You know, it's something sort of . . . surreal, when you go back and look at the earlier books. The chapters were substantially shorter than they are now (I don't think I put a size minimum on myself back then. It's especially surreal to go back and see my book ideas that have actually already been written and came out radically different than I originally intended. Maybe it's just me, but I found that rather interesting.
New chapter.
CHAPTER TEN:
Visions
Cloak dream that he was in a void. He wondered idly if that made this a Truth Dream. They really were insufferably vague about that, about whether it was just a dream, or a Truth Dream. There had to be a way to tell, surely. But for a few minutes nothing eventful happened. Then Cloak was divebombed by something that looked brown and yellow. He easily dodged it with a somersault.
"The most recent progeny of the Progeny of the Two Suicides," the figure said, with a ghostly timbre to its voice. Cloak immediately looked 'round and saw him clear as could be. The bird's feathers were rust-colored, with maroon bordering on black. He had red-orange eyes, a reddish-brown beak, and yellow feet and legs, with a bit of reddish hue on the toes and sides of the shanks. He was somewhere between three, three-and-a-half feet tall, and he was a levitating, anthropomorphic rooster. He also carried an ethereal brown and red aura.
"Galloflight? But --" Cloak queried. He was under the impression that Galloflight was dead -- but then again, this was a lucid dream, so petty borders, like those between life and death, were never truly considered.
"Fight me!" he demanded, as he divebombed Cloak again, but the RAFian wasn't having any of it. He used his Mastery over Air to cause him to collide into the ground, and he increased the air pressure in Galloflight's general area to prevent him from taking off. Then Cloak pulled out a hula hoop-sized ring from his eponymous cloak. It had a marking like a rounded "M" with a fish-like loop on the end.
"Ring of Virgo," Cloak said, flicking it over to Galloflight -- or this dream construct of Galloflight, anyway. "bind Galloflight."
Galloflight struggled to his feet, with his humanoid arms (which he had instead of rooster wings, which were set to his back, like some sort of chicken angel). Cloak had not lifted the sheer air pressure to allow him to levitate. Even despite his ghostly shade appearance. "That will not work, Brat Descendant. I will not go back to that hellish nightmare . . ."
Then he vanished, with the Ring of Virgo following him, wherever he went, leaving Cloak to wonder what all that was about. He was still perplexed by this, when he heard the snort behind him. He didn't even bother to turn around -- his Earthsight already having informed him who this newcomer was.
"Oxhorn, was it?" Cloak asked, already reaching into his cloak for a Ring. He snorted again, apparently in a vain attempt at intimidation. Unfortunately for him, Cloak had faced far more fearsome and intimidating threats that were far more stronger than him. Cloak turned slowly to face Oxhorn. He had the body style of a Minotaur, like all bovine Realm Walkers. Oxhorn's eponymous horns were short, stout, and looked as if they could support the weight of the Colossus of Rhodes comfortably. His aura was brown and pale green -- not really complimentary colors.
"You will die," Oxhorn said, with a snort.
"Many have tried," Cloak said, pulling out a Ring with a marking like "n" with the right end with a loop, and toward the left. He held it loosely in his right hand. "None have succeeded. Although . . .
he did come close . . . and he . . ."
Cloak chose not to say the last part aloud. Nearly two Dweller years ago, Abomination very nearly killed him*, and he did so with all the powers of the Tyrant's Twelve combined. Individually, he would be able to handle them, though. They could not possibly . . . just then Cloak leaped up, using his Mastery over Air to increase his hang time and jump height. He spiraled down with a little slipstream air current around him. He then landed without a sound and threw the Ring at Oxhorn.
"Ring of Capricorn," he said. "Bind Oxhorn."
"That won't work again," Oxhorn said as he and the ring vanished into the oneirokinetic aether.
"It seems that you were wrong, you bovine brute," Cloak muttered. Then he Earthsighted someone behind him, and his Earthsight unveiled precisely who it was. He remembered who it was from that vision that Master Avatar showed him so long ago.
"It will take more than that to get the drop on me, Silentslither," Cloak said, essentially gluing his feet to the ground now. It was necessary to "see" Silentsilther when he was invisible.
"You have no idea what'sss in ssstore for you," he said, hissing on all the "s" syllables. It was a common speech impediment for snake Realm Walkers, Cloak's sister, Dagger, included.
