Web of Knowledge - Chapter 4: Artificial Intelligence
Added 2022-09-13 01:08:22 +0000 UTCAkari stretched out her arms and formed a full-body shield. Relia struck the shield with a barrage of pure Missiles, threatening to shatter it like a glass plate. Akariâs body shook as she cycled harder, packing the Construct with more mana.
Until now, sheâd focused on her shaping skills, but Elend had advised against that.
âShaping is the most versatile skill for this test,â heâd told her a few days before. âBut raw power matters too, especially on the Construct and Cloak portions. And Iâll be honest here, lassâyouâre looking at some low scores in these sections.â
Gee, thanks.
âWe canât help that,â he said. âBut we can still control the narrative.â
Akariâs shield finally broke, and the next Missile took her square in the face. She staggered back but didnât lose her balance.
âOops.â Relia covered her mouth as if sheâd just said a bad word. âSorry!â
âItâs cool.â Akari removed her glasses and examined the unbroken lenses. Unlike her old pair, these had Apprentice-level micro-Constructs in the frames and lenses. That was the best invention ever, and she wondered why all glasses didnât come with those.
Right, she remembered a second later. The Darklights are richer than the Angels.
They fell back into their combat stances for the next round. This time, Relia raised her own shield while Akari tried to break it.
It was grueling work, but that was nothing new. As a Bronze, sheâd had to cobble Missiles together from mere drops of mana. This was the same idea, but at a larger scale. Every attack drained a fraction of her soul, but the Missiles were strong enough to shatter brick walls.
Reliaâs shields were far stronger than brick walls. Even then, the other girl held back her full power, using just enough to make Akari push herself, but not so much that it was impossible.
âThe narrative is simple,â Elend had said. âIf Akari Zeller is this strong now, then what could she do at Apprentice? You wonât fool anyone, of course. The board will be looking at your stats the whole time. But thatâs the best part, isnât it? Humans are most impressed by things they canât explain.â
Kalden also trained in the Darklightâs backyard. Sometimes, heâd take a turn sparring with Relia. Other days, heâd keep his distance, attempting to form blades of pure mana, the way he had in Creta.
Except now, it took him well over ten seconds to form a single blade. That was fine for practice, but no real opponent would stand there twiddling her thumbs while you crafted a deadly weapon.
Whatâs he planning? Did he want to become a Blade Artist again, even knowing heâd never be as good as before? Theyâd asked him several times now, and he gave some vague answers like âtesting the watersâ or âkeeping my options open.â
It was annoying, but Akari felt his pain. Simple aspects like fire or water only took a few months of preparation. Even on Arkala, high school students would enter the schoolâs Mana Arts program and emerge with aspects by the end of that semester.
But that wasnât true for high-level aspects.
Relia had spent years traveling the world with her first master. Sheâd worked everywhere from hospitals to battlefields, internalizing life and death.
Akari had spent over a decade studying space and time, along with all the related math and science sheâd need to know. Her parents had surrounded her with their mana every day. Not just their techniques, but countless artifacts around the house.
And Kalden had been studying sword fighting since before he could walk. This aspect had been in his family for generations, and theyâd spent years in Shoken to find him the best teachers.
You couldnât just toss that knowledge aside, and you definitely couldnât replace it overnight.
~~~
This new training routine continued over the next few weeks. Akari started each morning with a workoutâusually weightlifting on Irinday, Narsday, and Kelsday. She went for a run the other days, following Chapel Street west toward KU, or taking Frostville Ave south along the bay.
Even after three straight weeks, she never got bored with the water. Most coastal cities had multi-story mana walls to protect them against tidal waves, but Koreldon City was the exception. The state of Estrana held back the waves from the northeast, while a smaller peninsula guarded them to the south. This gave them a view of endless, unobstructed water.
Some parts of Koreldon felt dull and gray, but not the sea. The sea came with a rush of powerâthe power of distant manastorms churning miles off the shore. Each wave was an echo of a faraway tide, and she could practically taste the mana on her tongue.
