of crumpling steel is an unpleasant shriek that fills the empty street, echoing into the night.

Crystal can hear it from the perch she’s taken, high above the field of battle. Up there on top of the building she’s met by darkness, whipping wind and freezing rain unimpeded by the derelict structures that provide some protection to those below. Her field of vision is dim, a great expanse of darkness broken up only by the pin-point blue lights of the Nox diffusers that line the abandoned district. The barest glimpse of the moon can be seen through the carpet of clouds above, like a pale eye peeking through closed lashes.

When she turns her gaze down toward the street again she can see the lights, a tiny parade moving through the dark. A dozen maybe, red dots moving at a quick pace down the surrounding streets. More drones closing in on the team of Ars Magi down below.

There’s something else, too. The flash of something in front of the moon, a shift in the weight in the air. Her warning comes as red light begins to gather in the air above her, an ominous glow that illuminates the shape of something huge hovering in the air above her. Its outline is sleek, almost insect-like. Four wings, one central body, and a long stinger protruding from its bottom.

--but not a stinger, exactly. The tip of it is where the light gathers, and the point from which it lets loose the blast that carves through a chunk of the rooftop next to her. The beam slices neatly through the space just beside the girl, leaving a clean line of smoldering, red-hot concrete in its wake. A miss—but barely.

The four members of team Kheper can see the flash above them from the street below. Yet they have little time to ponder it before their earpieces crackle to life again:

“More coming down the intersection—prepare to engage.”

They round the corners of buildings, the heavy stop of feet signaling their arrival. More drones pouring in from intersection, from left and right. Cones of spotlights flash across the street, illuminating the four Ars Magi in their path as they march forward.
Hidden 2 yrs ago 2 yrs ago Post by HereComesTheSnow
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Thunder cracked in her face, as she was awash with the nova of blue and white cast off by the harmless flames, too far from her skin but not far enough from her space. That one had been close... if she breathed in deep, she could taste the explosives on the air— acrid cordite and phosphorous, like if she'd burned a packet of her fertilizer and mixed it with dust. They sure weren't pulling any punches for a training exercise...

Guess they expect big things. Far be it from me to say they're wrong!

She couldn't make eye contact to show her appreciation to her dear feuer fraulein thanks to the swath of drones fast approaching, in no small part thanks to the selfsame explosion she'd caused. Unfortunate, and she hated not getting a chance to see her purple clouds poking out from beneath the scarf, buuuuuut she'd have to make do.

Feeling a big ol' brawl coming wasn't a terrible problem to have.

She flashed a thumbs up high in the air, her grin carrying through the bellowing voice that echoed through the street.

"Nice shot! I owe ya!"

As she was about to hunch low and gamely growl a line about being all tied up at one-all, a flash of light caught the shattered glass of the windows she'd sent her kill tumbling through, stemming from the sky high above. It wasn't the brilliant blossoms of explosive amber, azure, or scarlet that they'd all just created here... Then what the hell was—

"More coming down the intersection— prepare to engage."

She felt them coming, only second away at the furthest, but was already quizzically looking up when her earpiece had crackled to life with its electric whine. In that span, she saw a dark, unnatural shape— and perched on the roof adjacent, just shy a line of smoke tipped by a crimson, molten edge to the balcony,

"Crystal—!"

Before she could finish the thought, let alone a sentence, she was interrupted by the luminous snap and eye-searing cascade, blued white filling her view as a symphony of floodlights clicked on from either side of their not-exactly-a-formation, casting her girls in stark relief against the ruined concrete. It was impossible to be truly surrounded in this terrain, but this was as close as you got in lieu of that.

Not good on either front, not if you looked at it from plain tactics... she had to do something to consolidate the threat.

Selma stomped roughly, sending out a pulse of vibration that rushed through the ground and felt for what came back, looking for— there.

She burst into motion, Nox-infused legs carrying her to the ruined office where her first kill lied, torn and twisted.

It was a snap decision, the kind she felt came the easiest. These guys they could handle, they'd proven that without a scratch to show for the first wave. That thing up there...

After hunting down a suitably large hunk of debris, a block of rebar and cement only slightly smaller than a dumpster, she gripped it tight. With a mighty roar she pulled it around, wrenching her arms—

...She just didn't like the look of that stinger. Why not swat the bug?

—and sending it hurtling, end over end, towards the flyer.
Hidden 2 yrs ago Post by Krayzikk
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"Privet, dorogiye!"

These machines sought with their own senses, and in their thermals a single point glowed vibrant red. Some of their spotlights settled upon it, light piercing the gloom to illuminate the threat to their searching sensors. The threat wasn't hiding; the harsh lights refracted on the steam issuing forth every time a drop of rain struck her skin, reflected off of the lenses over her eyes and the opalescent inlay on her spinning Gladius. Where they started dull by the end of its twirl they again glowed crimson, sharing Rivka's changing definition of 'reloading'. After all, there were no bullets. It was her power harnessed into a form she understood in and out; it was not an instrument itself but a conductor's baton. She was herself the symphony.

The Baeterran laughed, clear and musical, and bowed deeply to her robotic foes.

"An encore, then? Akh, tol'ko dlya vas." Her baton snapped up, sight flipped open and aligned with her eye. The spotlights impeded her own vision, even through her shades, but they also gave her unmistakable locations for her targets. She drew a breath, in slow and steady, and watched the bob of the loose formation of lights. As fast as their brains were they were simple, without creativity or genius. A tune generated by algorithm in the face of her artistry. Which was why she saw the shot they didn't account for, the moment that two targets overlapped and became one.

Her Gladius answered with both barrels, spewing white hot bursts of her Elementum at the same instant. If one of lesser power was enough to pierce one, then what these miniature suns would do scarcely bore thinking on. If it weren't fun. Who knows, they might have clustered closely enough that she could get some collateral damage out of those darling little novas. She'd need a moment to 'recharge', though, and the axes of threat were multiplying quickly. She jerked the bayonet off of her rifle with her other hand and held it loosely. A quick pivot and a few steps back put most of the enemies within her sight— if peripherally— and a wall at her back.

"How are we looking, girls?"
Hidden 2 yrs ago Post by The World
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"tHeRe WeRe SuReLy OtHeR tHrEaTs ThAn ThEsE tHrEe NeArEsT," stupid girl. Had to open her big mouth inside her own head. By the time she caught the glimpse in the sky she was already dead. Or would be, if the giant insect could aim. She decided that there was only room for one insect here, that being Kheper, and then realized that the thought she just had wasn't the greatest endorsement of her teammates. That was all that she had time to process before a large chunk of construction materials soared past her and into the core of the giant drone overhead. Crystal looked down and saw Selma, to no surprise, was the source of it. She gave a thumbs up that she doubted would be visible and turned back to the wasp overhead. She didn't know what it could do, but early prevention was usually a good way to handle battle.

Crystal took advantage of Selma's attack, a wonderful distraction she hoped, to freeze the pouring rain into two twin spires of ice, one circling up to the "stinger," coiling around it while the other went to just above the drone's body. She'd practiced maneuvering using her Elementum quite a bit, so it was almost second nature to form steps under her as she jumped her way up the pillar, not dissimilarly to how she climbed the building in the first place. By the time she was halfway up, the drone had broken free its laser and moved away, readying another attack. But now they were in the air, and while it may have been better suited to flight than her, Crystal had the stem of a wonderful, soon to be blooming, flower that she was standing on. What a beautiful final sight for it.

Crystal began freezing the rain on the drone, which in this downpour quickly built up weight and loss of temperature for the laser-wielding machine. Unfortunately, the laser in question was underneath the body, and was therefor not freezing as well as the rest of it. But this time she was ready, jumping aside while forming ice under her heels, and she managed to dodge the beam. She kept sliding across newly forming ice until the structural integrity of her sculpture could no longer hold her weight, at which point she jumped off towards the machine. With its internal temperature dropping severely and gaining a large coat of ice on its shell the machine was a fine target for Crystal's Gladius. Hiems was stabbed into the side of the hull, not quite piercing the metal until the freezing point of its tip made it buckle beneath it. Soon Crystal was holding herself up by her Gladius as the drone tried to maintain flight, with her flopping around as she hung on to its side.

Soon, the insides of the drone would be totally frozen. And the insect that came to pollinate her flower of ice would explode into the shape of its petals.

... Maybe she was trying to show off a little, after all.
Hidden 2 yrs ago Post by Ammokkx
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Chie, naïve as she could be, hadn't expected to be caught like a deer in literal headlights. The four girls had just gotten done with the first wave of drones, it's true, but the threat had multiplied. Where there were three previously, twelve showed up now- well, to Chie's quick count anyway. It could've been more, not like she had much time to ponder on it as she sprinted out of their headlights, a trail of bullets nipping at her heels. She managed to duck behind her previous cover again- battered as it was- for a brief respite from the onslaught. She knew, however, these things could launch missiles. The quicker she got out, the better.

Speaking of missiles, a stream of hellfire raced by her and clearly made contact with something on the other end of the firing range, judging by the loud crash she heard. Rivka's ever-elegant performance, she mused. Chie began to think; that had to have taken one of the drones out. Each of them individually was strong enough to take out one drone by themselves, they'd proven as much earlier. But they were with five and the drones... not so much. They're more than double the girls' numbers. If they were going to get through this, then...

"How are we looking, girls?" Rivka's voice interrupted her thoughts. Chie looked skywards, briefly, to spy Crystal cleaning up a hither-to-unseen target quite nicely.

"Fine for now. We can't keep this up as long as they outnumber us," she flatly stated. Chie took stock of each of her teammates' locations, trying to work through a plan of action. Selma had done a number on one of the buildings in the area, its foundations looking shaky. Maybe she could use that to her advantage...

"...Selma, Rivka. If you can corral them together underneath that office complex, I think I can bring it down on them," she suggested to the first two. Keeping her hand on the earpiece, she voiced in: "Crystal, Aoife if you can hear me- if we gather and freeze the rain, we can bring it down on them like falling spears. We should-" she wanted to continue her train of thought, but an explosion near her from a stray missile caused Chie to fly back, rolling over the pavement as the earpiece flew out with it. Her ears ringing and head foggy from the impact, Chie still tried her best to gather her wits. She got blown back into a relatively safe spot, but she couldn't do much else rather than trust her team.

...Though maybe it wasn't too bad. She was going to need a lot of Nox if she wanted to bring down that building, even if it was already rickety. Chie took a deep breath and started to let it flow through her, rooted in place while she gathered the requisite amount of magic for her hopeful venture.

Hidden 2 yrs ago Post by Inedible
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The streets are quickly becoming more crowded as the autonomous enemy force begins to close in. The drones bob and strut with almost bird-like movements, their strangely jointed legs carrying them ever forward. Most of them are still in formation, a cluster of blinking lights and swiveling weapons seeking out their next target.

One of those targets is Selma Rosemarie, who finds that she has company once she’s finished launching her makeshift projectile into the skies above. Two of the more enthusiastic drones, the front-runners, are approaching with both speed and violent intent. The peppering of magitech gunfire around her position is a brief prelude to the real attack; the first drone to reach her reels back one hefty leg and aims a kick at the verdant-haired Ars Magi, the hunk of metal aiming to knock her from her feet so the second can follow up with a crushing stomp.

Thankfully, the rest of the vanguard doesn’t arrive to press Selma any further. Mostly due to the molten ball of magic from Rivka that rips through the frontrunners of the drone formation, blowing a hole through first one, then two more mechanical adversaries behind. The little nova lights up the street for just a moment, revealing broken windows and ruined asphalt. The after-image of a dozen marching drones are burned into each girls vision for just a moment before the street goes dark again.

Meanwhile, high above, Crystal finds that Selma’s opening gets her a hold on the flying drone that was assailing her. It’s bigger than she might have expected—nearly twice the size of the machines on the street below. There’s a lot of internal circuitry for her magic to freeze, and it takes some time for the frost to spread far enough that the machine begins to sag and struggle to stay airborne. Crystals of cold begin to form along the metal surface, then thorns of frost, and soon Crystal finds that she and her adversary are descending at an alarming rate.

And the flying drone isn’t the only thing threatening to come tumbling down. As Chie gathers and focuses her magic the office building behind Selma begins to creak and groan, the skeletal remains of the structure being pressed upon by a sudden extra weight.

The cluster of drones are still on approach, about to unleash a new volley of projectiles on the gathered members of Team Kheper.
Hidden 2 yrs ago 2 yrs ago Post by HereComesTheSnow
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A little too busy to immediately reply, stalwart young Rosmarie stared down the speeding mass of steel plate, pneumatized sinew, and violent current driving it all as it hurtled towards her. She'd allowed herself a moment to verify that her improvised artillery had struck home, giving Crystal the opening she needed to work her magic— but the gunfire snapping around her had told her just what was awry, right around the moment she was pumping her fist in triumph at the sight of a thankful grin and a thumbs up. Company. And fast! This pair were eager beyond even their kin— who knew drones could manage personality? Cybernetics was a marvel, but really, that's getting a little scary.

Have none of these people seen Eradicator?

Anyway... with that creaking foundation behind her, she knew Chie was already hard at work with her scheme— one she liked, too. That meant it fell to her to check these guys' forward movement. Keep em beneath the rocks.

She slid her right leg back, kicking up a small cloud of dust as her greave settled to a stop a shoulder width from her left, angled fourty five degrees away. Her instructors had been sure, early on, to beat it into her head that just because she'd not found the upper limits of her transformed strength yet... Didn't mean that day wouldn't come soon. That she needed to ready herself for the inevitable moment when her own brute force wouldn't be the safety net she'd treated it as.

She braced her core, couching her breath.

She was a big, strong girl. In that she held total confidence, and within that, she was most confident in her legs. All the labor she'd done, all the carrying and lifting and pushing, all the explosive wrestling tricks— everything she'd ever done for that strength came from them. They were how she drove off the Mother Earth and into the sky, and how she took her vast power into her own strength. All trees had their mighty trunks that held it all up— and hers came in a pair.

She grit her teeth, and swung her hips into the drone's massive limb.

Time to find that limit, then.

The steel of her boot met with the massive plate of the drone's military-forged sabaton, and forced the latter to give in a visible, boot-sized dent. The titanic, crashing impact jarred Selma's teeth together, sending a blossoming rumble through her whole body. Her muscles locked as her hips and leg sank into the strike, forcing every bit of follow through she could muster. Beneath the magical armoring of her Parma... she noted that two freight trains colliding definitely hurt. It wasn't broken, she'd not felt anything give, but her strength and the massive drone's had certainly met—

And then physics ensued.

The rebound that had jarred her to her core kept coming in the next milliseconds, and our young tree remembered the most fundamental of all knowings she'd collected in 17 years: Mass moves mass, and while she was pretty massive, she was nothing compared to this golem of military might.

Selma, Selma, hurts like HELLMA!

"A li'l tied uuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuup!"

For the first time, Selma Rosmarie was flying under a power not her own. The bot's kick had angled her up and away from the earth, so even bracing her strike against the world couldn't have stopped this. Sent tumbling end over end by the angle of the rebound, she didn't have the time nor ability to see how much effect her kick had on the drone, and was only left to come crashing back down in an undignified skid, skipping like a stone over the concrete once, twice, thrice. It was all she could do to muster a tuck of the head while she steamed over the gaffe.

As she rolled to a stop, she found herself facing the sky— No, Not sky.

Sky wasn't that dark and metallic and creaking and dropping right on her face and don't smell the roses twice, stupid!

The second drone's heel, meteoric as it fell onto the ground, stopped cold nonetheless before true, total impact. Steel creaked as all that weight and force pushed something into the ground beneath, a spiderweb of crack blossoming outward from that point. If one possessed truly prodigious hearing, then maybe, beneath rain, wind, and the din of combat, they might have caught a strained growl.

"nggggggrrrrrrhhhhhhhhhhh..."

Scheisse, what an enormous pressure!

