Option One: Constant Practice. Push mana reserves until system stability is compromised (i.e., unconsciousness or worse), recover, iterate. Essentially, stress-testing his own soul using an agile methodology with potentially lethal sprints. High-risk, high-reward, he mused grimly, staring unseeingly at a dusty diagram of elemental flows. Potential for incremental gains, also potential for catastrophic failure resulting in... well, let's call it 'unscheduled psychic downtime'. Needs robust monitoring.
Option Two: Magebloom. The mythical silver bullet. Locate an asset with zero confirmed availability, bypass legendary security protocols, and implement using lost operational guides. Feasibility: Like finding a unicorn that can code, in other words impossible. Shelved.
Option Three: Magical Artifacts. Acquire enterprise-level hardware with astronomical acquisition costs, requiring political capital and resources far exceeding current F-Rank budget allocation. Basically, requisitioning a supercomputer when you're struggling to afford a second monitor. Logistically improbable.
That left Constant Practice, the high-risk grind. But unlike the mages vaguely alluded to in the texts, William had EMMA. His own internal, possibly sentient, definitely energy-hungry data visualization suite. If, and it was a significant 'if', he could configure EMMA to provide reliable, real-time feedback on his own mana levels, he could manage the risk. He could push the limits, red-line the system deliberately, but pull back before the catastrophic failure threshold. Precision mana limit testing, he conceptualized. Requires accurate biometric data streams and clearly defined failure parameters. Step one: Can EMMA actually show me my own fuel gauge?
He retreated to the spartan privacy of the small room provided by the Guild, clean, basic, blessedly quiet. A controlled environment for experimentation. Julia, still radiating a low hum of anxiety and wisely opting for the relative anonymity of the Guildhall over potentially being spotted by Blackcombe agents in the capital, had returned to the library's dusty depths. She was hunting for any obscure lore, any forgotten counter-spell or strategic weakness related to Neverus's necromantic legions, a task that felt increasingly like searching for a single vulnerability in a mountain of hostile code.
Alone, William sat on the edge of the narrow cot, closed his eyes, and focused inward. He sought the faint, internal warmth he was beginning to associate with mana, picturing EMMA not as an external projection, but as an internal diagnostic tool booting up. Okay, EMMA, he thought, focusing his intent. System status request. Display user mana levels. Current capacity, current reserves. Use simple visualization.
A faint shimmer coalesced in his mind's eye, an overlay visible only to him. Not the complex environmental scans, but something simpler, cleaner. A single vertical bar, glowing with a soft, golden light, filled almost to the top. Beside it, stark white numerals flickered into existence: 98 / 100.
Interesting. A quantifiable metric. Max capacity: 100 units. Current level: 98. Units of... what? 'Mana Units'? 'William Power Points'? Needs a label. Typical undocumented variable. Still, data was data.
Time for a baseline test. He recalled the simple Light spell, the mental pathways and whispered word finally grooved into memory after days of frustrating trial and error. Focusing, he channelled a minimal amount of energy. A small, wavering orb of pale light bloomed hesitantly above his open palm, casting faint shadows on the stone walls. He watched the EMMA display. The golden bar dipped slightly. The numbers changed: 97 / 100.
Okay. Quantifiable cost. Spell activation drains approximately 1 unit. But was it a one-time cost or continuous? He held the spell steady, observing the display. 96... 95... The bar slowly but perceptibly shrank. Continuous drain confirmed. Resource consumption scales with duration. Like keeping a CPU pegged at 100% utilization. He let the light fizzle out. The bar stabilized at 95 / 100.
Now for the stress test. He needed to simulate significant mana expenditure to find the lower threshold, the point where the system started throwing critical errors. Without knowing more spells, how to increase the load rapidly? EMMA itself. Complex visualizations were resource hogs. Right. Let's render something demanding. He formed a mental request: Generate detailed, interactive 3D model of Aver Capital, based on visual memory data.
The golden bar plummeted as if a plug had been pulled. 60... 50... 40... A faint, unpleasant lightness touched the edges of his awareness, like standing up too fast. The EMMA display flickered, and a surprisingly intricate wireframe model of the city began to rotate slowly in his vision. 30... 20... The dizziness intensified, coalescing into a dull ache behind his eyes. The bar graph shifted colour, turning a warning amber. 15... 10... Warning threshold breached? Low power mode imminent? The bar suddenly flashed angry red. 8... 7... 6... Nausea surged, hot and acidic, in his throat. His vision swam, the edges blurring into grey. Abort! ABORT PROCESS! he screamed internally, severing the mental command with frantic force.
