Chapter 987 - Legacy
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With plodding, ponderous steps, the nine-foot-tall golems clumsily walked around the courtyard, as if they werenât used to moving.
And they werenât, for within their chests were polished chunks of thunder wood amber, each one hosting a stone giant.
As Leon watched the small handful of giants move about, adapting to their new bodies, he couldnât help but wonder if they might need a name change. It wasnât hard to frown and dissuade himself of that notion, thoughâTikos had only brought enough thunder wood amber to house the wisps of half a dozen stone giants, despite Nestorâs enthusiasm once he got his hands on the material. Apparently, it was a spectacular material for holding wisps, and Nestor implied that it might serve other purposes too, though he declined to say more before he could run enough tests.
But, for the time being, Leon was comfortable in knowing that they could at least get the stone giants better bodies than they had. Unfortunately, Tikos had admitted that scaling up the production of thunder wood amber would take years, possibly even decades, so the rest of the stone giants encased within Rakos would have to content themselves with more ânormalâ stone bodies. Leon had already made arrangements for a small army of earth mages to assemble in a mustering field and create enough bodies for all of the stone giants, so Rakos wouldnât be forced to carry his entire species around in his skin forever.
And, Leon hoped, once they could refine this process of housing wisps and wisp-descended entities within thunder wood amber, then the stone giants could control other things, like arks, new model MALLs, and more heavily armed and armored war golems. He easily envisioned a millennia from now when stone giants could be inserted into any kind of specialized frame to accomplish a task.
Going even further, his eyes turned to watch Nestor take notes while observing the giants in their new golem shells, there might even be a point when a mage might be able to pilot such frames with their magic bodies⌠though he kept that idea unspoken. A mageâs magic body was spectacularly fragile, and the safest place for it was in their soul realm. Losing it could lose a mage access to their soul realm, would be potentially mind-shatteringly painful, and could cripple them for life, as evidenced by Justin. Many mages might balk at piloting a golem with their magic body, but not when doing the same thing in their normal squishy human body.
Others wouldnât, though, not to mention there was the possibility of building other war machines that could house not only wisps, giants, and magesâ magic bodies, but the magesâ physical bodies as well, so Leon didnât completely dismiss the possibility. If nothing else, it would be something to look into in a few years.
For the moment, Leon was simply contented with what they had accomplished. The giants could be housed in golem shells, and that was a promising and spectacularly important step toward using them to make up for Leonâs need for wisps to help control arks capable of traversing the Void. Next to that need, everything else took a back seat.
âOther things were minded on my,â Tikos whispered next to Leon, drawing his attention away from the giants for the first time in several hours.
Leon blinked as he retrieved his mind from the deep thoughts it had sunk into, and said, âOh? Please, do tellâŚâ
Tikosâ leafy hair fluttered and Leon smelled the tree spriteâs hesitance. But Tikos didnât hesitate long before it said, âLotus my can be improved. Made larger, much more powerful. But will I need land lots.â
Leon squinted a moment as he parsed the tree spriteâs strange speech before it clicked with him. Tikos was asking for more land to try and improve its comm lotuses.
âIâll get some people on it,â Leon said. âDepending on how much land you need, it shouldnât be a problem. What kind of improvements do you think you can make?â
âInfluencing magic with same place being,â Tikos explained. âMuch larger lotus be would neededâŚâ
Leon cocked an eyebrow as a smile spread across his face. Communication was one thing, but using the comm lotuses to remotely control enchantments was another thing entirely, and it was a possibility that resonated well with his inner enchanter. Such an advance would be invaluableâŚ
âRight,â Leon said as he exhaled a lungful of air through his nose in a desperate attempt to remain in control of himself, otherwise heâd have started bouncing around the courtyard in excitement. âWe can do that. We can definitely do that. Weâre going to do that.â
Tikos bowed its head in thanks, and for the rest of the day, Leon lost himself in thoughts of the future, and what kinds of fantastic things he and his people might be able to create together.
---
Leon advanced his infantry pieces to hold a valuable part of the board that would give them advantages, but in his turn, Gaius charged his knights forward, preventing Leon from taking it. For nearly thirty rounds they had been dancing around this âhillâ, both of them desperate to take it. The other parts of their frontline had largely calcified save for this hill, and whoever managed to seize it would hold the initiative in advancing anywhere else on the board.
Such tactical concerns werenât a part of keepsâ normal rules, but in the decades that Leon had been pitting himself against Gaiusâand his other retainers, whenever he could get them to playâthey had started adding more and more rules, as well as playing with larger boards and more pieces, leading to games that they could be playing over entire months in their free time. They still played shorter games, of course, but longer games proved themselves enthralling in their own way.
This one, however, was designed as a fairly short game, with four times the number of normal pieces instead of the eight, ten, and sixteen times games theyâd been playing recently, as well as eight different terrain features that could greatly influence what their pieces were capable of. Gaius held a defensive line across two hills and a river, while Leon bombarded his pieces with archers from two more hills and amassed behind a ditch. A thicket lay directly between their keeps, forcing their troops to go around or slow to half speed, which they both stationed troops near to prevent any pieces from getting through. This last hill was the only terrain feature that wasnât yet controlled fully.
