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Novelux Blackglass Caldera Mystery Dungeon

Nova wasn't going to jump to conclusions. Even if, from talking with Matthias, it sounded like Auriga was quite unhelpful compared to Betel's straightforward instructions... or even Powehi's blunt eleventh-hour directions.

No, instead, he had a different source: the shaken up Victini. "Is this what you'd prepared for?" Nova wondered. "Or were you only told that disaster was coming?"
 
“Oh!”

So the apparition of Auriga was, somehow, completely self-aware. Even remembered how much time had passed.

“So you know, that’s actually really…”

And yet. And yet. She seemed to feel the same way. Had probably felt that way for all five thousand years… Did an echo emotionally suffer in the same way a normal person would?

“Oh… I really don’t know how to feel about that. But I guess it’s helpful. Because no, you didn’t summon us. But you did—”

And then, he was gone.

“—summon two…”

He blew air through his nose, exasperated.

Damn it.

If he hadn’t hesitated for so long, hadn’t beaten around the bush, there might’ve been enough time in the cycle for a single question. Would he have to do the entire dungeon again to get a second a chance? Was that even an option? Or would the dungeon refuse to show him the same thing again?

He could sit there commiserating himself until the dungeon shifted. The atmosphere here certainly suited that. But doing so would just be making the same mistake again. Was there something he needed to ask Lorrel?

Lorrel… didn’t seem self-aware. But neither had Auriga, at first. She’d been fully in the moment. Emotionally, she seemed there even as they spoke. It would feel awful to go up and ask him some calculated, practical question. (He wasn’t even sure what he would’ve asked. Articuno had wondered why Victini had disappeared… But at this point in time, Lorrel probably didn’t know what was gonna happen to him.)

Nova… Nova was accustomed to grieving, wasn’t he? If they had one shot at a question, Gladion trusted him with it.
 
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"Why didn't you tell them?" His voice came out as pained growl and he advanced on Auriga, nearly glaring. "Why didn't you explain yourself!" His heart hammered in his chest as he looked back at the apparition of Lorrel, broken and sobbing. All he'd wanted to do was some good, to stop a disaster. Try to help.

Koa's eyes burned as he looked up at the blinding light that had once been Amida. She hadn't meant to... He blinked away the watery sensation in his eyes, fought against the tide of emotions bubbling up inside his chest. "You just brought them here and told them nothing and left them in the dark."
"Is this what you'd prepared for?" Nova wondered. "Or were you only told that disaster was coming?"

Lorrel looked up at Nova, his eyes dull. The irises were a striking blue, which showed here and there through the golden Radiance that still suffused his sclera.

"It was just a meteor," he said, as if pleading. Bargaining. "I could handle it. I was strong enough for that."

The vision shifted again, and now Lorrel was stood upright, bright-eyed, looking up at Auriga. It was neither day, nor night, but some dream-space where all was light. The grass was golden and soft and had the scent of spring.

"It will come by winter's end," whispered the Flygon. "You have until then to be ready. I have given you all the strength I can spare, and fashioned you a divine form for this sacred purpose. You are to be this world's Victini – the god of victory. This is our best chance for success."

"I swear I'll stop the meteor," promised the young Saint. "I'll do it, no matter what. I accept this task, uh, lady light-dragon!"

The World-Spirit smiled on Lorrel. There was love, there – and fear.

"This is not what we agreed," muttered Powehi, manifesting to one side of the pair. The grass paled where he stood, and the light dimmed. "Did I not say that the boy should stay mortal? Did I not tell you that you are leaving yourself without blessings to spare should he fail, or act unwisely?"

Lorrel didn't seem to notice Powehi. He just stared up, frozen in the moment of his oath-taking. A reminder that this wasn't real, exactly...

Auriga sighed to her counterpart. "This way, he surely cannot fail. I cannot bear to think of his falling short. How cruel would it be, to summon a young hero and not give them all the strength I can spare them? What if he should perish without that blessing?"

"What if the boy should spend his strength for worse, rather than better? You must not make these decisions out of fear, thinking that you can avoid all suffering if you only force a certain fate. Fate will punish hubris. You take too great a risk, my light, that you might spare yourself the pain of guilt... but you will feel it. You will feel remorse, Auriga."

