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Now reading: 226: Locked Universe Mystery ( from The Flower That Bloomed Nowhere, a Psychological novel by Lurina.

Inner Sanctum Underground | 9:33 AM | ∞ Day

"What do you think would have happened, if you could've controlled how it all ended?" I asked, still sohow hoping for more, feeling like so detail had to exist that would just make it all click into place. "If this were a novel, or sothing?"

"I dunno," Nahmi said. Her tone was growing increasingly indifferent and disinterested. I got the sense she was kind of done with the conversation. "The usual shit, I guess. Eirene would get everybody seated in the observation car, go over the evidence, and eventually figure it out. There were a lot of inconsistencies that'd have out if everyone was interrogated, or if anybody took a proper look at the body."

"I more ant thematically," I clarified. "Like, you said yourself that there was a focus on magical thinking-- On 'mythmaking', like you had Summiri say, whether it's about individuals or businesses or nations. And how living in the Crossroads got you thinking about how valuable 'truth' is as a concept."

"Uh-huh," she mumbled.

"The point you made about that in the story was interesting, actually," I continued. "When you were saying that having a truly critical perspective on reality, following the idea to its logical conclusion, would be like looking down a bottomless pit. Because, I an, it is true. Causally the universe shouldn't exist at all, or even if you believe in the divine, God shouldn't. So at a certain point you have to give up and embrace so beliefs about reality arbitrarily, or fall into nihilism. It's sothing I think about a lot." I thought occurred , and I hesitated. "Did Kam tell you that? That I think about this stuff a lot?"

"No, but I'm sure you're very deep," she replied flatly.

"I was just curious. It is partly about the conclave, and I know you had to rewrite things when I signed up, so it'd make sense if she was giving you, I dunno, direction to poke at specifically."

"All she asked to do was to change Kasua's role a little, so that she was less of a background character and might have a motive to commit murder," she said. "This may shock you to know, but existentialism is sothing that pretty much everyone in the world with more than two brain cells thinks about all the ti. It's secondary school bullshit."

I opened my mouth to object, to say that I was talking about sothing more specific, but everything I thought to say felt like it was just going to make look like self-obsessed pedant. I made what was probably an unusually huffy expression that she fortunately did not see.

"I just... what was your thesis, I guess I an," I asked. "What were you trying to say with the story."

Despite her attested passion for aningful writing, she seed more put-off by this question than anything, her voice turning almost defensive. "I dunno if I have theses when I'm writing these. Like, I've done a fucking million of them at this point, and things never turn out in the way I want them to anyway. The players and actors I'm not directly controlling end up going off-script." She was quiet for a mont. "To be a bit of a pretentious bitch about it, I try to treat them more like explorations of questions at this point."

"I see," I said. "And what was the question, in this case?"

Another pause. "I'd say that it was ant to be, like, 'what happens when belief in sothing that seed special is broken', I guess." She slurped her drink for a mont, then let out an indifferent sigh. "But who fucking knows. I've done so many of these, so many weird little stories circling around what's in those books in every setting under the sun, that it all kind of beco a slurry. And I want to believe I'm doing sothing high-minded, but really it's just tropes and the obvious inferences from those tropes. Oh, we've got the dead wealthy character with the big inheritance people are fighting over. Oh, we've got the stubborn blowhard character, the flamboyant wine mom character, the deluded loyalist character. Oh, we've got this period setting, and of course it's about this great change overtaking the world, because there's always a great change fucking overtaking the world-- Everything's always dying and struggling to be born. And of course these murder mystery tricks where the culprit tries to present it as so supernatural thing, that's from the books too. How many stories can you tell with that? Or, fuck, with the entire genre? It's incestuous, ultimately, the sa dozen blocks being stacked in different patterns. But then again, being here for a few years, you realize everything is incestuous, right? Humans aren't really that complicated . There's only so many stories we have to tell, only so many social situations we can have and types of people we can be. I've only been here for 3000 years or so and that's already been obvious for lifetis. Just the sa nested patterns, over and over again, the only thing that cos out of our shitty little brains. It's no wonder the people in this Domain act the way they do, turning even the most foundational parts of being a person into another lever to pull, another variable, another fruit to juice. You probably don't get it yet if you really were a Drear, but you'll see soon enough."

