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Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Summary:

Continuation of where Opera Omnia left off after Act 4. Updated 1-2 times per week. Contains a Recap at the beginning for the story of Opera Omnia.

[An ambitious story to include representation for every game in the franchise!]

Battles rage on in the World of Respite as the story continues. As the party grows, new allies and new challenges await. Though many have come to enjoy their time together in this new world, others wonder - what secrets are buried within its very nature? Will the cycles of battle ever end, and will they ever go home?

Act 5: A mysterious force is threatening and defiling the summons, which have been keeping the party from suffering death, hunger, and exhaustion in the World of Respite. Faced with their mortality once again, the party races to rescue them and find the source of the corruption.

Notes:

Like many, I was heartbroken when Opera Omnia announced its end of service. There were still so many characters and stories that I wanted to see. So, perhaps against my better judgment, I decided to take on this project to continue it in my own way. As a lifelong fan of the series who really does enjoy every single entry in the franchise, I hope to give them ALL time to shine.

This fic will be long. I can't promise how long, but I am experimenting with smaller chapters than I am used to, so I hope it can be appreciated in bite-sized chunks. I planned out all the characters I want to add ahead of writing this, with abilities and even Force partners included, so the Force partnerships helped decide the order that characters are being added to the story -- so keep that in mind if you are wondering where your favorites are ;)

This is canon up to the end of Act 4 -- so the most recent character added to the cast was Angeal, as in the game.

Please note: This story will contain spoilers for ALL games, including FFXVI, (minor) FFVII Rebirth spoilers, and eventually FFXIV's Dawntrail expansion. You have been warned!

(See the end of the work for more notes.)

Chapter 1: Recap: The Story So Far

Notes:

Here is a short summary of Acts 1, 2, 3, and 4 of Opera Omnia before we delve into my own Act 5, with a list of all characters currently in the game. I am hoping this will be helpful for anyone who hasn't played Opera Omnia, or watched the entire story on YouTube.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Dissidia Final Fantasy Opera Omnia

The Story So Far


Act 1


The story opens with the Warrior of Light, who has a vague memory of getting cut down by his arch enemy, Garland, before he wakes up in a sunny field. Here, he meets Vivi, Rem, and Mog, where he learns that he has been summoned to this world by the goddess Materia. Materia and her counterpart, Spiritus, have been at war and they have been summoning champions from across many different worlds to fight for them. This world, the World of Respite, was meant as a place for the warriors to rest from these constant cycles of battle - but something new threatens the stability of this world.

The Warrior of Light sets out with his new companions, with Mog acting as their guide, and over time they continue to find more allies and confront foes from a multitude of worlds. Mog charges them with recruiting "warriors with the Light," who have all been summoned by Materia, and Mog alone has the ability to track this "Light" to find their allies. They have another goal of closing the Torsions, rifts between worlds, that are causing the World of Respite to be destabilized.

Soon, the party discovers that this "Light" is simply a force that all warriors have, not just Materia's chosen, and it is this Light that empowers them to open and close the Torsions. Learning that Mog has intentionally kept this from them, and combined with the fact that the warriors are all starting to realize they lack certain memories of their home worlds, they grow distrustful - especially when it is discovered that Mog is not only subservient to Materia, but secretly to Spiritus as well. Furthermore, just like in World B (the setting of the previous Dissidia games), their battles create a form of energy that sustains this world - but something has been sapping that energy away.

With even the villains becoming suspicious of Mog, they all eventually learn that he has been possessed by the larval form of a "planesgorger," an agent of Shinryu, the divine dragon from the Interdimensional Rift who engineered the cycles of conflict from previous Dissidia games to empower itself, which has also been absorbing the energy created from battle. With the very stability of the world at risk, the party battles this planesgorger and frees Mog from its control, but the Crystal Core of Light, one of the two pillars of the world, gets destroyed.


Act 2


The destruction of the Crystal Core of Light sends the warriors to the World of Darkness, a world supported by the Crystal Core of Darkness. Here, the party begins meeting the Dark Manikins, crystal copies of the warriors that are more "advanced" than the standard Manikins they have encountered thus far, and have thoughts and feelings of their own. However, Dark Manikins are easily manipulated by those with a powerful "will." The power of "will," they come to learn, is a force in this world that can be wielded to alter even the fabric of reality, summoning landscapes from their home worlds and even creating things such as airships.

Throughout their journey, they rush to save the last standing pillar of the world, the Crystal Core of Darkness, from forces that are threatening it. As they travel, the party begins to restore their lost memories with the help of the Dark Manikins, defeat more planesgorgers, and eventually they learn that Ardyn is threatening the crystal core for his own ends. They learn that Materia is the one who has been taking away the memories of her summoned warriors, with her motivation being to spare them the pain they experienced in their own worlds so that they can find true rest in this one.

The party finally comes to confront Ardyn and Shinryu also makes his move. When the Crystal Core of Darkness is devoured by Shinryu, the party defeats it, and the Warrior of Light sacrifices himself in order to save this world. With both pillars gone, the Warrior of Light and Garland choose to become the new pillars for a new world - locked away in eternal conflict in the old world while everyone else is sent to the new one.


Act 3


In the new world, the Onion Knight wakes to learn that all of their allies have been separated across the world, and that he has been entrusted by the Warrior of Light to lead the party and guide them to find each other. Helping him in this quest are the "light compasses," special crystals that allow him to track down their lost friends. When he begins reuniting with the others, the Onion Knight learns that no one else remembers the Warrior of Light or the sacrifice that he made. Some, like Yuna, have vague memories of another person they used to call their leader, and it seems only those who fought in the previous cycles of battle (AKA, the other Dissidia games) have memories of this, but only the Onion Knight and Prishe remember him in full.

Figuring that the light compasses are gifts sent by the Warrior of Light, the party resolves to use them to find their lost friends and eventually the Warrior of Light himself. As they continue to travel, reunite with their friends, and restore more lost memories, they soon learn that the balance between Light and Darkness has been thrown out of equilibrium. One of the factors at play is the Cloud of Darkness, who is becoming empowered by this imbalance and is set to restore it by any means necessary. They also soon discover that all of the villains have had their most destructive powers sealed away by Spiritus as a precaution for summoning them to this world. Eald'narche is the first to discover that this power has been sealed away in the Crystal Core of Darkness, and he goes around the world to track down its shards, which he dubs "silt," to restore the sealed powers to the various villains - both so he can get some measure of control over them himself, and also to overwhelm the world with a flood of darkness so that it goes out of balance and they can all go home.

Meanwhile, the party begins to lose faith in the gods, and thus Materia and Spiritus begin to slowly lose their power. When the gods themselves start to come under threat from the villains, Materia and Spiritus put aside their differences and begin to put their trust in the party, acknowledging them as the protectors of this world. They vow to no longer take away the memories of their summoned warriors, since this world is for the warriors, not Materia and Spiritus, and those painful memories helped to make them who they are.

Eald'narche discovers that there is an entity sealed away inside of Hope, and forcefully gives Hope "silt" in an effort to free this being, thinking it is a powerful agent of darkness. In reality, it turns out to be the god of Hope's world, Bhunivelze - a god of light, who is the true source of the light compasses. After the party defeats Bhunivelze, the world becomes dangerously unbalanced, but it enables them to rescue the Warrior of Light. All their memories of him are restored, and with his help they are able to defeat the Cloud of Darkness before their worlds are devoured by the Void. However, to take the place of the Warrior of Light and Garland, Materia and Spiritus decide to seal themselves into crystal, becoming the new pillars of the world and unable to interact with it again.


Act 4


Reunited with all of their friends again (sans Ramza and Agrias, who had lost their light compass), the party sets out to restore the world and re-stabilize it from the forces that had been threatening it. During his time locked in conflict with Garland, the Warrior of Light learns that he has gained the ability to restore this strength to the world by granting wishes, helping the party come to terms with events from their pasts. Enna Kros, a god of many dimensions, promises that Materia and Spiritus may one day be saved from their fate as crystal pillars if the party continues to restore the world's strength.

They continue to travel and find new friends, and one of the more notable new arrivals is Selh'teus, who had become the sixth Mothercrystal in his world and thus acts as a third crystal pillar in this one. His arrival shakes up the goals of some of the villains, who seek to use him to set the world out of alignment again and destroy Materia and Spiritus.

Foiling the plots of many different foes, the party finally reunites with Ramza and Agrias.


In Act 4's Final Chapter, Materia and Spiritus are freed from their crystal (and I believe the warriors even get sent home). However, the events of that chapter are going to be ignored in favor of this story, since that is when the game ended service.


Current character roster (with more to come in Opus Divinitas):

  • I: Warrior of Light, Garland
  • II: Firion, Maria, Leon, the Emperor, Guy, Leila, Minwu
  • III: Onion Knight, Cloud of Darkness, Desch, Xande
  • IV: Cecil Harvey (Dark Knight), Yang Fang Leiden, Edward "Edge" Geraldine, Kain Highwind, Palom, Rydia, Cecil Harvey (Paladin), Rosa Joanna Farrell, Porom, Golbez, Edward Chris von Muir, Fusoya, Rubicante
    • The After Years: Ceodore Harvey, Ursula Fang Leiden, Leonora
  • V: Bartz Klauser, Galuf Halm Baldesion, Faris Schweriz, Krile Mayer Baldesion, Lenna, Charlotte Tycoon, Gilgamesh, Exdeath, Dorgann Klauser, Kelger Vlondett, Xezat Matias Surgate
  • VI: Terra Branford, Shadow, Setzer Gabbiani, Sabin Rene Figaro, Cyan Garamonde, Edgar Roni Figaro, Celes Chere, Relm Arrowny, Locke Cole, Gau, Kefka Palazzo, Leo Cristophe, Strago Magus, Mog
  • VII: Cloud Strife, Yuffie Kisaragi, Tifa Lockhart, Vincent Valentine, Aerith Gainsborough, Cid Highwind, Cait Sith, Barret Wallace, Sephiroth, Reno, Rude, Jessie Rasberry, Rufus Shinra
    • Crisis Core: Zack Fair, Cissnei, Angeal Hewley
    • Advent Children: Kadaj
    • Dirge of Cerberus: Shelke Rui, Weiss
  • VIII: Squall Leonhart, Laguna Loire, Zell Dincht, Irvine Kinneas, Quistis Trepe, Selphie Tilmitt, Rinoa Heartilly, Seifer Almasy, Raijin, Fujin, Ultimecia
  • IX: Zidane Tribal, Vivi Ornitier, Adelbert T. Steiner, Eiko Carol, Garnet Til Alexandros XVII, Kuja, Freya Crescent, Beatrix, Quina Quen, Amarant Coral
  • X: Yuna, Wakka, Tidus, Auron, Seymour Guado, Lulu, Kimahri Ronso, Jecht, Braska
    • X-2: Paine
  • XI: Shantotto, Prishe, Lion, Lilisette, Aphmau, Kam'lanaut, Arciela V Adoulin, Eald'narche, Iroha, Selh'teus
  • XII: Vaan, Penelo, Balthier, Ashelia "Ashe" B'nargin Dalmasca, Fran, Basch fon Ronsenburg, Vayne Carudas Solidor, Gabranth, Reks
    • Revenant Wings: Llyud
  • XIII: Hope Estheim, Sazh Katzroy, Oerba Dia Vanille, Lightning, Snow Villiers, Oerba Yun Fang, Cid Raines, Jihl Nabaat
    • XIII-2: Serah Farron, Noel Kreiss, Caius Ballad
  • XIV: Y'shtola Rhul, Yda Hext, Papalymo Totolymo, Thancred Waters, Alisaie Leveilleur, Alphinaud Leveilleur, Lyse Hext
  • XV: Noctis Lucis Caelum, Prompto Argentum, Ignis Scientia, Ardyn Izunia, Aranea Highwind, Gladiolus Amicitia, Cor Leonis, Lunafreya nox Fleuret, Iris Amicitia
  • Type-0: Rem Tokimiya, King, Ace, Cater, Seven, Deuce, Cinque, Machina Kunagiri, Eight, Jack, Trey, Nine, Kurasame Susaya, Queen, Sice
  • Tactics: Ramza Beoulve, Agrias Oaks
  • Crystal Chronicles 1: Ciaran
  • Crystal Chronicles: The Crystal Bearers: Layle, Keiss, Amidatelion, Jegran
  • Crystal Chronicles: Ring of Fates: Yuri, Chelinka
  • Crystal Chronicles: Echoes of Time: Sherlotta
  • World of Final Fantasy: Lann and Reynn, Enna Kros
  • Stranger of Paradise: Final Fantasy Origin: Jack Garland, Neon, Astos

Notes:

I hope this is helpful for any new readers! Now it's time to begin the story proper.

Chapter 2: Act 4 Interlude: Part 1

Notes:

I want to give a big thanks to Kahlil01 for suggestions on voice actors for characters who don't have any! For everyone who has been voiced before, I'll try to use their actual voice actors.

Chapter Text

Tyro ( Final Fantasy Record Keeper )

Voiced by: Akiko Yajima

A historian from the Royal Archives who maintains the paintings that store the history of the world. When a mysterious force begins to invade the records, the apprentice Tyro investigates the cause and ventures into the paintings to fight the corruption. Though he is an avid lover of the histories contained within, he sometimes struggles to separate himself from the tragedies they depict.

Tyro


Mustadio Bunansa & Construct 8 ( Final Fantasy Tactics )

Both voiced by: Hiroaki Hirata

A machinist from the Clockwork City of Goug. When he and his father come into possession of an auracite stone sought by the church, he is rescued by Ramza and company and joins the fight against the Lucavi. Alongside an ancient device named Construct 8, he happily handles any mechanical needs to support the cause.

Mustadio & Construct 8


Ryne Waters ( Final Fantasy XIV )

Voiced by: Kana Ichinose

A young girl from the First, a world alongside the Source on the verge of falling to a Flood of Light. Held in a cage her whole life due to her ability to vanquish Sin Eaters, the monsters of the First, she was freed by Thancred and taught to fight to help save her world from destruction. Originally bearing the name “Minfilia,” after the woman who gave her her powers, Ryne was given a new name by Thancred after she forged her own identity.

Ryne


TYRO


The royal archivists of the kingdom had a sacred duty that, for reasons Tyro could not discern, he had failed overnight. And as far as he knew, none of them in all of history had ever failed as badly as he just did.

All the paintings had vanished.

They were not ordinary artworks clad in paint and varnish. Rather, the paintings in the royal archives were stories – histories, fantasies, romances, and tragedies most of all – depicted in a wondrous splash of colors and scenes instead of ink on a page. Tyro had always been entranced the most by what made the paintings magical: one could jump into their stories as easily as a pool of water, experiencing them in a way that storybook readers never could. He loved meeting the characters, hearing their songs, smelling the wild roses…

His duty necessitated protecting them. Sometimes that involved cleansing them of corrupting darkness. Defeating the nightmares that spawned from within. Stopping the memories and colors from fading. But they had never outright disappeared before, as far as he knew. But Tyro was only an apprentice.

Dr. Mog was going to kill him.

“And where is everyone else, anyway?” he wondered, peering down the Hall of Records. The royal archives bathed in the morning sun; the ceiling was made of windows, the light refracting against the glass to make a crystalline rainbow dance above. The sunlight seemed to taunt him by shining down on the open spaces on the white marble walls where the paintings were supposed to be, their scarlet and gold curtains open like arms outstretched: Look, Tyro, here is where your precious paintings would be, if you could do your job correctly . He could even see the line of dust on the walls where the picture frames had been.

It had been silent since he woke. He wondered if something had happened to Dr. Mog, Elarra, and the other archivists as well.

The double doors at the end of the hall opened, their age and weight discernible through the groaning. Tyro jumped, nearly fumbling his tome.

From behind the doors came the knights and warriors of the stories he knew so well, living and breathing and, more importantly, outside of their paintings.


MUSTADIO


Machinists of Goug were considered learnéd in the ways of things, scholars of a sort that studied to understand how the world worked. Oftentimes by taking things apart and rebuilding them, utilizing the old to improve upon the new. As such, Mustadio Bunansa never cared much for libraries – he preferred to work with his hands to learn things directly rather than read about them.

So that made his current predicament especially frustrating: trapped in a library with no tools beyond what he had in his belt, a malfunctioning automaton, and a horde of rampaging monsters on the other side of the door that threatened to devour him. Books couldn’t fix Construct 8. He needed replacement parts.

“C’mon, buddy,” he said to the hulking piece of metal. “Work with me here.”

The automaton sat hunched against a bookcase as unresponsive as the day he’d met it. He feared he’d have to get his hands on some auracite again, but the odds of some miraculously showing up in this library were slim.

He couldn’t even move the bookshelves to block the door, since they had been carved from the same white stone as the walls and floors. He had already tried rolling up the carpets to stack them against the door in a flimsy red and gold barricade, leaving the pale floors bare. Books lined the shelves from floor to ceiling, many of which he had already added to his defenses.

Construct 8 was strong enough to drag the shelves and block the doors, or better yet pulverize everything trying to claw its way in behind them. But it seemed Mustadio was on his own with only his gun to defend himself. He didn’t even know how he got here, nor where he was – perhaps the Royal Academy in Gariland, based on how pristine everything looked. Not that he’d ever been there.

The door shuddered and something behind it howled. For all he knew, a behemoth was trying to force its way in.

Mustadio was no great knight or hero. With no other way out, he knew he’d have to face them – but his courage didn’t compare to the likes of Ramza or Agrias. “Gods, it would be nice to have Agrias here,” he said, priming his pistol. 

A crackle of magicks burst from behind the door and a sliver of the hall outside showed from behind his meager barricade of rolled carpets. A spindly arm ending in a taloned hand took advantage of the opening, some kind of yowling undead thing intent on getting inside. Mustadio took careful aim and shot the arm, shattering the bony invader. More monsters with fur and fang pressed against the breach, widening it as they forced their way inside. He caught a glimpse of something giant and feral with horns on the other side, but his hand remained steady as he pulled the trigger over and over again.

On the other side of the door, spears of crystalline blue energy pierced the rabble just as the smaller ones made their way into the library. Monsters shrieked in pain as stone and metal crunched, but Mustadio barely heard it over the bang of each bullet. He backed further into the room, sniping a raven-like fiend that tried to swoop down on him from above. A pair of floating heads bobbed in with manic grins, but once he dispatched them he realized that far fewer monsters made their way in than he had expected, with no sign of the behemoth that besieged the door in the first place.

Someone on the other side of the door had destroyed them all.

“Hey, I’m in here!” he called, shoving his pistol into its holster and tugging away the rolled up carpets. 

“Could that be?” a voice rang out in response. One that made his face redden just to hear. “Mustadio, is that you?”

“Agrias!” He was not a religious man, but perhaps the gods had come to his rescue after all. “Aye, it is me, but I can assure you my disbelief is greater! Thank you for the timely rescue, as always.” When he pulled the door open to regard her with sword in hand and none the worse for wear, as majestic as he always knew her to be, he could have hugged her. But he knew she wouldn’t appreciate that. “How did we come to be in Gariland?”

“Gariland?” she asked. “Whatever makes you think we’re in Gariland?”

“Er, well…”

“This a friend of yours, Agrias?”

A boy appeared from behind the corpse of the behemoth when it vanished in a whorl of darkness and magicks, with spiked hair, a red and black jacket, and trousers that cut off at the knee. He bore no weapons, indicating to Mustadio that he must be a monk of some kind, but none with any clothes or bearing that he recognized.

Agrias looked back at the boy and sheathed her sword, then back to Mustadio with a bit of a wry smile that Mustadio longed to know the meaning of. “Indeed he is,” she said. “Zell, meet a comrade of ours from Ivalice – the machinist Mustadio.”

Mustadio didn’t like the way she specified he was from Ivalice. As if he was far, far from home. “Agrias, would you mind telling me what is going on?”


THANCRED


The boy at the other end of the hall regarded them with wide eyes as he grasped his book close to his chest. His mouth worked at words that didn’t seem to want to come out.

Thancred exchanged a glance with his companions, the nameless Warrior of Light and Onion Knight in the lead. With their swords bare, it likely contributed to the poor boy’s fear. Thankfully both had enough tact to realize this, sheathing their weapons now that they had made it through the monsters outside the entrance of this grand marble hall.

“Our deepest apologies for alarming you,” said the Warrior of Light. He put a hand to his breastplate as he approached, slowly but steadily. Like the erstwhile hero from Thancred’s world, he had a way of pacifying situations just from his presence alone. “There are some fierce monsters outside. Do you live here?”

“How did you get here?” the boy asked. “How is this possible?”

“Our friend Mog told us he sensed the presence of a few strong warriors in this building,” said the Onion Knight, stepping forward to explain and get to the heart of the matter. “We came to investigate. Are you okay?”

Thancred stayed in the rear of their company, watching their backs in case any more monsters tried to barge their way in. Y’shtola’s eyes traced the walls, no doubt drawing her own conclusions about their environment, while Ramza focused on the boy and Quistis admired the glass ceiling. Unfortunately no one in their current party was the more nurturing type for scared children.

“Mog?” With the mention of the moogle’s name, the boy seemed even more alarmed, and his eyes kept flashing to the curtains on the walls. “Do you mean Dr. Mog?”

“We can assure you our Mog is no doctor,” said Y’shtola, brushing a hand along the curtains that looked as if they should have had windows between them, but instead framed nothing but a blank wall. “You are in another world, one which we have all been chosen to fight to maintain and prevent destruction from spreading to all of our respective worlds. This building is simply a recreation of one you may know.”

Trust Y’shtola not to sugarcoat it.

Rather than reacting with surprise or more fear as Thancred expected, the boy looked relieved, if anything. He blew air from his lips and slackened his grip on his tome. “So this isn’t the real Hall of Records, then? I was worried you’d all gotten out.”

Quistis’s gaze shot to the boy like the snap of her whip. When she spoke, it was in a voice as direct and measured as Y’shtola’s.  “What do you mean, ‘gotten out?’ Do you know who we are?”

The boy held his book over his mouth and his words came out somewhat muffled. “Do you… not know who I am?”

“I am reminded of a similar situation,” Thancred said, partially in an attempt to assuage the boy’s fears – whatever they were. “Lann and Reynn also expressed familiarity with us, but no one knew them in return.”

Y’shtola tapped her knuckles against her cheek. “How many different versions of us exist in other worlds, I wonder? Perhaps it can be likened to the different shards of our world, though on a grander scale than I had even considered.”

The Warrior of Light looked between them and shook his head, as unperturbed as always. He seemed content not to question the ways of other worlds, or their mysteries. “What sort of records are kept here? I don’t see any books, other than the one in your hand.”

Thancred peered closer at the boy’s attire. He appeared to be a scholar of some sort, with a hat that seemed a cross between a mortarboard and scrolls of parchment. His type seemed to be the kind of person immersed in books at all times, except when he was in mortal danger. And sometimes even then, as he well knew from the behaviors of his fellow Scions. He tried not to glance at Y’shtola – sometimes he had a niggling suspicion she could read minds.

Apparently deciding they were no threat, or that his secret was safe, the boy folded his book under his arm. “I’m a royal archivist, or… er, an apprentice, really. We don’t keep the stories we guard in books, but rather in paintings. I was worried they had all been stolen… but it appears they just don’t show up in this world. Our library is in the east wing, I can take you there if you want!” He turned toward the door at his end of the hallway, ready to lead them there without hesitation. “Oh, I’m sorry, I almost forgot! My name is Tyro.”

Thancred had to reassess his earlier opinion of the boy. He wasn’t afraid of the monsters, nor the strangers, nor even the concept of being in a different world – Tyro had just been scared of getting in trouble.

Quistis cupped a hand over her mouth to whisper to the others. “He seems eager to keep us from lingering here.”

The Onion Knight furrowed his brow and frowned. “Like he’s hiding something.”

“The east wing,” Ramza mused aloud, looking back at the door they’d come from. “Agrias and the others went that way, did they not? They were tracking monsters in that part of the building.”

Tyro opened his tome and set his face into a frown. “Monsters, inside?”

“And getting fiercer by the day,” said the Onion Knight. “The ones we found here have been unusually aggressive. Mog thinks it’s because it has been a long time since we’ve found so much new light in one place.”

“The world is changing again,” added Quistis.

“Then we’d better hurry,” said Tyro, pushing open the heavy doors into another hallway. “We’ll take a shortcut – I’ll bring us through the Astral Gallery!”


MUSTADIO


All things considered, he felt like he took the news of being in a different world well. He was glad to hear that Ramza had been summoned, too. And perhaps even a little gratified that some great crystal somewhere judged him to be a warrior worthy of such a grand battle.

But he still couldn’t get Construct 8 to work.

Zell punched the air repeatedly while Agrias explained the situation of this world to Mustadio. When Mustadio went back to his maintenance work on Construct 8, Zell crouched down next to him.

“I’m pretty good with machines myself,” he said, patting the automaton’s massive iron shoulder. “But I’ve gotta say, you don’t need all those tools.”

Mustadio sighed. “I know. What I really need is some auracite. Are you aware of where to find any in this world?”

Agrias shook her head. “For a blessing, this world lacks those infernal stones.”

The other pair who fought alongside Agrias and Zell, who had been introduced to him as Eight and Cinque, walked over. Cinque brushed her hair out of her eyes. “Ooh, that’s Magitek, isn’t it?”

“We can’t assume all other worlds have Magitek, Cinque,” said Eight, sighing. He turned to Mustadio. “Does it function through the use of both magic and technology?”

Mustadio scratched the back of his head. “To be honest, I’m not entirely sure. Sometimes it seems like it, but I think he’s just a really advanced piece of ancient technology. He actually negates magicks used against him.”

“Perhaps the magicks used to transport you both to this world caused him to deactivate,” Agrias surmised, turning away to return to standing guard.

Zell pushed himself up straight, then stretched out his legs. Mustadio had the impression that he struggled to sit still. “Then I think I know the solution,” said Zell. “Just gotta focus our will and he’ll wake up!”

Mustadio furrowed his brow. “Huh?”

“The power of will gives us the ability to do pretty much anything in this world,” said Eight, gesturing to Construct 8. “So focus on what you want, and watch.”

“I doubt it’s that easy!”

Zell took a stance, took a deep breath, and whirled to strike Construct 8 right in the head with a roundhouse kick.

“Hey!” Mustadio protested, scrambling to his feet. “Don’t damage my automaton!”

For a moment, nothing happened. But the whirr of machinery rumbled from underneath Construct 8’s casings and it fizzled to life, the lights in its eyes shining. It pushed itself to its feet, joints clunking as exhaust vapors escaped from behind its armor.

“POWER RESTORED. AWAITING NEW ORDERS.”

Mustadio’s jaw hung open.

“So that’s Construct 8, huh?” asked Zell, cracking his knuckles. “Cool.”

Cinque crossed her arms. “Hmm… ‘Construct 8’ is such a boring name. Is that really what you call him?”

Mustadio stammered. “Well, uh… I never asked if it had other names.”

“DEFAULT DESIGNATION: CONSTRUCT 8. ALTERNATIVE DESIGNATION: WORKER 8. ALSO SATISFACTORY.”

“Nah,” said Cinque, tapping her foot. Behind her, Mustadio spotted Eight rubbing his temples, as if anticipating a headache. “I’m gonna call him ‘Connie’ instead!”

“What? No!” Mustadio scoffed. “We are not calling my automaton Connie.”

The robot’s internal exhaust fans intensified, then calmed as its mechanical voice rang out. “SETTINGS ADJUSTED. NEW DESIGNATION: CONNIE. ACCEPTED.”

“You can’t just decide to rename him! Hey!”


RYNE


If this was a real place, Ryne imagined herself being able to live here forever.

The grand halls had a beauty to them, a marble austerity that made her think of how Voeburt may have once looked in its prime, before the Flood of Light. Statues and paintings lined the walls around the main floor, with an upper level accessed by a marble staircase that had bookcases and nooks and crannies for reading. The floor had a mosaic symbol that she didn’t recognize, but everything seemed to be framed around a centerpiece in the massive chamber – enormous windows from the floor all the way to the ceiling of the second floor.

Two of the window panes were made of stained glass, depicting a starry night. The third was clear, with a giant bronze astrolabe placed in front of it. It made her think of Urianger, and the home he made in the faerie kingdom and all the evenings she spent there studying. The thought made her ache with longing, for it was on those nights that she felt safest in her years traveling with Thancred. But it made her miss her friends even more, so she pushed the feelings away.

She didn’t know what this place was, but she knew it wasn’t real because the books weren’t real. All of the shelves had been built into the wall, but she couldn’t take any of the books from it – they all felt like they had been carved from a singular block of wood. Standing in front of one of the shelves, she tried to read the titles but all seemed to be gibberish.

“Thancred always told me to learn what I could of the situation I’m in, whenever I find myself in trouble,” she said to herself. “But how am I supposed to learn anything if none of these books will yield their knowledge?”

Her hand brushed against one of the books, and its cover felt softer than the others. Like leather. Real.

She pulled it from the shelf at once and peered at the cover. It depicted artwork of fairies frolicking in a landscape that looked just like Il Mheg. “A fairy tale,” she said, shoulders falling. “I fail to see how this would help me.”

“Your will made that book real,” said a voice behind her. “Your longing for a place far from here.”

“Oh!” Ryne dropped the book and turned to regard the source of the voice, hands pressed to her heart and back against the bookshelf. A woman appeared who wasn’t there before, with hair styled into a shape that resembled horns, a scarlet dress with a low cut, and black wings draped across her back. “My apologies. You startled me. I didn’t think anyone else was here – only monsters.”

“My fault entirely,” said the woman. “For quite some time, it is true that only monsters dwelled here. But then you came, and others like you.”

“Others?” Ryne asked. As far as she could tell, the woman didn’t seem to be a threat, so she didn’t draw her daggers. “I haven’t met anyone else. But I haven’t been here long. In fact, I don’t know when I arrived or how I got here.”

“The crystal chooses another warrior,” said the woman, turning toward the marble staircase and the statues of armless torsos flanking it. “Do you like artwork, little girl?”

Ryne folded her hands behind her back, confused by the sudden question. “I think so. There wasn’t much time for admiring works of art where I come from. Might I ask… is this the Source? Or some other place?”

Is this the Source?” the woman mused, turning back toward Ryne. She repeated the question, but not in a mocking way. “I wonder. A world where the past is captured and futures rewritten… a world where none of it matters at all.”

Ryne tilted her head. “Excuse me? Perhaps… perhaps if you are as lost as I am, we could travel together? My name is Ryne.”

“I had a castle not unlike this. Long ago, far in the future, in a different world entirely. I adore works of art. An attempt to capture the ephemeral in perpetuity.”

“I’m sorry, I’m not sure I understand,” said Ryne, frowning.

The woman regarded her. Stared. Ryne shuffled her feet, staring back for only a second or two before dropping her eyes. She felt as if the woman was weighing her, but for what she couldn’t divine.

“You have a power within you,” she said. “A wondrous light.”

Ryne gasped. “How did you…?”

The woman finally looked away and closed her eyes. “Do not venture forth from this room,” she said. “Your allies are coming.”

Before Ryne could get another word in, the woman vanished.

“My allies?” she said. She didn’t dare hope. They had gone back to their own world, forever. She looked back to the astrolabe and gripped her daggers. The strange woman had said that her will made the book real, so what if…?

A voice echoed down a hall to the west, beyond the marble staircase. A high voice that sounded like a child, but here, where monsters roamed? “And here’s the Astral Gallery! Just like in the real archives.”

A boy entered the chamber leading a motley group consisting of two knights, a swordsman, a girl in blue, and two people who made her heart nearly burst from her chest. 

“Thancred! Y’shtola!”

They both wore unfamiliar clothing. Thancred didn’t have his gunblade, and something about his face seemed as hard and stern as the day she had met him. When she ran to them, smiling so wide she thought it would hurt, both of them reacted with surprise but neither greeted her with open arms.

Thancred stepped back from her. “I’m sorry, but… do we know you?”


Abilities:

Tyro (Unique - Grimoires) 

15: Keeper’s Tome

35: Sentinel Grimoire

EX: Last Judgment Grimoire

LD: Warder’s Apocrypha

FR: Story’s End (with Papalymo)

BT: Fantasy Unbound

BT Theme: "FINAL FANTASY Main Theme (FFRK Ver. Arrange)"

All of Tyro's ability names come from abilities he uses in Record Keeper (with the exception of his Force ability, which will be original for everyone like they are in game). I'm no good with balancing and stats, so I will never delve deeply into that part of it, but I imagine he would play as a buff-oriented character with some magic damage capabilities -- a pretty basic all-rounder.

For his BT theme, most of Record Keeper's soundtrack is remixes of other music throughout the series. So considering he's a crossover character visiting all their worlds, I decided to give him the FF main theme.

Can you guess the reason for his Force partner?


Trey (Type-0)

FR: Study Break (with Tyro)

BT: Freezing Rain

BT Theme: "War: Pursuit"

His BT ability comes from an ability he uses in game. Though he doesn't appear in this chapter, if I don't include his update now I'll never remember to! We can imagine he might be on the banner for this chapter. :) Can you guess the reasoning behind this Force partnership?

Chapter 3: Act 4 Interlude: Part 2

Notes:

Please note: This story will contain spoilers for ALL games, including eventually the recent FFXVI. You have been warned!

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Part 2


RYNE


Ryne stopped in her tracks. She felt as if she had been kicked in the chest.

“You… you’ve forgotten me already?” Her eyes dropped to her feet, an old habit, as she tried to hide the pain that was surely brimming in her eyes. “You shouldn’t joke about such things.”

The girl in blue approached her in the silence that followed. “There, there,” she said. “Don’t take it personally. We’re in a world where some of us don’t have all of our memories. Maybe, as far as they are concerned, Thancred and Y’shtola haven’t met you yet.”

Ryne looked up at her. Though taller, Ryne had a feeling the other girl wasn’t much older than her. “Is… is that so?”

She put a comforting arm around Ryne’s shoulders. “Yeah, and we can always go look for those missing memories, and make new ones in the meantime. So try not to be sad, and introduce yourself to them again! My name is Rinoa.”

Ryne forced herself to look at the gathered party, all of whom had their eyes on her. She struggled to read Thancred and Y’shtola’s expressions beyond the complete lack of recognition in their eyes. Even if what Rinoa said was true, it still hurt almost more than she could bear. “My name is Ryne,” she said slowly. “I’m from the First. You came to my world to save it from the Flood of Light.”

Thancred’s eyes widened and he stepped toward her. For one hopeful moment, she thought her words might have triggered his memory. “To the First? Did we find Minfilia there again?”

Minfilia. Of course. If she told him who she was, then Minfilia would be all he’d see.

Knowing it was selfish, knowing the lie would feel foul passing through her lips, she stared back down at her feet. “I don’t know. Perhaps… perhaps I have lost some memories as well.”

“It perturbs me to know we have yet to regain all of our memories,” said Y’shtola, crossing her arms. “I’d thought we recovered them back when Lyse revealed her true name. If there is more to remember, then perhaps we are all more in the dark than it seems.”

“A harrowing thought,” said Thancred, walking toward the other end of the gallery without another glance toward Ryne. “At any rate, we should continue onward. We have yet to reunite with Agrias and the others, and there is still another warrior to be found here.”

Rinoa stuck her tongue out at him behind his back and whispered conspiratorially to Ryne. “His complete disregard for your feelings reminds me of a certain other stick-in-the-mud that I know. Well, since no one else is introducing themselves, I’ll do the introductions. That’s the Warrior of Light and the Onion Knight – our leaders. Then that’s Ramza, and that’s Tyro, who we also just met here.”

“The Warrior of Light?” Ryne asked. She knew the Warrior of Darkness was called that in their world, but she did not recognize this person.

“Many worlds have warriors of light, we’ve come to learn,” said Y’shtola as she passed. “He is not the same as our friend, if that is the one you are thinking of.”

“Apologies for my rudeness – I had thought to give you time to reunite with your friends. Welcome to the fight,” he said in greeting.

“You said you’re looking for another warrior here?” Ryne asked. “I met someone before you all found me. She was a woman in a red dress with black wings, and she spoke of strange things.”

She felt Rinoa tense at her side and her arms dropped from Ryne’s shoulders. “That’s not who we’re looking for. But it sounds like you met Ultimecia.”


ZELL


“Hey, watch that mace swinging!” Zell shielded himself with his arms from a rain of bone shards – pieces of the skeleton that Cinque pulverized – then ducked out of the way of an iron giant’s sword that came crashing down on him.

“Whoopsie!” Cinque exclaimed. “That’s a big one!”

Before Zell could think of a way to strike the giant’s weak points, Construct 8 came crashing through with its hands locking onto the iron giant’s wrists. Iron screeched against iron as both titans competed in strength, groaning as their inner workings strained. Construct 8 managed to force the giant to drop its sword, and then the panels in its chest opened up and launched a missile at point blank range. The iron giant crashed into the ground, a heaping mass of glowing metal.

“Woohoo, Connie is so cool!” Cinque cheered.

As the last monster toad fell to Agrias’s sword, Mustadio doubled over. “Is this world always full of fighting like this?” he asked, panting.

“Not always,” said Zell, stretching his wrists. “These are way stronger than usual.”

“We should turn back soon,” said Eight. They had already started climbing the east wing tower, which marked the end of their expedition. “Maybe the others had better luck finding the other sources of light here.”

Agrias took a look around the rest of the landing before continuing the ascent. “Let us reach the summit before returning.”

They found a room at the highest point of the tower behind another set of heavy double doors marked with a sigil that resembled a pair of spectacles. When they opened the doors, the light coursing out of the chamber nearly blinded them. Magic roiled in the center, a whirling mass of shining white that resembled stars. With daylight streaming in through the enormous windows beyond the magic mass, the whole chamber felt awash in energy and warmth.

