5.3 Nirvana
Naron
I trust you know where the happy button is?
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"Telepathy is one of the most difficult, yet also most potent disciplines known to date. There are several different subtypes, but the discipline's core consists of linking the minds of several people together. This allows for fast, generally unnoticeable communication; even over long distances. A creative mind can win the information war with no more than this. Due to its computable nature, Telepathy became more common with the recent advent of Archive magic, which can simulate it."
-excerpt from "The Soul of Magic"
The rush of adrenaline revitalised Solano; aloft upon her wings, she surveyed the woods far below. A flash beneath was answered by cutting off Aera's magical flow; she dropped like a rock, evading the lightning strike before catching herself. Oracion Seis' Angel dove lower to taunt them. She slipped between continuous streams of deadly gold like a dancer, displaying effortless grace.
While her body worked however, Solano was busy shooting messages back and forth. "Laxus is still focussed on me, but the rest broke off. I can't hold him for long. Status?" She quietly grumbled about the Heartfilia woman, too; that was a good counter she let them put together. "We really should've buried them under our minions."
"There is no sense crying over spilt milk," Brain admonished; his voice rang a little louder, seeing that he sustained the telepathic link between them. "MacBeth and I are free at the moment. He does not seem like waking up anytime soon, either." Meaning it was the four of them against the rest. Solano's sigh was pulled from her mouth by another drop. Her hair stood on end from how close the lightning brushed past her.
"It would be prudent of him to change his mind," Richard commented without any heat. "I have a Dragonslayer on my heels."
"Same here," Sawyer added.
She still failed to understand where they went wrong. Solano knew the only wildcard they allowed was Wendy Marvell; they had intel on literally every other member of the coalition guilds. And even for Wendy, Gemini learned a lot from impersonating her pet. Yet somehow, no one expected a taciturn and abrasive person like Laxus Dreyar to be sent here. Solano would have taken Mirajane over him any day, too.
Just as she thought that, a lightning lance grazed the tip of her wing; Solano separated it from her back and went into free fall before the current could travel. A new wing grew out under her will, steadying her.
"Can you lose Laxus?" Sawyer asked as she began to ascend. Solano even found time and energy to roll her eyes.
"Don't you think if I could-" another lightning strike, "-I already would have? I'm not you, speedy. If I fly a predictable pattern, like say, away, I get fried. If I slow down, I get fried. I don't have the reserves to use Meteor and keep Aera active afterward. If I could drop Serma on his head, I already would've done it!"
"Alright, alright! Sheesh, girl. Calm down."
"Enough of that," Brain interrupted their mental squabble. Solano was prevented from snapping at him by yet another attempt to tear her from the sky. She could smell nothing but ozone anymore, so thick with it was the air. "You can not win by just dodging. Take the risk and cast Meteor. Meet up with Richard and go to ground. They have Erik, so our fallback points are compromised anyway. Shake or defeat your pursuers and move to the central mountain. From what the locals tell, Nirvana is there. MacBeth and I will go ahead to secure it." A pause followed his orders while Solano began to focus; the link gave her an idea which way Richard was. "Or do you need the help?"
She considered calling their leader and his adoptive son back, but decided against it. Nothing they could do here. "I'll be fine, go. Richard, dig down. We're picking up Sawyer afterward."
"Understood," Richard confirmed at once; just like his physical voice, the mental one never wavered. "I shall create a suitable landing spot."
Solano forewent a response in favour of dodging more lightning by swooping down. She could spy Laxus even in the descending dark, a beacon of might to her frayed nerves. Even the elation of flight and adrenaline of battle could barely carry her now. Before he got to see her flagging, she forced her body to align. Then Solano threw her smirking pursuer a wink and a wave. "While playtime was nice, it's about time mommy takes care of some business. Later~"
The ruse worked well enough; he stopped attacking her while she talked. That gave Solano enough time to put Meteor's circle together. Laxus reacted instantly when it activated, but it was too late; Solano felt her perception speed up far beyond its physical limits. She idly floated backward to escape the wave of lightning. "Meteor!" she shouted, and dashed away. The combined speed of Aera and Meteor sent her two kilometres in less than a minute, right toward where she felt Richard wait.
Meteor gave out first, flickering away as her perception snapped back to normal. Solano was near ground level by then, rushing toward Richard's blocky form. He waved, then braced and caught her in a bear hug. Solano's wings dissolved. "I'm done," she groaned, cuddling into the embrace. Richard obliged her request and carried her into the hole he dug. The earth shifted closed behind them.
A soft chuckle rumbled through his broad chest; the thumping steps felt almost soothing in how rhythmically they came, too. He carried Solano a few minutes before setting her down on the soft dirt. She shuffled away from a wiggling worm with a sigh. Then she leaned against Richard's leg, allowing a headpat by virtue of being too tired to complain.
"They certainly got us good, did they not?"
"Don't act like you used up most of your juice on a failed ambush."
"That is a fair point. Can you stand?"
"I'll live." As much as she wanted to sit here for eternity or make Richard carry her, Solano held herself in higher esteem. She forced her aching body up after another minute. Her friend steadied her as they began to trot along; his magic continously shifted the earth, creating a tunnel around them that closed up as they passed. Whatever Richard did to refresh the air, she was glad for it. Tunneling was such an effective strategy; they got away with it more often than anyone would believe.
While Solano suffered silently, Richard took it upon himself to call back over Brain mail: "Solano and I are together. We escaped pursuit underground. Status?"
"No changes," Brain retorted at once; meaning he was fine.
Sawyer's response was disheartening, though: "Don't come my way, they caught up. I need to lose them first."
"Who is after you?" Richard inquired, prompting a sigh; Sawyer never told them how he managed to send sounds like these.
"Jura Nekis, Lyon Bastia, Lucy Heartfilia, and Wendy Marvell."
"That's too much for you alone," Solano chimed in. She wanted to come to his aid, but that was impossible with an Ethernano reserve of 'No'.
"I know, so...."
Solano already feared the worst when he trailed off just like that. No further comment, no nothing. "Sawyer? Everything okay?" she prompted with carefully hidden worry.
His answer was delayed and almost reverent: "So beautiful. She runs with the wind."