The skirmish for the hills began to swing in Leonâs favor when he moved his King piece into the fray, though that meant pulling the piece away from another point on the line.
âRisky move,â Gaius stated.
âThe game wonât be won on defense,â Leon said as he started pushing Gaiusâ pieces off the final hill.
âOthers would disagree,â Gaius argued. âA good game can still be won defensively. Cost the other player enough pieces, and the gameâs yours.â
âFine, then. I wonât win the game on defense.â
âHeh. Thatâs certainly a more accurate statement.â
Leon managed to take the hill, as well as more than a dozen of Gaiusâ pieces in the process, while only losing five of his own. Gaius, on the other hand, concentrated mostly on pulling his pieces back to form a stronger line outside of the range of Leonâs archers.
Gaius sighed as Leon pressed him, though, Leon not wasting a moment after taking the hill before he used the advantage it gave him. In the process, he liberally used his King pieceâquite the risk given Gaius would win if he managed to take it.
âAlmost twenty years playing this game with you,â Gaius said, a hint of exhaustion creeping into his voice, âand Iâm still taken aback by your aggressive strategy.â
Leon grinned. âAttack. Seize the initiative. Donât wait for the enemy to come to you. Hit them where theyâre weak.âfree(w)ebnovel
âLet them dictate where you fight,â Gaius added with a shallow, but cheeky grin. âLet them set the terms for your engagement. Fall into easily avoidable traps.â
As Leon pushed forward, several of Gaiusâ pieces holding nearby terrain features charged Leonâs flanks.
âDonât worry,â Gaius said. âYour people will be happy living under my rule.â In a single move, he took three of Leonâs pieces, giving his side the numerical advantage and threatening Leonâs King. âSometimes, boldness will lead only to defeat.â
âBut oftentimes,â Leon responded, âitâs the key to victory.â He ignored the attacks on the flanks of his assaulting force and pressed forward with his King and several pieces around it. He cut through Gaiusâ frontline and managed to get his King behind it. Gaius started to seize the pieces Leon had left behind, but Leon sent one of his knight pieces, the fastest in the game, on a beeline straight for Gaiusâ keep, while he kept his King and the other pieces behind to hold off any pursuing pieces.
âYour King might not survive such a maneuver,â Gaius said as he let Leonâs knight go. He couldnât stop it, and though he was still smiling, Leon could see the tightening in the corner of his eyes. He knew that the only way he was going to win this game was if he took Leonâs King now that one of Leonâs knights was behind his defensive line. âHis legacy will be one of defeat, having overextended himself and put his entire Kingdom in jeopardy.â
âIf he loses, then people will call him stupid,â Leon responded. âIf he wins, then heâs a genius.â
Gaius pressed in and Leon engaged in every delaying tactic he could, just barely keeping his King âaliveâ while his knight seized Gaiusâ keep, winning him the game.
The game had been set to be one of grinding positional warfare rather than sweeping maneuvers, but Leonâs charge after seizing the hill had won him the game, though at the cost of losing nearly the entire assaulting force, and nearly losing his King.
âThis works in keeps,â Gaius observed, âbecause the game simply ends when it ends. In life, thereâs always more after the curtain falls. Time doesnât stop once youâve achieved your goals. Too many victories like these will destroy you in the long run.â As he spoke, he indicated the sides of the board where they had been storing their taken pieces. Gaius, despite being on the back foot for most of the game, had taken more of Leonâs pieces than Leon had taken of his thanks to the bloody final charge.
Leon shrugged. âKeeps and real life are different, and I have no problem using different tactics for each. The strategy remains the same, though.â
âJust be careful that you donât end up with a legacy of âstupidityâ,â Gaius replied.
âThat would require me to lose, and I donât intend to leave a legacy of loss.â
âNo one ever does.â
âFew have the power and drive to give them victory.â
âNo one lives forever, no oneâs invincible. One bad day and youâre no longer a genius.â
Leon grinned and stared at Gaius. âAre you trying to tell me something, Gaius? Have you some disagreement with my ruling strategy?â
âOf course not,â Gaius claimed. His expression relaxed and he leaned back in his chair. âHonestly, Iâm just debating for the sake of it. Iâve⌠just had some things on my mind for a while.â
âWhat things?â
Gaius frowned and took a moment to answer. âLegacy. Family. Time. What will be left of me when Iâm gone? Who will remember me? How will it happen? When? What will I have accomplished between now and then?â
âHave you any answers to these questions, since theyâve been on your mind?â
Gaiusâ frown deepened. âNot really. Or no answers that Iâm ready for, at any rate.â
âBut you do have answers?â
Gaius sighed deeply. âThe question of family is easy enough. Just find a good wife and have a whole litter of kids. Surely at least one would remember their father fondly, no? And have kids of their own who will pass the Tullius name down through the ages? Who may remember me?â
âChildrenâŚâ Leon murmured.
