Chapter 20
As an extension of the Core four Myst Elements of Earth, Fire, Air, and Water, there are Compound Elements. Compound Elements result from applying the trait of one element to another element to produce something completely new. There are six commonly used Compound Elements.
Compound Element Examples:
Lightning results from applying the mobility of Air to the element of Fire.
Kinetic results from applying the solidity of Earth to the element of Air.
Acid results from applying the devouring aspect of Fire to the element of Water.
Nennel and Ferris both gave me a confused look, which turned to revolt with wrinkled noses.
“What in the name of the Gods is the awful smell?” Nennel asked.
“Did you not hear me?!” I shouted.
Before either of them could respond, there came a sound like rolling thunder behind me. Nennel and Ferris looked past me and toward the origin of that sound. “DON’T JUST STAND THERE! MOVE!” I commanded.
This time, I acted without waiting for a response. I rushed forward, grabbed both of my friends by the front of their harnesses, and yanked them with me down the stairs as fast as I could. I did my best not to run full-tilt because of my new ANFEN cybernetic installments. But the two trailing behind me still struggled to keep their feet under them as I practically sprinted down the stairs, skipping three steps at a time. As soon as I reached subfloor 4, I heard the elemental strike the wall right next to the stairs from where we had just fled.
Every part of my body hurt. My arms and legs ached and throbbed. Every breath brought on stabbing pain from my damaged ribs. My dislocated shoulder screamed in protest as it was pulled by Ferris’s weight while he struggled to keep up. My broken nose was the least intense pain, but it still pounded and burned, and I could taste blood on my lips. Despite all that misery, I kept pushing, kept going.
I kicked down the door leading from the stairway and rushed through. I could feel the enhancement in my legs waning, but I could not stop. If I stopped, we were all dead. I checked my map again as I hurried down the hall, desperately searching for a way out. My eyes flitted over the three-dimensional image, seeking a hint of anything I could use to get us out of this danger. Six paces down the hall, I found what I was looking for.
Strangely enough, we were near an environmental hazard I had planned to encounter. I could use it to my advantage. I slowed down as the desired turn came up and took a short right, kicking down another door with the last of my enhanced strength. The three of us came to a stop at the foot of a catwalk that reached thirty feet across to another door. While the catwalk looked unstable at best, that was only part of the problem. Beneath the catwalk bridge was a lake of caustic liquid. The awful, thick green, yellow, and gray substance gave off a glow that could mean nothing good. Each of the colors swirled with each other without mixing, giving a sense of several living creatures interacting with each other. The thick and large bubbles that grew and burst like breathing cists did not help that sense. The whole fetid pool emanated a truly repulsive stench that anyone could tell was just as toxic as the pools below.
“What the hell is the place?” asked Nennel with a look of revulsion. “This place stinks worse than you do, Iver.” As my sister made her comment, I thrust my dislocated shoulder against the wall behind us and pulled my arm to relocate the joint.
“I’ll explain later.” I growled because of the pain from the shoulder joint. “Nel, hand over your grav-hook.” As I took the device from Nennel, I continued to throw out instructions at a rapid-fire pace. “Both of you, put on your gas masks and your chem-pants.” I continued to speak while I loosely tied the end of the rope to the railing. “While you do that, I’m gonna cross and anchor the hook. After that, I need one of you to tie off the rope attached to the grav-hook to as stable a spot as you can find. Not where I just tied it. This is to keep it within reach of you two while I cross.” The instructions continued even as I pulled my gas mask from the bag and mounted it to my face. “The rope needs to be as taut as possible, and both the knot and the anchor point need to hold the weight of both of you. But we need to be lightning quick.”
As I moved to stand on one side of our platform, away from the other two, I could hear the elemental flowing down the stairs like a tide. This caused panic to rise like a tide all its own that threatened to drag me down. I resisted that threat as best I could while I tried to punch out the right mental math to pull off yet another daringly stupid stunt.
“Wait, what do you mean chem-pants?” Ferris asked, his brain clearly still not working at full capacity.
“I mean the damned acid-resistant leg guard covers, Rot-brain.” I snapped at him before turning back to my rushed work. To pull off the math in time, I was going to need to take out a loan. I carved my metal claws down my shoulder and tricep. I dug deep, drawing a snarl from me just as quickly as the blood welled and rolled down in a steady flow. It was a lot of life fluid, but I could only hope that it would be enough for what I needed. I drew on ten Vells and dumped all of it into as high a tier of mind enhancement using Distortion Myst and Morphic as I could manage. That meant I gave myself a Tier 5 Mind Enhancement, the highest possible tier for someone like me, but it would only last for one minute. I was really going to regret that action later, but then was not the time for thinking that far ahead.