Richard tensed up even before Solano did. They both knew Sawyer's love for speed and the wind. His passion got in the way of survival. "Don't do it!" she shouted into the aether. "You can't fight all of them!"
"We'll see about that. I just have to know!"
He fell silent afterward. The tunneling wizards could not help but slump. Solano buried her head in her hands with a groan. "Oh, that idiot."
She received a jovial pat. "I agree, but then again, none of us are free of idiocy."
"Can you stop being so zen just once?"
"Afraid not."
Solano weakly batted Richard's shoulder, but left it at that. Worrying helped distract her from the mess they were in.
Quite a distance away, Wendy was alternating between visceral anger and worry. Laxus just informed them that Angel ran for the hills; Gajeel's group lost track of Hoteye as well. "Bastard went underground," her fellow Dragonslayer complained, then paused. "Good news is, there's a whiff of Angel around here. They're together now."
Wendy sniffed the air to catch Racer's trail again, directing her allies along. The memory of seeing Carla in a blackguard's hands drove her forward; Wendy had never been this mad at anyone before. She wanted to hurt them. But with the trio from Blue Pegasus having stayed behind to secure Cobra, the only group still in pursuit was her own.
The planning continued around her. Lucy was calling back in that moment: "I can send Virgo your way, she is an expert digger."
"No," Ren chimed in. "Secure Racer first and check the ground beneath him. They might try to free him. Actually, Hibiki, you scan the earth around us, too."
Whatever response the other suit gave, it was not transmitted. Lucy's actual voice reached Wendy's ears, though: "Easier said than done, he is so fast!"
The scent grew stronger in that moment; as if on cue, Racer appeared between the trees and came straight at Wendy. Her eyes widened momentarily, only to narrow as she wrapped her hand in streamers of air. "Claw of the Sky-" A fist rammed into her stomach, but Wendy bit through the pain. "-Dragon!" she shouted and lashed out. The winds exploded from her fingertips like a hundred tiny claws, tearing at her enemy's metallic suit. He weaved past the follow-up kick, grabbed Wendy's leg, and threw her backward.
A rock broke from the earth between them while Lucy caught her. Wendy just growled as she was set down. Jura and Lyon rushed ahead to trade blows with Racer next, but he danced between them. He was no more than a blur every time he moved.
While the men took hit after hit however, Wendy began to dance. Her soul sung as she twirled around herself, attuning to the winds she coveted. A Sky dragon commanded the very air and it obeyed. She spread her awareness, felt every fibre of her being thrum with power; green leaves danced along with her, torn from their homes as the majestic trees bent under her will. Wendy was the eye of a miniature storm.
"Anchor yourselves," she sent. Lucy called for her maid again and vanished underground in response; Jura grabbed Lyon before stomping his foot into the ground and encasing it in bedrock. Racer failed to realise, staring at the two warily. Only when another gust tugged at his body did his attention turn back to Wendy.
Were she not so angry, his sheer awe at the sight of her dance may have made her reconsider. As it were, Wendy let her essence bleed out into the air, made it shine aquamarine as she ceased moving. The moment her body became still, the storm was unshackled; it roared around her, picking up rocks and logs as well as Racer. Smaller trees were uprooted, larger ones defoliated. A mass of wood and leaves churned along the twister Wendy upheld by force of will. Her very core throbbed under the strain, but she kept staring at the tiny body thrown about amidst nature's wrath.
Into her single-minded focus however, Lyon's mental voice echoed: "Stop it, Wendy! Jura's losing his hold!"
She wanted to refuse and hurt Racer more, but she was also growing tired. Wendy reluctantly stopped squeezing her soul to provide power; her storm weakened gradually. First the trees thundered to the ground, then boulders and logs followed. Racer was next, battered but still concious. He vanished in a cloud of fluttering leaves the moment he hit the ground.
Wendy followed his path by the tunnel he left, which was when she realised. "The leaves slow down around him. This is not speed magic at all!"
"Wait, what?" Lyon's gasp was followed by a crunch as Jura dislodged both of them from the ground. He switched to telepathy after: "So he's slowing us down! How do we work against that?"
"We need to catch him physically," Jura commented while Wendy trailed her target's path around the area. He was coming her way, first clearly visible and suddenly a blur. Then he became visible again, just as Wendy felt herself lose contact with the ground. A sudden force pulled her up. She wriggled in its grasp, only to drop back down a few seconds later; Racer kept rising, though. He struggled against the invisible force.
"Got you," Lucy cheered as she emerged, another spirit in tow. Libra, Wendy remembered. The gravity controller kept Racer in the air, impotent for now.
The four of them regrouped while Lucy's maid dress dissolved back into her normal clothes. All four were panting, but Wendy felt spent; she still had some reserves left, but that storm took more out of her than she thought. A glance around revealed devastation within several hundred metres; she suddenly felt bad.
Jura's mental message cut through her distraction: "We got Racer, but he is not beaten yet."
"Yet." Lyon responded cheekily; when her gaze flicked to the confident ice wizard, he was thrumming with Ethernano. A bright blue spell circle appeared over his hand. "Ice Make Eagles!" he chanted, then pushed himself forward to point at their enemy.
Meanwhile, Racer kept up his futile struggles against the invisible cage. "No no no no NO! I won't have it! You, you won't run faster than I, I won't-" his shouting devolved into a screan of pain; Lyon's swarm of glacial birds hammered into him for several seconds. It only cut off when he deemed it enough. Libra dropped Racer's motionless form moments later. He was in bad shape now, to the point Wendy felt a little bad. Jura caught the falling wizard, one hand already grabbing the magic-suppressing handcuffs from his pockets.
Beep.
Wendy perked up, looking this way and that. "What was that sound?" Something nudged at her senses.
Beep.
"What sound?" Lyon glanced her way in confusion, which only agitated Wendy more. "I didn't hear anything. Jura?"
"I-" Beep.
Jura's head snapped back to the man he held onto; the man who was somehow still brimming with Ethernano. A moment later, everything became fire and noise. Already disturbed tranquility was utterly shattered. Thunder followed the explosion, echoing over miles of forest. Spooked birds took flight, the wildlife fled.
