Following the 2070 Mage Selection Games, a young man was sourced what would
turn out to be a very powerful time power. He could teleport, but also apport,
which means he could instantaneously transport other things besides himself.
Not all apporters are alike. Assuming a given mage or choosing one is
standing at point A, some would be able to move an object from A to B only,
while others could move it from B to A, while still more could move it either
way. There are even a few who can move something from B to C, but they would
have to know a whole lot about the location of just about anything within
range, whether they were looking at it, or not. These were the three primary
classifications of apportation, but there were variants within them. Baran
Avan was a Class A apporter, but with a special twist. He had to teleport
himself along whatever it was he was trying to move. Of course, regular
teleporters were limited to this, but they generally had to be at least
touching the target for it to work. He just had to be close enough to see it.
The thing about him, though, was that his power grew over time, the more he
used it. When starting out, Baran could only transport something the size of a
penny, but he kept practicing, and upgrading, and becoming more powerful. In
under ten years, he was so strong, and his range so wide, that he was capable
of moving an entire town from one place to another. Knowing this would be the
case, a group of people started building a new town to capitalize on its
utility, which they called Motus. They didn’t dig into the ground, though.
They first constructed a gigantic platform, on top of which every building
would sit. It required a flat surface to remain stable, but these weren’t too
hard to find. While Durus did have mountains, valleys, ravines, and the like,
it was actually pretty smooth. They had, by then, surveyed the whole surface,
so Baran had an accurate map to know where to make his jumps. Once completed
in 2079, Motus required fewer mages to be assigned there than other towns. It
wasn’t like they didn’t need any, but their primary means of surviving monster
attacks would be Baran. When the alarm sounded, the other mages would fight
the threat, while Baran gathered his strength, and prepared to make the jump.
At first, this often resulted in his fellow mages being left behind to fend
for themselves, but as time continued, he not only grew even stronger, but
also more precise. He could select individual objects within his range to tag
along with them, even if they were a hundred meters off the platform. Some
believed his power would never reach a limit, and that he would one day be
able to move the whole planet across the void. They never found out, though.
Motus was only around for a little over a decade before the final battles of
the war began. While many of his contemporaries survived to pass their genes
onto their offspring during and after the Interstitial Chaos, Baran ultimately
became a casualty of the war. Until then, however, the Motus method proved
productive. It just made travel between it and the other towns a little more
complicated.
-
Current Schedule
- Sundays
- The Advancement of Mateo MaticTeam Matic prepares for a war by seeking clever and diplomatic ways to end their enemy's terror over his own territory, and his threat to others.
- The Advancement of Mateo Matic
- Weekdays
- PositionsThe staff and associated individuals for a healing foundation explain the work that they do, and/or how they are involved in the charitable organization.
- Positions
- Saturdays
- Extremus: Volume 5As Waldemar's rise to power looms, Tinaya grapples with her new—mostly symbolic—role. This is the fifth of nine volumes in the Extremus multiseries.
- Extremus: Volume 5
- Sundays
Monday, August 24, 2020
Sunday, August 23, 2020
The Advancement of Mateo Matic: Friday, July 2, 2117
RPS stood for rock, paper, scissors, which was a simple game to play on its
own. A player can throw one of the three choices, and can beat or lose to
the other player, depending on which one they choose, or draw if both throw
the same one. RPS-101 was an insane variant of this game that involved
ninety-eight additional gestures, each one capable of beating about half of
the others. It was practically impossible to play without a cheat sheet and
patience, or genius-level intellect. RPS-101 Plus was a computerized version
of this, complete with graphics, visualized consequences, and a total
abandonment of the original concept of throwing gestures. It was a video
game. Each player will choose a gesture out of the entire list, and stick
with that gesture throughout the whole round. It will be represented by an
actual interactive image. Should a player choose lightning, for instance,
they will see their lightning bolt on the screen, and control how it moves
about. They will then use this character to navigate a hazardous playing
field, where other characters attempt to attack. But since only half of them
pose a threat, the other half of the gestures are available for the player
to attack instead. Doing so will gain that player points, speed, and
agility. This game was designed to be played by one to a hundred and one
players, with all unused gestures falling under control of the computer.
Upon learning from Sanaa that the AOC’s system contained a local copy of it,
the group played for hours together, and barely got any sleep. Before they
knew it it was 2117, and their cuffs were directing them into the city.
