Chapter 565: Gaius’ Nightmare
The room that Leon fought the shade of Artorias in swiftly reformed around him. In only a matter of seconds, all of the furniture had returned, the carpets had sprung back into being, and the room’s proportions had fixed themselves. There wasn’t so much as a single scorch mark on the floor to act as proof of the fight that had just taken ce.
The lights, however, did not turn back on; neither did the sun begin to shine again, nor the vi be popted with people.
Leon barely noticed any of this. He knelt on the ground, his eyes unfocused, his body and mind fatigued, his brain locked up as he tried toprehend everything that had just happened. An illusion of his father, and one that had quite gravely injured him. One that he’d had to kill. One that had almost killed him after he’d hesitated to strike the killing blow.
There was no strength in Leon’s body. He felt about as weak as he did when he’d first seen Artorias and been stricken with terror.
He had no idea how long he knelt there, but he was slowly pulled out of his fugue state by Nestor and Xaphan.
[Leon!] Xaphan shouted. [You need to get up and finish this! The longer you stay there, the more time you’re giving that Yooman asslicker to fix his shit and start fucking with us again!]
[By the Gods, demon, you’re dumb,] Nestor softly said in response, his tone almost soothing despite the words he was speaking. [Have you not been paying any attention at all? The pirate’s name is ‘Jormun’, and look around at this ce… Whatever that idiot controlling this ce did, it clearly broke much of this pocket space. It’ll take hours if not longer for it to recover. Leon has plenty of time to get his mind back in order.]
[Who are you and what did you do with the dead man?] Xaphan sarcastically demanded before turning his attention back to Leon. [Leon, there’ll be time to thinkter. Right now, you need to move.]
Leon rapidly blinked. His vision had blurred again with unshed tears, this whole incident ripping open the wound that was his father’s death. But as his brain started to get whirring again, he realized just how much of a mess he was. He wasn’t wearing his cuirass or his helmet, but his armor was still covering his legs, left arm, and most of his right arm. His torso was covered in blood from the wounds the shade inflicted upon him, thetter of which was still bleeding a bit, though Leon’s natural healing abilities hadrgely stopped it. Still, Leon was in a significant amount of physical pain.
And that wasn’t even touching on the still-lingering wounds his right hand had taken when they’d been caught up in the formation of the spatial tunnel that had brought Leon here.
But all of that was nothingpared to how awful Leon felt about what had just happened. Sure, he hadn’t just <em>actually</em> killed his father, that much his rational mind could understand, but he’d still caused a great deal of damage to his father’s image, and he was having a bit of trouble reconciling that with his emotions.
<em>‘It wasn’t real…’</em> Leon thought to himself repeatedly. <em>‘It wasn’t real. It wasn’t real…’</em>
After a number of repetitions, he finally said it out loud.
“It wasn’t real…”
It wasn’t much, and he still felt terrible, but it was enough for him to start moving again. He summoned all the grit he could and pushed himself to his feet, while summoning another healing spell in the same breath. He pressed that spell to his chest, using it to quickly close his wounds that were still bleeding. He then stripped himself down to his skivvies and sted himself with water to wash himself clean of blood, before drying himself with fire and then summoning fresh clothes from his soul realm. In all, it only took about thirty seconds, but he felt immeasurably better once it was done. He wasn’t back to normal, but he was at least ready to get his head back in the game.
[Leon, you good?] Xaphan asked.
[Well enough,] Leon replied. [What in the hells was that? Was it darkness magic? My lightning didn’t have the effect I would’ve thought it would…]
[Our family’s power isn’t a hard counter to darkness magic,] Nestor said in a tone that was both didactic and exasperated. [As I’m sure you’ve been taught—and if you haven’t, then your teachers have treated you with criminal neglect—no element of magic has a perfect counter, not even light and dark or fire and water. What our powers do is prevent foreign magic from interfering with our minds. And in that respect, your power waspletely sessful. Your mental defenses were breached, allowing this temple to summon that shade—your father, I presume? Regardless, once you saturated your brain with your power, the influence was eliminated. Your power after that wouldn’t have any extra effect on the shade once it was summoned, though.]
