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Forgotten Girl Quest
Chapter 70 - Thaw and Shatter

Chapter 70 - Thaw and Shatter

Sacrifice, Pechorin supposed, was an aesthetic act. The form and style of a sacrifice contained its meaning. Reducing the act to mere content, you would have to call it pointless or wasteful, but to do so would be to deny its self-evident power. To put it another way, the style of a sacrifice was also its content. They were one in the same.

This was how Pechorin rationalized the success of his plan. Either his plan failed and he wouldn’t be alive to know it had failed, and thus his sacrifice was a true one, or his plan succeeded and he would be left with the much happier task of reconciling between his theory that true sacrifice entailed putting one’s own life on the line, and the fact that he wasn’t dead.

Natsuko was going to be mad at him anyway when she found out he’d been about 85-90% certain he wouldn’t die by force dimension-jumping. As far as he was concerned, the fake act was just as impactful as the real act, and perhaps more so in its deliberate attempt to measure up to reality.

Well, no, Natsuko was probably going to dimension-jump him herself.

Pechorin stood up and looked around the unfamiliar room that lay exactly one floor below the top floor of the palace. In other words, the floor he’d been dimension-jumped to. Unlike if he was standing directly on the ground, there was another geometric plane for him to get bonked to.

“Er, hello there? Can I help you?” said the former Emperor of Shikijima, Sada-no-Michi.

He had a shock of gray hair that stuck straight up, bushy eyebrows, and a goatee that made him look like an overstuffed scarecrow. He was sitting on the floor with his legs tucked under a heated table and a cup of tea in hand.

“Not unless you know any cheat skills to calm someone down,” Pechorin replied.

The Emperor laughed at that. “No, but if you learn any, you should teach me.”

Wanting to put off dealing with Natsu, Pechorin took a seat across from the former Emperor. This was without being invited, but he figured poetry could get him out of a social faux pas if need be. You could basically fix anything in Shikijima with poetry.

Sada-no-Michi stroked his goatee. “Hmm… I know you from somewhere…”

“The exorcism?” Pechorin said.

“Aha!” he slapped the table. “Right! Interesting times. I suppose I ought to thank you for that. Life has been a lot calmer since you pulled the Demon King out of me.”

Sada-no-Michi took a sip of his tea and gazed wistfully out an open window at rolling clouds. Outside the room guards were stomping up and down the corridor looking for Pechorin.

Pechorin frowned. “I’m curious why the Empress doesn’t seem to share your gratitude.”

“Ah, Sacchan,” Sada-no-Michi said with a sigh. “She… has her own way of looking at things. My change of heart was a bit startling, I will give her that, but I have no desire to go back to the paranoid tyrant that I was. The totalitarianism was an act, but my rage at the state of our world was not. Not that I’ve let go of all my concerns, of course, there’s still a lot wrong with our world. But I can diagnose it now with a clear mind, rather than raging at every injustice.”

“Injustices like the way Heroes act?” Pechorin asked.

Sada-no-Michi gave him a knowing smile and sipped his tea. “That’s certainly one of them.”

“Why haven’t you tried to bring the Empress around to your thinking?”

“Sacchan isn’t ready to hear it. She looks at me and sees a broken man because what resonated with her was my anger and outrage and paranoia. Without them, I seem like an uncanny fake. But it just takes time. Believe it or not…” The former Emperor locked eyes with Pechorin and leaned forward. “Not every problem can be solved by poetry. Just most of them.”

“Believe me,” Pechorin replied. “I know.”

There was something in Pechorin’s tone of voice that made the former Emperor ask, “you’ve got someone like my Sacchan?”

“I think in this metaphor I’m her.”

“Mhm… I see…” Sada-no-Michi stroked his goatee. “By the commotion outside it certainly seems like you care about whoever this is.”

“I do. But I also feel… frozen, I guess you could say. Like things are forever going to remain in limbo.”

The former Emperor relaxed back onto his hands and twisted his back this way and that to a symphony of cracks. When he was done, he gazed up at the ceiling.

“If the outside won’t change, then change the inside. That’s what you’re trying to do with your poetry, isn’t it?” Sada-no-Michi said.

“Didn’t you say a moment ago that poetry can’t solve every problem?”

“No, but it’s a tool to be used in the solution. You use a hammer to build a chair, but you wouldn’t be happy sitting on a hammer, would you?”

Pechorin shrugged. Even as his guard had been lowered, the ingrained habits of cool nonchalance were as present as ever. His very existence, even before his deliberate efforts to cultivate an archetype, was like a poem. Aesthetically perfect, and demanding aesthetic perfection from the world. Anything could be made cool when poured into that mold, even sleeping in a dumpster.