"Not if he wins, my shadow. And he will win. It is destined that he should win..."

The vision flickered, and faded. Lorrel was once again on all fours on the ruined beach.

He'd fulfilled his promise, and destroyed the meteor.

He'd won.
 
Just a meteor? Destined he should win?

Nova's crest tightened. Auriga hadn't given Lorrel vague inklings like with Matthias. She'd given Lorrel details. What would happen. When it would happen. She even turned him into a Saint.

She'd dangled divinity in front of him and he took it. Was it hubris? Or had he felt as though there was no other choice in the matter?

Did Auriga change her behavior as a result of this? Did she opt to be vague and obtuse with her future summons to avoid a situation like this?

"Nothing is destined," he mumbled to himself. "Nothing should be destined. Ever." He looked at Lorrel again. "Did you ever consider alternatives to fighting it head on by yourself?"
 
“If you two are self-aware, you’ve had this argument before. Right? Can you break from it for a moment?”

He locked eyes with Auriga.

“You, or rather the Auriga five thousand years from now, seem to be missing. You summoned one human a few years ago. Then another just one year ago. The first doesn’t seem to have met you, except maybe in some dubious dream messages.” (Gladion wasn’t sure he believed if that was true, or if it was a Matthias Original to justify why he didn’t what team he was supposed to be on to the Coven.) “The second also went missing. And pleaded someone else summon backup on her behalf.”

Deep breath. Don’t start rambling. This was a question.

“How should someone be able to meet you, normally? Maybe it won’t work, but we have to try it.”
 
Steven floated nearby, his heart breaking for the Saint in front of him. From everything he'd seen in these visions, Lorrel was so young; was he just a child when Auriga summoned him? Akin to a new trainer about to set out on their journey? Bright-eyed and optimistic, unaware (or unprepared to discover) that sometimes victory had a cost...

Had Auriga considered that when she handed him the powers of a Saint? Had Powehi when he'd lectured about responsibility and planning?

The others seemed interested in figuring out the details of the events, as if there was something that could still be done. Even if this Lorrel was only a dungeon vision, such hindsight must feel like salt in a wound. Trapped in an endless loop of reliving a victory that tore his heart asunder.

Lorrel said:
"I didn't want this," he said, quietly. "I didn't want this. I didn't want this."

Steven waited until the others had asked their questions before asking his.

"Lorrel," he began softly, "what is it that you did want?"
 
She had told him. She had told him and it had still gone all wrong. Auriga hadn't listened, Lorrel didn't understand, Amida had just tried her best to fix it... They'd only wanted to help.

All because Auriga had brought someone here, told him he could save the world, and given him the power to do it. And yet Lorrel had known. If he'd just- Koa cut the thought off and shook himself mentally. This was all thousands of years ago it couldn't be changed. Still...

While the others spoke to Lorrel, Koa sought out Powehi instead. "Was there another way?" he asked. "Another way instead of just standing back and letting the meteor hit?" There had to be something better than everything and nothing, being a bystander or starting an apocalypse...
 
"Nothing is destined," he mumbled to himself. "Nothing should be destined. Ever." He looked at Lorrel again. "Did you ever consider alternatives to fighting it head on by yourself?"

"We didn't need any help. That was plain as day to everyone."

Lorrel laughed – a pained, absurd sound.

"There was never any doubt that we would triumph. And look – we did. The meteor was nothing to me."

It was true. Lorrel had swatted it from the sky like a fat, slow housefly. It would be easy to imagine the young god asking ordinary 'mon for aid, and sounding like he must be joking. What help could anyone have offered him? Him, and his equally powerful partner, whose wings brought summer wherever she went.

"Was there another way?" he asked. "Another way instead of just standing back and letting the meteor hit?"

Powehi grunted, folding his arms.

"There is always another way. Many paths, and countless variations upon them."

He glanced at his bright counterpart, his eyes a contradiction – at once stone-hard and yet so, so soft.

"He should have been mortal. The odds should have looked steep, not laughably trivial. He should have had to work for his strength, appreciated the value of earned power, learned restraint and contingency. He should have tasted failure, and come to know that it is real. He should have become familiar with the world, and its frailty, so that he might see the towns evacuated and petition the aid of other heroes and divinities."