Continuing, Gaius said, âI think about achieving Apotheosis and it honestly terrifies me. Such an abyss of time, long enough to get complacent, long enough to forget so much of what Iâve done, long enough to do incredible things. But no one lives forever.â
Leon nodded in understanding. âMy Honored Ancestor once told me that an immortalâs greatest enemies arenât his actual enemies, but rather apathy, depression, and boredom. She told me that even post-Apotheosis mages rarely live longer than a few thousand years, despite their immunity to the ravages of time.â
âWhat a terrifying thought. Live for so long that you become bored with life. To have seen everything, been everywhere, experienced all that life has to offer.â
âI donât think one can see everything, nor do everything,â Leon mused. âThereâs always more to discover, to see, to experience. The possibilities are endless. If one grows bored with life, then theyâve simply suffered a lapse in creativity, they havenât run out of things to experience.â
âMaybe itâs more than that, then? If the Thunderbird herself says that apathy, boredom, and depression are the real dangers, then isnât there something to what she says?â
Leon shrugged. âHard to say. Weâre hardly immortals ourselves, are we?â
âBut weâre still staring down long lives. Even if we stop gaining power right now, Iâll live for many hundreds of years, and you for well over a thousand. Weâve barely lived five to ten percent of our lifetimes.â
âThatâs a lot of time to do a lot that others will remember. More than enough time for performers to sing songs and tell stories about us.â
Gaius chuckled softly. âTheyâll do that about you, not about me. The returning King will be a great hit for thousands of years, but his humble secretary? They wonât even know my name. Only crusty old historians who peruse my correspondence will know who I am. Or âwasâ, I suppose.â
âYou say that like thereâs no way for you to change it. But you have your whole life ahead of you. Do you want to be my secretary forever? I can always give you other duties and positions. Hells, if you want, you could even leave my service to adventure on your own. I wouldnât like it, but I would respect your decisionâŚâ
âWould youâŚ?â Gaius asked with a shallow grin.
Leon nodded in confirmation.
Gaius sighed deeply, then turned his attention to the board still in front of them, their pieces still as they were when Leonâs knight took Gaiusâ keep. âAnother game?â
Leon nodded again, and he and Gaius quietly reset the board with all their pieces arrayed in front of their keeps. They flipped a coin to start, and Gaius won the first turn. As was only good strategy, he sent knights on a beeline for the nearest terrain feature: a hill close to his keepâs entrance. Had he stationed faster pieces there in the previous game, he couldâve halted the knight in Leonâs final charge, but heâd concentrated most of his forces on more forward positions by that point in the game.
âIâve made other decisions,â Gaius said as Leon took his first turn, using a similar strategy of taking closer positions, then using those as springboards for positions further afield.
âOn what front?â
âFamily. Even if I die a secretary, at least my kids will remember me, wonât they? And theyâll tell their kids about me, and theyâll their kidsâŚâ
âIâve heard it said that children are one of the best ways for people to âlive onâ after theyâve died. I hope Iâll see for myself in due time, but I wish you greater luck than I think Iâll have.â
âThanks,â Gaius said as he and Leonâs foremost pieces finally made contact, to Gaiusâ benefit; one of Leonâs pieces was removed from the board. Leon hadnât even been able to do much, Gaiusâ piece taking it quite easily.
âOh, yeah, sure, no problem, I love just giving you my piecesâŚâ
Gaius grinned. âWhat are your thoughts about Alix?â he asked.
Leon stumbled a bit even though he was seated. He accidentally knocked over a few of his pieces, though he hardly noticed as he stared at Gaius in complete bewilderment.
âYou thinking about my squire?â he asked.
âWould that be a bad thing?â Gaius hesitantly shot back.
âNo! No, no, it wouldnât be. Iâm just surprised, is all. Wouldnât have guessed.â
âSheâs pretty, sheâs driven, sheâs fun,â Gaius listed. âI like her. Iâm still figuring out how much, but I want to explore that. If sheâs open to that, thenâŚâ His grin turned more natural, more open, as his eyes glazed over, like he was staring at something far away.
âOr maybe someone far awayâŚ?â Leon wondered, noting that Gaiusâ eyes were turned roughly in Alixâs direction. Alix herself was inspecting a company of Tempest Knights as they trained in a nearby mustering field, and cutting quite the impressive figure doing so, if Leon did say so.
âOnly one way to find out,â Leon said. âAsk her, see what she says. See if sheâs open to a courtship.â
âYeahâŚâ Gaius absent-mindedly said. âYeahâŚâ
For the next few turns, Gaiusâ mind seemed to be elsewhere, and he played without much direction. Leon easily took a few of his pieces and even made moves to seize the central hill. However, once Gaiusâ mind returned to him, he took Leon by surprise, charging his entire force forward in a display of maximum aggression that Leon hadnât been expecting. He crushed Leonâs advance force, then moved on his keep. Leon barely managed to halt his charge, but then Gaius switched targets and focused down his King.
In the end, Leon lost the game, and in a quarter fewer turns than heâd managed to beat Gaius. He didnât know whether to be disappointed he lost or impressed that Gaius won with such an aggressive strategy.
Gaius didnât stick around after his win, though, leaving almost as soon as the game was put away. Given the determined look in his eye and the direction his secretary began walking in, Leon didnât think he needed to guess where Gaius was goingâŚ