Chapter Ninety
Teemo goes and gets Staiven so he and Queen can talk some shop. Ill leave them to it, too. Queen knows what she should and shouldnt relay, as does Teemo. Shes tried to talk some with me about alchemy, but its a bit outside my wheelhouse. I understand the concepts of mixing things, and most of the technical terms, but Im a mechanical engineer, not a chemical.
It kinda makes me understand how Teemos been getting better at just relaying information without having to understand it. I guess thisll be good practice for him, as well as good PR with Staiven. Im pretty sure most magical stuff around here is either from me or him, and I prefer my competition to be friendly than anything else.
Speaking of friendly competition, the Trio have been coming back to tackle the hard gauntlet, and theyve been behaving themselves. They do a few encounters on the way, but they dont go trying to start crap with my scions or my Residents.
Theyve been making quick progress through the gauntlet, too. Theyd be going a lot faster if there wasnt an actual line to try it. From the chatter, a few of the more distant guilds want to be the first to finish it, but the local guild isnt going to let them have it without a fight.
With the Trio having joined the local guild, they have quite the advantage, seeing as they managed to work through it to escape me. Ive been sure to mix things up some, though, so they dont have a free ride. My favorite reaction from them had to have been when they saw someone doing the salmon ladder properly the first time, instead of their little tower maneuver.
Ive also added an element of time management in the final section, too. Even with me being easily able to change the specific answers, people were just endlessly theorycrafting what the solution could be. So now they get washed out after a couple minutes, though it resets with each section of the puzzle they manage.
Ive also been wanting to talk with the halfling and see if she knows anything about scythemaws. From Leos opinion, she doesnt seem the most one with natures balance and harmony of druids, but shes still a druid of some flavor. Maybe shes an expert in scythemaws and we dont know because we havent asked?
I mean, I doubt it, but its possible.
Queen
Oh, the Emperor should try to keep this one. She can feel a thirst for knowledge from this one, and not like Honeys thirst. The bee scion treats information like honey: something to be stored and appreciated for its own sake. She understands its sweetness, but doesnt feel the need to partake, to apply it.
But to ants, like Queen? Sweetness is to be gathered and used, shared with the colony and utilized. Sweetness that sits there is just going to make a mess. Of course, honey doesnt go bad, but the ant scion still likes her metaphor.
And this Staiven may look like the ratkin the Emperor uplifted, but he is an ant at heart. He hungers for knowledge, and is willing to share his own to get it. It also doesnt hurt that he recognizes her talent.
Staiven sighs at that, but nods as he produces a knife to start chopping the ingredients for easier grinding. I was afraid itd be something like that. I tried every method I could to get them to recombine after separating the sample I got the last time I was here, but nothing worked.
Queen perks up at that, so Teemo questions. Really? Is that a known thing?
The alchemist nods as he sets aside a small portion of the chopped ingredients, and motions for Queen to do her thing. She sees no harm in it, so sends her ants to process the go juice in the old way.
My old mentor used to say that, way back in antiquity, it was thought alchemy could only be performed in dungeons. The unique mana flows in them can influence the process in unknown ways. But as the ancients worked and experimented, they eventually started to figure out how to produce various things even outside dungeons, he says as he works, his hands deftly grinding the herbs into a fine paste.
The first true alchemist was said to have gained a unique affinity with his class, or so the legends say. Personally, I think he was the first to gain the meta affinity that most crafting classes get. Whatever the truth, he was supposed to be able to make anything a dungeon could.
Nowadays, though, alchemists make all sorts of things that dungeons dont. Maybe the processes are too complex for them? Who knows. But look, he says, as he shows the results of his work.
The texture is perfect, the mix fully homogeneous, and yet it just looks like an unpalatable tea. He motions at Queens work, where she already has a few shining droplets of the go juice.
Theres still something about dungeon alchemy that we just dont know. I can tell Ive done it just as she has, if only on a larger scale, and yet something eludes me, he laments, though not too deeply. Queen very much likes this Staven and his ant heart. Setbacks happen, but can be overcome.
Teemo gives her an odd look at her request, but still relays it. She wants you to put the mortar down so she can try something.
Of course, Staiven replies, and sets it next to her busy ants. Quickly, she has them swarm the contents, specifically using her alchemical storage ants for it. This sort of thing is their job, after all. Her pleased scent returns as the mixture is quickly finished in her ants, and they start adding it to her sample in the little dish she was working in.
Staiven chuckles at what hes seeing. See? Something about dungeon alchemy is different. Or maybe I didnt use enough ant spit in mine.
Teemo laughs at that, and Queen cant help but enjoy the joke. She does think he has a point, though. Not about the ant spit, but about the scale. She knows it takes mana to infuse the ingredients, but she and Staiven are working on a different scale at the conceptual level. If watching the zombie scion gain affinities has taught her anything, its that the conceptual level is vital when it comes to magic of any kind.