They all approached the centre of the room together. Once they were about twenty tres removed from the Starkiln, the three tracanas joined the rest of their kin at the base of the Starkiln. The god of stars extended his head past the edge and looked down at John and his party. The Gar felt like the glowing left eye of the god was trying to dissect him. Thankfully, that wasn’t one of Enki’s powers.
“An intruder, how unexpected.” When Enki spoke, John could see the inside of his maw. The left side seed healthy, the teeth were of a flawless ivory colour, while the right had ugly teeth, their size varying, number and density random, set into black, semi-liquid rot.
‘The corruption is bound to his flesh,’ John thought imdiately and considered his actions. There was no imdiate hostility in the air – the largest source of aggression was tra. Seminaris would have likely returned the rage of the first tracana in equal asure, but the First of Patience wasn’t around. That was cause for alarm in its own right. Regardless, the Gar decided to pursue a conversation first. Any delay would ultimately be to his advantage. “Unexpected? We talked about sixteen hours ago.”
The celestial dragon tilted his head and leaned down a little bit closer. His deep voice was filled with parental arrogance, as if he was chiding a child. “It never ceases to amaze that such limited mortal minds can speak such foolishness with such certainty. I know not who you are.”
‘The difference between the sleeping and the waking mind is real then,’ John thought and asked another question. “Where did you leave Seminaris?”
“Another peculiar question from you, invader,” Enki sounded amused. “I haven’t seen the First of Patience in centuries.”
John looked at Thresta. The Third of Darkness was both visible and kept a straight face. If she was confused about her master’s statent, she didn’t show it. ‘An elaborate ruse or…?’ he wondered and looked over to Leryala. “You were in the Middle East not too long ago and t a woman nad Momo, did you not?”
“…tra… are you sure you want soone with delusions to be Sargon’s heir?” the Second of Light asked. “Eeep!” she exclaid, raising her hands when Rex Magnar roared threateningly. “I’m sorry, I’m sorry! I’m just saying…”
“mory editing,” John sighed and scratched his head. He didn’t even try to keep things to himself. “That’s always an option for weaker Artificial Spirits under contract. I suppose when one is a god involved in their creation, it’s possible even for tracanas.”
“You lot are disappointing more by the second,” the First of Wrath growled.
“What are you even talking about?” Xerxes asked.
“They are accusing of malevolence. How daring,” Enki chuckled.
“No, I’m accusing you of being a puppet. You are not in control of yourself,” the Gar stated.
The Starforger’s chuckles grew into a stream of reserved laughter. “Oh, this is quite interesting. Quite interesting indeed. Entertain then, little mortal, and perhaps I will diminish your punishnt for destroying my second forge.”
“If ya don’t want it destroyed, don’t make it a Lorylim-powered teleportation device?” Rave suggested, causing another wave of laughter from Enki. “What? They operated it like an hour ago!” She gestured wildly at the four tracanas that they had briefly fought in the basent.
“What a ludicrous proposal,” the god of stars waved off. “The yarn you weave doesn’t cease to amaze.”
“I have to respect the influence Tiamat has over you.” John shook his head.
“The dead have no influence over the living,” Enki continued in his deaning tone. “Mother Chaos died at Babel.”
“And so should you have,” tra shouted. “Yet here you are.”
“Would you like an explanation, First of Wrath?” Enki asked. “What would I earn by giving it?”
“A trade,” John spoke up, always keeping an eye on his mana bar. His expenditures couldn’t outweigh his regeneration. “I tell you what you are doing here, giving you entertainnt if nothing else, and you tell what happened to you. That knowledge surely wouldn’t cost you much.”
“Hmmm, I accept. You start then, mortal.”
“You are operating a sche in which you teleport humans into a Lorylim infested zone, making them fight each other and growing the winners as servants. The losers are funnelled into the system and used as fuel for further operations.”
“…Hahaha… HAHAHAHAAA!” the star god’s laughter rose to a rumbling shout and then ended abruptly. “What a lie. The first foe can’t be controlled in such a manner and neither would it be interested in infecting humans for anything else than migration. Using them as servants?”
