Hero of Another Story:
I awaken as a small thing bathed in absolute darkness. I am surrounded by bone. This is
not what I was promised. Someone should have come to awaken me shortly after my body went cold. There was to be
ceremony for me and those others who became deathless knights. But here I am, trapped inside my own ribcage. Awoken by, what, my body growing so decrepit that no amount of magic could force it to hold my soul any longer?
Fear must not have any command over me, but I am… worried. Worried how this could be possible. The mask-makers would not forget us here. But then what could force them to leave us? Did we
lose the War of Truth? That cannot be. Our oracles asked the future, and were promised that we would be able to destroy the usurpers.
I cannot consider myself fortunate to be a bodiless wraith, but if nothing else my incorporeality means I will not be trapped inside my own ribcage in a sarcophagus until the last dregs of my soul ebbs away. The Temple of Glorious Eternity has fallen into disarray. The halls have filled with sand from places where the ceiling has buckled under the weight of sand on the floor above and crumbled. How long must it have taken for all this sand to reach me?
My sarcophagus bears the mask made for me as we prepared for my passage. Without the mask-makers to place my soul inside the proper earthen vessel, my soul must still be using it to support itself. Now, I’ll be soulbound to it until… I have to hope that someone above will understand the arts well enough to save me.
I stare into my own eternally-closed eyes, frozen in gold. This is
not what I was promised, but I must not cry, cannot let heretical emotionality pull me off the path of truth. I am a deathless knight and I am strong. If I’m to remain bound to the mask, I’ll just have to carry it with me. I lift the mask off the sarcophagus, leaving it with only a carving of my headless body.
I can hear sand shifting quietly. A sign that wild sandile have come to occupy the castle in its abandonment. A sign that any misstep could be dangerous, when I have many floors to ascend. Fortunately, sandile are not particularly intelligent. Unlike myself. I do not allow any to get the jump on me. Until the shifting sands are drowned out by the footsteps of something larger. I enter high alert, knowing I won’t be able to hear anything else coming.
“Look, it’s a wild yamask!”
A small child wearing clothes of incredibly fine fabric dyed rich colour points his finger at me, calling out to a floating, pink companion whose species I do not recognize. He runs
recklessly towards me, ignoring the ever-present danger of–
“Ow! Ow, ow, Munna, help me! That hurts, stop it!”
–sandile lurking beneath the surface. If nothing else, I am now certain that I am nearing the exit. This child would not have gotten far behaving like this.
“Munna, use Psybeam!”
Why does he give such foolish orders? Sandile is a dark type.
“Oh no… Munna, I think it’s a dark type.”
Yes. It is a dark type.
His voice is tinged with fear now. “Well, psywave ignores type matchups, right? Use that!”
That’s not how that… No. You’re still trying to use psionics on a dark type. Based on the child’s growing desperation, I suspect that this Munna does not know any other types of attack. Wandering into a desert with a psychic that has no coverage for dark types.
In absolute terms, I do not have much greater odds in fighting a sandile, but in relative terms any number greater than zero is infinitely greater than zero. We must simply hope I pick up the practical component of spectromancy as quickly as I did the theoretical. Soul can be manipulated to sublimate into light, that light into heat. I let a point of spectral energy loose from my body, and the will-o-wisp sticks to the sandile. I will require the attrition damage of the burn as well as the reduction in physical force.
It hisses, releasing the child’s ankle and whipping around to face me. There’s no turning back now.
”Woah! Thank you, yamask.”
(You are welcome, child. Even without my vessel, it remains my duty to protect those who cannot protect themselves.)
It is currently beyond me to focus on my casting and evasion at the same time. When the sandile lashes out, its jaws connect with my apparition. If I were more skilled, perhaps, then I could do this. But as it stands, I do not see a path towards victory.
I hex the sandile, latching into its soul with my influence and drawing its life force out through the burn wounds in its hide. It bites me again. The air fills with the smell of ozone. Ghost decoherence.
It’s over, then. I was lucky to ensure two bites from a sandile, but all it got me was one good hit. If I wanted to win, I’d certainly need at least three, perhaps four.
“Yamask, pull back! Munna, take front!”
What? What is this child’s plan? Has he not yet accepted that his munna cannot do anything? Has he deluded himself into thinking a psychic can outlast the sandile’s ability to endure its burn? Is he simply trying to buy me a few more moments? I had no choice but to fall back regardless, unless I wish to be torn apart. That doesn’t mean I trust the kid’s tactics.
The kid reaches into his bag. “Here, just let me just—” Then up at the munna. “Use moonlight!” Then he retrieves a flask filled with an unfamiliar orange liquid. “—spray this on you. It’s a potion.”
He squeezes a lever on the flask’s head, causing it to spray the potion onto me. Through some feat of alchemy, my strength is restored. I feel whole again. The smell of decoherence ebbs.
“There you go! Feeling better?”
I nod. Admittedly, I am surprised the child had a plan after all.
“Munna, come back. Yamask, your foe’s weak!”
He’s correct. The sandile has further aggravated its burns trying to break through his munna partner. Two hexes. I can do this.
My first hex strikes true. Its breathing is growing heavy. Not much longer now. Its bite comes out weak, halfhearted. My final hex does not, and it slinks away into the sand.
The child pumps his fist in the air. “Yeah! You got it, Yamask! Thanks a million for the help.”
He is going to return to where he came from now, correct? That ankle needs to be inspected, possibly dressed. But he’s just looking at me.
“Do… Do you wanna come with me? Munna and I are gonna beat all the gym leaders! I bet you would be good at it!”
Yes. Yes, I imagine I would be. I shall watch over you, child, and keep you safe. As any good knight should.