The city still had walls, of course. Their metal bases were visible beyond the pier, ready to spring to life at a momentâs notice. Those came on for monthly tests, but they hadnât had an actual tidal wave in years.
Akari followed followed her workouts with a shower and a high-protein breakfast. Then she spent a few hours studying for the written portion of her exams. This was her least favorite part of the work day, so she gulped down the metaphorical frog as quickly as possible.
âWhat were the first Espirian states to break free from the Shokenese Empire?â Glim asked from her bedroom mirror. And howâd they do it?â
Akari and Kalden had both studied with Glim these past few weeks. Apparently, the mana spirit had a flawless memory, similar to Irinaâs Second Brain. This made her a perfect flashcard machine.
Glim also formed a ticking clock in the top right corner of the mirror. The real written test was timed, so every second mattered.
Akari drew in a deep breath. âNew Cadria, Shosal, Costria, and Rireda. The Shokenese had two factions at that point, and Mystic Everrest played their leaders against each other.â
âAlmost,â Glim said. âExcept Shosal was never a Shokenese colony.â A map of dream mana formed in the mirror beside her, and she pointed to the northwest corner. âYouâre thinking of Sheton.â
Damnit. Hard to remember all the Espirian states when youâd just spent two years of your life thinking they were barren wastelands.
The clock reset, and Glim continued. âWhy hasnât transmutation achieved more widespread use in the alchemy field?â
Akari had no idea. However, certain patterns emerged across Mana Arts and its related fields.
âItâs expensive,â she said. âThe mana they spend is worth more than the results. And transmutation is based on weight, so a bigger payoff means a bigger cost.â
Glim gave her a thumbs-up. âHow are alchemists working to fix this problem?â
âWaste conversion. If one company pays them to take their garbage, they might have a chance of breaking even.â Akari had just made that up, but Glim didnât need to know that.
âYou just made that up!â Glim said.
Akari kept a straight face. âYouâre saying Iâm wrong?â
Glim nodded primly. âAlchemists are working on an aspect that specializes in transmutation. That will bring the cost down in theory, because theyâll be spending mana that was designed for the task. They even have an aspecting manual written, but they canât find any volunteers.â
Oh yeah, that was another classic problem with Mana Arts. Most volunteers wouldnât be good enough to handle something so abstract as transmutation mana. And anyone good enough wouldnât risk it.
Glimâs timer reset again. âHow much will a squareâs area change if you adjust the sides by ten percent?â
Akari did some quick mental arithmetic. âTwenty-one percent.â
Glim gave her another thumbs-up. âYou got that two seconds faster than Kalden.â
Akari grinned at that. Their schedules were similar, which meant Kalden could be studying with Glim at this very moment. After all, Grandmaster-level mana spirits could split themselves into independent parts. Sure, each part was weaker than the original Glim, but that hardly mattered for a simple flashcard program.
And yes, âprogramâ was the right word here. Glim didnât just have an eidetic memory the way people did. Her mind worked more like a computer.
Or an artificial intelligence.
Akari thought of the Archipelago, and all the strange rules it followed. For example, some people like Maelyn Sanako got to keep their Mana Arts, but not their aspects. Others, like Akari and her parents, lost their Mana Arts entirely. And then there was Agent Frostblade whoâd kept his Mana Arts and his aspect.
Despite that, the world still followed a strange sort of logic. People like Maelyn and Akariâs father had wielded aspects that were considered too advanced, so of course theyâd lost them. So had anyone with low birth mana.
Meanwhile, Emberlyn Frostblade had gone from an alchemist to a Combat Artist. Even that made sense, though. In real life, her father had been an ordinary member of Last Haven's militia. But his increased status as a Gold Martial made it more probable that his daughter would follow in his footsteps.
But who decided all these rules? Mana Artists hadnât been concerned about birth rank for several centuries, and they certainly hadnât worn badges. But someone had designed a world that followed these imaginary rules, down to the last detail.
No ordinary human could do thisâthere were too many small decisions and nuances. Not just for the island itself, but the lives and memories of a quarter-million people.