The window wasn’t going to be for awhile, so instead of teleporting to the
location, they decided to walk, and get some fresh air. Since they didn’t
really talk about anything during the games, they took this opportunity to
catch Mateo up with what they figured about Xearea. The reason her story
didn’t match up with their recollection of it was because she was from a
different timeline in the main sequence. In this version of events, the bad
men from the future were more successful in their mission, and would have
been able to finish the job if Leona hadn’t intervened. It was presumably
with knowledge of this outcome that prompted The Cleanser to conscript
Mateo, Gilbert, and Horace to fix things.
“So, wait,” Mateo said. “You sent Xearea back to her timeline, knowing that
it would collapse soon anyway.”
“No, we didn’t,” J.B. clarified. “Jericho went back, even though we warned
him he might not survive, just like Ariadna wouldn’t have. We kept her here,
though.”
“Where is she now?” Mateo asked.
“We don’t know anymore,” Ariadna replied. “Ramses showed up, and offered to
help set her up with a new life here. We never spoke to her, though. She was
still asleep when they took her away.”
“I’m right here.” It was Xearea, but she was much older now. Seventeen years
had passed for her.
“Oh, Miss Voss,” Leona said, surprised. “You’ve fully recovered.”
“Of course,” Xearea said. “These people have excellent medical technology. I
was intending to finally reunite with you, and thank you for saving me, but
then I caught wind that you have an appointment here.” She looked towards
the building they were standing in front of.
“What is this place?” Sanaa asked.
“It’s like an airport,” Xearea answered. “It’ll take you to other worlds.
Your trip is scheduled for the Andromeda room. Follow me, I’ll show you
where to go.”
“We’re going to Dardius, aren’t we?” Leona guessed.
“That’s the thing,” Xearea began. “It says you have an appointment there,
but no final destination is listed. We don’t know where you’re going.
Andromeda 21 isn’t the only galactic neighbor.”
“Surely it’s the island, isn’t it?” Mateo figured. “That’s what makes the
most sense to me.”
“We can’t know that for sure,” Leona advised him.
Perhaps Tribulation Island only seemed like the logical choice, because that
was where they were in this time. But they didn’t have a personal connection
to everyone they rescued, like Jericho. Still, Jupiter sent them to the
intergalactic portal, so…
“Sanaa?” J.B. prompted.
She consulted her cuff. “The cuffs can access information from satellites
orbiting the planet we’re on, so we don’t just have to follow the arrows,
but they can’t see beyond that. There’s no proof we’re going to Tribulation
Island, or even Dardius, for that matter.”
They arrived at the Andromeda room, where a portal operator was waiting for
their coordinates.
“If we go to the wrong place, can we come back, and try again?”
“Certainly,” she responded. “You may make as many jumps as you need.” People
here were really friendly and accommodating. It was even better than the
future in the main sequence. All these god-like powers probably made it
really difficult to encounter an inconvenience. The way they understood it,
energy and other resources were infinite, so there was no reason to deny
anyone anything unless it infringed upon someone else’s wishes. If someone
wanted to have an entire galaxy to themselves, for instance, where no one
else could go, that was kind of all right, as long as that galaxy wasn’t
already occupied, because whatever.
After the operator input the coordinates, everyone stepped onto the
platform, and transported across millions of light years of space, to
Tribulation Island, Dardius, Beorht, Miridir. The operator on the other side
greeted them politely, and welcomed them to the island. They expected it to
be heavily developed in this reality, but it was actually more sparse than
it ultimately became in the main sequence. They were presumably conserving
the wildlife here. The portaling seemed to have interfered with the Cassidy
cuffs, but after they recalibrated themselves, the directive arrow came back
to lead them down the beach.
“Who is it?” Sanaa asked them. “I’m not alive yet, so I don’t know that much
about y’all’s time here.”
“I don’t know anyone who it could be,” Leona said, “unless they’re from a
different timeline. No one disappeared that we can remember.”
“Maybe they’ll only disappear briefly, and then we’ll put them back,”
Ariadna suggested.
“Why would we need to transition anyone?” J.B. asked. “I thought you said
Jupiter admitted that we’re rescuing people. Is someone in danger here?”
“I don’t think so,” Leona answered. “Vearden dies here, but that’s not for
several years. I think everyone else is okay.”
“Whoa. This is a nice place. What is that, a helicopter?” They had come into
a clearing, where a lavish resort sat up against the water.
“It’s a jet with vertical take off,” came a voice from behind them.
“Baudin!” Mateo shouted, with a little more excitement than he would have
liked to express. “What are you doing here?”
