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By the time someone cracked a joke about Silver Gate's silver gate for the third time, Otis had to consciously restrain himself from shooting them. If there was one thing he hated more than losing, if there was one thing he hated more than the unknown, it was repetition. Especially vocalized repetition for the purpose of some immature sense of humor. But, alas, murder was not a solution while within polite society, doubly so when going through customs. Outside of a host of electronics and the terabyte-sized USB he used to keep all his personal research notes though, the Strigidae had nothing to bring with him back home. This was neither a triumphant return nor a family occasion, after all. This was still him coming back 'home' solely for business.

And in this case, what he was here was for materials. Earth, as scientifically advanced as it was, had materials that were generally much less varied in arcane purpose than Arcanis, and while Otis could make do with bullets, the battle in Kyoto reminded him that he needed more than just bullets. He needed more guns. More options. More power. An answer to harnessing the power of the bell that jingled in the patterned pouch that hung from his hips.

Of course, being an Arcanis native, most of what Mayble said fell on deaf ears and Otis spent the entire speech staring a hole into her mouth, waiting for it to finally close for good. The instant she concluded, he strode off, bold and cold as always. He had spent six years of his life in Arcture, studying first to catch up to others his age, then studying to surpass them in knowledge scientific and domestic. He knew these streets like the stitching of his pockets, and he had no need for weapons or armor either. Ignoring the customs officer who looked absolutely flabbergasted why someone would turn down what was essentially free money, the Strigidae stepped out into the daylight, into the fresh air, of the world that was his home.

He allowed himself one second to get the sentiment out of his system, before making a beeline towards the Adventurer's Guild, through the grand doors, to the line up, and finally, for the guild receptionist.

The clack of his badge against polished wood sounded clearly over the hubbub of conversation.

"Otis Tan Arillo, of Clan Strigidae." Clear words, tinged with youthful audacity. "I'm here to hunt."
I’ll keep you in mind for the future, Kumbaris.


“A belief reinforced by your advisor’s interest in them,” Isidore responded lightly.

The work itself was certainly interesting though. He knew nothing about the value of fabrics himself, only that the more people paid for, the less they got out with each incremental increase in price. To have such creatures though, and not make any progress towards raising them like farm animals…either the techniques of the Urutha were lacking, or it was simply culture that caused them to harvest from the wild what could be raised in their own homes. As he contemplated this commission, Isidore pressed his thumb against his chin, dark eyes gazing upon the length of silk that was placed before him yet focused on the troubles of the work ahead. If Naraheim had been a slums or something, that would be his home ground, but dark ruins inhabited by demons and monstrosities? For work that required the touch of an outsider, rather than any elite already in Vasserasa’s employ? It demanded caution, and that did not even include the limited amount of time he had to pursue such tasks.

Three days. Complete the investigation or solve the problem in three days, so she had something tangible to announce at the ball. Three days, compressing the amount of time he already had into something much tighter, much more consuming. It truly was curious, how much faster this world moved. It was something that the Storyteller prepared him for, giving him the physical ability to bear such a world.

“I am a stranger to these lands,” Isidore spoke, removing his hand from his chin and settling it upon the pommel of his sword instead. “As such, I have requirements.” His finger began to tap against the steel. “100 silver coins, to be paid immediately. Access to all information regarding Naraheim, demons, and silk-weavers. And a time piece, to keep on schedule.” With that same crisp, controlled audacity, he took the piece of paper and slipped it into the folds of his clothing, before examining the ring slowly, bringing it up to eye-level.

Framed by the contours of the ring, Vasserasa looked at once massive and minuscule.

“If this is agreeable, your problem will be solved.”

And if it wasn’t?

Well, Isidore never had any real intention of refusing. This would be a good test, after all. A true test of his capabilities in this new world.


@mantou@BrokenPromise@OwO@FamishedPants

Klava vaulted over the spinning cart with the eloquence of a parkour artist, both legs swinging up in the air as one hand planted upon the top of the cart. In that instant of contact, an arcane sigil engraved itself upon the rolling object, before it continued its path, crossing through a burning hallway and crashed to a stop beside the broken window that had been her entrance and exit mere moments ago. A way out, if need be. But even in flames, even in fog, she had her eyes on the prize. Moya-no-Yume scraped against the ground before swinging upwards, its lethal trajectory blocked by gunsteel. With the invocation of Balewulf, burning coal filled the air, its caster audacious regardless of circumstances.

“I’m not a bear,” Klava replied, her dried lips cracking as she broke into a ferocious smile. “I’m the fucking storm.”

