Arcane Exfil-Chapter 50Arcane Exfil : David MacPherson (2)

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Nobody spoke for a good minute after that, everyone just staring around instead: at the floor, at the ceiling, into the distance. π˜§π‘Ÿπ‘’π‘’π˜Έπ˜¦π˜£π‘›π‘œπ˜·π‘’π“.π˜€π˜°π“‚

Yeah, this wasn’t healthy at all.

β€œSooo…” Cole started. β€œPlans for tomorrow. Thoughts? Can’t just let our leave go to waste.”

β€œWell, you ain’t wrong,” Miles said with a shrug. β€œSee, I’m with ya, but uh… what? Head to the beach? That don’t seem like a good idea, considerin’ we just came back from the port.”

Ethan gritted his teeth and nodded. β€œYeah. Perhaps somewhere around the city then?” he suggested. β€œLady Elina?”

The question pulled her up from whatever depth she’d been at, Elina blinking like she’d forgotten other people existed. Her formal register came out like a reflex: β€œAh, pardon. I confess… I scarce know. The city abounds in diversions, assuredly, yet after the day’s trials I feel myself strangely adrift; there is no pastime that might readily commend itself.”

Miles gave a dry chuckle. β€œFancy way of sayin’ β€˜fuck if I know.’”

β€œWell, no…” She sighed, mouth tugging into something halfway between a smile and surrender. β€œYes, that, I suppose. Your vernacular does: begrudgingly, I say: capture the essence, if not the propriety.”

Cole laughed. God knew he needed that. β€œAlright, well, we’ve got some time to think it out. I’m not a fan of doing nothing, though: definitely no sitting on our asses.” He paused. β€œHow about uh… training?”

Miles tilted his head. β€œEhh… yeah, fuck it. Why not? Might as well, seein’ as we kinda left Lady Verna hangin’ last time β€˜round.”

Ethan nodded. β€œAlternatively, we might explore something less intensive. Library, maybe? Don’t know if it’s too early to reintroduce cultists to Mack, but even if that isn’t a good idea, there’s lots more to check out. History, spellcasting, and so on.”

β€œIf the choice is motion or rumination: motion,” Elina said.

All viable ideas. β€œYeah,” Cole agreed. β€œWe’ll check out the library one of these days, but I’m with Elina. Motion. Nothing too crazy; just some light training to practice what Lady Verna taught us and start getting into something new before our next deployment. New magic, supplementary skills, even building off the fundamentals now that we’ve got all the non-periodic elements down.”

Miles leaned forward. β€œWhat kinda magic we talkin’ β€˜bout?”

β€œWell, there’s telekinesis, apparently,” Ethan offered, looking just about as confused as Miles despite having brought it up. β€œYeah, crazy shit, right?”

Now that was something. Not a significant something: not yet, but definitely something. β€œI mean, yeah, but it depends on just how crazy it can get. Is it like… the Force? Or just lifting a cup: parlor tricks?”

Elina froze: not out of fear, fuck no. Rather, it was more like a cat that just spotted something worth pursuing. Her aristocratic composure cracked just enough for a slight raise of an eyebrow.

β€œParlor tricks, hm?” She rolled the phrase around like wine she was about to spit out.

Cole’s ass left the chair with all the dignity of a marionette getting yanked. He just went from zero to astronaut in half a second, Newton’s laws be damned.

His core cinched tight, a subconscious, raw response to the impromptu rollercoaster he’d just been sent on. His hands shot back for the chair, but the damn thing wasn’t where he left it, so he just pinwheeled once, catching nothing but air. And considering how goofy he must’ve looked doing so, he might as well add β€˜embarrassment’ to his haul.

At least he wasn’t alone. Miles’ β€œMotherfucker!” came out surprisingly high-pitched, while Ethan managed a simple but surprised β€œWhoa!”

β€œThis β€˜Force’ must be extraordinarily impressive,” she commented, strolling beneath them and examining their predicament like some curator considering acquisitions. Cole couldn’t quite prove it: not with Elina’s poker face: but he knew damn well she was enjoying every bit of this.

But something else caught his eye. No expression, which was actually even scarier; it meant no strain, no effort. If she had to really try to lift three grown-ass men, she didn’t show it.

Miles stabilized, opting not to tumble like a doofus, as Cole had. β€œI’ll be damned, Gracer. Since when could you do that?”

Cole couldn’t tell if Elina’s smile was genuine, or merely for their sake, but it was a welcome reprieve nonetheless.