For beneath that deadly mass of humanity's finest engineering, her finest warrior was putting all her faith into those tree trunks again. Chin tucked into her clavicle, her shoulders and bracing hands ground into the asphalt and concrete beneath as her legs rallied against the machine, the world's most brutal of leg presses. Her heart raced as she felt the cracks extend around her, earth reaching a breaking point in small stages before either of the two warriors atop it. The pulse in her head was like a blacksmith's hammer, her throbbing veins like a mighty river as they desperately kept blood, nox and willpower flowing through her frame.

She'd never felt such an enormous weight... it was as though the moon itself had fallen onto her. above, she could swear that vicious bastard was bearing into her, trying to grind her to paste with all its might—

But if that were true, she realized, on some primal level below thinking. If that were true...

Then I know where all my might stands.

And it—


She braced her core with a thick lungful of air, locking her diaphragm anew. Her base was restored, braced for proper muscle recruitment and strength. She'd learned this on the farm. She'd learned this again, in more detail, in their physical conditioning courses. She learned it a third time now, under true duress.

—Aint—

With it, she pulled inwards all the Nox she could from her surroundings, adding it to her reserves. It set every nerve in her body alight, and she felt her joints creaking, the fire in her muscles and lungs, her prodigiously thundering heartbeat, and most of all, her fading will returning. Moments later, the rush of renewed capability flooded out the burn, kept it in check, and a new store of strength held it in place, ready for her command. Of all the fabled winds, every Hastan treasured her second.

—LOSING!

And with everything here, the ground cracked ominously again— But the drone's sensors began to flare in sequence, calling for balance! balance! balance! as it, incredibly, teetered. That little bug below that it wanted to squish was squishing back.

And this time, mass moved mass again— but one was backed by the weight of the world.

"RAAAAAAAAAAAAAGH!"

With a howl of fury, effort, and defiance, the big girl's legs forced themselves straight, and the second drone's strength was conquered. It staggered away, into the radius of the creaking building with any luck...

And the sight its mighty boot had concealed from the world was that of one douglas fir, stabbed into the earth as if a hammered nail. Embedded in the ground as she was, she caught the flash of Rivka's brilliant flames in the direction of the back line of drones— and the one that had punted her. Right? She thought so, it was near that building...

She sucked wind, heedless of the rain her breaths inevitably caught.

She could feel the foundations creaking beneath the suddenly multiplied weight of the stone they'd been designed to carry. Down here, it was like having those fancy ear-covering headphones. She could feel it in such detail...

Her legs felt like jelly. She'd stand because she had to, run as much as she could manage, and fight because that was her calling, but god dammit, dummkopf, you definitely got what you asked for.

Above, a speck of blue at terminal velocity, flanking a hunk of ice and metal as they screamed towards the earth. So Crystal had taken that thing down, good. Seeing her teammates in trouble was never fun. They were strong girls, strong as hell, but Selma was the strongest. She had a duty to have their backs.

And none to lollygag. Come on, stupid...

Gritting her teeth, the big girl managed to wrench one arm free— and hammer into the earth again, forcing those cracks to work for her this time. A little shakeup would push that building over the edge, and onto those bots, she could hear it. She'd yank herself free in a second—

"RIVKA, I CAN'T CATCH HER IN TIME!"

Crystal was more important. The words ripped themselves into the air through her heaving lungs in a way that, however strange, almost felt easier than if she had just tried to speak normally. Hoarseness, at a guess. Dully, she noted that she theoretically could have created an earthen slope for their icy friend to skid down if she was fresh... but the time she needed to recenter herself would be too long. No matter how much she wanted to... she couldn't shoulder everything.

She had to live with that, as she hoisted herself free and forced her legs to quit wobbling.

Game face back on, girl... nice and easy now.

She began to run back to the group, just quicker than a jog, trying to not think of the earful she'd be in for.
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Hidden 2 yrs ago Post by Krayzikk
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"RIVKA, I CAN'T CATCH HER IN TIME!"

Shielded from the glare by her opalescent lenses Rivka's eyes snapped up and immediately narrowed. Crystal had begun to fall. Selma spotted her, processed, yelled, and Rivka herself heard, processed, and spotted her in turn. Mere moments, barest instants, but in this case those were crucial fractions of the time needed. She was the last person who should handle this. Gravity, earth, ice, and water were all better choices to save her than fire. That didn't matter. If the devushka said she couldn't save her she couldn't save her. Chie and Aoife were occupied, and that left her.

The word 'impossible' never entered her mind. The Ars Magi jammed her rifle through a sling on her Parma immediately, planted her feet, and cast the incoming drones out of her mind. Though live-fire this was still an exercise; medical staff were nearby, she was garbed in her Parma, and she was resistant to the heat the missiles would generate. Coupled with her supernatural might she would survive— if painfully— anything that came her way. But neither gravity or chance played any favorites, and impacting uneven terrain at terminal velocity was dangerous, even for an Ars Magi. Maybe even lethal. A member of her team was in danger. Her roommate, her friend, was in danger.

Letting her down wasn't an option.

The lilac-hued girl pushed off from the ground as hard as she could. The water below her feet evaporated, the concrete dried, scorched, and cracked near to shattering in the span of a few seconds of blistering heat. To thermal imaging she looked like a brand new sun, the glare of her fire as bright as before but sustained. Contained, sustained explosive force launcher her into an intercept course like a blazing comet shaded in orange and gold upon every opalescent accent. Practice, practice, practice had been the name of the game since the first time she tried this stunt; the ache in her ankles had demanded it. She could generate the lift, slow her descent, but control was proving elusive; fire was fickle, it performed as it was bid and no more. Without any sort of fine vectoring proper flight was beyond her. For now. But fire would obey, it would do exactly what she damn well needed it to do. It didn't have to be graceful. It just had to be enough.

The two Ars Magi collided, and collided hard, but Rivka wrapped one arm tightly around her roommate to keep her from slipping away. That, admittedly, was as far as her plan had gone. Their momentum, the opposite of each other, canceled each other out— nearly. Rivka had ascended a decent bit faster than gravity had accelerated Crystal. That was the science. The reality was simpler. They both slowed, and jointly reached the apex of Rivka's new trajectory before they again began to fall.

She felt rather lightheaded, actually. Dizzy. Channeling so much fire so fast, perhaps, but there wasn't any room for that. There wasn't any room for weakness. Seconds of respite, and she needed every one to muster her focus again to visualize the fire needed to slow their descent. All she had to do was slow them down.

Rivka never said a word.
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Hidden 2 yrs ago Post by The World
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Crystal hadn't once considered that hanging on to a flying entity as it lost its ability to be airborne might result in events including but not limited to: falling out of the sky, crashing into the ground at high velocity, being crushed underneath the weight of the flier, losing grip on her Gladius, having to have a friend rescue her, and/or death. Luckily, only two of these seemed to be the case, as Rivka came blasting through the sky to slam into her, catching her and slowing their decent together with her Elementum. Rivka hadn't said anything, but she didn't need to. She also probably shouldn't, considering that her focus was going to determine if the two Ars Magi walked away unscathed or not.

The unfortunate part was that the collision between the two had hit hard enough for Crystal to unclench her teeth and swallow the grape-flavored gum she was still enjoying. But that could be replaced. She wanted to help somehow with the landing, but distracting her roommate would probably not end well, and creating ice near where fire was about to be was not the greatest of ideas. So instead she simply trusted in Rivka's ability and took the moment to observe the battle below. Selma was kicking ass, as expected, and Chie was clearly up to something. Unfortunately it seemed that whatever she was doing was taking a moment, and Crystal had wanted some target practice... So as she and Rivka rose slightly from the impact between them, Crystal took aim at one of the drones and fired a ball of ice at it from the tip of her Gladius. Not enough to pierce it, most likely, but hopefully enough to knock its aim off of Chie.

And then she once again began to fall, this time supported by her teammate.
Hidden 2 yrs ago 2 yrs ago Post by Ammokkx
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Chie breathed heavily as she drew in more and more of the ambient corruption around her. Some of it started to swirl around her like a thin veil of dark mist, though most was drawn in and rapidly purified through her Ars Armagus. Good thing too, as all that raw magic was directly funneled back into the building in the midst of the action. The Ars Magi-in-training looked up from her crouched vantage point, watching as Selma dashed headlong into danger. Everything from the recoil damage to the impromptu wrestle match was bore witness to, all of it giving Chie a faint if-slightly-pained smile. Partially amusement, sure, but also pride and amazement at how strong her roommate was. If she put forth that kind of effort, Chie could hardly afford to lose pace. A competetive fire was lit underneath her, the dark cloud around her thickening as she began to purify even more Nox at once.

She could feel it. She could feel the building shifting under her weight. She needed to push it just a little more. Just a little more, and it would be brought down on the horde. She was so close. Yet, Chie couldn't give it the final push it needed. No, not yet, as she spied a blinding flash in the corner of her vision. It was Rivka, shooting up like the rising star she was, trying catch a freefalling Crystal. Chie could slow down their combined fall. She could save both of them so easily, if she'd just redirect her spell. All she'd need to do is reach out her hand, and...

"...Focus."

Chie closed her eyes and shut out the scene completely. She didn't redirect her magic, nor would she save them. Her job was different. She needed to, and did, trust her team. Rivka would be able to save Crystal, so that left Chie with one job. The ground underneath her shook as she drew in all that Nox gathered around her, small cracks forming underneath her hands. She rose, opened her eyes and raised one arm to the sky.

"And fall."

The gravity-controlling diva clutched her fist and, in one swoop, the building toppled over. The foundations it were built upon gave way to the extreme force applied on them. Rubble, glass and steel collapsed down like an avalanche, rolling in the direction of the approaching army because of the angle of Chie's well. Selma, being in such close proximity, could feel the tug of its crushing weight. Chie didn't just bring down one part- the whole several-story building was collapsing and creating a dangerous shower of terrestrial meteors. Any drone caught in its wake would be lucky to get away with some severe damages- the less lucky ones most likely crushed on impact.

Chie felt a mild exhaustion befitting of such a spell wash over her, being forced down onto her knee from it. She took a couple of heavy breaths, scanning the dust-covered battlefield with her eyes. If that wasn't enough... she wasn't sure what would be.
Hidden 2 yrs ago Post by Inedible
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The battle between metal and earth ends with a victory in Selma’s favor. The drone she’d throw off axis stumbles backward, it’s long legs all askew as it tilts over. Right into the impact zone.

There comes a great shuddering of concrete and fraying metal, an enormous rumble like some great beast awoken from slumber. The skeleton of the office building, the survivor of one apocalypse, will stand no longer. Gravity and magic bring its steel beams and crumbling columns tumbling down in a grand cacophony of dust and debris, a tidal wave of force that sweeps across the nearby street and swallows up anything unlucky enough to be nearby.

Including the approaching army of drones.

Those stalwart autonomous soldiers were neither prepared nor designed for was comes to meet them. Their metal frames groan and squeal as the weight of the building comes down on top of them, burying the opposition in one fell sweep.

The air is thick with dust now, the dark of night made even darker. Yet not even one light can be seen amidst the rubble, no blinking LEDs or any sign of survivors. The frozen metal husk of the flying drone lays ruined on the street as well, crystalline fragments of frost scattered around its final resting place. Save the residual creaks and groans of the settling office building, all is quiet.

Until, at last:

“Field is clear--no more targets.” Comes the message from the Officers team. “Remaining teams are completing their objectives. We’re holding for now.”

The rain slows as the next hour passes by and the group of officers move forward to establish a small base in the shell of a more intact building nearby. From there they monitor the rest of the battlefield, but no further drones approach Team Kheper’s outpost.

“Good work.” Liam, apparently the leader of the trio of officers, offers to the team of Ars Magi as they wait in their makeshift shelter. “With the building.” He nods toward Crystal after, adding, “And the flyer—we weren’t expecting that one.”

“I can’t believe you just threw that mech around,” Gushes cadet Green, a tall and dark-skinned girl manning the computers. She’s already replaying the footage of Selma’s battle with the drone, re-examining the verdant Ars Magi’s bench-press technique. “We thought you were out for sure.”

Time passes further, and eventually the officers receive word that the exercise has concluded.

Transports arrive to pick up the Ars Magi and their team of officers, ferrying them back out of the military zone. They part at the entrance to Nova Lux, the three officers saying their farewells before returning to their own academy.

When they make it back to the dorms the building is alive with activity, abuzz with the fervor of a successful mission. Most of the girls appear to have returned unscathed, though a few show bruises or other wounds from their encounters. Stories are being swapped, mostly of encounters with the same type of bipedal foe that Kheper faced in their own exercise. There are a few outliers though, and at least one tale of a building-sized version of the metallic walkers.

Eventually the gossip windows down as it nears time for sleep. The Ars Magi retreat to their respective dorms and the lights go out, signaling the end to another day. Tomorrow are debriefings and performance reviews, but tonight…

It’s time to rest.
Hidden 2 yrs ago Post by Ammokkx
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It didn't take any wild trains of thought to figure out the coast was clear, given the complete and utter lack of any signs of life from the drones. For just a moment, Chie could relax. She shifted her poise a bit; the girl would lean back and sit down on the hard pavement, dropping her hands to her sides for support. Coincidentally, the left one landed on the earpiece that had knocked out earlier- she'd almost forgotten it had been lost in the battle. Given that her ears were ringing from the explosions, Chie wasn't exactly sure how much noise would actually register once she'd put it in. Luckily for her, it was still enough to make out that, yes, indeed, the five of them were successful in their mission. Chie looked up at the sky, staring down the downpour soaking her and her teammates both. She couldn't help but have a goofy, tired grin on her face now that it was over.

"Yeah... this weather really sucks."








"Chu!"

Once settled safely back at the dorms, Chie was quick to break out into a fit of sneezes. It seemed like she caught a cold. 'Did colds set in that fast?' she briefly thought, but then immediately concluded that it didn't matter because she hated the sneezing either way. Chie had freshened herself up and hung around in the common room of her dorm's building, listening in on all the rumors floating about. The one about a building-sized mech almost made her wonder if there was a game of telephone going on with her little stunt, but as far as Chie was aware, no other teams actually saw that happening. The gravity-controlling Ars Magi herself sure hadn't told anyone either, but that was mostly on account of her allergic reaction to interacting with people she didn't know very well.

Chie huddled up a bit more on the sofa she was rightfully hogging, sipping on some green tea as she continued to keep her ears peeled. The other teams didn't have an easy time of it either, from the sounds of it. Some of the girls got roughed up and others sounded like they ended up needing to work with another team. In that sense, Kheper might not have done too badly. Though, Chie could really do without all the gossip on the cute officers some of the other teams were assigned with. It just made her pouty and jealous.

After a little bit, no more interesting tidbits reached Chie's ears, so she instead opted for the next best thing: Fiddling around on her phone. Truthfully Chie should probably just head back to her room and sleep off her screaming-sore muscles, but on the unlucky occasion Selma would also like to have a nice night's sleep, her snoring could keep Chie awake all the way to morning. That, and for as physically exhausted as she was, the girl was actually doing pretty okay on the mental front. It was probably the hate for the- "Chu!"- sneezes that kept her going. She figured most of her team must've been awake still and, in a Team Kheper group chat that they'd set up together, Chie typed a quick question:

"Any good rumours? I heard something about someone batting back a missile."
Hidden 2 yrs ago 2 yrs ago Post by HereComesTheSnow
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"Wuuuuu-u-u-u-u-u-u-uu-u-u-u-uuugh." Selma rumbled in response to the dinging notification from her phone, nestled within the length of her fingers. Theirs was an all-important job— securing her one true connection to the world outside this room into place, as oft-misplaced as its history with the academy had seen it, and to shield it from any potential jostling from the vibrations beneath. The earth was solid and sure, yes, but even it could rumble, could shudder, could quake."Do-o-on't b-e ma-aki-n me g-e-e-t u-u-u-u-u-u-u-up Ch-i-i-i-i-i-e..."

