Jump to content

Through the Living Heir

Members
  • Posts

    2061
  • Joined

  • Last visited

About Through the Living Heir

  • Birthday November 24

Profile Information

  • Member Title
    Threw the living glass
  • Pronouns
    he/him
  • Location
    North East US. (At least, that's what I want you to think)
  • Interests
    Reading and writing hard-ish fantasy and sci-fi. Learning cool things, generally through reading Wikipedia, TVtropes, or books. I’m a Life Scout, typically do swim team, and tried cross country this fall because I’m thinking of doing triathlons. I play D&D and want the Cosmere RPG to get here sooner. I procrastinate more things than I probably should.

Through the Living Heir's Achievements

526

Reputation

  1. “I’m creating a weapon that can harm the Witherlord.” Rebus gave a slightly rueful smile. “Unfortunately, the best way to get the materials requires several Narrators to give up their powers.” The Narrationblade shifted, quillon morphing to catch the end of the blade. Rebus twisted it, attempting to wrench the sword out of Cep’s hand - and then lunged forwards, the sword abruptly disappearing as a dagger coalesced in his other hand. “Actually…” Rebus thought for a moment. “Perhaps you could jump.” - Rebus reassembled next to her, forming what remained of his shield. He didn’t have any burns, of course, but he groaned as he forced himself to sit up. “Are you alright, Rebyl?” - The lab coat man seemed pretty dead. Killing him had been rather fun, which was weird, all things considered. - Rebus smiled. “I’m glad to hear that.” Taking a deep breath, he summoned some of his borrowed power. He didn’t glow, or float, or even sound different - but he felt strong, becoming the fulcrum of reality he would have been if he hadn’t split his power into countless pieces. “Narration is an incredible gift and an immense responsibility. I believe you know that already, but understanding it is a different matter entirely. We’ll start simply.” Rebus was holding an apple, his classic demonstration of summoning. “Show me what you’ve already learned.” “You were screaming, primarily. I suppose I did ask after metal, so if you were one of the stranger Narrators it would make perfect sense.” Rebus smiled. “As I mentioned, I’m looking for help facing the Witherlord.” - Meanwhile, Rebus went looking for Afterimage. One of him not in the middle of a withergeist attack, preferably.
  2. Rebus whistled - and then leapt forwards, his Narrationblade darting towards Cep's chest. Rebus glanced at Corvus. "Regardless of whether or not he ends up attacking Heaven, the Witherlord is a catastrophic threat. I need your help to prepare."
  3. "Unfortunately, I don't know. I would use someone like the Great Wizard - or even Sequence - to bring enough corruption to the realm that it allows entry, but I doubt that will be the approach taken."
  4. @xinoehp512 Onyx would perhaps notice that the multiverse lore had shifted dramatically - thanks to the collusion of some Authors, the number of worlds has become quite finite. Rebus, meanwhile, only got déjà vu - he'd been supposed to ask something else, but what had it possible been? - Meanwhile, on the ship, a particularly lucky withergiest reached some sort of crystal - after an alarmingly small amount of damage, it destabilized. An explosion rocked the vessel - and of course, every single other crystal. Or at least I think that's what happened. Neither party is really my worldbuilding, so... Rebus nodded. "I'm making a weapon to fight the Witherlord. That takes a lot of power. A-half-dozen-Narrators-sacrificing-their-magic levels of power." He summoned his projection of the weapon - a spike of Luxite flanked by Nullite and Prismite. "Pure Luxite would be easier, but it's so rare that the only reason I've gotten this far is Nameless's Conversion Medallion." Rebus smiled. "Hello, Kyler. I don't suppose you can get off that ship." - In that moment, the crew didn't matter to him - Rebus threw the Conversion Medallion to Rebyl, wrapping her in a bubble of Narration and nanotech. - The man seemed very dead - in fact, the wound burned with the telltale signs of a blow inflicted with Mordite. - Rebus blinked. "Indeed." Then he sighed, seeming almost on the verge of tears. "Before Atlas died, I'd been intending to teach her how to use her powers. Perhaps, if Fog was to fight Atlas after that time, she would be able to survive." He forced a smile. "We need all the Narrators we can get. Would you let me train you?" Rebus smiled, Abstraction fading into the background again. "You'd be more than a match against some withergeists, but until I get another core or two you won't stand a chance against the Witherlord. Hence-" Rebus summoned his Narrationblade, "you should spend this time practicing." "They aren't," Rebus said. "That's the only reason that he hasn't destroyed half that realm already."
