Chapter 123
Chapter 123
Part 18
“Ah.” Val noted. “I’d planned on using our Void Survival spell, since it maintains normal pressure and
breathable air. But I hadn’t considered the extreme pressure at this depth, and it’s meant to protect
from the lack of pressure, so we’ll just have to use a good Force Shield as well.
“I imagine you could just become energy if you wanted, that would work too.”
“I suppose I could.” Visinniria smiled. “Being a goddess is pretty handy. But it’s easier to just decide that
I won’t be affected by the pressure and that I don’t have to breathe.”
“Ah. You know, we’re on Father’s list, and he could make us gods. And I’m kind of tempted. But I feel
the same way he does, and more so. We’ve developed really quickly, but I’m still only seven, and I’m
just not done with being a mortal yet. Besides, like Fire said, if we can do almost everything that gods This text is property of Nô/velD/rama.Org.
can do, I don’t see that it’s really necessary.”
“I’ve checked the conditions and done the math.” Six announced. “The pressure right on the other side
of the wall right here is seventeen point six two five four times air pressure at sea level. I could just
Translocate to the other side of the wall right now, except I’d have to achieve displacement, which
would Translocate the high pressure water in the shape of me to this side of the wall, which would
probably soak all of you.”
“The portal’s almost finished cycling anyway.” Visinniria pointed out, and a moment later the four
Selkies emerged from the blue dome by walking through the side of it. They bowed to Mark’s party and
moved off.
Suddenly Val Translocated through the wall and appeared in the water on the other side with a bubble
of air around her head and a very thin layer of air held against her body by her form-fitting Shielding.
She rose a few centimeters, then stabilized.
“I just did a double displacement.” she announced both verbally and psionicly, though they couldn’t
hear her voice through the water and the barrier that contained it. “I sent the water from my
displacement to Hiliani, just off the coast, and sent the displacement air from there back to where I just
was. You have to compensate for buoyancy too. Pretty neat, huh?”
“Yah!” Fire agreed as she, Six and Karz duplicated her trick, followed by the rest of their party an
instant later.
“This void spell, how does it maintain breathable air here?” Nemia asked. Now that they were all in the
water together it was easy to hear her, though it sounded a bit strange.
“It’s a constant Translocation.” Kragorram explained. “As you breathe out, that amount of air is
Translocated out of the head bubble from just in front of your mouth and nose to a location over Hiliani,
and when you breath in, the reverse occurs. We have to remember to change the location of the
Translocation point before the Hiliani time-bubble is resumed.”
A Selkie and a Mer swam up to them and began to converse using a very clever translation spell that
read their sign languages of gestures and body movements and sent out a short-range Speaking in
Trade Common.
“Greetings, honored citizens.” the Selkie announced. “I am Prime Wisdom Gloz of the Banodez River,
and this is Guide Leader Bubniiiilduptiii of The Mer of The North Xervian Ocean. We know of your
desire to meet citizens of the aquatic races. As most of the land dwellers have done out there, the
aquatic people here are largely gathered with others of their own race. We would be happy to introduce
you around.”
“Thank you, Prime Wisdom.” Mark responded with bit of a bow. “And we are very glad to meet you,
Guide Leader Bubniiiilduptiii. The only other citizen of your race we’ve met was Zubzubweeeet, the
goddess who opened the Hiliani time-bubble.”
“As I am glad to meet you.” Bubniiiilduptiii returned with the same slight bow, then continued ‘speaking’
as he turned and led the way over the floor while Mark’s party followed with a combination of swimming
and Movement techniques. “Of the land peoples, I have only met citizens of the unicorn and gargoyle
races before today, so this is my first time meeting most of your races as well.
“Until the gods joined The Just Alliance, most ocean people had avoided land people since you first
learned to hunt on the seas, and none of our races were affected by the first war with the demons,
those millions of years ago. Still, at the request of our gods, we have joined The Just Alliance, and we
are ready to help defend our world.”
“That’s very admirable, and we thank you with great sincerity.” Mark told him.
They approached a group of a few hundred beings gathered on the bottom. They were many-tentacled
mollusks who carried pearlescent shells on their backs shaped like blunt cones. At first glance, their
skins all appeared to be different colors, then it was seen that all of their colors were slowly and
gradually changing. As Mark’s group came near with the Mer and Selkie leaders, all the mollusk people
turned toward them and considered them with pairs of huge eyes that changed color as much as their
skin, and all of their color changes became faster. The largest of them had a tentacle span of about two
meters when fully extended, and it’s shell was about sixty centimeters wide.
“These are the people called the Mogitar by the giants of south-eastern Felion, who have the only
spoken word for these people.” Gloz announced. “They live in the waters surrounding Felion, and are
concentrated in the two great bays on the east and west sides of that continent. Until recently, no other
race was capable of communicating with them, but now we all have the translation spells supplied by
the gods. In their language, their motion conveys information, and their coloring conveys emotion.
We’ve always known they were intelligent though. Those who thought otherwise and hunted them for
food in our distant past found themselves at war with a formidable adversary.”
“We greet you.” one of the creatures stated with a wave of its arms and a shift to a dull red. “We share
fear of the coming demons, and prepare.
“Also, now we can talk with you; we can trade with you. Our god says the best place to make a place of
trade and diplomacy is at Hilia, in the waters down-slope from your present deepest constructions. We
ask to do that.”
“You’re very welcome to do so, and we welcome you to Hilia, and to The Just Alliance!” Mark replied in
surprise. “The Selkies of Hilia can introduce your people to First Minister Sheramiv, who’s in charge of
such things.”
“Thank you.” the being acknowledged as it turned bright pink. “That is all the communication we have
prepared for today.”
“Ah. Well it’s been a pleasure meeting you all. You’re beautiful and fascinating.” Mark stated with a bow
and a smile.
Bubniiiilduptiii and Gloz led them away, and they had similarly brief but interesting encounters with two
other new races as they swam a seemingly-random route that led them gradually toward the surface.
They met a race who were obviously distantly related to the Mogitar, since they appeared very similar
to them, with the exceptions that they lacked the spiral shells of the Mogitar, and that they were much
larger. They formed their bodies into long and slim shapes up to six and a half meters long with their
bunched tentacles forming a tapering tail when they swam with a rippling sinuous motion, and seemed
capable of contorting themselves into almost any conceivable shape. They had never been
encountered by any other race before their gods bade them to join The Just Alliance, since they lived
near the south pole in the Great Southern Ocean; one of the most inhospitable regions on the planet
due to its isolation, extreme weather, and violent sea conditions. Since there had never been a word for
them in any other race’s language, they had chosen to be called simply The Southernmost.
The Kag were great sleek fish up to five meters in length with shimmering coppery scales and
hundreds of twenty-five centimeter long tentacles around their mouths, which were filled with hundreds
of jagged teeth. They were well-known to every sea-faring race, since they roamed the oceans of the
world in great hunting packs hundreds strong, and any vessel that foundered when they were in the
vicinity was sure to have few survivors. They were known to sink smaller vessels in rough seas and
consume everyone and everything edible aboard in minutes. What hadn’t been known about them was
their great intelligence and their thriving civilization on a vast underwater plateau beneath the tropical
waters of The North Kletiuk Ocean.