XaiJu
Foxmoor Fiction
Foxmoor Fiction

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SSD 4.29 - Wheel of the Heavens

October has passed by and now November is here. Happy Thursday and Happy Third Day. Hope everyone had a Happy Halloween and a great Day of the Dead. If you haven't had a chance to watch the movie Coco, I sincerely recommend it.

Fall has decided to skip here this year. We went straight from summer to winter. Still have some trees with green leaves, and about a half a foot of snow. And we are expecting more snow next week.

Hope everyone is enjoying where ever they are.


Love knows not distance; it hath no continent; its eyes are for the stars.

-Gilbert Parker

==Zidaun==

We eventually made it through the hallway and the new transportation system the dungeon had added in. We did a quick check of the other doors we could access and they had all been changed too. If the portals weren’t in a safe zone, I would have been more reluctant to trust them at all. As it was, I carefully tossed some objects between the rings of emblems embedded into the wall.

The amount of folerth in the walls made me want to shake my head. I was certain at least a few idiots were going to get themselves killed trying to retrieve it. Anyone stupid enough to mess with an active emblem deserved the death that would almost inevitably follow. That was especially true when that emblem was part of a portal. Most emblem specialists put special precautions to strengthen and protect any emblem in an accessible location. That wasn’t to protect wandering idiots, but instead prevent the emblem from damage. Idiots were an iron bit a dozen, folerth was valuable.

We had only given the dungeon a single messenger capsule. And it was only a little bit of time ago, at that. Had it developed portals from that? If so, it was truly monstrous. A smile flickered at the edge of my mouth as worshipful thoughts moved through my mind. It was proving to be a worthy god indeed.

After our longer than expected diversion we emerged back into the grotto.

We trudged over the stone, the unforgiving floor pushing back hard against our weary steps. Our footfalls were swallowed by the darkness, the sound fading into nothing. We were tired, not in body, but in spirit. The others were quieter than usual. I presumed they were contemplating the revelations I had offered. For myself, the emotional whiplash had been more than sufficient.

I was lost in my own thoughts when I felt a wave of mana sweep through the room.

“Mana is moving,” I said.

A moment later, I didn’t bother to speak more, because the effect was obvious. The grotto has always carried the facsimile of a night sky. It might lack Yamash, but otherwise the stars were recreated with a certain degree of fidelity. There is, however, a substantial difference between a good approximation and perfection.

And now, it was perfect.

The sky rippled as the perfect blackness between points of light gave way to the true deep blue-black of the night. Stars twinkled with light, each a slightly different shade.

Wind blew through the cavern, the deep darkness remaining, but subtly lightened by the ambient light of the heavens. The wind was brisk, and it carried the scents of far off greenery. The faint perfume of distance blooms perfumed the air. The shifting of the wind felt natural, each breeze slightly different in direction or intensity, interspersed with the occasional moment of calm.

Whereas the unnatural atmosphere of the grotto before had been beautiful but unnatural, now it carried the peace of a brisk Thaw night. The darkness was no longer faintly stifling, an unnoticed weight had been lifted off my shoulders.

“That was unexpected,” I said, my voice light.

“More art, huh?” Gurek muttered.

“Looks like it,” Inda said, her voice bemused. “This place really is different.”

Firi’s gaze still lay on the heavens as he spoke. “I wonder why it doesn’t have Yamash?”

I frowned, “I’m not sure. Maybe it was too difficult to make that part of the illusion. Or maybe excluding them makes it clear that it is an illusion. Not that we would forget, but new people might not realize when they first enter.”

“You’ll be here,” Firi said, “under this sky, in the various fake environments, seeing to your people? Will you get to see the real thing often, or ever?”

I cleared my throat.

“Not here, lets talk back at the base,” I said.

We didn’t hurry, our footsteps carried us forward slowly over the bare stone. The columnar lights to the side of the path contrasted against the new sky. Each of us enjoyed the silent starry splendor in our own way.

Gurek and I took some time to ourselves in one of the lounge areas downstairs. The windows were open, the shutters pushed outward and the curtains fluttering gently in the occasional breeze. Each of us faced the other, our chairs close. Our hands reached out to touch.

“As the leader here, I don’t expect to get outside all that often,” I said. “Usually, how much an Ancient, our title for the leader, manages to get outside is directly proportional to how deep the dungeon is buried. This dungeon is buried quite deep indeed. I might be called on to deal with the inevitable settlements that will form around the dungeon’s entrances, but that will just be at first.”

I look out the window. My heart is heavy, even as I feel gratitude.

“I didn’t expect even this much,” I said. “I’m honestly glad to have it. This is close to a real sky as I could hope for. And the dungeon is massive. We already found a section of wilderness, just in the first area. Not every area will be as nice.”

“Like the sewers,” Firi muttered, his eyebrows lifted with a smile.

“Ha, yeah. Even those were beautiful though, at least after we got past the beginning.” I said. “I am sure more wild areas will show up. And, when I’m not actually delving, I can probably get the monsters to ignore me. There are sure to be even more wonderful places. I am luckier with this dungeon than I had any right to expect.”