And Lucy stared in shock, waiting for pain that never came. A wooden casket manifested around her in the nick of time, weathering the firestorm. She absently felt Libra's Gate close while Horologium manifested fully. Lucy stared dumbfounded at the mayhem from inside her friend; the forest around them was gone for at least a hundred metres, replaced by a giant crater. Small fires burned merrily; most died as they had only ashes to feed on, but some licked on the edge of no-man's land.
The epicenter was worst, inevitably drawing her gaze: a single, charred body lay motionless. Jura's clothes were burned almost completely, all his skin and flesh cooked off. Of Racer, there was nothing left at all. The gruesome sight made naked horror bubble up in Lucy's gut; her gaze was glued to the dead man. Bile rose up her throat, only barely swallowed.
Jura was dead. Dead.
Then her field of view shifted. Horologium toddled around on his stubby legs, freeing Lucy from the grizzly sight out of his glass front. The clock spirit's voice echoed through his inside: "I wish you did not have to see this." His slow, accented way of speaking calmed Lucy a fraction. "Please, as hard as it is, center yourself, young mistress. Others need your aid now."
The clock vanished, but she did not fall. Loke appeared to catch her, Gate opened of his own power. He hugged her close to his chest, hiding Jura's remains from view.
A groan from next to them dragged their attention to Lyon. His entire body was red from burns, but none severe at first glance; Lucy shily averted her gaze when she realised the explosion left him bare, much like she was. Not that he cared, if he even noticed.
"Damn it, why did he have a bomb?"
Coughing from their other side drew attention to Wendy, equally naked but barely singed. The younger girl's sight triggered something in Lucy, however. She leapt out of Loke's hold and grabbed the disoriented Dragonslayer, smushing her head into her chest. Any consideration for their nudity was forgotten; she had to protect her from this. "Don't look!"
A slurred question was all she received in response. Wendy stayed where she was while Lucy cuddled her, both for the younger woman's protection and the older one's comfort.
After cursing under his breath, Loke took stock of the situation. "Alright, you do that. Virgo, get over here and help me put out those fires!" Again Lucy felt a Gate open nearby, but it did not draw on her. Just like with Horologium and Loke, the spirits came of their own power. Virgo dashed away. Lucy heard the ash crunch under her shoes.
"Okay, I heard the girls," Lyon groaned as he picked himself up. "What shouldn't... oh. Shit."
Silence reigned between them afterward. Lucy kept her eyes closed, clutching Wendy as tight as she could. She faintly wondered where her own clothes went, but decided it did not matter. Horologium probably could not save them.
"-going on?!" Hibiki's voice penetrated the haze lying over her thoughts. "Please respond! What happened? We saw the explosion from here. Please, answer me!" He grew increasingly desperate in his calls.
When Lyon did not respond at first, Lucy slowly forced herself to focus and do it instead. She was shaking now. "He, he had a bomb. R-Racer, he...."
"Oh gods, how bad was it?"
Lucy wanted to tell him, but she could not find the words. She just held onto Wendy, suddenly aware that all her friends could have died just then.
"Jura is gone," Lyon answered slowly. A shocked "What?!" followed, but no one knew who sent it. He did not respond to it either, talking as if in a daze: "I think, I think he saved us. Stood between the bomb and us, and it got him the worst. I'm out of juice and still got some burns. Nothing too bad," he added a moment later. "I've had worse frostbite. Lucy looks fine, too. Wendy?"
"I am fine," the blunette sent in response; she was squirming in Lucy's grasp by now. "Prithee cease thine attempts at suffocating me."
"Promise you won't look?"
"Okay."
Lucy let go. Then she quickly turned Wendy around so she definitely could not see; both of them were still shaking. Then Virgo appeared by their side with a faint curtsy. "Fires suppressed, Princess. May I suggest a change in wardrobe? It appears we are overdressed for the occasion."
Despite it all, her deadpan drew a snort from Lucy. At the same time, it made Wendy glance down and squeak; she quickly covered herself with newfound energy. This did nothing to hide her full-body blush in the firelight. Lyon just patted her head with a chuckle. "Don't think too much of it," he reassured her, "it's all natural."
"...right," Lucy deadpanned, "you and Gray had the same teacher."
"You make that sound so negative. Besides, this isn't the first time I lost some clothes on a mission. Better those than my skin, I'd say." He had a point, but Lucy still felt herself grow embarassed, now that the initial shock died down. She forced deep breaths.
Meanwhile, Wendy began to shudder and hugged herself. "Tis cold," she murmured, then sent to Hibiki: "Dost thou possess spare clothing?" Likewise, Lucy began to realise that the only protection she still had from the cold was her magical shell; Wendy must have run out as well. She absently received her keyring from Loke.
"W-Well," Eve responded after a moment. "We do have some spares on the Christina, but she will need some time to reach the area. That much noise will draw in the other dark guilds in the area, too. And I think we need Lucy to probe for Angel and Hoteye? So if she escorts you back, that could give them a chance to slip the net."
"What about Brain and Midnight?" Lucy sent back, suddenly worried.
"We lost track of them for now."
It was at this point that Levy chimed in, voice steady: "Let's meet up and switch teams. Sherry and I can bring Wendy and Lyon back. Lu, Gajeel, and... no. Those two can look for Angel and Hoteye." Lucy grimaced at the reminder they were one man down, trying hard not to look back at the cooling body behind her.
A faint crackle announced Laxus' arrival; all three wizards turned his way, the spirits long since gone. His expression was inscrutable under the faint moon- and firelight. After a moment, he shook off his heavy coat and wrapped it around Wendy. She thanked him meekly, but received no response. Lucy did not feel like saying anything either, but she mustered a grateful smile that was likewise ignored.
Lyon sighed. "Alright. And... ugh, I hate I even have to say it. Did anyone bring body bags?"
The silence that followed was deafening.
It was no different for Oracion Seis, either. Even Brain, who kept himself the most detached of the group, found no words to speak. Ever since the night lit up in the distance, their link was silent. MacBeth strode by his side by now, yet neither exchanged a single word; his adoptive son's countenance was stormy. By himself, Brain wondered what he could have done different; they picked the plan most likely to succeed as a group. Everything worked perfectly until their trap was sniffed out. That had never happened before. And now Sawyer was dead.
Before them rose the mountain they once spied from a distance. It towered above even the impressive woodland. Brain led the way into a nearby cave filled with various plants; life flourished, but his only thoughts were on the glowmoss illuminating their path. This was nothing like any mountain they ever scaled.