It was by far the longest answer she'd given, and by the ti she was done, her voice was trailing off to a whisper, like she was falling asleep in the process of giving it. She sounded totally defeated all of a sudden.

"Are you... alright?" I asked, frowning.

"Oh yeah," she said. "Just peachy."

Kamrusepa chose this mont to return, manifesting a few feet to the left of . "Sorry about that!" She said cheerfully. "So of the boys in our office in the City made a bit of a ss! I swear, it's an absolute death march to find decent help out here. Would you believe it, the cross-section of people who inhabit a hedonistic Domain engineered for broad appeal and aren't utterly flakes when it cos to keeping schedules? Not particularly wide!" She smiled at . "So, Su, are you content? Can we move this along?"

"Uh, I guess so," I said hesitantly. "I think I upset her, though."

"You didn't upset ," Nahmi said, back to sounding bored. "Not in the last 20 minutes, at least."

"Alright if we leave you here, Nahmi?" Kamrusepa asked with a smile. "Clean-up moving along well enough?"

"Uh-huh," she grunted. "Finished with the setting, just gotta take care of the actors for another hour."

Kam frowned. "You really need to stop going around Retrieval. It's ridiculously inefficient, not even to speak of the bloody ethics."

"You're the one who told we need to moderate our prop budget. And that we're losing candidates because of shitty performances." She sighed. "I'm not a drama director. I can't coach these people."

"What's this about?" I asked, frowning.

"Nothing you need to worry about, Su," Kam spoke, turning back sharply to . "Now then, shall we head to my Domain? I take you directly there. Just take my hand."

I almost did, but then hesitated. "I'm... not sure I can leave, actually."

She frowned. "What? Why not?"

My countenance turned embarrassed. "I sort of got in trouble with the law here," I said, scratching the back of my head. "I found the Domain before I really understood what was going on just by looking for the biggest group on the Stage, and then ended up hanging around the Manse since it was my first ti until sobody from the Waywatch showed up and arrested ." I bit my lip. "And then a few days later I-- Well, the short version is that I ended up being suspected of leaving the Domain to go the you-know-what again."

"Pft, you needn't worry about that," Kamrusepa dismissed with a scoff. "They bloody well suspect thousands of people of breaking that absurd rule. It never goes anywhere so long as we're careful not to ti it suspiciously."

"Uh," I said. "It might be a little more serious than that. They dragged into the governor's office."

She furrowed her brow. "Which one?"

"Cyrene." I hadn't really thought about it, but I supposed a governor of the Valley also implied one of the Island and perhaps the City as well. "I think she realized who I was. She was also talking about so kind of cult groups keeping an eye on ." I blinked. "Wait-- This isn't a cult, is it?"

Kamrusepa was holding her chin with a serious expression. "I suppose it shouldn't be surprise that so mbers of the assembly might taken an interest in you. There's a great deal of fuss about the M-word recently on account of that debacle Isaac caused a few years ago."

"Who?"

"One of our other mbers," she explained. "Not the most subtle type." She clicked her tongue. "The average person doesn't give a hoot in this day and age, but whenever there's public concern, there's an uptick in awareness of our identities in relation to the conclave among interested parties. You picked a poor ti to erge from seclusion, especially since you used your real na for so reason."

"That's not my fault. I told you, I didn't even know what was happening."

She tapped her foot impatiently. "Well, personally I don't think it matters much if you're expelled from this Domain. There are much better places to be if you're not trying to recruit people with prop." She looked at . "But I bet if I suggest that, you'll give so fear-of-missing-out spiel, so we'll just have to find sowhere more secure than here to continue the conversation."