Eight tried to step forward but guarded himself with his arms when an invisible force shoved him back. “What’s happening?”

Zell squinted as he looked around the chamber. When his eyes adjusted to the overwhelming light, he spotted more bookshelves, but also a mahogany desk against the far wall and flurries of documents disturbed by the magical energies. It felt too large to be at the top of the tower. It made him think of a study, particularly the one like Headmaster Cid’s at the highest point of Garden. In the center of the chamber, he spotted a figure in a slim dress with garments like black, feathery wings.

He recognized her silhouette at once. “Ultimecia!”

“Who’s that?” asked Mustadio. “Bad news?”

Agrias held her sword in a stance, ready to strike at a moment’s notice. “A witch most heinous. Be on your guard.”

“You are foolish children to stumble upon me here,” said Ultimecia, barely sparing them a glance. She focused on the magic power building in the center of the chamber. “Especially now – in this single moment, in this infinite moment, when I will achieve everything.”

The magic solidified into an orb. It rippled and churned as if filled with fetid water. Zell felt dizzy just looking at it. It flashed into a multitude of colors faster than he could register them, settling on a sickly green. Tendrils of energy snaked out, striking the bookshelves and making them disintegrate into dust scattered by wind. Other tendrils struck objects throughout the room – a globe, plush chairs, a standing chalkboard – and seemed to pull them into the greater mass, stretching them into impossible shapes. He knew this feeling. He recognized this phenomenon.

“It’s Time Compression!” Zell shouted. “How are you doing this? Don’t you need a Sorceress from the past?”

“You know nothing, idiot boy,” she said, arms spread as if to encompass and embrace the swirling energy. “Though I must admit, it took me longer than it should have to realize the Junction Machine is unnecessary here. This world had the capability for it all along. A world where past and future intersect. Memories and dreams. Where the dead return to the living, and the living cannot die. All this time, we have been in the source. A nexus from which all other worlds spring. A world with no beginning and no end.”

Zell felt the tower lurch and struggled to keep his balance. He looked at Agrias. “We have to stop her!”

“We must get reinforcements,” Agrias responded. “We cannot defeat her with so few numbers.”

“Big spell incoming!” Cinque warned, pointing their attention back to Ultimecia.

The Sorceress turned away from the origin of her Time Compression, arms raised high as she cast a spell at them. “Accursed SeeDs,” she said, her voice scathing. “You will not defeat me again.”

Her spell lashed toward them, a conflagration of pure magic that seared the air. Zell braced himself for the impact, but all he heard was the crash of Construct 8’s footsteps when it stepped in front to take the blast.

Holding its hands up high, the magic from Ultimecia’s spell siphoned away into nothing.

“Connie!” Cinque hooted with joy. “You saved us!”

“COMMENCE RETREAT,” it said. “THIS UNIT IS NOT CAPABLE OF PERMANENT MAGIC NULLIFICATION.”

“Not a chance!” Mustadio shouted. “I am not leaving without you!”

“ADDITIONAL MAGICAL OFFENSIVE INCOMING,” said Construct 8. Glyphs shone on the floor, crimson light intensifying as Ultimecia continued her assault. Construct 8 crouched down and placed a palm against the floor, making the glyph fade away like her previous spell. “REPEAT COMMAND. COMMENCE RETREAT.”

“We should really go!” Eight yelled out. “We can’t take her!”

“Mustadio, you heard him!” Agrias said, pulling Mustadio by the arm. “That is an order!”

Ultimecia’s face twisted into a scowl as she watched Construct 8 nullify her spellwork. “Begone!” Meteorites materialized above their heads, raining down in a way that Construct 8 couldn’t block them all. Zell and the others cried out in pain as her spell scorched the entrance to the chamber.

Mustadio tried shooting Ultimecia with his pistol, but she summoned a barrier to deflect the attacks. When he reloaded his gun to continue his assault, Construct 8 stepped in front of him with his back to Mustadio.

“COMMENCE RETREAT,” it said again. “THIS UNIT WILL MAINTAIN STRUCTURAL INTEGRITY.”

“You’d better,” he said in return, as he finally consented to Agrias pulling him away.

Zell led the way back down the spiraling stairs as he felt the world rippling around them. In this world so far from home, he wondered if destiny would save them a second time.


THANCRED


Thancred watched Ryne dispatch her foes with practiced ease, biting with her two daggers and eyes detached from the violence. He couldn’t deny that he was curious about her, since she seemed overjoyed when they first met her. But it was Minfilia who primarily occupied his thoughts. Minfilia who he longed to see again. Minfilia, who he had failed time and time again.

Many nights since coming to this world, he would lie awake wondering if she would be summoned to this world. He wished for it. He wanted nothing more than to see her again so he could apologize for all the ways he had failed her. And though this world had endless fighting, it still gave the gift of letting them enjoy so much extra time together. But while Minfilia was a fighter, she was no warrior. The will of the crystal wouldn’t have a use for her.

The irony. In one world she devoted her life to the Mothercrystal and sacrificed everything for it, and he hated it. Yet here, he wanted it desperately and knew the futility of it.

“You fight like I do,” he said to Ryne, keeping his own daggers ready.

“You’re the one who taught me,” she said, continuing onward without a backward glance at him.

He suspected as much. “What am I to you?”

She stopped. Before she could speak, a yelp from Tyro interrupted them.

“So you know us from your paintings,” Y’shtola said, looking entirely too pleased with herself. “How does that work, then? Are they mere windows into our worlds, or are they worlds themselves contained within portraits and landscapes?”

“I shouldn’t say any more,” Tyro said, looking away from her. “You already got too much out of me.”

“To your credit, you lasted a while,” Thancred said, having overheard most of their discussion. “It was but a slip of the tongue that betrayed you. Innocuous comments. When Y’shtola wants a morsel of knowledge, she gets it.”

“And the only superior interrogator is you, is that it?” Y’shtola said back to Thancred with a wry smile, to which he shrugged back with a grin.

Rinoa cupped her cheek and tilted her head into her hand. “Should we bail him out?”

“I can’t deny my own curiosity about his world,” said Ramza, pursing his lips. “They sound like wondrous things, those paintings.”

“Are we simply art come to life for you, then? Works of fiction rendered in paint on canvas?” Y’shtola asked, pressing her attack.

“Oh, Relm would have a field day with this,” said Rinoa.

“And if we’re just stories,” said the Onion Knight, “does that mean you know how our stories end? What about this journey – is it a story that just goes on and on?”

“Listen, I can’t tell you,” said Tyro, waving his hands as if to ward them off. “We are not supposed to interfere, much less tell you these things. I’ve already broken so many rules.”

“Leave him be,” said the Warrior of Light, stepping in. “That’s enough. He already asked you to stop.”

Y’shtola’s tail flicked. “Very well. But know this: I will not be deterred from discovering the truth of this world. Of all our worlds. If it is Tyro’s world from which all our worlds spring, then we deserve to know the truth of our existences. I will discuss this with Enna Kros later – she may have insights to share regarding the versions of us in her world.”

“Everyone, stop,” Ryne said suddenly, holding out her hand from her position at the head of the party. “Is that… normal?”

The walls rippled. A portrait of flowers – presumably a normal one, not Tyro’s magical portraits – flickered in and out of existence before the daisies within simply floated away. Fish swam by, and as soon as the absurdity of it registered to Thancred he realized they all swam in water themselves.

“What’s happening?” Onion Knight asked, kicking his feet furiously. “How can we still breathe?”

He saw places from the World of Respite far below them. The Dimensions’ Labyrinth melted into Capta Est Tower and then Altissia, but somehow he knew they never left the royal archives. He felt the touch of the Blackened Will, smelled the burning left behind by Shinryu’s divine breath. The tears and laughter of his friends rang in his ears. All of it combined into a singular experience, everything happening at once. The world fell apart in a blink before they could even stop it. Before they even knew.

“I know this!” Rinoa exclaimed. He didn’t know how he still heard her, she seemed so far away. “This is Time Compression! Ultimecia is behind this!”

“What do we do?” asked the Warrior of Light.

“We have to defeat her,” she said. “Focus… focus on each other, think of who you want to be with the most and don’t let them go! We can’t lose each other!”

The thought came easily to Thancred. He knew who he wanted there with him. He pictured her as he last saw her, vanishing into the rift to save a world that wasn’t her own. He saw her on that fateful night of the banquet, under the palace when he stayed behind to face their pursuers to let her escape. He saw her as a child, when monsters rampaged through the city on the day her father died. If the crystals wouldn’t summon her, then perhaps he could.

He felt a hand clutch his. When he looked at who it was, his jaw slackened when he saw Ryne, her eyes screwed shut in concentration. And it felt… right.

“Our friends!” Ramza called out, looking ahead at figures drifting toward them. “They’re here! Agrias and… Mustadio!?”

“No time for introductions!” Onion Knight said, swimming through the air in a frenzy that indicated to Thancred the boy barely knew how to swim. “We have to deal with Ultimecia!”


RINOA


She didn’t care how it had happened again.

All she knew was that Ultimecia had unleashed her horrors on the world again, eliminating time itself to make them experience all moments at once in her twisted desire to combat her loneliness. Rinoa was past feeling pity for her. All she had left in her was anger, fear, and the desire to fix things again alongside her friends. Alongside Squall.

When Zell and the others reunited with them, she thought she had told him to go find Squall and the others. Or did she only think to tell him that? She couldn’t tell anymore.

She had to face Ultimecia. Rinoa was a Sorceress too, after all.

“What is that creature?” 

The vague realization that someone new was next to her registered in the chaos. She thought she heard Ramza say his name was Mustadio.

Below them at the convergence of magic and time, a demonic being with no face, wing-like appendages on its head, and blades up and down its monstrous, veiny arms floated as if waiting for them. Red fabric billowed from its waist in a twisted approximation of Ultimecia’s gown, but instead of legs another figure hung upside down in a mirror of the creature, like a bat with folded wings. From experience, Rinoa remembered this figure to be Ultimecia herself.

Rinoa’s angel wings unfurled and when she spoke, her voice thrummed with power. Even to her own ears, it didn’t sound like her at all. “Ultimecia,” she said, both to address the Sorceress and to answer Mustadio’s question. “How are you doing this? Why now?”

Ultimecia’s response rang out all around them. “This world is a mockery of life and existence. Here, all creation will become one. It will become me. It must end – for the alternative is to fight each other for eternity. I will not have it.”

“Surround her,” said the Warrior of Light, pointing his sword in Ultimecia’s direction. “We attack as one.”

Rinoa unleashed a barrage of magic to hold Ultimecia’s attention while the others took position. Ultimecia responded in turn, her onslaught of spells so powerful it was like holding back a flood with her bare hands. But her angel wings, at least, helped her maneuver through the currents of time, blasting fire from her hands to save Ramza and Mustadio from Ultimecia’s ice. Her Holy magic augmented Ryne’s light spells. She flew through Y’shtola’s windstorm to strike at the abomination with her blaster edge.

The monster and Ultimecia raised their hands in tandem and pointed at Cinque and Eight, who had rushed Ultimecia together. Space warped around them before Rinoa could come to their rescue, shrinking them down to nothing until they disappeared into the void.

“Eyes front, Ryne!” Thancred urged. “Go for her blind spot!”

Rinoa shouted for him at the same time as Ryne did. Before he could strike the Sorceress, the void devoured him as well, erasing him. All three of them, gone before she could even react.

Ryne’s scream shook Rinoa to her core. “Thancred!”

Rinoa flew to Ryne’s side, clutching her arm to prevent her from doing something rash. She braced them both in the midst of the swirling nothingness all around them and she shouted above the roar of magic. “Ryne, this isn’t the end! There’s still a chance to save him and all the others – I’ve fought her before, experienced this before! You just need to hold onto him, and once she’s beaten we can bring them back!”

“How can I… when he hasn’t held onto me?”

Rinoa looked her in the eyes and smiled. “You’ll just have to hold on harder, then.”

A meteor materialized above them and almost crushed them both, but a spectral shield blocked it and gave them both time to dodge. Tyro floated above them, his tome held open. “Go, I’ll cover you!” he said.

For one brief moment, Ryne smiled. Then she took a deep breath and readjusted her grip on her daggers. “I’ll distract her. And you go in and strike.”

Ryne flashed forward, her daggers lengthening into swords made of ice. Rinoa flew toward Ultimecia’s other side. Ahead, she saw Mustadio get launched into the air by a robot, and he shot in tandem with missiles from the robot’s chest cavity. Ramza and Y’shtola flanked Tyro, defending him from a magical assault while he healed their wounds. The Warrior of Light dropped spectral swords from above, stabbing through the creature’s wings and arms.

Ultimecia focused her ire on Ryne, who dodged and retaliated with light and ice. With Ultimecia distracted, Rinoa joined her hands together and blasted the Sorceress with all the force she could muster.

While she struck the Sorceress below, she saw others arriving to join the assault from above. Squall was in the lead, gunblade flashing toward the monster’s head with Zell, Quistis, Selphie, Irvine, Seifer, and the Onion Knight at his side. Everyone attacked with spell and steel together.

And then everything went black.


TYRO


Rinoa had said to hold onto each other. But in this void, Tyro didn’t know if he had anyone to hold. None of his friends were in this world.

Tyro stood upon barren earth. The dark sky extended above him forever and ever, not a star in sight.

Dr. Mog, Elarra, and all the others weren’t here. But wasn’t he surrounded by his friends? He knew all of them, even if they didn’t know him. Or did he just know their stories?

A light shone ahead. There, parting the darkness, he saw Y’shtola, Thancred, the Warrior of Light, Ramza, and all the others – all holding their hands out for him. They didn’t know him, but they weren’t going to abandon him. He should have known that. He loved their stories, after all.

The light encompassed him. When he could see again, he found himself right outside the royal archives, its ivory towers gleaming as if Time Compression had never happened.

Ultimecia hunched over in pain in front of their gathered party, bloodied and beaten. Rinoa stood before her. Cinque, Eight, and Thancred had all returned as well, none the worse for wear. Ramza, Agrias, and Mustadio gathered together around Mustadio’s automaton.

“What do we do with her now?” Rinoa asked. “Seal her away, like we did to Exdeath, Kam’lanaut, and Eald’narche?”

“She’s trying to die,” Squall said, hardened eyes fixed on Ultimecia. “But she can’t. Not until she gives away her powers. Just like at home.”

“Don’t you understand, foolish child?” Ultimecia’s breaths came out ragged and gasping, taloned hand pressed against her stomach. “I cannot die. Not here, in this world. None of us can. That is what I was trying to do… I sought to end the story.”

Tyro stepped forward. “But these stories don’t have an end. Not here. I may not know what’s going to happen now… but they’ll continue on. All of ours.”

“Why now?” Zell asked. “You’ve been fighting us here in this world all this time, but why did you wait so long to make time compress?”

“The stasis permeating this world – the energy that keeps us all alive, fighting over and over again – is decaying. There is a rot at the center of this world and it is befouling the Guardian Forces that defend it. I took advantage of the opportunity.”

“Guardian Forces?” Quistis asked. “The GFs? They are the ones preventing us from dying?”

“The summoned creatures, right?” asked the Onion Knight. 

“They have all different names,” said Tyro. “In all your worlds. What is the rot that’s afflicting them?”

When he turned back to Ultimecia, hoping for an answer to his question, she disappeared. 

“Well, that’s rather ominous, isn’t it?” said Thancred. Something glinted at his feet, and when he knelt down to pick it up, a light shone in his hand. He looked toward Y’shtola. “More memories, eh? Think these are ours?”

“Depends on where they came from, I suppose,” she responded. “Shall we fetch the others?”

“I think I summoned these memories back,” Thancred said, staring into his cupped palms. “When we were all lost in that darkness, the person I reached for was a memory.”

“Minfilia,” said Ryne.

The glittering light dispersed, showering on Thancred and Y’shtola and disappearing into the sky, presumably to find Alphinaud, Alisaie, Lyse, and Papalymo. Thancred closed his eyes, but when he opened them again, he fixed them on Ryne. She lowered her eyes in return.

“Minfilia,” he said. It was curt, almost cold – and if Tyro had to guess, nothing had changed. “Hm… Minfilia. You did know what happened to her, and you kept that from me.”

Ryne winced. “Do you… remember now?”

He walked over to her. Everyone fell silent. Then he placed one of his hands on top of her head. “Of course I do, Ryne,” he said, and the warmth spilled forth from his voice. “Though I must confess to being ashamed of my behavior. Both in this world and the First. To think that you would be afraid to tell me the truth, hiding Minfilia’s fate from me in fear of how I’d react… I must have failed you, haven’t I?”

She looked up at him, her eyes watering. “I’m sorry.” She lunged forward and wrapped her arms around his torso. “Oh, I’m so glad you can remember me now!”

He lowered his hand from her head to her shoulders, pulling her into the hug. “You should never have to hide,” he said. “I care for you as you are, and I always have. I’m the one who’s sorry for forgetting.”

Ryne pulled away and wiped her eyes. “We can do things with the power of will in this world, can’t we? Then… I have something I need to return to you.”

She closed her eyes and held out her hand. Tyro waited with his breath held. A light flashed, and a sudden weight in Ryne’s arms made her nearly fall over, but when she straightened she held out a silver gunblade to Thancred, who took it with a smile.

“Thank you, Ryne,” he said, hefting it onto his back.

“A gunblade, huh?” Squall asked. “You never mentioned you could wield them.”

“I didn’t know until now,” Thancred replied, testing its weight. “Anyway, all that about ‘Guardian Forces’ and ‘Time Compression’ – how worried should we be?”

“She came to know some things about the nature of this world, I assume,” said Y’shtola. “Things I need to know as well. Is the ‘source world’ this one or Tyro’s world? I’m inclined to believe there is one, whichever the case – I do not think it mere coincidence that we have so many similarities in each of our worlds. Gil, chocobos, moogles, even a common language.”

“I’m just concerned that she got away again,” said Squall, turning away to head back to the airship. “Don’t know how we’d be around to stop her from initiating Time Compression again.”

Mustadio cleared his throat. “There’s a lot I need to be caught up on, I think,” he said. “But maybe first we can start with those Guardian Forces?”

Tyro smiled as the others explained to Mustadio. Maybe it would be nice to be part of the story himself for once, rather than just observing.


Abilities

Mustadio Bunansa & Construct 8 (Guns)

15: Aim

35: Dispose

EX: Seal Evil

LD: Pulverize

FR: Percussive Maintenance (with Zell)

BT: Elimination

BT Theme: "Tension 1"

I imagine Mustadio to be a ranged attacker with debuffs coming from his Aim: Arm and Aim: Leg skills - so he can probably shut down enemy attacks. Perhaps Aim debuffs enemies so that they cannot deal BRV damage and delays them. Pulverize and Elimination come from Construct 8's moveset, and I would also imagine him to use follow-up attacks alongside Mustadio. Since both of them have limited abilities (and Construct 8 has little to no characterization) I made the decision to combine them into one character.

His BT theme is one of the battle themes, notably playing when rescuing Mustadio at Zaland.


Ryne Waters (Daggers)

15: Banish III

35: Aeolian Edge

EX: Absolute Zero

LD: Light Rampant

FR: Oracular Sorcery (with Rinoa)

BT: Shattered World

BT Theme: "Return to Oblivion," the boss theme when she is faced in the Eden raid series

Costumes: She would have two - her appearance from the Eden raid and her original blonde hair/bright blue eyes as "Minfilia"

Ryne's abilities come from a couple different places. Banish III is an ability unique to her as a Duty Support party member, while Aeolian Edge is a Ninja ability. Her EX, LD, and BT all come from the Eden Shiva trial, where she transforms and is faced as a boss. Banish III does holy damage and inflicts a debuff that makes all damage to enemies for a few turns critical, and in general she does light and ice elemental damage with her attacks.


Can you identify the reason for these Force partnerships?

Notes:

And that is the end of the Interlude. I will also be including Lost Chapters between each story chapter, just like the game does. Please comment and let me know if you liked it!

Chapter 4: Lost Chapter: Engines Ignited

Notes:

And now's our first Lost Chapter. These will be much shorter than the story chapters. I'd be here writing for the rest of my life if they weren't.

Chapter Text

Cid Haze ( Final Fantasy III )

Voiced by: Michio Hazama

An eccentric inventor from the town of Canaan, initially cursed into the form of a spirit due to the djinn of Sasune. Freely lending the party his airship and his support, he later reveals the secret history of the four warriors of light. Dearly loves his wife and his airship, the Enterprise .

Cid Haze


EDGAR


“There is genuinely little I’d enjoy more than a card game with a beautiful woman,” Edgar said, leaning against the bar with a martini in hand. “How about it? Would you fancy a go?”

Quistis sat at her table with her chin in her hand and her legs folded, eyes rolling. “Do you even know how to play Triple Triad, Edgar?”

Edgar scoffed, eyes roving around the bar in the Falcon ’s cabins before settling on Tifa, who scrubbed some glasses clean behind the bar. “Do you hear that, Tifa? She asked if I knew how to play Triple Triad.”

Tifa exchanged a glance with Quistis and grinned, as if knowing something he didn’t. “Well, do you?”

“Absolutely not,” he said, laughing. “But I am open to learning.”

Quistis shuffled her deck, gesturing to the seat opposite her. “Well, sit down then. Let’s see if you pick it up even faster than Steiner did.”

“Rusty knows how to play? Color me surprised. Well, then I am up to the challenge.”

The airship lurched at the most inopportune moment for his dignity – just as he lowered to sit into the chair. The movement made him stumble and fall right on the tiled floor with a yelp. Edward and Deuce’s duet on the other side of the bar came to an abrupt halt as the airship’s engines made a whining noise that rumbled through loud enough for likely every occupant on board to hear.

From the floor, Edgar scowled. “What’s Setzer doing?”

“He’s taking a break from the wheel today,” said Tifa, bracing herself against the bar. “Is everyone alright?”

After verifying that no one else got hurt (or even fell, like Edgar did), Quistis tapped the table thoughtfully. “I think it’s Cid’s turn today.”

“Excuse me, ladies,” said Edgar, picking himself up off the floor. “I think I better make a call to the bridge.”

He made his way to the two-way intercom system against the wall just outside of the bar, flourishing his cape as he departed from them. He thought he heard Tifa giggle as he left, which was fine by Edgar; he was content for others to simply view him as some fop.

He pressed the intercom button harder than he intended to. “Highwind, what’s going on up there?”

Cid’s unmistakable voice buzzed back at once, heavy with feedback. “$&^@ if I know! Something’s wrong with the engines – go and take a look for me, ya hear? I’ll keep her under control. Setzer, calm the %# – ”

His voice cut out, and Edgar wasn’t sure if it had to do with the airship’s troubles or an argument brewing on the bridge between two of their pilots as Setzer came to check on his baby. His eyes roved the lounge area for someone’s aid he could use and found Prompto searching for something out the windows – perhaps one of their enemies.

Edgar snapped his fingers and pointed. “Prompto, with me! I need your company in the Falcon ’s belly.”

Prompto turned, eyebrows raised. “Me? Uh, sure. D’you know what’s going on?”

“That’s what we’re going to find out,” he said. “I may have use for your phone – bridge comms seem as if they are out.”

The pair made the descent toward the engine room together, meeting up with Desch on the way who had the same thought to check the ship’s engines rather than any outside interference. Edgar had to restrain from hitting himself – Desch tended to understate his engineering skills so it hadn’t occurred to Edgar to seek his help. It was getting harder and harder to maintain his mental list of all their allies and all their skills, a roster of strengths and weaknesses.

Just beyond the engine room’s door, a haze of smoke and steam blocked their path. All three men covered their eyes and mouths, but Edgar managed to cough out orders, pointing to the tangle of pipes and cooling chambers lining the walls. “Find the leak, quickly!”

“Hold your chocobos!” shouted a hoarse voice in the back of the room. Dimly, Edgar could make out an unfamiliar old man in a red hat, goggles, and white beard hammering at something in the floors, the grated walkway opened. “You kids can’t breathe it in yet, I’m fixin’ up the air filtration system!”

“Wait, Cid? Is that you?” Desch called out.

Edgar and Prompto tied scarves around their mouths and exchanged a glance to each other, tools ready. “While you fix the filtration, we’ll get the pipes!” Prompto said. “It’s dangerous for you too, old man!”

After the source of the leak was fixed, Cid hooked up a propeller fan to the filtration system that sucked away all of the gas and steam in the room, letting them breathe in peace.

“Thanks for the help,” said Edgar, surveying the room for any other signs of damage. “It wasn’t your summoning into this world that caused that issue, was it?”

“Only a Cid could get summoned directly onto our airship,” Desch noted with amusement. “And especially right into the engine room.”

“Of course I wasn’t the issue!” said Cid, jumping up and down with his hammer raised. “Your engine room is bigger than anything I’ve ever seen, perhaps even greater than the machinery in the Tower of Owen! You think the problem was solved already?”

“What do you mean?” Desch asked, furrowing his brow.

“You’ve got a lot to learn, my boy,” said Cid. “This is just the vestibule to the engine room. I can’t fathom the size of the airship that needs something like this beauty to fly. I can’t wait to see it.”

Edgar scratched his head. “Well, this ship grows the more we need it to. Perhaps the engine room has expanded since the last time I was here…”

“Oho! Is that so? Well, into the depths!” said Cid, pulling more of the grate away.

Prompto pulled out his phone and made a call. “Hey, Iggy! Pass the phone to Cid – er, Cid Highwind. Tell him we found another Cid down here in the engine room! He’s helping us fix it, but we have to go deeper inside.”

“Well I’ll be!” Highwind’s voice rang out from the phone. “Good to hear that there’s another Cid down there helpin’ ya! Makes me feel a lot better.”

“You guys heard that, right?” Prompto asked, holding the phone away from his ear and wincing. “He’s not even on speaker.”

The elder Cid’s head popped out from the floor. “Oh, another Cid? How about that.”

“You seem remarkably unconcerned about there being another Cid, and about being in this world,” Edgar said to the old man.

“Plenty of time to hear the details later,” he responded. “Now, are you kids coming?”


They followed a trail of pipes through a cramped series of halls that felt barely bigger than ventilation shafts, descending deeper and deeper into the hull. As they made their way through, Edgar tried to make conversation.

“So you are from Desch and the Onion Knight’s world, right?” he asked. “Glad to have another ally of theirs among our ranks.”

“Indeed I am,” Cid said, hammering away at a metal panel that blocked their way. “Thanks for taking care of them – those boys get lost in the little details a bit too much.”

“Hey!” Desch protested.

“Ah, I don’t wanna hear your complaining,” said Cid, grin visible through his bushy beard. “Salina’s not here to watch out for you, I take it.”

Desch’s face softened at her mention. “No, she isn’t. But we do have many great allies among our number. And I’ll have you know that I keep a close eye on our hero’s well-being.”

“Good, good,” said Cid, ducking underneath a low hanging pipe. He glanced back at Edgar and Prompto. “As for you two, do you have a special someone back home to help keep your heads on straight?”

Prompto gave a dreamy, wistful sigh. “I don’t kiss and tell.”

Edgar peered at him, wondering at the story behind that. “No great queen has yet graced me with her love, but we have many on board this ship that may one day return my affections.”

“Hmph,” said Cid, and Edgar couldn’t tell if it was a scoff or a chuckle. “Well, lads, a bit of advice – make sure you find one. And above all, cherish them. Maybe one day you’ll be as lucky in love as my dear wife and I!”

Before Edgar could formulate a response to that, the narrow service shafts opened up into a cavernous chamber that defied belief. Belts and gears churned and clanked while steam hissed from massive wheels and coolant tanks. Most of the pipes led to the coolant tanks or the gargantuan furnace in the center of the chamber, upon which sat a living bomb gorging on its flames. The coolant tanks had started superheating on their outsides, the metal plating turning molten under the heat of the steadily growing bomb.

“Well, there’s our issue,” Desch stated, deadpan. “What do we do? The moment that thing blows, the whole airship is going down.”

“Even if we had water magic, I doubt we could stop it before it explodes,” said Edgar, tapping the haft of his spear. “And no one else would make it down here in time even if we called.”

Prompto stared at it with wide eyes. “At least it’ll be quick here at ground zero…”

“Quit doomsaying so soon,” said Cid, cracking his knuckles. “We’ve got four great machinists, inventors, and engineers right here – what else do we need?”

Edgar switched his gaze from the bomb gnawing on the furnace door to Cid, wiping the sweat from his brow. “What do you suggest?”

“We can use that bomb,” said Cid, proudly putting his hands on his hips. “It can be this giant ship’s infinite fuel source.”

Prompto was the first to break the silence following his declaration. “That’s the craziest thing I’ve ever heard. That’d be the most unstable fuel source ever.”

“Not if we heavily regulate it with that incredibly robust cooling system,” Cid said, pointing to the cooling tanks on both sides of the furnace. “It’s working in overdrive right now because the bomb got so big, but if we get that bomb to let out some steam and do some repairs, we can maintain that easily! A ship this big’s got to have a team of engineers to monitor it, doesn’t it?”

“With how much our numbers have grown, we have enough on our team with the mechanical know-how to more or less keep an eye on it at all times,” Edgar said, considering the merits of the idea. “As long as we keep the bomb happy – which it should be, considering the size of that furnace – it should work. It’d be a self-perpetuating fueling cycle!”

“But the bomb is way too big already,” Desch pointed out. “Anything we try doing to it will make it explode immediately.”

“Don’t attack it, of course,” said Cid. “Instead, let it attack us. Once it’s small enough, we’ll shove it in!”

“We’ve got to hurry,” said Edgar. “Desch, Prompto, you two get to fixing those cooling tanks. Mr. Cid, can I trust you to help me keep the bomb distracted?”

“Of course you can, lad,” he said. “Try not to get burned, y’hear?”


EDGAR


The four of them emerged from the engine room covered in ash and burns, but they left the bomb happily munching on fire and coals inside of the furnace, reduced to a manageable size with the cooling tanks keeping it that way. After Prompto departed from them to show his pictures of the battle to the others, Edgar and Desch made their way to the bridge with Cid in tow.

Even the bridge had changed since the last time Edgar had been up here. The cockpit in the center had expanded to house some walking room, a monitor, and a central control panel alongside the pilot’s seat. Two upper walkways led the way to what Edgar assumed to be navigator and comms stations, with Selphie and Shelke respectively sitting at them.

Cid Highwind lovingly stroked the control panel. “Whatever y’all did down there, she’s running great now.”

The Onion Knight had been waiting there for them to arrive. “Glad to see you’re all okay. Welcome to our airship, Cid! Thanks for coming up with that upgrade to our engines.”

“Thank you, my boy,” said Cid Haze, whistling appreciatively as he looked around the bridge. “I expect I’ll be down in that engine room more often than not, but I’d like nothing more! You’ll all have to pull me away from there!”

Edgar exchanged nods with Setzer. “I’ll leave all of you to show our newest member around,” he said. “I’ve got to get cleaned up, and then I have a game with Quistis to finish.”

Overhead, Selphie laughed into her hand.

Setzer wagged his finger at Edgar, his scarred face turning uncharacteristically somber. “If you’ve any sense at all, my friend, don’t play Triple Triad against her. Quistis is a monster at it. She went easy on me until I learned the game, but then I lost over a week’s worth of winnings!”


Abilities

Cid Haze (Unique - Hammers)

15: Hammer Slam

35: Flaming Crash

EX: Wheel of Time

LD: Enterprise Fire

FR: Tinkers' Combo (with Xezat)

BT: Airship Smash

BT Theme: "Sailing the Enterprise"

Most of his abilities were created by me, since in game he appears as a guest with only a hammer strike and the Fire spell that he uses sometimes. His BT, "Airship Smash," comes from a unique ability he has as a playable character in Theaterhythm. He is a pretty standard fire elemental physical attacker, perhaps with some physical attack party auras and such.

When I first posted this, he had a different Force partner (Cid Highwind) before I realized I made a mistake and Cid Highwind was already taken by Balthier in canon. Whoops. Now he has a new one! What do you think the connection is here?

Chapter 5: Lost Chapter: Encouraging Reason

Notes:

(See the end of the chapter for notes.)

Chapter Text

Kiros Seagill ( Final Fantasy VIII )

Voiced by: Subaru Kimura

Close friend to Laguna Loire and Ward Zabac who served in the Galbadian army alongside them several years ago. Nowadays, he and Ward work as President Laguna’s aides in Esthar and help him run the country. Though he often has to keep Laguna in line, he really enjoys the unpredictability his friend brings.

Kiros


KIROS


Kiros crept low to the ground as more of the crystalline humanoids passed down the country lane, their footsteps silent and no air passing through their lungs. Three of them had already attacked him wielding powerful magic and it took him everything he had to escape without too much damage. The creatures unnerved Kiros more than he could say – they looked almost human on the surface, but their unnatural movement and faces devoid of emotion said otherwise. They seemed almost robotic, if not for the magic – perhaps some sort of Para-Magic?

He straightened again once they left. If he didn’t have to worry about those creatures, this place would have been peaceful and relaxing. A warm breeze drifted over the fields. It was rare for him to find time to enjoy sunny days like this nowadays; his work as the presidential aide kept him far too busy. But he felt more lithe and less achey than he had in years, almost as if he became younger somehow. Perhaps he had gone back in time, a side effect of Time Compression? He even felt like he was right outside of Winhill.

Distant gunshots echoed across the fields. On the swift feet of a man about half his age, he ran toward the sound, hopeful for company that wasn’t one of those crystal people.

When he crested the hill, his heart leapt when he recognized Laguna as the source of the gunshots. A pack of wolves surrounded him, but even more alarming was that one of the crystal people that had attacked Kiros had also found his friend.

Katars fixed to his hands, he leapt into action, slicing through muscle and fur. He was about to strike the crystal person from behind when they noticed him just before the blade touched their neck; they whirled away from his attack and retaliated with a ring of holy magic that descended on Kiros from above.

“That will teach you to attack me from behind, witless cur!” The magic-user sneered, and Kiros’s eyes widened when he realized they weren’t made of crystal at all.

“Kiros!” Laguna shouted.

Laguna barreled into Kiros, knocking him out of the way of the holy magic with a shoulder tackle and taking the brunt of it. His friend grunted in pain and fell to his knees.

“Laguna!” said Kiros – and, more surprisingly, so did the one who attacked. Kiros made it to Laguna’s side first, wrapping an arm around his shoulders to pull him away. “Careful, this Sorceress attacked me earlier.”

“I am a sorcerer, I’ll have you know,” they said, throwing their hair over their shoulders. “Laguna, who is this person who is touching you with such familiarity?”

“Kuja, this is my friend Kiros I’ve told you about,” Laguna said, biting the cork off of a potion bottle and swallowing its contents. “And Kiros, man, it’s good to see you! About time you joined us here. This is my comrade, Kuja.”

Kiros didn’t put his weapons away, even though the wolves had been dispatched. Sometimes Laguna could be too trusting. “Sorcerer? Are you a SeeD, then? You don’t really dress like one.”

“Ugh, don’t try to kill me and then insult me,” said Kuja. “I’m no SeeD. The rules about magic are different here.”

“What do you mean?” Kiros asked. “And why did you attack me earlier?”

Laguna scratched the back of his head. “Sheesh, I’ve got a lot to explain, huh? That probably wasn’t Kuja before – that was a Manikin. They look just like us, and they’re all over the place in this world.”

Kuja clenched his fist. “ Probably ? I’ve been here with you the whole time!”

“We’re on an expedition to kill some living flower monster in the woods down that way,” said Laguna, pointing down the dirt path. “It has some oil we’re after for fixing things up around the airship. I’ll explain it all on the way.”


Comrade. He called this Kuja a comrade after all that they had been through in this world. Kiros felt ashamed that he missed all of it. Not even Ward was here to keep Laguna company all this time. Laguna had Squall, at least – but Kiros would have liked to have been there for their time together.

They passed under the shaded boughs of the forest, the sunlight casting dappled rays across the loamy ground. The shade brought more monsters – goblins, ochus, and even ghosts assaulted them as they made their way through the forest in search of the specific flower they needed.

“Laguna, not that way,” said Kiros. “That is back the way we came.”

“How would you know where we’re going?” said Kuja. “You don’t even know the flower we seek.”

Kiros kept his expression impassive, a skill he learned from years of dealing with Esthar’s most irritating politicians. “I know Laguna, and any way he thinks is right is the wrong way.” He also knew that when he left Laguna to his own devices, things tended to work out anyway. But he had a lot of lost time to make up for.

Laguna grinned sheepishly. “Well, you’re not wrong.”

“Why don’t you lead the way, Kuja?” Kiros suggested. “Unless you don’t know which way to go, yourself?”

Kuja scowled at him. “Of course I know the way. Why else would I have come along on this waste of time?” He stopped and brought his fingertips to his lips, smiling devilishly. “Oh, right, it is because I was here to accompany my comrade. Laguna would be simply lost without me, especially since you weren’t here either.”

Kuja was as deft as any of Esthar’s politicians. He knew exactly what to say to get under Kiros’s skin.

Kiros turned away. “Hm. We should keep moving.”

Laguna looked between them. “Uh, is something going on here?”

“Nothing in particular,” said Kuja, waving his hand as if swatting a fly. “You heard the man – let’s move along.”

Behind him, Kiros heard Laguna’s footsteps abruptly stop moving in the underbrush and he turned to see what happened before Laguna even finished loading a bullet cartridge into his gun.

A man with long blond hair appeared in a clearing, white and gold armor gleaming under the sunlight. He held a sword out toward them, eyes holding the same wicked spark of amusement that Kiros had seen in Kuja’s face.