Leon took a deep, steadying breath. [I suppose that makes sense. It wasn’t really my father, though. Whatever that thing was didn’t even use any magic.]
[Of course it wouldn’t,] Nestor said chidingly. [As powerful as the forces that power this temple’s magics may be, the lightning of our family is unique and can’t be reproduced so easily. That shade could never have disyed our power.]
Leon nodded and closed his eyes. [I suppose… that makes sense,] he whispered, though it didn’t quite exin why the shade hadn’t used normal lightning magic.
When he opened his eyes, he was ready to face the world again. He’d be thinking about what happened here for a long time, but for now, he had to focus on finding Gaius and Maia. To that end, he took quick stock of his surroundings.
The vi was still devoid of magical power, save for the section not too far ahead that still scattered his magic senses. The room he’d just defeated Artorias in had returned to normal, but Leon didn’t take that for granted, and kept his eyes open for any signs of change. For the most part, however, the vi was still dark and deserted.
[What happened to this ce?] Leon wondered to his soul realm passengers.
[I think that Jormun broke this ce,] Nestor exined. [To create a pocket space such as this and fill it with all that it has is no small feat, as I believe I’ve said before. Without the direct influence of <em>powerful</em> beings, a pocket realm would have to rely solely upon enchantments and wisps to run them.]
[Right, I remember you saying something to that effect earlier…]
[Yes. Well, that enchantment scheme would have to be mind-bendinglyplex, too much for any one person to reallyprehend and control all at once. If Jormun is screwing with the settings to mess with you, it’s likely that he’s disrupting the enchantment scheme to the point of breakage. At the very least, it seems like whatever ‘trial’ this temple was having its subject undergo has, at least partially, been unraveled.]
[But anything might happen, Jormun could send in a massive dragon or something, couldn’t he?]
[I doubt it,] Nestor said dismissively. [I think he’s already done as much as he’s capable of. If I had to guess, I’d say that that there’s not much else he can do until you go to a new pocket space. This one looks so mangled that it can’t be manipted in any coherent way from the outside anymore. The only thing you can do is to find the exit and leave as fast as you can.]
[And there <em>is</em> an exit?]
[I should think so, this is supposed to be a trial, not a prison. I’m guessing that whoever is the subject of the trial has to do something that fulfills the trial’s conditions, and then you and they will be transported out.]
[Right…]
Leon was still a little anxious, but there was nothing he could do right now except move forward. Unless…
[I don’t suppose there’s any way I might be able to break out of here if I had to?] he asked Nestor.
Nestor replied, [That’s always a possibility, but save that as a backup n. Trying to break through a world, even one this small, isn’t as easy a thing as breaking through a spatial tunnel.]
Xaphan snorted and added, [You’re still in this world, too. Unless there’re conditions like what you faced in the spatial tunnel, you shouldn’t even contemte that option unless you want to risk being so twisted by spatial forces that all of your organs are ripped out through your asshole.]
Leon smiled as he turned his attention back toward the only door out of this room that he hadn’t taken to enter. [As always, demon, your powers of rhetoric allow you to make the most <empelling</em> arguments.]
[Damn right!] Xaphan sounded quite proud, either not picking up on Leon’s light sarcasm or just ignoring it.
Leon strode over to the door and walked right through without hesitation. There was another long hallway on the other side with more than a dozen doors leading off of it. Leon ignored nearly all of them, though, for he already knew where he needed to go. He didn’t need to waste his time exploring dark, empty rooms, not when the ck hole in his perception began at the opposite end of the hallway.
As he walked, he felt his heart rate start to slow down. He was about to walk into the unknown, into quite possibly some other kind of terror that this ce could’ve drawn from his mind. Anything and everything could be beyond that door. Butpared to facing down his own father, Leon couldn’t imagine anything more making his heart flutter even a little. After what had just happened, he felt numb and resigned. His walking pace was steady, his heart rate quickly slowing, and his hands no longer shook. He wouldn’t exactly say that he was ready for anything, but at the very least, he was about as ready as his mental state would allow.
