Chapter 220 - The Dazzler
Added 2024-08-16 01:42:32 +0000 UTCSebastien
Month 8, Day 28, Saturday 5:30 a.m.
Saturday morning, before the sun rose, Sebastien walked out to the Flats. Professor Lacer had asked her to meet him there in class the day before, and she didn’t know why. ‘Best case scenario, he wants to assess my progress on the three transmutable substances he assigned. Slightly worse, he wants to test my capacity with the Henrik-Thompson—though I’m not sure why he would have us meet on the Flats for that. Worst case scenario, he’s deduced something else about my connection to the Raven Queen and wants me away from any important buildings to mitigate destructive repercussions.’
Sebastien’s mind continued to spin up increasingly unlikely horrible scenarios. ‘What if he wants to have a meeting with Sebastien and the Raven Queen in the same room together?’
The way to the Flats was empty. Distant sounds from the land and sea below mixed into an almost inaudible sigh, but otherwise the night was silent and still.
Professor Lacer met her at the end of the pathway with a nod of acknowledgement, and she followed him up the pathway of white stone and across the obstacle-course laden Flats to the northern edge of the white cliffs. The stars above reflected off the placid surface of the lake below, which continued on through the base of the white cliffs before running out into the Gulf as well as fueling the city’s canals.
Without preamble, Professor Lacer said, “It is difficult to keep a secret. Most people do not realize how difficult, and they fail to keep them so commonly that failure is almost a social expectation—what one might call ‘gossip.’” He gave lips pursed with distaste. “But when they have an important secret, one they must ensure does not get out, many people find themselves without the tools to make that possible.”
Professor Lacer didn’t seem like he was building up to some big trap or revelation. In fact, his tone was more akin to one of his in-class lectures. Sebastien squinted. “A secrecy spell? Or a compulsion to avoid specific, related topics?”
Professor Lacer let out a huff of amusement. “That is an option, of course, and not just to bind others to secrecy. But not only is that magical field illegal to the masses, those kinds of spells have restrictions and downsides that I find…unpleasant. I much prefer to maintain personal control of my own mind.”
“Me, too,” Sebastien decided immediately.
“To keep a secret properly, it is best if you are the only one who knows. As is famously said, ‘Two may keep counsel, putting one away.’ Or, more colloquially, ‘if one of them is dead.’ Unfortunately for you, at least three people know your secret.” He looked at her pointedly.
Sebastien nodded slowly. ‘Professor Lacer, the Raven Queen, and Sebastien Siverling all “know” that I might be descended from Myrddin. But really, he’s the only one who thinks that. I really hope that is the secret he’s talking about.’
“When you have a real secret, not some little piece of gossip or an embarrassing skeleton in your cupboard, you must act as if you didn’t know it. Not just in action, but also in thought. It is extremely easy to slip and provide tiny clues to the truth without realizing it. When you come across information regarding your secret, you will automatically make conclusions, but you must act as if you hadn’t. You will need to simulate a self who does not know. If the secret were entangled with many different parts of your life or affects different people in different ways, you would need to maintain the causality of two or more different realities. This…is harder than you might think, but a strong Will can help. In fact, holding contradictory information in the mind and simulating either side as truth is one of the ways the Red Guard has experimented with increasing the soundness and force of the Will.”
Sebastien practiced this in some ways. It was why she used different names for different identities, even in her own mind. But she doubted she managed to reach the level of self-hypnotization that Professor Lacer was talking about. ‘It is good advice. If I had been capable of that from the very beginning, it might have changed a lot. But it doesn’t fix the risks associated with having to switch frequently between identities. It would work better for long-term, deep-cover Red Guard assignments.’
“You must also guard against your own impulses to share more than you should. I imagine you can think of several times that you’ve had a personal secret and felt the strong urge to divulge that secret to someone else?”
For some reason, the first memory that sprouted to life in Sebastien’s mind was a memory of looking at Ennis’s back as he hurried to throw rucksacks filled with their belongings into the back of a wagon. They needed to leave before the sun rose, for both of their safety. Siobhan had stood in the road, her eyes stinging and her throat stiff. ‘Father, you’re hurting me,’ had sounded in her head, as clear as if she had spoken it.