With my cognitive processing kicked into a preternatural gear, time seemed to slow down. Time became so sluggish I could only perceive Nennel and Ferris moving when I actively paid attention to them for what seemed like several seconds. With this effect active, I turned back to my calculations, triggering a function of my therra that had become a boon in the recent days. A three-dimensional measurement hologram appeared in my vision after what seemed like a long moment but must’ve been near-instant. I quickly measured out the distance from my location to the nearest space across the bridge that looked reasonably safe. Next, I measured the height of the ceiling from where I stood. Then, I measured the distance to each wall on either side of me. After that, I checked the remaining Vells left in the myst crystals I had installed in my Pacer Shoes. After all of this, I changed measurement systems to check trajectory and velocity with the resources I had on hand.
With all the variables I needed plugged into my formula, I realized I only had enough myst left in my shoes for one solid jump. That was one part of this issue. Another negative factor was that the juice I had wasn’t enough for a low jump that would cover the total distance. The ceiling was also too low for me to correct this distance-to-velocity issue by jumping in a high arc. Without my grappling hook, things only got more complicated.
I reduced my cognition to increase the rate at which I perceived time. When the world seemed to move at a quarter speed, I watched my bleeding shoulder until there was enough fresh blood that I knew I could take the next step. My Mystwell had only recovered a few Vells, so my current capacity felt like sixteen. I drew on all of the available blood to channel another ten Vells of Morphic and Distortion Myst into my body, mostly focused in my legs. I knew that this would likely cause severe damage to my leg muscles, but I had no other choice.
With the grav-hook in one hand, I bent down into a sprinter’s stance. I rushed forward toward a less-than-stable guard rail and lunged, carefully placing both of my feet on the rail. The body enhancement let my physical body operate almost as fast as my mind was processing. With both feet balanced on the rail, I felt it beginning to bend, giving in under my weight in slow motion. I squatted as low as I could while keeping my balance and thrust myself into the air over the toxic pool. The jump had pushed me three feet into the air and ten feet forward toward the wall on my right before I started my descent toward the glowing lake. The moment I felt my drop in altitude, I triggered the kinetic burst from my shoes, burning through the last of the myst in the crystals. After a terrifying moment of slowly dropping, the ability triggered. My legs were in the planned position of my left leg outstretched below and behind and below me, and my right leg was bent with my knee thrust out ahead of me. I shot forward as planned, but my foot placement had altered my trajectory in a manner I hadn’t predicted. While I was approaching the wall at top speed, I was veering slightly to the left, away from the wall. I cranked my mind enhancement back up to top gear to give me enough time to think out the situation.
If my estimation was right, I would still reach the wall, but at a point lower than desired. I would need to correct, and with my shoes fresh out of juice, I would have to pull that off myself. I already had plans for the rest of the myst in my Mystwell. That meant I needed to think up a solution without magic. And the solution needed to be decided with enough time before problems got worse for me to make that correction.
I could try to make the adjustment by kicking off with my legs, angling up higher. But without a solid grip on the surface, I was more likely to just slip off. If I still had my grappling hook, it wouldn’t have been a problem, but I also wouldn’t have needed to pull off this madness in the first place. I ran through every option I could think of before the concrete wall was within arm’s reach. When I got a closer look at the wall, I got an idea. The mad ideas just kept rolling out of my brain, but the very source of all this trouble inspired this one.
If Ferris’s hook hadn’t lost grip, he wouldn’t have fallen. If Ferris hadn’t fallen, I wouldn’t have needed to catch him. Because of how I caught him, he made enough nose to draw the ghouls, and so on the chain of events went, but it all started with a bad wall.
The encroaching wall was riddled with obviously weak spots. That was more than likely because of the caustic fumes from the lake below. I adjusted my body to land with my back, palms, and both foot soles against the wall. I made sure my feet were on a weak spot that was visibly crumbling. When my feet made contact, but my back hadn’t, I drew on two Vells, using the still seeping blood from my shoulder. I aligned one Vell with Earth and applied the solidity trait of the element to the second Vell that I aligned with Water. The result was a batch of magical adhesives commonly called Trapp Tar, a Compound Core Element. I conjured the small amount of Trapp Tar on the sole of my left foot. That would give me enough grip to adjust my flight angle.
Once my back touched the wall, I kicked up and off, using the tar to give my foot the grip I needed to angle my leap at a more upward angle. Sure enough, the weakened wall segment only held for just long enough to grant me my desired result. And as I had hoped, the moment my feet pushed free of the wall, the contact point with the tar tore free with almost no effort. My supercharged legs pushed me up another five feet and forward another eight feet. As soon as I reached the apex of my arc, I drew on my remaining myst, six Vells in total. I mentally slammed three Earth Vells into three Air Vells to produce kinetic energy. Seventy-five foot-pounds of force thrust me forward another twenty feet before my descent started. When I knew that my math was right on the money, I was elated. The speed from my last burst and leap barely gave me enough clearance to shoot over the far guardrail. I made it over the clearance with less than six inches of clearance, but I didn’t care. I hit the metal platform and shoulder rolled right into a wall with a painful slam. Hitting the wall was jarring enough to make me lose focus on my dual self-enchantment.