“I guess not,” Pechorin said.

“So, decide what you want to fix and let poetry help, rather than hoping poetry will be the fix,” the Emperor said.

Fix? Pechorin wasn’t sure what there was to fix. The world itself was built around hierarchies decided before he’d even been summoned. He couldn’t poeticize his way into better money, stats, and equipment. And he couldn’t think of anything that he wanted to get rid of about himself. He was fine as he was, and the things he wanted to change were all outside himself. He explained as much to Sada-no-Michi.

“Sure,” the former Emperor said, taking another sip of tea, “but if there’s something you want to fix about the outside world, and you don’t have the answer now, then you have to change into someone who does have the answer.”

Pechorin pulled himself out from under the heated blanket and rose to his feet. The footsteps outside had subsided, so he was now free to slip away and go find the others, and especially Natsuko. He was fairly certain the Empress would keep her word, but his certainty floated in that same 85-90% range that he’d given the floor below him catching him. He’d feel a lot better if he saw Natsuko unharmed.

“If I don’t know how to fix things, how would I know what to change so I can?” Pechorin asked.

“You don’t, kiddo,” Sada-no-Michi said. “If you did, it’d just be another boring stat to level up. You like poetry because it’s messy and vague and numberless, don’t you?”

Pechorin nodded.

“So don’t go and turn self-growth into another numbers game where you grind until you hit enough “truth” points. Let it be the mess that it is.”

Pechorin grunted. This wasn’t Pechorin being dismissive so much as the fact that words seemed not as cool and dramatic as a grunt. So, he grunted and moved to the door. One thing did seem cool enough to do though:

“Thanks,” Pechorin said.

Sada-no-Michi hummed to himself for a second, then replied:

“Frost in late fall

Kills unharvested crops

With its beauty.”

Pechorin blinked. “That was 4-6-4.”

Sada-no-Michi gave him a lazy smile. “The Shikijiman 5-7-5 is shorter than in the common tongue, so 4-6-4 fits the rhythm better.”

Without intending to compose it, a couplet slipped out of Pechorin’s mouth before he could stop it:

“As we enter winter,

How can we expect thaw?”

“How indeed. I leave that question to you, kiddo,” the former Emperor said.

Wandering around the hallways outside, Pechorin eventually found the staircase and retraced his steps back to the courtroom. Throwing the sliding doors open, he rejoined his own court case.

The court looked more or less how he’d left it but with fewer guards, fewer smiling faces, a smaller audience, and with the Empress re-assuming her position on the Hibiscus Throne with Natsuko’s bottle at her side.

Natsuko herself was kneeling beside Shuixing and Sofiane. She fixed him with a death glare, having already figured out he’d survived. The Empress, meanwhile, with no way to access the Use-Ranking stat to confirm his death, went pale.

“Y-You! You should be dead! How!?” Empress Sadako said.

Pechorin thought about composing a poem here, but he thought of Sada-no-Michi’s poem and decided that he should do something that was not nearly as cool and edgy and just state outright what had happened.

“I gambled that I'd survive being sacrificed in Natsuko’s place, and since neither of us knew the outcome, that means I upheld my part of the deal,” Pechorin said.

“Wait, then I would’ve been fine too, idiot!” Natsuko said.

“And I didn’t know that for sure!” Pechorin snapped back with genuine anger.

He wasn’t sure where it had come from, but it definitely wasn’t cool or brooding or edgy. What it was, he realized, was honest, and honest meant vulnerable. He’d been willing to risk everything if he’d guessed wrong about the way the bottle’s physics worked, and he was going to make damn sure Natsuko knew that.

In a softer and quieter voice, Natsuko said, “you ass…”

“Enough!” The Empress said, standing up from her throne and grabbing Natsuko’s bottle. “We agreed to a life for a life, and that means you backed out of your side of the bargain.”

Guards rushed into the chamber behind Pechorin and pointed halberds at his back, not that this would do much to him. He raised a gun at the Empress who only then realized that Pechorin, as the only person freed from the Special Event field, was by far the most powerful person in the room.

Empress Sadako locked eyes with him. “I take back what I said about you making a good Non-Hero. You behave like all the other Heroes.”

“Call it whatever you want,” he replied, his gun arm locked onto her. “But you’re gonna give us the bottle and let us go or I’ll kill you where you stand. I’m sure you’ve heard the rumors about deaths during Special Events.”

The Empress responded with a piercing, unhinged laugh and stared back at him with wild, vicious eyes. “One thing you and I both agree on, then, is that some things are more important than your life.”