To distract himself from his brooding, he uttered a soft sigh and finally sent at Richard: "How is Solano?"
His response came dully: "Inconsolable still. We dug deeper to rest. I can sustain us for a few hours if we do not have to move."
"This is probably for the best," Brain agreed. "We reached Nirvana's position, but have not found it yet." A sideway glance to MacBeth brought his attention to the unusual ascent again. They traversed thick bands of not stone, but wood. This was when he realised why this place felt off. "This is not a mountain, it is a tree with bark so thick and sturdy it may as well be stone."
The megaflora took no notice of his realisation; small animals skittered away from the soft clacking of their footsteps. Wherever he looked, Brain found natural pathways the wildlife created over centuries. "And it is partly hollow. There is an entire ecosystem in here."
He could not help but ramble a little; not only did it distract him from the reality of Sawyer's demise, but this place also intrigued Brain. MacBeth idly pushed up a thick leaf with the back of his hand, studying it.
Unfortunately, Solano chose that moment to enter the conversation: "Why did we give him the bomb?" she asked, painfully reminding Brain that he made that decision. He heaved another sigh.
"I did not expect him to do... that with it."
"He never struck me as the type," Richard agreed morosely. "And we did discuss smuggling the bomb under the coalition base. In retrospect, we should have done so. I should have held onto the bomb."
"You could not know," MacBeth responded this time. He said nothing else and gave no physical indication of the words he spoke. Brain had to agree.
"He is right, none of us could have predicted this. If anything, the blame lies on me for trying to save on our assets. Even if it takes a month to make one of these, we should just have used it." That was what he got for keeping an emergency measure; it only created the emergency to begin with. Now they lost someone who could not be replaced.
Just as he thought that, the ascending branch ran out into almost even ground. Stars glittered far above and Brain realised they reached the top; the tree opened to the open sky like a goblet, wood-stone walls reaching several dozen metres higher. All around the two men spread a glade of tall grass, easily the size of a village; it took him a moment to recognise what his senses told him, the sheer abundance of Ethernano driving all weariness from his body. Wounded animals rested this way and that, from predator to prey in harmony.
Brain blinked, unable to form words at the peaceful image. He needed a while to push back against the sense of awe. "We found it," he sent, then fell silent to study the place more. Now that he focussed, it felt like a bright light to his sense for Ethernano; the magical energy surrounded them in a thick band. It covered the entire glade.
What was more, a guardian of sorts sat to its center: hewn of rough, black stone, the dragon was depicted at rest. Its vaguely triangular head rested on thick legs. Brain could tell intricate details from a distance, even more so as he approached. The stone was warm to the touch, every nook and cranny filled with blossoming flowers and plants that made their home on the colossus.
Even at rest it towered over him and MacBeth. Brain felt like the mighty beast could come alive and lunge at him any moment, but there was no actual flow of Ethernano. It was not a magical construct of any sort. He shuddered, then shook off the faint sense of dread. The only potential danger was the old, black bear slumbering next to a wounded deer. And if this one woke, it had a meal right there.
"What a curious sculpture," MacBeth muttered as he ran a hand over the obsidian. "I wonder who built it?"
Brain shrugged, well aware the younger man did not see the gesture. "I don't know. Right now I'm more interested in where the source of this Ethernano is." It blanketed the entire area, but there was no fountain. No leyline sprout. No hive or generator. "I'm starting to understand why generations of scholars were stumped by this place."
"It could be a property of the soil, or tied to the area?"
"Hopefully not. We lost too much trying to get this in our hands already." Brain's fist clenched, but he kept his mind on track.
MacBeth scowled and finally left the statue alone. He skulked away, stopping only to level his usual piercing stare at his father. "And what if it is? What if we come out of this empty-handed?"
With Erik captured and Sawyer dead... Brain scowled back. "This is unacceptable," he snapped before schooling his features. Not that the outburst upset MacBeth. "If all else fails, we can just uproot this entire glade and take it along. Or build an actual base here. If this bountiful source of Ethernano keeps refreshing itself, we can use it to power high-grade magical cannons, shields, and perhaps even an Etherion of our own." Seeing that the Magic Council's Etherion was destroyed, theirs would be the only one on Ishgar's southern end. They could hold all of the surrounding countries hostage. Make themselves immune to all retribution. The more he thought about it, the more Brain liked the idea.
While he mused however, he became oblivious to his surroundings. Beneath the starry sky he stood, staring out at a territory he now dreamt to make his. Were he more aware, he may have noticed the minute shift behind him. The change in lighting as empyrean orange began to shroud his silhouette. A colour so familiar yet wrong, alien. Greater. It shone from the statue's forehead and fully came into focus.
Brain lacked the ability to sense the change before it affected him. The minute push of singular atoms that struck others in a growing cascade; the faint switch of quantum states across all existence. Primordial might grasped for reality's state of being and rent it asunder.
In the sprawling forests below, Sherry Bendy suddenly collapsed with a scream. Just like every other fortuneteller across the planet, the realignment struck her with a terrible migraine. Worse for her, she was near its origin; a single, bloody tear ran down Sherry's cheek as the subliminal force ran its course.
The moment Brain noticed, it was too late. A searing pain struck his chest, drawing a wheeze. His heart stopped and no attempt to shock it into restarting was successful. He futilely clawed at his chest in what few seconds he had. The pain overtook his concious mind and paralysed him; a moment later, his awareness faded. The founder and leader of Oracion Seis collapsed like a puppet with its strings cut.
The heavy thud drew MacBeth's, or Midnight's, attention. His head snapped back to the collapsed form, suddenly alert. "Father?" he queried, but received no response. "Father!"
He wanted to call for help, but with Brain's fall the telepathy was also cut off. He shook the man who adopted him and gave him purpose, tried to will him to wake. There was no pulse and no human force of will could overcome that which they opposed. When next the glow grew to encase MacBeth, his fate was already sealed. He leapt to his feet to strike at the active statue, but his heart gave out before he could. His shout became a wheeze and he, too, fell.
The glow faded entirely this time. Its final flickers illuminated the two still bodies, one draped over the other. Beneath the shallow hole in its head that emitted the light, scaled lids slid over two slitted eyes. Flakes of dust and soil rained from their neck and head as the primal being adjusted its posture.