Emerald eyes squinting, she peered closely at the screen she held aloft, arm reluctantly leaving the worn leather upholstery it rested upon. She wasn't gonna lean forward here, even if the churning motors ended up kneading her back into dough. She had told herself, all through the jelly-legged walk back from today's Operation, that she'd earned this much.

Where she was during all this happened to be not terribly far from Chie, in the grand scheme of things— esconsed within the halls of the Nova Lux Dormitories there was a paltry, quaint little gym, not all too dissimilar to the type you would seen in a hotel's ground floor. Not a place for real serious work, as Selma understood it, but nice enough. Its treadmills could support an urge to run, its small cache of dumbbells a good source for potential zombie apocalypse bludgeoning weaponry, it had the little niceties—

Tap it over to percussion now, I think.

And one BIG one.

The motor buzzed as a thudding staccato rhythm pounded her rhomboids beneath the thin mesh veneer on her back, as though the many millions of feet that stomped upon the base earth, and she, impossibly, seemed to sink in further to the cushioning. A massage chair, frankly, wasn't in most hotel gyms. Not the kinds like the Dorm's was based off of, at any rate— and according to legend around the residence halls, it wasn't supposed to be, either.

She'd heard it was lifted in the dead of night from the finest suites in Palmyra by a graduate with the Elementum of Shadow, a silent heist that made her parting gift to the school that had fostered her. Others called it a gift from an anonymous Duodecim, believing mankind's defenders worked better with proper R&R. Others still claimed it was found in a junkyard and its refurbishment was cobbled together as a group project, made in secret, by the second and third floor residents some dozen years back, kept in secret until properly integrated too well to make removal worth the hassle.

Hell, there was a story about the Academy trying to remove it, too, but being forced to back down at the sudden prospect of the entire wing up in arms against them. That one was her favorite— especially on a day like today, when the weight of a hundred years of robotics research had narrowly lost to every fiber of muscle she had. The kinda beating that workload gave you would be insufferable without some of this tender deep-tissue care.

Her thumb, absently, tapped its familiar patterns along the screen in response to her roomie's query: Something non-committal, as she'd genuinely spent more time hearing how the rumors about them had started permutating, but felt it too on the nose to mention. A joke about how she didn't think batting back a missile would end too well for either the Magi nor the Missile, for one.

What appeared in the group chat...

>weoildnt itb lowr upminthere faxce.?

>god da,mm#it

... Was less witty.
Hidden 2 yrs ago Post by Krayzikk
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owwwww.

Catching Crystal, in the end, was the last thing Rivka needed to concern herself with. Which in her opinion was fortunate; Crystal was safe, and so was Rivka. That didn't mean she was comfortable. Landing, while carrying a second person, was so far from an exact science that she couldn't even glimpse the far side of that gulf. Fortunately it took no amount of brainpower— and more than a little talent— to simply generate a force in the opposite direction. Even so landing on rubble, with Crystal landing on her, wasn't exactly a feather bed.

And the weather still sucked.

Their success was too potent for her to stay grumpy for very long, however, especially once she was in out of the rain. A hot shower and pajamas furthered the improvement, but time didn't help with her back. Actually she felt worse as the adrenaline faded and her body had time to register the impacts she had so rudely imposed upon it. But did her nervous system meet halfway her attempts to make it feel better? Noooooo. And aspirin was proving frustratingly elusive. It probably wouldn't help, anyway. The lilac-haired girl was sprawled on her bed, eyes half closed, and trying to negotiate with her aches and pains. Maybe, if she asked very nicely, she could get a massage from the tsa—

dah dah dah dah dum

Her phone vibrated with the five beat sequence of a fondly remembered movie. It wasn't quite fair to call the answering noise Rivka made a grumble, but only just shy.

dah dah dah dah dum

The second time she did grumble, stretching her arm out to grab the offending device and check her messages.

>no rumors here. only painkiller deprivation.
>i should have tried to send a missile back.
Hidden 2 yrs ago Post by The World
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The landing was... well, sufficient, and nothing less. Rivka had likely saved her limbs, if not her life, and Crystal was more than thankful for that. She was also rather upset at herself for causing her to have to save her in the first place. She shouldn't have made such a stupid mistake, but there was no point dwelling on it. She'd just have to make it up to Rivka, and likely the others, when she got the chance.

Even so, Crystal might just have lucked out and fared the best out of her teammates. Except maybe Aoife, but that was to be expected; rain was less likely to bother the two given their respective Elementum. After returning to the dorms, Rivka had requisitioned the shower, and trying to use it first would have led to further inconvenience for the fire-user. So Crystal had found herself taking an extra dose of circumstantial medication and wandering around until stopping off at the roof. She didn't even go out onto it, deciding to simply sit on the inside of the door and eat a small pudding pack.

She was just about, finally, relaxed when her phone buzzed. A quick look showed that the team was talking about rumors. To be honest, Crystal hadn't been paying much attention to what the other teams said. She'd been preoccupied with questions about the mechs that they had been deployed against. In a few years, would Ars Magi even be needed anymore? Would that be a good or a bad thing? But there was one...

- Batting back a missile would be impressive.
- I heard something about one of the robots getting hijacked somehow by one of the other teams.
- I don't know if it's true or not, but it would be pretty bad if they're hackable.
Hidden 2 yrs ago Post by Inedible
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The days that follow are busy.

With the exercise completed there’s naturally a mass of debriefs that follow. Each cadet is taken aside and given both a cross-examination and evaluation. Hours are spent pouring over footage captured by both the enemy drones and cameras set up around the military zone, analyzing each decision and combat maneuver in excruciating detail.

The members of Team Kheper are awarded high marks for their efforts. They were, they find out later, one of the three teams to take out a special combat unit—the huge flying mech that Crystal froze her way through.

With the exercise complete the next month passes uneventfully—the usual drills and classes, but no joint exercises or big excursions. The main focus instead is on preparing for the Field Readiness Examination--a group of written tests and smaller live exercises that will determine if a given Ars Magi is cleared to be sent on real (supervised) missions.

A grueling series of weeks pass by; long nights studying, endless magical exercises and a battery of preliminary tests fill each Ars Magi’s schedule. There’s barely any time left for their own devices, whatever they may be.

Time passes quickly--until, finally, it’s time.

The written portion of the exams have fill up about a half-days worth of work. The real test, however, comes after:

Each cadet is assigned a senior Ars Magi to supervise their test, and each has a challenge crafted for their specific skill set. The exercises are designed not just for the cadets to show off their strengths, but also to determine how well the Academy’s training has hammered out their weaknesses thus far.

And they begin—

Now.
Hidden 2 yrs ago Post by Ammokkx
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Two figures walked along the desolated and abandoned landscape of the training grounds where the girls' usual exercises took place. The sight of the broken, worn-out buildings felt as gloomy as ever to Chie. She didn't have much she could do other than look about the environment while she tailed behind her instructor: A tall, pink-haired Ars Magi with a placid expression on her face. She hadn't said much for the entire journey; in fact, Chie only knew her name was Lies because she'd been told beforehand.

"Out here's far enough," the older woman finally spoke up, a slight accent to her speech. It was somewhat similar to Selma's, so she must have been from Hasta. The senior Ars Magi hadn't bothered to look back at her examinee, instead fixing her gaze skyward.

Chie had already been transformed for a while now, waiting on her exercise to start. She timidly asked: "Uhm... miss Lies, what's going to be my test?"

And, as soon as Chie asked, Lies turned on her heel and drew her Gladius; a small handgun. She fired a shot from it without warning, point-blank at Chie who didn't have any time to react. She tried to dodge, too late, as the beam of energy that had come from it hit the girl square in her forehead. Strangely, it hadn't actually hurt her, or made any kind of impact at all. Then, when Chie blinked, Lies had vanished without a trace.

"Consider that your only hint," the instructor's voice resounded from no clear direction. "If you land a scratch on me, you pass."

It didn't take long for Chie to catch on to what that meant, quickly dodging to her side. Her movements were followed by several of those same shots from earlier, each now punching a very real hole in the ground where Chie had stood just moments prior. "Good, you think quickly," her instructor's voice echoed again. The first thing Chie needed to do was pin-point Lies' location, a feat made slightly harder by the fact that those first few shots were clearly just the warm-up. Chie had to rely on some kind of miraculous 6th sense because, as far as she could tell, the next ten, even twenty shots all came from different directions. The girl dodged to the side, ducked, jumped and did all kinds of maneuvers to dodge the veritable bullet hell.

"What are you doing?" her senior's disappointed voice resounded. The onslaught of attacks briefly paused. "Did they teach you to run instead of fight?"

Chie didn't have much time to ponder the question, for more shots were fired in her direction. This time, though, she couldn't dodge quite as easily; one shot had been a feint at her feet, meant to make Chie freak out and cause her to dodge backwards. All it ended up accomplishing was make her dodge straight into the actual attack meant to hit her. Chie would've gotten hit, if not for the fact she got lucky- her arms swung just right to end up deflecting the shot with one of her chakrams. And, in doing so, Chie realized what her senior was trying to do. The next barrage of bullets had Chie remaining rooted in place, parrying them with her gladius. From this, she learned a couple of things:

1. Not every bullet was real. Some vanished mid-air without a trace and she felt like she was slicing through thin air on others.
2: Even though she couldn't see Lies, sometimes a flash of her appeared in the reflection of Chie's chakrams.

Armed with this knowledge, Chie took a gamble. She broke straight through one of the attacks, not even bothering to cut the shot in half. Like predicted, it harmlessly phased right through the girl. Chie readied her chakrams to toss them, but instead of straight ahead, spun around to throw one to her diagonal in the back. The spot Chie threw it in looked empty, but from behind thin air, Lies suddenly emerged. She'd jumped to the side to avoid Chie's much-too-slow attack, but at least it served to flush the senior Ars Magi out of hiding. For Lies' sake, she merely pulled down her hat with one hand while casually unloading more rounds Chie's way. They weren't hard to dodge, though. For some reason, Lies just remained rooted to the ground and followed Chie's movements with her handgun, lazily shooting blank after blank. It gave the Calcarian girl the perfect chance to counterattack.

Taking stock of the area, Chie found Lies to be standing underneath a shaky lighting pole. All Chie had to do was increase the gravity, which would both root the instructor to the spot and cause the object to fall on top of them. Chie focused her magic on the spot she saw with her eyes. Clutching her hand, she created a gravity well to root whoever was standing there to the spot- and immediately as she did so, noticed what had gone wrong. The gravity beneath Chie's feet suddenly intensified, pulling her down on her knees as she heard the creaking above her. A shadow formed underneath where Chie was standing and, looking up, she could clearly make out the same lighting pole coming crashing down on her. The girl had no time to get out of the way, the only thing she could and did do was hurriedly reverse her magic. The increased gravity turned to zero gravity, just barely managing to stop the hunk of metal from crushing her.

"Your movements are predictable!" Lies chastised her again, this time landing a clean hit on Chie's side. She let out a yelp in pain. "Is that all those powers of yours can do?" the instructor continued to berate her. Chie panted and grit her teeth, getting back on her feet. She looked around to try and flush out her target again. "If you lack ambition, then get out!"

The sound of snapping fingers signaled a disorienting experience for Chie- in the quite literal blink of an eye, her world had turned sideways. The buildings were all stretching out horizontally across her field of vision, rather than reaching out to the sky. No- even the sky itself was to Chie's side. She moved her body, but it felt like it was going in a completely different direction to what she actually saw happening before her. With the sound of more gunfire ringing out, Chie knew she had to do something fast. She looked to her new 'down,' finding a building 'below' her. Taking an all-or-nothing gamble, Chie quickly anchored a gravity well to that building, sending her hurling straight to it. It allowed Chie to dodge the next few shots, sure, but at the price of her slamming straight into a brick wall.

"You're slow!" Lies continued to taunt. Chie barely had any time to scramble to her feet, managing to just barely jump backwards from another bullet that scraped her by. But there was one trick Chie now had available to her; even though her world had briefly turned sideways, her newfound location made it stand up straight again. Though in reality the girl was probably standing horizontally against the wall of a building, the fact she could anchor herself that way made her visual feed match up to what her body actually felt. Adjusting her field of gravity as she danced across the building's side, even jumping over the broken windows, Chie managed to easily dance around every shot fired back at her.

It finally dawned on Chie what kind of power Lies had been using up to now, but she didn't yet have a way to counter it. She knew she couldn't rely on her eyes; after all, that's exactly what her instructor had been misdirecting her with the entire time. Chie took a deep breath and shut them tightly, making her world go black. At the same time, Chie released the grip her gravity had on her. The area around her had returned to normal and the girl fell to the very real, actual pavement she'd decoupled herself from earlier. Chie wasn't used to fighting blind, so she ended up getting clipped by quite a few of Lies' shots while readjusting. Chie took a calm breath, assessed her situation and let the Nox flow through her.

"I figured out your trick," Chie said to buy herself some time. As she'd hoped, her instructor took the bait and briefly halted her assault.

"Tell me, then."

"It's... the light. You're refracting light!"

If Lies had been altering the direction of the ambient light surrounding Chie, then she could make Chie see anything she wanted. The bullets were never disappearing, they were mirrored images. Lies didn't jump out of thin air, she was jumping from behind a fake projection. Chie's world hadn't gone sideways, the light had hit her eyes from another direction. If Lies had really wanted to, she could have taken away Chie's ability to see anything at all. And if Chie couldn't rely on her senses... she'd need to rely on her magic.

Instead of altering the gravity around herself, Chie reversed her magic. It was something she hadn't tried before; rather than changing the gravity around her, she'd feel the changes in gravity. Every object, no matter how small, had its own center of gravity, its own pull. So, if Lies shot a bullet, Chie could feel the ripple. She could feel the new force of gravity, hurtling through the air- and sliced clean through it. Not just the bullets, even, as Lies herself was also a center of gravity. She was running around, shifting the net of gravity around herself. Obviously, she was running about to hit a rooted Chie from different angles. With her newfound trick, however, the girl had an easy enough time turning to parry each and every single shot. There was just one problem with this approach- it was とても difficult to maintain such a completely alien trick. She wasn't used to the technique, having only come up with it on the spot and it made it incredibly inefficient from a Nox-expending standpoint. Additionally, the concentration required of Chie made it all but impossible to create new gravity wells to root Lies in place with.

So, only one option remained open to the girl. Taking careful note of her instructor's position, Chie bet the farm on an all-or-nothing attack. She dashed forward, straight at Lies, cutting through any and all bullets in her path with one chakram. The other, Chie tossed straight ahead. At the last possible second, Chie's concentration broke. She felt her grip on the gravity net slip, suddenly losing all sensation. Mere moments after that a cold, metallic object was pressing into her chin- alongside an arm having firmly wrapped itself around her waist.

"Your test is over, kleine meid."

Chie opened her eyes, finding Lies to have shoved the gun right into her face. To make matters worse, the senior had Chie in a firm grip. If that trigger was pulled, Chie was dead- a clear sign she'd lost the duel. Lies released the girl from the lock, causing the young thing to drop to her knees. Chie scraped her fingers across the pavement, balling her hands into fists and biting her lower lip in frustration. "I... failed, didn't I?"

"Stop feeling sorry for yourself and look at me."

The instructor's harsh, aggressive words made Chie jump a little. She looked up, as instructed. Lies was clutching her side, the hand doing so being covered in blood. "Your last attack hit me."

"Then...?"

"I said if you could land a scratch, you'd pass. Now get up," she commanded, desummoning her gladius so her now-free hand could somewhat forcefully help Chie to her feet. Lies' expression was foul like usual, meaning a lecture for Chie was coming up.

"Stop relying on the same few tricks. You'll fight all kinds of enemies out there. Both our elementium- my Light and your Gravity- can't attack any of them directly. Your Gladius isn't there for show; crushing your enemies with magic may have worked for you to now, but for me, my only way of fighting has always been my handgun. I was forced to learn how to use my weapon for its own merit- now you should figure out yours."