"What's insecure about this place?" I asked, glancing around.

"The Waywatch already has so modest suspicion of what we're doing here. Not enough to monitor us on the regualar - yet - but still, it's better not chance it."

"Where will we go, then? If they can potentially spy on us anywhere."

"Safety in a crowd, Su," Kam said aningfully. "Safety in a crowd."

𒀭

She took to the beach in the Valley. It was the kind that felt like it only existed in dramas, which made sense insofar as it was literally fake-- Well, manufactured, at least. Perfect golden sands were kissed by a perfect aquamarine sea tinged orange from the setting sun, which threw off since my ntal clock was still processing it as being night on account on the ga. Corals were visible beneath the more distant water while an abundance of wildflowers sprung from the overhead hills, sandwiching the scene between two rainbows of color. It was idyllic even by Dilmun standards, the kind of thing an idiot imagines when they picture heaven.

As Kamrusepa had implied, it was probably the busiest part of the Valley I'd visited so far. Hundreds of figures lined the coast, walking, relaxing on towels, swimming, having barbecues. It was overstimulating, especially with how outrageously good-looking everyone who wasn't so kind of monster person was here. My face flushed, and I instantly felt overdressed and removed the shawl from my robes, despite it being the sa comfortably neutral temperature that most places seed to be.

Still, there was an odd feeling that nagged at as I beheld the sight, and it took a minute to realize what it was. The missing thing that it felt hard to imagine a place like this without.

It was children, of course. There were so younger-than-average looking people, and so people behaving in a bit of an immature way - laughing while building sandcastles and the like - but not a soul that was distinctly pre-pubescent.

It was... odd. Not good or bad, exactly. Just odd.

Kamrusepa returned from a nearby food stand with two popsicles. "Do you want the vanilla and cream, or the tropical fruit?"

"Uh, tropical fruit," I said, taking the yellow-pink stick of frozen sugar as it was offered to . This was feeling awkwardly close to a date. "I would have thought they'd have so more adventurous flavors."

She snorted. "Here? In the Valley? Not bloody likely." She licked her popsicle, her free hand going to her hip as she surveyed the masses with regal contempt. "If the Crossroads in broad strokes appeals to the lowest common denominator, then the ilk that subside here exist at the very nadir of human imagination. The sum total of their dreams rely a comfortable misrembering of their bygone lives."

I frowned. "That seems a little harsh. Everyone has that little impulse in them that wants a simple life, to go live in the country or sothing."

"The transient ones I can forgive, but in my old life, I never would have believed there would be so many people content to live indefinitely in an earthly paradise. In their little fantasies of cottages and sheep and red-brick walls." She shook her head. "It reminds of the worst people in my childhood."

I wasn't sure how to respond to that, since it felt too soon to bring up the journal, and how much she expected to know about said childhood.

"I really can't believe you've just been flying everywhere for the past month," she abruptly digressed. "You should learn the arcana for teleportation as soon as possible. You get by in this Domain without it, but there are others where everything is so spread apart it's absolutely vital."

"I'm not sure I could," I replied hesitantly. "I haven't learned a new incantation in nearly a century."

A case of theft: this story is not rightfully on Amazon; if you spot it, report the violation.

"It's not half as complex as you'd expect. Since there's no concern for eris here, simplicity is the only form of efficiency that matters in casting." She frowned as I continued to look skeptical. "You should at least go pick an artifice that does it. There are nurous shops in town that could do that for you."

"Wouldn't it just vanish if it ever did leave the Domain?"

"No, anything you keep on your person when moving between Domains goes with you so long as it's made out of your own prop. You said you've been staying with Ptolema? She should have explained all this to you."

"We haven't really talked about the chanics of life here much since my first day," I said, again stepping around the reason why we hadn't. "I've been more curious about the culture and, uh, taphysics, that sort of thing." I liked my popsicle, which was mostly mango.