Then it fell still and the Sea of Serenity lay tranquil once more. As if its halcyon days had never been disturbed.
-excerpt from "The Soul of Magic"
The rush of adrenaline revitalised Solano; aloft upon her wings, she surveyed the woods far below. A flash beneath was answered by cutting off Aera's magical flow; she dropped like a rock, evading the lightning strike before catching herself. Oracion Seis' Angel dove lower to taunt them. She slipped between continuous streams of deadly gold like a dancer, displaying effortless grace.
While her body worked however, Solano was busy shooting messages back and forth. "Laxus is still focussed on me, but the rest broke off. I can't hold him for long. Status?" She quietly grumbled about the Heartfilia woman, too; that was a good counter she let them put together. "We really should've buried them under our minions."
"There is no sense crying over spilt milk," Brain admonished; his voice rang a little louder, seeing that he sustained the telepathic link between them. "MacBeth and I are free at the moment. He does not seem like waking up anytime soon, either." Meaning it was the four of them against the rest. Solano's sigh was pulled from her mouth by another drop. Her hair stood on end from how close the lightning brushed past her.
"It would be prudent of him to change his mind," Richard commented without any heat. "I have a Dragonslayer on my heels."
"Same here," Sawyer added.
She still failed to understand where they went wrong. Solano knew the only wildcard they allowed was Wendy Marvell; they had intel on literally every other member of the coalition guilds. And even for Wendy, Gemini learned a lot from impersonating her pet. Yet somehow, no one expected a taciturn and abrasive person like Laxus Dreyar to be sent here. Solano would have taken Mirajane over him any day, too.
Just as she thought that, a lightning lance grazed the tip of her wing; Solano separated it from her back and went into free fall before the current could travel. A new wing grew out under her will, steadying her.
"Can you lose Laxus?" Sawyer asked as she began to ascend. Solano even found time and energy to roll her eyes.
"Don't you think if I could-" another lightning strike, "-I already would have? I'm not you, speedy. If I fly a predictable pattern, like say, away, I get fried. If I slow down, I get fried. I don't have the reserves to use Meteor and keep Aera active afterward. If I could drop Serma on his head, I already would've done it!"
"Alright, alright! Sheesh, girl. Calm down."
"Enough of that," Brain interrupted their mental squabble. Solano was prevented from snapping at him by yet another attempt to tear her from the sky. She could smell nothing but ozone anymore, so thick with it was the air. "You can not win by just dodging. Take the risk and cast Meteor. Meet up with Richard and go to ground. They have Erik, so our fallback points are compromised anyway. Shake or defeat your pursuers and move to the central mountain. From what the locals tell, Nirvana is there. MacBeth and I will go ahead to secure it." A pause followed his orders while Solano began to focus; the link gave her an idea which way Richard was. "Or do you need the help?"
She considered calling their leader and his adoptive son back, but decided against it. Nothing they could do here. "I'll be fine, go. Richard, dig down. We're picking up Sawyer afterward."
"Understood," Richard confirmed at once; just like his physical voice, the mental one never wavered. "I shall create a suitable landing spot."
Solano forewent a response in favour of dodging more lightning by swooping down. She could spy Laxus even in the descending dark, a beacon of might to her frayed nerves. Even the elation of flight and adrenaline of battle could barely carry her now. Before he got to see her flagging, she forced her body to align. Then Solano threw her smirking pursuer a wink and a wave. "While playtime was nice, it's about time mommy takes care of some business. Later~"
The ruse worked well enough; he stopped attacking her while she talked. That gave Solano enough time to put Meteor's circle together. Laxus reacted instantly when it activated, but it was too late; Solano felt her perception speed up far beyond its physical limits. She idly floated backward to escape the wave of lightning. "Meteor!" she shouted, and dashed away. The combined speed of Aera and Meteor sent her two kilometres in less than a minute, right toward where she felt Richard wait.
Meteor gave out first, flickering away as her perception snapped back to normal. Solano was near ground level by then, rushing toward Richard's blocky form. He waved, then braced and caught her in a bear hug. Solano's wings dissolved. "I'm done," she groaned, cuddling into the embrace. Richard obliged her request and carried her into the hole he dug. The earth shifted closed behind them.
A soft chuckle rumbled through his broad chest; the thumping steps felt almost soothing in how rhythmically they came, too. He carried Solano a few minutes before setting her down on the soft dirt. She shuffled away from a wiggling worm with a sigh. Then she leaned against Richard's leg, allowing a headpat by virtue of being too tired to complain.
"They certainly got us good, did they not?"
"Don't act like you used up most of your juice on a failed ambush."
"That is a fair point. Can you stand?"
"I'll live." As much as she wanted to sit here for eternity or make Richard carry her, Solano held herself in higher esteem. She forced her aching body up after another minute. Her friend steadied her as they began to trot along; his magic continously shifted the earth, creating a tunnel around them that closed up as they passed. Whatever Richard did to refresh the air, she was glad for it. Tunneling was such an effective strategy; they got away with it more often than anyone would believe.
While Solano suffered silently, Richard took it upon himself to call back over Brain mail: "Solano and I are together. We escaped pursuit underground. Status?"
"No changes," Brain retorted at once; meaning he was fine.
Sawyer's response was disheartening, though: "Don't come my way, they caught up. I need to lose them first."
"Who is after you?" Richard inquired, prompting a sigh; Sawyer never told them how he managed to send sounds like these.
"Jura Nekis, Lyon Bastia, Lucy Heartfilia, and Wendy Marvell."
"That's too much for you alone," Solano chimed in. She wanted to come to his aid, but that was impossible with an Ethernano reserve of 'No'.
"I know, so...."
Solano already feared the worst when he trailed off just like that. No further comment, no nothing. "Sawyer? Everything okay?" she prompted with carefully hidden worry.
His answer was delayed and almost reverent: "So beautiful. She runs with the wind."
Richard tensed up even before Solano did. They both knew Sawyer's love for speed and the wind. His passion got in the way of survival. "Don't do it!" she shouted into the aether. "You can't fight all of them!"
"We'll see about that. I just have to know!"