“I’ve been here for eight years,” he answered. “This is where I live now, I
s’pose.”
“Wait, you don’t exist anymore,” Leona said to him.
“I don’t?” Baudin feigned shock, and looked at the palms of his hands. “Oh,
no. What about the others? Do they exist?”
“Stop screwing with them.” Samsonite was walking out of the hotel, followed
by Gilbert. “We do exist. You can’t stop people from existing. You can just
make other people think that’s what you’ve done.”
“This is the explanation,” Leona asked rhetorically. “When Arcadia was
taking people out of time, all she was doing was bringing them here?”
“No, some other guy is doing it for her,” Samsonite corrected.
Mateo nodded. “Jupiter.”
“This is crazy.” Leona mused. “That means either all of you lie about it
when we see you again, or someone alters your memories. I don’t even wanna
think about what this means for when it happens to you, Mateo.”
“Well, I’m different,” Mateo reminded her. “The Superintendent was the one
who took me. Maybe he really can rip people from the timeline. That’s not
really the point, though, is it?” He directed his attention back to the
other three. “You’re not alone here, are you?”
Gilbert smiled, and lifted one eye to a window above them. A group of people
was watching them from inside their hotel room.
“Aldona’s family,” Leona realized.
“They’ve been here the longest,” Samsonite acknowledged.
“We’re here to add to your ranks,” Ariadna told them. “We don’t know who, or
exactly where.”
“Yes, we do,” Sanaa said. “It’s across the ocean.”
“Lorania,” Mateo confirmed. It’s 2117. We’re here to save Xearea Voss.
Again.” He looked back up at the Buchanan-Lanka-Calligaris window. “Those
people don’t seem to wanna talk to us. Could you ask Gino to come help us,
though. We need a doctor.”
Aldona’s family simply didn’t know who they were, which was why they didn’t
come out initially. Aldona’s husband, Gino was more than happy to provide
his services, once he understood the need for them. They didn’t need anyone
else to go, though, so while everyone else stayed at the resort to relax,
only he and Mateo flew off to retrieve Xearea, who was about to be stabbed
by a very unstable immortal named Ambrosios. She came through the transition
window, Gino stabilized her on site, and then they transported her to the
mainland, where she could be treated in the Parallel facilities. Mateo
wasn’t worried about whether she would survive or not, because he knew she
would later return to the main sequence, and continue with her pattern as
the penultimate Savior of Earth.
Jupiter Fury showed up while Mateo was alone in the waiting room, and sat
down next to him. “You were working with Arcadia the entire time?” Mateo
presumed. This was just another layer to the mystery of what happened to
them during Arcadia’s expiations. A lot was going on in the background that
they never knew about.
“No, I’m not,” Jupiter contended. “Everything she says is the truth as she
sees it. She believes that she’s taking people out of time, because that’s
precisely what she’s capable of. What she doesn’t know is that her
memory-wiper is working with me. I’ve been transitioning your friends at the
moment Arcadia attempts to pull them. She has a lot less influence over
people than she thinks she does. I don’t really need you for this, because
most of them aren’t in danger, and they won’t be receiving egress windows
until it’s time for all of them to go back at once. I only brought you into
it now, because it fits with your pattern, and I wanted you to see it for
yourself.”
“So, who will we be saving next year, and then on?” Mateo asked him.
Jupiter breathed deeply, and stared into empty space. “You have about a week
to figure out how you’re gonna save Vearden Haywood’s life, if it’s even
possible. You cannot alter the timeline. Whatever the truth, everyone in the
main sequence has to believe that he dies on Tribulation Island, millions of
years ago. You have to preserve that, so the future unfolds as it should.
Yet you still have to rescue him, so he can transition for medical
treatment. Again, I’m not sure it’s possible, but that’ll be your
responsibility. Until then, go back to the resort. You’re on vacation.” He
patted Mateo on the knee, used it to help himself out of his chair, and then
he walked away coolly.
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Saturday, August 22, 2020
Thālith al Naʽāmāt Bida: Deeply (Part IV)
I blink and look around, immediately seeing a mirror next to my chair. It’s
facing away from me, though, so I turn it. It’s my old body. Well, no it’s
not. But it’s at least my original face. “Report,” I say to the girl
standing on the other side of me. I just keep looking at my reflection,
though.
“I was gonna put you back in your new body,” the girl replies, “but then I
thought maybe you would prefer to look as you did before. Everything my
father explained to you about how it works—how strong and resilient this
substrate is—remains true. Now you look like yourself, though.”