She snorted. "I suppose it shouldn't be surprising that you would neglect the fundantals in favor of fixating on high concepts."

Fucking pot calling the kettle black, I thought.

"Is this a bad spot for you?" She asked. "You looked a little ill at ease when I was walking about."

"N-no, it's fine. I an-- It doesn't exactly feel like the right tempo for a conversation like this, but if you think it's the safest thod, then I'm not going to make a fuss." I looked out at the ocean again. "I have so baggage with beaches--"

"How can you have 'baggage' with the concept of a beach?" She interjected, baffled. "That's like saying you were traumatized by ruddy grass, what do you even an?"

"--but mostly I was just thinking about the fact there aren't any kids here," I finished.

"That's no mystery," she said. Her gaze wandered back toward the crowd too. "The only way you can have a child here is if you make them a Tertiary, and there are heavy restrictions on their participation in society here. It was a nuisance to even get residency for Nahmi."

"I hadn't realized she was one." In retrospect, her saying she'd only been in Dilmun for a few thousand years should have tipped off.

"Oh yes. You might have noticed she looks a little bit unusual in the face." She gestured a hand at her own illustratively. "That's because she doesn't have a baseline form, so the way she looks is always drifting and being ddled with. She can't even use the Power, so she has to rely on technology as well."

"Can they not use the Power? Tertiaries?"

"They can, but it's an abstruse process. Difficult to beco accustod to compared to us." She took a lick. "But as I was saying, most people who are interested in starting a family - who aren't put off by the inherent dynamics of the affair - go to Domains more interested in accommodating that. And there are rules in place that forbid taking the form of a child here, so you don't see that either."

I blinked. "Like, physical rules? The world won't let you do it?"

"No, moral rules. Here in the Crossroads." She flattened her brow. "You don't need to paint you picture."

"N-No, I guess not."

A few monts passed. I stared at the sunset.

"Well," Kam said, putting a smile on her face. "Shall we get started?"

"I suppose," I replied. "I... don't really know what to say. Even though I've done this three tis now, it still feels... I can't think of the right word. Sowhere between 'awkward' and 'inscrutable'."

"How about this," Kamrusepa began, as solution-oriented as ever. "You tell what you rember our last eting being, I'll tell you what I rember our last eting being, and we'll proceed from there."

"Okay," I assented. I thought for a mont. "The last ti we t was in the year 1413, a few months after we got our doctorates. Since they'd broken up our class and we'd ended up in different programs, we'd barely spoken in years. I ran into you in the quad while I was helping Ran clean out so of her stuff, and you told that you were heading back to Xattusa for a couple years. And then I said that I hoped we could keep in touch, and you were, uh, kind of noncommittal about it." I frowned to myself. "I kind of got the impression you had sothing going on. You were acting odd."

"She was probably dreading the prospect of continuing to crawl from the bottom-up in the Order of Chronomancers," Kam mused. "She never spoke to you again after that?"

"Why are you talking in the third person?"

"I don't view the variant of myself that existed in the Remaining World after the conclave as part of my own identity, per-se," she explained ambivalently. "We're all in a state of constant evolution, after all. I can't rightly be held accountable for the actions of a version of that could have been."

I squinted at her. "Are you fabricating up an entire philosophical outlook on the spot just so you don't have to apologize for ghosting ?"

"Don't be ridiculous, Su." She shook her head. "That being said-- I have viewed the experiences of my other self, if not autospectively, and I seem to recall us exchanging letters after that point."

"Oh." I hesitated. "...yeah, I guess you did send a couple."

I'd almost forgotten. After I'd finished school but before my first drastic life-pivot towards becoming an illustrator, there'd been a brief period where I'd been looking for a job as a researcher, and during that ti I vaguely recalled exchanging a couple of generic postcards with forr classmates. But by my standards the whole period was kind of a blur. I'd already been neck-deep in my second existential crisis since having to give up on saving Shiko, desperate to try to find so justification for my own existence.

