Chapter 2148
After warning Devick of the meddling from the Cerulean girl, Randidly returned back to the farm. He paused at the edge and looked back toward the city. Despite his curiosity about what would happen at Elhume’s meeting, he felt confident remaining here. Significance continued to pool above Malloon, specifically at the location where Mae Myrna and the Patron of Feathers were staying for their training.
With false cheer in her voice, Mae had informed Randidly they would come to visit when they had the chance. Also, she extended an invitation for him to come into the city and join them. However, returning seemed like a pointless risk while the area near Westrisser’s capitol building was undergoing repairs. Better let any lingering aggression bleed off for a few more days.
Which also prevented Randidly from making any headway on figuring out what weird methods Westrisser had used to draw the ire of Wyndaos, but he wasn’t in a rush to ferret out that truth. Plus, he assumed the answers would come out on their own, eventually.
He had warned Devick because he had felt the tingle of malicious intent in the puppeteering, although he wouldn’t mention that to her; despite the relative naivete of the current Devick, it was hard to predict how she would react if she knew the princess of Cerulean City plotted against her. Randidly hadn’t met the daughter of the soon-to-arrive Fatia Cerulean himself, but just sensing the bundle of cruelty and power within their most ornate viewing box taught him all he needed to know.
Perhaps, she was to him what he was to Westrisser and Bleak Sky. Didn’t seem like a genuine threat, but strong enough she would be a real headache to kill.
For now, while whatever is the next important event in the memory is building in Malloon, I need to take advantage of the chance to improve myself. Randidly released a slow breath. He headed back to his room and began his meditation. These old monsters... whatever plans Bleak Sky, Westrisser, and the Cult of the Savior are concocting, I’ll need to be able to survive in the area around the dangerous events. Or, at the very least, I need to master my own abilities enough to support Elhume and his group.
So in the three days since the clash against Westrisser, Randidly had thrown himself fully into sharpening the knives at his disposal. In the mornings he refined and utilized a brutalizing Nether Ritual designed to hone his physical body. Sulfur and Acri enjoyed the tingling strain as he moved through spear strikes. Sweat beaded across his brow and dripped down off the tip of his nose as he thrust and swept and spun and settled.
Even now, will all of his Stats steadily creeping up toward two thousand, he didn’t think this was the limit of his body. With eyes grimly forward, he tightened his grip on Acri’s shaft and thrust again. The weight of the spot on his left palm tingled, but he ignored it. Having shattered the shackles of the System, with an inner source of energy that would not run out, he wanted to see what lay at the end of this Path.
There was an unfortunate interruption in that process at the end of the first morning, apparently the Nether Ritual released a low hum that resonated with an underground aquifer, hollowed out the surrounding ground and created a sinkhole, and then collapsed half of the farm into a massive cavern. However, Randidly felt relatively sure the new foundational Engraving he built around the Nether Ritual would contain the radiation.
It did irk him to have destroyed the farm for a second time. But Randidly tried not to dwell on that too much.
In the afternoons, he settled into a mostly meditative state to think about refining his images and also purifying the emotional sea he had inherited from the Alpha Cosmos. While he had claimed those emotions for his own, they still possessed lingering traces of the individuals who had spawned those violent emotions. Small variances prevented a cohesive emotional force from being forged, which made hitting and holding the correct emotional notes a fraught business.
For several hours, he sat and breathed and tried to capture the different aspects of his images, drawn in vehement emotions. Protectiveness and steady growth for Yggdrasil. Fear of misunderstanding and overwhelming desire to surpass limitations from the Stillborn Phoenix. A wild desire to survive and a rather straightforward rankling at even the slightest hint of outside influence.
In the evenings, he cooked. Sometimes for just himself and Bogart, but the Patron of the Deep had somehow sniffed out the fact Randidly was cooking, bringing Demetrius and Jotem along as ‘escorts’.
Randidly smiled through the meals, allowing some inner part of him to relax in the process of making, even if ancillary conversation was swiftly devoured by the Patron of the Deep’s ego.
Then, as night fell and the dinner guests departed, Randidly called out and summoned Neveah to work on another strength he had allowed to go unimproved for far too long. They called it the energy games, a slightly tongue-in-cheek moniker that Neveah used to smooth over Randidly’s feathers when she absolutely crushed him five times in a row on the first night.
“Really, Randidly,” Neveah did her best not to gloat, but her cheeks kept twitching with the repressed smile. “It’s just a game. Is there any reason to take it so personally?”
The game was rather simple. They would set a desired result and then compete to more successfully accomplish it using different methods. Sometimes they chose antagonistic goals, drag the boulder across your line, while sometimes they selected more general tasks, like generating as much cold as you could with only a minute to set up.
After the final loss, Randidly had regarded his smug Soulbound companion with all the sourness of a squirrel with lemons in both cheeks. “If we were both competing in Engraving patterns, I would get you absolutely bludgeoning me over and over again. But you Engrave while I create a Nether Ritual. How the hell do you keep winning?”
Neveah clicked her tongue. “I almost hesitate to say this, because you’ve never been very good at letting go. But you’ve pretty much abandoned Engraving to a lesser degree and understanding Aether. Meanwhile, I don’t have your... natural deftness with Nether, but I’ve been following your discoveries rather closely. I understand both sides, while you really only get one.”
“Still-” Randidly growled, but Neveah held up a hand.
“Let me demonstrate. Our first task involved the boulder, yes? No time limit, just fueled with raw power. You considered it a tug of war; you crafted the Nether Ritual to counter me, to overcome my force. It was an elegant Nether Ritual, beyond a doubt. However, did you ever pause and look at my Engraving?”
In a few quick strokes, Neveah sketched it out. After looking at the Engraving, really understanding its purpose, his expression worsened. “... this was designed to push, and lightly.”
“You crafted a prayer to overcome me,” Some of that smugness flickered across Neveah’s face. “So I let you. In the temperature challenge, most of my Engraving was designed to prevent yours from functioning; only a small portion would affect the temperature. All the other energy games were similar. I didn’t try for the task, I could predict how you would approach the problem and countered that. Because I understood the way both Aether and Nether works.”
“And so...” Randidly reached up and rubbed the bridge of his nose. “I study.”
“You study,” Neveah confirmed. “At least with me, but... there is a reason your most problematic emotional core was exhaustion.”