Leon didn’t pay any more attention to the door between him and the warded part of this floor than he needed to see if it was in any way trapped. Thankfully, it wasn’t, or at least, not in any way that he could detect, so he pushed the door open and stepped into the room beyond.
The other side of the door was like a whole other worldpared to where Leon just was. In the rest of the trial world, everything was dark and devoid of life; whatever Jormun had done to screw with Leon had caused the world to nearly break downpletely. No sun, no magterns, no people. Just a dark and cold world.
When he entered the next room, it was like all the light in the world turned back on. The sun shone through the windows, there was arge firepit in the center of the surprisingly small room, and there were magterns glowing in the ceiling casting soft, white light onto the walls. The room was much smaller than it had appeared outside, where it had seemed to be at least five or six simrly-sized rooms, making Leon’s head swim a little bit as he was forced to adjust his spatial awareness, but his disorientationsted only a few seconds.
[Oh yeah…] he heard Nestor mutter from his soul realm, [I would wipe out this entire ne just to pick the brain of whoever or whatever built this ce…]
Leon ignored the dead man. He couldn’t spare Nestor too much attention, for the room wasn’t unupied, and his sudden entrance drew the gazes of everyone else there.
“Ahh, I was told that we had an uninvited guest…” said an almost obscenely rotund man sitting on the other side of the room, across from the firepit. It took Leon a moment, but after a second or two, he realized that he knew who this profoundly fat man was: Prince Octavius.
Leon rapidly blinked, wondering if he was mistaken, but the more he looked, the more he realized that it <em>was</em> the Prince, or some twisted image of him. Like with Artorias, there wasn’t much doubt in Leon’s mind that this form was just an illusion conjured by darkness magic or something of that nature, but it was still a shock.
Even more of a shock was seeing the other handful of people in the room. He saw sitting on Octavius’ left, the Sapphire Pdin, while on his right, the Earthshaker Pdin—a brief spike of anger shing through Leon’s mind as heid eyes on Trajan’s murderer, quelled only by the memory of skewering the Pdin upon his de and turning him to ash with a copious application of lightning.
Both Pdins were smiling obsequiously and hanging off the Prince’s arm like well-paid escorts, and barely spared Leon more than a nce. Each one had skin as smooth as ss of the highest quality, their features seeming just a little more symmetrical than they were, their beauty exaggerated by the trial world beyond reality. Still, their auras were seventh-tier, so if things went south, Leon knew that he’d be in a bit of a pickle.
However, all thoughts about the Pdins were immediately snuffed out when his gazended upon the woman behind Octavius, quietly rubbing the folds of his thick, soft neck with a contented smile on her face, her pale skin practically glowing in the sunlight that streamed through the windows, her hair appearing like glimmering silver as it cascaded down her back, her sapphire eyes narrow with how widely she was smiling.
Valeria.
And she looked like she was dly serving Octavius, her hands practically disappearing into the rolls of fat behind his neck like she was kneading the softest of dough. She didn’t spare Leon so much as a single nce.
Leon had thought that, after Artorias, this trial world had nothing left to throw at him that could truly infuriate him. And now, he kicked himself for hisck of imagination. To see someone here whom he loved, their form twisted and perverted, had his heart rate climbing right back up. Leon took a menacing step forward before he caught himself. His anger at seeing her here nearly drove his anger at seeing Earthshaker out of his mind.
<em>‘Two seventh-tier mages…’</em> he thought to himself. <em>‘Calm yourself, idiot, she’s not real! Keep a cool head… Keep cool…. Keep cool… Thest thing you need is to make a fatal mistake at this stage…’</em>
Leon did his best not to immediately fly off the handle, but that was easier said than done. He began to walk forward again, his body filling with magic power almost uncontrobly as he prepared for what seemed like inevitable violence.
“Who are you, and why are you here?” the fat Octavius blubbered, his voice almostically distorted by his immense girth, the huge pouch of fat below his chin quivering with every syble. “How did you get through my guards?”
Leon ignored the questions. His eyes were mostly focused on Valeria, still rubbing Octavius’ neck with a look of utter bliss on her face.
“Are you ignoring me, Peasant?”