But she didn’t. Not then, and not later, when similar things happened again and again. Occasionally, and especially as she got older, she got angry and let scathing accusations and verbal assaults meant to wound him in return spill from her tongue.
But never that small, vulnerable plea for him to see what should be so obvious. For him to care.
Sebastien swallowed and looked down at the heavens reflected below. Even considering that memory was a lack of proper compartmentalization, according to Professor Lacer. She was Sebastien now.
She had wanted to tell Damien parts of the truth several times. She had even idly considered coming clean to Professor Lacer and relying on whatever aid he could provide.
“It is a natural impulse for us to want to share with others. But consider, even when you are the one who would directly bear the consequences if your secret were known, you still feel the urge to tell others. Any person you share your secret with has that same inborn desire to share, and they will not have the same inherent motivation to remain silent. Nor can you trust that they are able to reliably model a world in which they do not know.”
Professor Lacer sighed. “Unfortunately, a lecture such as this does little to help you learn the depths and nuances of the art of secret-keeping, which is not my true expertise. Instead, we are here so that I can give you two resources that may help you if you face similar danger again and cannot rely on the kindness of random strangers who happen to be passing by to save you.”
Sebastien perked up with interest.
“Here is the first.” Professor Lacer held his hands in front of him, forefingers and thumbs touching in a lopsided Circle, with his palms angled outward. He spoke softly, adding long a pause between each statement that made his words sound like poetry.
“From luminous whispers,
Dancing stars weave dreams of light,
And shattering radiance blooms,
Defiant against the night.”
As he spoke, the esoteric spell gathered power, with tiny motes of light that looked like dust-sized fireflies converging to the center. They disappeared into a tiny black dot.
When Professor Lacer had finished speaking, he paused, then thrust his palms forward. The space contained between his hands grew entirely black, but from the other side burst a green light so bright that even the part that refracted around the sides of his palms and through the flesh of his fingers left spots in Sebastien’s eyes. She could see the path the light traveled highlighted in the particles of dust and water in the air for a long, long way.
Professor Lacer released the spell and lowered his hands. “This spell is called the dazzler. I have cast a weak and somewhat undirected example for better theatrical effect. It is used by the army’s special forces as well as the Red Guard, but is not illegal for civilians to know, as long as you can defend your use of it after the fact. Sometimes, small, versatile tricks can be surprisingly useful.”
Siobhan blinked several times to clear the lingering red blotches in her eyes.
“You can create any color of light, or even, with more advanced application, a strobe light that cycles between several colors. The green has a few advantages. If you keep the power low, that color will not do permanent harm to the human eye. So you can use it on people who you only suspect to be an enemy, or if there are friendlies or innocents in the direction you are beaming the light. At high power, you can and will permanently blind people who do not have access to magical healing. The green is well suited to penetrating atmospheric haze or smoke, if you needed to use it to light the way in the dark or through a battlefield. However, it is highly noticeable, which can be a boon if you are hoping to use it as a signal, or a liability if you require stealth. For you, however, the green has a very compelling feature, and that is how little power it requires to seem bright.”
“The human eye is most sensitive to green light,” Sebastien said, reciting a piece of trivia from Professor Gnorrish’s class.
“Indeed. I know you are familiar with one or two other esoteric spells, but this will likely be the most complicated and difficult one you have ever attempted. Usually, I would not attempt to teach it to a student below fourth term, perhaps even fifth, but I believe you will grasp the concepts. You are skilled with light-based spells and have a rare understanding of transmogrification.”
Sebastien grinned giddily and bounced on her toes a few times to bleed off some of her sudden, heady excitement.
Professor Lacer gave her a stern look. “Focus.”
“I am.”
He huffed, but his eyes held a hint of amusement. “The chant can be repeated as many times as you want to build up power, but I recommend you limit yourself to once until you are completely certain your Will can handle a second repetition, and so forth. As you gain proficiency with the spell, you may gather more power in the space of a single chant, so gauge your level of effort carefully.
“This is a partially transmogrification-based spell. You might have wondered how I was able to create such a large amount of light while seemingly gathering so little. Part of the explanation is that the spell absorbs heat as well as light. If you are casting it without loss, it will also absorb the sound of your voice. But part of what makes it seem so bright is that it exudes not just visible light, but also the concept of light.”