Dark Matter's eyes creased as he held back some fathomless, black sorrow.

"And if he should have come close to failing, I would have been at his side. I would have sheltered his soul. But now he is ablaze with Radiance, so much that I can barely stand to look at him. In guaranteeing the effortless destruction of that meteor, he let his light loose upon the waters, and frenzied Leviathan who slept beneath. On some other path, she could instead have helped him..."

“How should someone be able to meet you, normally? Maybe it won’t work, but we have to try it.”

Auriga's depthless light burned into Gladion's vision. If this was her phantasm, how blinding would the real thing be?

"There is a way. If I did not summon you, then I will not have the power to speak to you directly. I live in the aura of all this planet's life. I am ten thousand-thousand and more whispers under the skin of all 'mon. Only my champions can hear me truly, and there are limits even then. It is my nature. What you see before you is an impossibility. Unreal. I spoke with my shadow in the Astral Plains, not upon the steppes of Taleska. Yet there is a way."

The ground beneath Gladion rushed away from him, as if he were being pulled by some deity's hand across a thousand or more vertigo-inducing miles. For a moment, he glimpsed a temple of marble and wood, a brazier with a golden flame, pokémon in linen robes, the sun high in the sky—

"Go to the place where I come closest to the waking world. Go to my temple in the country that knows the secrets of the soul. Go to Auranosa."

"Lorrel," he began softly, "what is it that you did want?"

The Victini met Steven's eyes, and shuddered weakly.

"I wanted... to stay with her. With Amida. My old life, as a human... was nothing special. Why go back? I'd only miss this place. I'd miss everyone in it, her most of all. I'd miss being me, being Victini Lorrel, someone important. Someone useful."

He laughed again.

"I thought if I could live up to this... I'd get to stay."

"I could never allow an offworlder's essence as powerful as yours to integrate into the soul-stratum of Forlas," uttered Powehi, in a voice like granite.

"You wouldn't be able to stop me, old man," whispered Lorrel.

True or not, he sounded like he believed it.
 
Lorrel sounded so young. And perhaps his old human life wasn't that good. But still... the way the projection spoke — "Someone important. Someone useful." — made it sound like Lorrel had taken the "heroic spirit" business to heart in all the wrong ways. He'd bought into his own hype and, as a result, believed he and his partner were enough.

Nova's head involuntarily turned in Koa's direction briefly. Didn't the kid have a bit of a hero complex, especially with legends?

Though, Nova supposed that, despite Powehi's anger and mistrust of the Wayfarers, having the group here did prove a deterrent to such reckless thinking. After all, with both halves of the Cipher confrontation and dealing with Alexander, the Wayfarers didn't go it alone. They had roped native groups in, whether it was logistical stuff or getting directly involved in the fighting. So, even if they were exerting their will to some degree, it was with the people who truly called this place home.

It was a cold comfort, though. Nova looked back at Auriga. "Where's Auranosa?"
 
Koa's paws tensed, digging into the sharp ground. His chest ached for Lorrel as much as he felt some nameless anger at him, and Auriga, for how it had all gone wrong. At knowing that it didn't have to be like this. His fur suddenly felt itchy and his body all wrong.

If he had nothing at all to return to, would he have wanted to stay? Would he have tried? The memory of Lorrel destroying the meteor still lingered. You're no better.

Swallowing down his errant thoughts, he turned away from Powehi, satisfied. Now wasn't the time to dwell. There was something else...

"...Lorrel." Koa didn't know how else to address him. Victini felt off, somehow. "They still tell stories about the Saint of Victory... And some believe he'll return. If you got to stay here... where would you go?" If anything did remain of the Saint, where was it? Did his Divine Dungeon remain or... or did Powehi really had no way to get rid of him? Had Auriga sent him back? He glanced at the two figures, wondering if they knew where he'd last gone. Maybe not these specters, but the real ones...
 
Gladion staggered back as his vision was pulled into a place he’d never yet seen. A glimpse of Auranosa. Another place he’d have to find. And another place he’d have to reach. That part wasn’t negligible in a world without aircraft, even if he’d only have to make the trip there and not the trip back if the wayfarers made a dungeon shortcut there.

“Alright. I’ll do it.”