Chie cast her gaze downwards. "I see... I'd never-"

"And further," Lies cut off the girl before she could continue. "Stop doubting yourself. You're smart, I've never seen anyone figure it out as fast as you have. I kept changing my tricks to confuse you, but you also kept quick on your feet and always found some way to fight back. You need that kind of snap judgment- if you let self-doubt cloud your mind, you'll end up dead. Or, worse..." the senior Ars Magi berated Chie, with a brief pause at the end as she looked up to the sky. "...your negligence causes one of your friends to die."

The last bit had a hint of melancholy to it. Chie couldn't bear the thought. "No... I won't- I'm not going to let that happen, miss Lies."

Her expression passive, still, Lies lowered her head to meet Chie's gaze again. "Is that so? Then we're going to practice those new tricks of yours some more."

"Huh? But, your wound-" Chie tried to show concern, but Lies' Gladius had already been drawn. Unlike before, Chie managed to dodge backwards and parry the warning shot- very much a real one, this time.

"Zwijg, and focus."

"...Right!"

Chie may have passed the initial test, but her evaluation was far from over.
Hidden 2 yrs ago 2 yrs ago Post by The World
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The World A Thoroughly Unlikable Person

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The test was at eight-o-clock sharp. Not a second before, not a second after. Well, technically many seconds after, as well. Regardless, it began at eight-o-clock. 0800 hours. Two hours after Crystal woke from her barely functional and highly disturbed slumber. The girl awoke, ate a balanced but filling breakfast, got dressed, grabbed her pre-packed bag of food and other supplies, said farewell to her roommate, and began the journey to the place she would be tested. Except... one thing was off. Her medication, specifically the fast-acting ones, were not where she had put them. She realized this only after she ate, as they were to be taken with food, and given the location of the test she didn't have time to go get more. Sure, it was possible that her supervising Ars Magi would understand the delay, but there was an equal possibility that they would immediately fail her for being late. Eight-o-clock sharp had been drilled into her head the past week. So she put on her headphones and began towards the testing area. Which was not, surprisingly, where most of the Ars Magi in training were being tested.

Had she not had a mouthful of gum and her headphones blaring music on her travel, she might have been overloaded by her disorder. Though she may also have overheard the rumors of a certain senior Ars Magi who had been seen going the direction that she was now headed. Rumors that said Ars Magi was a sadist, had failed out several of Crystal's peers the week prior, and that most of the girls spreading the rumors were terrified of their subject. But she didn't hear any of that. She only continued on her way, slowly rising anxiety and hyperactivity growing in her mind and chest. Perhaps it was for the best that she didn't. It may only have made things worse for her.

After a half-hour walk, she arrived at the stated location, a large dirt field with a nearby waterfall. There were three levels to the terrain with the waterfall coming from a river on the top level, creating a river on the middle, and falling into a small lake on the bottom. Crystal checked her MP3 player. 7:45. She was early, and that gave her a chance to look around. There were no trees, but there were rocks, rather large stone and boulders, all around the area. It was rather serene, actually. But her test giver was nowhere to be found. So she found a rock to sit on and decided to wait, taking her headphones off one ear to listen for her.

The minutes passed, slowly but helped by her music, and turned into hours. Soon it was midday. She had just eaten a snack from her bag and refreshed her gum (now cherry flavored) when her senior arrived. Crystal heard a cough from behind her and turned to face it as she stood up and put her headphones down. Before her stood a twenty-something girl with white hair and a scar across her left eye. She went to open her mouth to greet her when the girl interrupted.

"Glad to see you made it in one piece! Too bad you got here too soon, gonna have to dock you points for that."

What?

"But you'll have plenty of chances to make those up. This is a multi-day test, after all. And you've only gotta get a hundred points to pass. Oh, and you can quit at any time, if you want."

"Wha-" Crystal began before switching thoughts. "Wait, how many points did I lose? How many do I start with?"

"Oh, you start at zero. So you're at negative three right now."

This was ridiculous. Was this girl really allowed to do something like that?

"Test begins now, by the way. Good luck, you'll need it, Caelestis."

Well, that wasn't a good sign.

"First things first, we're testing your mobility."

The next three hours were spent by her senior testing Crystal's ability to move across the lake. She was told to freeze only the minimum amount of water to stand on. The next portion was having her jump from place to place, freezing the water beneath her so as to not touch the lake's surface. Both of these Crystal managed to do sufficiently, granting her a total of six points, according to the white-haired girl. When it came time for a break, Crystal asked the girl's name.

"Not important. But you can call me Cascading Azure Pearl, or any variation thereof. Since you're Frozen Blue Sapphire, I'd normally call you by that title, but being a Caelestis... You get special treatment."

Really not a good sign, Crystal decided. But there was no more time to talk. As soon as she finished speaking, CAP started the next portion of the test.

"I've personally reviewed all of the data on you that they would let me, so I know your abilities and weaknesses. You can form ice on a surface to make footholds, but can you do it on a moving surface of water? You got a taste of moving water with the lake, but now your task is to climb from the edge of the lake, across it to the waterfall, and up to the very top of it in as few steps as possible. Get going!"

CAP smacked Crystal on the back and watched as she began towards her objective. Jumping from one ice floe to the to-be-created next ice floe, she managed to cross the small lake in five jumps. The fewer steps, the better, after all. Next came the first waterfall, about fifteen feet high. Based on what she had been told the test was, she figured she couldn't just make a platform parallel to the falls and go up it, so she formed a small platform from the waterfall and watched as it fell into the lake, gravity preventing her from using it. She'd have to be quick. She jumped up and touched her foot to the water, freezing it vertically a few feet and horizontally just as much, her foot landing on this small foothold. She began to jump off it but slipped, falling backwards onto the platform she had jumped from, cracking it and almost breaking it entirely. After reinforcing it she tried again, managing to get a good jump from this attempt, but pushed too far backwards with her foot and once again landed on the ice floe below her.

Damnit! She didn't have enough water to work with from the waterfall, so she was having to form some ice in the air and connect it to the water, taking much more effort than it should. She jumped again, this time angling the foothold, and managed to jump from it before it fell and make a copy above it. Repeating this, she soon found herself running up the waterfall as if on an elliptical machine, or climbing stairs. She wasn't getting enough height from each foothold to make much progress, but she eventually made it to the top. Crystal followed the river to the second waterfall, this one much stronger than the one it led to. It was also much larger, about thirty feet high. There was no way she'd make it to the top the way she did the previous. So she tried a new approach. She made her foothold and forced the ice beneath her upwards, launching her upwards about a foot and a half. Repeating this managed to get her to the top, but she was exhausted.

"Bravo!" CAP said, having already been at the top for quite some time. "You managed to make it in one-hundred and fifty-two steps! That's ten whole points! Out of a possible forty, but let's not dwell on that."

Crystal wanted to throw up. She had only made it to thirteen points so far? She could have been almost halfway done already!? She wasn't given much time to think as CAP gave the next order.

"Go back to the lake. Then we'll start the next phase."

So she did. She made her way back to the lake, turned around, and was hit in the face with a blast of mud, barely closing her eyes in time.

Oh no. SHIT! SHIT SHIT SHIT SHITSHITSHITHSTISHTISTHSITSHTISTHSTISTHISTHSSHIT! That was not okay! Her skin was crawling, her mind was reeling, her chest was thundering; even with her medication as directed, mud would have set her off. But now? Now was worse. Her mind short-circuited, and the only reason she didn't start screaming madly was that there was mud on her lips. She quickly tried to wipe it off, and as soon as she did she was hit by more. It was liquid-y and gross, practically just water, but the dirt in it was definitely there. She wiped her eyes and looked around to find CAP standing on the area above her, across the lake where the waterfall was, and she was smiling.

"Did I forget to mention that I know all of the data they would let me have on you? You can purify water you freeze, right? So all you have to do to stay clean is not let it hit you as water. Should be easy. If you can't preform under pressure, then you don't get field ready status. The world isn't going to cater to your disorder, and there may be times you don't have access to your medication. I figured that now would be a good time to drill that into your head, rather than letting you get out there and find out where lives are in danger. Oh, right. I took your medication. Couldn't get away with taking the long-term stuff, but getting the fast-acting ones should suffice."

With that, CAP flung further dirty water at Crystal, who barely had time to react. She managed to freeze it before it hit her, but then it was a spire of ice that slammed against her face. Ice that was made from almost pure water, thanks to her, but it still hurt.

"Remember, you can quit at any time!" CAP shouted to Crystal. The next thing she knew, Crystal was assaulted from behind with a huge splash of muddy water, coating her back from the chest down. Shuddering, she realized what her real test was. She tried her best to focus, but it was hell to do and hell to be in this position. The hours dragged as slowly as they could as Crystal continually spun around, trying to freeze the water that CAP flung at her from all sides without relent. One thing was certain: CAP had developed a very powerful training technique for Crystal. She was moving quicker than she had ever moved before; already being covered in dirt didn't stop her from fearing more in the slightest. The damage she was taking from the ice was building and Crystal was covered in bruises.

As the sun began to set, CAP shouted to her again. "Good news! You're managing much better than I expected! So you've only got to make it through the night, and then we get to start the real fun, the combat portion!" She paused her assault and smiled. "You're not about to quit, are you~?"

"I..." came as a whisper from Crystal's lips.

"Hmm?"

"I..."

"You...?"

"I... I..."

"I, I, I... Stop stuttering. What are you trying to say?"

"I..."

"You... quit? Is that it?"

Crystal's eyes burned with hatred as she glared at her tormentor. "Am going to murder you."

An eager grin grew across CAP's face. "That's the spirit."

---Hours later---

The night passed with Crystal managing to avoid getting much dirtier, even with CAP raising the tempo of her attacks. She did, however, think that her arm was broken in a few places, and maybe a rib as well from the blocks of ice she was forming. Finally, CAP gave the word that the test had moved to the next phase.

"You're free to come at me whenever, by the way! If you can even get to me..." CAP smirked at her victim.

Crystal didn't waste any time. She formed ice under her feet and launched herself halfway across the lake, freezing as she flew over, and landed on an ice floe that she effortlessly skated across. She was about to do it again when the platform was shot into the air; CAP had created a geyser underneath her and both shot Crystal several yards up and destroyed the ice floe, leaving her to fall into the lake. A similar pillar of ice shot from the bottom of the lake to the top, forming a new place to stand, but Crystal was hit with a tidal wave from the side and tumbled once again into the lake. She clawed her way back to the top of the platform, using her Gladius as a climbing pick as she held her breath, but as she stood up the platform was sliced free from the pillar and fell away, Crystal tumbling into the lake once more.

If this audacious bitch was going to keep this up, Crystal was going to pay back her torture two-hundred-fold. She formed another platform from the side of the pillar and launched herself out of the lake and into the air, where she was hit with a large blast of water that sent her flying to the side. This time, however, she managed to freeze the lake beneath as she hit the surface, causing quite some pain but giving her the chance to bolt upwards and launch herself from below towards the waterfall. As another blast of pressurized water came towards her to stop her momentum, she sliced through it with Hiems, splitting it and freezing it at the same time to create a path through the center for her. Crystal had no thoughts as she did this; her mind was filled with only despair and hatred, her body moving on instinct alone.

As she landed in front of the waterfall, she tried to launch herself upwards once again but was stopped by a downpour of water that almost tripled the output of the waterfall itself. And it didn't relent, making Crystal turn her head downwards to barely breath and putting a lot of force against her head and neck. So much so that she fell to her knees under it. It took a moment for her to acclimate before she formed a dome of ice over herself to give her some respite. But that was short lived when another tidal wave hit from her right and back simultaneously, slamming her head against the ice dome, breaking it from the force of the collision. Crystal pierced Hiems into the wall behind the waterfall and held on tight to avoid falling back into the depths of the lake again. She wasn't given time to breath as the downpour continued unabated, forcing her to throw her head away from the wall to gasp for air.

"You doing okay down there?" CAP asked, not a hint of sincerity in her voice, poking her head over the ledge of the fall.

Crystal took a deep breathe and threw her head back under the deluge, forming ice from Hiems outwards until she had coated the wall and made a horizontal bar out under the falling water. She withdrew Hiems from the icy rock and hooked it against the bar by its flat side, freezing the water pouring onto it until the waterfall began pouring from the edge of the ice rather than the edge of the ground as it normally would. Another wave blasted against Crystal's body but it wasn't able to dislodge her from her grip on Hiems, nor did it dislodge Hiems from the frozen waterfall. Crystal quickly pulled Hiems free just as the wave ended and began to jump up the ice via small footholds. Finally, she'd made it to CAP. She was ready to slaughter her. CAP smirked at Crystal's expression, taking her own Gladius that she had stabbed into the ground and pointing it at her.

"You're gonna have to hit me pretty quick. You're running low on juice, I-" was all she managed to say before Hiems came slicing through the air at her neck. She was able to almost effortlessly parry the attack, knocking Crystal's Gladius back over her head, but still in her grip. She turned this position into a vertical slice, though this was also parried. Training began to override instinct, and Crystal's flurry of furious blows slowly began to push CAP onto the back foot. Finally, CAP jumped backwards, creating a blast of water from the tip of her sword and unleashing it against Crystal, who sliced through it as she froze it, resulting in an opening. She lunged forwards, and nearly struck CAP. CAP's sidestep was textbook. It was perfect. It was the exact way a fighter would be trained to dodge. And that is why Crystal was able to predict it. As she lunged, she was already setting her footwork to let her spin counter-clockwise, straight into a vertical slash aimed right at the space CAP had just occupied. The next few seconds were a blur of motion, and Crystal would not remember them. Several blows were exchanged, water shot in all directions, ice falling to the ground under gravity's command. And by the end of it, Crystal had managed to nearly pierce CAP's throat, stopped by the water Magi's Gladius, but barely.

Crystal could no longer stand, she could no longer move. She could no longer maintain her transformed state. She fell to the ground, barely conscious as she de-transformed. The last thing she heard before she fell asleep was clapping.

---The next day---

Crystal awoke in a sweat, jolting upright. She looked around frantically only to find that she was in a bed in the hospital. There was a note on the table beside her. She took a moment to catch her breath and stabilize herself before reading it.

'Hey there, Frozen Blue Sapphire. If I'm being honest, your test was supposed to take several days. But, given the circumstances, I think I'll count your recovery time as part of it. Congratulations on scoring 194 points on your field readiness test. You passed.'

'P.S. I power washed you pretty well with purified water while you were out, and your meds are back where they should be. The hospital should have them too. Sincerely, Mara a.k.a. Cascading Azure Pearl'

Crystal read the note several times over. She had passed? Thank the gods. She had passed. And then, she fell unconscious once more.
Hidden 1 yr ago 1 yr ago Post by HereComesTheSnow
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Cold, thin, and a deep, pure blue.

She was a sensory creature, always. Whenever she found herself somewhere new, it was those impressions that came first, and lasted longest. Today was no different. It never could have been.

A soft tamp beneath her boots heralded the young stone beneath, and through it, the story of the world, told in collision millions of years in the making. This wasn’t flat ground— it was just as flat as they could find.

Diamond dust sprayed Selma as the familiar roar of the gunship’s engines began to recede into the winds above, buffeting her tall frame like the ocean tide. The snow crystals were sharp, like needles caught in a storm, but she paid them no heed. Below her, some two hundred meters or so down, the ever present carpet of the smoke that choked the land rolled and bubbled, tossed by currents now rogue and uncharted.

That, too, was beneath register. Academically speaking, it was long known that Nox had a maximum altitude— its density necessitated it sink below a certain line in the atmosphere. This was why commerce and communication and culture held between the Duodecim States— air travel was still viable. Experience had already backed up academia’s theories, too— After all, they’d shipped off in mighty zeppelins to Palmyra to attend the Academy.