Sebastien recalled the spell’s chant and looked up at the sky. “Does it have something to do with the stars? Does this spell only work when it’s dark?”
“You seldom disappoint,” Professor Lacer said mildly.
The words sent a gentle rush of satisfaction through Sebastien.
“This spell works best at night, under a clear sky where the stars can be seen. That is why I spent several hours before your arrival casting a far-reaching weather spell to ensure optimal conditions.”
Sebastien stared at Professor Lacer, who didn’t even seem to be bragging, and then looked up at the sky again. This time, the complete lack of clouds, the clarity of the air, and the lack of wind took on new meaning. Weather spells—effective ones—were a thing of legend. It required an immense amount of power to control the world on such scale. “Isn’t that…illegal?” Weather spells, cast poorly, could also have disastrous consequences. Only a few thaumaturges were licensed to cast them, and generally as a relief effort to stave off famine. And according to the newspapers she had been reading lately, even that was controversial.
He gave her a wry smile. “I was careful not to get caught. There were only going to be a few clouds, anyway, so the change was not too drastic.”
Sebastien wondered if it would be rude to ask his thaumic capacity. ‘Well, of course it’s rude,’ she realized. ‘But he can just refuse to tell me. He’s not the type to get hung up on social norms and niceties.’
She asked, and Professor Lacer raised one amused eyebrow at her and continued with his lecture instead of answering. “It can still be cast under other conditions, but you will struggle to output as strong a light compared to the amount of effort you spend gathering power. Now, an explanation of the exact mechanisms behind how this spell works is generally reserved for a few lectures in the higher levels of my Practical Casting course, but I think we can sum it up with something you will understand.” He paused, and then said, “It is the mind that sees light. The eyes are only there to send signals.”
Sebastien’s eyes widened slowly as the implications hit her. Before her thoughts could spiral off into the sparkling web of connected possibilities this had revealed to her, Professor Lacer continued.
“It is best if you come up with your own imagery for the spell, but as you cast it, you will want to focus on the idea of luminous whispers, dancing stars, dreams of light. Add to that a shattering radiance, which I have just demonstrated for you. Take your time to consider it, and when you are ready, attempt a low-power casting. Do not worry about the color, but do keep in mind the shield of darkness behind the directed light, as well as the fact that it should go forward from where you aim and not scatter off in every direction.”
Sebastien closed her eyes and pulled up memories of watching the aurora during her childhood on the Northern Islands, the dancing fire-familiar that she and her friends had watched atop a roof, and a play she had seen once that featured someone’s idea of the Radiant Maiden, along with a dozen other potential memories.
When she was ready, she placed her hands in position, spoke the chant, and did her best not to get distracted by the hovering pane of half-darkness that Professor Lacer cast to cover both of their faces.
When Sebastien thrust her hands out, a bright white light flared from her palms. It was not as coherent or strong as Professor Lacer’s, but he still nodded in satisfaction and allowed his shield to drop. “Passable. Try again.”
An hour later, the horizon was lightening and she was able to cast the spell in half the time it had originally taken, and at the specific frequency of green that he had demonstrated. It processed about half of the sound from her voice, enough heat to make her fingers ache, and had a piercing feel to it that spoke of cutting past defenses and burning out vulnerabilities.
Professor Lacer judged her skill sufficient, and warned her to wear eye protection when practicing without him, until she got better at reducing any spillover light. “If you ever need to use this spell but hope to keep low-light visibility, use red light instead of green. At low enough output, a single repetition of the chant will be enough to power the light for several minutes. You will want to adjust your imagery to support that purpose,” he reminded her. “Now, for the second contingency.”
Professor Lacer reached into his breast pocket and pulled out a badly tarnished copper crown—likely a forgery of some sort, as legitimate coins were formulated to be resistant against environmental damage. “This is an artifact which you can use to signal me in an emergency. Twist it like so,” he demonstrated, revealing a seam right down the middle and leaving the copper crown half tails, half heads.