In fact, thinking about it, it might have been who ghosted Kam, not the other way around. I'd felt so embarrassed by what I was doing, discarding 15 years of training towards a vocation in which I was considered a prodigy to chase a childhood dream in which I had no real talent or even deep passion. It'd been obvious to everyone it was a mistake. My parents, even Ran.

"I thought we were only counting, you know, physical etings, though," I continued, taking a lick. "Or at least talking."

"Fair, I suppose." She gave a asured nod, then twisted her popsicle to the side before running her tongue against it at an odd angle. "For my part, the last ti I rember speaking to you was on the top of the bell tower in Order's headquarters, closing in on eight in the evening on our third day at the conclave."

This would be in Kamrusepa's version, then. "What we were talking about?"

"Well, this was after all of the others were dead or separated," she explained. "We already knew there was a good chance we weren't in-- Well, at the ti, we called it the 'real world'. Before the killer got her, we'd set out with Neferuaten to confront Hamilcar in the underbelly of the sanctuary, whom at the ti we'd believed to be the mastermind. But upon arriving, she'd inspected the equipnt and concluded it'd already been activated, and then explained so of the technology and how it'd been intended to work, alongside much of the Order's original plans."

This was interesting. So there were so loops where Neferuaten didn't try to activate the Apega at the end of the second night? I wondered what could have happened to change things. Did sothing go wrong with Fang, or could the Order have seed more receptive to her request in a way that wouldn't drive her to such a rash action? Or could there have been so more imdiate reason she wasn't able to sneak off in the middle of the night?

I'll have to ask her more about this later.

"You are following , yes? It occurs that you might not have even learned the basics of the situation."

"N-No, I'm following you," I told her. "Like I said, I already talked To Neferuaten."

"Right, of course." She nodded. "So yes: Later, the two of us had been driven to the tower in search of a defensible position where we might ride out the night, if by chance Neferuaten was insane and the sanctuary was not, despite what we'd been told by the woman we believed to be Amtu-Heddu-Anna, going to explode. And we were talking about the Order, and life, and its many disappointnts when I believe you blew us both up."

A pair of laughing girls ran alongside the water behind us, one throwing a clump of sand at the other.

"Oh," I said. "Are you sure?"

"Not entirely. I felt an incantation activate, but it's possible soone else breached our barrier." She gave a mixed smile. "But I have spoken to the others, so you could call it an educated guess."

"I... I see."

I went a little stiff, averting my eyes.

"Oh, co on, Su," Kam, flicking the head of her popsicle at a few tis. "Did I not tell you just a minute ago that I don't consider myself accountable for different potentialities of myself? I'd be a rather a hypocrite if I didn't extend that grace to others." She brought it back up, taking a lick. "Besides, it wasn't as if it was painful."

I swallowed the air. "You're not... suspicious, of ? For... for murdering you?"

"Well, I assu you didn't do it in your weekend, judging by the way you've been talking to ?"

"No," I told her, awkwardly defensive.

"And do you have any idea why you might have done it?"

"N-Not really. I an, I've been thinking about it since I heard, but... no."

"Well, then there you go. It's not as if I actually died, so alls well that ends well." She furrowed her brow. "I have to confess, I wasn't expecting this reaction. I thought you'd have already anticipated this to so degree, or if not, then to be outright confused."

"E-Expected it."

"Since you've already talked to three of the others," she clarified. A beach ball flew over our heads.

It took a mont to understand what she was getting at, and when I realized an uncomfortable feeling began to stir in my gut.

Basically, she was saying that it was essentially common knowledge among the participants in the conclave that I had, in many cases, been the murderer. But since I appeared to not understand why - to personally recall doing it - then I should have already been confronted by this fact by one of the others and been prepared for this mont.

