The alley around Mar and the black-clad mages vanished. The world blurred but eventually the tugging sensation at the center of Mar’s being began to ease. After several long moments Mar was able to see straight again. Mar looked around and realized the area around him was completely different from before. It was was on top of a hill in an empty green field. Off in the distance where he knew the rest of the city lay he saw pale specters floating across the ground. Mar realized those must be the spirits of everyone in the city, the cloudy haze the only thing visible of them from the spirit realm.
The spirit realm was bizarre, and yet strangely familiar. He couldn’t recognize any of the scenery around him, and none of it resembled either Orlem’s school of magic or the wider city around it. Orlem wasn’t a planned city but there was order to it. The roads were straight and the buildings were mostly square and packed together neatly. In the spirit realm there were tall pillars of somethings strewn every which way. Mar wouldn’t have called them buildings, they were more like a thousand different people had sculpted a random shape out of clay and then piled them atop one another. The spirit realm was a place of thoughts, ideas, and emotion so it was no wonder that every feature appeared to have a thousand different hands at work crafting it.
Mar tried to blink and clear the blurriness out of his eyes, but he realized he couldn’t. He panicked for a few moments before he remembered an old book he had read about the spirit realm. The most common practice when coming here was to immediately manifest a humanoid body that was as similar to the mage’s real body as they could manage. The familiar form would provide focus for a mind that would otherwise wander. Ordinarily traversing the spirit realm would be quite dangerous, but the mages would all be trained and the entire trial would be carefully overseen.
Mar turned his thoughts inward and began to concentrate. To anyone looking, the cloudy shape of his spirit began to twirl and twist into itself until it was tightly packed like a ball. Then five projections shot out of the floating white sphere like the the limbs of a five pointed star. Four of them extended and morphed into crude arms and legs. The fifth one at the top stayed short and stumpy. The ball that had been at the center of the star-like shape shifted upwards and attached itself to the truncated limb, forming a head.
Fingers formed at the ends of the upper limbs, and toes on the lower ones. Mar refined the shape of the limbs to bend at the joints in the right way, picturing his own skeletal structure to refine the motions. With the basics down, he began working on the details. He formed facial features on his head and sprouted hair. Mar was trying to get the color of his eyes right when he realized he’d never studied that detail of himself very well. He knew they were a vague shade of amber but Mar just couldn’t get them to feel right. In frustration he just made them the same color as his hair. He clothed himself exactly as he remembered he had that morning.
Mar glanced at his hands and body. Everything was so ethereal. The thick and coarse weave of his cheap tunic seemed thin and gossamer, though Mar knew the clothes he imagined he was wearing were only a projection generated by his own mind.
He took a few moments to appreciate the weightless feeling. He took a deep breath even though he knew this form didn’t need such corporal things. He had read so much about the spirit realm, but not being a mage he assumed he would never be able to venture there. Everything here was forged from the mind, and altering it was merely an effort of will. After all, the entire spirit realm was forged from thoughts and dreams.
Mar glanced at his tunic again. He thought about how soft and well trimmed the ones the school had provided him in his youth had been. He had had a favorite set of clothes back then. They were the clothes of someone wealthy and powerful. The robes of a young mage destined for greatness. Mar recalled how they felt on his skin, and how they slid against his body as he moved. To his delight he found himself wearing the very clothes he was remembering, scaled up to match the size of his seventeen year old body.
Mar noticed other figures flickering uneasily into existence around him. Those must be the mages who lay around him the the physical world. He braced himself for the ‘killing’ blast of magic that would send him back to the physical realm. It wasn’t like he could do anything except wait to be sent back. The magic cast for the Trial would prevent him from re-entering his body unless it deemed that he had taken sufficient damage to be knocked out. He could try to run from them, but they were mages. They had likely practiced in the spirit realm before and would no doubt know enough of it’s ins-and-outs to catch him in no time. And even if he got away he would just be blasted to smithereens by another mage who saw him as free points.
Worse, Chetz and company might take enough offense to decide to rough him up in the real world. Mar’s bones still ached from Darrik’s little stunt with the rocks the other night. The most productive thing he could do with this time would be to figure out how he was going to talk himself out of the situation his physical body was in.
Mar was surprised to see how long it was taking the mages to manifest bodies for themselves. And how crude their attempts were. Of those that could even produce human-like shapes, only one of them had any features besides a general blobish form. Maybe the mages from Orlem were right to act so superior if this was supposed to be the best and brightest of Volfsdown.
Mar continued refining his own ethereal body while he waited. It was quite exhilarating really. He’d read so much about the spirit realm but never thought he’d get to test out what he had read for himself.
Mar glanced around. The voice had been so crisp and clear, totally unlike the distorted half-formed sounds that could be heard constantly buzzing in the background in the spirit realm.
Mar reached into his pocket and his fingers touched the face of the gray stone.