He twisted it back and handed it to her. “It works on sympathetic principles, but it is strong enough to overpower the Raven Queen’s boon and many other types of barriers. If you activate it, I will prioritize locating and saving you. When should you activate it?” he asked, staring at her with narrowed eyes.
“Only in the direst of emergencies?”
“No!”
Sebastian blinked.
“You should activate it whenever you believe yourself to be in significant danger that you would have moderate trouble extracting yourself from on your own. This includes legal trouble, such as being arrested. Your sense of a ‘dire emergency’ is so skewed that you might hesitate to contact me when facing down a dragon in single combat.”
Sebastien opened her mouth to protest, but closed it as Professor Lacer’s scowl grew even more thunderous.
His tone softened. “I will not be angry if you use it and it turns out your life was not in danger.”
Sebastien’s fingers tightened tentatively around the coin. She was aware that it could be a tracking device as much as a method to call for aid. She was also aware of what it meant that Professor Lacer would allow her to inconvenience him so. A mix of warmth and wariness battled in her stomach.
Before leaving the Flats, Sebastien took advantage of the opportunity to demonstrate her progress with transmuting the items he had given her. She was able to weave the spider silk in several different patterns, and even had some immediate control over its color, though she couldn’t do anything bright. She created a single strip of silk about two inches wide, depicting some stylistic herons and water lilies and using four different weaving patterns, including one that mimicked embroidery.
Professor Lacer took it, ran his thumb over the surface and examined the design in the rising light of the sun, then shoved the strip in his pocket and stared at her expectantly.
The scab-root came next. She made it as pretty as possible, leaving a fist-sized tuber that looked more like a potato than a dozen oozing wounds that had dried over.
Professor Lacer cut through it with a slicing spell, instantly steam-cooked it, and after what she assumed to be a diagnostic divination, took a bite. He didn’t even grimace, but her mouth watered in sympathetic disgust.
“I don’t know any way to make them taste palatable.”
“You can’t. Better to make them tasteless by cutting off the signals from your tongue to your brain. I have a spell for that, but you would probably be better off with a potion.”
Finally, she transmuted a cluster of diamonds from a twig, a piece of the white cliffs, and some water from the canteen in her bag. To show off, she even transmuted a diamond the size of a piece of sand from the air.
After examining all four, Professor Lacer put the diamonds in his pocket, too. “What are these exercises useful for?”
“Survival,” she replied immediately. “Even if I am dropped naked in the middle of nowhere and left for dead, as long as I have enough time to make a diamond, I will survive.”
“And with what will you make that diamond?”
“Celerium is best, but if you can restrict yourself to a few thaums at a time, anything can be used as a conduit. Even a random twig.” She picked one up and waved it at him. “I’d say I could channel at least twenty thaums without destroying it. My control is probably my strongest point, and I can easily restrict myself to that. The wood will start steaming and popping before it explodes, so I’d even have a warning if I were to get sloppy. Which I wouldn’t.”
“Good,” Professor Lacer said simply. “You have met my expectations for this term. Now go off and study for the exams or something,” he said, shooing her away.
Sebastien did that for a few hours, but then left the University and went through the whole hours-long process of multiple transformations. The tarnished copper crown remained in Sebastien’s bag, where she had left it.
As a heavily disguised Siobhan, she finally arrived at Liza’s house.
The woman had been working on Siobhan’s side to expand the sleep-proxy from one raven to many, which involved a large amount of math that Siobhan didn’t understand. She wanted Siobhan to spend more time helping—not as a thaumaturge, but as a research assistant who would examine, care for, and log the health of the ravens, from which they could estimate the efficiency of the spell design.
Siobhan hesitated. Transforming from Sebastien into Siobhan was dangerous, and she wanted to avoid doing it more frequently than necessary. But she had to be the Raven Queen to help Professor Lacer—in this body, better said “to help Thaddeus”—decrypt Myrddin’s other journals. She could help Liza if it coincided with times she already needed to be Siobhan. And over the two months of Harvest Break, she would be less pressured to transform back into Sebastien so frequently. “I can only come certain times.”
Liza found this barely acceptable, and after helping Siobhan to re-cast her sleep-proxy spell with a fresh sleeper raven, was in a sniping, grumpy mood as they left her house and hailed a carriage to take them to their true destination.