Empress Sadako charged at Natsuko, bottle cocked and at the ready. Pechorin opened fire. The Empress brought the bottle up to defend herself and a shower of broken glass sprayed in every direction as Pechorin’s bullets shattered Natsuko’s bottle.

Statistics:

NATSUKO

Level: 48

EXP To Level:

256,700

Class: Jack

Fire Elemental

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HP: (8,340 | 9,667)

STATS

Force: 112

Vitality: 135

Finesse: 57

Cognition: 41

Insight: 92

ABILITIES

PASSIVE:

Hothead —

Deal 50% more fire elemental damage while under half health

ACTIVE:

Jack of All Trades —

Every two levels, Jack learn an ability belonging to another class. These can be used once per day.

ELEMENTAL:

Fire Gale —

Produces a burst of fire from its user's limbs dealing moderate fire elemental damage and setting target ablaze

ACTIVE:

Fuel Injection —

Parry an elemental attack and regain 10% of the damage that would be dealt as HP and halve all current cooldowns.

DESPERATION ART:

Spontaneous Combustion — Coats the user in a wreath of flames and deals heavy fire damage centered on the user who loses half their health.

USAGE STATISTICS

USE-RANKING

#187/188

USE-NUMBER:

11,114 Emanations

ART NUMBER:

7,063

ERO-ART NUMBER:

4,739

FIC NUMBER:

17,012

Shuixing He

Level: 44

EXP To Level:

38,560

Class: Medico-Mage

Water Elemental

HP: (6,588 | 6,588)

STATS

Force: 24

Vitality: 69

Finesse: 80

Cognition: 178

Insight: 95

ABILITIES

PASSIVE:

Mental Mending — Add Cognition stat to any elemental abilities which heal or cure statuses.

ACTIVE:

Light of Hope — Cast a beam of light that deals significant unmitigated damage to undead enemies

ELEMENTAL:

Healing Waters — Passively store charges over time which can be used to heal HP proportional to Insight.

ELEMENTAL:

Ablutions — Use a charge of Healing Waters to cure status effects.

DESPERATION ART:

Bubble Storm — Produces a field of bubbles which protect and heal teammates and harm and slow enemies.

USAGE STATISTICS

USE-RANKING

#185/188

USE-NUMBER:

18,539 Emanations

ART NUMBER:

5,460

ERO-ART NUMBER:

2,109

FIC NUMBER:

18,213

Sofiane de la Nuit

Level: 71

EXP To Level:

675,063

Class: Duelist

Lightning Elemental

HP: (62,010 | 62,010)

STATS

Force: 360

Vitality: 592

Finesse: 775

Cognition: 190

Insight: 447

ABILITIES

PASSIVE:

En Garde — Successful parries increase crit chance on the next attack by 100%. Any overflow over regular crit chance is converted into bonus damage.

ACTIVE:

Perfect Parry — Briefly enter a stance in which the user automatically parries any damage in all directions.

ELEMENTAL:

Coup De Grace — Aims a precise strike at the target’s vitals and deals massive lightning damage to them on a successful hit. If this drops the target below half-health, it kills them instantly.

ELEMENTAL:

Ball Lightning — Turns the user into a ball of lightning and zips a short distance, dealing damage along the way.

DESPERATION ART:

Overcharge — For a brief period, all abilities have no cooldown and teammates’ attacks deal bonus Lightning damage and stun enemies.

USAGE STATISTICS

USE-RANKING

#39/188

USE-NUMBER:

2,366,324 Emanations

ART NUMBER:

11,249

ERO-ART NUMBER:

15,723

FIC NUMBER:

45,096

Pechorin the Gunslinger

Level: 47

EXP To Level:

52,111

Class: Gunslinger

Metal Elemental

HP: (8,105 | 8,377)

STATS

Force: 128

Vitality: 108

Finesse: 108

Cognition: 81

Insight: 4

ABILITIES

PASSIVE:

Headhunter — Each attack on enemy weak points reduces skill cooldowns by 1s.

PASSIVE:

Magnificent Seventh — Deal 200% damage while below 25% health and if you die, fully heal nearest ally.

ELEMENTAL:

Flak Cannon — Fires exploding shots in every direction which deal light Metal elemental damage and inflict the “conductive” status effect.

ACTIVE:

Vampiric Bullet — Fires an extra powerful shot which deals physical damage and heals for 33% of damage dealt.

DESPERATION ART:

Concentrated Fire — Attack speed quadruples and if target enemy dies, automatically lock on to the next.

USAGE STATISTICS

USE-RANKING

#188/188

USE-NUMBER:

3,993 Emanations

ART NUMBER:

467

ERO-ART NUMBER:

68

FIC NUMBER:

8,071