“Hoaaarw yoo” Mar tried to speak but the words dribbled off his tongue like a mouthful of sand. He realized that he had forgotten to build internal organs for himself and set about producing a set of lungs and throat.
Mar looked at the stone, furrowing his brow in concentrating, dimly aware of the fact that he had to modify the texture of his skin in order to do so.
Mar mentally snorted.
Mar huffed.
The stone made a ticking sound. It reminded Mar of how his nursemaid used to cluck her tongue at him whenever she was annoyed.
Mar felt the stone in his hand grow warm. Then it started to get hot. Really hot. The ley lines inside of it became visible and they latched into Mar’s ethereal body. Mar threw it to the ground but the feeling didn’t go away.
He felt at his hip where his pocket was. That’s where the painful invasive sensation was coming from. Mar felt around but there was nothing in his pocket. He glanced at the gray stone which he had thrown to the ground, but it was no longer there.
Mar pulled up his shirt and saw that thin, pulsating lines were traveling across his body. They reached his right shoulder and it was like all sensation in that arm went suddenly dark. As if the arm was no longer his.
The stone cackled malevolently.
It was the stone’s turn to be shocked and confused.
The pain in Mar’s side doubled, but he grit his teeth and held on.
Then Mar had an idea.
There was silence for a few moments before the stone spoke.
The tale has been taken without authorization; if you see it on Amazon, report the incident.
Before Mar could respond a pale figure clothed in half-formed rags stood up. It was a crude approximation of a human. It’s legs came to points and it balanced precariously on them. It’s hands were like mittens and lacked individual fingers. But still it stood, and from the folds of it’s torn and ragged cloak it withdrew a shape of short wooden rod. A warwand.
“B-bastard Orl-Orlem mages.” The figure mumbled unsteadily. “Mana… is d-different here. No w-wonder you cheats a-always win.” The human-esque creature stuttered out verbally. Studying it, Mar realized that this must be Chetz’s manifestation. Four other blobish shapes were pulling themselves together around the same time, and two of them seemed to be aware of their surroundings. All seemed to be slow and lethargic though. Mar was surprised, since for him movement in the spirit realm wasn’t any more difficult than in the physical realm.
Mar turned around and looked down at Chetz, whose humanoid form was hunched and disfigured. Despite his bluster, he seemed so… weak. So fragile. In comparison, Mar felt as strong as he did in physical body.
Chetz hissed and mana bubbled from the center of his aura. Mar realized that Chetz’s manifestation wasn’t as simple as he originally thought. It was made out of his aura after all, and that included all of the modified bits and pieces that Mages used to manipulate mana. As the raw energy tore through Chetz’s arm it lit up the elaborate series of patterns that instantly forced the mana into a spell pattern. Mar realized this is what combat casting actually looked like. Weaving a spell with raw magic by hand was tedious and impossible in a short time span, so instead mages forced mana through pre-made spell templates which allowed for much shorter cast times. The downside to this being that an aura could only fit so many templates at once.
The air around the warwand stirred and rumbled as electricity arced off of it. The bolt of lightning sped towards Mar. He’d seen this spell demonstrated before, but something didn’t seem quite right. It was so slow. As if the bolt of electricity were traveling through molasses. Mar stepped to the side and allowed the bolt to glide easily past him.
Chetz began channeling mana again and it accumulated just as fast as it had before, but this time he held the position for much longer, ever second charging a more powerful blast of magic. Even using a spell template carved into his aura, this spell was taking Chetz time to cast. Mar knew it would be stupid to give him any more of it.. He closed the distance between them and punched Chetz in the stomach.
That’s when something hard and cold impacted the back of Mar’s head, slamming his whole body forward to meet the ground. He realized that he’d forgotten about the other mages.
Mar winced in pain, but he was able to get up. Three of the four were moving now. They had manifested bodies much like Chetz, though somewhat lower in quality and each flawed in their own way. Perhaps Mar had misread something and building an accurate human body wasn’t actually standard technique for surviving in the spirit realm, but Mar was beginning to suspect that these mages were simply bad at this. Mar focused on the back of his head, redistributing his aura and repairing his manifestation using new mana drawn from his center.
With Chetz down she seemed to be taking the lead, so Mar prioritized her and charged the blob-like creature. He tackled it, and her gelatinous form gave way instantly, letting Mar pass harmlessly through it. Then he took a blast of water magic to the face. To Mar it felt like he had stuck his head under a waterfall. It was quickly followed by two similar spells, one of which burned like fire and another that sliced at him like a whip. Those were probably a fireball and wind slice, respectively.
Mar’s left arm fell to the ground from the force of the magic hitting him. He glanced down at the stump, which was dripping golden colored mana. He focused at it for a moment, drawing mana in from his center and pulling it towards wound. It was strange seeing his body damaged so, even though he knew none of this was real and he felt no pain from it. Within seconds he formed a new arm in it’s place.