“Kam’lanaut!” Laguna exclaimed, holding his gun ready. “What’re you doing here?”

Kiros tensed every muscle in his body, ready to spring to action at a moment’s notice. Two Manikins waited at Kam’lanaut’s side, one of which resembled Kuja. It was the same one that had attacked Kiros when he first found himself in this world.

“How were you freed from that prison?” Kuja asked, floating inches off of the ground. He winced. “Something happened. We’re missing a few memories, aren’t we?”

“I saw that new warrior there, traveling alone,” said Kam’lanaut, gesturing toward Kiros with his sword. “I thought I would give him a warm welcome to this world.”

Kiros readied his katars. “You set those Manikins on me.”

“How dare you present that ugly thing to me,” said Kuja, magic flickering in his hands as he glared at his copy. “Begone, before we use force.”

“You think you’re such a hero now, don’t you, Kuja?” said Kam’lanaut, his grip slackening on his sword. The same mask of detached amusement still hung on his face. “Need I remind you of the horrors you tried to commit, not so long ago? And that was just in this world – who knows what terrible villainy you carried out in your own to be summoned by Spiritus?”

Kiros’s eyes flicked to Kuja, whose face twisted into a snarl. “You know nothing about me, Kam’lanaut. You’ve been too busy sniveling at your brother’s boots.”

Kam’lanaut scowled at him, but rather than saying anything in response, he vanished in a flash of light.

“What a coward,” said Kuja, shrugging. “And one who can’t even take a basic insult. Let us dispose of this trash.”

The Kuja Manikin rose up high, magic building above its head. It unleashed a rain of energy, ripping up wood and earth from the ground as Kiros and Laguna took cover. The roar of gunfire broke through the clearing while the real Kuja retaliated with his own spells, sparks of circling magic converging on his enemy.

The second Manikin dashed toward Kiros and with a start he realized it was fashioned after himself. Its katars lashed out at Kiros, leaping and twisting through his counters in a perfect mirror of his own attacks. They found themselves in a dance of constantly dodging and revolving around each other, both unable to score a hit, and Kiros wondered if it was capable of tiring out. A flare of magic erupted beneath the Manikin’s feet, and Kiros snapped his blade out on a reflex without taking the time to think of the source of the distraction.

He slashed across the Manikin’s chest, making it stumble backward, but it barely reacted otherwise – it would have been nice if one of the others told him these things didn’t feel pain. He pushed forward, using his momentum to leap over the Manikin’s shoulder and stab it in the neck from behind. Rather than bleeding, it burst and crumbled into crystalline dust. He found himself grinning in relief. He hadn’t pulled off that little maneuver in years, and it felt good to move like this again.

Across the clearing, Laguna finished off the second Manikin with a well-timed bullet, and in the briefest moment when it shattered to pieces just like its partner, Kiros thought he saw sorrow flash across Kuja’s face.


KIROS


After they had procured the oil Laguna and Kuja needed and brought it back to the airship in little glass vials, Laguna introduced Kiros to the others. The affection everyone felt for each other was apparent, the airship more lively than he could have imagined, and though a little overwhelming he had the feeling he would like it here. Laguna had chosen his company well.

After they had taken to the skies again, Kiros found himself looking out over the deck toward the distant clouds, wondering when Ward might arrive. He froze mid-stretch when he heard a voice from someone approaching behind him.

“Welcome to the party,” Kuja said. “Now that you’re here, I don’t need to spend so much time with that fool Laguna. Thank you for relieving me of that.”

“That is a rather unkind way of saying you think I am here to take your place at Laguna’s side,” Kiros pointed out, turning toward him. “Unless you truly are a villain of some sort, after all, like that Kam’lanaut said. But I believe he was wrong – don’t think I didn’t notice how you saved me back there.”

He expected Kuja to scoff at him, but instead his gaze went to the sky, perhaps at something Kiros couldn’t see. “Kam’lanaut doesn’t know the half of it. You strike me as the sort of person who wouldn’t run away from the things I’ve done. Spending time with that fool Laguna helps me pretend it happened a long time ago.”

“It’s okay to call him a ‘friend,’ you know,” said Kiros. “Or your comrade. Though I will admit, he can be a fool sometimes.”

That got a hint of a smile out of Kuja, which Kiros matched.

“Ah, it’s good to see that you two are getting along now!” said Laguna, approaching them with two people he dimly remembered to be named Layle and Keiss. “Kuja, I just wanted to say – none of that stuff that Kam’lanaut said matters, and, uh… even though Kiros is here, it doesn’t mean we can’t still hang out. We’re friends, aren’t we? Kiros and I have been buddies for nearly twenty years, so I hope you can call him your friend too.”

Kuja tensed and anger flashed across his face. “How dare you presume I would feel such things! You really are a sentimental fool. I have had enough of this for today.”

He pushed past Layle as he strode across the deck at a fast pace, and Layle only shrugged. “That went about as well as I expected,” he said.

“Thank you all for looking after Laguna in my stead,” said Kiros, folding his hands behind his back after Kuja departed. “Our friend Ward would be grateful for it too, I’m sure, if he were here. Laguna can be a bit of a handful at times, I know, but I am here now.”

“Hey, I’m still here,” said Laguna, rubbing the back of his neck. “And I shouldn’t have to remind you that I’m the president of a whole country.”

“Trust me,” said Keiss, glancing toward Layle. “I can relate to your struggles.”

Layle crossed his arms. “I took care of myself for years before you came along!”

Kiros followed Kuja to go below deck. “Ah, but what would you do without people like us encouraging you to greatness?”


Abilities

Kiros Seagill (Fists)

15: Expert Slice

35: Mental Pain

EX: Blood Pain

LD: Deadly Dance

FR: Flawless Second (with Keiss)

BT: Bloodshower Festival

BT Theme: "Ride On"

Alternate Skin: Esthar presidential aide robes, Galbadian soldier armor

I had a harder time coming up with his abilities than I expected to. "Blood Pain" is his Limit from VIII, and I believe "Mental Pain" and "Deadly Dance" I took from Record Keeper. The rest of these are original, though. He's probably a turn stealing physical attacker - possibly even a linked attacker. Katars generally go over the hand like claw weapons that show up throughout the series, so I classified them as Fist weapons rather than Daggers. He's got some pretty nasty ability names for such a nice guy, doesn't he?

Kiros's BT theme was a bit tough, but I ended up going with Mrfipp's suggestion from his Reddit posts on this subject! "Ride On" is the airship theme when you get the Ragnarok. I was tempted to do "The Man With the Machine Gun" again, even though Laguna already has it! It's just too fitting. His FR partner of choice should be obvious from the end of this chapter ;)

Notes:

That's it for now -- next one will be the official first chapter of Act 5. Please comment and tell me if you enjoyed!

Chapter 6: A5C1, Part 1: Vermilion Wings

Notes:

So I mentioned in a previous author's note that this will have XVI spoilers. You may not have expected a XVI character so soon, but in this part they are very light spoilers. It will get worse later.

I also never revealed the reason behind the Force pairings in the earlier chapters, so here you go:

Tyro with Papalymo: Both are scholars (lowercase scholar, not the job) characterized as the best student of their powerful mentor. For the record, I decided Papalymo will have a different partner -- Vivi is the only character who shows up twice and that bugs me, haha.

Trey with Tyro: Both are students driven by the desire to study and learn, sometimes to the detriment of other things.

Mustadio with Zell: Both are the best with machinery among their group, and often a source of comedic relief. Zell also collects guns despite not wielding them.

Ryne with Rinoa: Both have a mysterious power given to them by another, and a connection to a surly gunblade wielder. Ryne is essentially a stand-in for Rinoa in XIV's Eden raid storyline, which is a huge shoutout to VIII in general.

Cid Haze with Xezat: Both are from a different world/continent that the heroes initially didn't know about, and use their skill with technology to save the day.

Kiros with Keiss: Both act as support and number two to their friend, who is more of a protagonist, and wield small bladed weapons.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opus Divinitas

Act 5, Chapter 1, Part 1: Vermilion Wings


Joshua Rosfield ( Final Fantasy XVI )

Voiced by: Natsumi Fujiwara

Second son of the Archduke of Rosaria, and Clive’s younger brother whom he has always adored. Awakening as the Dominant of Phoenix at a young age despite being frail and bookish, he had a heavy burden placed upon his shoulders as the most powerful person in Rosaria. He was believed to have lost his life in an incident that later came to be known as the “Night of Flames,” an event which shook the realm.

Joshua (Child)


Ravus nox Fleuret ( Final Fantasy XV )

Voiced by: Yuichi Nakamura

High Commander of the Niflheim army despite losing his family and home to them. Elder brother to the Oracle Lunafreya, he cares for her deeply even though he blames and hates her betrothed, Noctis, for his perceived abandonment of Tenebrae. His arm was replaced with magitek after a failed attempt to wield the Ring of the Lucii so he could become the King of Light rather than Noctis, though he later comes to support Noctis as the True King instead.

Ravus


Feolthanos ( Final Fantasy XII: Revenant Wings )

Voiced by: Akio Otsuka

An aegyl from Lemurés with designs on the land of Ivalice below. Extending his life with auracite, he is the ancestor of all feol viera and stole the anima – the souls – of all his aegyl followers to make them easier to control. Using the power of auracite, he became something of a god to his people.

Feolthanos


FEOLTHANOS


Feolthanos slumbered. While he slumbered, he dreamt. 

He often visited the realm of dreams during his long imprisonment on Lemurés. With the floating Purvama sealed away from the rest of Ivalice, he had little else to do except bide his time and wait. Enjoyment scarcely found him anymore, but occasionally the subconscious fancies of the mind occupied him. Memories of long forgotten days. He suspected it had to do with the anima of his people he had absorbed into himself, or the fact that Lemurés was rich with Mist and the lines between the realms of Yarhi and men were blurred.

This time, he saw something unusual while he slept. A hume boy with red wings, like an aegyl, his magicks blinding in vermilion brilliance. He stood before a machine of such resplendence that even through the dream Feolthanos could feel his heart quickening through the weight of its aura.

His eyes opened. As ever, his waking mind brought with it recent memories when the haze of sleep lifted. He had perished. He knew this. But somehow, here he sat upon his throne in the Keep of Forgotten Time as if his death had never happened.

He knew little of machinery, in truth. He had slept so long in Lemurés that the innovations of mortals in the world below eluded him. But Feolthanos knew he needed the power of the one from his dreams to renew his holy crusade of Ivalice. As if he were a prophet or dream reader divining the Ring of Pacts, he felt his vision engraving its name on his mind, further convincing him of the righteousness of his mission.

Alexander .


ASHE


Despite being so high up in the air, the breeze on the Falcon ’s deck never felt cold or overpowering. Ashe felt that it was yet another miracle of this strange world that they were able to stand together and hear each other over the roar of the open sky.

Even so, a chill descended on the gathered party as they discussed Ultimecia’s ominous parting words. Ashe stood beside Rydia and Yuna, and Hope leaned against the mainmast with his hands in his pockets. Ryne, Terra, and Garnet stood opposite them, while Enna Kros lingered outside their circle gazing at the sky with a full mug of coffee.

Rydia wrung her fingers together, her sleeves billowing in the wind. “Mog, is it true what Ultimecia said? That the reason we can’t die in this world is that the eidolons are protecting us?”

“That’s right, kupo,” said Mog, floating in the center of their circle without any of his usual cheer. “Materia and Spiritus themselves figured it out shortly before they turned into crystal. In this world, kupo, there is one that represents each elemental force, for a total of twelve. We have been borrowing their power this whole time throughout our adventure, but we never knew they were that closely tied to the thread of this world!”

“Are the eidolons the same in most of your worlds?” Yuna asked. “In mine, they are called aeons, and several that we’ve met here are unfamiliar to me.”

Mog shook his head, his pom swinging back and forth. “No, kupo,” he said. “I don’t know why these twelve are most prominent in this world, but I think they’re different in all your worlds, kupo. Like all of you, the ones we’ve met here aren’t even native to this world – they come from the World of Illusions.”

Terra clasped her hands over her chest. “That is another similarity between many of our worlds,” she said. “Maybe Y’shtola was right and that is something we should be thinking about more. I’m not sure what it means for me… I don’t think I have told many of you, but in my world they’re called espers, and my father was one of them.”

Ashe found herself agreeing with Terra. She didn’t know why they had all overlooked the multitude of similarities between each world. She knew in just her own world there were varieties of cultures and people, and so much of the world beyond Ivalice that she knew precious little about. Could those lands really be like home, as similar to her as the friends she had made in this world? Or was this the anomaly?

Instead of voicing all that, she decided not to steer them away from the topic at hand. “We call them espers in my world as well. But I believe they all have different origins, as none of the denizens of the World of Illusions we have met are familiar to me. In Ivalice, espers are creations and servants of the gods, cast down and bound to glyphs to serve us in punishment for their rebellion. Some of you may recall that Vayne once summoned Ultima, the High Seraph, against us – she was the leader of their unholy uprising.”

Terra frowned at her. “That sounds awful.”

“Indeed it was,” Ashe responded. “Yet we, too, eventually fought to break the gods’ hold over Ivalice, so the espers lent us their power.”

Enna Kros clapped her hands together as if to dispel the gloom Ashe’s words brought upon them. Her coffee mug had vanished. “Now, now, Terra – there is nothing wrong with being part esper. I am too, after all. It’s kind of why I’m God.”

“Not the sort of god that Ashe just mentioned, I trust,” said Hope.

She covered her mouth in a polite laugh. “No, no, nothing of the sort. Or do I truly hold Grymoire in an iron fist? You’ll have to ask Lann and Reynn.” When no one else laughed, she cleared her throat. “Anyway, I think the one we should seek first is Alexander. I may be a bit biased, but he is always quite reasonable and should be able to tell us what is happening to break their protection over us, like Ultimecia said.”

“I am in favor,” said Garnet, wrapping both hands around her staff. “Alexander is the protector eidolon of Alexandria, my home. Eiko and I summoned him once to defend it from Kuja’s assault.”

“Me, too,” said Hope, standing up straight and raising his hand. “As a l’Cie, I have an eidolon partner and he is mine.”

“How can we find him?” Yuna asked. “Mog, can you please take us to the World of Illusions as you always do?”

“Um… about that,” said Mog, his pom drooping. “Ever since Materia and Spiritus went into their crystals, I have been unable to connect us to the World of Illusions, kupo. We’re going to have to find the summons the long way.”

“Alexander is a holy eidolon of divine light,” said Garnet. “Can we not follow his light as we do for everyone we’ve met in this world?”

“It’s not the same kind of light, kupo,” said Mog. “Alexander is Light light.”

Everyone fell silent after that, but if they were all feeling the same way Ashe did after his statement, it was not out of reverent awe or confusion about the lack of leads. It was because, to Ashe, Mog’s words felt a bit like nonsense. The distinction meant nothing to her.

Ryne folded her hands behind her back and cleared her throat. “I think I have an idea,” she said. “My world doesn’t normally have Primals – or eidolons, or espers – but I am somewhat familiar with them from Thancred and the others. We did have beings called Sin Eaters, though. Monsters born from the Flood of Light that ravaged my world. As the Oracle of Light, I have the ability to sense them. Perhaps I can use it to help us track this Alexander.”

As the others praised Ryne and considered the merits of the idea, Ashe found her gaze drifting skyward. Ramza had once mentioned to her that he was familiar with the espers in her world, but to him they were demons.

So which sort of being awaited them, now that their protections were failing?


LUNAFREYA


When Ryne detected a powerful source of Light far above them, Lunafreya couldn’t help but marvel at the idea. How wonderful some of the other worlds seemed, with landmasses that floated high above the clouds. Some among them reacted with excitement. Others with simple curiosity. Yet others regarded the idea with uneasy tension. Perhaps floating continents varied as much as all of their worlds did.

Cid Haze was one who had the experience of flying that high. Stating that the Falcon needed necessary adjustments, he led the other engineers in modifications to their airship that allowed it to ascend even higher. Once that was completed, Luna ventured out to the deck where she found her husband and his friends to watch the floating isles come into view.

Massive islands of earth and crystal appeared above them, parting the clouds like waves in the sea. Greenery draped from them with ribbons of waterfalls that dispersed into the sky. Crystal columns grew from the islands like splayed wings, natural and glittering, and so beautiful that Luna thought they might ripple like they were real.

Noctis took her hand and she felt her heart leap. “You really like the view, huh?” he asked, a soft smile gracing his lips.

“It is as if from a story,” she said. Though she had to admit, it paled in comparison to being able to share this with him. “From which world do they hail, I wonder?”

“Ours,” said a voice behind her. Both Luna and Noct looked over their shoulders to see Vaan. “I know this place. It’s called Lemurés – Llyud’s home.”

They followed his gaze across the deck to their winged companion, who stared up at the islands as they approached with spear in hand. Without looking back at any of them, his wings extended and he leapt from the deck, flying toward the nearest island.

“Excited to see home, I guess?” Noctis asked.

The airship followed, engines humming as the propellers spun and they ascended through the clouds. Luna and the others went below deck again to avoid getting wet, but she emerged again as soon as she felt the airship land. Eager to disembark, she and Noctis found themselves alongside Vaan, Ignis, Aranea, Balthier, and Penelo as they stepped off of the airship and into a jungle.

The ground was soft with moss and moist soil, the air thick with fog and the smell of wet earth. Vegetation with leaves bigger than her head hung high, with lances of sunbeams piercing the canopy above them. Insects chittered around them and birds called to each other in song. Luna half expected such a place to be stifling in its heat, but it felt rather cool.

Ahead, they found Llyud standing and staring into the jungle. “We are in Tswarra, Isle of the Lost,” he said. “A holy place for the aegyl.”

“Few from our world have ventured to Lemurés,” said Balthier, leaning his gun over his shoulder. “Mostly us sky pirates. For untold years, this place had been shielded from the outside world, and once it was discovered many came in search of treasures.”

Luna braced herself with her trident on the unsteady ground as she walked to Llyud’s side. “I can imagine you would have complicated feelings about that,” she said. “All those outsiders coming to plunder your home.”

Vaan scratched his head, averting his eyes. “Not like we knew people lived here at the time…”

“I bear no ill will toward my friends,” Llyud said, offering Luna a smile. “After all, they helped save it.”

Ahead of them, a white shape appeared from the fog, like a wraith. Luna readied her trident at the same time as the others drew their weapons. The white shape solidified into a man with a long coat and a steel arm, and as he came closer Luna felt her breath stop.

“Well, how about that,” said Aranea, confirming what Luna saw. “The high commander, in the flesh.”

“Ravus,” she managed to get out. “Brother. Is it truly you?”

Once he came closer, she saw her disbelief mirrored in his face, one that she longed to see again ever since coming to this world.

“Lunafreya?” he said, mouth working to form words. “Twice now I thought you dead and twice you have returned to me. How cruel it would be for the chancellor to play his tricks again.”

She dropped her trident as she approached him, placing one hand tenderly upon his cheek. “There is no trickery this time, I assure you. You and I both live, yet we are in another world that lets it be so. Noct is here with us, as is Ardyn – and many others besides.”

He leaned into her touch with closed eyes, but at the mention of Noctis and Ardyn he opened them again, his jaw clenching. His magitek hand went over hers and he looked past her toward her companions as their hands fell back to their sides. “So you two have finally reunited. I am… heartened for you, sister.”

“Hey there,” said Noct, offering him a wave. He looked hesitant to approach, kicking his toe into the dirt. “Er, about the last time we met…”

“You put me out of my misery,” said Ravus. “I remember. And I thank you for it.”

“No hard feelings, then,” Noct said, grinning. “You’re welcome to join us.”

“Though be warned that Ardyn himself does travel among us,” said Ignis, putting a hand on Noct’s shoulder as he stepped forward to his friend’s side. “Many of us have put his dark deeds behind us, but it would not be remiss of you if you struggled to do the same. I remember the occasion on which we joined our blades together, and would gladly do so again.”

“Indeed,” said Ravus, nodding to him. “It will not be easy to come face to face with him. I want nothing more than to thrust my blade through his black heart.”

Luna let out an unsteady breath. That was one aspect of her brother's arrival to this world that she had dreaded. The anger in him had the potential to overflow, and while she could not blame him for it, she also wished for Ardyn to find the light again.

“Glad to have you added to our cause. Before we do any thrusting through hearts, shall we continue our venture across this isle?” suggested Balthier. She dearly wanted to thank him for the change in subject. “We’ve much to see and investigate, as we do not yet know the reason for the isle’s appearance, nor why Alexander’s domain is here.”

Penelo gave Balthier a disapproving frown. “Can’t you give Luna a moment to have a heartfelt reunion with her brother?”

Lunafreya gestured with her palm to Penelo to indicate her assent. “No, Balthier is correct. We have much to do here – and I can always speak with Ravus as we venture across Tswarra.”


RAVUS


When he had found himself in an unfamiliar jungle and heard the telltale rumble of an airship’s engines, he had rushed to it expecting to find an imperial warship. Never did he dream he would find his sister on board, together with the True King – revived from their untimely ends to fight in an endless war in a different world. Hardly the fate he had ever wanted for his sister, yet according to her their journey had been one filled with unexpected joys. Joys she wished for Ravus to share.

“Here, we can be free of our duties,” she said.

Free from the duties that were killing her, yet fighting alongside the man who had dealt the fatal blow.

“Just the kind of life I like,” said Aranea, walking past them with her boots crunching the underbrush. “So I shouldn’t have to call you ‘High Commander’ anymore, eh?”

“As long as I do not need to address you as ‘Commodore,’” he said in return.

“Llyud, would you mind telling us what we may expect to find here?” Ignis asked the winged boy, scanning the jungle for any signs of trouble to his liege. This world had even returned the vision Ignis had lost upon wielding the Ring of the Lucii, it seemed. “What might draw a being such as Alexander to this place?”

“As Balthier mentioned, Lemurés is a holy land that was sealed off from the rest of Ivalice, keeping my people in isolation. One aegyl, our leader and god, stole our anima to keep us subservient to him during all those years, extending his life with the power of auracite. The crystals are plentiful here.”

Penelo scowled. “What Feolthanos did was awful. I hope we never have to meet him here.”

“If the trend holds, I’d expect him sooner rather than later,” said Balthier, with wry amusement. “If Lemurés is here, he may not be far behind. Though young Filo or Kytes are a possibility.”

“They’d be much better,” Vaan said, leaping over a fallen log. “None of us really have great memories of the rainwood, though.”

“We met Mydia here as well,” said Penelo. “She was the Judge of Wings, a knight in service to Feolthanos. I’d prefer if she didn’t show up here, either.”

“Such negativity doesn’t suit you, Penelo,” said Luna, accepting Noct’s hand to climb over the log. Her clothes didn’t exactly suit a traipse through the jungle. “This world is a new start for everyone.”

Ravus spoke his thoughts faster than he could rein them in. “From what little I have gleaned of this world so far, some may not change at all,” he said. “Here you are, sister, on a journey to forge pacts with yet another Astral. Must you carry on endangering yourself?”

“It’s not the same,” Noctis said at once. “Alexander isn’t one of our Astrals.”

Luna put a hand on her husband’s shoulder, unperturbed by either of their comments. “I do this not out of my duty as an Oracle, but as one of many who are fighting to keep this world safe. I look forward to meeting this Alexander, but it should have no adverse effect upon my body as forging covenants with the Astrals do.”

Ravus lowered his gaze to the path ahead. If only she knew what it looked like from the outside, for him to have to watch her become more and more frail while he could do nothing to stop her. Even an armed escort back to Tenebrae did not keep her from her mission. “Very well, then,” he said.

She leaned forward to catch his eye, smiling. “I thank you for your concern, though,” she said.

He looked up, wondering if he should say something more, when he saw a white dog sitting on a wide, low hanging branch of a tree behind her. He recognized that dog. Before he could point it out to Lunafreya, it barked to get all of their attention.

Noctis gaped. “Wait, that’s – ”

“Pryna!” Luna exclaimed, in an expression of shock so unlike her. 

“Is that yours?” Penelo asked, beaming with her hands clasped under her chin. “That’s such a beautiful dog!”

Rather than running toward her master, Pryna’s tail wagged and she leapt off her perch as if weighing nothing, and ran off further into the rainwood.

“Let us follow,” said Luna, gesturing toward Pryna with her trident. “She is a dear friend, but Pryna is no mere dog – she is a messenger of the gods, along with her brother Umbra. Perhaps she is leading us to Alexander’s domain.”

“Be warned,” said Llyud, as they all moved to follow. “When we made camp here in the Zwaua Rainwood before, the isle visited visions upon us, and they are the source of great dangers here.”

“But we’ve got to make sure,” said Noctis, rushing ahead.

Vaan nodded to him. “Yeah – in this world, anything can happen.”


BASCH


Basch cut down the last of the lamiae that had assaulted them, turning to his companions as he shook his head free of the monsters’ beguiling influence. “The Mist is thick here,” he said. “Loathe am I to say it, but it may mean we are on the right path.”

“Indeed,” said Fran, returning fallen arrows to her quiver. “And the monsters ‘twixt here and the airship have grown yet more fierce. Mayhaps we should summon the other search parties to us.”

“I would sooner wait until we find something of note,” said Basch. “Some sign of this holy esper.”

Iroha, the third member of their party, pointed ahead. “What of that black dog?”

Basch and Fran turned to look. He was certain he didn’t see anything there before – it was as if it had sprung from the pond next to it. Too small to be a war hound, it didn’t seem like any sort of monster to him, with its jet black fur and gray around the eyes. It yipped at them, then turned to the north to point with its nose.

“A grim portent, or a new ally?” Fran mused.

“I hope the latter,” said Basch, leading the way to follow it.

Their guide kept an easy pace, trotting happily through the dense jungle and waiting for them every time it got too far ahead. They passed roaring falls, white with rage that would eventually be devoured by the clouds below. The dog led them past parts of the jungle so thick and so dense that Basch would have thought they’d have gotten lost if left to their own devices. It even seemed to avoid most of the monsters, as if projecting an aura of sanctuary.

Eventually they stopped in a clearing bathed in sunlight. There, among the moss, they found a boy with his arms around a white dog. The black one ran to their side, circling around them as it nuzzled against the laughing boy, and before Basch could offer him a greeting he saw several of their companions emerge from the greenery on the other side of the clearing. Lady Lunafreya, Noctis, Vaan, Balthier, and the others all looked just as surprised to see him as he was to see them. A man in white stood next to Lunafreya, though Basch didn’t recognize him.

“Umbra, too,” said Lunafreya, smiling as she approached the center of the clearing. “Apologies if my companions caused you any trouble. My name is Lunafreya,” she said to the boy. “And those dogs are Pryna and Umbra.”

“None at all,” said the boy, smiling with his arm over the white dog. “I love dogs. They’ve kept me safe here, and led you to me.” He stood and gave them a formal bow, and that combined with his manner of dress indicated to Basch that he was some kind of nobility, whichever world he hailed from. “My name is Joshua. Would you… would you know my brother Clive, by chance? I’ve never been to such a place before, and I think he would like to see it. He’s a great warrior.”

“Afraid not,” said Balthier, bumping his fist against Fran’s as the two rejoined each other’s side. “Though it seems someone out there decided you are a great warrior yourself, if you’ve been summoned here.”

“Is… is that so?” Joshua asked. He seemed as if he didn’t want to leave Pryna’s side, clutching her fur with both hands. Pryna, for her part, kept brushing against him.

“It’s nice to meet you, Joshua,” said Penelo, dragging Vaan over as well. “C’mon, Vaan, say hi!”

“Ow!” he said, stumbling as she pulled him. “What’s that for? I can say hi on my own.”

Joshua looked as if he tried to restrain himself, but he let out a laugh into his hand.

“You don’t have to be nervous around us,” said Noctis, putting a hand on his hip. “We’ve got plenty of kids your age back on our airship.”

Joshua’s eyes widened. “You have an airship? What is this place?”

“You’ve been very brave to be on your own here,” said Iroha, kneeling next to Joshua. “But you are in a different world, summoned here as we have. Perhaps others from your world are with us, but if not, I should be glad to offer you my spear. Phoenix and I will protect you.”

Joshua’s arms wrapped tighter around Pryna. “Phoenix? You know who I am?”

Iroha furrowed her brow. “Do you have a connection to the Phoenix as well? Is that why I feel this compulsion to aid you…?”

The ground shook, and far away above the trees they saw a great pillar of light pierce the sky. The magicks rang out in deafening fury, sending a shockwave across the jungle that bent the trees. The pillar of light seared Basch’s eyes, but the flash died down as quickly as it came, and he furiously blinked away the spots of brightness.

“By the gods,” said Basch, checking that no one had been harmed. “Was that Alexander?”

“No,” said Llyud, flying to the treetops. “I believe that was one of the auraliths, the crystals from which the auracite are born. There has been a grand summoning of Yarhi. We must go to them.”

Joshua tentatively released his grip on Pryna. “Alexander is there,” he said, as everyone turned to him. “He spoke to me earlier. He says he needs your help.”


Abilities

Ravus nox Fleuret (Swords)

15: White Lion

35: Dark Spark
EX: Daemonic Surge
LD: Tenebrous Sword
FR: Alba Slash (with Jegran)
BT: Last Rites

BT Theme: "RAVUS AETERNA"

 

I imagine Ravus to be a Dark and Lightning-elemental attacker, with a mechanic wherein his daemonification worsens as the battle goes on, making his attacks stronger and his turns more frequent. Maybe not the best idea in terms of balancing, but as I mentioned I'm not great at that part of it (lol). Of these abilities, only his BT actually exists in game as a technique he uses when he is a party member in Episode Ignis. The rest are all original names, but the central mechanic (and his BT theme!) comes from his boss fight in the main game.


Joshua Rosfield (Swords)

15: Rising Flames

35: Fireball

EX: Cleansing Embers

LD: Heatwave

FR: Undying Will (with Iroha)

BT: Flames of Rebirth

BT Theme: "Away"

Joshua has a mix of ability name sources. His 15CP ability is the default Phoenix skill, and I imagine it turns him into a launcher. Fireball he uses in the segment of the game where he is playable in the beginning, transformed into Phoenix. Cleansing Embers is original, and I figure it is the barrier skill he uses at times, which enables him to defend and heal the party. Heatwave is another one of Clive's Phoenix skills, used most often as a counterattack, but I am not sure I envision Joshua being a counterattacker. His Burst is Phoenix's iconic skill. He is mostly a fire magic attacker with some healing and defensive abilities.

His BT theme plays when playing as Phoenix against Ifrit and Bahamut.

Notes:

Part 2 should be here hopefully by next week! Please comment and let me know if you enjoyed this one!

These new abilities and Force partners may also be pretty straightforward, but what do you think?

Chapter 7: A5C1, Part 2: Ode to Light

Notes:

So I read the first part of Act 4's official final chapter. My intent was to leave the events of that chapter intentionally vague for this story, in case I needed to retcon anything because they all went home or something. But what are the odds they'd face an Ultimecia who wanted to do Time Compression, just like in my Interlude? She spent the whole of OO not trying to do that yet!

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Act 5, Chapter 1, Part 2: Ode to Light


JOSHUA


Joshua heaved in great breaths as he struggled to keep up with the others, carefully maneuvering his way around tangles of tree roots and pits of deceptively soft soil and mud. He stumbled and wheezed, his limbs exhausted so soon after they had started running toward the crystal structure they called an auralith (not a Mothercrystal?), and had to question the veracity of the claim that he was some great warrior summoned to fight on the behalf of gods he didn’t know.

Clive was the warrior. It should have been Clive they summoned. It always should have been Clive, just like with Phoenix.

This world was hot and sticky and so unlike Rosaria, with so many great knights and fighters who could wield magic without the blessings of any Eikons and who did not seem to be Bearers. Even the other children, like Eiko, wielded powerful magic of their own and suffered none of the frailties that afflicted Joshua. What would Mother think of him trying to keep up with all of these people, hiding behind them while they battled the monsters on the way? She would be livid about him being so close to the danger and the dirt, even with these strange new allies defending him.

An enormous flying insect launched at Joshua from the trees, and though his first reaction was to cower he gripped his shortsword and closed his eyes and cried out as he swung, a trail of flames following his blade. The monster shrieked and clicked its mandibles to attack again, but a barrage of ice magic converged on it and the insect crumpled to the ground.

“Careful,” said his savior, a man named Kurasame. He called ahead to the front of their party as the rest of the assaulting monsters were dispatched. “Llyud, we should stop for the moment.”

Joshua’s hand shook as he gripped his sword. He wanted to drop it. But Clive’s lessons rang through his head, as did his father’s words to fulfill his duty. They spoke louder than Mother.

“Apologies for my lapse in attention,” said Iroha, bowing to Joshua. “That insect escaped my notice.”

“It’s… it’s okay,” he responded, panting. In some ways, her excessive formality reminded him of the way Clive would behave in public. “Do you need any healing?”

“I think you should be worrying about yourself first!” said Eiko, casting her own curative spells on Llyud. “Do you need something for your coughing? You should ask Rem!”

“We need to find Alexander,” said Joshua. “He needs help the most.”

He knew it from the moment he found himself in this jungle. A searing light woke him and a booming voice reverberated through his mind. It was like no voice he had ever heard before, but he knew it to be a desperate plea for aid.

“Findeth the gods’ chosen guardians… We cannot suffer this defilement… Mine brethren keen…”

“Do you have some sort of connection with Alexander in your world?” Aphmau asked, kneeling at his side. “How have you heard his voice?”

“I am not sure what Alexander is,” Joshua admitted, frowning. If it was some sort of Eikon like they said, he did not know why he would have been chosen to bear that message. He already had Phoenix. But Eikons were not known for having a will of their own, and no one in the history of Rosarian Dominants had ever divined Phoenix’s words. This was something altogether different – and he wasn’t sure if he had a longing for Alexander to speak with him again, or shame because it should have been Phoenix. “My brother would know what to do…”

“You look up to your brother, huh?” said Aphmau, smiling. “I have a brother, too. Things were always cold between us, and through much of my childhood I wished it could have been better. I always thought he was the strong one, and I was weak.”

“I’m sorry,” said Joshua, because he didn’t know what else to say. “Clive is my shield. He’s always been there to look out for me.”

“I am envious that you’ve grown up with a relationship as valuable as that,” said Iroha.

“My brother sought Alexander’s power in our world,” Aphmau continued. “And… I’d thought I lost him. He wanted to wield Alexander as a weapon for the good of our empire, and that power consumed him. He’s better now, though, and for the first time in as long as I can remember, he has been supporting me. It’s… nice. I think I can finally understand how it feels to have an older sibling like that. Alexander, thankfully, is no longer a threat to my nation.”

“Your Alexander sounds frightening,” said Eiko, hugging herself. “When Garnet and I summoned him together, he was really powerful, but he saved us.”

Kurasame continued walking down the path, speaking as he passed Llyud, who listened silently. “In my world, summoning a being like Alexander required a massive sacrifice. Hundreds lost their lives just in the act of summoning, and thousands more in the destruction left in its wake. Let’s hope the same thing doesn’t happen again.”

Joshua stared up at the auralith and shivered after Kurasame’s ominous words. With a different Alexander in each of their worlds, he did not know what to expect of this one.

The same feeling of dread from when he journeyed to Phoenix Gate weighed in his stomach. The memories of fire, heat, and blood stung at his eyes and he wiped away the falling tears before the others could see.


RAVUS


“Here we go – Heaven’s Pillar. Lofty name, huh?”

Ravus stepped up to Noct’s side as they stared at the mountain of crystal stretching to the heavens. “Arda, Llyud called it,” he said in response to Noct. “A fitting appellation for a mountain range of crystal high in the clouds.”

The magic that suffused through the auralith earlier had mostly dissipated into the air, a glittering wind heavy with a substance that Balthier had called ‘Mist.’ No ordinary mist, Ravus assumed – especially as it bore an army of summoned espers to patrol the skies. They looked out at the auralith from a place called Heaven’s Vigil, where the jungle ended and the Ymir Qul Range began. The mountains floated among both clouds and Mist, blending into each other as if like a hazy dream. 

While the airship bore most of their fighters to battle in the skies, Ravus accompanied Noctis and several others on an excursion beneath the espers’ notice, deep into the Ymir Qul Underground where they intended to ascend through Heaven’s Pillar from the inside – and then to where they believed they would find Alexander, at the top. Someone had to summon all the espers, and according to Vaan and Llyud they expected one of their foes to be behind it.

“Your Majesty,” Ravus said, not taking his eyes off of the roiling Mist ahead. “Before we go – ”

“Drop the ‘Your Majesty’ bit,” Noctis interrupted him. He glanced at Ravus with a raised eyebrow. “Not even sure why you’re starting that now. Just ‘Noct’ is fine.”

“It was an acknowledgement,” said Ravus. He flexed the fingers on his Magitek arm. “And the beginning of an apology. For many years, I had falsely blamed you and King Regis for the fall of Tenebrae. I knew it was folly, and I knew it was misblamed, yet it was anger born of my own incompetence and failure. I’d thought I could be the King of Light, and that such power would be wasted on you. But now… Now, I give you my sword, ever and always.”

Noctis put a hand on his shoulder. The Magitek thrummed ever so faintly under his touch the same way it did under Luna’s, in the brief moment when she had touched him. If only this world had restored his old arm the same way it had restored sight to Ignis. He wanted to be rid of this accursed thing.

“I’m glad for it,” Noct said. “And, y’know, you and I are technically brothers now.”

“What a touching sentiment.”

The familiar voice made the daemonic energy within his Magitek arm pulse like blood. When Ravus turned to regard its source, he already had his sword in hand.