I sigh, and lean my head back. I close my eyes, but it doesn’t have the same
relaxing effect as it once did. Even after I started upgrading my body with
technology, this would help make me feel better. Way back in the day,
futurists would boast about how powerful we would one day be. They were
right, I installed incredible physical strength, endurance, faster
processing speeds, and lots of other stuff. What they failed to realize was
just how beautiful it was to be a living organism. These upgrades cause you
to lose something about what it feels like to be alive. Sleep was something
I always took for granted, because it took eight hours out of my day, and I
didn’t have a choice. Ancillary to that was the ability to close my eyes,
and shut the world out. While I could still hear, suppressing some of the
stimuli still helped slow my brain, so I could calm down when my emotions
got the better of me. I actually had to downgrade my systems after I
realized I added too much, and lost my ability to sleep. But that only
lasted so long. I never want to age or die, so I later had to upgrade again.
Sleep and immortality just don’t mix, I guess; I don’t know.
The only solace I took in my new situation was that I could turn my systems
off. I could shut myself down, not entirely, but close. I could still
maintain my perception of the passage of time. Other people would find this
horrific, existing inside a void, conscious of their own existence, but
unable to do anything. I embraced it, because it was the closest thing I
could find to sleep. In fact, I loved it so much that I set a timer to not
wake me back up for five hundred years. I wasn’t even in there for a hundred
and fifty years before this girl’s father forced me back awake by
transferring my mind into a new body, and then promptly destroying the old
one. I don’t blame her, though. I’ve only known her for a few minutes, but
she doesn’t seem to be on his side. She may actually be the best person I’ve
ever met in my life. After several seconds of my eyes closed, I start
feeling a sense of sleepiness. It’s not enough to make me fall asleep, or
even start nodding off, but it’s definitely more what I’ve been missing for
centuries. I almost feel human again. “What’s going on? I’m a little tired.”
She smiles. “That means it’s working. I modified more than just your face. I
installed a hibernation mode. You still won’t need to sleep, but you can,
whenever you want. You’ll also wake up if, say, a saber-toothed cat shows up
to attack you, but you should otherwise be good.”
“That asshole could have given me the power of sleep, but chose not to?”
“With more time, yes,” the girl answers. “He didn’t think to include that,
but I’ve been working on it for months. You’ve been completely dormant this
whole time.”
I stand up out of the chair. She’s right about how she changed me. I’m a
little weak, like a regular person would be. It’s nothing I can’t get over,
but...it’s amazing. “Oh my God, thank you so much. I don’t think I could
explain just how important this is to me. I haven’t felt this great in
centuries.”
“I’m glad you like it. My name is Abigail, by the way.”
“Oh, yes, sorry. How rude of me. I’m sure you know this, but let me
introduce myself. I’m Thor Thompson.”
“It’s nice to finally meet you. I grew up on this planet, and I passed your
storage case every day to get to Trinity and Ellie’s labs. I always wondered
what you were like.”
I accidentally release a scoff, but it’s a Freudian slip, because what she
said deserves it. “I’m not that great,” I admit.
“Oh, I’m not so sure about that. Way I hear it, you were one of the first
colonizers of Mars, and you were directly involved with Operation Starseed.”
Project Stargate was a secret endeavor to send automated ships to every
single star system in the galaxy, so people could travel to them instantly
with quantum communication technology. Operation Starseed was a super secret
companion to that, which added biological samples from Earth, so life could
be seeded on those planets. The public wasn’t sure whether they wanted us to
conquer the Milky Way, which is why a few key people in the government gave
the greenlight without telling anyone. The public was pretty much completely
opposed to Starseed, though. Some people were cool with it, but the majority
found the prospect irresponsible, and upsetting. Together with my friend,
Saxon, I was in charge with transporting the samples to the launch site in a
star system called the Gatewood Collective. Only an even fewer number of
government officials, time travelers, and time-traveler adjacent people knew
anything about it. “Those are just accomplishments, and they say nothing
about my character. Your father is quite accomplished too, isn’t it?”
“That’s true, but Trinity and Ellie have said good things about you, and I
trust them.”
“Are they still here, or did they move on?” I ask.
Abigail checks her watch. “They’re at work right now.”
“Why did use airquotes?” I question.
“It’s because of something I learned about in my studies,” she says. “People used to
have set hours that they would work. They had these things called jobs, so
they could make money and if they wanted to survive, they had to have one.”