He fell silent afterward. The tunneling wizards could not help but slump. Solano buried her head in her hands with a groan. "Oh, that idiot."
She received a jovial pat. "I agree, but then again, none of us are free of idiocy."
"Can you stop being so zen just once?"
"Afraid not."
Solano weakly batted Richard's shoulder, but left it at that. Worrying helped distract her from the mess they were in.
Quite a distance away, Wendy was alternating between visceral anger and worry. Laxus just informed them that Angel ran for the hills; Gajeel's group lost track of Hoteye as well. "Bastard went underground," her fellow Dragonslayer complained, then paused. "Good news is, there's a whiff of Angel around here. They're together now."
Wendy sniffed the air to catch Racer's trail again, directing her allies along. The memory of seeing Carla in a blackguard's hands drove her forward; Wendy had never been this mad at anyone before. She wanted to hurt them. But with the trio from Blue Pegasus having stayed behind to secure Cobra, the only group still in pursuit was her own.
The planning continued around her. Lucy was calling back in that moment: "I can send Virgo your way, she is an expert digger."
"No," Ren chimed in. "Secure Racer first and check the ground beneath him. They might try to free him. Actually, Hibiki, you scan the earth around us, too."
Whatever response the other suit gave, it was not transmitted. Lucy's actual voice reached Wendy's ears, though: "Easier said than done, he is so fast!"
The scent grew stronger in that moment; as if on cue, Racer appeared between the trees and came straight at Wendy. Her eyes widened momentarily, only to narrow as she wrapped her hand in streamers of air. "Claw of the Sky-" A fist rammed into her stomach, but Wendy bit through the pain. "-Dragon!" she shouted and lashed out. The winds exploded from her fingertips like a hundred tiny claws, tearing at her enemy's metallic suit. He weaved past the follow-up kick, grabbed Wendy's leg, and threw her backward.
A rock broke from the earth between them while Lucy caught her. Wendy just growled as she was set down. Jura and Lyon rushed ahead to trade blows with Racer next, but he danced between them. He was no more than a blur every time he moved.
While the men took hit after hit however, Wendy began to dance. Her soul sung as she twirled around herself, attuning to the winds she coveted. A Sky dragon commanded the very air and it obeyed. She spread her awareness, felt every fibre of her being thrum with power; green leaves danced along with her, torn from their homes as the majestic trees bent under her will. Wendy was the eye of a miniature storm.
"Anchor yourselves," she sent. Lucy called for her maid again and vanished underground in response; Jura grabbed Lyon before stomping his foot into the ground and encasing it in bedrock. Racer failed to realise, staring at the two warily. Only when another gust tugged at his body did his attention turn back to Wendy.
Were she not so angry, his sheer awe at the sight of her dance may have made her reconsider. As it were, Wendy let her essence bleed out into the air, made it shine aquamarine as she ceased moving. The moment her body became still, the storm was unshackled; it roared around her, picking up rocks and logs as well as Racer. Smaller trees were uprooted, larger ones defoliated. A mass of wood and leaves churned along the twister Wendy upheld by force of will. Her very core throbbed under the strain, but she kept staring at the tiny body thrown about amidst nature's wrath.
Into her single-minded focus however, Lyon's mental voice echoed: "Stop it, Wendy! Jura's losing his hold!"
She wanted to refuse and hurt Racer more, but she was also growing tired. Wendy reluctantly stopped squeezing her soul to provide power; her storm weakened gradually. First the trees thundered to the ground, then boulders and logs followed. Racer was next, battered but still concious. He vanished in a cloud of fluttering leaves the moment he hit the ground.
Wendy followed his path by the tunnel he left, which was when she realised. "The leaves slow down around him. This is not speed magic at all!"
"Wait, what?" Lyon's gasp was followed by a crunch as Jura dislodged both of them from the ground. He switched to telepathy after: "So he's slowing us down! How do we work against that?"
"We need to catch him physically," Jura commented while Wendy trailed her target's path around the area. He was coming her way, first clearly visible and suddenly a blur. Then he became visible again, just as Wendy felt herself lose contact with the ground. A sudden force pulled her up. She wriggled in its grasp, only to drop back down a few seconds later; Racer kept rising, though. He struggled against the invisible force.
"Got you," Lucy cheered as she emerged, another spirit in tow. Libra, Wendy remembered. The gravity controller kept Racer in the air, impotent for now.
The four of them regrouped while Lucy's maid dress dissolved back into her normal clothes. All four were panting, but Wendy felt spent; she still had some reserves left, but that storm took more out of her than she thought. A glance around revealed devastation within several hundred metres; she suddenly felt bad.
Jura's mental message cut through her distraction: "We got Racer, but he is not beaten yet."
"Yet." Lyon responded cheekily; when her gaze flicked to the confident ice wizard, he was thrumming with Ethernano. A bright blue spell circle appeared over his hand. "Ice Make Eagles!" he chanted, then pushed himself forward to point at their enemy.
Meanwhile, Racer kept up his futile struggles against the invisible cage. "No no no no NO! I won't have it! You, you won't run faster than I, I won't-" his shouting devolved into a screan of pain; Lyon's swarm of glacial birds hammered into him for several seconds. It only cut off when he deemed it enough. Libra dropped Racer's motionless form moments later. He was in bad shape now, to the point Wendy felt a little bad. Jura caught the falling wizard, one hand already grabbing the magic-suppressing handcuffs from his pockets.
Beep.
Wendy perked up, looking this way and that. "What was that sound?" Something nudged at her senses.
Beep.
"What sound?" Lyon glanced her way in confusion, which only agitated Wendy more. "I didn't hear anything. Jura?"
"I-" Beep.
Jura's head snapped back to the man he held onto; the man who was somehow still brimming with Ethernano. A moment later, everything became fire and noise. Already disturbed tranquility was utterly shattered. Thunder followed the explosion, echoing over miles of forest. Spooked birds took flight, the wildlife fled.
And Lucy stared in shock, waiting for pain that never came. A wooden casket manifested around her in the nick of time, weathering the firestorm. She absently felt Libra's Gate close while Horologium manifested fully. Lucy stared dumbfounded at the mayhem from inside her friend; the forest around them was gone for at least a hundred metres, replaced by a giant crater. Small fires burned merrily; most died as they had only ashes to feed on, but some licked on the edge of no-man's land.