And just as quickly as she said it, a wave of embarrassment rushed upwards, coloring her cheeks more brightly than the hot coals ever could. Thankfully, Sofron didn’t respond to that and opted to go for a shoulder slam instead. To create distance, no doubt. A blow to stall for time as his magic ate her away. Thank god for Apollo then; Klava could go all-out without worry about having to get out afterwards. Dropping her own center of gravity down, Klava slammed her massive heels into the shin of the tackling Esper while bumping hips with him as well, using the curve of her own body to flip Sofron over herself and slam him back-first into the ground.

An improvised shoulder throw.

And with him on the ground, his face pinned down by her knee, Klava didn’t even need to see to know where the rest of his body was. Both hands on her dagger, she drove the blade down, in hopes of piercing his right lung and granting him both a mortal wound as well as a chance to save himself via de-transformation.

It was still uncertain, after all, whether or not Sofron was just a freelancer hired by the gang or a tried and tested member of the Cobra Gang. But if he was the former? Well, what comes around goes around. And old folks ought to die in a bed surrounded by loved ones, or at least in a place with a better view than fucking Pax Septimus Precinct Seven.

“Palm trees aren’t cedars.” was Otis’s own response to Safia’s words. As she prepared herself and put forth warnings that the Strigidae would take as things he’d definitely have to test, the amber-eyed adolescent worked to prepare his own tools. Through experimentations in isolation with the Scan spell, he had more or less managed a method of detecting whether an object was truly ‘divine’ or not, a wonderful feature that came with having access to an artifact that constantly radiated weak amounts of divine power. So, with a healthy but restrained amount of anticipation, Otis sat back, prepared his systems, and allowed Safia to demonstrate the summoning of an angel.



A few minutes later, and with just the smallest hint of disappointment, Otis sighed.

“That’s not divine. That’s just elemental.”
Table of Contents
Chapter 1: Lessons
Chapter 2: Advancement
Chapter 3: Trial
It was a blur. Had it really only been two days, when you’ve lived through six? Whether out of desperation to make up for lost time or out of a desire to remain social and keep up with one’s friends, you continued to dive into the fantastic world of Cacophony Concord, breathing in air purer than any that you could breathe outside, experiencing wonders natural and magical, which regardless of repetition, never truly lost their charms. Goldspun Fields and the deadly critters lurking between golden longgrass. Pearl Bloom River and the amphibious creatures at once comical and lethal. Thunderstruck Grove and the shadows that lurked at the edge of your sanity. And Nyu-Taro, the untamed city-state, from which all corners of Horogi interacted without threat of violence, from which all corners of the world first arrived to properly immigrate into the nation of perpetual war. In your dreams, it haunted you, brilliant ideals of a paradise craft of code, outshining the grim humdrum of reality, of political divides and mounting tensions, of acid rain and desertification.

Of course, even the worse news was never about your own cities, your own homes. It was radio static, compared to immediate concerns. Stocks traded in consideration to the calculated whims of the free market. Musings of marriage murmured between dates and kisses. Late night conversations across all castes of the social hierarchy. Brotherly rivalry, reignited through video chat and parental comparisons. Impatient seconds, crawling away as the timer continued to tick. Moments of levity found, even in the maelstrom of academics and filial obligation. Between the necessities of physical existence and the flashes of fantastic living, a life beyond both still peeked in occasionally for you, reminding you of the small joys that persisted still.

But war, war was on the horizon. Chances for glory, for promotion, for recognition, for loot, for blood. It was a war that could shape the entire political landscape of Horogi. It was a war that could engrave your name upon the history books of a world separate from your own. It was the impetus of change, and undoubtedly the termination of many lives. It was something that you absolutely could not miss.

So you plug in once more, feeling technology seep into your brain, dragging your senses away.

And you fall.

Search for it, starve for it, thirst for it, struggle for it, and seize it.

That which you desire most.

𝔸

𝔸

𝕋

𝔽𝔸𝕃𝕃𝕊
𝕋ℍ𝔼 𝕎𝕆ℝ𝕃𝔻
𝕋ℍ𝔼 𝔹𝔼𝕃𝕃 𝕊𝔼𝕃𝔼ℂ𝕋𝕊
𝕋ℍ𝔼 ℂ𝕆𝔾𝕊 𝕊ℙ𝕀ℕ
𝕋ℍ𝔼 𝕊ℂ𝔸𝕃𝔼𝕊 𝕊ℍ𝕀𝔽𝕋
𝕋ℍ𝔼 ℙ𝔼ℕ𝔻𝕌𝕃𝕌𝕄𝕊 𝕊𝕎𝕀ℕ𝔾



《𝔻𝔼𝕊𝕋ℝ𝕌ℂ𝕋𝔼𝔻 𝕎𝕆ℝ𝕃𝔻 𝕄𝔸ℕ𝕀𝔽𝔼𝕊𝕋𝔼𝔻》
《𝔻𝔼𝕊𝕋ℝ𝕌ℂ𝕋𝔼𝔻 𝕎𝕆ℝ𝕃𝔻 𝕊𝕋𝔸𝔹𝕀𝕃𝕀ℤ𝔼𝔻》

𝕡ℝ𝕆𝕍𝔼 𝕪𝕆𝕌ℝ 𝕝𝕆𝕍𝔼 𝕚𝕊 𝕥ℝ𝕌𝔼



War!