The shaman that Liza worked with at the Retreat at Willowdale had agreed to meet “Amelia” again and help her answer some sensitive, perhaps less-than-legal questions to do with shamanry.
He lived above a small shop that sold magical trinkets as well as spices and teas. A sign above the door mentioned making appointments with the shaman for “a reading,” so presumably he had some sort of collaborative arrangement with the shop owner.
Liza nodded at an aproned man through the window, then went around to the back of the building and up the stairs there. She knocked several times, checked her pocket watch to make sure they had arrived at the right time, and then reached down to try the handle.
It opened easily. Liza’s frown deepened, but she stepped through the doorway into the gloom within, and Siobhan followed.
“Renaldo?” Liza called. A kettle was sitting atop the stove, but was long burned dry and the heated metal was starting to leave a strange, faint smell in the air.
While Liza turned off the stove, Siobhan pushed aside the beaded curtain into the small living room. Her breath caught in her throat and she stiffened, arching backward as her body half-tried to jump away.
The shaman was sitting in an armchair.
He was staring right at her. Or at least one of his eyes was. The other was looking off in another direction entirely. His sclera were blood-red, and blood and brain fluid had leaked from his nose, staining his chin and the flamboyant, bright robes beneath.
The skin of his face sagged strangely, and his mouth hung open, revealed a pale, swollen-looking tongue that seemed to want to spill out from between his lips.
Siobhan backed up as silently as she could, grabbed Liza’s arm, and whispered to the other woman, “He’s dead.”
Author note: Woof! This chapter took a really long time to write, and I still think it could be improved, but I'm not sure how, yet. I'm just going to drop it here and stumble off.
Would you guys find it useful if I put the various posts in Collections, in addition to tagging them?
Comments
There is an earlier episode where was teaching her something and knew it would take her months to achieve and she did it immediately? He callled her a monster mentally but in a good way. Can’t Remember the chapter. I really really want to read the chapter when he finds out she is the Raven Queen.
thomas lueckenhoff
2024-08-29 19:46:24 +0000 UTCAh so disgusting but contains everything needed to survive Thank you <3
Tjolbin
2024-08-21 22:06:11 +0000 UTCThe root was explained so long ago, you possibly just forgot: <blockquote> But these specific items were special. The scab-root, so aptly named, came from a mountainous area on the far west coast, south of the equator. The plant killed all but the most tenacious of competitors simply by sucking up so many of the nutrients that were needed to survive. If not for how slow-growing it was, it would have been a devastatingly efficient invasive species. It sent out its ugly, knobby roots a long way before sprouting up another plant, and it was endangered because everyone hated it. It apparently tasted disgusting…but it had almost every single nutrient someone would need to survive. If one could supplement their diet with even small amounts of animal fats and proteins, they could live off scab-root indefinitely. </blockquote> <blockquote>They might lose weight because of how disgusting it was, but they would survive.</blockquote>
JKlarinet
2024-08-21 21:54:02 +0000 UTCStrong Daddeus vibes in this chapter, i love it The essential survivalist spells are super cool, does the potato-thing taste bad because of its magical creation or because they just taste like that? In that case, why that fruit in particular?
Tjolbin
2024-08-19 23:05:39 +0000 UTCI guess it just made sense to me why he’d want Sebastien to have an esoteric spell that couldn’t be taken away like an artefact and which could be used as a signal flare or to blind enemies long enough to get away. Obviously, this is a spell that gets more powerful the more power you put into it (high powered lasers vs low powered lasers). He also gave her an artefact that can call him for help but if that gets taken away before activation a massive green beam is a good hint if he has to go searching for his wayward apprentice.
Hannah
2024-08-17 10:50:00 +0000 UTCIsn’t it possible to channel without a conduit as well if you really need to, especially with the naught bloodline. For example to create an extremely small conduit which you could then make a larger one with.