The 3D model vanished instantly. The bar graph ceased its flashing, hovering precariously at a stark, red 6 / 100. The room seemed to tilt violently. William gripped the rough blanket on the cot, knuckles white, sucking in ragged breaths. Sweat beaded on his forehead, trickling into his eyes. The wave of nausea slowly receded, leaving behind a pounding headache and a profound, bone-deep exhaustion. It felt disturbingly similar to pulling a 48-hour coding marathon fuelled by vending machine coffee and pure panic right before a critical launch deadline.
Okay... he thought, his body trembling slightly but his mind grimly triumphant. Data acquired.
- Point 1: EMMA provides functional real-time mana monitoring.
- Point 2: Critical threshold for 'mana backlash' symptoms initiates around 10% remaining capacity (approx. 8 units).
- Point 3: Recovery rate... He watched the red bar with morbid fascination. It crept upward with agonizing slowness. 7 / 100... A minute later, 8 / 100... ...is incredibly inefficient. Passive mana regeneration functions like trickle-charging a deeply discharged battery off a hamster wheel.
This cemented his strategy. Constant Practice, meticulously monitored by EMMA, was the only path forward that didn't rely on mythical MacGuffins or bankrupting a small nation. It would be slow, tedious, iterative capacity building. Pushing himself to the amber warning, maybe dipping briefly into the red, then immediately backing off to recover. Manageable. Provided, he added with a fresh wave of caution, I don't get cocky, override the safety protocols, and fry the motherboard.
His earlier dive into artifact lore had also surfaced the name Lumenar, the isolationist elven kingdom nestled south of the Tallenwood. Subsequent cross-referencing in the library archives painted a consistent picture. High walls, deep forests, ancient magic, and a distinct lack of enthusiasm for external affairs. Trade existed, but superficial, lacking deep treaties or alliances. High barrier to entry, William had analyzed, thinking back to closed-off corporate intranets. Low historical engagement metrics. Probability of securing immediate military or resource commitment against Neverus based on current relationship status: extremely low. They sounded like the Switzerland of this world, but with longer lifespans, pointier ears, and significantly better magical R&D. Persuading them to join the fight would require a compelling value proposition and probably navigating layers of ancient protocol. And the chances of getting an ancient artifact from them to amplify his own mana, let’s just say he liked his chances of winning the lottery more.
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The days leading up to Julia's scheduled meeting with Lord Marshal Sir Gerald fell into a rhythm dictated by this new training regimen. Push mana reserves via EMMA visualization until the amber warning flared, rest, recover slowly, repeat. Interspersed were sessions in the Guild training yard, where his attempts to master basic sword parries remained stubbornly clumsy (Rate of skill acquisition: significantly below projected estimates), and brief check-ins with Julia in the library. He saw the mounting strain in the set of her shoulders, the quiet desperation in her eyes as she sifted through scrolls that offered no easy answers.
As the scheduled meeting took place, William felt it coil in his own gut, a knot of anticipation tightening with each passing hour. This meeting felt critical. Feels like waiting for the Q4 earnings announcement when you know the market's tanked and layoffs are inevitable, he thought, pacing the stone corridor outside the fourth-floor meeting room while Julia was inside with Borin. You just don't know the exact percentage of the disaster or who's getting the axe.
He practically vibrated with nervous energy when the heavy oak door finally creaked open. Julia emerged first, followed by Borin, whose usually impassive face was set in grim lines. Borin gave William a curt, preoccupied nod and strode rapidly down the hall. Julia, however… she looked like she’d been run through a data corruption cycle. Not physically injured, but hollowed out, her face the colour of old parchment, dark circles blooming beneath her eyes like bruises. She swayed, a hand momentarily reaching for the doorframe, and William was moving before he consciously decided to, catching her elbow gently.
“Julia?” he asked, his voice low, guiding her towards a stone bench set into an alcove in the relatively empty hallway. “Are you okay? How did it go?”
She sank onto the bench, her hands twisting together in her lap so tightly her knuckles shone white. She stared straight ahead, focusing on a point somewhere on the opposite wall, visibly gathering the fragments of her composure. When she finally spoke, her voice was thin, brittle, like autumn leaves skittering across pavement.
“It's… bad, William,” she said, the words landing like stones in the quiet hallway. “Oakenfall. The battle everyone expected? It's begun. But it's… wrong.”
She recounted the intelligence reports delivered to the Lord Marshal, her voice gaining a faint edge of bitter frustration. The Goblin King hadn't launched the anticipated suicidal assault on the fortress city. Instead, scouts reported a massive, sprawling encampment erupting deep within the Tallenwood forest, effectively encircling Oakenfall. An endless tide of goblins, ogres, trolls, and darker things William didn't recognize from the brief descriptions, were digging in. They weren't attacking. They were besieging. Settling in for winter.
“It's attrition,” Julia explained, pressing the heels of her hands against her temples as if trying to physically contain a headache. “Gerald sees it now. Neverus isn't aiming for a swift victory. He intends to bleed Oakenfall, bleed Aver. Force the kingdom to pour its dwindling resources, its best legions, into a protracted, grinding siege.”