Between the Mora-Sho clan, scions to the greatest disaster that befell Horogi, and the Tato-Ie clan, perpetually in the shadow of the titan they split themselves off from! The Ryoku-Jo and Sa-Li, both opportunists, shadowed the outskirts of this conflict, none but the clan heads truly certain of whether they would act. And the Gakui-Re, a people without nations, an army without borders, wildcards that could drastically shift the tides of any battle they involved themselves in. It had been a long time since any of the clans had last pronounced their desire for wealth and land, and now, within the city-state of Nyu-Taro, on the morning of the war’s start, the city was in a fever pitch. Foreign mercenaries from lands as far away as Deneb and Erid strode boldly, lead by leaders both callous and charismatic. Merchants, overstocked with wartime necessities of food and potions, peddled them at prices that announced discounts…from overpriced values. And despite the bloody business of war, there was a festive atmosphere as well, exceeding even that of the conclusion of the continent-wide tournament just nine days ago. Death, violent death, was simply a fact of life for the Riens of Horogi, and Nyu-Taro, ever neutral, could watch any of the battles from a safe distance.

And, amongst those milling about the Keystone Plaza, five figures arrived at the preordained time, all greatly changed from a mere six days.

Of prodigious size, such that even his own oversized axe was rendered small, Klein was the first to emerge from his pilgrimage to the mountains. The blood of giants now flowed through his veins, and he towered above many others, a behemoth of physical prowess, experienced both in battle against monsters as well as against other Immortals. After all, though he did not yet commit to joining the Gakui-Re clan, he had certainly worked for them, ambushing merchants, collecting loans, and all the other small-time thug activities expected of someone who couldn’t truly get involved in the greater operations of the bandit clan. They would welcome him with open arms, if he ever asked. But for now, the Mountain Man had no intention on asking, for on his quest to obtaining his desire for a truly unkillable build, Klein had heard about something else. A rare low-rank job that could only be uncovered in the territories, or perhaps history, of the Mora-Sho clan: [Dead Soldier].

Prodigious size alone did not dissuade a sharpened blade though, and in the time he had spent becoming accustomed to possessing only one truly functioning arm, Raime’s blade had not just become sharpened, but had become teethed and possessing a hand cannon. His own studies, more cerebral in nature, granted him a small collection of common and uncommon consumables at his disposal, as well as the ability to make more if he could find the materials for them. Nyu-Taro was still just the ‘tutorial’ area of Horogi though, home to only a small selection of vegetation that a beginner alchemist could transform into higher quality ingredients. If he sought the battlefield though, following in the path of the Tato-Ie army, perhaps there would be more chance for quality ingredients. Much has been said, after all, of the blood lilies that bloomed upon the Plains of Repentance.

Repentance, or any cerebral activity, however, was the furthest thing from Magpie’s mind. Having had the least amount of time to grind for the war, due in part to her heroic sacrifice within the territories of the gyunin, the Brawler-Strongman-Qi Gong had absolutely destroyed her soul trying to depopulating all the farming zones within the nature. Her body count must have numbered in the hundreds now, her fists stained with the viscera of a dozen demons. If Klein was a mountain, immovable and impassable, Magpie was a drill, capable of piercing both the earth and the heavens. She had become strong. And in the clash of armies, she would grow even stronger. The Path of the Macho was never-ending, after all, and her steps matched the tempo of war.

But if war was the end for Magpie, war was a means for Amulak. His continued progression into the realm of the dead had only added a more and more sinister air around the man, face obscured by an impenetrable veil. Even the stone beneath his feet seemed to blacken somewhat with his approaching footsteps as lightless fire flickered within his lantern. A few faces in the crowds of adventurers buzzing about the war even noticed him, waving or shouting a quick greeting. Though his fame was insignificant within solo arena PvP, which was what people were naturally inclined to valuing, Amulak had formed a half-decent reputation for himself in randomized 3v3 PvP matches, slowly becoming accustomed to expecting the unexpected. With thousands of job classes and an infinite amount of permutations available due to Nuclei, equipment, and personal habits, it was impossible to have perfect counters for every scenario, but very possible to train one’s skill to analyze and adapt on the fly, which he had done to great effect. And if he could replicate that same success on the battlefield, if he could play any significant role in driving back the Tato-Ie army…perhaps there was an opportunity for a meteoric rise into the echelons of the Mora-Sho clan.