FuriousDee
2024-08-16 22:55:32 +0000 UTCSo there is a difference between sunlight and single wavelength laser light - the sun's peak emission is actually in green wavelengths. There is a nice article at https://bigthink.com/starts-with-a-bang/what-color-is-the-sun/ . However, the military is using green lasers. I did some digging and found "First of all, green laser light at the same power is 5x-7x brighter than other colors. So, you get greater visibility at equal power levels and at lower power consumption. That gives someone on the ground more available time to use a laser on a single charge." at https://biglasers.com/blog/2021/07/01/what-qualifies-as-a-military-grade-laser/#:~:text=First%20of%20all%2C%20green%20laser,completing%20a%20mission%20or%20exercise. and also "The wavelength of most green lasers (532 nm) is close to the eye’s peak sensitivity when they are dark-adapted. A green laser may appear as much as 35 times brighter than a red laser of equal power output[xii]." at https://www.revisionmilitary.com/en/revisions-lazrbloc-gf-8-lenses-case-study#:~:text=The%20wavelength%20of%20most%20green,even%20temporary%20effects%20is%20intensified.
Melinda Hutson
2024-08-16 20:44:38 +0000 UTCEdit: I started this comment several hours ago, finished it, and then realized Azalea already replied. SO, I was without the benefit of her reasoning when I wrote it: As I have understood it from physics classes, the reason the light we see is useful to us (and therefore adapted to vision) relates to the fact this part of the spectrum is the greater part that reflects off objects (and is primarily the spectrum emitted by our star). Go much farther into the violet and the radiation passes through it; go much farther into the infared and everything glows or is blurry. Radio waves are so big, they bounce off the atmosphere, may be interfered with by heat, and basically require larger detectors. As for the most damaging light, it should be UV light; welding masks remove that light - often with green-tinted lenses. As for illegal, I think that’s the point exactly; the spell gives the sensation of bright light without actually generating harmful amounts of light.
JKlarinet
2024-08-16 19:35:52 +0000 UTCThanks everyone, I appreciate your feedback. I can see that several logical inferences and such that were clear in my own mind weren't communicated in a straightforward enough manner, leaving people guessing about why this spell would be the response to Thaddeus learning about the kidnapping attempt, and indeed what this spell is meant for. I'll update things in my next iteration pass, likely adding quite a bit of text as a result. (Remember, chapters are updated on my website, 95% of the time the Patreon version remains the original version.) But esoteric spells are the closest you can get to free-casting, and as a free-caster, Thaddeus has a rather strong disdain for the actual usefulness of artifacts. Sure, they are powerful and versatile, but once they are removed from your person, if you were dependent on an artifact, you are useless. This spell, along with the three transmutable items, are things that can be done when all else is lost, with zero external resources or components (except for a Conduit of some sort.) There's lots more to be said about this spell, but I'll leave it for iteration.
Azalea Ellis
2024-08-16 18:14:15 +0000 UTCCarrie, I chose green because that is what the military uses for their high powered lazers when they don't want to cause permanent harm. Supposedly it reacts less harmfully with the human eye. The dazzler is based on the actual real-world dazzlers and adjacent light weapons from our world. I wasn't able to find super in-depth information about how and why that specific green is supposed to have those properties, but if they use it because of cost or ease of engineering rather than true "best" for that purpose, I'd be happy to be corrected. They use similar green lazers for other reasons, like it being a color that stands out against both natural and man-made backgrounds, but I didn't want to go on and on info-dumping about the green. And yes, this spell has a very limited ability to change the brain's interpretation of light. I can see from several comments that people felt like they were missing things, so I think I need another iteration pass of this chapter to smooth out logical jumps and conclusions that were obvious to me in my own mind, but perhaps not in the text.
Azalea Ellis
2024-08-16 18:02:31 +0000 UTCHi Carrie, you should be able to hold shift while pressing enter to move onto a new line without immediately posting. I'm not going to venture onto the colour of light as I am not informed enough on the topic to make a sensible contribution. I'm hopeful that the mechanics of colour in this regard are explained further as the story/Siobhan's expertise with the spell progress.
Nytram12
2024-08-16 16:53:49 +0000 UTCYes, my point is closer to what Keid is saying, Hannah has good points too.