“I should cut you down where you stand,” Ravus said to Ardyn, face twisted into a scowl. “After what you did to me in Gralea. After murdering Lunafreya. After everything you’ve done.”

Ardyn offered no more than a shrug. “You’re free to try,” he said. Ravus hated the man’s constant nonchalance even when he only knew Ardyn as chancellor. “Your new bosom-brother certainly did. Regretfully, you’ll find that I am no less immortal here than I am in our own world – and unless you do something about that Alexander, your own mortality will come back in full force.”

“Ravus,” said Noct, holding out a hand. “Let him be.”

“You’d really join together with him?” Ravus asked, his stance like stone. “Trust him?”

“I wouldn’t go as far as to say I’d trust him,” Noctis said. “But he’s helped us a few times. Things are different in this world. We’re all alive again, the empire is gone. The strength that all of us bear is needed here.”

Ardyn flipped his hat and put it back on his head, smirking at Ravus. “It is indeed as he says. Though I still despise the Lucian royal family and everyone in it, I have even more of a bone to pick with the enemies you all face. While our goals align, you have nothing to worry about from me.”

Ravus narrowed his eyes. “You lack even a shred of remorse, don’t you?”

Ardyn’s smirk didn’t fade. “That word, I regret to say, is not in my vocabulary.”

“Luna forgave him,” Noctis said. “That’s enough for me. For now.”

That was enough for Ravus to lower his sword. He closed his eyes and took a deep breath, willing his anger to fade. It was a titanic effort. “If my sister insists, then I will stay my sword. But if he ever acts against us, I will spare no mercy.”

Ardyn glanced toward his Magitek arm, his face bearing an unreadable expression. “From one daemon to another, you have my word that I will not oppose or obstruct you and yours while our enemies are the same.”

Ravus clenched his jaw, turning his back on Ardyn’s cruelty as he made his way into the caves.


IROHA


Iroha followed from a distance as Joshua listened to Llyud speak of Lemurés. The boy was entranced as Llyud told him stories of the aegyl, his adventures with Vaan and the others, and the wonders of espers in this floating continent he called a Purvama. Even Iroha had to admire the marvels inside the caves as they made their way to the auralith – crystals in the rock hummed with energy, dust and shards lending an azure glow to the fungus and plants clinging to the walls.

“It’s like right out of a story,” said Joshua. She had to agree – it made her reminisce about the stories she had heard from her master. Reisenjima had beauty of its own, but much of her home had been devoured by the Emptiness. If places like this had existed there, they were long gone.

“What of your home, Joshua?” Llyud asked him. “I am curious to know about it. It has been a true joy to hear of all the other worlds, and we have yet to meet someone from yours.”

“Most of my days are spent in training and study, so I don’t get to go outside of Rosalith often,” said Joshua.

“Rosalith? Is that like an auralith?”

“Oh, no, sorry, it is the castle…”

Iroha smiled as she watched Joshua slowly become more comfortable around them. At first, he would only cling to Pryna and Umbra, but in such a short period of time he began to speak more outwardly, laugh and smile, and battle alongside them with fire spells rather than hide behind Iroha. He was more talented than Iroha had initially thought – he commanded powerful fire magic when facing his foes, and wove potent curative spells besides. He didn’t go into the details of his training, but Iroha suspected something to do with the Phoenix – her own inner fire flared up whenever he cast his spells. She could feel him like a flickering ember, growing in warmth as he became less withdrawn.

A beam of sunlight broke through a gap in the cave ceiling ahead, casting the embedded crystals in gold. The tunnel opened up into a wide cavern. On the floor among the stalagmites, Iroha spotted bullet casings – Prompto had already been through here, likely alongside Ignis and Gladio and the others in one of the parties assigned to ascend Heaven’s Pillar to find Alexander.

“How much further?” Iroha asked Llyud.

“Not far,” said Llyud, unfurling his wings. “We are nearly through Ymir Qul. I will fly outside and check our progress, as well as the state of the esper battle in the skies.”

Iroha and Joshua watched him ascend through the hole in the cave ceiling, then exchanged a glance with each other. Iroha suspected that he, too, wished to soar as easily through the sky. When Iroha continued walking, she heard a heavy wingbeat behind her and she turned to question why Llyud had returned so soon.

But it was not Llyud. This aegyl was an older man with a beard and black wings, like a raven’s. He looked at them with hardened eyes, sword bared but not pointed at them. With wings outstretched, he looked like he weighed nothing as his feet just barely touched the ground. Based on the descriptions offered to her by Llyud and the others, she knew who he was at once.

“Feolthanos,” she said, hefting her spear. “Joshua, please stay behind me.”

“It’s you,” he said, his voice surprisingly smooth. He looked past her directly at Joshua. “The child from my dream.”

Confused, Iroha took her eyes from Feolthanos to glance back at Joshua – a mistake that nearly cost her. His wings made no sound as he cut through the air and slammed his sword against the shaft of her spear with so much force that she almost fell backward into Joshua. She let his blade slide along the haft and brought the blunt end of her spear up to strike him in the knees. His wings carried him above the attack, giving him the freedom to strike her from above. Iroha dodged, then focused Phoenix’s energies at the end of her blade to strike upward at him.

Her fire soared, but Feolthanos enveloped himself in his black wings to defend from the heat, spreading them again to disperse her attack. He descended to fly along the ground in a low sweep, but she whirled to the side to dodge him. When she brought her spear around to strike him as he passed, his wings flared and struck her, knocking her off balance. She recovered just in time to prevent herself from being beheaded, fire coursing up the length of her spear to block the swing of his sword. 

“Yield to me,” Feolthanos said, eyes locked on hers. She saw no emotion in them – only emptiness. “Pitiful hume. Stand aside and know your place. I seek only the child borne by wings of brilliant flame.”

Iroha grit her teeth. “Joshua, run away! He is a powerful foe.”

“O-okay!” he said, going back down the tunnel from where they had come.

Wordless, Feolthanos disengaged from Iroha and soared above her, but she expected the movement and leapt as high as she could, cutting him along the torso with white hot steel.

She smirked as she landed. She may not have been a Dragoon, but she had picked up some things from Freya and Kain.

Feolthanos let out no more than a mere grunt after taking her attack, holding a hand to his bleeding and burned torso. Though he had stopped pursuing Joshua, his wings continued to beat as he hung higher up in the cavern. With his sword arm raised, magic swirled around him, summoning two espers that looked vaguely like masked aegyl from the Mist. One of them dove toward her like a swallow in flight while the other sped toward Joshua.

“Joshua!” she cried out in warning.

He turned in time to block the enemy’s spear swing with his sword, but the force of it knocked him to the ground. Fire erupted from his form, immolating the esper, but two more converged on Iroha before she could go help him.

“Stop!” Joshua yelled. “Leave us alone!”

She couldn’t handle Feolthanos and all of his summoned espers alone.

“Why?” she asked, hoping to stall. “Why do you want Joshua?”

But instead of answering, more espers poured in from the sky – fairies and bombs and zus, all of which descended on Iroha at the behest of Feolthanos.


GARNET


At the top of Arda, Heaven’s Pillar, they found a metal fortress.

They had been fortunate to discover teleportation glyphs within the Ymir Qul caverns that made their journey faster. With so many different paths and junctions, they had to travel in smaller groups. But it had all been for naught.

“I take it… this is Alexander?” said Kiros, the first to find his words as they all stopped and stared at the colossus. This high up, they heard nothing from the battle far below, only the roar of wind at the top of the world. But even further above them, an ancient keep floated.

This Alexander looked different from the one she knew at home. Rather than crenelated stone ramparts, it had massive legs that clung to the side of the auralith. Instead of angelic wings, it wore a crown of iron spires. But Garnet felt none of its protective aura, its ancient majesty. It just felt cold and empty.

“It is,” said Garnet, holding a hand to her chest. “Or rather, it appears to be.”

Aphmau stepped up to her side. “Maybe… maybe we just need to activate it?” she suggested with a worried frown.

“I bet we could do that by performing another summoning!” said Eiko, clutching her pendant.

Steiner held his sword up high. “I will defend you while you carry out your duty, Your Highness!”

“I think you’re getting a little ahead of yourself, big guy,” said Hope, crossing his arms in thought. “I’m not sure it’ll be that easy. Something feels… wrong.”

Garnet nodded and looked back at Hope. He had voiced exactly what she was feeling. “It’s as if… Alexander has lost its soul.”


JOSHUA


“Let me go!”

Feolthanos had Joshua in a grip as hard as steel as they flew away from Iroha in the caverns. But when his captor started to rise from the ground, Joshua found himself clinging to Feolthanos instead.

“You are needed,” said Feolthanos, his voice a low rumble. “For with your power I will reign absolute in my crusade against the gods of Ivalice.”

Joshua tried not to look at the clouds beneath them as Feolthanos carried him away from the island. Far away, the airship launched attacks at the hordes of espers assailing them from the skies. He had never felt so alone, so helpless – he wished Clive was here to save him. He wanted his father back.

“You mean… my powers as a Dominant?” Joshua asked.

“No,” he said. “Within you sleeps the anima of Alexander, gifted to your frail body for safekeeping for reasons I know not.”

Joshua screwed his eyes shut. He had no idea what Feolthanos meant; no inkling as to why he would have Alexander’s anima inside of him. But his words called to mind his mother’s lamentations about his weakness. About how he was not the Dominant she wanted. He was weak. He was frail. He needed to be protected.

“I don’t care!” Joshua shouted. “I don’t care about Alexander! Leave me alone!”

He didn’t feel the flames bursting from his body, only the sudden rush of wind as he fell from Feolthanos’s arms. Joshua’s cries became drowned out by the Phoenix’s keening as scarlet flames surrounded him like a falling comet. Above, he could see Feolthanos swooping down at him, and more than anything he knew he did not want Feolthanos to take him again.

Wings of fire burst from Joshua’s back and he took flight. He took no joy in soaring on the wind, focusing everything he had on getting away from his pursuer and not falling to his doom. But memories of the last time he summoned Phoenix’s power filled his mind. He saw red; blood and burning flesh filled his nostrils. He could smell it on Feolthanos. He could smell it on himself.

“Get away from me!” he screamed, tears falling from his eyes. “Get away from me, or I’ll kill you! I’ll kill you!”

He didn’t know where his sword had gone, so he wove the magicks with his hands. An inferno burst forth from his fingertips, striking Feolthanos, but the aegyl dove through it with scorched wings and magick that kept him aloft. Joshua tried to create a barrier of flame to defend himself from the ensuing assault, but Feolthanos cut through his feeble defenses and slashed at his flaming wing.

It knocked Joshua off course, but before Feolthanos could deliver another blow, a red blur shot through the sky and speared Feolthanos through his wing, sending him spiraling down toward the mountain of auralith below. Joshua didn’t realize they had gone so high up. Feolthanos righted himself in midair before he crashed, facing down the one who had struck him – Llyud.

“Ah,” said Feolthanos, halting his attack. “I remember you. The traitor who consorts with the hume invaders. Curious… There is a fire in my breast when I think of our previous battle. The memory of my death is… disconcerting.”

Llyud readied his spear. “I wonder… is that anger? Or perhaps fear? Has your anima finally returned as well?”

“I have long ago forgotten the feel of anima,” said Feolthanos. “I feel nothing but the desire to eliminate you as I do the Occuria. For that, I need Alexander’s holy might. A power untainted by the anima of humes. I will rip the anima from the boy and turn him into a lifeless husk if I must.”

Llyud angled his wings and beat his wings, launching himself toward Feolthanos like a hawk at its prey. Joshua could barely follow them as they traded blows – they looked like no more than a whirl of black and red, spear against sword. As Joshua floated in midair, watching, he felt himself steadily descending, his breaths getting more ragged, the cold seeping into his clothes. He grew tired as Phoenix’s power left him and he drifted toward Heaven’s Pillar, coming to rest on a crystal slope with sparse trees under Alexander’s shadow.

A man in black with a black hat walked up the slope toward him, followed by Noctis, Vaan, Penelo, and Ravus.

Joshua stumbled as he spoke to them. “Llyud’s in trouble. Iroha, too – she’s down in the caves. Someone needs to help her.”

“You sound awfully calm given the circumstances,” said Noctis, furrowing his brow. “You okay?”

Vaan looked up at Feolthanos and Llyud. “I know what this is – Feolthanos is taking his anima! His emotions!”

“We need to get him off the auralith,” said Penelo, rushing to Joshua’s side to put an arm around his shoulders. “Quickly!”

“I’m… fine,” Joshua said. His head swam, but he told the truth. If anything, the events of that night at Phoenix Gate felt so far away now.

“Resist thy desire to sleep. Thine aid is still needed.”

Espers appeared to block their way down the mountain, while a wounded Feolthanos landed on their other side.

“You will not obstruct me,” said Feolthanos, hunched over and panting. Llyud landed hard behind him, propping himself up with his spear. “I will have the child’s anima. He is a vessel for Alexander’s soul – pure and holy power, gifted to the undeserving.”

The man in black scoffed. “Pure and holy, you say? How disgusting.”

“Ardyn, do not underestimate him,” said Llyud. “His will is absolute.”

“Oh, nothing is quite so absolute,” he said. “Nor is it ever so ‘pure and holy.’ In fact, we daemons excel in tainting those sorts of things, do we not?” Before Feolthanos could react to his words, Ardyn threw his blade, vanished, and reappeared right in front of Feolthanos, their swords clashing together.

While they fought, Ravus walked over to Joshua and put a hand on his shoulder. “Does Feolthanos speak true? Is Alexander’s anima inside of you?”

“I… I think so,” said Joshua. “Ever since I came to this world. I don’t know why. I don’t want it.”

“Then I am sorry,” said Ravus, kneeling down in front of him. “Truly, I am. This will hurt.”

Joshua didn’t react in time. From where Ravus touched him, he felt a burning spread throughout his body – not a burning like Phoenix’s flames, but something deeper. A darkness like he had never known. 

He saw his father, clearer than ever before. His head separated from his shoulders, drenching Joshua in his blood. He saw iron and death and flames, the life leaving his father’s eyes, the wet choking of soldiers beside him as they were impaled by men they had trusted.

And he saw the dark Eikon. He remembered the end of their battle. He remembered dying.

Joshua screamed.

NO!” Feolthanos roared and unfurled his wings. "All that sanctified power -- corrupted by your mortal hands. I have returned upon wings undying on my holy mission, only to be foiled by an imperfect darkness?"

"There is much you need to learn of this world," said Llyud. "This is not Ivalice, and it is not the real Lemurés."

Instead of saying anything else, Feolthanos simply glared and vanished in a flash of light.

Joshua found himself on the ground, covered in sweat and scorch marks. His head rested in Penelo’s lap as she stroked his hair.

“Are you okay? What happened?” She looked up at Ravus and he couldn’t see the expression on her face, but he heard the hardness in her voice. “Why did you do that?”

“I knew it was there. I felt the holy power pouring off of him in a deluge. It is anathema to us,” said Ravus. “I did as daemons do – I tainted that power, just enough to make it useless to Feolthanos.”

“So that is why he fled,” said Llyud. “But Joshua… what did that do to him?”

“The boy will be fine,” said Ardyn, shrugging them off. “Our dear Ravus is a weak daemon, and he did not expose the boy to the scourge enough to corrupt him.”

“That was a huge risk,” said Penelo, frowning back down at Joshua.

Joshua sat up, groaning, and looked up toward the mountaintop. His eyes stung, his throat burned, and all he wanted to do was sleep. But they weren't finished yet. “I’m okay. But… I’m not sure about Alexander.”


LLYUD


“I knoweth not what planted the seed of corruption into me and mine brethren. Bequeathing mine anima to the boy was all I could do to forestall it.”

Terra clasped her hands together as she looked up at Alexander. Life had returned to the mighty fortress, but the holy light that had previously surrounded it had begun to fade. “What do we do to stop it?” she asked. “Where are the other espers?”

“Find them and free them ere they art lost. Now that thou art hither, I giveth to thee mine essence. Safeguard it, so that we may continue to be the wardens defending this world.”

All at once, Alexander’s form shone with a brilliant, holy light, forcing them all to hide their eyes from the radiance. When it died down, a round crystal – almost like a large coin – rested in Terra’s hands.

Enna Kros stroked her chin. “Alexander gave us his magicite,” she said. “How interesting.”

“Do you know why this is happening?” Terra asked her, holding the magicite close. "In my world, they gave their magicite to us as they died, lending us their power that way. But now it sounds like he needs us to protect it."

“I know as much as you do,” said Enna Kros, shrugging. “Which is to say: no idea. Sorry. Sounds like he was just barely able to avoid getting corrupted by whatever it is that went after the other ones, though – and I doubt it had anything to do with Feolthanos.”

“Why did Alexander give his anima to me?” Joshua asked. “I wasn’t strong enough to be worthy of protecting something so precious.”

“Dunno,” said Enna Kros. “Maybe it’s just because you were closest.”

Llyud frowned at Enna Kros and shook his head. “I disagree,” he said. “I saw you fighting against Feolthanos. You are strong, Joshua. You just lack experience.” Llyud had to give it his all to even stand against Feolthanos for as long as he did, himself. Something about the god of the aegyl seemed different here – Llyud suspected that either death had changed him or being in this world was restoring his anima to him.

Iroha, her wounds healed from her own battle with Feolthanos, approached Joshua’s side. “What is that power you wield? Perhaps I can help you refine it.”

Joshua wrung his hands. “I am the one person chosen to be the Dominant of Phoenix. It’s a power I was born with, and one that everyone expected my older brother to bear instead. But…” He shook his head, and smiled up at Iroha. “Thank you. I would like that.”

Lunafreya scratched Pryna behind the ears. “Perhaps that is something we have in common,” she said. “As the Oracle, much has been expected of me all throughout my life. Yet I have always been heartened by having my brother at my side.”

Ravus turned away – and if Llyud had to guess, it was to hide the expression on his face. “Come. We are all in need of rest. We should return to your airship and plan our next course of action.”

Both Pryna and Umbra let out barks and trotted up to Joshua’s side as they began to make their way down the mountain, making Joshua laugh. “They’re coming with us, right?”

Llyud thought back to their first encounter with Pryna, in the same jungle where he had once been assailed by countless illusions. “They may not be real.”

“To me, that does not matter,” said Luna, patting Umbra’s head. “Whether they are or not, both Pryna and Umbra are very dear to me. I’d like nothing more than if they came with us on our journey.”

Enna Kros crossed her arms and grinned. “At this rate, we’re going to need kennels. And more dog treats.”


Feolthanos (Swords)

15: Judgment (enables Dex follow ups)

35: Condemnation (enables Sinis follow ups)

EX; Faithless Cry

LD: Wing Wraith Scythe

FR: Eternal Gate to Paradise (with Kam’lanaut)

BT: Feolthanos Exultant

BT Theme: "The Ultimate Trial"

In my version, Feolthanos is a non-elemental melee attacker focusing on traps and follow-ups. His abilities all come from his boss battle. Another mechanic idea I had in mind for him is a new one I came up with. I always thought the devs could have done more with the launch mechanic, since that is something pretty unique to Opera Omnia. This mechanic would be called "juggling" - basically, after all 3 party members do their attack as part of a launch, the juggler does another attack that launches the enemy up again, allowing all 3 party members to do an attack again. As a flying character, I see this fitting with Feolthanos pretty well.

His BT theme, like most of the RW soundtrack, comes from XII - in this case, The Zodiac Age which replaced "Flash of Steel" for the Third Ascent of the Pharos.

Notes:

Please leave a comment and let me know if you are enjoying the story!

Chapter 8: Lost Chapter: Like Powdery Snow

Notes:

I've decided to add pictures along with character bios to help anyone who might not be familiar with all the new additions! I went back to the previous chapters to add them too.

Previous FR pairings explanation:

Joshua with Iroha: Mostly because both of them draw their powers from Phoenix, and in this story Iroha more or less becomes his substitute Shield. I also see Iroha's personality as having some traits that are a mix between Clive, Jill, and Jote, so IMO it fits!

Ravus with Jegran: Both are known as the High Commander of their respective armies, and are antagonists.

Feolthanos with Kam'lanaut: Both are driven to attain superiority for their race and use auraliths/Mothercrystals to reach the gods.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: Like Powdery Snow


Ritz Malheur ( Final Fantasy Tactics Advance )

Voiced by: Yumi Kakazu

An outgoing young girl who was the class head at school before getting drawn into the fantasy world Ivalice, wherein she became the leader of her own clan. Independent and outspoken, she clashes several times with Marche in his mission to revert the world to normal. Despite her outward confidence, Ritz is self-conscious about her naturally white hair and dyes it pink to hide from bullies.


RITZ


The streets of St. Ivalice felt strangely quiet.

Ritz’s footsteps crunched in the snow as she looked around the empty cobbled streets. The cold bit at her nose so she tucked her face into her scarf, rubbing her mittened hands together to stay warm. As was usual in St. Ivalice, the cloudy sky offered little in the way of warm sunlight.

“It’s supposed to be a school day,” she said. “Where is everybody?”

It was difficult to see against the snowdrifts, but down the street ahead of her she saw a figure in a white jacket, with long white hair. Their back was to her, so she couldn’t see their face, but her heart skipped a beat when she saw them – no one else she had ever met had hair like hers, and for a moment she thought them to be a viera. But they lacked a viera’s distinctive long ears.

“Excuse me?” she called out, carefully running toward the figure to avoid slipping on ice. “Do you know where everyone is?”

They kept walking without stopping to look back at her, and vanished from her view when they rounded a street corner. Ritz followed them, but when she swung around the street lamp in a sharp turn, she almost slipped and fell from the sheer surprise of seeing a trio of goblins swinging clubs at a parked car.

“Goblins!” she exclaimed. “Here? How is this possible?”

She regretted her words as soon as she said them, because that attracted their notice.

Ritz turned around and ran back down the street as they followed with raucous cheers and shouts. She felt pathetic running from goblins – back in Ivalice, these were considered small fry. But now she was back in a world with no magic. She was a normal girl who didn’t own any weapons, and her only friends who would help her fight instead of run away screaming were nowhere to be found.

She heard three quick fwips of arrows slicing through the air, a sound she knew well, and the shriek of the goblins as they perished. Ritz slid to a stop and looked around, wondering – hoping – her best friend had been the one to save her, against all odds…

She put her hands over her mouth in shock when she saw a viera standing on top of a parked car, bowstring still vibrating from the arrows she had shot. But this was no viera she recognized. It wasn’t Shara.

Even so – goblins and viera, here, in St. Ivalice?

“Are you hurt?” the viera asked her, clouds forming in her breath.

“No,” Ritz said, shaking her head. “Just confused.”

“Well, anyone would be – we’re in a different world, after all,” said a voice behind her.

Ritz turned to look at the new arrival and her eyes widened when she saw another girl with hair as white as snow, just like hers. And she lacked a viera’s ears – but rather than a hume’s, hers were pointed. “But there aren’t any elves in Ivalice,” she caught herself saying aloud, and then winced at her rudeness.

“I’m an elezen, I’ll have you know,” the girl said, putting a hand on her hip. “But you’re from Ivalice? Then perhaps if you don’t recognize Fran, you may know Ramza?”

“I’ve never heard of either of those people,” Ritz said, looking between the elezen and the viera. “What’s going on? What are goblins doing in my town?”

The elezen girl gestured at herself. “I believe some introductions are in order. My name is Alisaie, and that’s Fran. Welcome to the World of Respite.”


Ritz’s head spun. “So it’s not that goblins came to my world, but we all went to a different world that just looks like my street?” And it was here, of all places, that they had hoped to find clues about 'Primals,' apparently. Or other lost adventurers, like her.

“Indeed,” said Fran, looking around. “Though if you say this is Ivalice, then it is no Ivalice I have ever seen.”

“It’s Saint Ivalice,” said Ritz. “And I once traveled from there to a different world called Ivalice. But… it wasn’t real.” She rocked on her heels and tried to sound as flippant about it as she could. “The Ivalice we went to was a dream world, created from stories in a magical grimoire.” She had learned from Shara not to even bother trying to explain what a ‘video game’ was.

Alisaie crossed her arms. “For you, Ivalice is a dream world? How interesting… This lends credulity to Y’shtola’s ideas about all of our worlds springing forth from a hypothetical ‘source’ world. If you recall Ivalice to be a dream, I wonder what that means about some of our other worlds. Shall we ask Tyro? He called all of our worlds stories.”

“Ivalice is no mere dream to me,” said Fran, frowning. “I would respect you not to refer to it as such, nor as a story. Is it so far-fetched that there could be various worlds named Ivalice?”

Alisaie swallowed her words. “Apologies, Fran. I did not mean to offend. As you say, there could be several Ivalices. If I recall, there are stories of an historical region named ‘Ivalice’ in my world as well, though I’m far from an expert on it – I only know that much because I’ve heard a little about it from a friend.”

Ritz tugged at the cuff on her jacket. “If you ask me, I think there’s an easy way to determine if they’re the same. We should compare what we know of our Ivalices. Start with something big that the general public might know, then work our way down to more specific things if we keep finding similarities. For example, have you ever heard of Queen Remedi or Prince Mewt?”

Fran peered at her in the inscrutable way viera often did. “I know no such queen or prince. But that is a clever idea. Are you familiar with the Archadian Empire?”

“No,” Ritz said, smiling. “So, there we have it – that means I just went to a different Ivalice, and your world probably isn’t fake.”

The jury was still out on this world, she supposed. For all she knew, she was dreaming even now – she longed to go back almost every night when she lay in bed.

“Well, then,” said Alisaie. “Let us go back to our airship so you can meet the others.”

Ritz rewrapped her scarf around her neck. “Wait,” she said, before they could turn to leave. “Earlier, before I saw those goblins, I saw someone with white hair go down the street. I’d like to know who that is.”

“White hair?” said Alisaie, glancing at Ritz’s own snow white hair. “Do you have the slightest idea of how little that narrows things down?”

Ritz puffed out her cheeks. “Well, I knew they weren’t a viera.”

Alisaie and Fran exchanged glances.

“Let us bring you to those who ventured off of the Falcon with us,” said Fran. “Mayhaps it was one of them.”


Ritz massaged her temples. Snow fell in a delicate flurry, and lit under the dull golden glow of street lamps, Ritz had to concede Alisaie’s point.

Alisaie and Fran brought her to the park, where they had gathered together the scouting party that had come down to investigate St. Ivalice with them. Here, Ritz was introduced to Thancred, Alphinaud, the Warrior of Light, Firion, Cecil, Setzer, Kadaj, Fujin, Arciela, Hope, Ravus, and Seven. 

“Okay, fine,” Ritz said. “Point taken. But the person I saw was none of these people.”


“Do you oft associate with viera, Ritz?” Fran asked, as night began to fall and they continued their search through town. “You seem particularly keen about white hair.”

Ritz stretched her arms over her head, smiling wistfully. “I did, when I went to Ivalice. I met a whole hunting party of viera who took me in and showed me how to fight. When we all became friends, I suggested we become a formal clan and take on jobs. And, well… after that they voted to make me the clan leader. I miss them a lot.” She brushed the snowflakes from her hair as they walked. “In St. Ivalice, it wasn’t common for people my age to have white hair. I had always hated it, and all the other kids used to bully me. So when I met Shara and the others, I learned that it didn’t matter. It was something to be proud of, and to them white hair was beautiful and sacred.”

Alisaie blew warm air into her palms and rubbed them together. “So when you saw that person with long white hair…”

“I’ve felt alone in some ways ever since coming back to St. Ivalice,” Ritz admitted. She had Marche and Mewt, and even Doned, but things had been tense at first. “I have some of my friends, true, but I never felt such a sense of belonging as I did with my clan.”

“You’re very well-spoken for your age,” Alisaie said.

Ritz scowled. “Well, I was class rep. But you’re not much older than me!” she said, and then paused. Elves in all her favorite games tended to live eternal lives, after all. “Wait, are you?”

Ahead of them, Fran stopped and held out her hand, causing them both to fall silent. “I believe we found who we’ve been looking for,” she said.

Ritz looked at the man facing them down the street. With long spiky hair and a white jacket, she was certain that was who she had seen earlier. He wore no shirt under his jacket, and wielded two blades and a confident smirk.

Alisaie drew her sword, face twisted in anger. “Weiss! What are you doing here?”

Weiss twirled his swords. “Took you long enough to find me. All I’m doing is searching for Manikins. Is that a crime?”

“With you, probably,” Alisaie said. “What do you want with them?”

Fran readied her bow. “Our party has been surveying this town since dawn, and we have seen naught of any Manikins. What is it you truly seek?”

“Ritz, can you fight?” Alisaie asked her, low enough that Weiss couldn’t hear.

“Only in Ivalice,” she said, drawing back behind them. “I don’t have any weapons.”

“If you have the will, then you have a way,” Alisaie whispered, without taking her eyes off Weiss. “That is all you need in this world.”

“But that sounds like nonsense!”

“And yet none of you could find me until I wanted to be found. I wonder why that is?” Weiss asked, in response to Fran. “Because you are all weak. And now I will eliminate you.”

Alisaie beat him to the attack, joining her rapier and crystal together into the shape of a staff to cast an explosion of crimson gemstones at Weiss. Weiss shot bullets from his sword so recoil would throw him out of the way, letting him rush into close range to attack Fran.

Fran let go a volley of arrows, but before Weiss reached her, Alisaie blocked his path with her own blade, engaging him in a battle of swordplay. But he had her on the backfoot, unleashing a relentless barrage of sword swings that she struggled to block and parry. Fran pressed forward with her palm and ice crystals bloomed across the ground. Alisaie dodged out of the way, but they encased Weiss before he could avoid them and Ritz realized that Alisaie had maneuvered him to be trapped between two cars.

“Well, now what?” Weiss asked, encased from the shoulders down. He looked more amused than anything. “This won’t hold me forever.”

“Come on, Ritz,” Alisaie said through grit teeth. “We could really use another sword arm right now.”

Fran snapped her fingers before Weiss could burst free, and the ice shattered around him.

“How do you expect me to fight?” Ritz retorted. “I’m from the real world. Magic doesn’t exist where I’m from. And…” She trailed off, backing away from the battle. And what? It was right in front of her face. Ritz had never been the kind of person to doubt what was right in front of her. “And yet…”

She didn’t just fall into Ivalice. She threw herself right in. She had fought for it. She even fought against Marche to preserve it. She had known it wasn’t real, had always known that it was nothing but an escape, but she wasn’t ready for it to end yet.

Alisaie made a grunting noise that sounded a little like a growl as she dove back into the fray. “Who cares what’s real or what’s not? You’re being daft!”

Ritz just wished she had her sword back in hand. Then she would know what to do.

A light burst from her hand, and with it she felt a comforting weight.

There was a lightness, too. It accompanied the familiar rush of magic flooding through her veins, the connection to nature around her. She didn’t feel the cold anymore – only the snowflakes falling from the sky, the gentle caress of wind, the ground beneath her feet.

Her gauntlet tightened around the hilt of her rapier, and she summoned fire from within.

White, healing fire surrounded Alisaie and Fran while a whip of red flames lashed out at Weiss, and both Ritz and Alisaie closed in on him together. Bullets riddled the ground as they danced around his attacks, stabbing toward any opening they could find, working together in perfect tandem. His swings came with vicious ferocity, but focused and honed to a point where Ritz struggled to keep up even with Alisaie at her side. The forms all came back to her, though – parry, strike, sting – and she kept her footwork as light as a feather.

Weiss backed up to a cross street, but orbs of holy light shone and converged on him, followed by Cecil coming in with a low swipe. Firion joined Fran in firing arrows and Arciela appeared to provide magical support. Together, they all closed in around Weiss, surrounding him with a shop front at his back.

“Oh, one day I will mutilate you all beyond recognition,” Weiss said, baring his teeth. “Just you wait.”

“What was it you wanted with the Manikins?” Alisaie pressed, rapier pointed at his face. “Tell us.”

“Well, they’re changing, aren’t they?” he responded. “Along with everything else in this world lately. Call it experimental curiosity. If we are supposedly becoming mortal, what about them? What would I find if I ripped open their insides? Do they have blood? Viscera?”

“So you’ve learned about the summons, have you?” Firion asked.

Behind him, black energy swirled to life in the shop window, bringing with it a gust of wind and crackling energy. Ritz felt it dragging her in – dragging everything, like a black hole.

“A Torsion!” Cecil warned. “Back away, Ritz!”

Weiss gave them one last grin before the Torsion swallowed him and vanished, but as no one else seemed surprised by that development, Ritz assumed the danger had passed. “Is… is that something that happens here often?”

Alisaie sheathed her blade, turned to Ritz, and grinned. “More or less,” she said. “What do you say? Would you like to join us? There is still plenty to learn of this world, apparently – and I would certainly like to know what maniacs like Weiss are up to.”

Ritz clenched her fist. “Of course. I hate guys like him.”

“We are all heartened to hear it, I’m sure,” said Fran, gazing at Ritz from the corner of her eye. “Does this mean we are real enough to you?”

Ritz looked around at them all as they awaited her answer. It was still strange to see so many fantastical things right on the streets of her own hometown, but she had never felt so at home since Ivalice. “Yes,” she said. “I was so afraid to get my hopes up, to admit to the possibility of this being real… but yes, I’m certain now. I’m here, and I plan to fight.”


Ritz Malheur (Swords)

15: Swallowtail

35: Shining Air

EX: Elementalshift

LD: Nighthawk -> Enables Featherblow followup

FR: Red Remise (with Alisaie)

BT: White Flame & Sliprain Flurry

BT Theme: "Battle of Hope"

Costume: Another appearance she'd have is her St. Ivalice winter coat outfit, with white hair

Ritz is a non-elemental melee damage attacker with some critical damage buffs, follow ups, healing, and battery. Her EX ability, Elementalshift, can convert all elemental absorption/nullification into weaknesses. She uses Fencer and Elementalist skills. Despite her character image, she uses swords just like in game.

Mrfipp gave Ritz "Painful Battle" (which is the theme of any non-hostile battles), and "Battle of Hope" (the boss theme) went to Shara. I decided to swap them, because I like the idea of a more prominent character like Ritz getting the more dramatic music.

Notes:

New game addition! I love all three games in the Tactics series, so here we go. This FR pairing felt pretty natural, but I did change Ritz's partner a few times before settling on Alisaie. Her first partner was actually Ravus, but that connection was pretty weak and it got shuffled around when I added other characters late in development.

Please comment and let me know if you are enjoying this story! I'm still enjoying writing it, but feedback is very appreciated.

Chapter 9: Lost Chapter: Around the Candle's Warmth

Notes:

First things first, I messed up -- I forgot that Cid Highwind was already Force partner to Balthier, so I had to switch Cid Haze's FR partner and ability. Now Cid Haze's partner is Xezat (which means I had to take Xezat away from someone else, but I think that person has a more fitting partner now anyway). But inevitably that also leads to a shuffling of the FR chain for several characters, so hopefully that didn't screw anything else up going forward!

Now, for this new character... finally, one of the two most long-awaited ones! (Inb4 "Where's Rikku??")

FR partner explanations:

Ritz with Alisaie: Both are teenage Red Mages with similar headstrong personalities who can be a bit bossy. Both also have naturally white hair.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: Around the Candle’s Warmth

 

Red XIII ( Final Fantasy VII )

Voiced by: Kappei Yamaguchi

Originally from Cosmo Canyon, where he lives with his beloved grandfather Bugenhagen. Once a prisoner of Hojo’s inhumane experiments, Cloud and the others help free him so he can return home where he discovers the truth of his father’s disappearance. Though outwardly wise and collected, he can be more emotional than he lets on, and is younger than he seems.

Red XIII


TIFA


Tifa stretched her arms over her head and took in the sight of the sky turning a brilliant crimson as the sun began to set. It had been a long day of exploring a new region in this ever-expanding world, but no matter how different things seemed here the sunsets all looked wonderfully the same. On this particular sunset, however, she crested a hill and noticed that the ground ahead seemed to turn a brilliant red under the light, so much that she first thought it was fire or gold, until she realized it was just that the color of the earth and stone had changed.

She walked near the bottom of a cliff, sparse with greenery, but further ahead she saw another slope rising up opposite the cliff and realized it was the beginnings of a canyon.

Tifa stopped walking. She recognized this place.

“Tifa?” Krile asked, stopping alongside her. “Is something wrong?”

“This is Cosmo Canyon,” she said, turning to her companions behind her. “Cloud – !”

Cloud put a hand on his hip and then crossed his arms and tapped his foot. Though he didn’t show it, she could tell he was excited. “Yeah,” he said. “I bet Red XIII’s here.”

Aerith clenched her fists in a more obvious display of excitement. “Let’s hurry and find him – it’s been too long!”


RED XIII


Everything smelled different here.

At home, everything was vibrant. Bonfires churned with the scents of woody smoke and cooked meats. Spices drifted up from the cookpots – bergamot and mustard, sage and juniper, mint tea and rose hips. Aromas of cedar and oak still permeated in the dwellings built long ago. In Cosmo Canyon, Nanaki could even smell the dust of the earth, the winds from distant lands, and sometimes even the sea.

Here, the scents were muted. Numb. There and not there. Not quite artificial, but even the sterile labs in Shinra headquarters didn’t smell this bland.

The only conclusion he could draw was that, despite looking like home, this was not Cosmo Canyon. This was not the Planet he knew.

He turned his back on Cosmo Candle, the eternal bonfire lit in the center of the village, and turned down the walkway to depart and investigate his surroundings. As soon as he left the village border, however, he saw figures coming his way.

Cloud walked in the lead with the familiar silhouettes of Tifa and Barret alongside him. His tail flicked back and forth as he restrained himself from running up to them. Next to Barret, he saw another hulking figure covered in blue fur with white hair and a broken horn. The sight made him pause; he had never seen such a person before, which furthered his opinion that this was not the Planet he had sworn to protect.