The epicenter was worst, inevitably drawing her gaze: a single, charred body lay motionless. Jura's clothes were burned almost completely, all his skin and flesh cooked off. Of Racer, there was nothing left at all. The gruesome sight made naked horror bubble up in Lucy's gut; her gaze was glued to the dead man. Bile rose up her throat, only barely swallowed.
Jura was dead. Dead.
Then her field of view shifted. Horologium toddled around on his stubby legs, freeing Lucy from the grizzly sight out of his glass front. The clock spirit's voice echoed through his inside: "I wish you did not have to see this." His slow, accented way of speaking calmed Lucy a fraction. "Please, as hard as it is, center yourself, young mistress. Others need your aid now."
The clock vanished, but she did not fall. Loke appeared to catch her, Gate opened of his own power. He hugged her close to his chest, hiding Jura's remains from view.
A groan from next to them dragged their attention to Lyon. His entire body was red from burns, but none severe at first glance; Lucy shily averted her gaze when she realised the explosion left him bare, much like she was. Not that he cared, if he even noticed.
"Damn it, why did he have a bomb?"
Coughing from their other side drew attention to Wendy, equally naked but barely singed. The younger girl's sight triggered something in Lucy, however. She leapt out of Loke's hold and grabbed the disoriented Dragonslayer, smushing her head into her chest. Any consideration for their nudity was forgotten; she had to protect her from this. "Don't look!"
A slurred question was all she received in response. Wendy stayed where she was while Lucy cuddled her, both for the younger woman's protection and the older one's comfort.
After cursing under his breath, Loke took stock of the situation. "Alright, you do that. Virgo, get over here and help me put out those fires!" Again Lucy felt a Gate open nearby, but it did not draw on her. Just like with Horologium and Loke, the spirits came of their own power. Virgo dashed away. Lucy heard the ash crunch under her shoes.
"Okay, I heard the girls," Lyon groaned as he picked himself up. "What shouldn't... oh. Shit."
Silence reigned between them afterward. Lucy kept her eyes closed, clutching Wendy as tight as she could. She faintly wondered where her own clothes went, but decided it did not matter. Horologium probably could not save them.
"-going on?!" Hibiki's voice penetrated the haze lying over her thoughts. "Please respond! What happened? We saw the explosion from here. Please, answer me!" He grew increasingly desperate in his calls.
When Lyon did not respond at first, Lucy slowly forced herself to focus and do it instead. She was shaking now. "He, he had a bomb. R-Racer, he...."
"Oh gods, how bad was it?"
Lucy wanted to tell him, but she could not find the words. She just held onto Wendy, suddenly aware that all her friends could have died just then.
"Jura is gone," Lyon answered slowly. A shocked "What?!" followed, but no one knew who sent it. He did not respond to it either, talking as if in a daze: "I think, I think he saved us. Stood between the bomb and us, and it got him the worst. I'm out of juice and still got some burns. Nothing too bad," he added a moment later. "I've had worse frostbite. Lucy looks fine, too. Wendy?"
"I am fine," the blunette sent in response; she was squirming in Lucy's grasp by now. "Prithee cease thine attempts at suffocating me."
"Promise you won't look?"
"Okay."
Lucy let go. Then she quickly turned Wendy around so she definitely could not see; both of them were still shaking. Then Virgo appeared by their side with a faint curtsy. "Fires suppressed, Princess. May I suggest a change in wardrobe? It appears we are overdressed for the occasion."
Despite it all, her deadpan drew a snort from Lucy. At the same time, it made Wendy glance down and squeak; she quickly covered herself with newfound energy. This did nothing to hide her full-body blush in the firelight. Lyon just patted her head with a chuckle. "Don't think too much of it," he reassured her, "it's all natural."
"...right," Lucy deadpanned, "you and Gray had the same teacher."
"You make that sound so negative. Besides, this isn't the first time I lost some clothes on a mission. Better those than my skin, I'd say." He had a point, but Lucy still felt herself grow embarassed, now that the initial shock died down. She forced deep breaths.
Meanwhile, Wendy began to shudder and hugged herself. "Tis cold," she murmured, then sent to Hibiki: "Dost thou possess spare clothing?" Likewise, Lucy began to realise that the only protection she still had from the cold was her magical shell; Wendy must have run out as well. She absently received her keyring from Loke.
"W-Well," Eve responded after a moment. "We do have some spares on the Christina, but she will need some time to reach the area. That much noise will draw in the other dark guilds in the area, too. And I think we need Lucy to probe for Angel and Hoteye? So if she escorts you back, that could give them a chance to slip the net."
"What about Brain and Midnight?" Lucy sent back, suddenly worried.
"We lost track of them for now."
It was at this point that Levy chimed in, voice steady: "Let's meet up and switch teams. Sherry and I can bring Wendy and Lyon back. Lu, Gajeel, and... no. Those two can look for Angel and Hoteye." Lucy grimaced at the reminder they were one man down, trying hard not to look back at the cooling body behind her.
A faint crackle announced Laxus' arrival; all three wizards turned his way, the spirits long since gone. His expression was inscrutable under the faint moon- and firelight. After a moment, he shook off his heavy coat and wrapped it around Wendy. She thanked him meekly, but received no response. Lucy did not feel like saying anything either, but she mustered a grateful smile that was likewise ignored.
Lyon sighed. "Alright. And... ugh, I hate I even have to say it. Did anyone bring body bags?"
The silence that followed was deafening.
It was no different for Oracion Seis, either. Even Brain, who kept himself the most detached of the group, found no words to speak. Ever since the night lit up in the distance, their link was silent. MacBeth strode by his side by now, yet neither exchanged a single word; his adoptive son's countenance was stormy. By himself, Brain wondered what he could have done different; they picked the plan most likely to succeed as a group. Everything worked perfectly until their trap was sniffed out. That had never happened before. And now Sawyer was dead.
Before them rose the mountain they once spied from a distance. It towered above even the impressive woodland. Brain led the way into a nearby cave filled with various plants; life flourished, but his only thoughts were on the glowmoss illuminating their path. This was nothing like any mountain they ever scaled.
To distract himself from his brooding, he uttered a soft sigh and finally sent at Richard: "How is Solano?"