But... none of them had. Ptolema had told she didn't know her killer. Neferuaten had suggested she'd committed suicide in the sa way as in my loop. And Bardiya had avoided the question altogether.

For a mont I wondered if this was so freak coincidence, that I'd just happened to end up interacting with the three people who had neither personal experience nor secondhand knowledge of what I'd done in the loops-- But this wasn't exactly Occam's razor. The more obvious conclusion was that they'd all known about the elephant in the room, and had just been being nice, or at the very least hoping to avoid an awkward conversation.

So I'd been spared a mont like this thus far, and - wanting to avoid thinking about the topic - hadn't really questioned why. But contrary to Kam's expectations for this scenario, I still knew what I'd done.

Because I'd heard it from my other self. And from the Lady.

"I... no, it's complicated, but I didn't hear about it from them," I said. I looked at her with concern. "So all the others-- All of you-- You all see as, like, a murderer. The murderer."

"Su, for goodness sake." She sighed. "It's not like that. No one cares about back then any more--" She clicked her tongue, seeming to realize the hypocrisy in saying this when she was seemingly running what amounted to a conclave re-enactnt society. "Well, cares about it emotionally, at the very least."

"I-- I've heard that the mories of our lives in the Remaining World up to then are the only ones seared into our brains forever," I told her. "You're telling none of them are bothered? Even if they rember , I don't know, stabbing them in the throat or sothing?"

She looked like she was about to give a completely affirming answer, but then hesitated and stopped herself, which made feel even more embarrassed. ('Embarrassed'? For being a murderer? This was so weird. I didn't know what I was supposed to feel.) "Obviously so people are going to think about it," she finally said, "But look, it's not just you. We all one another doing absolute depraved things during that weekend, things we can't even explain our reasoning for. If we all viewed one another in that light, it'd be impossible to ever even talk about." She looked at , pursing her lips. "Like, what do you rember doing, Su? In your loop?"

"Uhh." I thought about how to phrase it. "I an. You sort of shot Linos for indefinitive reasons - except it turned out it wasn't his real body for so reason - which turned into a fight that got almost everyone killed. Oh, and you convinced we should pretend we didn't find a body in the shaft in the armory."

She looked a little puzzled for a mont, but nodded. "Alright, not my worst showing, but still, hardly sterling," she concluded. "My point is, we all killed one another in at least one version of that weekend. And though I can't deny that so people have chosen to isolate themselves from most of the rest of us in an attempt to avoid any uncomfortable feelings, they're the ones who are missing out on the ability to aningfully reflect on those experiences." She licked. "And it's not just us, Su. Most Primaries have learned to look back on their old rivalries and pains as the epheral things they are. There's nothing that can hurt us here, we're past all that. A shared experience as enemies to reflect on together can be just as aningful as a shared experience as friends."

Wow, I thought. I didn't think it was possible to be taphysically centrist, but she's kind of pulling it off.

"Anyway, never mind that for now," Kam continued. "Let's roll that back instead to the last ti we can mutually agree we saw one another, or rather that we both last saw the versions of ourselves that stand before one another now. The dinner of the second night, when we were talking about our presentations."

I nodded slowly. "...okay. Okay, I think I can do that."

"So, what do you want to say?"

"Um."

I glanced around.

"I an," I continued reluctantly. "I guess you were right. It actually was possible to beco immortal."

She looked oddly at for a mont, then burst out laughing, almost dropping the popsicle.

"It's not that funny," I protested, annoyed. "I an, the stuff I was saying about narratives is still true for most people."

She looked back at , even as she continued to giggle uncontrollably. "Su, I don't care about that! I'm not looking for you to concede a pedantic argunt we had a lifeti ago." She leaned in closer, her eyes bright. "I want to know what you're feeling!"

I leaned backwards instinctively. "Feeling about what?"

"About everything!" She flung her arms outwardly. "Look at where we are, Su!"