Tifa ran ahead of the others when she saw him. “Red! It really is you!”

Nanaki sat back on his haunches as she approached, pleased that they, at least, seemed to be the genuine article. “I am glad to see you have all come to join me in this unfamiliar world,” he said. He looked the giant blue-furred person up and down, who crossed his arms and examined Nanaki in turn. “Along with new allies besides.”

“You got it the wrong way ‘round,” said Barret, chuckling. “It’s you who took your sweet time coming to join us!”

“Is that so?” Nanaki asked. His tail flicked again as he looked them over, drinking in the sight of his friends and their new allies. “I believe some introductions are in order.”

Cloud cleared his throat. “Yeah. Kimahri, Amarant, Krile – meet Red XIII, a friend of ours.”

Nanaki regarded Cloud out of the corner of his eye. He had thought both Cloud and Tifa stopped calling him that. “You may call me Nanaki if you wish, but it makes no difference to me. I am only that which you see before you – no more and no less.”

“Nanaki,” said a hauntingly familiar voice from behind Kimahri, soft and full of affection. “It’s good to see you again.”

Aerith emerged from behind Kimahri, as if she had been hiding -- or nervous to see him. Nanaki stood up on all fours with such speed that it was as if he had stepped into a bed of cactuars.

“Aerith!?”

None of the others acted as if her presence was unusual, causing him to make a double take at all of them. Were they all monsters taking on the guises of his friends? Illusions? Merely a dream?

She pressed a finger to her lips. “It’s okay,” she said, giving him a placating smile. “It’s just me. Remember?”

Tifa touched Nanaki’s shoulder, making him flinch. “What’s wrong?”

Beasts roared from deeper in the canyon, making them all turn toward the source of the noise. Nanaki felt all of his fur standing on end – he suddenly found himself wanting to go out there and hunt whatever it was causing the tumult, anything to get away from these imposters who wore his friends’ faces.

“Kimahri will dispatch those fiends,” said Kimahri, summoning a spear. “Kimahri will return.”

“I shall accompany you,” said Nanaki, heading off into the canyon at a sprint without looking back.


“Kimahri heard Nanaki was a great warrior,” said Kimahri, finishing the last of the bear-like monsters. “But Nanaki’s mind is clouded.”

Nanaki rubbed his face clean of the monsters’ blood. They even tasted bland, so he was not sad to see them disappear into the whirling vortex of black energy that Kimahri called a ‘Torsion.’ “I am a great warrior,” he said. “I have long fought to protect this canyon, as my mother and father did before me.”

“Is that why Nanaki ran?” Kimahri asked. “Friends were happy to see Nanaki. Or did new world bring something Nanaki did not expect?”

Nanaki sat and dropped his head onto his paws, closing his eye. Why did he run? He should have been happy to see them. But something wasn’t right. “I ran because I am a coward after all, even though I spent the greater part of my youth ashamed of my father for thinking he was the coward instead. I have no honor.”

“Kimahri knows that isn’t true,” said Kimahri, pressing the butt of his spear against the ground. “Sometimes, those who come to this world have memories beyond those of friends.”

Nanaki opened his eye again. “You’re saying I may just remember more than they do? They just don’t remember that Aerith…” He trailed off. Did this world revive her, then? “I don’t like feeling confused. I don’t like the feeling that I remember more of the things we went through than they do – throughout our journey, they have become the most important companions in my life, especially after I lost my grandfather. I told them it does not matter what they call me. But they called me Red XIII. That tells me everything they know about me.”

He did not know why he opened up to Kimahri this way. The other warrior seemed strong in so many ways – ways that even reminded him a little of the Seto he remembered as a pup.

“Nanaki.”

There it was again. Aerith’s voice. She stepped from the shadows into the moonlight, hands clasped in front of her.

“What are you doing out here?” Nanaki asked, standing. “It’s dangerous to be alone.”

“I’m fine,” she said, brushing loose strands of hair behind her ear. “Can we talk?”


AMARANT


While the others discussed Red XIII’s sudden departure, Amarant noticed Aerith quietly sneaking away outside of the village. Since no one else saw, he followed her from a distance. Mostly so he could tell her off for being reckless if she found herself surrounded by too many monsters.

As he expected, she sought out Red XIII. When she asked to speak with him, Kimahri departed but Amarant lingered outside their field of vision. Not because he was curious to eavesdrop, of course – mostly so he could take down any monsters wandering over to interrupt them.

“So I guess you remember, huh?” she asked, bunching up her shoulders. “I figured someone would, sooner or later.”

“You mean to ask if I remember what Sephiroth did to you?” Red XIII asked, so tense that he looked like an animal ready to spring into attack. “So the others have forgotten? How could they forget something so important?”

“It’s not their fault,” Aerith said, eyes on her joined hands. “To fight in this world, the gods took away some memories that could be a burden to us. It was meant as a kindness. They just haven’t found their lost memories yet. I’ve known all along, but…”

“That is wrong,” Red XIII barked. “They need to know. You need to be honored for the sacrifice you made for the Planet!”

Ah, so he wasn’t as calm and collected as he seemed. Despite his appearance, Red XIII was just another hot-blooded bonehead hiding under a mask. Amarant rolled his eyes.

Aerith shook her head. “I don’t think they do. We’ve seen this same situation with others here… they will learn on their own time.”

“And then what? They will simply suffer the pain of losing you again? Why am I the one who must remember, who must bear this burden?”

Amarant scoffed. Bold words, and then an unsaid admission that he wanted to forget the tough memories too.

“I think Vincent knows, too,” said Aerith. “He has always looked at me differently since coming here, and he has his memories of Shelke back. And the Turks know. And Sephiroth himself. But honestly… their memories seem a little spotty. They don’t seem to know about the Sector 7 plate dropping, and Jessie dying, either. I’m not even sure if Jessie herself knows.”

A low rumble escaped from Red XIII’s throat; a growl. “So Sephiroth’s here, too… Perhaps if we stop him before he hurts you…”

Amarant emerged into the rocky clearing; he’d heard enough. “Alright, enough whining already,” he said, as both of them looked at him in surprise. “So Aerith died in her world. Big deal.”

Red XIII lowered his front legs, hackles raised and snarling as his flaming tail straightened. “You watch your tongue!”

“Tons of people came back to life here,” Amarant replied. “Instead of complaining about who does or doesn’t know, look at it like it is – another opportunity to spend time with someone you’ve lost. You’re really just an idiot kid, huh?”

Aerith clenched her fists as if about to tell him off herself, and then her shoulders slumped. “Amarant… You could have phrased it a little more nicely,” she said softly. “Please don’t tell the others.”

Red XIII showed his fangs at Amarant, but then closed his mouth and his eye. “What do you know?” He walked back toward the village, and Amarant let him depart without a parting shot.

When Amarant moved to follow him and Aerith back, he nearly jumped out of his skin when he spotted Kimahri watching him from the shadows. “Shit! Were you watching me there the whole time?”

Kimahri only nodded at him with something like approval before leaving.


RED XIII


When he returned to the village, he found his companions sitting around Cosmo Candle just as they used to each time they had visited. He paused outside of the circle in the flickering shadows cast by the flames, and he watched them. He wondered – without their memories, did they care for him as he did for them? How much of their adventures did they recall?

Tifa stared up at the stars rather than into the flames. Barret cleaned out his gun arm as he listened to Yuffie tell him an animated story. Cait Sith danced on the ground in front of his moogle doll while Vincent sat so still with his eyes closed he appeared to be sleeping. Cid sat cross-legged as he smoked his cigar. Cloud was the only one who noticed Nanaki and gestured him over to sit at the empty seat between him and Cait Sith.

Perhaps Amarant was right. These peaceful moments were something to cherish, while he still could. It felt just like the old days.

Aerith walked past Nanaki, her fingers trailing through his mane.

This wasn’t home, but that didn’t matter as long as he was here with them.


Character abilities:

Red XIII (Unique - Combs)

15: Sled Fang

35: Lunatic High

EX: Stardust Ray

LD: Blood Fang

FR: Crimson Lore (with Amarant)

BT: Cosmo Memory

BT Theme: "Red XIII's Theme"

Red XIII is a non-elemental magic damage dealer with lots of party buffs - mostly based around HP Dmg Up, speed, and attack power. He is also a party EX recharger with some healing capabilities, and a buff that enables the party to do rainbow BRV damage. All of his ability names come from his various limits.

His FR partner was originally Alisaie before I had to shuffle things around, and then Alisaie ended up with Ritz who I think fits better anyway.

Notes:

Hope you enjoyed this chapter! Where are the Red XIII fans?

Next one is going to be another Lost Chapter -- on average there will be 3-5 Lost Chapters between each story chapter.

Any ideas for the explanation behind this Force partnership? Please let me know what you think in the comments!

Chapter 10: Lost Chapter: Filling in the Pages

Notes:

I have now gone back and added Burst themes for each character at the suggestion of Toggle1, and for many of them I will probably be relying on your Reddit posts about prospective Burst themes, so thank you!

Force partner explanations:

Red XIII with Amarant: Both are initially aloof party members associated with red and fire.

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: Filling in the Pages

 

Luso Clemens ( Final Fantasy Tactics A2: Grimoire of the Rift )

Voiced by: Yū Kobayashi

A truant boy from St. Ivalice who discovers a mysterious book that transports him to the world of Ivalice. Though a habitual prankster, he has a strong sense of justice and is eager to explore and have fun, acclimating himself to his new environment in no time. In his journey to fill the pages of his grimoire and return home, Luso matures into a hero others can count on – but he never loses his fear of ghosts.

Luso


LUSO


Luso hugged himself and shivered as he hid behind a tree.

He was hopelessly lost. When he woke up, he had found himself in Ivalice again somehow, but not in any forest he recognized. Moss and foliage covered the ground, dark and damp and perfect for mushrooms in all sorts of colors. The trees were taller than any on Jylland, with layers and layers of branches and massive leaves to make a canopy that blotted out the sun. Far away, distant beasts howled. But it was not them that he feared.

It was a perfect environment for the bane of his existence – ghosts.

Three spectral wanderers appeared in the clearing Luso had been about to pass through to try and orient himself. But now that he saw them, he froze in place. He could handle fighting them… sometimes. If he had his clan or his friends with him. But now he was alone.

Despite the cool air, he felt sweat dripping down his brow. His pulse quickened as he tried to hold his breath out of fear of the ghosts detecting it and stealing it from him. He heard their ghastly moans carrying across the clearing and to his hiding spot. The chill crept into his bones; surely a sign that they could sniff out the scent of the living. He was done for.

He heard the telltale whisper of magicks being woven as the ghosts closed in on their prey. Luso shut his eyes tight and prepared to run for it. Just as he braced himself to sprint, a sword sliced through the air and the ghostly wails grew louder before abruptly fading to nothing. When he peeked around the other side of the tree into the clearing, his eyes widened when he saw his savior.

The person who had defeated the ghosts was… himself.

“What the…?” he said, emerging from his hiding spot to approach. Upon closer inspection, his other self looked like he had been carved from crystal, lacking color in his skin and hair, eyes blank and face expressionless. “What are you?” It didn’t appear to be aggressive, so he crept closer.

“I’m a Manikin,” it responded. Luso nearly jumped back in fright – its voice had a vague echoing quality to it. “Copied from you, I guess.”

“You guess?” Luso asked, frowning. “You look just like me! Who made you? And why?”

“This world made me, and all the others,” said the Manikin, sheathing its sword. “As for why… who knows? Why were you made?”

Luso didn’t have an answer for that, so he just scrunched his nose at it. He didn’t even want to think of the possibility of others. “Are you some sort of… I dunno, crystal machine? Or golem? I bet you’re a golem. You’re not gonna activate and try to kill me to take my place, are you?”

Its mouth moved as it spoke, but the rest of its face kept still. It was unnerving. “Why would I do that?”

Luso crossed his arms. Now that he mentioned it, that was kind of a ludicrous suggestion. It sounded like something from a movie. He hoped he didn’t give it any ideas. “Uh… never mind that. Hey, if you’re me, why aren’t you afraid of ghosts?”

“Would you like me to be?”

Luso shook his hands at it. “No, no! Actually, that works out better for us. Maybe we can fight the ghosts together.”

The Manikin nodded. “Sure.”

The foliage rustled behind him and Luso whirled around to look, shouting and drawing his sword when he spotted a wolf man emerging. “Monster!”

“Sheathe your sword, boy! I am no monster!” The wolf man backed away, arms lifted in a gesture of surrender. “Unless you would prefer to see my secret technique in action, I suggest you stand down.” Others emerged from the underbrush behind him – other humes.

“Sorry, sorry!” Luso said, though he only lowered his sword instead of sheathing it. “I’m, uh, a bit jumpy from the ghosts earlier.” He narrowed his eyes when he recognized someone among them. “Wait, Vaan? Is that you?”

“Luso?” Vaan sheathed his sword and tapped his thumb once against his chin. “You’re here now too, huh? And with your Manikin!”

“Is this a friend of yours, Vaan?” said another swordsman at his side, a boy with blond hair who looked a bit like Vaan. “You’ve become quite popular, haven’t you?”

Luso furrowed his brow. “Well, I wouldn’t go that far. And I’d like to throw out there that Vaan’s the one who joined my clan.”

Vaan straightened the collar of his shirt, shooting a look at Luso out of the corner of his eye. “Your clan? Clan Gully belonged to your friend Cid. Besides, Penelo and I only joined to help you guys out for a bit.”

“Well, whatever,” said a girl’s voice. When she poked her head out from behind the legs of the others, Luso had to hold back a gasp. She was tiny – and adorable. “Can we back up for a sec? You said there were ghosts here?”

Luso nodded, and on a reflex he looked around at the surrounding trees for signs of more. But he focused his attention back on the tiny girl. “Yeah. This Manikin helped me fight them.”

“Actually,” said the Manikin, “I did all the fighting. You were hiding.”

Vaan laughed and Luso felt his face reddening. “Well… I fought other ones earlier!”

“Hey, I don’t blame you,” said the tiny girl, hugging herself and shivering exactly as Luso did earlier. “Ghosts are terrifying! Finally, someone else who is sensible about them. I’m glad I found a kindred spirit that understands… pardon the pun.”

“Well, it’s nice to meet you, tiny person,” Luso said, crouching down to look more closely at her. “I’ve never seen anyone like you.”

She grimaced at him. “I’m a Lillikin, you know, and I don’t always look like this. And that’s not surprising – you’re in a totally different world. I guess I’ll explain since Vaan’s not being helpful. My name’s Reynn.”


“This one’s pretty vexing for a Dark Manikin, eh?” said Leila, walking in a circle around the Luso Manikin to examine him more closely. “Haven’t seen hide nor hair of ‘em in a while.”

Luso took the news of being in another new world well, he thought. All things considered. He was fairly certain he didn’t open any grimoires this time to get here, though. Though he was surprised to learn that Vaan had a brother, Reks – he had always pegged Vaan as an only child.

“Dark Manikin?” Luso asked. “Does that mean it’s, like… evil or something?”

“Of course not,” said Vaan, a little pompously. “Dark Manikins just come from the World of Darkness. We’ve found plenty of them a while back – unlike regular Manikins, they talk and think and don’t attack us unless someone else makes them do it.”

Luso rolled his eyes. “Okay, know-it-all. Didn’t realize you were such a professional.”

“You asked!”

“I’m not a Dark Manikin,” said Luso’s Manikin, shutting down their bickering. “I’ve got both darkness and light inside of me.”

Kelger, the wolf man, made a rumbling noise in his throat. Luso had to admit, meeting a wolf man was pretty cool. “How unusual… Does that mean they are, indeed, evolving into something new?”

“It would seem so,” said Reks, reaching toward a songbird chirping away at one of the lower branches, with his finger held out to it. “I wonder if it has to do with the eidolons’ protection on this world being lifted. Or something we’ve done.”

“Weiss did say they were changing,” said Ritz, rubbing her chin.

Vaan headed off deeper into the woods, not even pausing to see if the others followed. “We should go find more and see if Red Cap’s is the only one around here. The others might need help.”

Luso held his hand out in Vaan’s direction. He knew from experience that he needed Penelo around to rein him in -- and Luso was not about to pick up her slack. No way was Vaan going to upstage him. “Hey, wait up! I’m gonna find them first! And don't call me that!”

Leila put a hand on her hip and gave an amused smirk. “I reckon we’ve found Vaan’s rival.”

Reynn groaned. “Well I reckon I spoke too soon about Luso being a kindred spirit. He’s just an idiot, like Lann.”

Luso stuck his tongue out at her. “Try to keep up!”

Ritz was the first one to spring into action alongside him, running at Luso’s pace through the woods. “Even though you know Vaan, you’re not from his world, are you? You don’t speak like an Ivalician.”

Luso supposed such a thing wouldn’t be as far-fetched here, so he decided to tell her the truth. “It’s that obvious, huh? Yeah, you’re right – a magic book took me to his world.”

Ritz stopped running. “A magic book?”

Luso slid to a stop as well, panting. Water trickled somewhere nearby, and the sharp scents of a bog stung at his nose. “Something wrong?”

She walked closer to him, her gaze locking him in place. “A magic book took me to Ivalice as well. But a different Ivalice, a dream world. How did that happen? Where did you find yours?”

Luso backed away – something about her eyes seemed a little intense. He rubbed the back of his neck. “Uh, just the town library. It was blank, and I scribbled my name in it. Then it brought me to Ivalice, where I met Cid.”

“What town?”

“Well, I landed in the Targ Wood near Wood Village, but Camoa wasn’t far away – ”

“No. I mean what town did you come from?” Ritz asked, standing so close to him now that he thought she would grab him by the shoulder straps to demand her answers.

“Oi, you two!” Leila called out, running up to them. Ritz backed away from Luso, averting her eyes. “We interruptin’ something?”

“No,” said Ritz, shaking her head. “We’re just talking about our experiences.”

Kelger looked at them both with an expression Luso couldn’t read. “I think young Vaan has gone up ahead. Shall we continue?”

Luso’s Manikin brought up the rear, showing no signs of exertion. “I sense others like me up ahead. I believe Vaan has found them.”

“Aw, man,” said Luso. “Ritz, you let him get ahead of us.”

“Aren’t Manikins supposed to have the same kind of personality as us? Or our memories?” Reynn asked as they followed after Vaan. “This one’s nothing like Luso. It’s way more eloquent.” 

Luso only shrugged rather than taking offense. She had a point.

“I wonder if it is because there is something different about these new Manikins,” said Reks, pushing aside leafy branches and swatting away gnats as he cleared the way into the next clearing. He stopped suddenly, tensing as he saw something in the clearing ahead. “Oh, no…”

Luso wriggled around him and nearly dropped his sword.

Vaan stood in the center of the clearing, perfectly still and surrounded by over a dozen dead Manikins. They had fallen at the edge of a lake, positioned as if they were trying to swim out of it. A beam of sunlight broke through the dense canopy overhead, falling squarely on Vaan and making the crystalline forms of the Manikins glitter. Luso thought of puppets that had their strings cut, but the heavy feeling in his gut felt as real as any life lost. They seemed like corpses.

“Who did this?” Luso asked, hand clenching around his sword hilt. His voice shook as he looked over the dead Manikins. Another one among them resembled Luso. Vaan’s eyes were fixed on his own copy, scattered among others that Luso didn’t recognize.

Leila knelt down to examine them, her expression grave. “I’m not sure any knave we know is the culprit. This be the work of beasts.”

“I see,” said Luso’s Manikin. It alone seemed unresponsive to the tragedy. “Just as this world birthed us, it ends our lives as well. In your worlds, you call this a natural cycle – do you not?”

“Maybe so,” said Kelger. “But that does not make it right.”

“They all fought back,” Ritz said, crouching down alongside Leila. “This is interesting… Manikins and monsters don’t usually fight each other, do they?”

“They don’t,” said Vaan, a little gruffly. “But now this means we have a new duty.”

Luso looked him in the eye and nodded. “Yeah,” he said. “We’ll protect them, right?” He turned to his own Manikin, standing at the edge of the lake. “Starting with you. Why don’t you come with us?”

The Manikin shook its head. “My place is not alongside you. I’ll make my own way in this world, with other Manikins like me. And if I end as these other Manikins did, then I will have lived and died as you do: without knowledge of when it comes.”

It turned to leave without saying a farewell, another sign to Luso that they were not quite hume. Luso reached out to stop it, but Ritz caught his eye and shook her head. “Let it go,” she said. “It should be allowed to make its own choices, right?”

Luso sighed. “Yeah, I guess so…”

Vaan stepped away from the dead Manikins, patting Luso on the shoulder as he passed. “You had a good idea,” he said. “We've gotta go and tell the others. From now on, we’ll protect the Manikins as much as we can. And we’ll make sure this is a world they can all live in. Even after we go home."


Character abilities:

Luso Clemens (Sword)

15: War Dance 

35: Magick Hammer

EX: Vitals Shot & Sidewinder

LD: Sandstorm Hunting

FR: Gully Graviga (with Layle)

BT: The Gran Grimoire

Burst Theme: "Green Wind," from the first battle of the game

Luso's got a mix of different ability sources here, and with the exception of his Burst and FR they are all taken from different TA2 jobs. I like Ramza as a Soldier and Samurai and Marche as a Paladin, personally, so I like to keep Luso thematically separate from them. (Plus, there's already a canonical Paladin in TA2 that isn't Luso). And with his appearance in War of the Lions, he has an innate Poach ability so that tells me Hunter. He's not only a Hunter though, as you can see, so I also gave him Blue Magic to play up his loose association with monsters and protecting monsters from actual poachers.

What do you think of Layle being his Force partner?

He plays as a non elemental melee damager dealer with a focus on auras to buff his party's damage, like Attack, Max BRV, and HP Damage Up. Luso himself also specializes in dealing critical damage and backstab bonuses, and Magick Hammer reduces enemy BRV to zero.

Chapter 11: A5C2, Part 1: The Search for Summoned Beasts

Notes:

This may be very bold of me to introduce Elena a little over a month before VII Rebirth comes out. I'm sure that game will change her personality a bit, and give her a much more cohesive kit than what I'm throwing together here. Well, I'm going to try and use her personality just from the original game, but I guess I can change her ability names down the line if I need to.

Force explanation from last time:

Luso with Layle: Both are troublemaking, irresponsible heroes whose curiosity get them into trouble, and both tend to bicker with their friends.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Act 5, Chapter 2, Part 1: The Search for Summoned Beasts


Elena (Final Fantasy VII)

Voiced by: Megumi Toyoguchi

The newest recruit to the Turks. Though rather green, she is determined to prove herself to her new colleagues and has big shoes to fill after following in her older sister’s footsteps. Occasionally clumsy, she can be surprisingly talented at times, and has not-so-secret feelings for her superior.

Elena


Luneth ( Final Fantasy III )

Voiced by: Jun Fukuyama

An orphan raised in the village of Ur. Adventurous, protective, and a little blunt, his curiosity often gets the better of him. The way he encourages the party has caused them to view him as a pillar of support in their journey to restore the light of the crystals.

Luneth


 

Luca ( Final Fantasy IV: The After Years )

Voiced by: Ai Nonaka

The princess of the dwarves who Cecil and the others first encountered as a child, when her precious dolls Calca and Brina fell under Golbez’s control. As an adult, she showed prodigal skill with engineering and became Cid’s best apprentice, with sights on surpassing her master one day. She still loves her dolls and has a soft spot for Palom.

Luca & Calcabrina


LUNETH


Fire scorched the ground just inches away from Luneth’s feet and icicles burst into a sunburst of tiny shards. He shielded his face with his arms as he ran and dove for cover around a corner into the next alley between clusters of buildings. Pressing his back against the wall, he caught his breath and tried to make sense of his surroundings in this chaotic city of steel and bolts.

The mad giggles of his pursuer rang out, reverberating across the empty streets. “Come out, come out, little boy! I need to give you a warm welcome to this world! Or how about a blazing hot welcome?”

Luneth wasn’t afraid of jesters. Nor was he afraid of a fight. But he also knew when he was outmatched.

He tightened his grip on the haft of his handaxe and kept running.


RENO


“There’s no mistaking it. That’s my father’s favorite cannon.”

Reno craned his neck up at the massive barrel of Junon’s signature Mako Cannon jutting out from the city toward the sea. As far as cities went, Junon was marginally better than Midgar but still a cesspool at the best of times – the difference was that Junon was a cesspool whose filth saw the light of day. Even Under Junon, beneath the airfield, got more daylight than Midgar’s slums.

It was strange to see it so quiet, though. Gulls flew by overhead and for once he could hear the waves lapping against the shore, but no people walked the streets. The memory of soldiers drilling filled his ears to make up for the lack of the real thing. And even though this replication of the real Junon looked like it had its filth caked to the walls, he couldn’t spot any wind-blown garbage on the ground. He wondered why the World of Respite would reproduce a trash heap like this place.

He never mentioned it aloud to anyone but Rude, but he always thought the old president was compensating for something with the size of this cannon.

Cid Haze gave an appreciative whistle. “That’s some big gun. Hope your father didn’t use it for anything nefarious.”

Rufus ran a hand through his hair and smirked. “I don’t think you need me to answer that. To be honest, I always thought it was ridiculously over the top. Junon was the seat of the Vice President and I suspect it was because my father wanted the public to think I was the one compensating for something.”

Reno had to conceal a chuckle and even Cissnei coughed into her hand. “Cid, I think you’d be more interested in Junon’s airfield. Or even the Underwater Reactor – I wonder if that is here as well,” she said.

The Onion Knight walked ahead of them and looked around. “So would you associate any summons with this place? Why do you think the city appeared here?”

Reno and Rude looked at each other and both of them shrugged in tandem.

“Our world does not have such strong associations to the summons as some of your other worlds, from what I have gathered,” said Rufus. “There are rare types of materia that someone can use to call them forth, but they are difficult to find.”

Rydia, who had been looking out at the sea, turned back to Reno and the others and brushed her wind-whipped hair out of her eyes. “Do you think we might have to find one of those special materia? Is there a way to track them?”

“You’re the summoner,” said Reno. “Wouldn’t you know? Or why can’t you just – ” He waved his hands around in mimicry of casting a spell. “ – summon one of them to us?”

Rydia folded both of her hands over her chest. “I think I speak for all of the summoners among us. Since coming to this world, the eidolons I summon in battle have been different from the ones I’ve always known in my world. It’s like… they’re an imitation, or a small fraction of their power. I can’t speak with them or understand their feelings.”

Cid scratched at his beard as they all considered her words. “Well, we won’t get anywhere by sittin’ here and talkin’ about it. Let’s get to the search.”

Reno looked at the storefronts and smirked when he saw one he recognized. The dirtiest, shadiest hole in the wall in Junon. “Before that, how about we stop for a drink? I see a favorite haunt of ours, and with no one here that means everything behind the bar is free.”

Rude turned to Reno and Reno didn’t need to see his eyes to know about the panic behind his partner’s shades. “Reno, that would be extremely unprofessional. We’re on the clock – and with the boss.”

Rufus waved a hand. “No, no. Your boss isn’t here. Don’t refrain on my account.”

Cissnei glanced at their companions. “Our leader is here and he is underaged, so I’m not sure it would be appropriate.” She looked Rydia up and down and folded her arms. “Though I have to admit, I don’t know how old you are, Rydia.”

Rydia only shrugged with an all-too-innocent smile and led the way to the bar. “Me neither,” she said. Reno grinned with approval.

The Onion Knight scowled. “You don’t have to worry about me. If I really wanted to – and I don’t – I’d just will it into existence on the airship.”

The inside of the bar was as dark and dingy as he remembered, with few windows and years of cigarette smoke clinging to the upholstery. Oak lined the sides of the bar, the stools, and the pool table, a hint of elegance withered away beneath the years of Shinra employees drinking away the stresses of their jobs. Garish neon signs still decorated the walls or advertised brands of beer and whiskey. Everything looked so similar that Reno didn’t immediately notice the lone figure in a suit slumped over at the bar with a morose expression, staring at the empty bottle in their hands – another common fixture.

“Elena!” said Rude. “What are you doing here?”

Elena’s head shot to the doorway and her eyes widened when she saw them. “Rude? Reno? And… Mr. President!” She hurried to her feet, nearly tripping when her feet got tangled in her barstool, and glared at Reno and Rude reproachfully when she straightened. “You both know the boss wouldn’t approve of bringing the president here.”

Rufus held up a hand to suppress her objections. “It’s fine, Elena. This place is rather… quaint.”

Rydia waved. “Nice to meet you! Are you another one of the Turks?”

“A new recruit,” said Cissnei, crossing her arms and smiling. “One I haven’t had the chance to work alongside. Welcome, Elena.”

Elena frowned. “I’m not that new anymore. Are you the Turk known by the code name ‘Shuriken’? It’s been a long time.”

“I go by Cissnei now,” she said. Cissnei straightened her posture and folded her arms behind her back, making Reno roll his eyes. Why did everyone insist on being so uptight? “I used to be on the same team as Elena’s sister.”

“Who are your new associates?” Elena asked, swiftly changing the subject – as Reno knew she would when the subject of her sister came up. “Have they been properly vetted?”

“Yeah, yeah,” said Reno, digging behind the bar. “There’s a lot we gotta brief you on.”


ELENA


When she ended up in an unnervingly empty Junon, she wandered for hours before she had ended up in that bar. Bereft of any orders or guidance, she didn’t know what else to do and wandered – in part subconsciously – to a place associated with comfort and warm memories with her colleagues. She had been thinking about what to do next when Reno and the others showed up and told her that she was in a different world, of all things. But if even the president bought into that crazy story, who was she to deny it?

In all honesty, the worst part was that she was supposed to trust Kadaj, or at least expect him not to stab her in the back, but thankfully he didn’t join the survey into Junon.

Monsters and machinery roamed and rampaged through the empty streets, clanging in the distance, which in any other scenario would have caused mass panic in Junon but was apparently business as usual for everyone here. Even so, Elena couldn’t help but try and focus on her job. It was her way of maintaining normalcy.

She took down the last unmanned gunship that assaulted her with a well-timed grenade into its loading bay and flipped open her PHS. “West 7th Street is clear,” she said. “Targets eliminated.”

“Well done,” said Cissnei, on the other end. “Survey is ongoing here.”

“That was amazing!” said Lyse, pumping a fist into the air. “Are all the Turks as efficient as you four?”

Elena snapped her phone shut and pocketed it. “Nowadays, it’s only Reno, Rude, myself, and our boss Tseng. Cissnei quit before I joined up. So… yes, if you think I’m efficient, then we all are.”

Elena didn’t know how she found herself with only Lyse for company – an otherworlder. Reno and Rude kept Rufus safe as they explored while Cissnei led a separate group in searching for the summoned beast that they all thought might be here. Elena had actually gone off on her own, but Lyse had followed her for some reason.

“Even though I’m sure you’re capable enough, I figured anyone new to this world shouldn’t be going off on their own,” said Lyse, stretching her arms over her head as they walked. She looked a little too relaxed for being in an area infested with monsters and murderous machines.

Elena wondered, briefly, if people from other worlds could read minds. “But I know Junon pretty well.”

Lyse winked. “Don’t forget, it’s not the Junon you know! As much as it looks like someplace familiar to you, we’ve still got to be careful.” She sniffed the air and glanced toward the sea wall, scrunching her face. “That said… I hate to offend, but is this place special to you? The water smells awful. Everything is so… industrial.”

Elena laughed. “No, not particularly – I’ve just spent some time here for work. My favorite part is probably that bar we were in earlier.” According to the others, it was possible that Elena herself had summoned Junon here somehow, but she didn't know how or why she would have done it.

Lyse looked back at her. “You work really hard, don’t you?”

“Of course! I’m proud of being a Turk,” Elena said. “And we do important jobs. Surveillance, intelligence, protecting persons of interest, apprehending other persons of interest, protecting company secrets…” She clapped her mouth shut. “I’m not supposed to be saying all that.”

“It’s fine, Reno and Rude have already mentioned all that, more or less,” said Lyse, laughing. “But I don’t get it. You seem… nice. All of you do. Yet you do work like that for a company that’s draining the planet’s life away, to hear Barret tell of it.”

Elena looked up at the sky – one place mostly untouched by Shinra. “We found ways to justify what we did,” she said. Lyse fell silent after that, and Elena wondered what judgments she passed. “If it makes you feel any better… Those Avalanche guys don’t seem to remember, but Shinra the company isn’t really around anymore. No one’s draining mako energy and we’re actually helping to restore the planet.”

Lyse grinned. “Oh, really? And you can all just come together like that and rebuild?”

“Of course, there have been challenges,” said Elena. “But yeah, I suppose so.” The silence between them lengthened as they looked around the empty streets and Elena weighed her opinion of Lyse, wondering how much to tell her. “You know… when I was younger, I didn’t want to join the Turks at all.”

“What made you change your mind?”

“My big sister,” said Elena. “Oh, she annoyed me so much. She was a Turk, too, and I never wanted anything to do with Shinra because of that. She did everything better than me. But eventually, I decided to join up so I could surpass her.”

Lyse looked at Elena and her eyes softened. “That’s as good a motivation as any,” she said. “Some big sisters can be tough. I wanted to measure up to my sister, too. She was one of the strongest people I’ve ever met. After she was gone, I didn’t really know what to do… so I spent a while pretending to be her, in a sorry attempt to fill her shoes.”

Elena wanted to hit herself for her social blunder. “Oh, no, uh… I’m sorry. My sister is still around. She just left the Turks.” She cleared her throat. “I’m sorry about your sister. Here I am complaining about mine.”

Lyse shook her head. “No, no, it’s okay! I understand if your feelings for your sister are complicated. I don’t know her, but I bet she was like that so she could be a big sister you could admire.”

Elena wanted to scoff. “Maybe,” she said. She looked off toward the city’s skyline again, but far away toward the base of the cannon she saw an explosion burst from the base of a building, causing it to topple. She halted and pulled out her PHS. “What was that?”

Lyse squinted. “There’s someone flying around over there, using magic. Is that… Kefka?”


ONION KNIGHT


“Kefka’s here? Then there’s got to be something nearby that he wants,” Onion Knight said. At one of the upper levels of the city, they had a vantage point of most things this side of the cannon. But he would have thought Kefka would make his presence known.

Rude hung up his phone. “Agreed,” he said. “He should be near the base of the cannon. She said it looks like he’s chasing something. Or someone.”

Red XIII growled. “And if that’s the case, then we may be close to one of the summoned beasts.”

Desch clapped the Onion Knight on the shoulder. “Ready, partner?”

Onion Knight looked up at the buildings towering on both sides of them. “How will we get there?”

Cid Haze pointed to the end of the street, which opened up to a flat platform with a black machine that had crossed blades on top of it. “Well, how ‘bout one of them flying contraptions? I bet I can fly it!”

Rude adjusted his sunglasses. “That would be a helicopter. And since you called it a ‘flying contraption,’ I think I’ll be the one who takes the liberty of flying it.”


PALOM


The blue image of Shelke shimmered as she used her ability to contact them. “Kefka has been detected near your location. Be on your guard.”

“Yeah, we’re kind of aware of that with all the explosions!” Palom said, ducking his head to avoid shrapnel from the fire magic up above.

They had found themselves in a section of the city charred black and with metal warped beyond recognition, a cacophony of monsters hiding the true reason for the devastation. The wreckage of living machines littered the streets, belching fumes that made the air heavy with smoke and the scent of oil. Kefka’s mad laughter echoed as he flew about the scene – whatever had occupied his attention earlier did not make for prey as appealing as Palom, Porom, and Leonora.

Shelke’s holographic form vanished.

“What do we do?” Leonora asked, lip quivering. “He does not seem inclined to talk…”

“That guy? No way!” Palom exclaimed. He gestured to his student with his staff. “C’mon, keep it moving!”

More fire rained down on them, but Palom neutralized it with ice that bloomed in midair. Kefka skipped away from the exploding ice shards as if he walked on solid ground, and with a flick of his finger he unleashed another conflagration condensed into a sphere that screamed toward them. Porom whirled around Palom and conjured a barrier to protect them from the blast, while Palom launched a volley of thunderbolts from under the cover of Kefka’s own attack.

One of the bolts struck the mad clown right in the butt, causing Palom to grin. 

“Don’t underestimate us!” he shouted up at Kefka.

If anything, that seemed to amuse Kefka even more. “Aww, is the widdle baby teething? That almost felt like a bite!” He wagged his finger at them. “Now, now – I think the kiddies need to be scolded! Hmm… am I above immolating toddlers?”

“Be careful, he’s preparing something big!” Porom warned, gripping her staff with both hands.

Kefka tapped his chin, finishing his thought with a wicked smile. “Nah!” Still in midair, he spread his arms out and the glow of something holy burned behind him. Palom sensed the ambient magic around them warping like the city’s metal as the light condensed into a solid beam that descended from the heavens. Palom locked eyes with his sister and he lent her his power.

Before they could form a barrier together powerful enough to stop the spell, Leonora stepped in front of them and formed her own.

“No! Don’t be stupid!” Palom yelled out, but he was too late to stop her. His vision turned white as Kefka’s Light of Judgment seared everything, blinding him and silencing all other noise. For a moment, he wondered if this would actually do them in – no one knew if the eidolons’ protections from death had actually fallen yet. It wasn’t something they could just test.

The whiteness felt like eternity but the pain was brief. Fleeting thoughts came and went. He supposed, if this really was the end, that he could do much worse than fighting alongside his twin and Leonora. Shame he had to have his final moments in his child body, though.