Leonardo Krieck
2024-08-16 16:22:24 +0000 UTCI do agree somewhat, but to me it isn't so much that an esoteric light spell isn't enough, it's more that it isn't made as clear as I would like what advantages the dazzler spell has over the other tools that Siobhan has access to. In terms of pure energy expenditure, it doesn't really take too much to blind a person, especially relative to other feats the RQ has achieved with magic, and what she is probably carrying on her power in terms of available beast cores. What is keeping her from enacting a similar, purely transmutation-based with a pre-drawn circle in her spell rod? She has also used the light crystals in cheap novelty drink coasters to great effect, what keeps her from just buying a larger, higher quality light crystal and just using it as a tool directly, requiring no chant? Either the downsides for these other methods should be made clear in her thoughts, or, preferably, Lacer should just explicitly spell out what I think he is sort of getting at: That this spell allows you a legal means of enacting minor memetic effects. If, in some subjects, with the right application of power, the spell has a chance of dazing someone in a way that wipes out the last few seconds of short term memory? That's priceless and isn't something she has any other way of doing. If it can leave someone in a daze for minutes or hours after, until someone shakes them out of it? That is similarly valuable. If he can't spell out these usages due to some oath that prevents him from teaching mind altering magics, then he might use such oaths as an example of what he dislikes earlier in the conversation. Or maybe he can slip in a little warning that at high enough power, it can even do permanent harm to the mind and/or brain of a target, so great care must be taken. That could serve as a bit of foreshadowing, as well as a bit of a red herring if the shaman's death is meant to be somewhat of a mystery. Basically, it would be nice if it was more clear how this is different from the other things she already has in her toolkit, but doesn't really use that way yet.
Keid
2024-08-16 15:54:22 +0000 UTCIn terms of light, on the electromagnetic spectrum, of visible light, a lot of things are off. Bear with me as I explain. Light goes from blue -> green -> red. Blue has the smallest wavelengths and red the largest. The reason our sky is blue is because as light comes through our atmosphere? it has to go through all of the crud in it to get down here. Blue light is so small that it ping pongs off of every particle (water moiture, dust, etc.) in the air. This makes it spread out further than the other two. Red light, on the other hand, is so large that it moves between particles/stuff more easily. That's why police sirens are red and blue, to cut through any type of air quality and be seen more easily. Green is just a whatever in between that doesn't really count or matter for this. It would be a terrible choice to use it to block someones vision. Also (man, I'mnot seeing how to make a new paragraph here without posting) maybe I'm not understanding what you mean, but our eyes are just tools to see light, our brains interpret it. Our brains unconciously choose what it means. A spell to change that interpretation, as opposed to changing light before it hits the eye, would be great and probably illegal, I would think.
Carrie
2024-08-16 13:46:21 +0000 UTCThe advantage of it being a spell is mostly that it can't be taken away. Lacer probably considers the beacon to be most of the defence.
FuriousDee
2024-08-16 13:09:46 +0000 UTCVery nice strong twist shift at the end there...
Jørgen
2024-08-16 06:19:58 +0000 UTCThank you for the chapter! This left me quite giddy. It’s great to see Thaddeus and Sebastien getting in actual apprentice time and having him teach Sebastien things that you just know are going to get tinkered with to interesting ends. I’m very interested in having a collection for the chapters since I go back to reread them frequently and they’re not always in order if I look for a specific chapter. It would be useful!
Hannah
2024-08-16 03:58:18 +0000 UTCShiver. I love the esoteric spell too.
JKlarinet
2024-08-16 03:55:45 +0000 UTCI mean, here is an esoteric spell that you can cast without having to draw a circle or gather components and which you can use to blind many people, create a signal flare, probably even bypassing glasses/shields and even actual blindness if you consider Lacer’s words about the mind sees light, not the eyes. With regards to the difficulty of it, he’s deliberately picked something Sebastien can cast, has non lethal variants and which won’t be lost the way an artefact would. It’s worth remembering that the sun is also a star so I’m not convinced that this spell is restricted only to night time, but it’s probably more effective at night due to bright light in darkness. Also, the stars are always there, even if hidden behind clouds. I’m pretty sure this is a spell that you can gain increasing mastery of, the way Siobhan has gained mastery over her shadow. Lacer is NOT going to give his troubleseeking apprentice aberrant parts to practice with - he’s trying to keep Sebastian from dying and out of danger, remember! Sebastien is still a student with a lot of room for growth. The Red Guard and Archmage Zard and even Thaddeus Lacer are all legendary. It makes sense to work on these simple tricks because look at how much she’s achieved with her simple, non lethal shadow spell - imagine how much more she can do with a spell that does actual damage!