“Why does it have to be you?” He said, looking at me earnestly, squeezing my hand gently. “You don’t need to stay. Stick around a bit, then when your people show up tell them what you know. Stick around longer and delve with us if you want… but only if you want to. Someone else can be the Ancient. I know you have your duty, but why does it mean all of your life is sacrificed. There is more to life. I… can put everything else aside though. If you want me to, I will stay with you.”

My heart broke, just a little. My eyes grew watery.

“I…” My voice broke a little and I cleared my throat. “I would like that, very much.”

His face rose in hope and I hurried to interrupt him.

“However. However, I can’t promise anything. I have my duty to my people and my god. Faith is what drives me. It compels me. My people come first. I came here first. I made the first connection. You saw how it transformed me. It might be possible for us to be together, though.”

Normally I wouldn’t be able to even hope for that. I was sure that Gurek could understand why faith moved me. His own dedication to Shurum had influenced his class. Now though, my faith, burning inside me like a constant fire, might not conflict with what I wanted for myself. A normal dungeon wouldn’t care. Most wouldn’t understand my feelings at all. Caden might though. He understood people better than I would have ever believed. Exsan, seemed like a normal dungeon, so I had no idea how that would affect things.

“It all comes down to what the dungeon wants,” I said softly. “Normally they would prioritize duty, but Caden might understand.”

“I can’t say I have ever understood why you worship dungeons,” Firi said, one side of his lips twisted into a smirk, “but I will be happy enough to offer some prayers to this one. It would be a small price to pay for something as divine as you.”

Words were soon lost to kisses. Each of us breathlessly panting into the cold air beneath the slowly moving stars.

==Caden==

Most skills provided knowledge when they leveled up, but Environmental Immersionwas proving to be the first skill that provided situational knowledge. If I gained a level in anything else I might get the equivalent of muscle memory, techniques, symbols and meanings, etc… I was still working through what I had gained by learning Metallurgy.

Environmental Immersionwas giving me knowledge as I needed it. It started when I applied it to the Starlight Grotto. I suddenly knew how to improve the feeling I was was going for. I knew how to alter the randomization to produce a more natural breeze. How to synthesize tiny random fragments of air to place smells onto the wind. I knew to change the color of the sky away from the pure blackness into the tiniest bit of light to replicate the feeling of the night.

All this and more flowed through my head. And I had the feeling that there were far more tiny details buried beneath the surface. My ability to implement changes would no doubt improve as I gained levels in the skill.

And, once I had gone as far as the skill would take me, I pushed further and an illusion imposed itself over my own work. The skill streamlined everything I had added and incorporated its own. The sky, formerly frozen forever, began to turn producing a slowly shifting kaleidoscope of stars, replicating the normal turning of the heavens. Though, here in the Starlight Grotto, the sun would never rise.

The meadow gave me far more information. Apparently I didn’t know much about soil depths, drainage patterns, and where different soil types were appropriate. Shifting those around only took time. Adding in new animals and insects from my substantially enlarged collection was easy enough as well.The skill also directed me in painting distant mountains and clouds upon the walls of the cave. I could feel it as the skill interfaced with my new artistic skill to produce better results. In the end, I pushed again to shift the static images into a living environment.

I repeated this for each environment that I had created. Each one was refined and then overlaid with an illusion to make them more than I was capable of making on my own.

I had already worked hard to make each area feel real, and that was reflected by the skill. From the beginning, I could feel the illusion waiting. However, I could also tell that the illusion would be better if the environment was closer to what I wanted. I wasn’t entirely sure what better meant, in this case, but I had plenty of mana stored away, so shifting some pieces around wasn’t something that worried me very much.

There was something peaceful about the process of creation. Plus, I was actually learning a lot. I learned the types of soils various types of trees preferred to grow in. How close they usually were to their neighbors, whether they formed groves with entangled roots or stood alone with roots protruding deep into the earth to serve as an anchor. I learned about weather patterns and incorporated them into how my environments functions. The temperatures, precipitation, and other weather of each area was now properly set up; rain would fall, and wind would blow.

There was no proper change between day and night in any of my areas, yet. I actually had a good idea of how to implement that, but I didn’t actually want every area to have a day and night cycle. The Wandering Wood would always be some variation of twilight, depending on what section you were in. My underground areas were not necessarily exposed to daylight patterns either, though some had shafts of light showing from the “surface.”

I had a feeling that implementing larger changes, like days and nights, was exactly how I would level up the skill in the future. I suppose that was true of any skill I had. The way to make progress was to go beyond what I could already do easily, and try new things.

Comments

his artistic capabilities grow ever greater

abowden

"Gurek and I took some time to ourselves" wait? What? I thought it was firi and Zidaun?

lysixa

Loving the story good work man.

Lillow Lynx

That was a good skill to get. And nice to know Zidaun might be happy here, or just will support Caden a tone.

ZCochraine!%


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