“Leonora? Leonora!” he heard his sister shouting, as if distant. Palom opened his eyes and realized he was still on the city street – but further down the road. His ears rang and his vision swam back into focus when he saw Porom bent over a prone Leonora, the latter’s robes smoldering.

“Oho? A teleportation spell?” Kefka asked, still levitating above them. “That was quick, but it wasn’t far enough, kiddies!”

A teleportation spell? Palom didn’t cast that, and he knew Porom didn’t either. Was it possible Leonora had managed it in addition to casting the barrier?

Palom grit his teeth and tried to stand. Even if the teleportation spell didn’t bring them far enough, Leonora’s barrier had done its job to protect them from the worst of the damage. He prepared another spell against Kefka when he descended to the ground, laughing derisively.

Leonora blinked weakly up at them when Palom approached. “I’m so terribly sorry…” she said.

“Oh, I love it when your big, heroic efforts amount to nothing,” said Kefka, waving his arms in circles to generate magic. A cloud of poisonous gas ballooned around him; a harbinger of the destructive spell to come.

Palom glared, heat rising in his chest. His cape fluttered as he prepared his own counterattack. “You hurt my student! What do you even want with us?”

“Want, want, want – is it not enough to pay you losers a little social visit?” said Kefka. “And by social, I mean coming by for this big ol’ cannon! Just imagine the kinds of social calls I can make with it!”

“What do you mean?” Porom asked. “You really just want the cannon?”

The earth erupted beneath Palom’s feet and he realized the poison cloud was a misdirection. A barrage of fire, ice, lightning, and poison followed, but Palom wasn’t quick enough to retaliate. Porom managed to cover herself and Leonora from the onslaught. A wave of sickness washed over Palom as the Bio spell took hold. Kefka’s attacks came from too many directions, erratic and impossible to predict, and it was all he could do to just survive.

A figure with silver hair darted toward Kefka while his back was turned, swinging an axe that Kefka barely noticed in time with a yelp of surprise.

“Oh, lookie here – you’re still alive!”

The one with silver hair was a boy that Palom didn’t recognize. He stopped to catch his own breath, but his rescuer looked in even worse shape than Palom did. His face was covered in dirt and ash, clothes singed and blood on his arm. He strained to hold his weapon with his uninjured hand, bright eyes fixed on Kefka with fierce determination.

“Are you okay?” the boy asked Palom without taking his eyes off Kefka. “My name’s Luneth! Do you know where we are?”

“We don’t really look okay, do we?” Palom asked, grimacing. Even so, he held his staff forward and prepared for another round of attacks.

Luneth’s eyes diverted to something behind Palom, widening with recognition and something that looked like anger. “What the – Xande!?”

Palom spun around so fast he almost stumbled. The last time they saw Xande, something seemed to change in him, but it was impossible to know the mage emperor’s allegiances.

“Begone, fool,” said Xande, his staff spinning behind him as he gestured forward with both hands. Stone burst from the ground beneath Kefka’s feet while darkness and fire converged on him from above. He avoided earth and fire but the darkness spell struck true, launching him backward where he landed on his feet with a murderous glare directed at Xande.

“Spoiling my fun,” Kefka said. A flying black vehicle with a single propeller flew toward them, kicking up wind. “Oh well. I know when I’m outnumbered. Bye-bye!”

When he vanished, Luneth immediately turned on Xande, struggling to hold his axe straight. “What’s this? How are you alive? We beat you!”

Xande regarded him for a moment, arms crossed even after the threat had passed. “I have no recollection of who you are,” he said.

Leonora’s voice called out weakly as Porom worked her healing magic on her. “Don’t… don’t hurt Xande. He’s… a kind man.”

Luneth looked at her in disbelief. “Huh? Do you have any idea who he is?”

“Xande!” The flying vehicle landed, revealing its occupants who jumped down with their weapons drawn. The Onion Knight was in the lead, glaring at Xande. “Was that all you? Where’s Kefka?”

“No,” said Palom, leaning on his staff. “Xande saved us from Kefka. Kefka was here to try and use the cannon. What he wanted to use it on, I have no idea.”

At Palom’s words, the Onion Knight frowned but lowered his sword. “Really? Why would you help them?”

Xande glanced toward Leonora, who now sat up, before fixing his gaze back to the Onion Knight. His face betrayed no emotion. “Kefka did not mention what I believe to be his true purpose. He was here because he sought a creature that escaped from him. I, too, have concerns about our protections from death being lost, and I believe this creature has something to do with it.”

“Cid? Desch!” Luneth called out suddenly, grinning as he noticed two of the vehicle’s other occupants. “Wow, you’re here too! Who are all these guys?”

Cid and Desch looked at each other before Desch stepped forward, regarding Luneth with hesitation. “Uh… do we know you?”

Luneth’s axe hung slack in his hands. “C’mon, that’s not funny.”

Apparently deciding that Leonora would be okay, Porom switched her attention to Luneth. “Things are not as they seem,” she said, as the healing light enveloped him. “We’re all from different worlds, so this Cid, Desch, and even Xande might not be the same people you know.”

“How’s that possible?” Luneth asked, frowning. “They look exactly the same!” He looked back toward Cid and Desch. “Don’t you remember? We saved the world from Xande and the Cloud of Darkness together!”

“I’m sorry, boy,” said Cid. “I can’t say I recognize you one bit.”

The Onion Knight shook his head. “Yeah,” he said. “They did all that with me.”

Luneth furrowed his brow. “But I have no idea who you are,” he said to the Onion Knight. “Do you guys remember Arc, Refia, and Ingus? What about Aria?”

“Aria, I know of,” said Desch. “But not those other names. Sorry, kid – that’s just how this world works sometimes. Different versions of us seem to exist in multiple places.”

Luneth crossed his arms and tapped his feet, frowning thoughtfully, and everyone else fell silent until Mog drifted toward them from further down the street with Elena, Lyse, and Rydia in tow.

“Thank you for helping us, Xande,” Leonora said, using her staff to pull herself to her feet. Palom suspected she timed her comment to avoid the new arrivals having to ask more questions.  “We owe you a great debt. Can you tell us more about that creature Kefka was chasing?”

“It was small and made of magic, with a glowing ruby on its head,” said Xande. He pointed down the street, toward the elevator that Palom and the others had arrived with. “I believe it escaped to that elevator when Kefka’s barrage on this boy began.”

“The name’s Luneth,” Luneth said, scowling. “Don’t forget it!”

“A ruby?” Lyse asked. “Was that Carbuncle? Is that one of the ones protecting us in this world?”

“No, he isn’t, kupo!” said Mog. “But Carbuncle’s power is tied closely to theirs, and he knows just about everything that happens in the World of Illusions, kupo! If we find him, he might be able to tell us what happened to the others.”

“Did it go to Lower Junon, then?” Elena asked.

Xande crossed his arms again, closing his eyes as if bracing himself to say something he would regret. “I will help you find this Carbuncle,” he said. “For now, our goals are aligned in preventing the corruption of the summoned beasts.”

Palom looked around at the others. It was his turn for Porom’s healing, and he shrugged as she went to work. Luneth bit his lip as he looked around, likely still perturbed by the situation, while the Onion Knight regarded both Luneth and Xande thoughtfully.

“Hey,” said Palom. “We’ve done weirder things here in this world. Like Leonora said, we owe ya. Welcome to the team, Xande.”


LUCA


Luca’s dolls, Calca and Brina, spun in place and danced idly while the adorable creature in front of them entranced Luca. She had never seen anything like it in the Underworld before – it looked supremely out of place amidst the scorched earth and flows of magma.

The creature shone with light, but it did not seem to notice her. Then it ran away, chasing after a series of twinkling lights that looked like stars.

“Hey, wait up, little guy!” she called toward it. “Are you from the Feymarch?”

It looked at her and the ruby on its forehead blinked before it turned back to chase after the lights.

My name is Carbuncle ,” a voice resounded in her mind, startling her. “ Sorry I can’t linger – you’re going to meet some people shortly who will need these lights !”


Character abilities:

Elena (Throwing - Bombs)

15: Kick

35: Bewildering Throw (inflicts Confuse: enemies do not attack on their turns)

EX: New Recruit

LD: Grenade Barrage

FR: Icy Cocktail (with Cater)

BT: Try This on For Size!

Burst theme: "Hurry Up!" which places in the Battle Square and tense moments, such as when the Diamond Weapon appears on the map

Elena's abilities mostly come from her boss fight. She has nothing named, so I had to come up with them on my own. She is a non-elemental ranged attacker specializing in multi-target damage. She can also inflict Confuse which is one of the more notable abilities she has in her boss fight, some turn delay capabilities, and offensive party auras. Since she's the only boss in the game that switches rows, she also has a bit of a stance system going on where her auras actually change to become more defensive after using her LD (or maybe in my world Opera Omnia has front and back rows, hehe). Her Force ability, "Icy Cocktail," refers to a Molotov Cocktail rather than a drink!


Lyse

FR: Proven Strength (with Elena)
BT: Perfect Balance

Burst theme: "Liberty or Death," which plays in the Ala Mhigo dungeon at the end of the Stormblood main story

Alternate costume: Her dress that she starts wearing at the end of Stormblood

And now Lyse gets her Force and Burst, too! Her Burst name is a Monk ability.


What are your thoughts on this chapter and the Force partnerships? To be honest, Elena is in the story so early not because of a chain of Force partnerships (though hers was easy, both of her partners are already in game), but because of another character who I did need to introduce early because of their "Force chain"... we'll be seeing them soon.

Notes:

In that Luca art at the beginning, technically the art of Calca and Brina comes from Dimensions 2!

Regarding Luneth and the DS Onion Kids, to be honest I was never crazy about the idea of them joining the roster in Opera Omnia, mostly because I always knew there were limited character slots and I wasn't sure if I wanted them to take them up. But for the purposes of this fic, I'm excited to delve into the implications of what it means to have both Luneth and Onion Knight in the same place.

Please comment and let me know what you think of the chapter or story overall!

Chapter 12: A5C2, Part 2: Ode to the Shining Ruby

Notes:

This chapter was a toughie to write! I also keep distracting myself with wanting to add new characters and I have to hold myself back or it'll be never ending. I don't want to be as fast and loose with new character additions like Brave Exvius is - I have some guidelines for who can and can't be added. :P That said, it's still a lot.

Force partnership explanations:
Elena with Cater: Both are kinda clumsy members of their teams of elite fighters. This one is kinda weak, but it's tough with the Type-0 cadets.

Lyse with Elena: Both are inexperienced members of their teams motivated primarily by an older sister.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Act 5, Chapter 2, Part 2: Ode to the Shining Ruby


RYDIA


When they crowded into the elevator separating the upper part of the city from the lower, Cloud told Rydia about Lower Junon – a fishing village with polluted waters trampled underfoot by the city above. When the elevator doors opened, Rydia expected to see – and smell – a derelict collection of fishermen’s huts, rotting docks, discarded rods and torn nets, and rusted metal propping up the city above. Instead, heat blasted them and instead of water they saw black stone and the glowing flow of hot magma.

“How strange!” said Rydia. “This looks like the Underworld.”

Elena jumped and pressed herself against the back of the elevator. “The Underworld? Do you mean we’ve died?”

Yang was the first to step out, closing his eyes and breathing in deeply. “This indeed appears to be the Underworld. Not to worry – it is nothing so grim. It is simply the world below the planet’s surface, domain of the dwarves.”

“And the eidolons!” Rydia exclaimed, grinning. “The Feymarch is down here, so this is where we should find Carbuncle. And maybe some of the other eidolons!”

Elena straightened and cleared her throat, tugging on her suit to smooth it out. “Ah, right. Yes, everything appears to be in order. I was just surprised, that’s all.”

Mustadio sniggered as he stepped out of the lift. Rydia tried not to laugh as well – for all of Elena’s professionalism, she could be a little overeager. She found it rather endearing.

Cloud and Mustadio walked ahead, taking in the sight of the cavern that seemed to stretch into the eternal darkness. Meanwhile, Rydia turned to the final three members of the party that had fit into the lift after it ascended back to pick up more people.

“Xande, do you know why Kefka was attacking Carbuncle?” she asked. He kept his arms crossed and his eyes closed the whole way down, as if he couldn’t bear to look at any of them. Rydia found him intimidating, but not quite as fearsome and despicable as some of their other foes. From what she knew of him, he had been driven to commit his evil deeds out of a desire for an eternal life. With their immortality in threat now, his desire to join them made sense to her. “Palom, Luneth, did you learn anything from your fight?”

“I suspect Kefka has no reason for doing anything beyond his desire for ceaseless destruction,” said Xande. “Perhaps he is the cause of the phantom beasts becoming corrupted and losing their ability to protect us.”

“I dunno, that doesn’t seem like something Kefka would do. He’d just keep trying to kill us over and over again,” said Palom, face screwed up in thought. “He didn’t say anything about Carbuncle while we fought him. He just wanted that Mako Cannon. More destruction, like Xande said.”

“He doesn’t seem like the type to give up so easily,” said Luneth. “He was toying with me while he chased me through the city, and only stopped because Palom and the others came around instead.”

“Why did he want that cannon, anyway?” Mustadio asked. “It didn’t look like it was particularly mobile. Does it only shoot in a straight line?”

They all looked at Cloud and Elena, who both shrugged. “Don’t ask us,” Cloud said. “It’s destructive, but can only do so much.”

“Cecil, Celes, and Kain are guarding it, in any case,” said Yang. “In the event that monster tries to commandeer it.”

“The other Turks are helping, too,” said Elena. “Kefka won’t get anywhere near it on their watch.”

They continued their trek through the Underworld, with monsters as plentiful as the Underworld back home and twice as vicious. Rydia wondered if it extended across the span of this world as well, or if like everything else it was slowly expanding. If so, they would have to find a way to explore more of it – who knew how many allies could be down here?

Palom froze a trio of living bombs in a block of ice far bigger than it needed to be, the sheer cold making Rydia shiver despite the heat from the rivers of magma. His casting came with harsh gestures and a scowl unbefitting the face of a five year-old.

“Is there something bothering you?” Rydia asked him, edging a bit closer to the heat.

“No,” he said.

Rydia frowned, but figured she didn’t ask him the right question. “How’s Leonora’s recovery going?”

“She’s fine,” he said, just as curt. Just as Rydia was about to try a different angle, he spoke again. “I don’t get it – how’d she make a barrier strong enough to defend against Kefka’s spell and teleport us away from the damage at the same time? Why even do both?”

“The girl is a mage of unusual talent,” said Xande from behind Rydia, making her jump. “Though she did conjure a powerful barrier to protect you from the worst of the damage, it was not enough. It was I who teleported you away from the danger.”

Palom’s eyes widened, but he seemed pleased with that answer. “Oh,” was all he said. Rydia gave him a knowing smile; he wasn’t ready for the student to surpass the master, it seemed.

The ground shook. Rocks tumbled down the craggy mountainside and dust rose in clouds down the path ahead. Stone golems and coeurls groaned and hissed as they fled from the source of the noise.

“What is that?” Elena asked, pressing against the stone lining their path with her eyes fixed upward for falling rocks. Rydia followed her lead.

Cloud, Yang, and Palom were the first to rush to the source of the noise. Rydia shared a glance with their other companions and followed with slightly more hesitation, but when she rounded the bend her eyes widened when she saw a nightmare smashing its giant head against the ground to crush monsters.

But it was a nightmare she recognized.

“Calcabrina!” Palom exclaimed.

Cloud, Elena, Mustadio, and Xande prepared for a battle, but Rydia shook her head at them and smiled. “It’s okay – that’s a friend,” she said, to their increasing perplexion.

When the dust cleared, the giant, monstrous doll lolled in midair as if it was a puppet without strings, and spun so that a whirl of magic circled around it. When it stopped, two much smaller dolls stood in its place: Calca and Brina, separated. Behind them, Rydia could now see a familiar face – a dwarf girl with a visor and toolbelt, goggles hanging around her neck, and hammers dangling at her waist.

“Oh, lali-ho, guys!” said Luca, waving. “Lots of monsters around here!”

Palom slid to a stop, his face an equal mixture horrified and surprised. “Luca!?”

Rydia ran over and hugged her. “Oh, it’s so good to see you!

Luca grinned and hugged her back. “I’ve got no idea what’s going on, but I saw some little animal that called itself Carbuncle – he said he was trying to catch these twinkling lights for some people I was about to meet. Did he mean all of you? Who are all these new people?”

“Twinkling lights?” Rydia asked, tilting her head. “Did he mean… someone’s memories?”

Mustadio stood frozen with his eyes fixed on Calca and Brina, who stood equally as motionless but with eyes staring blankly ahead. “Is anyone going to explain what the hell that thing was?”


AERITH


Aerith joined the second group descending down into the cavernous darkness that Rydia and the others had called the Underworld. At this point, the wondrous sights of other worlds no longer surprised her, but they never failed to captivate her. Even with the stifling heat and dry air that made the back of her throat tickle, the thought of a place like this where people could live felt like a fantasy. Under the earth, never knowing sunlight. On second thought, perhaps it was not so different from the Midgar slums.

“We’ve got dwarves in my world, too!” Eiko said, excitedly chattering with Luca while they took a break in their search for Carbuncle. Alphinaud, Noctis, Ciaran, Chelinka, and Bartz sat in a circle with them away from the sight of monsters. “Though they say rally-ho in greeting instead.”

“Rally-ho?” Luca asked, leaning against a rocky alcove while her dolls stood guard. “Well, that just sounds silly.”

Alphinaud raised a finger. “The dwarves that I know have a fierce rivalry with the other dwarven villages, going so far as to ensure they greet each other differently. A dwarven greeting is an important cultural cornerstone, it seems.”

“Yeah,” said Luca, grinning. “You’re explaining that to a dwarf.”

His face reddened. “My apologies. I was simply making an observation about similarities to my world.”

“No worries, I’m just teasing,” Luca said, laughing. Aerith giggled with her – something about her laugh was infectious. “So… what’s the deal with Carbuncle, anyway? Is it an eidolon?”

“He is,” said Eiko. “Well, Mog says he’s not quite like the others here, and mostly just lives in the World of Illusions rather than helping us in battle. But he’s really helpful in my world!”

“In mine, Carbuncle is a magicked creature summoned by engraving geometric symbols upon gemstones,” Alphinaud said, observing his own moonstone carbuncle. “It is an aid for spellwork rather than a Primal. It’s quite useful as a familiar.”

Noctis sat with his arms hanging over his knees. “Carbuncle’s a divine messenger,” he said. “It, uh, actually guides me through my dreams sometimes.”

“And in our world, Carbuncles are quite large, though they are a race of peaceful sages who know much about our history and the miasma, sleeping away in Mag Mell,” said Ciaran. “Some say they even guide people through the realms of the dead.”

Chelinka nodded, her eyes downcast. “They do,” she said. “It seems Carbuncle acts as a guide of some sort in a few different worlds, even if they look different.”

Aerith frowned, sensing the weight of Chelinka’s sadness but unwilling to pry. “So… the common thread is their ruby?” She crossed her arms, pursing her lips in thought. “Is this one guiding us to whoever’s lost memories those are? I wonder why he’s deciding to help now.”

“The Carbuncle I know wasn’t a guide,” Bartz declared, putting his hands on his hips. “It turned into a giant monster that tested our strength!”

Eiko threw her arms up in the air. “A monster!? That cute little guy? No way, that sounds dumb!”

“It’s not dumb!” Bartz shot back. “It was really powerful, with huge rippling muscles and everything!”

Aerith had to admit – the concept sounded a bit unbelievable. Even Alphinaud’s carbuncle tilted its head in confusion at Bartz’s antics and Aerith couldn’t help but laugh.


LEONORA


“Ohhh, but you’re just too cute!” Luca exclaimed, bending down to pinch Palom’s cheeks. Magma sizzled around them, shooting gaseous fumes into the air from vents in the earth.

He batted her hands away, scowling. “Yeah, yeah. Not like you’ve never seen me as a kid.”

“He is rather adorable,” said Leonora, laughing into her sleeve. Porom had finished healing her and as soon as she learned that they’d found Luca in the Underworld, she rushed to join her friends. “Seeing him like this does make me nostalgic.”

“Yeah, really makes you realize how young we all were back then, huh?” Luca said. She looked over her shoulder toward Ceodore and Ursula. “That was before you two were even born!”

“It’s pretty amazing to think King Cecil and my dad let you two fight with them, as young as you were,” Ursula said to the twins. “It took forever to convince my dad I could handle myself, even at my age now!”

“Hmph,” said Palom with an upturned nose. “We’re just that good.”

“I have to say, it is strange to see such a young child acting so cocky,” Ceodore noted. “Seeing that expression on an adult is one thing, but…”

Porom sighed. “No, he was always like this.”

“What’s that supposed to mean?” Palom asked, shaking a fist at his sister. “I’ve completely changed from how I was when I was a kid!”

Luca clasped her hands together and cooed at him. “You were such a ladykiller even back then. But now looking at you I just can’t help but wanna squeeze you! You’re just like Calca and Brina!”

His eyes bulged and he sputtered, making Leonora laugh more and this time even Ceodore and Ursula joined in.

“Okay, I’ve had enough!” Palom exclaimed, stopping and clenching his fists. “It was fun for a bit, but I’m over being a kid!” A bright light enveloped him, forcing them all to shield their eyes.

Porom shrugged. “I was wondering how long it would take for you to want to change back,” she said, and a bright light surged around her as well.

Ursula spread her legs to brace herself as a wind swept over them. “Whoa! Give us some warning before you use super powerful magic or something!”

Leonora blinked away the light in her eyes as it died down. Where the children once stood, an older Palom and Porom had taken their place. Palom scowled at them all, throwing his braid over his shoulder, while Porom patted the dust from the familiar pink outfit and cape Leonora recognized. Even her hair had been dyed pink again.

Ceodore stepped back in surprise. “Wait, it’s a choice? How?”

Porom winked at him. “It’s just a matter of willpower, like everything else here.”

Leonora smiled softly at Palom while she watched Luca blushing and grinning at him. No matter how much her teacher insisted otherwise, he never changed in his desire to impress them.


LUNETH


Luca’s boisterous enthusiasm intensified when she met Mustadio’s automaton partner, Construct 8. The two machinists shared notes on their respective robots, talking about their inner workings in such complicated, technical terms that it went completely over Luneth’s head. He stood with Elena and Lyse, watching the pair in confusion while Luca and Mustadio raved.

“Do either of you know what they’re saying?” Lyse asked.

“Not a clue,” Luneth admitted. “Cid would know, though.” Mentioning the old man brought a pang of sadness. As fun as it was to meet so many new people, it didn’t feel right that Desch and Cid couldn’t remember him. It made him feel lonely; he could only hope that the memories Carbuncle pursued belonged to his friends so they’d remember him instead of whoever the Onion Knight was.

“I do, a little bit,” said Elena. “Robotics isn't my field, but we’ve got plenty of them in Shinra.”

“I’m an apprentice to a Cid, you know,” said Luca, apparently overhearing Luneth’s comment. “Seems like the old coot is taking his sweet time coming to this world, though. I can’t wait for you all to meet him!”

Luneth trailed behind everyone as they all walked ahead, tracking Carbuncle’s path. Normally, he wouldn’t let something like this bother him – Desch’s lost memories came back once before, after all. It was just that he didn’t know what to think about the Onion Knight. Could they all really be from a world just like Luneth’s own? He didn’t want to consider of the possibility of other versions of Arc, Refia, and Ingus coming here and not remembering Luneth either. Wallowing and being sullen wasn’t really Luneth’s style, but he didn’t think he’d be able to bear the idea of his closest friends forgetting him, too.

“Aw, sad your widdle friends don’t remember you?” said a jeering voice behind him. Luneth felt gooseprickles rise on the back of his neck and whirled around with his axe in hand, recognizing the voice as Kefka’s. But he couldn’t see the clown anywhere. The others had gone too far ahead – now he was alone. “Maybe I’ll give them a big knock on the head to help trigger things. Or just to rattle their brain matter loose.”

“Don’t you dare touch them,” Luneth said, his feet sliding across the ground into a stance. “You were listening back in Junon, weren’t you?”

“Heeheehee.” Kefka’s disembodied voice rang out. “Maybe it’s not their memories. Maybe you’re just a doll, like that girl’s little puppets! Oh, I do love playing with dolls.”

Luneth’s stomach twisted. “Go away!”

“Ooh, struck a nerve, have I?” The clown’s voice deepened. “I think I’ll keep an eye on you. How funny it’ll be to watch you realize you don’t exist!”

Luneth grit his teeth and was about to shout a rebuttal back at him, but the air felt lighter and less oppressive and it made him realize the presence had gone. He hadn’t even noticed the weight in the air choking him like the volcanic fumes.

“He’s lying,” Luneth told himself, putting his axe back on his belt and bracing himself. “What does he know? I know I’ll see my friends again, and they’ll all get their memories back!”


AERITH


Aerith flourished her staff as she spun to dodge a flan’s fire spell and countered with ice, reducing it to a pile of red sludge. As soon as Barret and Cait Sith took down the last of the flans together, Cloud pushed ahead through the monster nest, bracing himself against a tower of volcanic rock. 

“There!” Cloud called out. “I think I just saw it.”

“Me too!” Bartz exclaimed.

“Eh?” said Cait Sith, jumping up on the moogle’s head. “That radioactive squirrel thing?”

Aerith followed Cloud’s line of sight, catching a glimpse of a glowing tail disappearing behind more rocky crags jutting out from the landscape. A red blur shot by at the corner of her vision.

“On it,” said Nanaki. The others raced after him like hunters after their hound, with Cait Sith staying behind to tell the others. They came to a stop within a smaller cavern lit by multifaceted crimson crystals, casting the area in a red glow. At the center of the cavern they found Carbuncle with its back to them, but it turned and stood on its hind legs when they arrived. The red ruby on its forehead matched the crystals embedded in the cave walls, but in its joined hands it held something made of a pure, white light.

“I’m feeling something warm,” said Yuffie, pushing her way to the front. “Those memories… are they ours?”

Luneth looked from Carbuncle to Yuffie. “Yours? But… how do you know?”

Carbuncle’s mouth opened and words came out; not like how Luca had said he spoke into her mind. “These memories do indeed belong to those among your number,” he said, voice high and a little musical. His long ears flattened to the side of his head. “I’ve found them for you. They were lost for a long time.”

Aerith took a deep breath and stepped forward, turning her back to Carbuncle, and faced her friends. Particularly Cloud. “If these belong to who I think they do… are you sure you want to remember? There’s no turning back after that.”

Nanaki looked first to Cloud, who appeared hesitant, and then to Aerith. “But they deserve to know. They can’t go on living like this.”

“You had your memories all along, didn’t you?” Cloud asked her. “I can’t have all these holes. I feel… incomplete, with all of my memories missing. I’ve already felt like this before.” His shoulders slackened and he lowered his head. “Zack…”

“We’ve gotta know,” said Barret. “There’s no gettin’...”

“Off of this train we’re on,” Aerith finished for him. “Right. I just… thought it’s been nice, being here with everyone. I know it isn’t ending, but things will feel different. You’ll all look at me differently.” She rubbed her arm and turned back to Carbuncle. “But I know that’s selfish of me. If Galuf and all the others were able to do this… then I guess I will do it, too.”

Carbuncle’s tails flicked and he released the lights into the air. They fell like snowflakes back down onto Cloud, Barret, and Yuffie, who closed their eyes. When they all opened their eyes again after the memories settled in, they turned toward Aerith in tandem and her heart dropped when they looked at her the exact same way she expected them to – with a grief that threatened to burst free. Like she had died.

“After what you did for us, for the Planet, no one could ever call you selfish,” Nanaki said.

Yuffie rushed forward and threw her arms around Aerith with a loud sob. Over her shoulder, Aerith saw Barret rubbing the tears from his eyes, Cloud staring at his feet, and Luneth staring wistfully at Carbuncle, as if he could dispense more memories for them. 

Aerith hugged Yuffie tight. “There, there,” she said. “I’m not gone yet. And besides… we still need to ask Carbuncle for his help.”

“You’re searching for the others who have been corrupted,” Carbuncle said, causing all of them to turn back toward him. “I can help you find them. But be warned: the corruption has turned them all aggressive. Alexander was able to fight it off long enough for you to find him, but you must be strong enough to face all of the others if you are planning to reach them through the darkness clouding their minds.”

Cloud clenched his fists. “We’re as strong as we need to be.”

Carbuncle lowered to all fours and his tails wavered. “I will be the judge of that,” he said.

His ruby shone. Fur rippled as Carbuncle grew in size, muzzle lengthening as sharp fangs grew from his jaws. His paws writhed against the stone and claws emerged to cut deep gouges in the rock. Muscle stretched out from his back to his limbs underneath a thick mane of fur that grew from the back of his head. A deep rumble shook the cave and Aerith realized the monstrous Carbuncle had let out a low growl, threatening to pounce.

“See?” said Bartz, pointing at Carbuncle when they all stood with jaws dropped. “I told you!”

Nanaki launched into action, leaping with claws and fangs bared but Carbuncle lifted up on his hind legs and grabbed Nanaki, using his momentum to hurl Nanaki into the stone wall behind him. Barret unloaded with a barrage of bullets, but they did little to pierce the fur of Carbuncle’s thick arms. Cloud and Luneth attacked together, but the monstrous Carbuncle flew out of the way, high up and out of their reach.

Aerith twirled her staff and sent a healing spell Nanaki’s way before unloading the strongest fire spell she could muster. As it erupted around Carbuncle’s floating form, she jumped back in alarm when Bartz dove at her with a yell.

A barrier flickered around Carbuncle and the fire burst from where Aerith had been standing before Bartz pushed her out of the way. They landed heavily on the ground.

“No magic!” Bartz said. “Carbuncle will just reflect it all back!”

“How was I supposed to know?” she said, scrambling back to her feet. “We don’t have Carbuncle in our world… I think.”

“Ninjutsu’s not magic!” Yuffie exclaimed, hurling her shuriken and unveiling her techniques with a series of hand signs without first testing it. Bolts of lightning flashed in a series of short bursts, piercing the reflective barrier, but magic whirled around Carbuncle as he prepared to cast his own spells at them. Aerith prepared protective magic as a rain of lightning and water fell on them in a torrent, battering her shields in a chaotic and unpredictable pattern; she realized he had bounced the magic off of his own shields, making his aim wild and erratic. While she focused to maintain their defenses, she spotted Nanaki leaping from crystal to crystal as he ascended the cave wall, launching himself at Carbuncle’s throat. He struck where Carbuncle’s thick mane was weakest and both of them yelped as they clawed at each other.

Barret charged up a heavy shot from his gun arm, striking Carbuncle in the haunches while he was distracted by Nanaki, knocking him back against the stone wall and allowing Nanaki to free himself. The magical assault let up as Cloud, Luneth, and Bartz closed in at melee range, dodging claw and tail swipes as they hacked at his magical form.

Carbuncle roared and poison dripped from his maw, coating the ground in an acidic, foul-smelling liquid. Aerith and Yuffie rushed to a higher perch as Aerith cast spells only to keep the others healed. After everyone rushed away from the flood of poison at the cave mouth, heading deeper into the cave, Carbuncle reapplied his reflective barrier and renewed his onslaught of magic. Without focus, bolts of lightning and fire crashed into the cave wall and made the crystals explode into thousands of tiny shards, adding to the cacophony.

“What do we do?” Yuffie asked, eyes wide with panic as she tried to shield herself behind an outcropping of stone.

Luneth readjusted his grip on his axe. “We’ve got to overwhelm him up close!” he shouted. “All of us, attack at once!”

Barret just barely dodged a bolt of lightning. “Are you out of your damn mind!?”

“Can’t use magic,” Cloud said. “So I’m in.”

Luneth led the renewed assault while Barret shot a hail of bullets to give them an opening. Yuffie let out what sounded like a little whimper as she emerged from her cover. Wind circled around Bartz’s sword as he caught up to Luneth and Cloud and Aerith did all she could to deflect the worst of the damage away from them.

Alphinaud and Cait Sith appeared at the cave mouth. They shouted something Aerith couldn’t hear, and behind them the hulking mass of Calcabrina appeared and pushed its way into the cave. Its eyes glowed and lasers beamed toward Carbuncle, striking him from behind. Carbuncle howled and turned to face the new arrival, but before he could attack, the monstrous doll struck with its massive head, slamming Carbuncle into the ground.

Calcabrina pounded again and again, battering Carbuncle and making the entire cave shake so much that Aerith feared it would collapse with them in it. When Carbuncle tried to get up, Calcabrina’s eyes pulsed again and the lasers fired until Carbuncle moved no more.

“Amazing!” said Bartz, his eyes bright.

“Eh, we softened it up,” said Yuffie, edging away from the monstrous doll as Luca, Alphinaud, Elena, and many of the others arrived to fill in the cave – mostly those from Aerith’s world. Mog floated in the rear.

Carbuncle shrunk in size, changing shape back to its normal stature as Calcabrina did the same, splitting into two separate dolls again.

“Great timing,” said Luneth, grinning. “Uh… Carbuncle, are you okay?”

The little creature curled up into a ball, unmoving, but jumped up after they all started to crowd in closer with its fur standing on end. “That hurt ! You didn’t have to hit me so hard! What gives!? I’m just a cute little animal and you guys didn’t hold back at all!”

Aerith and the others drew back, stunned. “But… you asked us to,” she said, gathering herself again. “You said we needed to show our strength so that we could face the other summons.”

“But they’re way stronger than me!”

Luneth knelt down next to him. “Right, well, we’re sorry. But we really need your help. And if you can find any other lost memories…”

“Yeah, and you better give me the nicest room with the softest bed,” Carbuncle said, licking his paws. “I’m going to be bruised for weeks.”

“So it’s gonna be like that, huh?” Cid Highwind asked, lighting a cigarette. “This lil thing’s comin’ with us?”

“But I’m supposed to be the guide, kupo,” Mog said, his pom drooping. “Is Carbuncle trying to take my role?”

Tifa grabbed Aerith’s hand, steering her away from the others, her eyes brimming with tears. “You knew all along, didn’t you? You remembered?”

“I don’t know why I knew,” Aerith admitted. “But I’ve been too happy to spoil it. Besides, that’s not the most important thing you’ve all been missing out on. You beat Sephiroth! You saved the world. You saved Cloud.”

“But we couldn’t save you.” Cloud joined them, with Barret, Nanaki, Yuffie, Cait Sith, Cid, Vincent, and even Jessie behind him.

“Or you, Jessie,” said Barret, frowning. “Here we are, fightin’ alongside Shinra goons and even Rufus himself – yet they’re the ones who dropped the plate on you. On everyone in Sector 7. How can you even forgive us?”

Jessie folded her hands behind her back and stared down at her feet, quiet in a way that made Aerith think she was trying to hide her tears. But when she looked up at them, she was smiling. “It’s… it’s all okay now,” she said. “Like Aerith said, I’m happy to actually fight alongside all of you here. I couldn’t remember all that either. But now that I do… well, what difference does it make? It’s all in the past, right? Years ago now for you guys.”

“That doesn’t mean it’s okay,” Cloud said with a grunt.

Jessie shook her head and wagged her finger at him. “Stop moping. I never even got to meet most of you guys – and it’s been great to make more friends with people from my world! Seriously, I knew something was up anyway when you all seemed to know each other but a bunch of you had no idea who I was, talking about everything with that Sephiroth.”

Aerith smiled at her, astounded at her strength. “It’s been great to become your friend, Jessie. Now that you remember too, I want to keep treasuring our friendship.”

Jessie winked. “Us dead girls gotta stick together, right?”

Tifa gasped. “Jessie!”

“What?” she asked. “It’s true. I’m not gonna sugarcoat it. Even with my memories back I can’t remember a thing from after the plate fell, so I can only assume that means I died. And I can make light of my own death if I want to, thank you very much.”

Cid shook the ashes off the butt of his cigarette. “Well, s’far as I’m concerned, you’re one of us,” he said. “Girl like you, great with machines and explosives? Hell yeah!”

Vincent crossed his arms. “I didn’t think it was in question. You’re on our team, Jessie.”

“I’m guessing the boys didn’t make it either though, huh?” Jessie asked. “Biggs and Wedge?”

Barret shook his head. “Naw… Maybe it’s best you didn’t see how bad it was after the plate fell.”

Aerith clapped her hands together. “Jessie’s right. No moping about us. Besides, even in the Lifestream I’ve got Zack now – and who knows how much time we all have together in this world? Let’s spend our time cherishing it.”

Cloud turned away, back to the others – above everyone else, she knew he had the most to reckon with after gaining his memories back. His identity had been tangled up and he had to make sense of it all over again. And she didn’t know if he had ever let go of his guilt.

As if sensing her thoughts, Tifa squeezed Aerith’s hand and smiled. “He’ll be okay,” she said. “ We will be. All of us are here together.”


KEFKA


Their airship looked like a toy as it flew away from Junon. Toy for smashing . He’d blow it up! Idiots fools where did they go such wimps for running away. Joke’s on them, leaving the big wonderful destructive cannon for him to play with. They forgot. Oh, they forgot. He wasn’t just god of all magic. He was once no no don’t think about that a Magitek knight too. He knew machines. The cannon was a lot like his Light of Judgment. No effort in comparison. This would be fun.

Well, well, well. It only fired in a straight line. Right at the end of the barrel, a Torsion opened up, swallowing devouring black hole . Cannon built up energy, fire fire fire! Devoured by the darkness .

Near their airship, distant and so far away, like a tiny toy on the horizon, another Torsion opened up spitting up the beam from the cannon and ripping away its hull a conflagration spreading from bow to stern and tearing apart the wings and propellers. The fire spread to the ball of gas, that wonderfully reactive balloon, and Kefka heard the explosion all the way from the cannon.

