The last set of stairs led Jason into a hallway that looped around in a ring, a huge circuit he estimated to be almost as wide as the full tower. The outer wall of the hallway was the familiar stone, while the inner wall was solid glass; a single, curved pane that looped in a giant circle. Through the glass was a library, softly lit by magical chandeliers, hanging from the ceiling. The circular space was haphazard in design, with shelves set out at strange, seemingly random angles instead of in neat rows.
Walking along the hall, Jason encountered other stairwells, much like the one he had entered through. He soon found other adventurers that had used them. His first encounter was one of the foreign adventurers he didn’t know. They shared a wary nod of greeting and kept moving around the loop together. More people joined them, including, Humphrey, Beth, Valdis and Valdis’ team member, Sigrid.
“Were you all told to execute a whole group of people?” Humphrey asked.
“Yeah,” Jason said. “I thought I was done when I refused, but here we are.”
“Same,” Valdis said. “I choose who I kill and why. I’m not some blind executioner.”
“I killed them all,” one of the other adventurers said, his face harrowed. “It was awful, but I’ll do whatever it takes. We aren’t all princes and outworlders. Some of us have to fight up from nothing, even if it means soiling our hands to do it.”
Jason frowned but said nothing. While he had his own struggles, there was no question that many good things had been handed to him.
There were nineteen adventurers gathered together before Shade finally appeared.
“Adventurers,” Shade said. “You have all passed the trials and proven worthy of the Order’s legacy. Please step through the glass.”
They reached out to touch the glass wall. Many had done so previously, finding it hard and warm to the touch. Now it was thick, like molasses, yet permeable, their hands passing right through. They all stepped forward, moving into the library.
They group followed Shade through the oddly-placed shelves to the middle of the library, where shelves gave way to tables. There were books stacked on them, collected into a series of neat, identical piles. What drew their attention, through, was the circular dais at the very centre. Resting upon it was a heavy metal rack containing a single object: a large scythe, stylised well outside of practicality as weapon or tool. The blade was made from silver and the shaft from gold, inlaid with obsidian polished to a gem-like finish.
Shade reached out to touch one of the book piles.
“Each of these collections contains the collected teachings of the Order of the Reaper,” Shade said. “How to move in silence, to walk unseen. How to pass through locked doors and trapped rooms unimpeded. How to kill. These are no ordinary books. For each volume there are two copies. One is a skill book, the other, a written guide. The guides, however, are more than simply words on a page.”
Shade picked up a book, holding it up to show a blue gem set into the cover. He touched the gem and an ephemeral image of a man appeared.
“This is the first volume of the Way of the Reaper,” the image said. “It details the first form of our order’s complete martial technique. Turn to any page and I will instruct you.”
Shade returned the book to the pile and the image disappeared.
“Each of you have proven yourselves to embody the virtues the Order once held,” Shade said. “Though the Order may be gone, its legacy can be secure through bestowing its knowledge to those who exemplify its ideals.”
One of the shadow gates rose up from the floor.
“Please,” Shade said. “Each of you may take a collection and go. The trials are complete.”
“Hold on,” one of the adventurers called out. “What about the scythe?”
“What about it?” Shade asked.
“Who gets it?”
“No one,” Shade said. “It remains here.”
“We were told that whoever passed the trials would get the scythe,” Valdis said.
“I am responsible for enacting the trials in the ways with which I have been charged,” Shade said. “I am not responsible for what you have been told by anyone else.”
“Well, I’m going to take it anyway,” another adventurer said. “Call it a memento.”
She moved forward to take the scythe, but the moment she moved over the dais, she dropped like a sack of meat, moving no further.
“The scythe is an object of death,” Shade said. “To go near it is to die.”
“So you’re saying we need to carry it out on a long stick,” Jason said.
“You are certainly welcome to try,” Shade invited.
Rather than pick up the books as directed, the adventurers formed clusters, immediately entering into a discussion about the scythe.
“There has to be a way to take it.”
“Maybe there’s a hidden, extra trial.”
“Obviously, but what would it be?”
“Maybe figuring out how to take the scythe is the trial.”
Jason, Humphrey, Valdis and Sigrid formed their own group.
“What do we think?” Valdis asked.
“I’m taking the books and leaving,” Jason said.
“You don’t want the cloud palace?” Valdis asked.
“I want the cloud palace,” Jason said. “What I don’t want is that scythe.”
Humphrey narrowed his eyes at Jason.
“You’ve figured it out.”
“Nope,” Jason denied. “I just think that what comes with getting that scythe is trouble best avoided.”
“Really?” Valdis asked. “You’ve come this far and you want to give up?”
“Yes,” Jason said. “I’m going to take the loot and go.”
“You don’t strike me as the giving-up kind,” Valdis said.
“Watch me,” Jason said. “I’m giving up on the scythe and I advise you all to do the same.”
Jason took one of the stacks of books, placed it in his inventory and walked through the obsidian portal. This drew attention as he was the first to do so, but no one moved to stop him. One less person meant less competition for the scythe.