"The beach?" I said, feeling like I needed to play into the bit even if I sort of saw where this was going.

"Not the bloody beach!" she replied with a scoff. "Elysium! The end of the universe! A place of infinite potential, infinite understanding, infinite everything, free from fear and misery!" Her eyes were wide, and even as she continued to smile widely she sohow started to look very serious.

No, 'serious' doesn't quite describe it. There was a vividness in her eyes I saw all of a sudden, almost the opposite of the quiet, tired ease that I'd first noticed in the City and now observed in almost everyone in Dilmun, or the outright nihilism I'd seen in Nahmi earlier and witnessed flickers of in Bardiya and Nora. It was a like a hunger, ravenous, that given space had only grown exponentially larger. She looked more her than I'd ever seen her, equal parts naively idealistic and carnivorously selfish.

It was kind of scary, honestly.

"Su, a few weeks ago - at least as you recall it - you were living a normal life, out there. Weren't you?"

I nodded. "Yeah."

"What were you doing?"

"Uh." I wasn't sure how much of my embarrassing personal ltdown I wanted to reveal to Kam. "I was living on Deshur, between jobs. Mostly just playing a lot of echo gas."

"And now you're here."

"Y-Yeah."

"I'm asking how that makes you feel," she pressed. "Of having been uplifted like this, to a state so much has beco possible! You had a tiny taste of it today, even."

"The roleplay, you an?"

"Yes!" She hesitated. "Well, sowhat. The sort of thing you can do in a day is rather limited, but-- Still, a different life! And that was only the tip-of-the-tip of the iceberg, the first grain of snow closest to the clouds."

"I an, it was fun." I scratched my head. I didn't want to get into an argunt about what I felt about 'different lives'. "But... I dunno. So far life here just seems like it was in the Remaining World, just with, I dunno, better technology and food. And a bunch of disturbing cultural practices." I frowned uncomfortably. "I still can't really believe I'm stuck here."

"Stuck here." Kamrusepa withdraw slightly, her brow twisting even as her lips remained upturned. "You've been here for how long?"

"Coming up on three weeks, I suppose."

"And what have you done, in that ti? How much did you see before you ca to the Crossroads?"

"Barely anything," I answered. "I woke up in the Magilum, which was weird, but they kicked out almost right away. And since then I've mostly just been hanging out in Ptolema's house. I went to see Neferuaten at the, uh, artificial death place, went to this bookstore, went to a few restaurants--"

"Oh, no," she cut off in a furtive tone, her arms crossed. "This is no bloody good."

"What's no bloody good?" I asked, confused.

"No one's trying to help you understand, Su! "

"Understand what?"

"What's happened to you! How far you're above what you used to be, how far we both are, in this mont!" She almost started shouting for a mont; a couple people passing by looked our way. "That there's-- That there's this banquet, this incredible thing laid out for you, bigger than you can possibly even imagine, and now there's nothing stopping you from reaching and taking it! They're just dragging you down into they're ridiculous little self-obsessed mires, just like everyone else in this ruddy pit!" She ran her free hands across her face. "Ugh, good God, I can't even put it all into words!"

"Uh, you're kind of freaking out, Kam," I said nervously.

Her hand dropped, her gaze once again eting mine sharply. "You can't move between Domains, but they can't stop you from Spectating," she said. She stood upright, composing herself. "Take my hand."

"O-Okay."

I reached out, and held it.

And then I saw everything.

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Thegoodnews:Likeotherluckyonesinnovelsandfanfics,PeterinexplicablytransitionedtotheOne-PieceworldandobtainedtheSaiyanbloodline.Thebadnews:Toincreas...

Walker Of The Worlds cover
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Walker Of The Worlds

Grandvoiddaoist ·Action

LinMuwasacommonboylivinginasmalltown,ostracizedbythetownsmenbecauseofamistakehemadeduringtheharvest,hishouseseizedtocompensateforit.Forcedtofendfor...

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