Chapter 292: Don’t Change Your Body
Tala hunched in on herself beneath the ongoing tirade. Just endure, Tala. It cant last forever.
Master Cazor was long gone.
She wasnt sure how long the stream of words had been going on, but as soon as they had entered Mistress Hollys warehouse, a bit of magic had tickled Alats inscriptions, and Mistress Holly had lost her mind.
Her exclamation of outrage had knocked dust from the ceiling, even as the Inscriptionist stormed towards the reception area.
It was then that Master Cazor had wisely excused himself. Sorry, Mistress Tala. We can reconnect tomorrow or whenever works for you.
Hed closed the door behind himself as he left before Tala could gather a response.
Mistress Holly had stalked out, seized Talas wrist in an oddly powerful grip, and practically dragged her back to her private workroom.
It was at that point that the tirade had begun, Are you incapable of functioning without damaging yourself?
Things had only gone downhill from there.
Mistress Holly was working incredibly hard to counter the flaws in Talas biology, and every new stress, strain, or degradation only made that harder.
Tala gleaned that the severing of iron from her ownership had, indeed, somehow physically harmed her. Though she was unclear on the exact nature of the damage.
Mistress Holly suddenly stopped mid-sentence, jerking Tala back to the present moment. You arent even listening to me, are you. It was not a question. Mistress Tala. I am trying to help you.
Tala forcefully straightened herself. I know, Mistress Holly. I did not intend any harm. I was testing out my new soul-bond in a non-combat setting. There shouldnt have been any chance of damage to me.
The older Mage grimaced. The greatest harm comes when it shouldnt, Mistress. I hope this reinforces that lesson.
What even happened? All that I did was lose a bit of iron.
Iron that was bound to you, just as your body is. The dasgannach has no magical function for losing material as it should be impossible for the thing to do so. It should also never bond, so were in the realm of the impossible. In this case, the impossibility was detrimental to you. The loss sent ripples through all your soul-bonds. Your outfit self-repairs on principle, and your weapon is specifically magicked to distribute and endure magical trauma. There are minor fractures in your Archive link, but I can see that its been upgraded to a magical weight that is incredibly unwise below Refined, but you are an enigma. She gave Tala a stern look. Still, I should have been consulted before that upgrade occurred.
Tala shrunk once again. I apologize; I didnt even consider that.
Mistress Holly waved her off. I assume Mistress Ingrit investigated it on her own; though she should have consulted me. I will have to have words with her. But, in this case, it saved you. The added weight allowed it to weather the trauma, and it is already nearly fully recovered. Your body should be in a similar place with your frankly insane magical density, but you are riddled with flaws. Each of those is a point of weakness, which allow far greater damage under stress and will never properly recover on their own.
Ahh Thats less than ideal.
Indeed. The Inscriptionist rubbed her temples. We need to do something about the dasgannach. Aside from this new problem, the iron suffusing youeven if only in the dimensions of magicwill hamper Refining. As it is already going to be a complicated, delicate process, any additional interference needs to be avoided at all costs.
What do you suggest? I can expel all the iron, and leave it off to the side. So long as it stays within my aura, it shouldnt cause a problem, right?
While that might work, your aura is going to be erratic through the process, and we cannot allow this sort of trauma to occur in the middle of Refining.
So, I need to merge it with another of my soul-bonds before I Refine.
Mistress Holly hesitated. That that is an excellent idea. Her eyes narrowed. How do you know of that? Who suggested it to you?
Tala frowned defensively. No one suggested it. It seemed reasonable, so I asked if it was a possibility. Master Grediv gave me some information, but not too much.
Ahh, that does make sense. He would know, too. She shook her head. But that is neither here, nor there.
What did Master Grediv do?
-Well, based on the context, it sounds like he tried to merge two soul-bound items, and it went badly.-
Yes, I got that much, thank you.
Now, the question would be which you are going to merge it with. I hope you arent considering merging it with your body.
Noooo. Tala held up her hands even as she drew out the word in emphasis. Oh, by the stars no. I cant even fathom what that might do to me. Even during the bonding process, it wanted to cause all sorts of changes to my body that I only avoided because of Master Gredivs assistance. I cant stomach whatever would happen if it fully merged with my physical body.