Leon slowly walked around the firepit, his mantra of keeping himself cool, already not working all that well, now starting to failpletely. He was only a hair’s breadth away from drawing his de and attacking, and it seemed that the Pdins sensed this, for they stood up and drew their own weapons, their auras rising to match his in intensity and degree of killing intent.
But Leon didn’t charge. As he got a closer look at the group, he realized something: he’d missed someone in his initial scan of the area. A man, golden-haired, handsome, but much thinner and weaker than he remembered. He was on his hands and feet, his head bowed low.
Octavius was sitting on him like a stool.
Leon paused a moment as he took in this strange sight. Gaius’ aura was weak and his body was nearly devoid of all muscle, but Leon had a strange feeling that he was real, unlike everyone else in the room, who were practically gross caricatures of their real life counterparts.
“Gaius…?” Leon asked aloud.
Gaius didn’t respond. All he did he was whimper and bow his head lower.
Octavius, on the other hand, looked incensed, and he shouted, “YOU WOULD ADDRESS THIS SLAVE BEFORE YOUR KING! I WOULD HAVE YOUR HEAD!” The fat Prince began to struggle and shake in a clear attempt to rise to his feet, but he was unable to do so, even his fifth-tier powers proving unable to support all of this extra weight.
The same wasn’t true of the Pdins. In unison, they began to circle around to Leon’s sides, trapping him between them and the firepit.
Leon wasn’t too interested in them, only giving them enough attention to be sure they weren’t attacking just yet.
“Gaius,” Leon loudly stated, “can you hear me?”
“Kill this peasant!” Octavius shouted irately, his arm jiggling with fat as he waved his hand at Leon. “I want his head! Kill him now!”
Leon sighed, then turned his attention fully to the Pdins. With his armor wrecked again, he was sorely tempted to finally take Xaphan up on his offer toe out of his soul realm and crack a few skulls, but he didn’t indulge that temptation just yet. He was starting to get an idea of what exactly was going on here, and he didn’t think that violence was going to be the best way to solve this problem.
Earthshaker and Sapphire began to wordlessly approach Leon, identical sadistic smiles stered on their inhumanely-perfect faces, but before they could take more than a couple of steps, the ring on Leon’s finger shed with light, and his form began to fade from view as light was bent around him.
“GAIUS!” Leon shouted as he moved, not wanting either Sapphire or Earthshaker to start hurling magic at him and get in a lucky hit that might disrupt his invisibility. “Get ahold of yourself! We have to go!”
Leon wasn’t quite sure what he could say. From his own experience dealing with the shade of Artorias, he could take a guess as to what was going on here: the trial world was striking Gaius where it hurt. Leon had to get Gaius to start fighting back, but he couldn’t be sure what kind of state Gaius was in, or far Leon could push him without breaking his mind. The nobleman already didn’t even acknowledge anyone around him, merely meekly keeping his eyes on the floor directly below him as he struggled to support the obese Prince using him as a stool, tears asionally slipping from his eyes and sliding down his nose.
At the very least, Leon had a bad feeling that Gaius needed to rise up and do most of this work himself if either of them had any hope to escape.
“You’re better than this!” Leon shouted, hoping his voice was reaching the broken, quietly sobbing man. He kept shouting, and he kept moving, not stopping for even a moment even as the two Pdins did their best to hunt him down. He hoped Gaius would do something soon, because he didn’t know how long he had left until those two started to throw magic around.
When they did, he’d likely be revealed, and at that point, he’d have little choice but to fight.
—
Gaius was worthless. He knew that in his heart of hearts. There was no confirmation needed, the proof was in how long and how willing he was to go along with Octavius.
Sure, he had his moments of rebellion during his squireship, but in the end, he did little to stop Octavius’ mad grab for power even though he’d had the power to stop it, and thousands died because of it. He was worthless.
When Gaius walked through the doors of the temple and appeared in front of Octavius, he did his best to make up for that. He knew that something was wrong, that this was some kind of illusionary world, but the punishment doled out by the Pdins felt every bit as painful as he’d imagined.
All the fight he had in him vanished as soon as Valeria appeared. The things she’d said to him were nothing that he hadn’t said to himself in the past, but to hear those words in her voice, telling h