For her and her Kheper, being above the Nox was old hat. However…

It took her a moment to realize that she was alone again; the gunship’s mighty rotaries fading, with a haunting smoothness, into the constant howl of the high winds. She took in a breath, deep through the chest to fill her big lungs… and marveled.

Cold. The air was like ice through her system, a thousand knives into her gullet. Though her blood was primed for the snowfall of winter forests, she was Hastan-born at the end of the day— and the beating heart of fashion, art, and cuisine for humanity could never hold a candle to this. Her garb was practically ski clothing, engineered to hold in warmth beyond all else. It mattered not here. With one gulp of air, she’d chilled her body to the bones.

Thin. Her connection to the earth through the snow. Her shortness of breath as she began to trudge, despite her full lungs. The path forward, a channel of stone carved out of an overlooking bluff, stone and ice cascading down into the Nox beneath at not a sheer angle, but a very steep grade. She’d heard the tumble of the errant pebbles her stride had knocked over the void— and knew that the difference between those was negligible. One false step would send her to the same ignoble fate, lost in the poison sea.

Yet it was not simply by the frigid paucity of the life in the air that saw her breath catch, as forested eyes instead cast themselves up. Rather…

“So blue…” she spoke, the words already lost upon the gale that buffeted her skyscraper frame. Even for a woman so bold as she, the visage before her was humbling as it was grand.

Indeed, no Nox could survive here, for it would have been wholly swallowed. Cascading as far as the eye could see, the azure was brilliant in the midday sun, an ever deepening curtain of sapphire. It was a clear day, the disk of white hanging upon the heavens burning twice as bright, twice as harsh in the thin atmosphere. Above even it, the abyss yawned as though stygian, but refused to lower itself from its grandeur and change colors. It did not show her the blackness of space above— here, the king was dark, deep blue. Forget Nox. The many hues of ultramarine, unblemished and uncompromising in their purity, their totality… They would swallow anything. Of that, the sapling was convinced.

And yet.

Cut stark against it, and no less imposing, was a wedge of white and grey. Snow and Stone. The summit of this mountain loomed large against the backdrop, soaring impossibly high as though growing with each second she craned her neck up. The face she had been cast upon, yet another stone on the pile, was a massive wall upon which the winds coursed and scattered, rounding and smoothing it just as they parted them. Young in rock years, academia had told Selma, but all the same ancient to her. The snow crunched dully beneath her steel-spiked boots as she walked forward, a palm placing itself at rest upon the supple grays of slate. A break in the wind had allowed this of her— and as she strode, each step thusly was deafening against the sudden stillness.

Time and wind had humbled this mighty rock indeed. It was almost polished beneath her bare, pale skin, but a half-step away from losing that last grit that gave luster to even the dullest pebbles one errantly threw into a stream. It, too, was chilling— but less than the breeze, less than the surrounding remnants of atmosphere. Idly, Selma wondered if it was because this side had caught the face of the sun.

And then the wind began again, almost snatching her removed glove from its temporary home between her teeth, and successfully stealing away the warmth she, just as covetously, stole herself from the rock. Her tall, broad frame did her no favors, and she was all but pressed back into the wall, muttering alarmed swears beneath her breath in German.

It might have just been her imagination, the product of a gregarious girl thrust into stillness, silence, and solitude. It may have been sheer coincidence, a natural result of the unknowable and at times capricious nature of the alpine and high-altitude air currents, the mighty jetstream paying a visit to carry far-off weather. It may have been, looking back, the beginning of everything.

But she couldn’t help herself. Upon that bracing, stern gust, she felt a chiding air— Like the mountain itself, or that cold, thin, and royal blue atmosphere that cloaked its shape, or both… were reprimanding her.

Idiot girl, the gale said, in the voice unspoken. Do you lack sense, doing this now?

No. She thought in reply, drawing the heat-trapping fabric tight against her reddened fingers again with a huff. Though it had been mere seconds of exposure, they stung with the fading chill, as an almost alarming amount of feeling and flexion had to return (!!!) to their digits. Her, the same girl who made sport of the ice baths that Rivka and Chie dreaded.

Unbelievable.

She peered up again, now beneath the same rush that had so buffeted the stone above her. She had learned her first lesson, a pointed nudge along her trains of thought. She was right to be awestruck, she knew now— she was right when she felt so dwarfed by it.

Her long flight away from the Academy was by clear design, cutting her loose from her friends and their tests that dotted the nearby Military Zone.

Her instructor had full leeway regarding the nature of her examination. In a field readiness evaluation, nothing was by accident. She was here, on this peak, because it was where they wanted to put her.

This harsh land. This was her proving ground.

Where even solid stone, millions of years old, found itself being gradually swallowed by the blue.

The Meeting of Earth and Sky.

Digging in her heels, she trudged forward, leaning her weight against the wind. Up ahead, along that narrow walkway that hugged the mountainside and was carved into the stone itself, the bright orange thread of a nylon guide cable popped against the slate backdrop, beckoning her forward.

Each step was a battle against the wind. A hike that should have lasted no more than a minute had stretched to nearly three. The big girl grit her teeth, all too cognizant of how short her breath was getting. All that conditioning work to further extend her farmgirl stamina… and fifty meters had her panting.

Hostile terrain, wasn’t it?

Deep breath in…

In…

Gott, okay, in a little more…

… And out.

Closer inspection came in the form of a firm grip and tug against the length of the tightly-weaved synthetics, but the details clarified themselves all the same. The cord was looped through steel pitons every three meters, give or take, and sturdy. It’d handle even an unskilled mountaineer’s weight.

She wasn’t exactly super experienced, in all fairness, but…

All the same, she appreciated that her natural affinities got their due justice served. Bring it on, said her lupine grin beneath the hefty scarf wrapped double round her neck.

Selma, Selma, Let’s give ‘em Hellma!



***



As one may have expected, hoarse voices often were caught and shredded by high winds.

“Selma… Selma… sucks… like Hellma..!”

The same could of course be said for our heroine, whose foghorn bluster normally filled a room on her calmer days, and whose whipping, music-propelled limbs had single-handedly pared poor Chie’s reaction times down further than any structured training program the Imperium’s finest minds could muster.

It was an hour into the ascent, by her measure— and slow going each minute. Her mantra had been incessant, merely swapping between the differing permutations of her classic bit and the more primal, workmanlike “hand over hand, hand over hand”, as though the latter were a cadence to pull herself along to. She missed dancing. It was these moments that made her miss it the most.

The orange lengths had proved a sure and true guide, at least, as she inched her way along the path as it wound around to the southern face of the mountain. While her briefing had been sparse regarding the true nature of her examination and examiner in favor of necessary mountainside precautions and gearing up, it was sure to cover the important details—chief of which was that the path she’d seen would be the one to lead her to her proving ground.

Satellite imaging had been provided, as well— apparently there was indeed shelter from the raging tempest and biting cold to look forward to. A stone hermitage, itself too carved into the mountainside as the trail was, would be her place of respite. It was to be a frankly square and rustic thing, all things considered. Not much more than a hole in a wall, only decorated by an archway and a swirling crest overhead as you entered.

But it would suit her fine. As well as I know it, by now you surely know that Kheper’s Jolly Green Giant nestled right at home in “rustic”. If it would give her a solid place to lay her head, then Selma seldomly cared for any more.

She marched on. Logging where she had passed in the journey in her tired noggin was a task in and of itself, but thankfully navigating was one of her stronger suits. An hour down the drain meant a little less than that to go, basing things off of the estimated travel time— but looking at location, she knew that she was getting close.

The mountainside dwelling overlooked a fair-sized “front lawn”, so to speak, facing roughly west-southwest. Not quite a [plateau], given that there was still a little much in the way of grade and drift for the weight of a transport craft landing upon its face to go well— but obviously, naturally, undeniably a good space to take the measure of a bruiser like herself.

She had been stealing glances upward all morning— the contour of that bluff was distinct even from her personal “tank controls” angle. For the past ten minutes, she’d been carefully lining up the dossier’s overhead outline with the dips and blades above and to her left, and by now had reached the conclusion of “yup, that’s it”. Her pace began to climb, even as her lungs burned.

Her eyes had now begun to strain as they fully glued themselves to the strata above, arms and legs yanking her along on automatic. If her hunch was right, and they always were, then soon enough she’d see her destination.

A minute passed of this.

Then two.

Three… There!

On the far end, a spot of orange against the gray revealed more than wall melting into wall— it was the end of the line, tied in an intricate, almost woven knot along the the fluid spokes of the crest adorning a low stone archway, revealed from beneath the surrounding ice and shale only by eyes that knew what they were looking for.

The finish was in sight. Which meant… so was the start.

Against the depths of the ultramarine, a glimmer of emerald shone.

May the World Quake!

Aching legs drew in arcane fuel, and the sluggish trudging gave way to a mighty LEAP as the conifer girl soared through the air, nox reactor heart brimming with anticipation. It carried her high as her patchwork leather and plate burst into brilliant life, a second skin infinitely more warming than any amount of winter coating. Her lungs held within them twice the strength, perhaps even more, and her mind thrive as clear thanks to them and the euphoric transformania both. Compared to all the crap before, to the written exam, to the trudging along in a one-woman Souran dance, this above all else was living!

One issue arose, though—

“Gah Wait Crap Crap Crap!

The wind had taken her at her zenith, changing a ballistic arc that would terminate in a stylish three-point landing into an uncontrolled corkscrew, a diagonal tumble through empty space.

She hit the ground hard, tossed aside by the dismissive gale and precariously close to going back over the edge.

Hell, she just may have, if not for Kleinbruder, coalesced in her palm and biting deep into the rock of the western cliff. Another three meters, and it’d be her contending with the sheer face below.

“Beats walking…” she muttered all the same, drawing herself into a rather undignified crouch. Good a time as any to survey the landscape. “Least she didn’t see that…”

All told, it felt bigger than the dimensions listed suggested, at least 60 meters in any direction from its center point no matter how you sliced it. Cozy for a spar between Ars Magi, perhaps, given their superhuman abilities and how they all correlated with distance-chewing, but plenty of room to work her magic. The snow layer stop the stone, to speak of that, was thankfully thin— no more than an inch between her and the rock she knew and loved to manipulate. There was but one outlier in that regard.

Atop the archway, seemingly beneath the runoff of the summit above, the accumulation of frost and ice had formed a tall mound some 5 and a half feet or so high, characterized by a long and thin blade of an icicle that was glacier blue. Above it, though, was a curtain of black that hung at its peak, framing a pair of deep sapphires that shone with judgement in the brilliant hues of the overhead sky as they looked her shoddy trainee’s half-baked landing posture up and down and—



“Hello, Rosmarie.” Intoned the woman, belatedly cluing Selma into the sudden stilling of the winds. There was little humor upon her tongue. “Your examination has already begun— And you would be wise to believe I am always watching.”

Scheisse.



***



“Drink.”

She sat in the passable seiza that Chie had managed to teach through a hard-fought week early into their rooming together. In front of her, a lightly steaming cup, pressed forward by her instructor and carrying less invitation than command. Selma eyed it a touch warily. Her proctor, almost picturesque by contrast, loosed an exasperated sigh.

“I said your examination has begun. I didn’t say it was every little thing. Drink. You’re still my guest, even if I’m grading you.”

Her internal concerns immediately sniffed out, addressed, and urged against. Not the lady’s first rodeo with this reaction, was it? As she plucked the ceramic mug from the stone floor and brought it to her lips, Selma regarded her host again as the floral, comforting warmth of the tea flowed through her chilled bones. She was never one to be too concealed, but…

“It’s good… Thank you, Miss Kazebayashi.”

As warmth returned to miss Rosmarie’s body, so too it returned to her voice. Hospitality told a thousand tales sooner than a speech could rope you through one, to be frank— this was heartening.

She had gleaned early on that the examiner she had drawn carried with her a reputation, noticing the hushed whispers among the flight crew and the few students that had overheard. They carried tales of long, distinguished service high in the Duodecim chain, of harsh assignments and harsher verdicts as Ars Magi instructor. Apparently, it had gotten to the point where it was a rare candidate that was even offered, let alone accepted.

An honor, to be sure— that kind of prestige was as much a reflection on their expectations of her as any. That she was chosen by her all the more so. A stringent, curated field of examinees was worthless if they all flunked out, by anyone’s metrics. What did this matching of student and master mean, if not that the latter saw worthy potential in her thus far?

These thoughts, and the warmth of the tea, gave her heart to shake away her momentary trepidation at being read so easily. The latter in particular was vital— for all the stone walls had done to trap the heat of the inhabitants and counteract the seemingly ever-present gale outside, they could do nothing for the ice in the older woman’s gaze.

“You will need the strength and warmth.” her counterpart explained, bringing a similar cup to her own lips. Her movements were fluid to the exemplary degree— as though her being simply carried itself through the paths without effort. By contrast, Selma was deliberate in the extreme. This was where she’d get to as a veteran? So coordinated, coordination ceased having need? “You have already failed.”

Hwa—!?

And the winds shift again on the poor mountain, struggling to keep pace.

It was that same deliberation that held Miss Rosmarie back from sputtering, choking, spewing her tea all over Kazebayashi-sensei in that moment— instead, her eyes contented themselves with three blinks before going wide.

Slowly, she swallowed her tea, the calming jasmine within stifling her oncoming outrage. She wasn’t smart, but she could read people fairly enough in her own right— and for all that the truth was her wanting to rant…

“The hell? I just got here, what’s the other shoe about to dr—“

“I will explain, Rosmarie.”

The woman coughed lightly, vibrations less resonant to “clearing her throat out of need” and more “I’m taking the floor, this is me being polite about it.” Nonetheless, Selma settled down— so far, her instincts hadn’t been wrong when it came to this demeanor of hers. She really wanted to get to the exam already, to be honest.

“You have failed at multiple junctures. You have made choices that would get you killed, choices that would endanger your charges on a mission, choices that endanger your peers. Even so you sit here in my abode before me— this isn’t by accident.”

Okay.

Okay.

She’d really scared her with that one, yeesh…

The glacial blues behind curtains of onyx flickered with something Selma couldn’t quite recognize. Kazebayashi held forth a lone finger.

“The examination period is one week. I intend to make full use of it. My criteria for approving you are personal, and they are specific. To that end, you have failed, and continue to fail, many times. But you will only need to pass once...”

Selma loosed the breath she hadn’t realized she’d held. Almost lost on her was the fact that she’d pulled it in with about the depth her body was used to. Right! Here we go, this made sense!

So to say, that the puff of air that was tousling the very end tips of her mossy locks carried more oxygen than normal. The tree smiled— harsh reputation or not, she was being taken care of. The same had to be true of everything else.

It was like auditioning for a play, a musical, a dance number— they wanted you to be great. They wanted you to be right, fit for the job, easy to find the right answer within, so why sweat so much? She was in good hands, no?

They weren’t enemies, merely collaborators. Teammates. She and Kazebayashi-sensei wanted to see the same goal reached— to see Selma Rosmarie rise to the occasion, as she had every time before.

For a moment, the woman regarded her as she nursed the tea. Then, in a quiet voice as the winds outside halted,

“Rest a while. You have had a long journey here. I can’t test your strengths if you have none. Your weaknesses would outshine everything else.”

With all the breathing room in the world, a whole week to log one win, Selma did just that. She’d tangled the latest technology one-on-one and sent Eradicator back to the movies. She’d pitched slabs of concrete the size of her head at Voids from across the gaps between skyscrapers. She’d been fighting the enemies of humanity since before that gem had even touched her abs. She was strong and beautiful, the mighty vanguard of Kheper, the team that’d go down in the history books.

After all that? Whatever this test would be was gonna be a cinch.



***



Nighttime.

For a creature that hailed from the outskirts of Hasta’s neon-drenched streets, the cozier outlying neighborhoods holding enough room for agriculture, Selma had long grown accustomed to admiring the light shows of places far away. Those sights weren’t for her, not after a hard day’s work had passed and another’s was on the way.