Akariâs first theory had been a machine-based artificial intelligence, but Relia claimed those didnât exist in the outside world. But of course they didnât exist. Why bother with a machine if you could make an AI entirely out of mana?
But then things got crazier. Akari knew about machine-based AI from movies. But those movies only existed on the Archipelagoâa contrived world without mana-based AI. That meant whoever created that world had erased all knowledge of mana-based AI. Not only that, but they'd followed that absence to its logical conclusion: if people couldnât create AI with mana, they would find another way.
Talek. That gave her a headache just thinking about it. And this didnât even help her find her enemy. Most Mystics were secretive, but sheâd found websites that attempted to break down their aspects. A full quarter of them had a strong knowledge component to their mana. That meant they could probably make Second Brain techniques, or mana spirits like Glim.
Glim seemed like an anomaly outside of ancient history, though. Others had tried to replicate Elendâs work, but theyâd always failed. Then again, for how secretive the Mystics were, they could easilyâ
âHey!â Glim snapped her fingers. âAre you even listening?
âSorry.â Akari blinked at the physics equation Glim had written on the mirror. âEighty-five seconds.â
âIs that the answer, or the number on the clock?â
Akari flipped her off.
Glim laughed. âThinking of Kalden?â
âActually, no.â
âWhy donât you guys just study together?â Glim suggested.
âAsk him. Heâs the one avoiding us.â That wasnât entirely true, but it was close enough. Kalden still talked to them in the backyard and during meals. Theyâd even exchanged some training tips over the past few weeks.
Despite that, he didnât act like their friend anymore. He acted more like a co-worker. Polite, but distant.
âI did ask him,â Glim said.
Akari perked up. âWhatâd he say?â
âNo comment.â
Akari frowned. âYouâre not gonna tell me?â
âNo, no.â Glim shook her head. âHe literally said âno comment.ââ
âWhy?â
She crossed her blue arms. âHe said my reputation for gossip proceeds me, and that Iâd turn his words against him.â
Akari shrugged. âHeâs not wrong about that.â Sheâd been careful what she said around Glim too. Elend had even warned them their first day here, explaining how he could see Glimâs memories, and how nothing they said around her was private.
âYeah.â Glim crossed her arms again, more dramatically this time. âYou guys are no fun at all. Except for Relia. Sheâs an absolute gem.â
Glim sure had a lot of emotions for an advanced AI.
âBut why donât you ask him?â Glim suggested. âYou donât strike me as timid or old-fashioned.â
âIâm not.â
Glim leaned forward. She didnât actually emerge from the mirror, but her face still seemed closer than before. âSoâŚ?â
âNo comment.â
âCome on!â Glim said. âI swear to the Angels I wonât tell anyone.â
Akari twirled a mechanical pencil between her fingers. âLetâs get back to work.â
âI thought you needed a break.â
âThought your job was to keep me focused,â Akari retorted.
âCome on. â Glim clasped her hands together, making a cloud of sparkling blue mist. âIâm doomed to be forever single. At least give me some vicarious romance.â
âWhy not fangirl over Elend and Irina? At least theyâre a real couple.â
Glim waved a hand. âThey got boring forty years ago. Especially Irina. Have you seen her Second Brain?â Glim used dream mana to draw several ellipses around her upper body. âTheyâre just cold, heartless versions of me.â
âGreat,â Akari muttered.
âAre you worried Kalden will say no?â
Akari shook her head and squeezed her pencil tighter. More likely, Kalden would say yes, but his statue impression would put those heartless rings to shame. Theyâd spend the whole time studying in cold, professional silence. She would try to meet his eyes, but heâd never look away from his textbooks. Sheâd try to start a conversation, but heâd give her one-word answers.
After that, theyâd feel even farther apart than before.
Was this because of his lost hand, or because heâd merged with his old personality? Akari had worried about her old self taking over, but that hadnât happened. Sheâd learned from her mistakes, and sheâd proven that by following Elendâs advice to the letter. She had Dream Akariâs memories, but she hadnât become her.