Hopefully. He’d have to find it on a map and decide if it was reasonable to get there.
 
Steven's expression pinched at Lorrel's words. The anguish, the desperation in them.

So it had been like that. Lorrel had a glass handed to him by Auriga and filled to the brim, overflowing with power and importance. A blessing. And a curse. One misstep, one small tilt of the rim, and it would tip over, spilling out in an unstoppable cascade. It was an impossible ask from the start, one that left Lorrel as shattered and empty as the glass he'd been asked to hold.

Steven's eyes drifted skyward to the glowing form of Amida that staved off the cold and the dark.

"You loved her," he said simply. It didn't have to be any more complex than that. The bond between two people-- two souls-- so strong that when severed it felt like a part of you was gone.

He turned back to Lorrel. "I'm so sorry," he murmured.

There weren't any platitudes that would heal the wound of having all the power in the world, and none of it could grant the one wish you desired most.
 
It was a cold comfort, though. Nova looked back at Auriga. "Where's Auranosa?"

Betel chirped a greeting in the party's heads.

I can answer that! Auranosa is a member state of the Commonwealth. It is east of Sojavena and south of Prosper – it is somewhat remote in practice due to a lack of tansportation infrastructure in the region. It is possible that you might charter a dirigible if you wish to get there swiftly.

“Alright. I’ll do it.”

"Find me," whispered the World-Spirit.

Whatever part of her was preserved in the Caldera's heart... that quasi-consciousness believed that Gladion should speak with her real self, if it were possible. That vision of a temple was almost certainly five millennia out of date...

"You loved her," he said simply. It didn't have to be any more complex than that. The bond between two people-- two souls-- so strong that when severed it felt like a part of you was gone.

He turned back to Lorrel. "I'm so sorry," he murmured.

"I did," replied Lorrel, his eyes shutting against the welling grief inside him. It spilled out regardless. It was not something his matchless power could do anything to abate. Even a god of victory, then, could weep.

"I can still feel her," he gasped, clutching at his chest. His aura in that spot was so strong that even out of combat, it pulsed golden to the naked eye, resonating with the aura of his partner, still burning herself away in the sky.

Powehi had implied that she'd lasted months. Just how powerful had Amida been...?

"They still tell stories about the Saint of Victory... And some believe he'll return. If you got to stay here... where would you go?"

"I... I—I'll travel," said Lorrel, getting control of his voice back with a heaving gulp of air. "I'll do what Amida would have wanted me to do. I'll fight the darkness in the world, I'll protect innocent 'mon. I'll be a lantern in the night. I'll give my fire to all who need it."

"You'll do no such thing," growled Powehi. "You'll return home. You've done enough."

"I won't. I won't go. I belong here. This is my world, there's no way I could abandon it."

"You have until the last new moon before your presence here becomes permanent," hissed the jackal. "That is the stay of exile I may grant you. But no more than that. You must leave by the appointed time, or I shall remove you myself."

"You aren't strong enough to do it," said Lorrel, more firmly this time. "You can't make me."

There was a moment of tense silence as this ancient argument hung in the air. Then Betel chimed in.

So... Did Victini Lorrel actually remain on Forlas or not...?

"No."

"Yes."

Auriga just stared silently into the middle distance, her eyes hidden behind her lenses. There was no consensus on Lorrel's eventual fate. The phantasms... didn't know.
 
Victini had disappeared with no divine dungeon or successor to speak of. That… leant itself to the assumption Powehi had gotten what he wanted.

On the other hand, the metaphor Powehi had sent them here to understand was how a pointed stone, if flung with sufficient speed, could tear a canvas. That… Was that was what they’d already seen… Or was that what Lorrel was going to do when exiled? Throw themselves against the canvas of the world to try to stay?

“Powehi. Uhh, good news for you is that Victini’s been mysteriously missing for ages now with no divine dungeon or anything. Probably supports your conclusion. But you still told me to come here. To see how a pointed stone can tear the fabric of reality. Is that what we already saw, or…”

It wasn’t, was it?
 
"You'll be a 'lantern,' will you?" Nova frowned. He'd head that exact word thrown around before. "You ever meet any other Saints before this?"
 
The first Zeraora, the Wandering Light... Carry the light. Lorrel had to have passed it on. Koa felt sure. Even after what happened he'd tried to do good. Koa's heart twisted.