Mar roared mentally and swept the stray bits of elemental mana from his body, casting it aside. He charged at the blob again and swept his hand through it as if his arm were a blade. He dug out a handful of the mushy substance that made up her aura in this twisted plane of existence. The water mage shrieked in response, and began preparing another blast of water magic. He cupped his hands like shovels and began tearing into the blob, ripping chunks out and throwing them aside. He’d removed a head sized chunk of mass by the time the thing collapsed in on itself, dissolving as the mind controlling the manifestation was sent skittering back to her real body by the Realmstone.
Mar didn’t waste any time. As soon as the water mage seemed to be incapacitated he leapt on the pyromancer and grabbed his manifestation by it’s crooked neck, hurling it into the gangly form of the air mage. Then he leapt on the earth mages back and pushed it’s crab-like humanoid form face first into the dirt. He grabbed one of the arms and began to pull.
Just when Mar was starting to feel something breaking he was hit in the back by a massive bolt of energy. Chetz was back up and had hit him with a bolt of electricity.
Mar groaned. His manifestation was hurting badly. Most of his torso had been blown to pieces and was only being held together by the spine he had built his body around.
Mar twisted his arm behind his back and tried to grab at the leg jabbing into his back, but it was too much effort. Chetz responded by grinding his pointed foot harder into Mar’s back. Mar re-modifying his manifestation, trying to repair the damage, but with Chetz standing so close it was hard to move his aura around.
Chetz blasted him with magic again, scattering Mar’s attempt at reforming a body.
While Chetz ranted to himself the area around Mar’s leg started to grow warm. He knew without looking that veins of mana were creeping along his manifested body, but this time he didn’t have the strength to fight back against them.
Mar couldn’t hold onto complete control but He wasn’t about to give up his entire being to the entity in the stone. Mar pulled at his aura around him and pulled inwards with all his might, building a shield around himself. Just in time, because that’s when the tendrils reached his manifestations head.
Chetz noticed the shifting of the body under him. He grew more alarmed when the veins of mana could been seen creeping across them.
It was only then that he noticed the pieces he’d been blasting off Mar weren’t dissipating into free mana. They were retaining their shape, coming together and reforming. The air, earth, and fire mages all turned their hands, warwands, and staffs towards the collection of rouge mana. Fireballs, wind slices, earth darts, and a massive electric bolt blasted into the headless figure. Chetz turned and saw that the figure was still standing, completely unscathed. A shimmering bubble flickered around the headless creature. Chetz snorted. The last of the sparks from Chetz’s blast fizzled out. They had been suspended in the air around the shield, slowly growing weaker before dissipating entirely. Chetz roared angrily. Chetz ignored her. Immediately several others started chanting and soon the mages were blasting hammering the shield with their offensive spells, from all sides. There was a cloud of dust and the spells sizzled out. Just then the dust cleared and the headless figure could be seen stepping forth from the cloud of debris. The spectral figure let out a deep chuckled that resonated strangely, as if they were in a small room instead of an open field. Chetz turned back towards where Mar had been thrown. Chetz growled at the unresponsive white orb in his hand. Mar had changed shape again. He’d abandoned all semblance of human form, gathering as much of his essence as he could salvage and dragging it together towards him, forming a hard, crystalline sphere. The red tendrils from that had taken over the rest of his body were unable to penetrate its glossy surface. Even now they still clawed at the shell around him to no effect. Chetz grabbed the sphere in both of his crudely formed hands. He squeezed them between his fingers, channeling mana into electric energy and driving it into the sphere. Then, as if he blinked as missed something, the sphere disappeared from in front of him. Along with his hands. Chetz gazed at the stumps in uncomprehending confusion. In a flash the headless figure closed the distance between them and grabbed Chetz by the back of the head. The center of it’s chest opened up, revealing a sinister looking vertical mouth. The mouth opened up to reveal rows of sharp teeth like a shark, and they expanded outwards, far larger than the size of the body should have allowed. The creature lunged forward, engulfing Chetz in its maw and sucking him inside. The headless manifestation closed it’s mouth and reverted to a mostly human form. It strode over to the place where Mar lay and picked up the hard, milky white pearl of aura he had encased himself in, placing it on top of it’s headless neck. More red tendrils creeped out of the creature's neck and gripped the crystal orb, trying but failing to penetrate the hard outer shell. The air cleared her throat. The voice spoke again in a deep and sinister voice, and even Mar behind his protective shell could make out the words as the reverberated through the air. Synthia gasped as her aura was engulfed and absorbed. In a puff of light she disappeared as she was yanked back to her physical body. The swirling mass of black tentacles expanded, grabbing the two remaining mages and pulling them inward where they were quickly devoured. Then the spirit from the stone turned its attention inward, towards the egg-like sphere Mar had encased himself in.