Good. You do have some wisdom.
Tala snorted. I was thinking of Flow?
Your weapon? Mistress Holly looked up to one side, then she started to cackle. That would be so deliciously ironic but, hmm
Tala felt herself smile. Yeah, I considered it might make Flow into a truly morphic weapon.
I would bet that you will have that option, yes. Though I believe it will be among the lesser options you will have available to you. Dont let your recent experiences taint what you can become. Even if it would be amazing to take what they intended as your death and use it to finally forge you into what they were aiming at. The Inscriptionist shook her head. But you are not an Eskau, not anymore.
Tala grunted. You think there will be better options?
Oh, undoubtedly. She narrowed her eyes. Dont change your body.
I know that, Mistress Holly. Tala paused for a moment before continuing. So, you think thats the right call? Merging it with Flow?
I do. But! Mistress Holly held up one finger. I am not doing this on my own. Give me a day to consult with the others collaborating on this project, and well see what we can come up with. Well arrange for the merging as soon after that as we can.
I can do that.
Her countenance suddenly hardened. I am still cross with you, Mistress, but I understand that you did not do this intentionally.
Tala swallowed, hard. Thank you, Mistress Holly. I will try to be more careful, going forward.
* * *L1tLagoon witnessed the first publication of this chapter on Ñøv€l--B1n.
Tala sat to the side of an incredibly complicated, but vaguely familiar spellform.
The ironclad walls of the Constructionists merging room were becoming more and more comforting. Though, she wasnt sure if that was due to repeated exposure or the iron.
It had been three days since Mistress Holly had confirmed the wisdom behind the plan to merge the dasgannach with Flow.
Theyd consulted experts and gathered the needed pieces to give the greatest chance for success.
Honestly, there wasnt really a chance for failure, but there was a chance for things to go sideways.
If this went well, they would only need to wait for the merging to settle, and they could proceed with her Refinement. That should only take a month on the outside, since the greatest remaining barrier will have been removed.
If it went sideways?
Well, no need to focus on the negative.
-Yes, lets focus on what we can do.-
Mistress Holly wasnt present. Master Queue was facilitating the magics along with another high-level Archon who hid her aura and rank.
She was a specialist in mergings and soul-bonds, and shed been in the city to visit family.
Mistress Holly had found her two days ago and convinced her to delay her departure.
While the womans presence was fortuitous, the worst that would have happened otherwise was a delay of a few more days.
But Tala was distracting herself from the upcoming process.
Mistress Tala?
Tala looked up and smiled at the other woman. Yes, Mistress Aurius?
Its time. We need you to place the two items in the same physical space, alongside the other materials.
Tala nodded, standing and striding to the center of the intricate working.
With measured care, Tala sat Flow, bare-bladed on the floor amidst several minor artifacts, specifically crafted for this process. Then, with her hand on the handle, she took careful breaths and slowly moved all her non-biological iron down her arm and into the dimensions of magic aligned with the weapons physical shape.
Tala could see the weight of the weapon grow with her magesight. More than anything, it looked like an increasing magical reflectiveness to that sight.
It took less than a minute to empty him of power, and in the instant in which he ran dry, a blade tore free of Talas hand, beheading the man cleanly.
What is with this merging and beheadings?
Before Alat could respond, they watched the manifested Tala slam her hand downward, a dark void opening in her palm to swallow the body even as the head hit the ground.
This Tala growled and a chain burst from her leg, lancing through the fallen head before it could roll away, drawing it back to be devoured.
-What the rust?-
At least its arcanes this time?
This Tala clearly held the merged weapon in her own blood, and that had done something to her.
The manifestation expanded, showing that this Tala stood in an arcane city. Flecks of blood were the only evidence there had ever been people in this otherwise abandoned main square.
Its midday. There should be hundreds or thousands of people.
-Maybe they all ran away?-
They saw a rabbit beast-man scramble out of hiding in a dead-end, side alley, trying to bound away while this version of Tala had her back turned.