The ship rocked back and forth, black smoke rising in plumes as it fell to the water below. “Such a shame that I missed,” Kefka said, laughing. “I wanted to hit them dead on! Oh, now their deaths will be drawn out and miserable. I guess that’s even better! Oh, Kefka, you’re just too good!”

Even as the airship fell, the fire coalesced into a round shape and launched back at Junon like a comet. Kefka’s eyes widened as he recognized the figure as a bomb monster, hungry for more energy and fixated on the source of the airship’s destruction.

“Now, now, where did that come from?” Kefka asked, just as it crashed against the cannon and reacted with the Mako and it all erupted into a glorious inferno and – 


Palom and Porom

Adult Palom voiced by: Daisuke Sakaguchi

Adult Porom voiced by: Rie Kugimiya

For Palom and Porom's adult forms, I imagine they'd be an alternate costume rather than a new unit. Their abilities don't really change as they get older to justify it. Now you can assume they'll look like this for the rest of the story.

Regarding "canon" character costumes (meaning how they appear by default in the story), most of the time the character appears the latest they do in their canon story, assuming their memories go up to that point. So for example, Lightning is wearing her Savior costume from Lightning Returns. Cecil, Rosa, Edge, Edward, Yang, and Rydia are wearing their After Years clothes. After the events of this chapter, Cloud, Barret, Tifa, and Yuffie wear their costumes from Advent Children onward. Vaan's wearing the shirt he has in Tactics A2. Lyse has her red dress she begins wearing at the end of Stormblood, while Y'shtola's dressed in her Sorceress dress (sorry, I don't think she gets abilities interesting or unique enough to give her a new kit with it). I'm gonna say that the XV Chocobros have their pre-time skip appearances, but they switch outfits around whenever they feel like it.

That said, these characters are all still wearing their default costumes: Yuna, Alphinaud, Penelo, Snow, Kain, and Golbez. (You may be able to guess why...)


Character abilities

Luneth (Unique - One Handed Axes) Non elemental melee, offensive tank, offense buffs, spiker

15: Advance

35: Provoke

EX: Guiding Swipe

LD: Close-In

FR: Vigorous Assault (with Luso)

BT: Quake & Tsunami

Burst theme: "Eternal Wind," the main theme of FFIII

Luneth is typically portrayed as a Warrior in his crossover appearances, so I kept that. I also gave him Geomancer and even a Viking ability snuck in there. His EX ability, Guiding Swipe, is one of Onion Knight's skills in Dissidia NT. Luneth is a non-elemental melee attacker and tank, but a more offensive variety with lots of damage and offensive buffs.

For Feolthanos's skills, I shared that I came up with a new mechanic for launches - the "juggler," who can give all party members an additional turn in a launch sequence. Luneth, on the other hand, is a "spiker," meaning he shows up at the end of a launch sequence (similar to Raines in game), but his attack "spikes" them back down to the ground, dealing additional damage and even splash damage to other enemies.


Luca (Greatswords - Hammers) Non-elemental ranged, critical dmg, follow up heals/damage, battery

15: Big Throw -> Enables Brina’s Curaga follow up

35: Lightning Brain Buster -> Enables Calca’s Thermal Rays follow up

EX: Makeshift Cannon 

LD: Double Tomahawk 

FR: Doll Construction (with Mustadio)

BT: Final Calcabrina

Burst theme: "Dancing Calcabrina," the boss theme of Calcabrina

Luca's abilities are pretty easy. Big Throw is her unique skill that lets her do normal damage from the back row. All of her other abilities are her various Band attacks with other party members. Since she has a couple skills based around throwing and being in the back row, I actually made her a ranged attacker who focuses on critical damage and follow up attacks with Brina and Calca (who do White Magic and Blue Magic, respectively).


Any ideas for their Force partners? This is the first time that my new character additions are starting to show up as partners for other new characters, so we're making our way into the "Force chains" now!

Notes:

Please leave a comment if you are enjoying!

Chapter 13: Lost Chapter: A Thousand Years of Suffering

Notes:

Last chapter's Force partnerships:

Luneth with Luso: Both irresponsible and troublemaker heroes but always loyal and reliable, and they are both noted to despise bullies.

Luca with Mustadio: Both are among the best with technology among their parties and have robot partners, which in their games are independent party members.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: A Thousand Years of Suffering


Shuyin (Final Fantasy X-2)

Voiced by: Masakazu Morita

A man from the Zanarkand of a thousand years ago. When he lost his lover in the Machina War against Bevelle, his hatred clung on for centuries in the form of a shade – pyreflies gathered together by strong emotions. He seeks to use Vegnagun, an ancient machina weapon, to attain revenge on Spira.

Shuyin

 


TERRA


Terra’s eyes shot open and the chaos of the Falcon ’s crash came flooding back to her.

The blast of energy came with only the brief warning of the Mako Cannon charging up and firing, but too quickly for anyone to do anything about it.

A flash of light and silence had deafened her to everything else, and then everything lurched and fell away and heat washed over them. She had been on the deck – she saw the Torsion and the beam of mako slice through the part of the airship where the equipment was kept. She had no idea who had been there at the time. Who took the brunt of the attack.

She was on a beach. Dusk had come and gone. Parts of the Falcon ’s wreckage – mainly a wing – burned on the beach with her, bonfires belching smoke into the night sky. She sat up on shaky arms.

She heard screaming. She saw Mog amidst the fire, the moogle of Respite, teleporting as many of their allies to safety as he could manage. They had grown so much since the last time he had saved them all. He couldn’t get all of them anymore.

Miraculously, she wasn’t wounded. She looked around – scared for those who may have fallen into the dark ocean.

The impact threw Maria from the deck. Terra acted without thinking, hurling herself into the sky, catching her in midair before going into Trance.

“Maria!” Terra called out. She vaguely remembered flying as fast as she could, trying in vain to find and rescue the others who might have fallen. She thought she had seen Kuja doing the same, and Llyud.

She scrambled to her feet, searching along the beach for any others but afraid of what she might find. Dread settled into the pit of her stomach when she spotted a prone form on the sand – Maria. Terra dropped to her knees at Maria’s side, healing magic glowing in her hands. “Maria? Come on, please wake up.”

She didn’t seem wounded, either. Maria groaned, her brow furrowing, before her eyes fluttered open. “Terra? You saved me…”

Terra let out a breath of relief. “You’re okay!”

One. She found one of her companions. But so many more…

The waves washed against the shore, tranquil in spite of everything that had just happened. They’d been split apart before – everyone had to be okay. They just had to find everyone. Again.

Further inland, she saw rocky crags and a mountain that looked host to a cave system. Just at the edge of where the sand met the stone, Tidus stood as still as the stones behind him. He just watched them.

“Tidus?” Terra said. When he didn’t respond, she called to him louder, though hesitant. It was difficult to see him in the darkness, but the silhouette was unmistakably his. Perhaps a Manikin? “Is that you?”

He turned away from them and walked into the caves with long, purposeful strides.


Wind howled through the cave system as Terra and Maria approached. The stones twisted into swirling shapes, flattening out near the tops to make a series of platforms all at different levels, smooth and reddish and seemingly worn away by years of high tides. Several of them seemed to be shaped like saucers or mushroom caps, framing the opening to the caves.

“Why would he just walk away from us like that?” Terra asked. It hurt more than she thought it would have when Tidus turned his back on her. “After what just happened. Isn’t he worried about everyone?”

“I know I am,” said Maria, keeping an eye on their surroundings. Grains of sand from the beach blew inland, skittering down the slope of smooth stone. “Something isn’t right. Tidus wouldn’t do that.”

They found Tyro lingering near the entrance to one of the caves, staring into its dark depths. Around its mouth, it had what appeared to be the edges of something man made, like an ancient door part of the stone that had yawned open. Terra felt the weight on her chest lessening when she saw him. She was especially worried about the children on board, so seeing one of them unharmed helped to lift her spirits.

“Tyro!” Terra exclaimed. “Are you okay?”

He jumped in alarm, turning to face them with his chest pounding. But when recognition dawned in his features, he calmed himself. “Terra! Maria! Yes, I’m fine – Golbez opened a Torsion before the airship fell and a few of us hopped inside. He and I are the only ones who came out, so I’m glad to see you’re okay too!”

“If they went into Torsions, they should have escaped the crash,” Maria said. “But who knows where they’d be now?”

Terra looked into the darkness of the cave and a chill that had nothing to do with the night crawled up her spine. “Where’s Golbez now?”

Tyro frowned and followed her line of sight. “He went in here. But… something feels wrong about it.”

“If we go in together, we should be okay,” said Maria. Terra knew the other woman could be a bit reckless sometimes, and normally she wouldn’t be so put off by a cave, but she had to agree with Tyro. Something felt strange about this cave.

“Wait, don’t go inside!”

Yuna’s familiar voice rang out in the night and they all turned to look at the ravine further inland to see her running down the path toward them. Tidus and Paine flanked her; both women appeared to be on edge, but Tidus just looked worried.

“You’re all okay!” Terra exclaimed, but her smile faltered when she noticed their expressions. “Or… are you?”

“We’re alright,” Tidus said. “Yuna summoned and flew us out of the danger. I doubt the others are far away!”

“Don’t take a step into that cave,” Paine said, cutting into their reunion with a harsh order. “It’s way too dangerous.”

“It’s called the Den of Woe,” Yuna explained, catching her breath. “In our world, a shade dwells inside and possesses people to make them fight each other.”

“So the more of us go in, the more ammo he gets,” Paine added. “Especially if someone has darkness in their heart.”

“But Golbez went inside!” said Tyro. “And… he’s been possessed before. I think he might be vulnerable.”

The familiar clutch of anxiety grasped at Terra’s chest. Golbez was powerful, but she didn’t fear him. She ached in sympathy for him; she knew what it was like to lose control at the whim of someone else. But every fiber of her being rebelled at the idea of being possessed. She hated the idea of going into this cave. “We have to rescue him,” she said, nonetheless.

“Then let’s go,” said Tidus, moving to enter. “We can’t leave him there on his own.”

Yuna grasped his hand and held him back. “Wait! I can’t bear the thought of fighting against you, too. I know we have to find Golbez, but… I’ve already gone into the Den of Woe before. I will do it again. Just please… wait outside.”

“Are you saying you want to go in there alone!?”

“Don’t be foolish, Yuna,” Paine said. “We’ll manage it together just like we did last time.”

Terra fixed her eyes on Tidus. “Can this shade’s influence reach outside of the cave? Earlier, Maria and I saw Tidus on the beach. And he was acting strangely.”

Tidus looked at her and blinked. “Huh? Me? I’ve been with Yuna and Paine the whole time.”

Yuna and Paine exchanged glances. “That may have been the shade,” Yuna said, hesitant. “His name is Shuyin. They look similar.”

“And if he’s here, then this cave really is trouble,” said Paine.

“You’ve told me a bit about him,” Tidus said, lowering his voice. “We’ve got to go in. Yuna, I can never hurt you. I’m still your guardian.”

“I know,” said Yuna, taking a deep breath. “I’m just worried I might hurt you.”


Lights that Yuna called pyreflies lazily drifted through the darkness of the cave, beautiful and trailing a rainbow of colors behind them. The Den of Woe wasn’t particularly deep, but it was cavernous, and the pyreflies acted as their only source of light until Terra lit a flame in her palm. As they navigated the darkness, Terra felt flashes of painful memories: the slave crown. The war. Transforming into an esper for the first time. The catastrophe of the World of Ruin. Kefka’s laughter, ringing out in her head over and over again. How could they have left the Mako Cannon in working condition when they left Junon? How could Terra have been so stupid?

“Think of your friends,” Yuna advised. “Think of the people you love. Shuyin’s soul was trapped here for centuries, reliving the moment of his death and his lover’s death over and over again. It twisted him. Tortured him. We brought him rest, but… it seems this world has other plans.”

“That’s horrible,” Terra said, heeding her words with images of Celes, Locke, Edgar, Mog, and the others, but an ache settled in her heart for Shuyin’s sake. She couldn’t imagine living through such a thing for that long. Thoughts of Mobliz helped her feel warmer again.

“My mind is still my own,” Maria said. “Perhaps the dangers are not as much of a concern as in your world.”

A scream echoed from deeper in the cavern as if to instantly prove her wrong, hoarse with pain. “Get out! Get out!”

They all froze in alarm, broken only when Paine shouted out in recognition. “That’s Golbez!”

Deeper into the darkness, they found the armored sorcerer fighting off invisible foes, clutching his head and shouting in agony. Pyreflies swarmed around him, no longer placid like at the cave’s beginning. “Foul spirit, out! Out of my head!” Ice and lightning burst from his hands, aimed erratically but nearly striking Tyro.

“What do we do?” Terra asked, magic crackling in her hands. “Do we fight him?”

“Many have lost their lives in the Den of Woe,” Yuna said, bearing her staff. “We’ll have to think of another way!”

“Well, think of something quick,” Paine said, as Golbez’s shadow dragon swiped at them. “Or else we’re going to have to kick his ass. Nonlethally.”

“Not… again!” Golbez shouted, clutching his helm. “I will not yield!”

“He’s got nothing but darkness at his core,” a voice rang out around them, echoing off of the cave walls. “I see only destruction in his memories. He deserves this, just like the rest of you.”

“That’s not true!” Tyro shouted back at the voice. “Golbez has changed!”

“That’s Shuyin,” Paine said, her voice gruff as she hefted her sword. “He’s just an angry spirit. He won’t listen to reason.”

“Well then we’ll make him listen!” Tidus declared. “No one who looks like me is going to act like this.”

“Zemus…” Golbez said, making them all stop. For the first time since she had met him, Golbe’s voice actually shook with fear. That scared Terra most of all. “Leave me be…”

“We have to hurry,” Paine said. “The longer we’re here, the more we’re at risk of being possessed.”

“Wait,” said Yuna, holding her arms out. “Something isn’t right! I've just remembered -- Seymour is no longer an Unsent. In this world, when we are summoned, anyone who has died is brought back to life. Shuyin shouldn’t be able to possess us!”

“Then what’s he doing to Golbez?” Maria asked.

“He’s controlling the pyreflies,” Yuna said. “It’s those that are getting into Golbez’s head. Shuyin, show yourself!”

A man appeared behind Golbez, emerging from the shadows. Terra gasped – he really did look just like Tidus, but with narrower eyes and a harsh gaze. Even his clothes looked vaguely similar. They could have been brothers. “Even here, in a completely different world, you all still fight and hate and destroy,” Shuyin said. “I saw that machina weapon strike your airship down.”

“C’mon Golbez, fight it off!” Tyro urged the knight in black. “You’ve faced much worse than this!”

“Think of your brother, Cecil!” said Maria. “He knows you are strong. He cares for you, just as we all do!”

“Well, now he’s got a physical form,” said Paine. “All the better for us.”

“Shuyin, don’t you remember what Lenne told you?” Yuna's plea made Shuyin's eyes widen. “The message we worked so hard to deliver?”

He glared at her with such revulsion that it made Terra take a step back. “How do you know that name? Who are you!?”

“With her final breath, Lenne told you that she loved you,” Yuna said, unwavering. “You can’t have forgotten!”

“Yuna, that was never Shuyin,” Paine said. “Just his shadow. This is the real thing – he never got that message!”

“I don’t know who you people are!” Shuyin spat. “Get away from me!”

Golbez let out another wordless yell, Flare magic ripping apart the air all around him. The sudden brightness and heat made Terra shield her eyes. She saw Tidus grab Yuna and cover her with his body, and the explosive power behind Golbez’s spell threw them all back.

By the time Terra reoriented herself, Shuyin was gone.

Scorch marks formed a circle around Golbez, who stood hunched over with his armor rising and falling from deep breaths. Most of the pyreflies around him had vanished. Everyone else looked unharmed except for Tidus, who already had Yuna at his back to administer healing. Terra rushed to Yuna’s side to supplement the healing with her own.

“Golbez, you back with us?” Paine asked, back on her feet.

He looked up at them. Terra couldn’t sense his feelings underneath the helm. “I am,” he said. “My apologies for – ”

“No apologies,” Maria cut him off. “No brooding about this like Leon does. Just say ‘thank you’ and be done with it, alright?”

He exhaled and stood up straight. “Then… you have my thanks.”


“Who is Lenne?” Terra asked Yuna later, after they returned to the beach. So far, no one else showed up from the crash.

“The woman he loved,” Yuna said, staring out to the sea. “She was a summoner called to the front lines of a war from a thousand years ago. Shuyin gave his life to save her, but they died together.”

Terra had no words. To go so far for love, and to still perish like that… and furthermore, to suffer for a thousand years. She couldn’t imagine a worse fate.

“How are we gonna find the others?” Tidus asked, recovered from his burns. Terra turned back to the others, who found an open area on the beach away from the wreckage. “Golbez, can you make us a big airship again like you did last time?”

“It seems I cannot,” he said. “I have already tried. Anything I try to create with the Torsions is a pale imitation of what came before. And furthermore, it did not seem to have the same capabilities as our previous airships – growing and changing to accommodate our increasing numbers. We may need the help of the engineers to create a new airship from scratch, or perhaps find a new one. I only wish I knew what happened to those who leapt into my Torsion on the airship."

“I hope that bomb Mr. Haze put in the engine room is okay,” said Tyro. “When the cannon hit, I thought the fire was going to consume us all – but I think the bomb ate all the fire and stopped it from blowing everything up.”

“I saw it fly toward Junon,” said Maria. “Who would have thought that bomb would protect us?”

The fact that Golbez could not create a new airship for them was another unsettling reminder that this world was changing. Now that they had been separated again, without an airship or either of their leaders, Terra wondered how they would be able to save the espers now.


Character abilities:

Shuyin (Swords) Non-elemental melee damage, follow ups, turn steal, self buffs, HP Poison, HP Silence, Blindness

15: Vita Brevis

35: Noli Me Tangere

EX: Memento Mori (enables Pallida Mors, Mors Certa follow ups)

LD: Guardian of Woe

FR: Lamentation of Loss (with Thancred)

BT: Terror of Zanarkand

Burst theme: "Their Resting Place," which plays during the final battle against Shuyin

Most of Shuyin's abilities actually come from the sequence of Vegnagun boss fights at the end of the game with its tail, body, and head. His LD is an original ability that allows him to buff himself and turn steal, while his Burst is an ability that Shuyin himself uses in the final battle against him (which is basically Tidus's Blitz Ace animation). I wanted to focus more on Vegnagun with his kit since everything from the Shuyin boss fight is basically a reskinned Tidus Overdrive.

He has a pretty nasty combo of HP Poison, HP Silence, and Blindness as a follow up attack with Mors Certa to shut down enemies.

His Force partner actually changed a couple of times but I'm happy with this one. Originally his partner was Lunafreya, which kinda fit as a Lenne stand-in, and Thancred was actually Kimahri's partner until I moved things around.

Notes:

I used to like how they changed their airship almost every act, but they've had the Falcon since Act 3. Figured it's time to switch it up. :P I won't be rehashing the plot of finding all their allies again which was the plot of Act 3, though -- everyone will reunite much quicker this time around.

And yes, I know, another FFX character made it in before Rikku...

Chapter 14: Lost Chapter: Ode to Kweh!?

Notes:

This will be the only LC where I introduce two characters at once, but it's mostly because one of the characters isn't really... well, talkative.

Previous Force partner explanation:

Shuyin with Thancred: Both failed to save the life of someone immensely important to them, throwing themselves in great danger to do so. Shuyin also has a habit of possessing people, while Thancred has been possessed.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: Ode to Kweh!?


Chocobo ( Final Fantasy Fables: Chocobo’s Dungeon )

A chocobo named Chocobo who adventures in search of treasure as a loyal partner to Cid. Pure of heart, he arrives in the town of Lostime to help the people by delving into mysterious ‘memory dungeons’ within the recesses of their minds. Above all, Chocobo loves to make people happy by cheering them up with a hearty “kweh!”

Chocobo


Shirma Magnolie ( Final Fantasy Fables: Chocobo’s Dungeon )

Voiced by: Sayaka Senbogi

A young white mage who lives on the outskirts of Lostime with her aunt. Believing that everyone should have the right to keep their own memories, good or bad, they avoid the ringing Bell of Oblivion in the center of town that makes everyone forget their troubles. Shirma is the Oracle of Light, a guardian of the seal that binds the Destroyer, and uses her powers to help Chocobo in his battles.

Shirma


ACE


Ace groaned as he felt something hard nudge against his cheek. His whole body ached; exhaustion weighed down his eyelids and all he wanted to do was keep sleeping. Everything felt so warm.

Something nipped at his fingers and he yelped, opening his eyes to see two chocobos in his face.

He blinked away his grogginess and gently pushed both beaks out of the way so he could sit up straight, stretching out his neck and rubbing his shoulder. He had quite the fall – the blast from the airship had thrown him around his cabin, and when he went out into the hall he stumbled until he found Minwu, who cast teleportation spells on everyone he saw to get them to safety. The problem was, Ace distinctly remembered the rush job releasing him in midair. At least nothing was broken. Much better than falling to his death, at any rate.

He scratched under Chichiri’s chin. “Thanks for keeping an eye out for me, girl. I’m glad you made it.” She warbled at him happily in response.

When he looked at the second chocobo, his eyes widened. He expected it to be Chichiri’s mate, the one she found in this world, but he didn’t recognize this chocobo at all. It was smaller than normal, but without the down of a chick, with large blue eyes and a pouch strapped around its neck.

“Uh… hello,” Ace said. “I don’t think I’ve ever seen your breed of chocobo around. Since you have that pouch, do you have an owner around somewhere?”

The chocobo only blinked and tilted its head at him. Ace reached out to see if he could get a clue from the contents of the pouch, but the unfamiliar chocobo pecked his hand away.

“Ouch! Okay, I get it. Sorry for reaching.”

He pushed himself to his feet and stretched out his stiff legs. He already felt the bruises along his back and shoulders forming. Shielding his eyes from the bright sun, he took in his surroundings. He’d been teleported to an open, grassy field. Mountains rose high in the distance with a forest around its base that looked like tiny bushes from his location. Everything was nondescript enough that he didn’t know where to begin searching for his companions. He really wished this world was easier to map.

“Where’s your mate, Chichiri?” Ace asked. “Did he get teleported out of there with us?”

Chichiri let out a low cooing sound and her head drooped. 

Ace frowned, petting her with sympathy. “I’m sure he’s fine,” he said. “Just like everyone else. We’ve just got to find them.”

The other chocobo nudged against Chichiri and let out a little song in what Ace could only assume was encouragement, and Chichiri jumped up and flapped her wings in response. She stomped both of her feet and then lowered her neck toward Ace, as if she wanted him to mount up and ride her.

“Pumped up now, huh?” Ace asked, smiling. “Alright, let’s go search.”


Chichiri pulled him with so much intensity toward a grove nestled between a pair of hills that Ace kept bouncing up and down in the saddle. She only ever paused to let the smaller chocobo catch up to them; Ace suspected that some conversation transpired he couldn’t begin to fathom. Despite their urgency, his bruises, and the fact that all of his friends were missing, he couldn’t deny that he enjoyed the ride across an open field, bathed by the sun’s rays.

At the edge of the grove, he spotted familiar figures and his shoulders sagged with relief. Krile stood just outside the treeline, peeking into the forest with Carbuncle at her feet and Mog curled up next to him.

“Hey there!” Ace called out. Chichiri crooned as they came to a stop and he dismounted, but she still appeared restless and ready to dive right into the grove. “Thanks, girl – but what has you so worked up?”

“Ace! You’re okay!” Krile said. “And you too, Chichiri! But ohh, who is that cutie?” She put her hands on her knees as she bent down and grinned at the little chocobo.

“I woke up and he was there with Chichiri,” Ace said. He frowned with worry as he regarded Mog, whose pom sagged while he rested. “Is Mog okay? He teleported most of us out of there, didn’t he?”

Krile smiled at the moogle fondly. “He did, but he’s exhausted now. I did what I could, but I think he just needs rest. He really saved all of our lives once again.” She bit her lip. “I’m just worried about everyone else. I didn’t see what happened to Grandpa…”

“I’m sure everyone else is fine,” Ace said. “Even if Mog didn’t manage to get all of us to safety, we’re all really strong. And great in a pinch.”

“It was that Kefka, was it not?” Carbuncle asked with an upturned nose. “Nasty piece of work, that one. I am sure you’ll all make him rue the day he attacked your ship. Now… may we get to the matter at hand?”

Chichiri crowed as if in agreement while the smaller chocobo chirped.

“Do you know what they’re saying?” Ace asked Krile. “What’s going on?”

“Chichiri says her mate is in there! But Carbuncle led me here,” she said. “It’s a chocobo forest! And he says the Chocobo summon is inside.” Krile looked toward the trees. “To be honest, I’m a little hesitant to head in there alone. The Chocobo summon isn’t a particularly powerful one, but if it’s corrupted I’m nervous about dealing with it myself, you know?”

“You’ve got me now,” Ace said. “But… I don’t blame you. I think it feels wrong to fight a chocobo.”

The little chocobo tilted its head, but marched right in.

“Wait, little guy!” Ace exclaimed, following it. “It’s dangerous!”

Krile cradled Mog in her arms and gently placed him on Chichiri’s back. “Let’s go,” she said.

Within the shadows of the trees, Ace felt a marked difference in the air; a weight from something dark and foul. For a chocobo forest, Ace found the lack of chocobos disturbing – until he heard a chocobo’s cry that made Chichiri answer it in distress. The little chocobo picked up speed, outpacing both Ace and Krile with a fervor it didn’t show on the field, and when they all burst through the bushes together into a clearing Ace readied his deck of cards.

A girl – a white mage, from the look of her – held her staff out to ward a cluster of imps away, protecting Chichiri’s mate. Before Ace or Krile could attack, the little chocobo launched forward with a flurry of kicks and pecks, dispatching the monsters when Ace could only slacken his jaw in surprise.

“I’ve never seen a chocobo fight like that,” Ace said.

The white mage smiled. “That’s Chocobo – he’s the most heroic chocobo I’ve ever met.” She patted him on the beak as he preened. “Thanks for helping us!”

“He’s a friend of yours?” Ace asked. “I’m Ace, and this is Krile, Carbuncle, and Mog – and that’s Chichiri.” Chichiri nuzzled up against her mate, and it made Ace realize they never thought of a name for him. “That’s her mate. Thank you for looking after him.”

“Chocobo led us right to you,” said Krile. “He said he met Chichiri’s mate earlier, and he rushed right in!”

“I’m Shirma,” the girl said. She stood on her tip-toes to look at Chichiri’s saddle. “Does Mog need healing?”

“The moogle will be fine,” said Carbuncle. “But we have to find Chocobo. Let’s go!”

“Kweh?” said Chocobo.

“I think he means the summoned Chocobo,” Krile said. “Let me explain…”


“Chocobo and I have been through a lot together,” said Shirma. They searched through the forest, though the eidolon proved elusive. Carbuncle insisted it was still nearby, but couldn’t pinpoint its location any further. “But I never expected us to end up in a different world.”

Mog had awoken during Krile’s explanation, but his pom continued to hang as they made their way through the forest. “I’m sorry, kupo – I didn’t help Ace and Krile find you.”

“You couldn’t,” Ace corrected him. “Don’t beat yourself up about it, Mog. You were unconscious after saving our lives.”

“And now I don’t know where everyone is again, kupo…”

“We’ll find all of our friends,” said Krile. “I know our search for the summons will lead us right to everyone again.”

“Yes, you found Chocobo and I,” said Shirma. “So don’t sweat it!”

“At least this time we didn’t forget our leader again,” Ace said. He supposed the reason for their split was rather mundane compared to the destruction of the previous World of Respite.

Krile frowned. “Well… we wouldn’t really know if we forgot about someone, would we?”

Ace pondered her words as he searched the shadows among the trees. “I’m not so sure. I feel like I’d at least have an inkling. When you lose a memory, it’s like having a hole but you don’t know what’s supposed to fill it.”

“I know what you mean,” said Shirma. “Where I come from, all the people think they’re better off forgetting everything. That it’s better to live in bliss rather than deal with bad memories. And as much as I believed that they were all wrong, that we all had to accept the good and the bad, there were things that I forgot, too. For so long I felt lost without those memories. Like I didn’t fully know who I was.”

“Sounds like the people in your town thought the same way as Materia,” Krile said.

“Unsure of your own identity when you’ve got lost memories, huh…” Ace said. His elbow settled into the palm of his other hand as they walked. What did that say about the people of his world who forgot everyone who ever died? “I don’t think I’ve ever thought about it that way.”

“Hey, have you all been paying attention?” Carbuncle asked suddenly. “This chocobo forest didn’t seem so big from the outside. It’s like we’re going in circles.”

Krile stopped. “Do you think the Chocobo summon has trapped us here?”

“Kweh!”

Chocobo turned toward Chichiri’s mate, eyes narrowed and legs bent as if he prepared to charge. Chichiri’s mate had stopped walking. Chichiri’s feathers ruffled as she backed away, and even Ace felt the hairs on the back of his neck stand up as they all turned to look behind them at the three chocobos. Wisps of darkness seeped from the male chocobo’s feathers and his eyes turned black.

“The corruption!” Carbuncle exclaimed.

“Wait, kupo,” said Mog. “Does that mean Chichiri’s mate was the Chocobo summon all along!?”

“He’s got so much anger in him,” said Krile, holding her staff in front of her as Shirma did the same. Her voice shook. “He wants to hurt us. Wants to end us. He’s mad that I figured out his trick!”

Ace’s cards fluttered around him, floating as a sort of barrier. “Are we supposed to fight a chocobo?”

Chocobo, the smaller one, trotted up to the summon with determined chirps and warbles. The summon squawked back at him. Chocobo shook his tail feathers. The larger chocobo pecked at him but Chocobo didn’t back down, shaking and flapping his wings as he circled around Chichiri’s mate. Chichiri stood by Ace but kicked out her legs and hooted in distress.

“What’re they saying?” Ace asked Krile.

“Chocobo is trying to make him remember his love for Chichiri,” Krile translated. “And he’s denying it… but it sounds to me like he’s in a lot of pain. Chocobo’s insisting there’s still light in him, and telling Chichiri to keep calling out for her mate!”

“Come on, Chichiri!” Shirma cheered her on. “You can do it! Help him remember!”

Both Chocobo and the summon fixated on each other, shaking their tail feathers as they circled and pumped their wings. They fell into a sort of dance; time seemed to slow as both chocobos fought with beak and talon, but this was more than a simple scuffle between two birds – love and fate were riding on their backs in the ultimate struggle for salvation of the hearts of Chichiri and her mate. 

The summon stretched its neck out high, flapping its wings as it focused its magic to conjure a meteor high above. It came crashing down, tearing through the sky to bring calamity down upon the chocobo forest below. Ace knew this titanic clash was just between the two chocobos – all he could do was shield himself along with Krile and Shirma as wind and heat threatened to flatten the forest.

Before the meteor impacted, Chocobo leapt up and delivered a mighty kick to the summoned Chocobo’s face.

The meteor vanished and wind rushed to fill in the space it left behind, kicking up dirt and dust and leaves. Both chocobos froze in time, the silence between them so dense that Ace couldn’t even hear the others’ breaths. Like the moment before a wave crashed against a shore, everything hung in a balance until the deluge broke and a shockwave spread out from their clash. The darkness swarming around the Chocobo summon dissipated like the meteor had, and he collapsed.

“Amazing…” Krile said. Then she gasped. “Oh! He needs healing!”

“I’ve got him!” said Shirma, but then a light shone around Chichiri’s mate and he floated above them. As they gathered around him, he warbled at Chichiri.

“He’s saying he cherished his time among us, walking among mortals and real chocobos outside of the World of Illusions,” Krile said, tears welling in her eyes. “But he’ll never forget us. He’ll never forget Chichiri. He wants to thank us for everything.” Chichiri herself let out a cry, jumping up as if trying to reach him. “Oh, Chichiri… He knows.”

The light intensified, and when it died down, a piece of magicite floated down to land in Ace’s hands. It was warm, but his heart ached in sorrow for Chichiri as he leaned into her and pet her neck.

“He’s still with us, girl,” he said, holding the magicite up to her. “See? You’ll always be able to sense him. We saved him.” He looked down at Chocobo, smiling. “Chocobo saved him.”

Chocobo swayed in a way that made Ace think he was being bashful. “Kweh…”

Chichiri dropped her head but let out a trilling sound that was both beautiful and sad.

“She understands what needed to be done,” Krile said. “She’s thankful that he’s free from the darkness now.”

“I see the edge of the chocobo forest, kupo!” said Mog. “And I can sense the lights of our friends!”

“And now we have two new friends,” Ace said, more for Chichiri’s benefit. “You’ll never be alone.”

“You hear that, Chocobo?” Shirma asked, grinning. “They’re our friends now!”

Chocobo let out a happy sound, waving at them with one wing.

“And that is our second magicite. Though I must warn you – they will only get more powerful from here. So be resolute, and remember your strength.” Carbuncle walked ahead of them, waving his tails as he left the heartfelt goodbye behind him seemingly without a care. It was as if the spell had been broken. “Even Chocobo’s uncommon tenacity will not be enough to save your sorry hides.”

“Ouch,” Ace said, as both he and Krile winced.

“Gee, thanks,” said Krile.

Chocobo tilted his head but chirped as he followed them out of the forest.


Character abilities:

Chocobo (Unique - Talons) Non elemental melee damage speed buffs, turn manipulation, offensive auras

15: Choco Kick

35: Chocobo Drop

EX: Chocobo Dash

LD: Camelot

FR: Cavalry Chocomet (with Ace)

BT: Chocobo Kick Zero

Burst theme: "Dubstep de Chocobo," the Chocobo theme from Every Buddy!, the remake of Final Fantasy Fables: Chocobo's Dungeon

Chocobo's abilities all come from his Freelancer job, with his LD coming from Knight. His fighting style is pretty much what it says above, basically allowing him to pull the party's turns around to keep them away from enemies.


Shirma (Staff) Non-elemental magic attacker, healing, battery, support, BRV and HP shield, Sleep

15: Cure Charge

35: Manaward

EX: Lostime Dia

LD: Sleepy Shuffle

FR: Memory of Light (with Ryne)

BT: Oracle’s Holy

Burst theme: "The Town of Lostime," Lostime's normal town theme, which is itself a remix of a different song from earlier in the series like the rest of the soundtrack -- in this case, "Tarutaru Male," from FFXI

As one of Chocobo's Buddies who can come along with him in dungeons in the remake, Every Buddy!, she only has the Cure spell. I expanded it to give her more abilities (or variations of them) from the White Mage job, plus one from Dancer for variety. She is a healer and battery who can defend allies with BRV and HP shields to reduce damage, and also inflict Sleep which functions more or less like Edward's does.

Notes:

Bit of whiplash from Shuyin's story about possession and loss, huh? I had a bit of fun with this one, if you couldn't tell. It could be thought of as a mini story chapter since it has two characters and a major plot development -- all of the other summon encounters will be main story chapters going forward, though.

Please leave a comment if you're enjoying! Kudos are nice, but one thing about them is that everyone can only leave one, so it's hard for me to know if the story is still being enjoyed after that initial kudos, you know?

Chapter 15: Lost Chapter: Walking Tall

Notes:

So I've officially finished my rough outline of this whole story. It's gonna be long! I'm planning to end with Act 7. I know who the last character is going to be, but that may change as new FF games come out and I get the urge to add more characters from them. I already know FFXIV's Dawntrail expansion is getting at least one and we will see what Rebirth brings...

Previous FR partnerships:

Chocobo with Ace: Ace loves Chocobos! Chocobo is also depicted as using cards in some games, though this Chocobo is specifically from FF Fables: Chocobo's Dungeon (or Every Buddy!, the remake).

Shirma with Ryne: Both are known as an Oracle of Light, and are juxtaposed to an Oracle of Darkness.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: Walking Tall


Regis Lucis Caelum ( Final Fantasy XV )

Voiced by: Tsutomu Isobe

113th monarch in the line of Lucis and father of Noctis. Regis channeled the power of the Crystal to conjure an enormous barrier and shield the city of Insomnia, though sustaining the barrier took an enormous toll that sapped him of his life force over the course of thirty years. At present, Regis's condition has worsened to the point that he can barely walk without aid—yet he still managed to send his son Noctis off to his wedding with a smile on his face.

Regis


SEYMOUR


The dry, dusty air irritated Seymour’s skin as he wandered the unfamiliar desert landscape. His robes felt heavier than usual, making the heat even more unpleasant, and it reminded him more and more that the protections of this world’s aeons were fading. The inconveniences of life were becoming more pronounced; heat and cold and exhaustion had begun to plague him again as it likely did for the others, and “will” was becoming less effective. Reality would not just bend to the whims of anyone anymore.

Soon, they would be able to die. If it had not happened already.

The curse of immortality granted to them in this world had neutered Seymour’s plans to grant the respite of death to everyone. But he still couldn’t act. Though death once again prepared to rear her beautiful head, Unsent did not exist in this world. Death only meant pain. In a way, the protection of the aeons felt similar to being Unsent. With its absence, Seymour only felt more keenly aware of that. Here, death was finality. It meant the end of his ambitions.

So now he wondered: could he find a way to change the laws of this world, as so many others had failed to do before him, and become Unsent?

Or would he reinforce the protections they had lost?

His musings were interrupted when he came across a small settlement of rusty metal, battered by the desert as if for decades though Seymour knew this landscape had only recently appeared. Machina vehicles suffered from years of disuse, but it was quiet here. Peaceful, away from the distant roars of monsters. In front of one of the buildings, he saw a man who stood with a cane as if deep in thought, swathed in a black cape that looked about as stifling as Seymour’s robes.