His response came dully: "Inconsolable still. We dug deeper to rest. I can sustain us for a few hours if we do not have to move."
"This is probably for the best," Brain agreed. "We reached Nirvana's position, but have not found it yet." A sideway glance to MacBeth brought his attention to the unusual ascent again. They traversed thick bands of not stone, but wood. This was when he realised why this place felt off. "This is not a mountain, it is a tree with bark so thick and sturdy it may as well be stone."
The megaflora took no notice of his realisation; small animals skittered away from the soft clacking of their footsteps. Wherever he looked, Brain found natural pathways the wildlife created over centuries. "And it is partly hollow. There is an entire ecosystem in here."
He could not help but ramble a little; not only did it distract him from the reality of Sawyer's demise, but this place also intrigued Brain. MacBeth idly pushed up a thick leaf with the back of his hand, studying it.
Unfortunately, Solano chose that moment to enter the conversation: "Why did we give him the bomb?" she asked, painfully reminding Brain that he made that decision. He heaved another sigh.
"I did not expect him to do... that with it."
"He never struck me as the type," Richard agreed morosely. "And we did discuss smuggling the bomb under the coalition base. In retrospect, we should have done so. I should have held onto the bomb."
"You could not know," MacBeth responded this time. He said nothing else and gave no physical indication of the words he spoke. Brain had to agree.
"He is right, none of us could have predicted this. If anything, the blame lies on me for trying to save on our assets. Even if it takes a month to make one of these, we should just have used it." That was what he got for keeping an emergency measure; it only created the emergency to begin with. Now they lost someone who could not be replaced.
Just as he thought that, the ascending branch ran out into almost even ground. Stars glittered far above and Brain realised they reached the top; the tree opened to the open sky like a goblet, wood-stone walls reaching several dozen metres higher. All around the two men spread a glade of tall grass, easily the size of a village; it took him a moment to recognise what his senses told him, the sheer abundance of Ethernano driving all weariness from his body. Wounded animals rested this way and that, from predator to prey in harmony.
Brain blinked, unable to form words at the peaceful image. He needed a while to push back against the sense of awe. "We found it," he sent, then fell silent to study the place more. Now that he focussed, it felt like a bright light to his sense for Ethernano; the magical energy surrounded them in a thick band. It covered the entire glade.
What was more, a guardian of sorts sat to its center: hewn of rough, black stone, the dragon was depicted at rest. Its vaguely triangular head rested on thick legs. Brain could tell intricate details from a distance, even more so as he approached. The stone was warm to the touch, every nook and cranny filled with blossoming flowers and plants that made their home on the colossus.
Even at rest it towered over him and MacBeth. Brain felt like the mighty beast could come alive and lunge at him any moment, but there was no actual flow of Ethernano. It was not a magical construct of any sort. He shuddered, then shook off the faint sense of dread. The only potential danger was the old, black bear slumbering next to a wounded deer. And if this one woke, it had a meal right there.
"What a curious sculpture," MacBeth muttered as he ran a hand over the obsidian. "I wonder who built it?"
Brain shrugged, well aware the younger man did not see the gesture. "I don't know. Right now I'm more interested in where the source of this Ethernano is." It blanketed the entire area, but there was no fountain. No leyline sprout. No hive or generator. "I'm starting to understand why generations of scholars were stumped by this place."
"It could be a property of the soil, or tied to the area?"
"Hopefully not. We lost too much trying to get this in our hands already." Brain's fist clenched, but he kept his mind on track.
MacBeth scowled and finally left the statue alone. He skulked away, stopping only to level his usual piercing stare at his father. "And what if it is? What if we come out of this empty-handed?"
With Erik captured and Sawyer dead... Brain scowled back. "This is unacceptable," he snapped before schooling his features. Not that the outburst upset MacBeth. "If all else fails, we can just uproot this entire glade and take it along. Or build an actual base here. If this bountiful source of Ethernano keeps refreshing itself, we can use it to power high-grade magical cannons, shields, and perhaps even an Etherion of our own." Seeing that the Magic Council's Etherion was destroyed, theirs would be the only one on Ishgar's southern end. They could hold all of the surrounding countries hostage. Make themselves immune to all retribution. The more he thought about it, the more Brain liked the idea.
While he mused however, he became oblivious to his surroundings. Beneath the starry sky he stood, staring out at a territory he now dreamt to make his. Were he more aware, he may have noticed the minute shift behind him. The change in lighting as empyrean orange began to shroud his silhouette. A colour so familiar yet wrong, alien. Greater. It shone from the statue's forehead and fully came into focus.
Brain lacked the ability to sense the change before it affected him. The minute push of singular atoms that struck others in a growing cascade; the faint switch of quantum states across all existence. Primordial might grasped for reality's state of being and rent it asunder.
In the sprawling forests below, Sherry Bendy suddenly collapsed with a scream. Just like every other fortuneteller across the planet, the realignment struck her with a terrible migraine. Worse for her, she was near its origin; a single, bloody tear ran down Sherry's cheek as the subliminal force ran its course.
The moment Brain noticed, it was too late. A searing pain struck his chest, drawing a wheeze. His heart stopped and no attempt to shock it into restarting was successful. He futilely clawed at his chest in what few seconds he had. The pain overtook his concious mind and paralysed him; a moment later, his awareness faded. The founder and leader of Oracion Seis collapsed like a puppet with its strings cut.
The heavy thud drew MacBeth's, or Midnight's, attention. His head snapped back to the collapsed form, suddenly alert. "Father?" he queried, but received no response. "Father!"
He wanted to call for help, but with Brain's fall the telepathy was also cut off. He shook the man who adopted him and gave him purpose, tried to will him to wake. There was no pulse and no human force of will could overcome that which they opposed. When next the glow grew to encase MacBeth, his fate was already sealed. He leapt to his feet to strike at the active statue, but his heart gave out before he could. His shout became a wheeze and he, too, fell.
The glow faded entirely this time. Its final flickers illuminated the two still bodies, one draped over the other. Beneath the shallow hole in its head that emitted the light, scaled lids slid over two slitted eyes. Flakes of dust and soil rained from their neck and head as the primal being adjusted its posture.
Then it fell still and the Sea of Serenity lay tranquil once more. As if its halcyon days had never been disturbed.