She never begrudged the distance. It was just the way of things. By the time she might have learned to envy her friends for bathing in the pinks and blues and oranges of 2049th Avenue, living in the vibrant city that Norban Noir flicks always had a poem to wax about, she’d already understood that it’d all be a little much for her sensibilities. Raw night took a softer hue in her eyes— the only one she’d known it to, content to gently blanket where the city strobed, thrummed, and burst out into the surrounding dark.

Along the snow-covered half-mesa, the black dots of two figures let soft hues of their own shimmer forth from the silhouettes they cast on the white. The taller one, rolling her shoulders and craning her neck high, naturally, had hair and eyes of a charged green. Her mouth was agape as she drank in the rebuttal to the old understanding of the girl she’d been, whose world was so very small.

In its true form, night dwarfed the world man had created.

The thin air, the staggering altitude, the remote locale— all until this moment outside her grasp. All outside this moment, hiding a greater scene than any even the beating heart of human culture could forge. No amount of Neon or Noir or New Wave could truly hold their single candles to a massed billion, painted in manic bands and shapes, a feverish canon of myth. Orion here. The mighty Bear there. It was hard to imagine her breath ever not being taken.

It was as though she could reach out and touch the moon from here, hanging low in the sky— high above the clouds of Nox like this, it felt the only logical place left to go.

As if trying to act upon that sensation, carried by the impulse of intrepid daring, her hand reached up to meet the silvery-blue rays of moonlight, catching them upon gauntleted steel.

The smaller one, highlighted by the blues of summer sky, stared in the direction of her counterpart, eyes narrowed just so. There was an uncharacteristic stillness in the air of this moment— as though the jet stream itself was hanging on, waiting with her.

The needle of ice in her hand shifted, her stance lowering at the knees. The trial for tonight had been a simple one, as far as any went. One-on-one combat, student and master. A test of ability, “feeling her strength for herself”, or perhaps “seeing things with her own eyes”. The goal was first blood for victory.

How classic.

A rush of air from afar fills the void in wind. A burst of motion. Drawing close like a rocket, like loosed arrow, like the many bullets that bounced off her throwback hides and plates in all the trials before now.

Selma’s eyes were still pulled high by the endless splash of starlight, at the opposite end of the arena. The beauty, the drama, the flow of those lights as the night spun them in a world-scale waltz, immeasurably slow to her eyes but known nonetheless… captivating enough that she had to reach out and touch it. The uplifted hand flexed as if to grasp, even as a surge of wind tossed that alabaster line of her scarf into the painting—

And wrenched down, as the heft of Kleinbruder knocked aside the tiny, puny stinger that went for her jaw. Her expression had warped— admiration and awe for the world and its beauty replaced by feral, primal laughter. Right for the throat with no warning? “Frau Kazebayashi, you’re one hell of an examiner!” she crowed, emerald eyes gleaming with the stars they’d captured. Mars brought War. Jupiter, Jollity. Mercury, their messenger.

The Earth, the stage of their symphony. What else was there to do but dance, but revel in the sound?

The big girl was, as ever, the taller of the two. She knew well to abuse the fact— especially in close here. At distance, her opponent’s weapon more than equalized the disadvantage of reach brought about by that disparity in frame. A stabbing rapier versus a hewing axe— already, the latter was physically shorter, but the linear thrusting attacks meant that her instructor could blade herself along that same narrow line, drive the force behind that diamond point from a stance that extended her further still. She could dart in and out, harass Selma in between and in the middle of her powerful arcs. Death by a thousand cuts, that. Swing herself into exhaustion if she tried to play the game.

So she didn’t. Her left hand shot forth, reaching for the smaller woman’s outstretched arm before it could retract, before that dart back out far could happen. In this close, there were two options— try and regain distance beneath the shield of her frame’s length… or close in further, invite the brawl, and rough the smaller one up with the physicality. Really, only one of those choices mattered— it didn’t matter how storied the foe, Selma wasn’t here to back down. That would be wilting, and she was here to rise to those lofty expectations of that first thrust. Pull her into a knee to the jaw, wrench her around with an arm drag, make it messy, hold and hit, never let the woman escape…

Kazebayashi was stoic. Unfazed by the parry, by the mania, by the play for a dominating clinch.

“Whimsical and revelrous.” she noted, almost feather-light against the booming echos of Selma’s foghorn. Where it not for the tinge of ice that brought sharpness to pierce, it would doubtless be swept away.

Selma’s hand reached the distance, closed—

And Kazebayashi was gone. As though Selma had grabbed at naught but smoke on the wind.

The tree blinked, cursed, and tried to spring back, but was slow on the draw in that momentary shock. The sudden slam to the side of her lead shin confirmed the suspicions that had brewed in the moment, that her examiner’s speed was prodigious, but belied the fact that she’d not gone far at all.

Selma’s eyes flitted downward. A wall of wind from behind halted her retreat in her tracks, the weaponized breath of the mountainside

“Carefree, too. Lazy.”

The words, impossibly, brushed Selma’s ears from behind, carried upon the gust. For a half of a half-second, part of her couldn’t shake the urge to turn and hunt for it—

Erupting from the cloud of powder that the foot sweep had kicked up, a line of azure glass aimed for her cheekbone. Close! She was off-balance, extended weird— Had to catch the edge on her gauntlet!

And falling. Scheisse, alright—

A trio of granite spikes shot up from beneath the snow, an impromptu barrier to cut off the frontal attack long enough, at least, for Selma to catch herself upon the earth, stamp down proper footing and balance again. Kazebayashi wasn’t gonna be hit by that, obviously, but it’d ward her away.

Palm slamming against the stone, the deciduous trainee knocked herself into a whirl lead by Kleinbruder as her feet found terra firma, a bearish swipe that would take out every angle of atta—

“And laziness fails you.”

A bar across her windpipe stopped her dead halfway through, and her eyes followed its length down to the downright delicate grip beneath the swirling basket hilt. Kazebayashi’s stern gaze, again, was unchanged. Nor the tone, blunt as it was paradoxically sharp, pointed.

A deliberate turn of the wrist. A gust of wind, all but indistinguishable from the needles of her climb—

And the rapier was pulled away, its tip faintly tinged with red.

…”Okay, pretty metal…” Selma breathed, half-numb. Had her blood not turned to ice, it would have doubtless lit on fire at the accusation. Baseless as it got, she was nothing if not hardworking— but the results were undeniable. A finger across her throat bore a light sting. By the time she had rubbed it, gingerly, the Nox in her system had sewn the scratch closed beneath new skin. That shallow a cut, placed that precisely… The tall tales failed her.

“Yes. It is made of that.”

Any other time, and the conifer might have laughed. Any other person, and it might have been a joke.

In those glacial blues, our protagonist found little humor.

“Your file was quite the read, little sapling. You have a knack for being caught up in surprise attacks. Your familiarity with that pressure shows. It will serve you well.”

Another burst, and the red stain on the blue line is gone. Kazebayashi’s free hand continued to rest upon her hip, turning a duelist’s posture into a pose for lecture.

“This doesn’t mean you should start inviting them. No matter how comfortably you improvise on the spot, no matter the value of thinking on one’s feet, giving away initiative is irresponsible. Voids will take every moment your lollygagging gives them, no matter how strong you are. They will sprint with the moment. You’ll need to catch up with them.”

The wind resumed on the mountaintop, as a turn on the heel saw the victor stride away, back towards their humble abode. Dignified, measured steps, each softly crunching the snow in a manner Selma heard as gunshots.

On the winds, the last words Kazebayashi shared that night.

“Another failure. Ruminate on this. As I said, you’ve a week. I am not lazy. I will be thorough with you.”

The tree’s gaze narrowed, the corners of her lips pulling back. She was looking to the sky again, even as her verdant locks were tossed again in those resurgent gusts.

It wasn’t even that it’d be rude to argue. It wasn’t that she couldn’t find the fault because she was dumb…

“When you are ready, return for rest. We start early tomorrow.”

Sometimes, when you looked at the truth, that was all it was— even when it was a pain to admit.

“Yes, ma’am.”

The moon looked distant now.

***

The third day on the mountain was, again, disquieting in its stillness. This high up, winds were supposed to howl and tear at anything higher than your kneecaps. The plateau was no different in that regard, and for much of the second, Selma’s mountaineering exercises had seen her combat the free flow of the intercontinental jet streams, fighting to keep upright in inclement conditions. Balance, Miss Kazebayashi had noted, was the least of the many concerns raised in the planning of this testing period…

“… But a concern nonetheless.” came the other shoe, dropping blunt as you liked. “It is important, just as any other attribute.”

It wasn’t of much chagrin to Selma, at least. A girl who’d walked the fine line between dancer and brawler with legs as long as hers was bound to become sturdy and stable early on, far sooner than she’d truly excelled in either of the pursuits.

After the first day’s skirmish dumped a bucket of ice water onto her noggin, and the constant dervish had worn down her frame thoroughly by the second, the jolly green giant was getting miffed— for all her confidence, being a leaf in the ever-changing eye of the storm meant fronting every bit of capricious idea behind that insistent, focused composure.

And on the third, the whirlwind that had assailed the mountaintop had shown its whimsy again. Not in the uncharacteristic reprieve it was giving the stone, but…

“Where’s his carrot nose?” The girl murmured to herself, ruefully eyeing her reflection in the polished black beads that stared back. Coal from the hearth, pilfered the night before and arranged in an unmistakable pattern to anyone who had lived through a Christmastime—

Three balls of compacted, shaped snowdrift, stacked some meter and a half high in descending order of diameter. Through the edges of the powdery thorax, a pair of pilfered twigs from god knew where— it was obviously farr too high for any vegetation to naturally survive. Upon the topmost orb, a black smile was dotted along the face, composed of the selfsame anthracite, precious in these temperatures. At either side of the sculpture, forming a goofy delta that had to have taken up a solid half-hour of somebody’s time, a pair of comrades protected his flanks. They were a stalwart formation, made of the most indefinite material.

As far as snowmen went, Selma had to admit that they were pretty cute. Frau Kazebayashi was such a serious person in the three days she’d known her, composed and strict. If it weren’t for the fact that anyone else being up here was roundly impossible, she’d never have believed her examiner to be the culprit. But it couldn’t have been anyone else— Selma, exhausted as she was after any day of work back home, had slept like a log.

“Carrots are for eating. I would not waste one on a nose.”

Hold on.

Was that a tinge of a blush on her voice? What, like she didn’t have them and was miffed?

By the time Selma had turned to face the senior Ars Magi, a fullbody whirl that kicked up powder into the still air, all she was greeted with was that same composed mask, as folded arms uncrossed to rest a hand on the hip, and point the other towards the motley group of four. Selma clicked her tongue, knowing the opportunity to latch onto a little levity gone now. Whatever she’d cooked up involving something like snowmen…

“Enough on that. Rosmarie.”

She stiffened. Here we go.

“Do you believe in your teamwork?”

“Absolutely.” like snapping jaws, Selma’s answer came sharp and quick. Maybe even too much so— but she couldn’t help that she really didn’t like the angle this was taking. “Kheper are the best girls I could ever ask for on my side. I wouldn’t trade ‘em for the world.”

“Good, good.” A sage nod, but no sway. “But not the question. I’m asking about your teamwork. You are the examinee here— and your ability to work within a unit will be paramount in the coming years. With all that in mind, then…”

The stilled breeze began to flow again, as though a small harbinger of things to come. A pressure release valve. The tip of Kazebayashi’s finger drifted in a lazy circle pattern, sweeping over the almost-monochrome quartet as she laid out her terms.

“Those three are the teammates you say are so important— Crystal, Rivka, and Chie. The ones you’ve been with longest, with no disrespect to Aoife. I’m going to be going after them the way I’ve gone after you.”

Selma’s stance dropped, weight falling onto poised springs as the step outward found the stone beneath the snow—

And jagged spires of mountainside tossed the powder beneath Kazebayashi’s feet into the air, as they smashed into the place she’d promptly disappeared from. Her voice, disembodied as the clouds that ringed the peak began to roll in, kept the explanation going, only colored by a small note of pride.

“Not letting me walk right up to them with my sword, are we? Much better than last time— let’s just start from here, then. Remember that if I take them out…”

You take ME out. she finished mentally, grip on the haft of her axe white-knuckled beneath the layers of Parma. She backed in close to them, straining at the ears to pick up a direction from her continual adversary… But nothing came.

Another moment.

Selma held her breath, straining her magnified senses to their utmost limit. Her eyes scanned the field, finding only opaque grey.

Another moment.

Her ears searched to pierce the flowing winds, searching for the shift against the current, the crumple of powder. The only rhythm was her beating heart.

Another minute.

Her skin, now accustomed to the ripping cold, governor of touch and all its subtleties. Hers was uniquely gifted through the soles of her feet, however numbed they may have been to the rigors of temperature, of sharpness— all that painful sensation they had traded. All that response to things one feared, they exchanged for a second sight.

Nothing still. Her grimace was plain now upon her face— the trial having begun in earnest, Selma could only assume that Kazebayashi was utilizing the full extent of her Elementum. That meant that any trace of her movement, potentially, could be dampened by a cushion of air. That the very same boiling cauldron around her, the thick soup of foggy cloud and swirling atmosphere… It could be turned around on her.

Another minute.

If it came to life and death, she was confident that the woman holding a solo-act court over her future could even suck the breath from her lungs.

More.

The winds continued.


***





***


She began to wonder when the attack was coming in the first place… But she knew it was coming. It had to be.

She’d heard of horror movies doing this. The lack of stimuli letting the mind wander, forge foes out of the shadows and void. In a certain respect, their eternal enemy was a reflection of that tendency— from stagnant, stale, choking death and silence, nightmares spawned.

A swirl in the breeze sent emerald curtains over her field of view, forcing the young trainee to hunker down beneath a forearm. She spun, as though to locate the source of what felt like discrepancy… then, finding nothing, pivoted a 180. It would have made a classic feint, pulling her attention one way to strike from the opposite. She stomped, shaking loose a pebble from the ice that had entombed it.

Her eyes still locked onto the grey haze, Selma bent down to scoop the freed stone into her palm—

Wrenched herself to the side, facing her threefold protectorate—

— and hurled it into the distance, over their heads.



Nothing. Nothing, save for a tickle of icy cold on her cheeks that felt like a far-off chuckle. She fought not to fume— no tunes to speak of, and yet here she was, dancing like a monkey for her disembodied audience.

Breathe, girl. We came here to prove ourselves. Not to get caught up in the moment.

Letting her shoulders hang slack as though forcing tension free from her raised hackles, she inhaled deeply, and scanned the field anew.

The four of them were on, by necessity, a pretty flat slice of the mountainside. Normally, that’d make for good visibility, but with the inclement weather obstructing even her supernaturally enhanced vision, Selma had to admit— this essentially left only the bad bits to work with. Namely, the exposure of the position. The last thing you wanted was to be stuck, blinded, and in an open field.

She wouldn’t be getting out of this test with her instructor’s approval by just sitting and waiting. If she relied on reaction at this stage, it’d be the first night all over again. At the very best, stuck playing catch-up through defense.

Proactivity. Proactivity was what Kazebayashi sought. Initiative. If she had no target, she couldn’t steal it— but there was something she could do.

Lowering a palm to the snow, digging through to stone, she let the Nox reserves within her flow down from the Armagus at her core, passing bone, muscle, nerve, out through the palms and into the million-year collision of continents beneath.

The face of the mountainside that this yard had been cut against counted as one wall. If she made two more, that’d cut off different lines of attack. Reinforce the flanks to the point where they’d be impossible to get through— or at least obstruct her enemy, force them to make themselves known. A large section of unsteady rubble had kept the winding path above from being remotely safe for a while now, so she could rule that out.