Jason emerged from the portal in another circular chamber he estimated to be the exact size of the library. This room was empty, however, aside from the dais in the middle. ON it was an exact replica of the scythe he had already seen. The only light was right above the scythe, a plain, magical lamp that illuminated the weapon but left the rest of the room steeped in shadow. Shade appeared next to Jason, who spotted him through the perception power that allowed him to see through darkness.
“I thought that portal was meant to take me out of here,” Jason said.
“Your time here is not done,” Shade said.
“You said we were done.”
“The final trial tests the virtue of insight,” Shade said. “The ability see beyond appearances to grapple with the truth.”
“I truly want to get out of here, if that helps.”
Quest: [The Hidden Trial]
The invigilator of the trials has realised the revelation you’ve had about the true purpose of the trials.
Objective: Reveal the true purpose of the trials and claim the scythe.Reward: ???.
“Decline,” Jason said to the screen. “Decline, decline, decline.”
This quest cannot be declined.
“Oh, sod off.”
“You have had insights about this place,” Shade said. “You tried to warn your friends away.”
“Just general suspicions,” Jason said.
“Tell me what you have realised..”
“I realise how much I want to leave,” Jason said, his hand snaking into his clothes and around the escape medallion dangling from his neck on a cord. He pressed his aura into it and it dissolved into nothing.
You have used [Medallion of Escape].Trial invigilator [Shade] has revoked your escape privileges.[Medallion of Escape] does not take effect.
“Oh, that’s just not fair.”
“I will hear what you have to say before you leave this place.”
“Let me out of here,” Jason said. “Hear that.”
“You have seen the truth, Jason Asano. Speak it, or you will not be released from this place.”
“How is that fair?”
“If someone promised you fairness, Jason Asano, they lied.”
Jason groaned.
“Do you have some kind of mind reading powers?” he asked.
“I have merely been watching you closely, along with all the others. You have had a revelation to which you refuse to give voice.”
“And if I promise to keep not giving voice to it, can I go?”
“Say it.”
“I don’t want to say it. I don’t want the ramifications. You could kill me for it. I’d kill me for it. Killing me would be the smart move.”
“You have greater value than as a corpse.”
“I’m not looking for new employment.”
Before Shade could answer, Humphrey appeared through the archway.
“I thought this was meant to take us out,” Humphrey said.
Jason groaned again.
“You figured it out?” Jason asked him.
“Figured what out?” Humphrey asked. “I was just taking your advice and getting out.”
Jason looked at Shade. “So, everyone comes through here?”
“No,” Shade said. I decided that you needed further motivation. Now your friend is trapped here with you, for as long as you refuse to talk.”
“That just implicates him,” Jason complained.
“Then I suggest you speak up before I bring more of your friends to this place,” Shade said.
“Jason, what’s going on?” Humphrey asked.
Jason sighed.
“It’s about what this place is for,” Jason said. “Its true purpose.”
“What do you mean?”
“Think about what it took to get here,” Jason said. “Emir is an expert at finding things and even he took the better part of two years, a huge staff and a slew of hired adventurers to find this place and everything he needed to open it up. He’s a gold-ranker with exactly the right skill set and resources to get the job done and it still took more time and money than we’ve seen since becoming adventurers.”
“So?” Humphrey asked.
“So, after all that, the only people who can get in here are iron-rankers. But the grand prize, the scythe, is useless to an iron-ranker aside from what they can trade it for.”
“What are you getting at?”
“The purpose of these trials isn’t to bestow some legacy of a long-dead organisation of murderers. Think about it. Centuries of stories; legends of an ancient order of assassins and the grand treasure they left behind. Clues hidden around the world, finally pieced together at great time and cost. Why? To give some iron-ranker a pile of books and maybe an overwrought harvesting tool?”
“Then what are the trials for?”
“They’re here to create the legend,” Jason said. “If you’re telling stories about an ancient order of assassins that got wiped out, you know what you aren’t doing?”
“What?”
“Asking whether they got wiped out at all. I’m willing to bet that most of the story holds up. A coalition of churches coming together to hunt them down and root them out. But these were the world’s greatest assassins. You really think that none of them got away? Of course they did. Some of them, at least. Then they created these trials, hid away the keys to open them and started dropping rumours and stories. Just enough to linger through the centuries.”
“You think the Order of the Reaper still exists?”
“I do,” Jason said. “I’m willing to bet they operate very differently, now. Smaller numbers, different methods. My guess is that their first tenet now is secrecy.”
“This why you didn’t want us to go for the scythe,” Humphrey said. “You didn’t want us getting caught up with the Order.”
“Exactly.”
“Are they going to kill us?”
“Probably,” Jason said. “I would.”
“Then why have the hidden trial at all?”
“To catch anyone who figures it out,” Jason said. “If people leave with a pile of ancient knowledge from an order of assassins long gone, then the legend of their demise carries on. If someone figures it out, though, they want to deal with those people. Only letting in iron-rankers keeps out anyone who can really investigate this place. The scythe is bait, so some high-ranker would eventually go to the effort of getting some iron-rankers inside. The ones quick enough to figure it out they can take aside and deal with.”
Objective complete: Reveal the true purpose of the trials 1/1.
Jason sighed.