Politics and clan advancement, of course, was something that Ames simply couldn’t be bothered to really care about. After all, the flame-haired swordsman was not only the proprietor of a travelling inn, but also, as he learned from his more hardcore gamer friends after that fateful night, the person who possessed one of the rarest Nuclei types currently in the game: the Maiden-Hybrid. Between visits to the Shin-Yu Temple (of which Lugh had never returned to since), keeping up the grind with his other regular party members, and exploring both the potential of The Sweet Maid and the potential for in-game fashion, Ames had been keeping busy, and had been keeping busy in such a way that when the time came for the war, he hardly even realized it. After all, it was just an in-game war. It may as well be treated as a scripted event, like any other large-scale MMORPG event that didn’t really alter the world in any way. So, it must be fine too, then, to just have fun.

After all, Cacophony Concord was just a game. An escape from a grayscale reality.

And, as the five of them shared their greetings, they could all hear the rumbling of an engine in the distance, an anachronism within the Eastern Fantasy environment they’ve grown accustomed to.

The roar of the engine, and the arrival of a friend.


But as Safia raised her head once more, eyes no longer shut, what greeted her wasn’t the sunset-bathed room of a secluded section of the library, away from prying eyes and romantically lit by an orange glow. No, as the door closed behind her, she found herself in room sealed by blackout curtains and lit up by a sterile, fluorescent brilliance. Upon every available section of the wall were pieces of printer paper stained almost black by the amount of writing upon them, while upon the central table of the room laid a motley collection of tools both for magical study as well as scientific study. One of the chairs had been repurposed as a makeshift shelf for books to be stacked upon, and if Safia took even a slight glimpse, she’d realize with horror that half of the books were about theology, and the other half was about atheists pissing on theology.

But there was a reason why the fusion of piety and blasphemy only warranted an ‘if’.

For, standing in the center of a magic circle drawn from some dark red substance, was a bell that shone with a light most sanctimonious. And, standing behind, dressed in his usual outfit of homespun attire, Otis stood, long shadows turning his face into that of a menace, a madman.

Safia could not have known, not with her packed daily schedule.

Every day since his return to Silver Gate Academy, Otis had reserved this particular room in the library from morning to dusk, slowing creating his own laboratory for arcane-divine experimentation. And with her own entrance into this room, the Strigidae smiled a smile that did not reach his eyes.

“Good. We are friends. Safia, show me your holy magic. Teach me how to summon one of your angels.”

He was now well past the stage of observation. And if he wanted to move onto experimentation, well…

Otis needed disposable test subjects.


Before any spicy details could be imagined or sputtered out by Nesherit, Augusta swept in, her presence acknowledged with a nod from Isidore. After last night’s discussions, perhaps she had developed her own reservations about having made a deal so quickly with someone of such influence and prestige. Still, he recognized a favour for a favour and acquiesced, taking a bit of the preserved meat from his pack and feeding it to Octavia.

“Good luck,” Isidore intoned, his gaze lingering briefly on her back as she left. After a couple moments, he returned his attention to the Uruthan prince. “Treat her well,” he said, tone just a touch lighter than before. “And if you lie, know that if she believes you, she’s only playing along.” Well, it was also a question of whether or not Augusta would simply make him obsolete as a royal and relocate him to some comfortable, isolated part of the world after the honeymoon was over. The dark-haired youth personally hoped that things didn’t go in that direction, but this engagement really was more business than romance.

Perhaps the Queen knew of Augusta’s eyes and wanted it.

But such thoughts were unnecessary when he had no means to verify it, and as they neared the throne room, Isidore focused his mind upon the presence, his back straightening some more, his gait taking a more orderly, purposeful measure. Mentally, he reviewed the weapons upon his person again, halberd strapped to the side of his back, longsword at his left hip, dagger on his right thigh. His fatigue last night had prevented him from experimenting with the other avenue of magic he wished to pursue, but he still had a new card in his deck to play if things became dangerous.

When Vasserasa spoke of an underground complex though, of demons sealed away, Isidore recalled the demon-flower rotting away in the depths of that prison and suppressed a smile. “I am flattered,” he spoke, leaving more left unsaid. “Has the Urutha’s relationship with the demons changed? Or does this involve the Elder Beast who continues to worm its way through this mountain?”
Peace dude!
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