“They didn’t have to have a job, or even money, to survive; only if they
wanted to live in town. They could go off and live off the land, if they
wanted to. But go on.”
“Obviously we don’t have jobs anymore. People just work on things that they
want to do. But Ellinity like to pretend it’s the olden days. They live
farther away from their workspaces than they used to, and they go into work
every day. They don’t leave until the work day is over.” She seems to think
this is silly, and it is.
The old ways made some bit of sense at one point, but not in a galaxy where
quite literally all work can be automated. I have a better appreciation for
it, though, since I grew up in a time period where work was ubiquitous. The
only people who didn’t have jobs were too rich to need them, or too poor to
get them. The irony in that is precisely why we did away with money. I nod.
“That’s hilarious.”
The doorbell rings. Abigail answers it, then lets Trinity and Ellie into the
room.
“Mr. Thompson,” Trinity says. “How are you feeling?”
“Better than ever.”
They look at me funny, not because it’s a bad answer, but because it’s
uncharacteristically genuine of me to say.
“No, really, I am. I’ve always wanted to live forever, but never wanted to
lose what it means to actually be alive. If I were to ever consume the
Immortality Waters, I wouldn’t take Energy. I like sleep. You guys get it.”
They’re both immortal too, but in their own ways, and they’re still fully
biological.
“That’s great,” Ellie says. She almost sounds bubbly again. It’s not that
she was faking it, but she does kind of have two sides to her. When she
meets someone new, she’s really outgoing and carefree, but once she learns
to trust them, she’ll let a little bit of that go, and act more reserved. I
hope this doesn’t mean she doesn’t feel she can trust me anymore.
“What are you two working on?” I ask them.
They look at each other, like two secret agents, who know they can’t talk
about their work with their old roommate from college, who they’ve just run
into in a bar.
“Whoa, sorry I asked.”
“No, it’s okay. It’s just—” Trinity closes her mouth tightly, not to keep
herself from explaining, but so she doesn’t say it the wrong way.
“It’s a crazy idea.” Ellie can’t go any further either.
I look to Abigail, who shakes her head. “They won’t tell me either. It has
something to do with dead people.”
“We didn’t wanna say anything until we knew we could do it.” Trinity finally
feels like she’s ready to talk. “Making ourselves look insane is a lot
easier now that we know it’s a real possibility. We’re just not sure about
the ethics.”
“And some of the logistics,” Ellie adds.
“Come on guys, what is it? Dead people?”
Trinity gestures towards Ellie. “I’ve learned something about her ability.
She can teleport people’s minds. Regular people. Of course, you can upload
yourself into another body, but she can do that with anyone, or herself,
with no technology.”
“We’ve figured out how to harness that, and mass produce it,” Ellie
explains.
“You’re gonna use that to bring dead people back to life?” I imagine.
“Yes,” Trinity answers. “All of them.”
“All of them?”
“Literally everyone who has ever died.”
“How?”
“With these.” Ellie holds up a stack of microscope slides. “I call them
synthetic central nervous neurolemmocytes. They will change everything about
everyone.”
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Friday, August 21, 2020
Microstory 1435: A Child is Born
As the source mages were coming into control over Springfield and
Splitsville, they came up with a lot of rules about how to keep the town
safe, from the monsters, and any other threat. Some of these rules were for
the people to follow, while others were internal. But these internal laws
were still devised in order to protect the citizens. There were certain
things the source mages would allow each other to do, and things that they
would not. For one, they would not let themselves become the leaders of some
kind of religious cult. There was a scientific explanation for their time
powers, whether anyone understood the science, or not. They were still just
people, and God should be left out of it. Furthermore, ruling power could
not be consolidated into one of the mages, or even all of them. It would
remain a fair and democratic society, even though a lot of their conventions
would feel very medieval. That was only because of their combination of
magic, and only enough technology to survive, rather than an actual feudal
system of government and justice. One thing they decided, in order to
prevent any abuse of their position over others, was to outlaw mage
children. This was especially important for the sources, but town mages
couldn’t conceive children either. This made the logistics of competition a
little difficult, but not impossible to overcome. Two mages could raise a
child, of course, but only if that child was born before either of
them had their powers. This meant that a twelve-year-old mage—that being the
minimum age at the time of the Selection Games—simply would not be able to
have kids. Unless they waited to be sourced their abilities. Like deferring
college enrollment, a winner could delay being given powers until after they
had however many kids they wanted. This delay was limited to ten years,
however, so if they didn’t think they could make it happen by then, it was
probably best for them to just wait the full twenty years before the next
competition. Again, this complicated matters, but the source mages didn’t
know what kind of power a legacy child would have, and they weren’t jazzed
about finding out. It just seemed like too much of a risk, except in one
case. Knowing which power a new mage received—and how powerful it was
exactly—could take too long if they just waited for them to figure out on
their own. The holistic diagnosticians belonged to a single bloodline of
people with the ability to understand a patient’s abilities just by
examining them. The Taggart family was the only exception to the no-child
policy. Breaking it was kind of a big deal.