Lorrel's determination sounded so great. So strong. He said he wanted to help innocent mon. Fight darkness. Do good.

He wouldn't have left.

Koa found himself shaking his head. "No," is he murmured. "He's not gone. At least... He wouldn't have left that easily." Not without a fight.

And he did pass his light on, to a Zeraora. Could he have left after that? Was giving up his power his last act or had he been too strong for Powehi to force out?

"What would happen to you if you... Gave your power to someone else?" Was that why there was no dungeon left behind?
 
"You ever meet any other Saints before this?"
"No," he murmured. "He's not gone. At least... He wouldn't have left that easily." Not without a fight.

And he did pass his light on, to a Zeraora. Could he have left after that? Was giving up his power his last act or had he been too strong for Powehi to force out?

"What would happen to you if you... Gave your power to someone else?" Was that why there was no dungeon left behind?

Lorrel's visage flickered, his simple garb changing like a choppy moving-picture show. His fur grew disheveled, his eyes showed more blue. He wore a pendant that looked like a sun, he wore clothing from a dozen lands, he wore a hood over his head.

"My light will never go out," he said, softly. "When fire spreads, it only grows."

In other words, teaching Radiance to another wouldn't consume his own power.

"I've met other gods. I've fought them. Maybe I can befriend them. I liked the Wandering Thunderbolt. Maybe he would understand..."

Was this a vision of Lorrel's later life? Hard to say – the dungeon couldn't really know for sure. Evidently, Lorrel's end had not come immediately after his fateful moment over Lake Cobalt...

“Powehi. Uhh, good news for you is that Victini’s been mysteriously missing for ages now with no divine dungeon or anything. Probably supports your conclusion. But you still told me to come here. To see how a pointed stone can tear the fabric of reality. Is that what we already saw, or…”

"An apt metaphor. As you will see... Observe."

Lorrel flickered again. He was back to that moment of despair – Victini victorious, on the beach as before. His aura was pulsing desperately, as if it were trying to escape his body. Light and fire and arcs of burning dust caught in his bursting soul cast a hot glow over his fur. His eyes closed, but the Radiance pressed out between the lids, through the lids, so bright as it was.

"Why...?" he choked out. "It didn't have to go this way... No, no, Amida, aughhh—!"

His eyes blazed open, and Lorrel screamed to the sky, where the Living Sun still hung, red and aflame.

The fabric of reality ruptured around him, and the sound of a distortion being born ripped inside the Wayfarers' heads. The Void howled into the thin air of reality, light and time melted into noise. Discordant and full of grief, the sound could be heard in the bones, and lingered in the tendons and sinews and joints of one's body. Lorrel's Radiance burned a hole in the world, and the planet could only contain it...

Blackglass Caldera shimmered into existence, a pearl to salve a scratch in spacetime.
 
"I think... we've gotten the picture."

Nova watched the projection, cheek bolts turning slowly. "All right," he called out to the dungeon. "Show us the core and we'll be on our way."
 
Wandering Thunderbolt... Maybe that was the name of the Zeraora he'd passed on Radiance to.

So the dungeon was Lorrel's doing. Born from hubris and misguided ambitions and grief... thousands of years ago.

A power so great it had torn into reality itself. Despite the dungeon atmosphere, a chill ran down Koa's spine. "Powehi, were there any other dungeons around? Before this happened?"
 
As Steven watched Lorrel's time-lapsed transformation, of what had come to pass whether in a fortnight or more, more of Aurelia's words came to mind:
Day Captain Aurelia said:
"It is written that the cost on her was so great that she has slept ever since, and the proof of her sacrifice is in the unnatural long dawns and dusks of Sunward, the place above which the Sun placed her protection, and warded off the darkness."

The myth of the Sun said she now slept in her sacrifice. If Amida was just as powerful as Lorrel, and Lorrel's light never left Forlas despite Powehi's insistence that it should... Was it possible Amida's light still remained of this world as well?

Two powerful beings full of Radiance, both with the power to shape the very fabric of existence with their gift.

Steven winced as the formation of the Caldera dungeon reverberated through his body with the screech of nails on a chalkboard.

He needed to go back to Sunward.
 
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