‘Don’t,’ John reached out to tra, who was about to use her dinsional magic to retrieve Ehtra’s skull from his inventory. ‘Proof won’t do us any good. They are not operating in reality.’
“When Gaia’s initial punishnt ravaged the realms, I was already fleeing. I knew Mother’s ambitions were too grand and was too smart to get myself killed in her designs. Freeing myself of Chaos’ touch and getting out of the range of the great tyrant’s wrath proved to be more difficult than I anticipated, however, and so I was caught in the outskirts of the annihilating energies. Half of my body rapidly decayed, but I kept myself alive by using storages of Mother’s flesh.”
“And since then, you have aid to restore your body with Astrotium, recruiting tracana wherever you could,” John finished the story. He wasn’t sure how much of it he believed, given the rest of the god’s warped perspective.
“The first true thing you said since entering my Sanctum,” the Starforger humd. “A Sanctum you ravaged. Punishnt is due, wouldn’t you agree?”
John looked over the tracanas and the ancient treasures around. “Even if you don’t know what you are doing here, fact is that you are the source of things. Yes, I agree, punishnt is due.”
No sooner had John finished those words, than the sandstone of the structure was deford by Gno’s will. Throughout the entire conversation, John had sent his regenerating mana to her, and now that mana was shaped into a wave of rock that washed over the tracanas. Nia, tra and Rave dashed after the eight ancient weapons, while John and his elentals remained right where they were. They had their fight and John had his.
From atop the Starkiln, Enki looked down and yawned. “You will bore after all.” The dragon spread out his wings. Streaks of starlight separated from the mbranes and descended on John’s position. Each projectile was as thin as a pencil, but their quantity was imnse. John used Magus Step to try and dodge, but found that the swarm of arcane spells readjusted their path to pursue him. The elentals suffered the sa issue, scattering out, each followed by their own cluster of attacks.
John ran. ‘Bad start,’ he thought, having hoped the god would react in a different fashion. ‘I’ll need to tickle his arrogance more.’ A second Magus step and a Skitterstep in quick succession caused half of the pursuing spells to lose him and randomly scatter through the room. ‘They follow based on visuals?’
While the Gar tried to shake off the remaining projectiles, his elentals fared a lot better. Following his discovery, Siena simply went invisible and lost them that way. Salamander and Sylph outpaced them in the air. Gno shielded herself with rocks, which didn’t fully protect her from the impacts but reduced the damage taken to ignorable. Undine was originally safe inside Purgatory, but soon decided to co out and use her own body as John’s shield. She could take the damage better than he could, especially since Particle Skin was toggled off at the mont. Stirwin hung from John’s belt, in his item form.
“My, you are an agile bunch,” Enki’s bemused voice comnted. Left claw raised, he conjured a sphere of silver mana. “How will you fare with this?”
The sphere turned into a series of Arc Lances, shooting randomly at John and his party. They coalesced quickly at one point, hiding behind a wall Gno hastily erected and continued to reinforce. Self-certain chuckling preceded a second wave of silver projectiles. Undine wrapped around all of them when the thin lines curved around their barrier and were about to hit them in the back. The sli’s health bar went down considerably, only to refill at a quick pace. They usually kept her out of harm’s way due to her importance as a healer, but her passive regeneration was even stronger than Aclysia’s.
“We will all die if you just keep sitting there,” Enki mocked them. “You, due to my arcane supremacy and I, out of sheer boredom.”
‘If only that last part worked,’ John thought, while asserting his plan. Obviously, the god of stars was right. In a contest of their defences against his power, they would eventually succumb. ‘Sylph, try to attack him.’
‘Roger, roger!’ the arcvolt elental answered, but didn’t move imdiately. Closing her eyes, Sylph turned inwards. John sensed her recalling the events of the past two days in vivid detail, the pain inflicted on her loved ones, the stress, the fear and the anger. Her eyelids flew open, the air around them went completely still and then she stord away as an Unleashed incarnation of wind and lightning.
In one aspect Sylph and tra were quite similar, they were at their strongest when they focused their anger.