Her back exploded in blood and chains. The chains wove together, even as they arced through the air, and the manifestation of Tala screamed in pain and anger.
An instant later, the rabbit-man was skewered.
-Alright, Im going to say it. The mergings involving the dasgannach seem way worse than options for any other.-
Youre not wrong.
As this version of her turned towards the central pillar that was filled with founts, hunger evident in her eyes, the watching Tala had had enough.
NO.
* * *
Tala was beginning to despair as option after option showed versions of herself that had been horribly twisted in body, mind, or both. She still held onto hope, however, though it was fading.
After dozens of options, she was beginning to think that she should call on Mistress Aurius.
Finally, she saw it: There were some tendrils of power linking Flow to her flesh, and Tala felt a sinking feeling.
Oh, were idiots.
-The iron in your flesh is still tied to the dasgannach, is that why all these options seem to incorporate your body?-
I would bet so. She really did feel foolish. This was obviously a problem that should have been anticipated. But there was nothing to be done about it, at least not now.
Or is there?
Tala gathered her will and pushed it out upon the still forming merging.
Leave my body be. She felt the tremors through the magic as her will manifested and pressed down on her two soul-bonds.
If this doesnt work, Ill call upon Mistress Aurius for aid.
* * *
The latest manifestation formed, and Tala felt a renewed blossoming of hesitant optimism.
There didnt seem to be anything changed within the version of her in this manifestation, at least not physically.
She saw iron moving through the dimensions of magic between her and Flow, though the metal was clearly more tied to Flow than her body, now.
She could move the iron around her body even before this, so that wasnt a change as she saw it.
Tala watched this version of herself cut through arcanous beasts, and it took only a short time to notice the first difference beyond the obvious.
The liquid that came out with each cut was clear, obviously blood that had been stripped of iron.
She was able to see some beasts cut but not instantly killed; so, the magics didnt utterly strip them of iron.
Even so, those that survived seemed much more affected than they should have been.
So, its able to strip it out a little ways into their bodies?
-It seems so. The act of cutting with Flow seems to grant some limited ownership around the wound, at least for the short time of the passing.-
Flow usually cauterized the wounds it created, and that did still seem to be happening, but the added ripping free of iron seemed to cause the wounds to seep.
It seemed that the iron didnt have to pass out of the body painlessly.
Thats grisly.
-Would you rather strike them down and leave no evidence or damage?-
No violent death is always ugly. If I could kill that cleanly, I dont think I could keep viewing death as I do, as a necessary evil.
Tala was drawn back towards the vision as this manifestation of her did something new.
Iron passed harmlessly through her flesh, forming a layer on her skin as a massive creature that Tala didnt recognize slammed its claws down on her upper arm.
The claws stopped as surely as they would have on Flow.
Tala felt herself mentally focus. The bits of lethargy that going through so many options had brought on were banished entirely.
Early after discovering aspect mirroring, Tala had tried to mirror Flows resilience to magical attacks onto her own body.
That had not ended well.
It seemed that the iron now functioned as an extension of Flow for this purpose.
If it worked as it seemed, she should finally be all but immune to purely physical attacks, at least those around her power level.
The iron also added to her own aura in forbidding direct magical action upon her.
She still had no real defense against indirect magical attacks, but this should help with that as well.
And I can take some ideas from the other visions.
Finally, the last portion of this option was displayed for her to observe.
For no reason that Tala could discern, this version of her created a ball of iron, and rolled it out of her own aura.
Tala held her breath, but while this version of her grimaced slightly, that was all the emotion she displayed.
On the other hand, Flow almost seemed to ring like a bell, and as the last vestiges of her authority over the iron faded, a pulse of void-magics blossomed from around the metal, and the iron simply vanished rather than being given up.
Thats thats actually an elegant solution.
Tala instinctively knew that it had taken a quite significant amount of power to enact, making it a detriment in the heat of battle, but it was far superior to the soul-rending agony that had previously been the result of such a loss.
I think this is it. Alat?
-Yeah, I think I agree.-
With an inward smile, Tala projected, YES.
Power blossomed outward, enveloping the whole space and drawing Talas consciousness back to reality, the merging complete.