  5. Rebus stumbled, the shock of Atlas and Symbol’s deaths hitting him once more. Then he composed himself, standing straighter as he truly understood the situation. “You’re free of Cyrus now, as he won’t notice you’re gone for quite some time. We’ll need to contact your brother - he’s on Cyrus’s ship, with a clone of me.” - “Alright, the highest priority is to-“ The ship rocked, almost throwing Rebus and Rebyl off their feet. - Darkness glowed around Leinard’s hands as the man in the lab coat panicked. “Help!” - Rebus’s eyes widened. “One 9 16? 1 26 Fourteen. 26 1 20 21! 17 10 13 1 2313” Rebus returned the grin, the expression actually visible as the reality warping followed the weapon. “As long as the weapon is Abstracted, we can both possess it - there’s not time for me to finish it before it is needed. And, while me bringing it fully to reality would increase the powers, physical Balancium is… volatile.” “There are surprisingly many there - though that’s stalled at the moment. As for Heaven, all I know is that that’s its name, it shares an Author with Erryin, and you have to have had good intentions to enter.” “I’ve been trying to stop an apocalypse,” Rebus said, rather tersely. “I would ordinarily try to help you. At the moment, though, I’ll need something in return.”
  6. “Excellent. In that case, we’ll proceed.” The weapon didn’t move, but it was suddenly in Cep’s possession. “With the world as it is, you should be able to bond it.” Rebus returned the nod, striding after him. - Rebus grinned, manipulative the Prismite crystals to block an errant blast of darkness. “I’d gladly tell you more after the withergiests are gone.” - “Ok! Fine. He- he went the other way.” The man stammered out the words as though Amoebus would hear him if he spent too long talking. “He threatened me. Said he would kill me unless I sent you the other way.” Choking back a sob, he slumped against the wall. “I’m sorry.” - Rebus’s smile warmed, and he started to return the hug. Then he tensed, pain and anger clouding his expression. Salt reminded him so much of Atlas. When Fog returned- Rebus shook his head, and lines of orange light coalesced around his hand. They sunk into his scars, locking away his emotions; pain, anger, grief - and tenderness. Rebus smiled. “I should have done that quite a while ago. Now, let’s find you something to do.”
  7. “Kyler?” Rebus asked. “I won’t know for certain until I have my powers, but I suspect I gave him something to contact me with.” - Rebus smiled. “The Conversion Medallion. Nameless made it, long ago - it can change different kinds of magic into one another, like making a withergeist’s torso suddenly made out of Prismite.” - The man blinked, looking nervously down the hallway again. “It doesn’t really matter.” - Except… he wasn’t. In fact, the pathway of destruction simply ended at the hallway turned a corner, with a scorch mark on the wall. - Rebus blinked, taken slightly aback by the question. “There’s an apocalypse going on and most of my friends are dead.”
  8. Rebus smiled. “I spoke to someone else in the same situation. Cyrus was threatening his family. But Cyrus left, and as soon as I get out of the Nullite I can take us away from him.” - “Don’t touch them,” Rebus warned. Then he swept the medallion through the withergeist, and its substance imploded into little wisps of shimmering colors. - “I am?” He took a deep breath. “I am. Yes.” He glanced nervously at the path of destruction down the hall. “I’ll be alright; you should go catch Amoebus.” “There’s a planet under attack as we speak, but the Witherlord is trying to invade some version of the afterlife.” Rebus smiled, and the world… shifted. It became almost like the Mindscape - simultaneously malleable and pure, a representation of the world and yet somehow realer than it. Rebus was at the epicenter, a nexus of schemes, power, pain, and hope. He was simply a name, and the thoughts that went with it - an abstract representation of himself. He smiled - and that was his essence, genuine pride intermingled with an ever-present mask - and brought the weapon to himself. Power, sacrifice, magic - chaos, order, and dark aligned as they should be, but most of all light. The medallion around Rebus’s neck - still Nameless’s, even now - mirrored it. The blade - which it was, or at least could be - was nearly as the Conversion Medallion was; each axis, bound together in a form that could master them all. Chaotic Darkness was missing - Prismite and Nullite flowed only into Luxite, would be twined around what would become a hilt. Rebus spoke, though the words didn’t need to travel through air to be heard. “Luxite dominates, and needs to, but there are two gaps within the form. The first, you will fill - your core will bring symmetry, and in turn the weapon will give you power. The second will be filled by the power of the Witherlord himself. If you would be corrupted, the weapon will take that dark power and be strengthened - for a time.” Rebus paused, silence stretching an indeterminate length under the influence of whatever power he was using, and smiled once more. “What do you think?” If Jack had not been made from metal, he might have blushed. He definitely did some stammering. “Not much. I’m not sure you remembered. You don’t have to tell me. You should probably write it down.” - Brought into existence by a flicker of Narration, a speck appeared. It orbited the planet, outside the shroud of darkness, and broadcast its coordinates back to its creator. Rebus smiled at Salt, though it wasn’t much more than polite. “I suppose that is true. Would you allow me to think?”