Her form crackled between the streaks of arcane. Searching for an opening, she weaved with instinctive elegance through all attacks that sought to harm her. At the first opportunity, she stopped in the air and raised her hand. An expression of grim determination on her face, she focused her might into a lance of manifested thunder, launching it at the god of stars.
Pulling up his right claw, a four fingered ss of dripping black liquid and Astrotium, Enki manifested a Mana Barrier. Sylph’s attack collided with the protective spell and shattered into branching electricity, crawling over the surface of the bubble.
“How I love it when mongrels put up the effort.” The arrogance of the god, justified or not, knew no bounds. He seed to consider what was to be his next move when an explosion of mana suddenly washed over him. Annoyed, he turned to look at the Unstable Arcana that John had just left there.
As impressive as the god’s magical abilities were, his Physical Stats were ridiculously low - lower even than tra’s reports had made John believe. Especially his Endurance being in the unimpressive range, particularly for his level, ant that even John’s attacks could do worthwhile damage. Of course, Enki wouldn’t have been a god, much less one with the honorary title of god of magic, if he didn’t have asures against this.
The Mana Chain from the first impact and the second wave of the Unstable Arcana were both stopped by Enki’s left. Spellwork, frozen in its mont, for the god to analyse while he blocked further attacks with his other hand. “The nerve,” he hissed, only to begrudgingly admit, “What a crafty overlap of spellwork…”
“There’s more where it ca from!” John shouted, deliberately challenging the god and casting a second Unstable Arcana. It didn’t get to explode even once, Enki halting that spell as well.
“Know your place!” Enki growled, confirming just how easily he could be ticked off. “A mage, a summoner, such as you thinking you can challenge in the magical arts? What could you possibly do against , who seals mana in its purest form?”
The dragon god closed his intact hand, as if he was slowly compressing sothing inside it. At the sa ti, John felt a duality of sensations. One was a pull, as if a circuit inside was forcefully removed, the other was a surge, the energy that usually fed that circuit being rerouted. The feeling ceased, the Unstable Arcana and Mana Chain crumbled away into fading particles, and two windows opened.
‘There it is,’ John thought and checked his MP bar. The Max Mana he had been granted had simultaneously been generated, leaving him with a giant amount to work with. He suppressed a smirk.
Gods were powerful, that much was unsurprising and almost redundant to say. They were beings of Fate, coalesced into a singular entity, and this brought with it special abilities beyond simple might. Whether those abilities were predictable and simple, such as raising entire volcanoes with one’s will, or more elaborate, like becoming a swarm of unnerving creatures, every god had sothing that was on the level of a latebloor’s Innate Ability. For Enki, this was his ability to control magic and consolidate it into stars, an ability he had extended to seal the spellcasting capabilities of others inside their body in the shape of raw power. Lingering doubt about its exact interaction with his system had been the final hurdle. Now the path to victory was clear.
“Like I need a couple of spells to defeat you,” he declared defiantly and had Gno raise a series of pillars for him. He used them to get up further and further, towards the top of the Starkiln. “As long as I have my elentals, you won’t win.”
“Hope… what a misplaced feeling,” Enki scolded him and directed his attention at Gno. “You are no Gilgash, all your magic is mine to dominate.”
Once more, John felt that pull and expansion within him, then the next window opened.
“Impressive,” Enki gave begrudging respect again. “Certainly, more than I expected of a pest… what is so funny?”
John had started to chuckle. His plan was too far advanced now for the god to stop him. “See, engagents like this are what I excel at,” he allowed himself a mont of boasting. “You are, without a doubt, stronger than anything else in this barrier. Yet, you are not nearly as threatening to as the swarm of Lorylim within your Sanctum. Fundantally, the only thing I have to be afraid of is a lack of information. As the saying goes: know yourself and the enemy and you need not fear the outco of a hundred battles.”
One Magus Step and John was on the Starkiln. One Skitterstep and he was behind the barrier. One jump and he was up to Enki’s face. One punch and the god stars was sent flying off his pedestal.
Absurd things happened when planned modifier stacking was enabled.
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