Out of all of the source mages, only Valda Ramsey and Lubomir Resnik were in
a relationship. It wasn’t technically disallowed, but the others did
discourage it, because it could lead to a breach of their other internal
rules. None of the others took any romantic interest in anyone else. They
were absolutely not asexual, and they didn’t think of themselves as elitist,
but they certainly had trouble relating to other people. In 2077, Valda and
Lubomir took their relationship to the next level by having unprotected sex
with each other. They weren’t trying to get pregnant, but they
weren’t trying not to either. A part of them wasn’t thinking about
the consequences, or how upset the others would be for it. They were just in
love, and caught up in the moment. Another part of them, however, was
terribly curious what the child of two source mages would be able to do.
Nine months later, Valda delivered a little baby girl. Fortunately, the
source mages saw time move differently, and fully expected to live forever,
so the fact that they didn’t see Valda for seven months didn’t seem strange
to them. Most of them didn’t even notice she wasn’t just busy in the other
room. They named the baby Jayde, even though they knew they couldn’t keep
her. If she developed powerful abilities, she would have to do it somewhere
else. No one could know that she was the offspring of two source mages. They
searched through the census, and found a nice couple to raise their daughter
for them. The Kovacs had been wanting a child of their own, and Valda and
Lubomir knew that they would take care of her, and also not tell anyone that
Sadie never carried a pregnancy. Jayde would grow up to change everything
about life on Durus, but for now, she was just an infant, and she didn’t
deserve to be treated differently because of her unique origins. Valda and
Lubomir regretted letting her go, but they would see her again one day, and
they would never regret having her.
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Thursday, August 20, 2020
Microstory 1434: Fort Salient
Now that Durus had a decent number of mages, it was so much easier to get
things done. Construction was easier than it would probably ever be on
Earth, and the monsters had become more of a common nuisance than a real
enemy. A monster came in, a town mage was assigned to dispense with it, and
they did. No one had died from an attack in decades, and no one had been
seriously injured in several years. The Durune humans knew what they were
doing, and their population continued to rise at a predictable rate. They
stopped planning for new towns ahead of time, because each one would only
take a matter of weeks, depending on which mages they had access to for a
given development, and how complex they wanted that town to be. People did
still want to move to new places though; that was a value that wasn’t going
to change anytime soon, so whenever the need arose, someone would be there
to make it happen. They would keep planning to build them until something
changed about their situation, which it did. Fort Frontline proved to be one
of the best ideas that the mages had ever come up with, but it was beginning
to be less effective. The monsters were seeking out people, and to get to
most of these people, they would usually end up going through Frontline
first. That stopped being such a reliable outcome, though. For reasons no
one could tell from this end of the broken portal, starting around 2077,
monsters were coming in faster, and more abundantly. Experts still weren’t
sure exactly what was on the other side or even what these things were—and
no one was brave enough to investigate—so there was really no way to know
what was causing the influx, but it could prove to be a problem.
The Fort Frontline method was no longer good enough on its own. The monsters
were simply going around the fort, and not because they were becoming smart
enough to avoid it, but because there were too many of them now, and they
didn’t exactly travel in a single file line. Fortunately, there was a simple
solution to this. All they would need to do was build a second military
outpost. The tenth town, insomuch as it was a town, would be called
Fort Salient. It was built closest to the portal ring than anyone ever
thought it was possible to survive. While it was a crapshoot where on that
ring a monster appeared, they did seem to come through more often on the
Southwest side. So that was where Fort Salient sat, within clear view of the
ring. It was the first thing these monsters saw, so they always went right
for it. The strongest fighters in Fort Frontline, and elsewhere, were
assigned there. If you were posted at Salient, it meant that the source
mages saw potential in you. They wanted you to fight in the war until its
bitter end, and there wasn’t a question whether that would happen, only
when. Seers were predicting the end of the war, but seers are always
purposefully vague. They’ll only give you enough information to make it to
your destiny. If they just laid it all out on a roadmap, you would probably
try to change it, and screw everything up. Some people interpreted this omen
to mean they needed to go on the offensive, instead of just defending
themselves, and Fort Salient became the first staging ground for these
battles. This was when it turned back into a true war, complete with damage
to infrastructure, and casualties. Some called this year the beginning of
the end of the Protectorate, but most agree that it would have fallen much
sooner if not for the brave men and women who fought here.