She grabbed nothing, and pulled, as though ripping out a fistful of grass—

And as though carved by graniteworkers, the magic pulled forth the barrier her mind desired, the rumble of the shifting stone resonating and casting, through her seismic sense, the entire peak into uncharacteristically sharp relief. Striking the earth with Kleinbruder in her opposite hand as her eyes continued to scan ahead, she mirrored the landscaping, forming a nine foot high ring around her protectorate, herself the dazzling emerald beset in the front.

“I know you’re out there.” spoke the mountain, in the grumble of ultrasound.

“I might be closer than you think.” laughed the swirling eddies of the sky in return.

For a moment, their standoff remained in the realm, that of their elementa.

And then, the winds shifted.

It was kicking off.

Selma heard the change, took Kleinbruder in hand, and whirled—

Smirking, as the wall of wind slammed into her back. An array of stones burst forth from beneath the snow, smashed loose by the strikes and seismic events moments prior. Welcoming the tailwind, they sailed into the gloom—

And a shape appeared in the fog, darting sideways the instant she felt a Kazebayashi-sized weight touch down to terra firma. Little more than a hazy silhouette, but that was all she needed. Savoring the heft of here axe, the big girl stepped forward—

And dropped immediately, as a distortion in the fog ahead became a lancing jetstream that would have taken her head off, compressed into a needle-like point. The tip of that rapier of hers, it had to be—

More on the way!

Snarling, Selma tore out of the crouch into a dead sprint, on course to cut the older woman off. Her prodding seemed intent to harry Selma off, at this point—

But who the hell’d she think she was dealing with!?

If those were supposed to be her girls in trouble, there was no way in the world where that wasn’t a front row seat to Hell in a Selma!

She juked, weaved, and refused to let the blur of her instructor out of her sight as she tore around to the left flank, churning through the powder. Nicks and scrapes tore into her nox-infused skin, rivulets of blood nearly freezing in the icy wind.

Not even a bargain, that little for the sake of her teammates was a steal.

She drew closer, all but three paces from cutting the advance off entirely— and brought her hands together, eliciting a grind of rock on rock from her side as Kazebayashi’s gambit revealed itself.

The lack of cracking or chipping in the polished face of those granite slabs had proven that there was no way her wind, even concentrated into invisible lances sharp enough to wound Selma, was going to get through the walls.

So what was a magician of the wind to do… but fly?

A burst of air, pooled at the silhouette’s feet, blew away the fog that had been so damned vexing, the cloud having nominally passed them by at this juncture already— revealing a rather unruffled, but noticeably focused proctor sailing above the top of the wall, arm and rapier cocked back like a piston.

Her blade flashed, catching the newly-returned light on its azure edge as a lance of air… hit stone again. She blinked. The cloud retreated further.

“A dome?”

“You said to start using mine!”

Now Selma’s was revealed, as a length of impossibly sturdy white cloth wrapped around the wind elemental’s leg and yanked downward, sending a sapphire comet down to terra firma as Selma brought her back into range.

The arc was wide, and terminated in a plume of diamond dust near the edge. Tearing through the distance, Selma Express was at full steam, axe raised high.

Her foe, instead, gave ground, handspringing back and firing off another lance of wind in Selma’s path. Perhaps due to an uncharacteristic moment of imbalance, it went high— not like Kazebayashi at all. She pressed forward.

Regaining her footing, the instructor felt her heel’s dig into the frost… and the felt the frost fall away, into the void. Cornered.

She looked up. A wolfish grin on the redwood’s face greeted her gaze, the menacing glint of a heavy axe blade catching light close by.

“Got you, ma’am.”

“Hm. Was that the goal?”

“Gotta take out the threat at the source, right? I’m dumb, but I’m not stand around and get cut up from afar dumb.”

Kazebayashi’s eyes flickered to something behind Selma.

No.

Wait.

They’d never left

And they descended, until a heavy, evil, and doubtlessly bone-and-snowman crushing CRACK filled the once again dead air. The sound traveled through Selma…

“Do I need to tell you?”

Slowly, the girl’s axe lowered, wilted by the turnaround. She didn’t— at the moment of impact, Selma had felt it happen, and instinctively known.

Numb grimace on her countenance, she looked back over her shoulder. Not at the messy, snow-flavored crime scene beneath the rubble, no… but at the newly cleared eyrie on the face above, where that same damn boulder had convinced her to rule it out of her consideration.

“You betrayed a sound plan and smart principle today. For all that prep, why did you chase me so far out? Why is it that you, constantly, separate, and become separated in turn?”

The mechs. When she’d gotten herself into a contest of strength with them, and been unable to do anything for a Crystal at terminal velocity.

“I had to. I had to field the biggest threat. We could win if we just… go heavy hitter for heavy hitter. It’s always worked out.”

The words were bitter on her tongue. Hollow.

“And prove how tough you are? Dummy.”

As counters went, this was less venomous than usual. An experienced veteran at dealing with people she had failed, Selma reckoned Kazebayashi to have clued into her thoughts already, no matter how petty the phrasing.

“Being bulwark and vanguard both is one thing, Rosmarie. But remember: a shield is useless for defense if it’s thrown off the arm. If you seek to protect… if Kheper needs you to, you can’t stray.”

A brush of wind dusted the pair of them off. Through the soles of her feet, Selma felt her instructor return to solid, sure footing, coolly striding away from the edge.

Selma’s gaze held on the void below.

The steps paused. She heard behind her a shift in cloth, the mild clinking of the rapier in its sheath. Only so much clarity came from her magic, as it was now. She did not know what expression had turned over a shoulder to regard her.

She imagined it not to have changed overmuch.

“I know the stories you grew up on. Mine were much the same. The legends you get in our profession don’t change much, but…”

Selma took a half step, letting the walls in the yard sink back beneath the snow. Her examiner watched them, the window Selma had to meet her gaze gone.

Kazebayashi looked high next, folding her arms. Were it not for her fine control of the air around them, Selma wasn’t sure she would have heard the point.

“There’s a common thread between them all— they’re told by people who came home alive.”

Something intangible colored those words. It wasn’t enough to be captured and identified, even by keen ears, but it was enough to give the disappointed conifer pause, as she absorbed the message long understood between them.

Another failure. Ruminate on this.



***



The days rolled by.

With them, more time under the exacting microscope, more time with every thread that weaved together to make the Verdant Moss Emerald being pulled apart and checked for quality. As a whole, they seemed more run-of-the mill benchmarking exercises than those major peaks and synthesizers from before— but no less grueling, no less taxing, and no less thorough.

Strength and Endurance work, measured by laps up and down the same path she’d trudged over for what had previously felt like an eternity on the first day… only now with something akin to an Atlas stone, hoisted onto her shoulders. Five laps of that would even have her feel it.

There too was speed, always suspected to be her weakest link in the athletic chain— big and strong meant more weight to move, the lifestyle of consistent and constant workrate prioritizing its demands over what she needed for explosive bursts of movement. Naturally, it had folded in with agility and reaction times— a big, grand game of keep away, trying to avoid Kazebayashi at full tilt with a well-inked calligraphy brush. It had taken hours to get the stains out afterward.

Of course, technique and leverage of all that athleticism was paramount, too. While there existed an appreciable amount of cross-pollination in the two realms of her ringen and Kazebayashi’s judo (as she was later lectured on being true of all grappling), the finer mechanical details of the latter made notable differences to overall impact— to the point where Selma was amazed to rank her instructor’s graceful uchi mata as “probably worse than that time my brother powerbombed me when we were in middle school”. Given the relative scales at play in the comparison, it was about as top-shelf as praise could get from the much, much bigger girl, formerly so confident that she could have just muscled her way through if she really, really needed to.

Her propensity for throwing rocks around as a ranged option hadn’t gone unnoticed. A gauntlet of targets (snowmen again, but with fewer names and effort put into them) was set at the end of their proving ground, to be pitched at with projectiles drawn forth and molded into shape by way of her Elementum. Simple at first, but once she’d gotten comfortable at aiming… Variables had emerged.

Targets swinging in a sudden breeze.

Crosswinds to take into account while aiming.

Most vexing, finely-tuned headwinds that came in after she’d launched her projectiles— any imperfection in her finish would see them falling short. Time and again, she’d beat her head against the wall of delicacy, letting hours of incremental refinement push her forward— of all the exercises, polishing these felt the most like that first hike up the path that had lead her here. Even when she switched to “shaped charges”, the aerodynamic form factor was no silver bullet— instead, the whittling process would begin anew.

Were it not for the fact that the accumulated familiarity made the second go around much smoother, the jolly green giant might have torn her god damned locks out. She half suspected that to have been an unspoken test, too.

And so came the late afternoon of the sixth day, painting the drifts upon their crucible a mellow orange as the sun fell towards dusk. Their morning had been spent splitting a shipment of firewood at the landing zone, most of the early afternoon ferrying it and other supply up the path to camp. This one was less a test, and more necessity— though in a rare spurt of wry humor, her teacher had noted that if either of them did manage to hunt down a failure on this bit, they’d both be in a hell of a lot of trouble.

“I’d be pretty mad if you graded me on basic survival stuff,” Selma had chuckled, manifesting her trusty log-splitter.

Kazebayashi offered a shrug that hid shaking shoulders. “Every day’s a test, isn’t it?”

Gott, you sound like my Dad.” her eyes made a show of rolling.

It being near on a week now, Selma knew she’d have no trouble in getting things organized in the interior of the humble abode she’d been guesting at— not like it was terribly large to begin with. Larder, hearth, a small library next to the futons, it was all pretty spartan. Hard to get confused by. When Kazebayashi had gone and taken the vegetables and meat up first, leaving her the rice bags and wood, she’d thusly paid little heed, still paring down the last few spears into good kindling and whistling a short tune.

Now, as she’d begun to suspect when bundling everything together, it was indeed clear that was just pretense.

The big girl folded her arms at the scene before her, and wondered how, even with the time Kazebayashi had squirreled away, the woman had gotten all this set up beneath her nose.

A procession of carved stone tiles across the breadth of the potrero, all polished to a reflective enough sheen to catch the light as it begun to wane. The arrangement was one of classically descending order from this perspective, beginning with a slab the size of Selma’s whole torso and gradually reducing down to that of her palm, edging upon the realm of looking like shogi pieces. All told, there were roughly fifty of them. Whatever their purpose, this setup had taken a good bit of care.

Seriously, what was the magic trick she’d pulled to hide it from someone who could sense vibrations at their feet? They’d both spent so much time transformed together that it seemed roundly impossible. More accurately, Selma should have had no excuse to miss it.

Which is why, if I were a betting girl, that’s what she’s testing me on today.

Her eyes slid over to her esteemed counterpart, perched again atop the roof of her abode and clearing her throat. Given that her voice carried on the winds if she choose, Selma wondered if it was really necessary for the woman to project— but listened regardless.

“Alright. You’re nearing the end of the examination period, as I’m sure you’re aware, and this will most likely be your final exercise, Rosmarie. If you expected another spar with me, I’ll have to disappoint you.”

Selma took the allowance where she got it after the past five days, and was disappointed for a moment.

“The goal of this period has been to highlight your strengths and weaknesses by putting them through equal rigor. I’ve been grading you on how well you can leverage all the lessons you’ve learned ever since you were accepted by our program— including your very beginnings. Those, I’d argue, are more important than any others. They were foundational to your skillset and experience.”

The tree swayed with the breeze, cocking her head forward. This was an awful long lead-in compared to the last dozen or so… Was it signifying crunch time, or something else? Either way, important stuff.

“You remember the night of your journey to the Academy, yes?”

“Don’t think I could ever forget, ma’am.”

“I would hope not— it’s full of all the lessons I want to teach.”

Selma blinked. Kazebayashi’s presence loomed over her, looking down the nose as she regarded her student with an unbroken gaze.

“Do you know what your most valuable ability was, in those first moments?”

On Sunday morning, she would have smirked and answered blithely with “Belly-to-back suplex”. It was what had changed the direction of the encounter right in front of her, it was what she’d done with the most impact by far.

Now, though, after carefully being picked apart and shown the details of where she had truly made her craft work…

“Communication, right? Teamwork and keeping track of Chie, Captain Wei…”

The wind sighed. “...Not quite. I’m glad you’re cognizant of the importance that rapport between yourself and Miss Sokolov had, but I mean more fundamental… Let me rephrase.”

“The most valuable thing you brought to the table.”


…Ssssssuplex?

“This skill was the root of that communication, in actuality. That which fostered it, gave you something useful to communicate.”

Topic of communi… Yep, that’d be it. Her instincts were right.

“Ah.” Selma tapped her foot, fifty echoes of solid rock behind her. “I get it now, you mean the tremorsense. That’s the focus?”

“Yes, it is.” as usual, her finger was jutting out again, over Selma’s left shoulder and sweeping across the field. “You’ve been diligent with using that sixth sense reactively through our time together, reading my movement when I can’t be seen. That's praiseworthy. However, you did it differently in that encounter, as I’m told— you used that sensitivity as a bat would echolocation, no?”

The big girl nodded, curious as to where this was going to go now. They both knew she could feel those already… though if she’d not just checked a moment ago, she just might have believed that this inevitable twist.

“I’m going to have you develop that further— reading the resonance of the world around you is a gateway to the mind’s eye the likes of which few can hope to grasp. It will be invaluable if you can use it with intent, as you did prior. To let it reside in the realm of the ancillary would be wasteful.”

“I agree, but… what’s the game here, then? I can read their size and position already with just by stomping. Like this.”

She demonstrated. Still 50.

“'Read', you said? Pick up that tile behind you.”

Selma obliged, ready to get to the bottom of the little mystery. She didn’t care for getting too roundabout with matters like this, and much preferred a task be plainly put to her ears. No matter the consistent effort made by both parties for her to value using the ol’ noggin a little more when she could, the girl was a hard-nosed worker. That preference was never going to leave. She flipped it over…

And everything clicked into place, as she beheld a pair of words engraved upon the stone in precise, almost artful lines, crevasses in the otherwise unmarred face. The shogi comparison was more apt than she’d guessed.

“Upon the underside of each of these stones is an engraving in this manner, little tree. Together, they form a favored saying of mine. For your sake, this tile and the knowledge that they are arranged by size, not necessarily order; those will be your only hints from me. Everything else is up to you, and your ability to focus on the specific resonances that each carving brings. They will ring differently, of that I can assure you.”

The instructor turned her head to the west, glaring into the oncoming dusk in a moment of thought. Selma spent the time placing the tile, her Rosetta Stone, face down where she had hoisted it. The impression it had made, and the warmth it had gained from basking in the afternoon she’d spent unaware of its existence, had done her a solid here— most of that seemingly omnipresent layer of rime had melted away beneath. Things would have been fuzzy if it hadn’t.

“Dawn.”

“Ma’am?”

“You have until dawn to decipher it with your abilities.”

She nodded, foot beginning to tap against the earth. Just to start, she’d feel out the etchings she knew were there, looking to get the basic sensation down…

“What if I peek, ma’am?”

“I’ll still be watching for a while yet. I’d have to commend you for doing so beneath my notice—”

But those deep sapphires saw through her, every time. How annoying.

“But you wouldn’t, would you? You’d hate to take the easy path. You hate to lie.”

Selma’s response to that was to exhale, and tap her next ping a little firmer. Just to try and find greater fidelity with greater volume, of course— more amplitude meant more range for the different frequencies to warble and reveal themselves. Probably.

...

...

Truth be told, this was a damn sight removed from anything she’d done with the ability before— even the example she’d been directed to during the subway attack was nothing close to this intensive. That, really, was just looking for things that weren't rubble— this was detail work, the bane of any bruiser. On some level, she had to make an allowance to admit that as something she was— were she not, she wouldn’t have tried to go kick for kick with a four-story mech. She wouldn’t have her first thought be “suplex” when grilled about her inherent skillset.