"So you say," Cloak said, reaching into his cloak again to pull out a ring. This may be a lucid dream, or a Truth Dream, but he was feeling every effort of this. But then the snake Realm Walker dropped his invisibility. He was a cobra with his serpentine hood drawn, swathed in an aura of purple and green. They didn't compliment him very well.
"Yesss, I do sssay," he said, "but you remain obliviousss to the larger view. There'sss sssomething bigger at play here . . ."
"Oh, stop trying to be so Veiled enigmatic," Cloak said. He pulled out a Ring with a marking of a circle with a dipped line in it, looking like a very simplistic drawing of a bull's head. "It doesn't make you 'cool' or anything."
"You have no
idea," he said, almost as he was savoring Cloak's ignorance to what he was putting forth.
"Ring of Taurus," Cloak said, flinging the Ring as if it were a Frisbee, "bind him."
"That won't work," Silent slither said, as he vanished. The Ring followed him, wherever he went. Cloak wasn't liking this. Taurus and all the rest had to die to hold these people back. The RAFian was using
their rings after all, invoking
their powers and
their names. He hit upon an uncomfortable idea of will that be his legacy as well? People invoking
his chosen name and
his powers to hold off and contain Malice? He didn't want to think about that.
Then, before Cloak could react, he was struck. Then he was struck again before he could process the first attack. Then again, and again. Then twice more before his attacker stopped so he could process what just happened. But that didn't take too long. He has only known one Realm Walker speedster, and he believed her to be long dead.
"So, Speedy, alive as the others?" Cloak said, still hoping that this was nothing more than a dream construct.
"You know it!" she giggled, hoping from one of her large feet to the other, her long ears quivering in excitement. The cottontail was swathed in an aura of brown and pink. But when Cloak moved to reach into his eponymous cloak, she struck him again. Faster than a blink of an eye. She might have even given Cerulean a run for his money.
"Don't give up!" she said. "I love playing with you like this!"
Cloak growled. "'Playing'? Excuse me for not enjoying myself."
"Oh, don't be like that! Especially when we're gonna play again in the future!"
"What do you mean?"
"And ruin the fun?" she cackled, acting like a hyperactive five-year-old hopped up on a sugar rush.
Cloak used a technique that he never thought to use when he was awake. He increased the water saturation on the ground around him, and used his Mastery over Earth to make it a mire to walk in. Speedy didn't seem to notice this. She was far too busy having a fit of giggles. Somehow, Cloak found this really irritating, but he had set the trap.
Cloak reached into his eponymous cloak again, and when Speedy rushed to attack, she found herself mired in the quicksand. The more she fought the mire, the more she got herself stuck. Cloak smiled at this. This was the precise problem that arises when you leap before you look, if you act before you think. Which is what Speedy was,
who she was at a person.
"Hey! You cheated!" she complained.
But Cloak had pulled out a Ring with a marking of ") (" intersected horizontally by a line. Cloak said, "Ring of Pisces, bind her."
However, Speedy managed to free herself from this mire, and dashed away from the Ring, managing to shout, "We shall play again -- next time, don't cheat!"
Then she vanished, with the Ring in hot pursuit. Cloak counted silently -- that was five of the Tyrant's Twelve. He was clearly gonna receive dream visits from all of them. That left seven more to come, and he sensed the next one rather than saw him.
"Ghost, I presume," Cloak said, before turning around.
"Yes, and you're the descendant of the Prodigy of the Two Suicides," he said. He was a ram Realm Walker, only he was swathed in a electric yellow and pink aura. It actually worked, somehow.
"You're supposed to be dead," Cloak said.
"We never claimed to be," he said. "We never truly left. We never went Beyond the Veil. We're not dead."
"One could say that that is an absurd proclamation," Cloak said, reaching into his cloak once more.
"You cannot kill us," Ghost said. "No one can."
"You sound like you think that's impressive," Cloak said, pulling out a Ring with a marking of two circles with an arcing line from each that is in the direction of the other, but not connecting the two. "I think that's just sad and depressing. Eternal life must be so incredibly
boring."
"We are invulnerable," Ghost said.
"Uh, no. Immortality doesn't equate to invulnerability." Cloak said. "Then again, immortality itself is an impossibility. All things come to an end. Gods, planets, stars, universes, realms, Dwellers, Walkers --
everything. The only thing that never changes is the existence of change."
"You have no concept of what we are," Ghost intoned.
"Maybe not," Cloak said, "Ring of Cancer -- wow, that sounds bad, doesn't it? -- bind Ghost."
Ghost had vanished, but the Ring was in pursuit.
* Book One.