  9. Rebus smiled more broadly, seeming genuinely proud of what he was creating. "A weapon made from Luxite could kill the Witherlord, of course. But the Fundamental Essences are more than simply building materials... Keying the weapon to your core could allow you to tap into magic that hasn't been seen in the Thread for a very long time." Jack's eyes widened. "You do?"
  10. Rebus gave a small, grateful nod. "May I bond your core to what I have thus far?" Rebus slowly raised an eyebrow. "Are you perhaps being blackmailed?" - The Conversion Medallion snapped into being, chain wrapped around Rebus's hand. He chuckled, face absolutely devoid of mercy. And then the top deck was within the ship, reality paying absolutely no heed to the contradiction. @xinoehp512: that is of course Narration, and would leave them more-or-less in the midst of the withergeists - though any within ten feet or so would be where they were before, and need to leave and come back to encounter them. - The path of destruction left the ceiling, more shattered space forming a passage out into a hallway. Scorch marks still smoldering with darkness led the way to the left, while an out-of-breath man in a lab coat cowered in the other direction. With a flick of his wrist, Rebus's hand was empty - the core safe and ready for its conversion. Former Antagonist... Rebus thought, smiling at where 9/10 had been. "References to earlier points in the narrative of reality." Rebus waved a hand, indicating the Thread around him. "But that's not especially important at the moment - even now, the Witherlord is preparing to attack." Jack nodded - it was odd, as he thought about it. There was plenty of woods, and only sheer luck had led to him finding Lyric. "Do you remember anything not in the journal?" "There's an index of worlds, actually. Eventually, I'll find the one my 'daughter' came from," Rebus's smile - inexplicable infused with passion and pride - began to shift towards slyness. "The easiest way to do that is to find a parallel universe where I already succeeded."
  11. “Yours, actually.” Rebus said. “That’s why I don’t have anything in particular to ask of you. Unless you’d like to fight a reality-destroying nexus of dark power possessing a man who already wanted to become as evil as possible.” - “I’m not your father, but I do care about you. That’s not something I do lightly.” - Ameobus had left a trail of broken machinery and shattered reality in his wake, either trying to slow pursuit or replenish the Mordite he’d lost. Rebus suddenly grinned. Exposition. That was Bacon’s Plotblade, though I don’t think he ever used it. “Callbacks that are useful to me,” Rebus clarified. “I’ve approached a number of Narrators in parallel; I would need six for this to work as I intend.” “Well, my weapon would made out of modified Narrator cores.” Rebus shrugged. “There’s not many other options, though.” “Allies… Yes.” Rebus nodded slowly. “We can be allies. I don’t think our ultimate goals align, but for the time being I will assist you, and accept your help in return.” “Indeed,” Rebus said. “I have a device that can enable this travel, but Lore may still be necessary; the fuel it’s supposed to use doesn’t seem to canonically exist here.” “The alternate realities seem to be non-canon versions of this world, reminiscent of fan-fiction. I may be able to find, for instance, a man named Benevolence, who spared the life of a man he hated in order to bring the Luxsprites back.” Rebus smiled wryly. “I suspect you see the applications…” Jack frowned. “You should have it; we were recording things in case you lost your memories.” I’m not especially surprised. Perhaps, though, we’ll meet again. Rebus made a choking sound as the Symbol died, barely even aware of the Witherlord’s gloating. Kneeling in the darkness, Rebus felt only despair. Then a brief flash of pain, and then he felt nothing. - From across the Thread, Rebus watched helplessly. Symbol was dead, just like that. Grief crashed down on him even as the wave slammed into what had once been the truest version of him. He took a long, sobbing breath. And then he stopped. The burn from Redemption surged along his arm, but he halted it with a glance. “I will remember.” He didn’t smile, but he was no longer crying. “I will remember this. And I will remember Nameless.”
  12. Rebus took a long breath, the Conversion Medallion around his neck. His Author's absence had been frustrating, but not utterly fruitless - trapped within daydreams, he had learned some of the Medallion's secrets. He took another breath, carefully sculpting the descriptions of his actions, and touched the Medallion to the core. It began to glow - not with the violent flash of the first experiment, but rather a steady light. Rebus smiled. "Five left, I suppose." "You are a Narrator, of course, but a blade also needs someone to wield it." Then Rebus smiled, his eyes glittering. Rebus grinned, eyes sparkling. "We certainly can..." "I have a conversion device." Rebus raised his eyebrow, just slightly - Renamed's reaction was intriguing. "I've been around long enough to have a few Chekhov's Guns." Uh oh. As memories came rushing back to Jack, he panicked - first as he realized the gravity of his surroundings, and again as he realized Lyric was wandering off. And then he had an idea. "Check your journal," he said softly. - Rebus reached for Symbol, desperately hoping that somehow... he didn't even know. Somehow he could fight the Witherlord himself with nothing but floating