But that was all the more reason she needed to throw her all at the problem. For a while now, the many lectures she’d received from the woman that had taken a seat on the edge of the roof above were spinning over and over on the inside of her head, the detailings of the many limitations she had picked out of the young conifer whenever she’d let herself remain in that comfortable realm of “brawler” and little else.

If she wanted the glory, that was fine. If she wanted to continue crushing her demonic foes, that was good motivation. If she wanted to enter the halls of history… she had best do it the right way.

She needed to be all-terrain. Not just the one thing she’d taken a shine to. The core of that would be adaptability, the core of adaptability would be, of course, to know the field.

Maybe twelve, maybe fourteen hours to figure out how to make that happen.

This would be tough… but that would be what made it worth it, right?

She dropped to her haunches and focused further, controlling her breathing as she began to shut all other noise out.

Her finger tapped against her arm.

Her kicking foot, restless and uncomfortable with not being set to some kind of work.

Her heartbeat.

These were all leaking into the earth below. She could feel that. Anyone could, thinking about it— how many times as a little girl had she felt her own heart thudding into the cushion of her bed?

The theory was sound— a fact of nature, really. Architects needed to account for this. When her head had been spiked into the earth after the Leg Press from Hell, she could discern the creaking of old, worn foundations from the impacts around them, from the shifts in rubble. Even, if she thought about it, the better preserved buildings shifted differently too.

This was definitely possible. The test lied in whether or not she could tune it even finer than that under normal conditions… Getting nailed into a surround sound headset was out of the question. She needed to figure it out from above.

So she listened.

She shut more out. The howling winds that dashed against the mountainside faded into undertone. The light from the sinking sun was shut out beneath closed eyelids. Errant concerns and worry of inability to complete the trial, inability to secure a passing mark, fell to the wayside. She had a job to do.

She focused.

She focused.

She focused, clicking her tongue within a tight jaw and feeling it run through the bones of her face. Shutting everything out. Feeling for the lines she knew existed there, in front of her. In her mind’s eye, they were almost showing. The shape of the stone was clear, she could register which face was which… she could feel the discrepancy. She could feel that the ground-facing plane had something off, that material was missing.

She just needed to find the resonance that told her its shape. Find the detail that drew the lines in her head… then she could begin.

The evening dragged on into night.

She continued to toil, sending pulse after pulse into the earth below. The time that had passed was lost to her— only vaguely was she aware of the dark overhead by way of the change in the temperature gradient of her skin.

Progress was slow.

At times, she would slam her palm into the earth, and note that it had reached further than before. Others, she would snap her fingers in the air, and feel how the echoes rang, dimly, subtly, through the stone that surrounded her.

She continued.

Night continued to pass.

Slowly, more revealed itself. Her process was refining. Her strength was growing. Her mind’s eye opened further.

She continued.



***







***



She stood high, watching the stars. With her enhanced vision, the first tendrils of blue had begun to creep forth from the east.

She closed her eyes, a sabaton charged with Nox colliding with the earth. Behind her, a scrambled mess of single or paired letters had been given order. Writ into stone, it made a hell of a lot of sense why she’d been given this one.

She continued to look up, though, eyes tracing a path that wound in a spiral towards the summit of the mountain she had called her proving grounds, where Earth and Sky made their eternal exchange of force.

The boulder that had fallen onto her snow-made comrades had been cleared ages ago.

She took a deep breath, looking back to the house, to the stones, to the filaments of dawn creeping from below…

And began to climb the steps, towards the revelation that waited for her.



***



I awake early, as I have done for a decade. On the mountaintop, there is no better alarm clock than the warming rays of the Sun. I’ve long held this belief. My joints are stiff in this matter, my muscles aching— but at least, I will have a little rest soon enough. Even though I’m still very much in fighting shape… I have days where the first person I need to be strict with is me, let alone that Sequoia-chan I took on this semester.

Home is a small place, and as I float to my cozy little washroom I’m a touch concerned— my charge is usually impossible not to hear, in some respect. Today is a quiet morning. It shouldn’t be— if for no other reason than her snoring reminding me what semi-trucks sound like when they downshift. Idiot girl, what is she getting up to?

A splash of cold water, filtered snowmelt, wakes me fully, and for a moment I stare into the eyes of the woman in the mirror.

I am Kazebayashi Fumiko. At no point have I been anything more. I have had names attached to me by others, true— nom de guerre make for good propaganda, after all. The sanctum cities have a vested interest in lionizing their protectors. I get it. The Jetstream Witch, the Diamond Hurricane, The Ghost of Ganryujima, all the classics the tabloids attach to a career they deem distinguished. I’ve gotten my share of those. So have my peers. Something invoking your home (Japan), something invoking your Elementum (Wind), something invoking your Armagus (Surging Cyclone Diamond, yoroshiku). Old hat, but it gets the job done if you shoot down the TV Deal.

At least, “Proctor from Hell” is a funny one, if a little much. I’ll get into that soon.

Really, it’s a rare day where I get to hear the names I treasure.

Fumi-chan.

FumiFumi.

Kaz.

A breath escapes me, in a manner that tells me I’ve held it. The woman in the glass looks pretty good for her age, if you listen to those that hardly know her. The mountain air does feel healthier than Calcaria ever did. Perks of the hermetic lifestyle.

But those in the know see things differently. She can’t lie to me. I can’t lie to her. So, stop looking so haggard. You’ve an example to set here, wherever that kid is.

Moving quickly, I get myself together into presentable, official looking shape again, and begin to brew a couple mugs of tea. My mind’s long used to every step, and my underling hasn’t gone and misplaced my restocking of hojicha on me— my mind’s free to think things over, as the body sets to work.

That underling, six feet tall and every inch of it talented. Selma Rosmarie, my one part understudy, one part guest, and one part victim for the past week.

I’ve had a lot of kids come up this mountain over time, ever since I decided to start giving back to the system that had brought me up. But I’m not certain any of them have been quite this damn big. As a candidate for a future career that went in the vein of mine, earning all those accolades and titles and whatnot, she looked a frontrunner in every regard.

Strong as an ox went without saying. The girl’s the perfect storm for raw horsepower, hailing from a family of fellow giants and growing into a life that demanded she leverage every ounce of that potential strength from the time she could walk until now. If I hadn’t seen that much coming, I’d have to rip the gem out from my navel and throw myself off the cliffside to get any kind of dignity back.

Her love of dance was an almost unheralded supplement to it, granting her a coordination and agility, if not outright speed, that belied her long frame. Oftentimes, growth spurts like the one she must have undergone imprinted gangly, awkward movement patterns into the kid’s body, but the balancing test proved her capable of being almost catlike, the judo lesson a testament to her flexibility in technique. Being able to learn the physical skills so readily would make any developmental program jump for joy.

She was one of those Hard Workers— not people who could work hard, in as much as those that prided themselves on their ability to. Not once had she balked at my tasks, be they inane or entirely comprehensive, even in the face of the mounting frustration I could sense from her. It was little wonder why her reviews coming into this were practically glowing. Even I’m not immune to being impressed: the exercise of the third day showcased that raw ability very well, even in some of her weaker phases.

That was why I had picked her to come here.

Often, too often, there are Ars Magi who are gifted in many of the ways she is. They swim through the oncoming current of the program like sharks, as though made for it by destiny. They’re young, but well aware of their own talent. There’s nothing young people are better at than measuring themselves against their peers.

There is nothing worse for a prodigy. Nothing will ruin them faster than their own explosion of ability, than letting that unrefined talent run wild. They think they’re invincible.

We aren’t. We never were.

I look down at the empty cup in my hands, and over to the full one I had set aside.

Still quiet. My journey from the washroom to the kitchenette spans the length of the house, so I know for a fact there’s nowhere in here the girl could have crammed herself where I wouldn’t have seen— not at her size.

In that case, she’s still out there, pumping ultrasound into the earth. It’s my duty to put an end to it— her dedication was always admirable, but she would benefit from the lesson this would instill.

I get asked pretty regularly whether or not my methods are too stringent, my judgement too arbitrary, or my lessons too cruel. If, beneath the window dressing of those terms and lead-ins, I’m not holding back promising students out of some sense of perfectionism, an adherence to an ideal rather than practical benchmarks for their relative experience. I can see why— I’m usually saddling myself with wide-eyed first years, still very much growing into themselves as empowered warriors, let alone Ars Magi.

A blow to motivation and self-perception can indeed severely inhibit their growth, yes… But we’re humanity’s front lines for defense against existential enemies. There’s no room for kids who can’t handle someone who tells them they aren’t ready—

“Rosmarie?”

I open the door to a field that isn’t quite empty. There’s no splotch of green in sight, but the stones are still in their place.

—Because if they go into missions believing themselves invincible, tragedy is only a matter of time.

My eyes flicker across the stretch of my crucible yard, narrowed and alert. I should have seen it coming, with how self-reliant she forces herself to be!

There’s little to go off of. Having let the winds flow unabated, I hadn’t seen a need for allowing any tracks to be preserved— it’d be useless for trying to determine whether or not that hypothetical cheating ploy had actually gone down. I still don’t think she would, but dammit, of all the times to get careless! After all the work I’d done, trying to beat overconfidence out of her!!

I force my nerves to calm with a deep, full breath. There really wasn’t many places she could have gone, and even if she had run out of Nox to burn with her Armagus, she had survived the majority of the climb from the landing zone here just off the back of being bundled up.

She wasn’t going to freeze to death. Not unless something had gone majorly, majorly wrong.

I feel the corners of my mouth pulling back into a grimace regardless as I crane my head around the corner of my abode. It’s a cold comfort, knowing she ought to have been alive— I’m still her teacher. She’s still my responsibility. I’d told her I was always watching, sure… but to hell with my word.

A rumble from above draws my eyes towards the summit, where winds have without rest torn at the rock that touched the heavens. There is something up there… but not once had I directed her that way.

That was my cross to bear.

And yet, I had cleared the boulder I’d set there to cut that path off from any would-be snooping dogs in that teamwork assessment— And for days, I had left it, focusing on my task. On being the thorough teacher I aspire towards. She had respected it without thinking… but I had given her the option.

Do the winds always know why they change?

From atop the roof, guided by the wind at my feet, I can make out the Landing Area on a clear day. Any day is clear if I will it to be.

I find it barren, save for a few twigs that numbskull had dropped.

Another thump from above, traveling up through my feet as it shakes a few sprinkles of powder free from the ledge that overlooks mine.

Process of elimination meant that she had to be up there, and my scowl softens into a frown. This stunt is still stressful, and I’m mad at this, but…

A sigh again, as my shoulders slack. Face the music, FumiFumi. She’s seen it.

As I still the winds that would inhibit my flight, my grip clenches around the mug in my hand, now lukewarm in the alpine air of morning.

I had earmarked Selma Rosmarie for the examination under my watch due to her talents, because in reading over them I’d gained a hunch. As I narrowed the pool of my candidates, I dug a little deeper into the dossiers given to me— and as I tacked on each of my usual criteria, I found something she’d done to fit the bill.

From the stunts she pulled in her first transformation test, to the footage of her exercise against the mechanized cavalry, to even her encounter under Captain Wei’s escort, her valor had proven itself time and again…

But scratching that surface showed me a girl who believed herself immortal. Someone who had known victory, after victory, after gutsy, impressionable victory— and gotten away with being more and more ridiculous each time.

It rocked. I felt invincible, unstoppable. Nothing in the world could beat me.

Those were the words she herself had used, and I’ve seen it, time and again, over the course of this week. For all her savvy when she uses her brain, there’s an arrogance that comes with it— a conceit that needs addressing. It showed in her spar with me, in her sudden decisions to singularly attack the biggest and scariest threat that faced them, in the way she was comfortably allowing herself to pigeonhole into being a bulky melee berserker. None of these things on their own were wrong, per se… but they were bad signs, signs that I needed to ensure that she shake off the idea that she can handle everything now…

I crest the summit.

“‘The purpose of today’s training is to defeat yesterday’s understanding’.” She begins, reciting the answer I’d hoped I would wake to hear.

Before me, a tall and strong girl, wrapped in steel, leather, and furs that belied all the prodigious protection a well-developed Parma could provide. She’s not facing me, though, but I can read her tone well enough. She’s never this quiet on her own. Never solemn. She’s already put the pieces together. She rubs a gauntleted hand upon the oblong structure of stone before her, and I watch its edges sharpen.

The winds had really given this cenotaph a beating over the years.

“Musashi, right? My brother was a fan.”

It hasn't looked so polished in a long time. There’s a lump in my throat I’m forced to swallow, as my student now turns to face me. Her eyes are a little baggy, and I suspect she powered right through to dawn, but the eyes themselves betray far less fatigue. Instead, they search me. The answer’s as far from her mind as it is mine.

“Kazebayashi-sensei… the names on here,” she begins, glancing back for a moment before pinning me anew.

Iseult Brighton.

Asahisa Rindou.

Siduri Fakhreddini.

Ophelia Monte-Blanc, whose gaze was a warm meadow. You remind me so much of her sometimes.

“They’re your old team.”

It isn’t a question.

“They were, yes.”

And mine’s far from an answer. It’s painful to look upon these names, even now. Looking at what time and wind, which I should have so much governance over, have worn them to. The engraved letters are slowly, carefully, being carved anew with her Elementum. The detail is exacting.

I shift my gaze to her, and speak. I have to know how we got here.

“I never told you this was up here. The past three never knew of it.”

“Hm?” she blinks, glancing back to the stone to check her work. “You kind of did with the last exercise, if I’ll be honest. Forcing me to get down to that detail, and read the small carvings… yeah, it did open my mind’s eye. I felt these up here, too. When I’d put the quote together, it felt natural… Like you were leading me here.”

…Maybe I was. Maybe I was leading me.

“Well,” I breathe. “Here you’ve been led. What do you make of it?”

“It’s a memorial.” her answer is blunt as her arms fold, satisfied with her restoration. A small smile graces her face. Wistful. It mirrors mine as the memories flood back to me. “I don’t want to pry into what happened, but I know you were looking this way when you told me to make sure my girls come back alive.”

You have to come back alive, too. If you get yourself somewhere where you can’t… You might pull more people in than you thought.”



A silence passes between us. In the distant eddies of the atmosphere, I hear rotaries spinning, as her ride home to Palmyra makes its approach. Neither of us move for a while.

She’s shrewder than she lets on. Watching her face, I can tell those emerald eyes see straight through me. How annoying.

“That’s the lesson you wanted me to learn, before it was too late.”

“Well,” I begin, turning out to pick out the glint of the chopper from the pale morning blue. “I do also have a job to do as your ‘Proctor from Hell’. Everything else still counts.”

“What a dumb name.” Selma breathes with unexpected frustration, folding her arms. “Seriously.”

I raise a brow. Wasn’t this the girl who had just been telling me she was “about to rip her god damned hair out” yesterday?

“A proctor from Hell wouldn’t take me into her home and feed me. Wouldn’t care so much whether or not I got something right. Wouldn’t give me so many chances to get through getting things wrong.”

“Maybe I enjoy tormenting you?” I offer.

“Maybe. But that’s fine. I have four brothers and three sisters. I’m used to a little torment,”

When she turns, it’s towards the cenotaph again. She isn’t admiring her work… I see the names on her tongue, in an unspoken recital.

“And you put me through it for their sake. So that I don’t end up on one of these… or end up carving one.”

She turns to seek the chopper, same as me. The solemnity still gives her face serious lines…

“Compared to that, the rest of it’s a breeze.”

But a smile worms its way from beneath.

Maybe they saw in her what I needed to see, when that rock fell.

“So thank you, Ma’am. For bringing me back to earth.”

It’s my turn to smirk, now.

“If you want to thank me, let me see Kheper soar, little sapling. Avoid my mistakes. Pass my heights. And remember, I am—”

Always watching.” she finishes.

Mirth rolls down the mountainside, out on the winds. The hovercraft's drawing close now, kicking up powder at the LZ. She should get going— I've done all I ever could. The rest will be her.

“I expect big things.”
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