She shrugged off the question like it was no biggie. β€œOh, since tutors first grew weary of replacing shattered glassware. In truth, telekinesis is standard for Slayer Elites. There is much expected of us, and so we are pressed to master many disciplines, whether our talent inclines or not. I confess, mine inclines modestly: five hundred pounds with control, and a thousand with complaint.”

Huh. Cole made a mental note: so that’s why they wobbled a bit.

β€œThe masters, though,” Elina continued, β€œthey make a grand spectacle of it. I once bore witness to Graves toppling a Fell Giant, first by slicking the ground with ice, then by hurling the brute aside with sheer force of mind. Inelegant, perhaps, and nothing near so efficient as your enhanced fireballs: but undeniably satisfying in its result.”

β€œFell giant, huh? Apt, I guess,” Ethan said with a light smirk.

Ethan’s commentary almost got to Cole; he’d missed the little dad jokes Ethan tossed out from time to time. He was damn near on the verge of cracking a smile when another thought struck him. He’d seen some shit, but apparently this world had a whole lot more in store. β€œWait, hold on. Giant? How uhh… how big we talking?”

β€œTwenty, perhaps twenty-five feet.” She read the next question before he voiced it. β€œBut do not flatter yourself with visions of such a feat; it will be long ere you approach it: conceivably not until you’ve attained mana corresponding to Level Sixteen. And for you, I suspect, that might require the draining of an entire vat of mana elixirs. But to return to the topic at hand, most mages scarce manage the weight of their own frame; a rare few reach Graves’ talent. As for the layman, twenty pounds is labor enough, and fifty near miraculous.”

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β€œLayman? The average person? The average person can cast telekinesis?” Miles asked.

β€œWell, most never bother, be they content with standard physical enhancement for their daily chores or simply disinterested. For those who do, it’s rather handy, particularly for maids. Ask Mrs. Guinnosa.”

Cole could imagine why: with this sort of utility, anyone could get an army of brooms and dusters to function like magical Roombas. But… was it really so easy? β€œSo you don’t even need to be a trained mage to pick up telekinesis?”

β€œNot in the least. You’ve done it already, and more deftly than most apprentices. Those stones you hurled, the ice you shaped and projected: all of it telekinesis. It is much the same with fireballs. Ordinary mages content themselves with shoving their fireballs forward; that is the extent of their craft. Which is indeed why your design was so remarkable: you dispensed with the need entirely.”

Well, that and the massively increased firepower. For the briefest moment, Cole thought about correcting her, but let it go. He was grateful enough for the praise.

β€œEven the most trifling manipulation of water demands it,” Elina went on. β€œThe blob of water that novices are oft trained to keep aloft? Nothing but telekinetic force. With most casters, the faculty abides beneath notice: for them it is instinctive, unconscious. Thus do we begin with the elements; for to bid a pupil to push water is far simpler than to instruct him in the abstract forces that undergird the act.”

β€œUh-huh. Rivetin’ stuff. Damn intriguing,” Miles delivered with immaculate deadpan. β€œBut uh… how long we gonna hang β€˜round here like piΓ±atas for?”

β€œAh!” Elina had the grace to look sheepish, at least for a split second. β€œForgive me: though I had begun to think you were enjoying the vantage. Perhaps I should have left you aloft a while longer.”

They descended gently, like an elevator easing to a stop. Cole’s ass found the cushion with all the dignity physics would allow: which wasn’t much, considering the yanking he’d endured. But… he’d take it.

β€œGood thing it wasn’t a demon that pulled that on us,” Ethan remarked, settling back into his seat. β€œWe’d be thoroughly cooked otherwise.”

Miles gripped his chair as if he could go to orbit at any time. β€œRight. Don’t s’pose you’ve got a counter for that?”

β€œTo counter telekinesis is, in principle, a simple matter: though in practice, another thing entirely. One must first perceive the forces themselves: the subtle push, the pull, the pressure upon the body. Until you can feel that current at work, you cannot hope to oppose it.”

β€œDifferent substances yield different responses,” Elina added. β€œSome mages exhibit a particular aptitude with metals. Director Fotham and the Office of Thaumaturgy maintain that it may be bound to magnetism, though their proofs remain incomplete.”

Magnetism. Cole’s mind jumped to electromagnetic fields, fundamental forces: wait. If magic interacted with magnetism, did that mean it operated through one, maybe all of the four fundamentals? Gravity, electromagnetic, strong nuclear, weak nuclear… He shelved the thought for later. Much later.