Borin, she relayed, had argued vehemently against simply reinforcing Oakenfall, calling it a strategic blunder, a resource sink designed to drain Aver's strength. Goblins excelled at wars of attrition, breeding faster, needing less, thriving in brutality.
“He believes,” Julia continued, her voice dropping almost to a whisper, husky with exhaustion, “that Oakenfall is a feint. A massive, costly, bloody diversion.”
A knot of ice tightened in William's stomach. His mind, trained to look for underlying patterns, for the signal hidden in the noise, immediately grasped the implication. “A diversion… from what?”
Julia finally turned to meet his gaze, and the dawning horror in her eyes mirrored his own internal calculations. “Lumenar,” she breathed. “Borin is convinced Neverus's real objective is the elven kingdom. While Aver's armies are bogged down in the Tallenwood meat grinder, he'll strike south, securing Lumenar's ancient magic, their artifacts, their libraries…” The unsaid conclusion hung heavy between them. Access to that level of power and knowledge would shift the balance irrevocably. Game over, the analyst in William supplied grimly. Scenario outcome: Unrecoverable strategic failure.
The potential countermeasures discussed in the meeting sounded desperate. A direct assault on the goblin encampment? Catastrophically costly, likely playing directly into Neverus's hands, and stripping defenders from other vital areas. Attempting infiltration with spies? Too slow, uncertain, and unlikely to yield actionable intel before it was too late.
“So,” Julia said, her voice barely audible now, raw with the weight of it all. “Borin proposed… a third option. A long shot. The Guild will assemble a small, highly specialized team. Tasked to infiltrate Tallenwood, bypass the siege lines entirely, and make for Lumenar. Warn the elves. Attempt to forge an emergency alliance.” She gave a short, broken laugh utterly devoid of humour. “A diplomatic outreach mission, conducted via covert infiltration through hostile territory into a notoriously isolationist nation, all while a major war kicks off nearby. Calling it a long shot feels… offensively optimistic.”
“Did the Lord Marshal...?” William began.
“He didn't dismiss it,” Julia confirmed, weariness etched into every line of her face. “He's taking the proposal to the King. But he looked… interested. Desperate times call for desperate gambles, I suppose.” She leaned her head back against the cool stone wall, closing her eyes for a moment. The weight of the situation, the impossible choice Borin had likely pressed upon her, duty demanding her expertise, perhaps even her participation, pulling her back towards the political inferno she'd fled, was written all over her.
William felt the information settle, his mind automatically running through the variables. Mission profile: Covert infiltration, diplomatic objective, extreme environmental hostility, time-critical. Risk assessment: Catastrophic failure highly probable. Probability of success: Statistically negligible without significant unforeseen advantages or 'black swan' events. Yet... the potential payoff if successful? Kingdom-saving. Game-changing.
He looked at Julia, really saw the crushing burden she was shouldering, not just the strategic nightmare, but the invisible weight of her family name, her history, the political tightrope she walked even here. A surge of fierce, almost painful protectiveness rose in him, immediately followed by the cold slap of his own inadequacy. F-Rank. Barely functional mana reserves. One marginally useful Light spell. A cryptic internal system he was only just beginning to debug. What could he possibly contribute to a mission like that?
“It's the only viable play we have left,” Julia murmured, seeming to sense his internal calculations, echoing the grim logic of the situation. “We have to roll the dice.” She opened her eyes and looked directly at him, a silent, heavy question hanging in the air between them. What about you, William? Where do you fit in this equation?
He didn't have an answer. Not a concrete one. But meeting Julia's gaze, seeing the exhausted resolve hardening there, the acceptance of a near-impossible task because the alternative was unthinkable surrender, solidified something within him. He had to find an answer. He had to master EMMA, not just for mana management, but for whatever else it could do. He had to get stronger, faster, smarter within this world's ruleset. Because standing by, analysing the kingdom's demise as a helpless F-Rank observer while people like Julia put everything on the line?
That was simply not an acceptable outcome. The potential for regret was statistically certain.
William Shard - Character Sheet
- Level: 1
- XP: 200 / 1000 (+200 XP gained from recent EMMA diagnostic/analysis practice)
- Title: [Novice Magic Analyst]
- Effect: +5% Mana Regeneration Rate
- Class: Magic Analyst
Stats:
- Strength: 15
- Agility: 18
- Magic: 20
- Vitality: 12
- HP (Vitality *10): 120
- Mana (magic / 2 * 10): 100
- Unallocated Stat Points: 3
Skills:
- Swordsmanship: Basic
- Magic (Conventional): Basic
- EMMA System: Basic
- Language (Averian Common): Basic
- Healing / Regeneration: ??? (Unknown - Nature Undefined)