“Sorry, Humphrey,” he said. “They brought you in because I refused to admit that I twigged to what was happening.”
“It was rather obvious that you’d realised something,” Humphrey said.
“Very good, Jason Asano,” Shade said.
“Is this the part where you kill us?”
“That would be a waste,” Shade said. “As you said, the Order operates very differently, now. It does not maintain a roster of assassins at all. Rather, we make connections. Quiet allies. A job worth doing is worth doing well, therefore to do a job well you must find someone who thinks it’s worth doing. That is what we do; find jobs that require doing and match them to the person who thinks doing them is worthwhile.”
“So, you’re talking about a volunteer network,” Jason said.
“Something like that,” Shade said. “The fall of the original Order of the Reaper was not unwarranted. The founding purpose of the Order was to do what was necessary. Over time, it became more controlling, seeking to rule from the shadows, rather than serve. The new structure was designed to place the power to act in the hands of others. To let their judgement and conscience be the guide.”
“That’s what the tests are for,” Jason said. “To find people with the principles you want in an agent.”
“Yes.”
“What if we say no?” Jason asked. “What if we don’t want to be part of your order?”
“It is not my order,” Shade said. “I am merely an administrator for this trial. There are other such tests, looking for people and taking many forms. Once this one is done, my obligations to the Order are done. As for you, you are not being invited to the Order. All that is being asked of you is that you be open to it, should the Order find a task to which you are suited.”
“Sounds reasonable,” Jason said. “Like standing at the top of a slippery slope. It’s fine, because you’re at the top. What about the other people in the trial? You’ll use them too, right?”
“If the right circumstance and person come together, then we will use anyone.”
“How does that work? A person just happens across a situation where their natural inclination will be to intervene?”
“Just so.”
“And what makes you think Humphrey and I won’t talk?”
“Your reluctance to speak even to me demonstrates that you have the wisdom to understand the repercussions of doing so. As for Humphrey Geller, he never learned about it in the first place.”
Humphrey disappeared into thin air and Jason snorted a laugh.
“That’s the duplicating magic you used for the old resolve test, right?”
“It is,” Shade said.
“So now I just go?”
“You should take the scythe with you, first.”
“Wait, I can really take the scythe?”
“Yes.”
“I didn’t think you’d let me take it. Actually, that makes sense. It really rams home the idea that the Order is dead and gone. Otherwise, why would they leave the very symbol of their order to languish in some diamond-rankers collection like any old trinket.”
“Indeed.”
“What about the whole object of death thing?”
“That only applies to the replica in the room below.”
“What do I tell people about how I got the scythe?”
“Use your ingenuity.”
“That’s helpful.”
“If you cannot figure that much out, then you wouldn’t be much use to the Order.”
“I don’t much want to be.”
He wandered over to the scythe, slowing down as he approached.
“You’re sure there’s no instant death field?”
“Yes.”
“How do I know you’re not lying?”
“You don’t.”
“That’s terrific.”
“You may leave without it, if you like.”
“Just because I take this, it doesn’t mean I’m willing to be your assassin.”
“I think you’ll find that if ever the Order does contact you, Jason Asano, the circumstances will be more complicated and nuanced than a simple assassination.”
“Just Jason, is fine.”
“I would prefer to refer to you as Mr Asano.”
“Whatever rows your boat, cobber.”
With a steeling breath, Jason moved up to the scythe and grabbed it.
Item: [Scythe of the Reaper] (diamond rank, legendary)
??? (tool, scythe).
Effect: ???Effect: ???Effect: ???Effect: ???Effect: ???
The scythe wouldn’t budge from its rack.
“Why is it stuck?” Jason asked. “I thought you said I could take it.”
“It is not affixed in place,” Shade said. “You simply lack the strength to shift its weight.”
“Huh.”
After a series of attempts that failed to so much as shift the scythe on its rack, Jason came up with something new. Standing right up to the scythe, he opened his inventory window on the other side. Then, with one hand on the scythe, he stepped back, the window following. When it touched the scythe, the weapon vanished, appearing in his inventory as an icon. Jason looked at it with satisfaction.
“Nice.”
Quest: [The Hidden Trial]
Objective complete: Claim the scythe 1/1. Quest complete.100 [Iron Spirit Coins] have been added to your inventory.[Reaper Token] has been added to your inventory.
“Okay,” Jason said wearily. “I am really ready to get out of here.”
He headed back in the direction of the archway he had come in through. He was about to step in when someone stepped out. It was Sigrid, Valdis team member.
“What are you doing here?” Jason asked, stepping back to give her space.
“I’m not sure,” Sigrid said, looking around. “Where is here?”
“She figured it out,” Shade said.
“I realised that the reason you wanted out was to avoid the attention of the Order of the Reaper that still existed.”
“Well, congratulations,” Jason said. “Shade can explain everything; I’m out. I took the scythe by the way, so you’ll have to ask Shade if he has a spare.”
“A spare?”
“Shade,” Jason said, pointing at the archway. “Does this thing actually go where I want, this time?”
“It does.”
“Great,” Jason said, patting Sigrid on the shoulder. “I’ll see you on the other side.”