β€œIn any case,” Elina continued, β€œonce you sense the forces against you, all you must do is oppose: push where it pulls, pull where it pushes. The great advantage, however, is: as with all magic: that power wanes with distance. Should some foe attempt to hold you at a hundred feet, you might unbind yourself with but a fraction of his exertion.”

β€œSo it’s shit for offense,” Miles summarized.

β€œUnless they stand so near you might count the buttons on their coat, yes.”

A wave of bad memories flooded Cole. The death grip that Mimic had hit him with on the first night was bad enough; it had taken damn near everything in his power at the time just to weasel out of it.

β€œWhich means counters aren’t optional.”

β€œJust so.” The little bit of levity she had drained away as she glanced toward the windows. β€œBut that is a demonstration better undertaken in daylight, under Lady Verna’s supervision, and not in these weary hours.”

She was right. Cole hadn’t noticed the creeping exhaustion until she mentioned it, but now it hit him all at full force: the warehouse, the debriefing, Mack’s breakdown. His body felt ready to collapse, like he’d finally arrived at a hotel after enduring a grueling flight.

β€œYeah.” Miles rubbed his face. β€œBeen a long fuckin’ day.”

Understatement of the year. They’d started the morning thinking they’d practice multicasting, maybe work on new elemental combinations. Instead they’d discovered a figurative nuclear plot, wiped out an entire group of cultists, and watched their friend catalog every dead kid he’d ever failed to save.

Once the telekinesis sideshow passed, silence came rushing back: heavy with everything they weren’t saying.

Cole pushed himself up. Someone had to move first or they’d sit here all night, drowning in their own thoughts. β€œBreakfast at seven?” He looked around the room. β€œHead to OTAC after, see if Lady Verna’s available?”

Everyone nodded.

Ethan stood first. β€œI’ll see you all at seven.” He paused at the stairs, glancing toward Mack’s room, then continued without another word.

Miles stretched. β€œGuess Imma crash too. Night, y’all.” He headed up, leaving Cole and Elina in the growing quiet.

Elina hadn’t moved, still clutching that journal of hers. She looked completely wrung out: defeated, but definitely not in the way that called for a pep talk. If it were Cole sitting there, he’d want somebody to keep it short, keep it clean, and then leave him the space to breathe.

So that’s what he gave her. β€œYou did good, Elina. Get some rest.”

Elina sat with it, then finally nodded like she was willing to let the verdict stand. She gave a warm smile. β€œGood night, Cole.”

She said his name, plain as anything: Cole – and honestly, it tripped him up for a good second. Since when were they on a first-name basis? Then it hit: he’d called her Elina without thinking, stripped the titles off, and she was just reciprocating. Quid pro quo.

Probably didn’t mean more than that… But still, hearing it was good: warm, close, like she’d stopped holding herself at arm’s length. Fuck if he knew what else she might’ve meant, but the important thing was that she finally stopped seeing herself as an outsider. That was enough.

Cole waited until her footsteps faded before pocketing Mack’s revolver and heading up himself.

He paused halfway to his room, glancing down at the light leaking from under Mack’s door. No sound came from inside, but what sound could be made from staring at the ceiling? What could Mack be thinking at this moment?

Nothing too crazy, hopefully. Like, it was fucking insane to think Mack would come for the gun, for example. Still, insane didn’t mean implausible or impossible. Trust had limits: and those limits started somewhere before leaving a loaded option within reach.

Even if Mack remained stable through the next few days, it wouldn’t be proof of anything; Cole had seen men white-knuckle it longer than that, all the way up to the moment they didn’t.

Granted, things weren’t so bleak with Mack. The night had given him other reads: focus when the talk turned to business and games, an appetite that wasn’t performative, a mood range that wasn’t painted on. None were suicidal signs.

Cole could let himself relax a bit. He knew well enough that ideation wasn’t intent: God knew how many times his own mind had been struck with intrusive thoughts. And besides, the guy handed over the revolver, didn’t he? That’s as good as saying he got it. Or at the very least, that he didn’t have any plans on saying goodbye anytime soon. He just didn’t want the rest of them chewing themselves up over him.

Cole moved on. Whatever demons Mack was wrestling in there, he’d face them or he wouldn’t. But as long as that light stayed on, as long as he kept existing through the night, there was tomorrow. And tomorrow meant possibility, even if tonight held none.