Hannah
2024-08-16 03:52:52 +0000 UTCThe thing is, Lacer is trying to look after her and show, in his own way, that he cares. This may or may not get used in combat, but it’s a nice to have for Sebastian’s paranoia and it’s part of healing her familial trauma - showing her she can rely on an adult to help her out when things are bad. Maybe there will be trouble or incarceration…but we have so many preparations that have been in place for ages and not really used. But they’re there for peace of mind.
Hannah
2024-08-16 03:42:35 +0000 UTCI tend to agree with the other reader that the esoteric spell makes less sense than a blinding artefact. It still fits with the exercises that aim to improve survivability in the event you can’t prepare yourself. I suspect it’s a lot brighter than a simple light-creating transmutation spell array on a piece of seaweed paper could be because it enhances brightness with a sympathetic effect. And it’s probably a lot more difficult to write and cast a spell that empirically interferes with the senses. All that said, if this is even somewhat common, wouldn’t soldiers and swat teams have auto-darkening welding visor artefacts to defend from such a thing? Maybe the piercing sympathy helps with that too? Artefacts that interfere with light magics might also interfere with Siobhan’s shadow familiar spell too. All this emergency preparedness feels like we’re headed for another imprisonment. Or at least another riveting exam from Fekton. Something happening to Sebastian not Siobhan, that way she can’t just shadow familiar herself out of trouble.
James Barclay
2024-08-16 03:31:08 +0000 UTCThe harmless part is more incomparison of what we are seeing happening, in the scale of things, aberrations parts beeing used, the books, this seems less relevant. 2 books ago, this was top tier
Leonardo Krieck
2024-08-16 02:55:15 +0000 UTCBeing able to blind groups of people permanently is far from harmless. Based on S's perception, it almost seems like a Radiance based esoteric spell - if that's even possible? And, if it is, it does make you wonder what plane her shadow spell could be linked to
Stefanie
2024-08-16 02:51:30 +0000 UTCOn the improvement of the chapter, some thoughts: I could be wrong, but we never have seen a esoteric spell that is difficult enough to be only taught to older students and this one don't have anything that makes difficult IMO. He is giving 2 things for the danger of the secret and this spell is kind of useless imo, a artifact that Laceus posses or can buy would not be better? At this point in the books, a almost harmless esoteric spell seems feels off IMO. Great interaction tho.
Leonardo Krieck
2024-08-16 02:30:50 +0000 UTCAlso how do we feel about art with Sebastien up against a dragon with a tiny thought bubble that says "does this count as an emergency? I think I've got it..."?
Stefanie
2024-08-16 02:24:15 +0000 UTCOh no! That poor shaman! I was looking forward to S talking to him. How very unfortunate.
Silvia Wakefield
2024-08-16 02:22:06 +0000 UTCWell that was a rollercoaster ride. This is why you don't try to divine the Raven Queen, I guess? Or, at least, not her Shadow Friend. What's the likelihood someone was with him and the coppers are already on their way...?
Stefanie
2024-08-16 02:17:17 +0000 UTCI think it would be useful if you put the volume number either in the tag or as a separate tag.
Phil Haddock
2024-08-16 02:12:16 +0000 UTCThis is awesome. Keep it up!
Roland Haller
2024-08-16 02:06:48 +0000 UTCThanks for the chapter! I enjoyed the chapter, at the very least. More tools and more puzzles!
Sleeping Shadow
2024-08-16 02:04:39 +0000 UTCIt's good to see her progress on the assignment ! And I think Lacer just made it less likely to tell him her secret while deepening her trust in him... i hope she's not going to face a dragon any time soon, that dig was funny :p Poor shaman though.
Adspartan
2024-08-16 02:04:33 +0000 UTC:)
ShadyTundra
2024-08-16 01:43:12 +0000 UTCSecrets indeed
Adspartan
2024-08-16 01:42:53 +0000 UTC