It was different for Kalden, though. Almost as if his loss had woken a slumbering dragon deep inside his soul.
Akari sent mana into her forearm, squeezing the pencil until it snapped. Damnit. This was all his fault. Heâd started this that day on the roof when he said he liked her. She never would have gotten her hopes up otherwise.
Glimâs smile faded. âYou wanna talk about it?â
âAlready got a therapist,â she said.
âI wonât tell anyone,â Glim continued. âNot even Elend. He wonât view my memories if I tell him itâs important.â
âMaybe,â Akari said. âBut itâs getting hot in here.â
Glim cocked her head to the side. âWant me to go turn the air conditioning down?â
âDonât worry it.â Then, before Glim could say another word, Akari grabbed the hem of her tank top and pulled it off over her head.
âWaitââ Glim started to say. Then she flickered out like a dead lightbulb.
The mana spirit had some built-in functions that barred her from entering rooms if people werenât dressed. Akari, being the hacker she was, abused this rule whenever she wanted to get rid of her.
~~~
Her study sessions usually went on until lunchtime, then sheâd switch to Mana Arts training in the backyard. After that came dinner, which they ate together in the dining room. Or the breakfast nook. Whatever it was called.
Elend still had a few more weeks before he got back to work, so he almost always joined them for meals. But Irina tended to work all day. Sheâd be gone at six oâclock before Akari left for her morning jogs, and she wouldnât return until well past nine in the evenings. Clearly, she didnât follow Elendâs advice about balance and resting.
Speaking of resting, that was definitely the hardest part of the day. Sheâd spent the first day pacing the trails in the backyard, trying to cycle ambient mana through her palms. Her body itched to train more, or even to study in her room. Anything was better than nothing.
To make matters worse, Kalden didnât have to follow Elendâs rules. While Akari paced around after dinner, he just kept on training, careless as a cat.
âThatâs bullshit,â she said to Elend one day on the covered patio. âKalden gets to keep working, but I canât?â
âOh no.â Elend lowered his sunglasses at her. âHeâs even worse than you, lass. Irina tried telling him that. So did Relia. But he wouldnât listen.â
She deflated at that, and her eyes settled on the silhouette of Kalden forming blades against the setting sun.
âBut unlike you, Kaldenâs already an Apprentice. The lad will write a great essay about how he lost his hand in battle, and the board will gulp it down like soulshiners.â
Talek, he was right. It was basically an improved version of Akariâs story. But while she looked cocky and impatient for applying early, Kalden looked brave and determined.
âIt will work,â Elend said. âBut not forever. Thatâs the thing about trainingâthereâs always another challenge ahead. Too many Mana Artists look forward to that ultimate goal of immortality, and they forget that most of them will die first. They forget to live along the way.â
She actually liked how Kalden kept looking ahead as opposed to settling for lessâshe was the same way. A month ago, she wouldnât have seen the problem with endless training.
Now, the problem was clear as glass. Kaldenâs life was a three-legged table that would eventually collapse.
And so Akari kept training by day and resting in the evening. To her surprise, the rest actually helped. Sometimes, she would get stuck on an alchemy equation, only for the answer to strike her later on the patio. Almost as if her brain were chipping away in the background.
And it was the same with her Mana Arts. Mental breakthroughs had been a rare thing beforeâemerged only in moments of true desperation. Now, her mind and body flowed easier than ever. Sheâd mastered more than a dozen new shaping techniques, and her pre-Cloak was strong enough to lift three times her bodyweight.
Even her mana count increased more than seventy points since sheâd started. That pace wouldnât get her to Apprentice before her admissions, but she might make it before midterms.
Despite her progress, she waged a daily war with her ever-present doubts. What if Elend was wrong about all this? What if this balanced path was a recipe for mediocrity, and sheâd never rank among the best Artists in the world?
But then she remembered what Elend had said that day in the gym. Her parents had lived balanced lives too. Theyâd only been in their late thirties when Last Haven fell. But in their final hour, theyâd taken on a Mystic.