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Wednesday, August 19, 2020
Microstory 1433: Peak Valley
Before there was even a spark of an idea to build the eighth town of Astau,
construction began on a new town called Peak Valley. It may seem like an
oxymoron, but there really was a smallish mountain to the south of Springfield
and Splitsville, on top of which was a sort of bowl that looked like any other
valley. Experts believed it once housed a glacier, but they couldn’t explain
what would have happened to all the water on the surface. In fact, it was a
question they never answered about the whole world. There were signs of water
erosion all over the place, but no liquid or solid water anywhere. The planet
must have ventured close enough to its star to evaporate it all away before
that star expelled it from its system, but there really wasn’t any proof of
that either. Regardless, the real magic of the Peak Valley was that there was
an extra seed portal from Earth there. For the most part, seeds only showed up
on Durus in a certain region, and any plants that grew beyond it did so due to
the normal spread of vegetation. They appeared from small flashes of light,
like fireflies. It wasn’t particularly safe, because of the monsters, but
teenagers liked to go there on quick romantic getaways, and watch the seeds
appear. The Peak Valley was the only other place where this happened. It would
have been a nice place to live all along. While monsters definitely had the
ability to climb up the side of the mountain, or simply fly, it was still a
well-fortified area. It was easy to see them coming from pretty much anywhere
in the valley, which would give mages enough time to prepare for an attack. As
always, the main reason they never settled there before was because of
resources. It was difficult to pump water up from Watershed, but as time went
on, both technology and time powers promoted progress. By the 2070s, it was a
sufficiently viable option. The filter portaler would remain in Distante
Remoto, where she belonged—even though they could have used her—because there
were other ways of getting what they needed, which they didn’t always have.
Laying pipe in the ground was a fairly easy endeavor when dirt could be
teleported out of a hole, the pipe could be teleported into the hole, and then
the dirt could be teleported back on top of it. The new town was initially
planned for a 2075 completion date, but in 2072, a new member of Mad Dog’s
Army was sourced who could make quantum replications of objects. A single pipe
could be manufactured once, and then copied thousands of times. This process
was not instantaneous, but it started moving a lot quicker once the quantum
replicator joined the project. Peak Valley was finished in 2073, and prospered
for seventeen years.
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Tuesday, August 18, 2020
Microstory 1432: Astau
The third vicennial Mage Games were a huge hit. The population of Durus,
across the seven towns, was booming. The number of people applying to become
town mages was unprecedented. The number of mages needed to protect the
towns was lower than expected. The number of people who performed
excellently was incredibly impressive. The inception of the fourth town,
Hardtland showed that a pattern had formed. The number of towns was rising
proportionately to the growth of the population. People were moving out to
new places, and over the next twenty years, it was becoming clear that the
ability to do this was an expectation. In 2070, the only ones applying for
mage selection were those born on Durus. They had never known what it was
like to live on Earth, besides the stories their parents and grandparents
told them. They fully understood why it was so important that the
competition happened, and that the people who were selected knew what they
were doing. So they trained. And they trained, and they trained. They
prepared their whole lives for the chance to prove that they had what it
took to be part of security. Some just wanted cool powers, but it was easy
to weed them out, because they lacked true heart, and the dedication that
was required to succeed in the contest. Still, there were more winners than
there needed to be to serve the towns. Both Hidden Depths and Distante
Remoto required fewer mages, because of their strategic locations. Engineers
had made the technological solutions surrounding Springfield stronger, and
more reliable over the years, even after their original inventor left the
planet, so they didn’t need a whole team either. The source mages could not
decide who they would select out of all the people who deserved it. They
didn’t just want to raise their standards higher; they wanted to reward the
people who had dedicated themselves to the cause. So they did something new.
They built an entire town in a day, and nearly everyone in it would be a
mage. There were a few families, but for the most part, the ones who moved
there were single, and ready to go out into the world without their parents’
oversight. They called it Astau. This was based on the root for eight,
because it was the eighth town on Durus. They weren’t going for originality
here.