rocks and a liquid that drowned you if you touched it? Somehow he could bargain with a being that wanted the destruction of reality? Rebus fell to his knees, truly and completely beaten. - Of course you don't. I do admire your handwork - with the Medallion, not the fact our current predicament was even able to occur. The man - who hadn't gotten a name because he'd really been supposed to die quite speedily - was mildly uncomfortable. He'd never liked heights, nor being practically strangled by spooky mist dragons. That was a while ago. Template is still more-or-less around, though, should someone look for them. That's perfectly understandable. Of course, by the time I was done, it wouldn't be a sliver. Rebus grinned. As for replacements... I suppose I could give you some nanotech, or that magic system BftS borrowed, but I think I can do better than that. Rebus considered the question for a moment, missing the speed of thought his powers and enhancements provided. "I have no reason not to be." - "I will protect you." Rebus's voice was devoid of flippancy or false reassurance. - Ameobus reeled back, chips of Mordite and nanomachines scattered across the floor - his torso reforming as what had once been his head started to disintegrate on the ground. "Remember that even I warned you," it said, tongue crumbling to dust. Meanwhile, Ameobus's headless body flung the remaining dagger at Jack. It leapt, scuttling across the ceiling and into the vent that Jack's had been hiding. "Primarily, this concerns lore. Lore itself would certainly be an asset, but I fear for what could happen if it were wielded against Antagonist." Rebus smiled slightly. "I know you've spoken on time travel in the past. Universe travel, though, is largely uncharted - I'm met my daughter, from a world in which Symbol and I truly do get a happy ending. For a time, at least; Rebyl is stranded here, and her father disappeared in that accident." - They found a number of lights that seemed bent on destroying them. Nanomachines - mere specks of life and metal to the eyes of a withergeist - constructed lasers, while crew members with energy weapons had rushed belowdecks to protect the ship's drive.
  13. "Luxite is the metal associated with Ordered Light. I can use your-" Rebus indicated to Corvus- "power to produce some, because Narration is of Chaotic Light." Rebus is definitely responsible for his death, but he's twisting words to make Cep a bit more likely to assist him. Rebus smiled. "I need Narrator cores - ideally six of them."
  14. Rebus thought for a second, considering his word. "I am." Not that the response would make any sense, but being confusing was better than being shot. - I was thinking that part is before the attack, since it makes the timeline work better. Your choice if we want to do that, though. "That's the thing about Withergeists. They're weak, but they have numbers." - Amoebus continued to backpedal, clutching at his eye. Then he shook himself, pulling the dagger out and allowing his face to knit back together. Dagger in one hand, Mordite sword in the other, he swung at Jack with ferocious rapidity. As he did so, however, he spoke calmly and softly, face perfectly composed. "You shouldn't trust Rebus. He'll betray you-" another flurry of violent slashes- "because eventually, he always does." - Rebus nodded. "Good. Can you find either Nameless or Utility and get them to come here?" - @xinoehp512 "The powers of Ordered Light were used against the Witherlord during its previous incarnation, and a Luxite blade could kill it permanently. What I can do depends upon the resources I am given."
  15. "I was." - "I don't know of anything here by that name. Can you describe-" Something rocked the ship, almost throwing them off their feet. - Amoebus ducked, and the second dagger thudded into his torso, slotting neatly between the Mordite in his skin. He gasped, stumbling backwards. - Rebus nodded. "Regardless, you seem to be new here." As soon as the coin was out of his hand, Jack blinked once more. Everything came rushing back, and he stumbled, briefly overwhelmed. Lyric, on the other hand, would probably forget what he had been doing. - Rebus let out a long, shaky breath. "It gave me time. Sometimes, that's all you can ask for." "I do." Rebus smiled. "I'm going to use our power to form a weapon which can be used against the Witherlord." The monster didn't care much. It drove its splintery claws into the recently deceased lumberjack's chest. He fatally wounded Cricket, and then Twinstorm put him out of his misery with a lightning bolt. "Regardless," Rebus smiled, seeming oddly cheerful for the circumstances, "the Witherlord is back. I'm the only one here who's brought forwards a plan, so I would like your help." The man was confused, since he hadn't been paying attention. The tree monster from earlier seemed to be tearing the bones out of the unfortunate lumberjack behind them. "Several plans, in fact - that's the best way to ensure one will work. One of mine needs you." - Rebus assembled a crystal in front of the light, directing beams of it to several withergeists. He was too late, though, some withergeists had already made it beneath the ship, where they couldn't be reached by the beams. "They'll likely try to break into the ship - we need to protect the energy cores."
×
×
  • Create New...