It was really important to the founders that this mage town not be seen as
elitist, or separatist, but there was always tension. They tried to
alleviate these problems before they began by situating the construction
site as equidistant from the other towns as possible. Of course, Distante
Remoto was farther away than anything, but they found a pretty good spot to
be in the middle of everything else. They encouraged people to visit, and
their residents to travel to other places, but the friction remained. Things
weren’t any better within Astau’s borders. Everyone there thought they were
too good for menial jobs, so no one wanted to work in the fields, or on the
repair detail. They wanted to use their time powers, and sometimes, they
weren’t necessary. They didn’t really feel the need to keep any border
security, because when a monster came by, there would always be someone
around with the necessary skills to get rid of it. So there was no one
working, and no one in the other towns who liked them. They weren’t real
mages, because they weren’t protecting people who needed it. They were just
there, hanging out by themselves, not contributing to the community, or even
being capable of supporting themselves. It was the first major failure since
the Mage Protectorate rose to power, and an embarrassment for all involved.
In less than a year, many of the residents moved back to the towns they had
come from, or requested assignments elsewhere. Some stayed, formed the usual
border patrol, and allowed regular people to come in. It became just like
any town. In fact, it was probably considered to be the most normal out of
all of them. It wasn’t original, like Springfield; tech-based like
Splitsville; well-irrigated, like Parade; forested, like Hardtland;
militaristic, like Fort Frontline; concealed, like Hidden Depths; or far
away, like Distante Remoto. It was just a town in the middle of Durus, with
regular people, who were trying their best to live their lives. Perhaps that
was what made it special. On Earth, most towns didn’t have some kind of
niche, or defining characteristic. They were just places that people lived,
instead of living somewhere else. And that was completely okay.
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Monday, August 17, 2020
Microstory 1431: Distante Remoto
In the year 2058, a woman was sourced with a power that Durus had seen once
before. She was a filter portaler, meaning she could transport clumps of
molecules, but nothing too large. This really only helped her move water and
air from one place to another, because nothing else was small enough to fit
through the filter. No one knew why it was that this rogue planet held an
atmosphere, or more importantly, where the air was coming from. They did
have a pretty good idea of where this air first showed up. Several
kilometers North of Hartland was a special location they called Gaspunui. A
seer town mage had named it that many years ago, but never said how he
thought of the word before he died in 2054. There was nothing particularly
special about the land itself. It looked just as the land looked anywhere
else. But the oxygen levels here were slightly higher than anywhere else.
The atmosphere originated here, and spread everywhere else, but it wasn’t
evenly distributed. The air was thinner the farther away one traveled from
this spot. All six towns were well within normal range, but if one attempted
to spend a significant amount of time on the other side of the world, they
would have a harder time breathing. It wasn’t impossible, and certainly
people could acclimate to it, just like people on Earth did with higher
elevation, but it wasn’t ideal, and there wasn’t much reason to try.
It was too far from Watershed to build irrigation pipes, so why bother?
Well, the people in charge of coming up with the seventh town knew why it
was worth a try. Being so far from everything included the time monster
portal ring. As far as they knew, these monsters never traveled so far,
because they sought out life to destroy, and there wasn’t anything out
there. Much of the planet was covered in weedy plants they simply called
the thicket, but not even that extended this far out, because the
seeds that portaled there from Earth couldn’t float that far; and the now
native plants had not yet done so themselves. But the filter portaler
changed everything. She could give hopeful inhabitants of a distant new town
the opportunity to live peacefully, free from the monster attacks. She just
needed to be convinced. Filtering worked both ways. She could transport
molecules nearby to somewhere far away, or she could summon these
molecules from somewhere else, to her location. The latter was a lot
easier. Portaling something away took more energy, and more concentration,
than bringing it to her. So if she wanted to help the people of the new
town, she would pretty much have to be one of them, and that wasn’t
something she was naturally interested in. In the end, though, she agreed to
leave Springfield, and the rest of the Mad Dog Army, to make sure these
people had what they needed. She sacrificed her own happiness for the good
of the community. It wasn’t entirely without its advantages, however. She
met a good man there, and later married him under the Arch of Endless Water,
which she created with two looping portals that stayed open permanently on
their own. She was also given the honor of naming the town whatever she
wanted. She chose Distante Remoto, which was obviously redundant, but she
liked the cadence, and everyone else liked it too. Walking to Distante
Remoto became a journey that people trained to be able to do, and was
ultimately incorporated into the 2070 Mage Selection Games.
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