Seymour had come because he wanted to investigate the change in the landscape. With it, he knew that typically accompanied new warriors. But this man, with his cane and a leg brace, did not appear to be much of a warrior.

“Greetings,” Seymour said as he approached. “I take it you are a new arrival to this world?”

The man turned toward Seymour, eyes widening only a fraction before the man schooled his initial reaction behind a careful mask. The man was older than he appeared at a distance, with wrinkles around his forehead and eyes, and hair that had long since gone gray. “A new world, you say? But it looks just like one I recognize, just without the people.”

“Let me take the liberty of explaining, since the gods of this world are still indisposed,” Seymour said. “The will of the crystal summons warriors from worlds far and wide with the singular intention of fighting each other to generate an energy that keeps this new world alive.”

“Crystals and gods,” the man mused with a low rumble of thought. “Hmm. Not to alarm you, but does this crystal also summon its warriors back from the beyond? Because if my memories serve, I should not be here.”

Seymour’s lips curled into a smile. “It has a habit of doing that, yes.”

The man grasped the top of his cane with both hands. “I see. You have my gratitude for this information. Might I ask one more boon of you?”

Seymour dipped into a bow, more out of a desire to appear accommodating and trustworthy rather than any form of obeisance. From his disposition and manner of dress, the man seemed lordly – if not kingly. Always the right sort of person to know. “However may I help?”

“Do you know of anyone named Noctis? He is my son, and I should like to see him again.”

Seymour’s smile fell. Yet another whose father had been summoned to this world from beyond death. Another who had a chance to reunite with those they loved. How could even this world continue to be so cruel in robbing Seymour of the same grace? Lady Yuna could see Lord Braska again. Would Seymour’s own mother never arrive? She was a warrior, a guardian – his guardian – so he did not understand why she wouldn’t come. Questions stormed in his mind. Was it a matter of waiting? Would he need to reestablish this world’s protections after all, to keep it alive as long as possible to make way for her summoning?

Then another question snaked to the forefront of his thoughts, a potential outcome so maddening that Seymour had never allowed himself to consider it before.

What if the crystals summoned his father instead?

He would simply murder Jyscal again. And he would continue to kill again and again until his mother showed up if that was what it took.

Amidst the cacophony of his thoughts, Seymour smiled again as he answered the man’s question. “I do know him – and furthermore, I know how to find him.”


NOCTIS


“Hey, would you look at that,” said Noctis, putting his hands on his hips. “We’re in Leide.”

The familiar sun-baked desert stretched out before them, an expanse of dirt and stone broken by the occasional parched skeleton of some long-fallen creature and the distant Longwythe Peak. Asphalt roads connected to each other in a spider web of routes, dotted with rest stops and power lines. He could even see the Wall in the distance, but experience in this world told him that it didn’t necessarily mean Insomnia was on the other side.

“Perfect,” said Gladio, joining him at the top of the ridge as they overlooked the area. “Wonder if we can find Hammerhead and get some wheels. Or at least some spare parts to repair what parts of the Falcon we can find. If that's possible."

“Assuming cars work in this world,” said Cor, with his usual practicality. “Always consider the possibility that things may not be as they seem, and unlike home.”

“Kinda brings me back,” Noctis admitted. Right at the beginning of his journey to wed Luna, the Regalia had broken down and they had to push it on foot. Now, they were without an airship and had to hoof it again. “Think we’ll find the Regalia itself there?”

“Maybe, but if you think you’re driving it ‘cause Iggy’s not here, think again,” Gladio said, slapping Noct’s back. “We’ve got the safety of your lady wife to think about now.”

Noctis furrowed his brow. Did he have to tease right in front of Luna? “You know my driving is totally fine!”

“I kindly ask you not to tease my husband,” Luna said, almost imperiously – there was a hardness in her voice that Noctis rarely heard. Gladio’s mouth clamped shut, startled, and Noctis himself stared at her in surprise. “I happen to know from experience that his driving is perfectly adequate – he so adored showing me his collection of toy cars when we were children.”

Noct’s jaw dropped as she smiled , and Gladio howled with laughter.

“Betrayed by my own wife,” Noctis said, his face reddening as he held a hand over his heart. “Ouch.” He said that, but as they both locked eyes for a moment he knew that neither of them would trade an opportunity like this for the world. He never imagined she would ever join in with banter, and he loved it.

Ravus didn’t so much as crack a smirk. “Let us hope that we find more than one vehicle,” he said. “Since we would not all fit in just one.”

Noctis looked back at the last two members of their traveling party that had escaped the wreckage. Joshua kept close to Braska, perhaps because they were the only two among their company not from the same world. “Are you going to be okay in those heavy robes?” he asked Braska.

“You don’t have to worry about me,” he replied. “I am accustomed to traveling all through Spira’s many climes.”

“If the king ends up driving, I may have to worry,” Cor quipped, getting another laugh out of Gladio. “Without your two guardians here, I’ll protect you in their stead.”

Noctis groaned. “You too, Cor?”

“I would be glad to have you as my temporary guardian.” Braska smiled, but his eyes followed the road ahead and then narrowed. “Is that Seymour I see coming our way?”

Noctis squinted and shielded his eyes from the sun as he watched the person approach – but it didn’t take much to recognize Seymour’s distinctive silhouette. “What’s he doing here?” he asked, as he and the others tensed.

Gladio, Cor, and Ravus put a buffer between Seymour and everyone else as the maester approached. He didn’t look like he was ready to fight, but Noctis knew he was always usually up to something.

“My, my, what has you all on edge?” Seymour asked, offering them the Spiran prayer bow.

“Do you need to ask?” Noctis said. “What do you want?”

Seymour smiled. “Such hostility. I have only come to notify you that I believe an ally of yours has made his way to this world. He was an old man, and we spoke down by the settlement that way.” He pointed toward the direction Noctis knew Hammerhead Station to be.

“An old man?” Gladio asked, glancing back at Noctis and Cor. “Cid, maybe?”

“It would make sense,” Noctis said, shrugging. “He wouldn’t want to leave the garage if he could help it.”

“Do not listen to his lies!”

A voice – one that Noctis knew well, and never expected to hear again – shouted out in warning, giving them time to shield themselves from a blast of lightning that snapped toward Seymour. Seymour barely managed to shield himself, but then a black streak flashed in front of them – then the swirl of a cape, and Noctis nearly dropped his sword when his father materialized in front of them. He threw his sword at Seymour and teleported to close range, slashing to kill.

Seymour avoided most of the damage, stumbling back, but the sword cut a gash across his chest. He let out a grunt of pain and a Torsion opened behind him. “So it seems this world hasn’t degraded enough to let you die yet after all,” he said, seething at Regis.

Before anyone else could go on the attack, Seymour vanished into the Torsion and it closed behind him.

“Dad!” Noctis yelled out, rushing to his father’s side. He grasped his shoulder just as Regis turned around. Though his father cringed with pain, his face softened into a smile.

“My son… so it’s true,” he said.

Noctis looked down at where his father held the left side of his ribs, spotting blood seeping through his fingers. His eyes widened. He couldn’t lose his father again. Not now. “No! You’re hurt!”

“I can heal him!” Joshua said, rushing over with healing magic at the ready. “Let me help!”

“A child who can use magic… this really is a different world, after all. He took me by surprise,” Regis said through rasping breaths. He stumbled backward, but Gladio and Cor caught him. “I…”

Noctis watched his father collapse, and dread gripped every inch of his body.


“I’ve never seen you move like that, Dad,” Noctis said, once they had managed to carry him to Hammerhead Station so Joshua and Luna could tend to his wound more easily. Both of them noted how their healing magic didn’t work like it normally did in this world, indicating to everyone that Regis really did have a chance of dying there. But according to Luna, the worst of it had passed – he would be okay.

Noctis had his father again.

They found him a camp chair and they all rested outside of one of the Hammerhead RVs as night fell. 

“Though I may look as you knew me last, I feel quite a lot younger,” Regis said. “Invigorated. The crystal is no longer sapping my power in this world, it seems.”

“You still need to be careful, Your Highness,” said Cor, standing guard behind Noctis. “This world has plenty of dangers, even before we started to lose our immortality.”

“Enough with the ‘Your Highness’ formalities,” Regis said, waving him off. “I am no longer your king – he’s right there next to you.”

“You will always bear the title of a king, like your forebears,” Luna said, leaning forward in her own chair. “You must still be given all the honors you deserve. I’ll never forget how you gave your life for the Ring of the Lucii. For the world.”

“For you, my dear,” Regis corrected her. “And for Noctis. Honors and titles mean little when in this world I can simply be a father who is happy for his son and his wife.”

“I agree with the sentiment,” said Braska. “This world has given so many of us another chance.”

“Woo, yeah!” Gladio’s voice rang out from the direction of the garage. It accompanied the growl of an engine. “Got her working again! Got another junk car going, too – we’re gonna need at least two.”

Noctis stood up and grinned as Gladio steered the Regalia out of the garage, its black paint gleaming in the moonlight. “Picked up a few things from Cindy, huh?”

Ravus walked out of the garage with him. Noctis had been surprised when he volunteered to help get the car working again, but he realized later that Ravus had been avoiding his father.

“Would you two like some time alone while the rest of us go take a look at this car?” Braska asked, looking between Noct and Regis.

Luna stood, departing with Joshua to join the others with a smile at Noctis.

After they left, Noctis didn’t really know what to say, so instead the two of them watched everyone crowd around the Regalia from a distance.

“That boy reminds me of you when you were young,” Regis said, watching Joshua push himself up to climb into the back seat.

“You think so?” Noct asked. “We’ve made a lot of friends here.”

“So it seems,” Regis replied. “Though I was attacked upon first coming here, this is still an amazing world.” He looked at Noctis, his eyes twinkling. “It has given us the opportunity to speak again. With each other, with Lunafreya – even with Ravus.”

“Doesn’t seem like Ravus is ready to talk with you yet, though,” Noctis said, lacing his fingers together.

“He will, in time,” Regis replied, leaning back. “The fact that he is fighting alongside you says enough. I’m so proud of you, my son. Both as a king and as your father. And I’m sorry for everything you have gone through – for saddling you with the immense burden of the whole world. For raising you to give your life in service to it.”

Noctis felt his face reddening. “I know that already. And it’s okay. Everything worked out.”

Regis looked at him, and for the first time that he could remember he saw true apprehension in his father’s eyes and heard hesitancy in his voice. “Is it? Truly? I know a simple apology could never suffice for…”

“Really, it’s okay,” Noctis assured him. “I’m happy here. More than I can say. You were the missing piece – there’s nothing more that I can ask for.”

Regis closed his eyes and let out a deep breath. “You have lived your life walking tall. Taller than I ever could. And now, for the first time – I will fight alongside you, instead of in front or in back, for the sake of this world.”


Character abilities:

Regis Lucis Caelum (Swords) Holy/Lightning magic damage, Holy/Lightning enchant, turn deletion, turn warp, gravity dmg

15: Ring Magic Holy

35: Ring Magic Death

EX: Elemancy - Lightning Strike

LD: Armiger of the Father

FR: Honored Fallen (with Angeal)

BT: Alterna

Burst theme: "The Final Battle," boss theme in "A King's Tale" against Ultros

Since Regis mostly has the same abilities as Noctis, I decided to give him the Ring Magic from the Ring of the Lucii. When he uses magic in the movie, it's also a lightning spell. He deals Holy and Lightning magic damage, with turn warping mechanics similar to Noctis, turn deletion, and gravity damage.

Notes:

A big thank you to Toggle1 for reviewing pretty much every chapter so far! It is really, really appreciated!

Stay tuned for the next LC!

Chapter 16: Lost Chapter: Heart of Stone

Notes:

So this is probably the first character that the majority of readers may not know. The Dimensions games are probably among the most obscure games in the series, but I've always liked them. This is where I hope the bios and pictures help the most! I'll try not to write as if I expect you to know their stories already.

Previous chapter's Force pairing:

Regis with Angeal: Both are predecessors to the hero and passed down their fighting style. Both also have a strong belief in personal honor. Their successors, Noctis and Zack, are also Force partners.

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: Heart of Stone


Sarah Burtgang ( Final Fantasy Dimensions )

Voiced by: Chiwa Saito

A princess of the fallen kingdom of Burtgang, which was conquered by the Avalonian Empire. Taken captive by the empire and forced to carry out their dirty work, she is on a mission to steal the crystal of Lux when it unexpectedly chooses her to be a Warrior of Light. Generally cautious and reserved around others, she has a caring heart and becomes vocal about defeating the Empire, avenging her family, and restoring her kingdom.

Sarah


LIGHTNING


Jihl Nabaat was not one of her first choices for a companion, to say the least.

The Torsion that opened as the airship started to crash had spit them out in a craggy mountain pass, with gray slate, dirt paths, and scraggly weeds that clung to the mountainside. When it had been just the two of them, Lightning wasn’t concerned about Nabaat taking her by surprise and betraying her, but when they regrouped with Lenna and Sherlotta she wasn’t sure if the others would be on their guard around her. With so few allies, Lightning wondered if Nabaat would take her chance.

“Where should we go?” Lenna asked, when they took a moment to rest after coming across a den of coeurls. “Without Mog, how are we supposed to find everyone?”

“We wait for Mog to find us,” Lightning said, dismissing her sword. “It’s our only reliable way to regroup with the others. He has our dimensional coordinates.”

“So what do we do? Just wait here?” Sherlotta asked, and her expression of distaste told Lightning everything she needed to know about her opinion on that.

Nabaat brushed her hair over her shoulder and looked around. “I say we make ourselves more accessible, at least. Work our way down the mountain pass so it is easier for the others to find us.”

“Not a chance,” Lightning said, narrowing her eyes. “You know there’s tons of monsters down that way. We’ll be overrun with just us four.”

Maybe it was best that Nabaat was close so that Lightning could keep an eye on her.

“Very well,” Nabaat said, showing her palms. “It is only natural for you not to trust me yet. But I needn’t remind you that I was a PSICOM officer – and an accomplished strategist, if I say so myself.”

“Maybe we should consider it,” Lenna said to Lightning, an imploring softness in her eyes that reminded her all too much of Serah. “This pass is like a maze, and that path was the only way down that we’ve found so far.”

Lightning was about to retort to Nabaat when a screeching sound echoed among the crags.

Sherlotta clamped her hands over her ears and scowled. “What was that?”

“Mandragoras!” Lenna exclaimed. “Sounds like they’re fighting something. Maybe one of our friends!”

When they arrived at the scene of the battle, it was to see an unfamiliar girl with blue hair and a dull yellow shawl over a leather bodice and white robe. She fended off her enemies with a sword, light on her feet and jumping in and out of range of her five mandragora foes. Two lay dead at her feet.

Lenna was the first to attack, striking one of the mandragoras with a flurry of arrows. Sherlotta followed it up with a blast of magic from her hands, while Lightning dashed to dispatch two of them together before Nabaat could join the fray herself. With four of the monsters taking their focus off the stranger, the girl finished off the last one with an elegant slice, and then all the mandragoras disappeared into Torsions.

“Are you all right?” Lenna asked, dismissing her bow. Lightning was slower to unarm herself, checking the area for more monsters, but Nabaat didn’t even lower her baton.

“I’m fine,” the girl said. She looked between the four of them, her expression yielding nothing other than what Lightning perceived to be guarded indifference. “Who are you?”

Lenna introduced them, gesturing to each of her companions in turn. “Do you know this place?”

“I do,” the girl said, apparently deciding it was safe enough to dismiss her own sword. “My name is Sarah, and you are on Mt. Burtgang.”

Sherlotta clenched her fist and grinned. “That’s great! Then maybe you can guide us out of here. I’m so tired of just wandering around!”

Sarah’s eyes widened upon seeing Sherlotta’s tail flicking back and forth, but it was brief and she schooled her expression back to show an impassive wall. “Very well. Though it is rather strange… some parts of these passes appear to be different from what I am used to.”

Lightning put a hand on her hip. “There’s a reason for that.”


Sarah remained withdrawn as Lightning explained the World of Respite to her, but through the clenching of her jaw and the widening of her eyes Lightning saw right through her mask to the doubt carefully hidden beneath it. She walked at the head of their party with Lenna, who kept a conversation going to get to know their newest companion.

“You are awfully quick to trust her,” Nabaat said to Lightning, out of Sarah’s earshot. “She could be leading us right to our doom.”

“We have to give anyone new the benefit of the doubt, at least,” Sherlotta said. “What kind of life is that, to just reject them outright?”

“She could be taking advantage of our ignorance,” Nabaat continued. “Both regarding her identity and this place. It does not seem as if she is from the same world as any of our allies. She could be anyone.”

“You mean she’s only pretending to be friendly like you did when you first came to this world?” Lightning asked.

Nabaat smirked. “Exactly.”

Lightning quickened her pace, walking past Nabaat to match Lenna and Sarah with the gravel crunching underneath her feet. “That’s the difference with what we do. We don’t immediately assume the worst of people.”

Not anymore, at any rate.

“Do you live here, Sarah?” Lenna asked, as Lightning caught up to them.

“I live in the Kingdom of Burtgang,” Sarah said, keeping an eye on their surroundings. “If I really am in a different world, I worry for the state of my people. We’ve only just emerged from the end of a horrible battle and things are still unstable. Can you show me how to go back home?”

Lenna frowned. “I’m afraid not. I’m sorry. I worry for my kingdom back at home, too. But we must have faith they’ll remain strong in our absence.”

Sarah caught Lenna’s eye, then lowered her gaze to the ground as they walked. “I see,” she said, and offered nothing more.

Lenna looked back at Lightning with a wordless gesture, as if not sure what to make of Sarah.

“Well, we know Nabaat’s wrong,” Lightning said. “If she’s ‘acting friendly’ to get our guard down, then she’s doing a bad job of it.”

Sarah shot her a look, brows furrowed. “Excuse me? Are you accusing me of being the enemy? I have no association with the Empire of Avalon.”

“If you think your enemies only consist of that empire then you’ve got another thing coming,” Sherlotta said. “This world is full of all kinds of foes. Plus, you may have forgotten – we have no idea what Avalon is.”

Sarah looked away and crossed her arms. “Right.”

“Maybe we should stop and rest for a little,” Lenna suggested. “Regain our bearings. It’s been a long day.”


A chill descended over the mountain as the sun began to set, but after Lightning built a fire she still had to deal with Nabaat pushing her issue with Sarah.

“You just let her go off on her own?” Nabaat asked, the firelight reflecting in her glasses. “No one to watch her, no one to ensure she won’t just find some way to betray us?”

“She’s entitled to her privacy.”

Lenna clasped her hands together, frowning at Nabaat. “Coming to a new world, especially with none of her friends, is overwhelming. I’m sure you remember, yourself – it wasn’t that long ago for you. Sarah is kind. I can tell, so we don’t need to talk about her like this.”

“That boy Vivi trusted me from the moment he met me, and look how that turned out for him,” Nabaat countered.

“Are you trying to get us to kick you out of the group?” Lightning asked.

Sherlotta pursed her lips as she watched Nabaat. “I think I know what’s going on here. You’re not used to the concept of trust, especially if someone’s a stranger. You think the world is out to get you, and can’t really fathom when that isn’t the case.”

Nabaat scowled at her. “You don’t know me.”

A monster roared from the darkness, putting an end to their argument.

“That’s coming from where Sarah went,” Sherlotta said, springing to her feet.

“That sounded like a wind drake!” said Lenna, rushing toward the sound. Lightning scoffed at her tendency to rush right toward the danger without a second thought – without Faris here, it was her job to look out for Lenna.

“Are you coming?” Lightning asked Nabaat, who gave her a wordless nod and followed them into the night.

Beyond their camp, the sharp rocks jutting up from the mountainside looked like teeth, casting shadows under the moonlight that elongated into fangs that almost felt like they would clench around the party. Lightning mentally pushed away Nabaat’s warnings – she would not let Nabaat turn them against each other.

They found Sarah in an open space below them in a part of the mountain that seemed to have been a quarry at some time. She had her back to a winged blue drake, which bled from a gash across its scaly chest. Opposed to Sarah, with his blade glinting under a moonbeam, was Sephiroth. He looked as if even his hair was spun from moonlight.

Lightning cursed and leapt down to fight him, but Sephiroth was too fast for her and went on the attack.

Sarah’s shortsword came up in time to parry his first strike, but she had to dodge his follow up blows which cut gouges into the earth. When she was unable to dodge further, she conjured a magic barrier to block his next attack, but the force of it launched her back toward the wounded drake. Before he could finish her off, Lightning made it in time to lock her sword against his.

“What do you want?” she asked him, staring into his eerie, unblinking eyes.

He pushed her blade off of his and leapt backward so gracefully it was as if he was floating. “Conflict. As we always do. We were summoned here for a singular purpose, and it was in my way. I sought to impale that dragon upon my blade. A trophy.” He smiled at her; the grin of a predator locked onto its prey.

Lightning clenched her jaw. She wondered if he knew their protections against death were failing.

“Cloud’s not here, so you’ve got no reason to obsess over us,” said Sherlotta, as the others caught up and checked on Sarah. “Leave us alone, why don’t you?”

“If it’s a fight you want, fight me,” Lightning said, holding her blade ready for any sudden movement.

“I’m fine,” said Sarah, refusing to back down. “It’s the drake that’s hurt, not me!”

“This wind drake is Hiryu!” Lenna exclaimed, and she fired off arrows at Sephiroth. “You hurt him!”

Sephiroth’s mirthless smile didn’t leave his face as he calmly cut her arrows from the air, and Lightning pressed her attack to avoid giving him time to retaliate. Her sword was as fast as his, but she knew enough about him to know he had inhuman endurance. As long as she kept him away from the others, they would be able to get out of this.

Sparks trailed from the end of her blade as she pressed her attack. Wielding his massive katana with one hand, he used his other to call swirling black magic in his other palm, pressing it downward where it exploded outward in a blast of energy. Lightning shrugged it off, leaping high to attack him from above while Nabaat pounced on him from behind. Her baton struck him in the back of the knee when Lightning stabbed down from above, preventing him from fully defending himself from her aerial attack.

“Stand back, everyone!” Sarah called out, and the shaking of the ground accompanied her words. An eidolon from another world – Titan, if she remembered correctly – materialized as if from the mountain itself, calling forth the energy of the earth. Lightning grabbed Nabaat and leapt away, leaving Sephiroth at the epicenter of the blast while they all shielded themselves behind Sherlotta’s magic.

When the dust cleared, Sephiroth had unfurled his black wing and floated high above them, arms spread out. He continued smiling at them as Titan faded away, but his black wing curled around him and he vanished, acknowledging his defeat.

As a single black feather fluttered down to the ground, Lightning turned on Sarah and the drake. “What happened? First rule in this world: don’t confront people like him alone.”

Sarah knelt at the wind drake’s side while Lenna and Sherlotta worked on healing it. She furrowed her brow in Sephiroth’s direction, surveying the damage left in Titan’s wake. “As I mentioned, Burtgang is my home. I ventured out to see if I could recognize any other places and I saw that man about to kill this wind drake.”

Sherlotta shook her head in disbelief. “You put yourself in danger for a wind drake you didn’t even know, huh?”

Lenna’s eyes widened and she reached out to grasp Sarah’s arm. “Thank you,” she said. “Hiryu is very dear to me.”

Sarah averted her eyes, her cheeks reddening. “It was a creature that needed help. I couldn’t hesitate.”

“As I said, wait for backup next time.” Lightning turned to Nabaat and gestured toward Sarah. “Does this suffice for trustworthy now?”

Nabaat pursed her lips. “One of these days, you will meet someone you can’t trust and you can’t use. And it will come back to bite you.”

Lightning wondered if she was just reacting to her own history of distrust and being used as a tool, as Sherlotta theorized. Or perhaps it was just her way of making up for trying to betray them. Or maybe it was something deeper, and trying to understand her former enemy was a futile effort. She decided not to voice her thoughts.

“Oh, Hiryu, I’m so glad you’re here,” Lenna said, rubbing the drake under its chin while it nuzzled its big scaly head against her. It let out a low rumble – presumably from pleasure. “When you’ve recovered, will you let us ride you? We’ll have a much easier time of finding our other friends.”

Nabaat’s eyes looked as if they threatened to leave her skull. “You want me to ride that?”

Hiryu spread its wings and let out a cry.

For the first time since they met her, Sarah smiled. “I think that means yes.”


Character abilities:

Sarah Burtgang (Swords) Non-elemental magic damage, healing/support, buffs, fixed damage based on total party dmg taken/healed

15: Brave Ballad

35: Alabaster Veil

EX: Argy

LD: Dire Shock

FR: Memorandom: Hiryu (with Lenna)

BT: Heroic Hymn: Sunder Earth

Burst theme: “Imperator,” which plays during the penultimate boss fight

Final Fantasy Dimensions uses a job system, and there's really no "canon" job for these characters. In game, you control two separate parties: the Warriors of Light and the Warriors of Darkness, and the story jumps back and forth between them, with their own pools of jobs to pick from (the starter jobs are common to both parties, though). Sarah is a Warrior of Light, so she gets the Light Warrior jobs. One unique mechanic is "Fusion abilities" that are unlocked when two abilities from different jobs combine during battle, which can then be used at will.

Personally, in my game, I made her a Summoner because I think it fits her personality, and it's one of the jobs common to both parties. Story-wise, though, I think Paladin fits her very well, since Burtgang was a kingdom of paladins. That said, the only official artwork that depicts the characters with jobs (as far as I can find) chose to depict Sarah as a Bard. So..... I basically combined all of them into one! It makes her kit a bit busy, but what can ya do. I feel it preserves the spirit of her being a magic sword fighter with support abilities so she looks a bit like a Paladin without fully being one (Paladin will go to a different character).

Brave Ballad is a Bard ability, obviously. Alabaster Veil is a support ability belonging to Paladin. "Argy" is a Summoner spell, one that heals the party, and Argy herself is also one of the guest party members who has a close bond with Sarah. "Dire Shock" is a combination of "Dire Dirge" (a Bard ability) and "Shock" (a Bard/Paladin Fusion ability). "Memorandom" is technically a Memorist ability, which is Argy's job, but the Force ability basically consists of Sarah summoning Argy and Lenna summoning Hiryu for a combination attack. Finally, her Burst is a combination of Bard's ultimate song and a Fusion ability involving the Titan summon.

Chapter 17: Lost Chapter: Corrupted Future

Notes:

Last chapter's Force partnership explanation:

Sarah Burtgang with Lenna: Both are princesses of a kingdom that later come to lead it, and both have a similar personality trait of throwing themselves into danger for the good of someone else without first considering the consequences - both with cases notably involving a poisoned wind drake.

One thing I realized I probably should do is go back and add a "Recap" chapter before the Interlude so that this story doesn't have such a huge barrier of entry for new readers who may not have played the game (by that I mean the existing storyline of Opera Omnia, which will soon be viewable only on Youtube). Stay tuned for that.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: Corrupted Future


Shadowsmith ( Final Fantasy Record Keeper )

Voiced by: Chihiro Suzuki

A high ranking official from the Royal Arcanium who arrived to the Archives to assist during the Hall of the Magicite incident. With his extensive knowledge and magical expertise, he aids Tyro in restoring the records, though he has secrets of his own and is eventually revealed to be behind the corruption in pursuit of his own ends.

Shadowsmith


SHADOWSMITH


From the moment he woke up here, Shadowsmith knew he was in a different world.

The magic here felt strange. It had an energy all its own, crackling and rejuvenating, making him feel more powerful than ever before. This was no record painting, corrupted or otherwise.

He also knew, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that Ullr and Jord – his erstwhile collaborators – weren’t here. A pity.

Since his arrival, he spent his time gathering information. Watching from afar. He saw Tyro in the recreation of the Archives join up with the countless heroes he knew from the records. That had been Shadowsmith’s first surprise, to see them all together. 

Like the researchers in the Arcanium, he took meticulous notes of his observations. He learned of Torsions and strange landscapes that appeared as if at the whims of gods. The beasts and monsters which appeared seemingly at random, with no consideration for their environment, were considerably more aggressive than he expected. He noted his lack of hunger and exhaustion. It almost felt timeless, like in a painting, but something wasn’t right.

The time for observation was over. Now he needed to seek out information himself.


Y’SHTOLA


A wasteland of unaspected crystals stretched to the horizon, naturally formed as if in the wake of a terrible calamity. The sky was white, more like the harbinger of snow than the disaster of Light like on the First shard in her world. Y’shtola wondered which barren world had made its way to this one, for it was no landscape that she recognized.

After the destruction of the Falcon , she traveled alongside Thancred, Papalymo, Shantotto, and Seifer across this wasteland to find their multitude of lost companions. Papalymo had advised waiting for Mog to track them down, but Y’shtola refused to sit idle. When the vaunted professor of the mystic arts agreed with Y’shtola, even Seifer knew it was wise not to cross either of them.

“I begin to suspect the mystery has unfurled,” Shantotto said suddenly, breaking the silence as they walked. “These crystals do not belong to anyone’s world.”

“How have you come to that conclusion, Professor?” Papalymo asked.

Shantotto stopped to inspect one of the crystal growths more closely, and they all stopped with her. “They bear no element nor hue, and it is from this world’s energy they grew.”

“The energy from our battles, you mean?” Thancred prompted her. “We’ve not yet seen it crystallize like this, have we.”

“We have encountered the two crystal pillars of this world, and some of our foes have drawn power from Jegran’s corrupted crystals, the Torsions, or the manikins themselves. But to see the ambient energy from our battles crystallizing like this means it is overflowing in ways it hasn’t before,” Y’shtola realized, thinking out loud. “It is a natural consequence of the buildup of energy, at least according to the natural laws of our world.”

Seifer crossed his arms. “I’ve got no idea what you’re talking about. So what does that mean for this world, huh?”

Y’shtola traced her fingers along the crystals’ surface, her thoughts racing. They really needed a proper name for this nebulous ‘battle energy,’ because it was not aether. She couldn’t see the traces of it moving through the environment when she closed her eyes – that was one of the primary reasons she suspected she wasn’t blind anymore. This world needed her to see with her original eyes. “I believe there are two possibilities,” she said. “This world has always been suffering from a dearth of energy from the beginning, and is now becoming healthy. Or, more concerningly…”

“The opposite,” Thancred finished for her. “It was sustaining itself on a steady flow of energy, and now it is amassing at an alarming rate. Turbulent and dangerous.”

Y’shtola nodded, offering him a grin that lacked mirth. “Experience tells me the dangerous outcome is often the most likely.” She even wondered if the corruption of the primals could be related.

Papalymo tilted his head toward her. “Some might call that pessimism.”

Shantotto’s eyes twinkled at Y’shtola, as if impressed by her thought process. “To put your hypothesis to the test, we must find where this energy makes its nest. Here is my own theory forged: it’s been some time since Shinryu’s gorged.”

Y’shtola’s eyes widened. The implications of that were too alarming to think about, but she was never one to shy away from the truth, no matter how grim. “So you’re saying Shinryu and his planesgorgers were regulating the energy of this world?”

“Let’s not forget – regulating, or stifling,” Thancred pointed out. “If we want to be optimists like our dear Papalymo suggests, we must consider that Shinryu’s defeat meant nothing but good for this world.”

Assuming that they had even fully defeated Shinryu in the first place, which Y’shtola wasn’t so sure of. As those thoughts stewed in all of their heads – except perhaps Seifer’s, who looked around as if bored – Y’shtola closed her eyes and sensed the movement of aether in their environment. Though it wasn’t as sharp as it used to be back in her world, her ears pricked up when she felt an unfamiliar source of aether nearby – a stranger.

“Someone is on the other side of this crystal growth,” she said.

Seifer drew his gunblade at once. “Who’s there?”

A figure stepped out from behind the crystal wearing a black jacket trimmed with red, black gloves, and a grimoire strapped to his belt. “I should have known you would be able to sense me there, Y’shtola,” he said.

Y’shtola frowned. Precious few knew of her blindness in her own world. “You have me at a disadvantage. Who are you?”

“Have you been listening to us?” Seifer asked, keeping his gunblade ready.

The man shrugged. “I am called Shadowsmith, and I assure you I haven’t been eavesdropping for long. Put the gunblade down, Seifer – before you do anything reckless like back in Dollet. Or Timber. Though Y’shtola is a Sorceress, she is not the one who saved you there. And your dear friends Fujin and Raijin are not here to hold you back.”

Seifer lunged forward, but Thancred held out an arm to stop him. “You seem to know a lot about Seifer,” he said. “Are you from his world?”

Shadowsmith shook his head, unflinching. “I am not. But I know you, too, Thancred Waters – the orphan picked up from the streets of Limsa Lominsa, trained in the art of subterfuge only to fail someone you loved like a sister, losing her to her fate forever.” Thancred froze, fists clenched, and Shadowsmith moved on to Papalymo. “And the finest student of the great Archon Louisoix, who gave his life in a futile attempt to temporarily seal away a Primal.” Then to Shantotto. “And it is not only those two worlds I know, but yours as well – it is a pleasure to meet you, Professor Shantotto. Ex-Minister of the Orastery and hero of the Crystal War.”

Though he spoke in a light, almost conversational tone, the tension was palpable.

“You’ve made your point, though it’s rather blunt – what do you hope to accomplish with this stunt?” Shantotto asked. “If you know my reputation then you better speak before my next incantation.”

Seifer scowled. “How d’you know all that stuff about us?”

“Before I tell you, there is information I need from you first,” Shadowsmith said, wiping his spectacles clean with a handkerchief before putting them back on. “I am a rather recent arrival to this world. Tell me what has summoned us here and why I do not feel the need to eat or sleep. Are we frozen in time?”

Y’shtola looked to the others. Thancred had his jaw clenched as tight as his fists, all of his walls up in front of this man. Papalymo had a thoughtful frown, no doubt calmly analyzing the situation on his own. Seifer still looked ready to attack, but Shantotto looked vaguely amused by the stranger. Y’shtola thought Shadowsmith should have played his cards closer – the answers to his questions were things they would have freely given to any new arrival, but now they knew not to trust him. Perhaps he didn’t care about making allies.

“We have been summoned either by the two gods of this world or the will of the great crystal itself,” Y’shtola said, seeing no harm in answering. “It is unclear how time passes in this world, and though some of us eat or sleep out of enjoyment of it, we do not know for sure why we function without it. This is meant to be a world of rest, a reprieve from the countless battles waged in cycles we cannot remember, but many different forces threaten it.”

“I see,” said Shadowsmith, furrowing his brow as he brought his finger up to his lips, deep in thought. He walked up the slope of a buried crystal shard, getting the high ground over them. “Though it does raise more questions.”

“Now tell us how you know so much about us,” said Thancred.

“Perhaps you should ask Tyro,” said the Shadowsmith, straight-faced. “He knows all the same information I do.”

It clicked into place. “You’re from his world. You know us from those paintings,” Y’shtola said. “How? What does it mean?” After meeting Tyro and grasping that nugget of information from him, she had questioned Enna Kros, hoping her divine knowledge would shed some light on the state of this world – of all their worlds. But the god had remained frustratingly quiet about it, citing rules she could not break.

“So he told you about the record paintings, did he?” Shadowsmith asked, eyebrows raised in amusement. “Never would have thought he’d break the cardinal rule of the Royal Archives.”

“Records, you say, as if citing history,” said Shantotto with a grin. “I believe I see the root of this mystery.”

“Then we are historical figures to you?” Y’shtola asked, tail flicking. Tyro had revealed only that they were paintings, but Y’shtola had surmised they were perhaps windows into other worlds. Or perhaps even stories. But not factual historic records. “That cannot be possible. All of our worlds cannot share the same history. We cannot all be from the same world, with you and yours as the custodians of its record.” She stepped forward, past the crystal formations that twisted to the pale sky. “In each of our worlds we share a common language, a common currency. Yet just in the recorded history of my world we can trace the rise and fall of languages, the first minting of gil – and it differs even across the Shards. It wouldn’t make sense for all of us from throughout time to speak the same language and use the same gil. You are wrong, Shadowsmith. Your portraits do not record our history.”

Shadowsmith held out his hand. “I’ve often wondered the same thing myself. My world carefully records every facet of its history, yet the stories of all those worlds never seemed to fit neatly into it, from my perspective. There is something else at work here.”

“The girl Ritz said Ivalice was but a dream,” said Papalymo. “Then are these ‘portraits’ flights of fiction? Just wondrous works of art?”

“It doesn’t align,” Thancred said with a grunt. “Tyro knows her story, too. Unless it’s a dream within a dream, then Ritz may be wrong as well.”

For the first time, Shadowsmith smiled. “Come with me, Y’shtola. I believe you are one of the very few among all the inhabitants of this world that I can trust. You and I can follow the trail of this secret together, to find the truth of this world. Of all our worlds.”

For one tantalizing moment, Y’shtola considered it. Not out of any inherent desire to trust him, but from her thirst for knowledge. Questions kept flooding into her mind and the answers still eluded her grasp. If she never found the answers, she wondered if they would ever find their way home. But what if she discovered a way to traverse the worlds, the stars – to travel between them at will? What if that included the Source of her world and all of its Shards?

“Why me?” Y’shtola asked. “You know so much about me, it seems. You may claim to trust me, but I would never be able to trust you for that reason. I know nothing of your past nor your future, yet you know mine.”

“And I can tell you yours,” Shadowsmith said. “I can tell you where your story goes – even how it ends.”

Seifer threw himself forward with a shout, leaping off of the side of one crystal to propel himself to the one Shadowsmith stood upon. He slashed downward, shattering the crystal on impact and making the Shadowsmith lose his footing. “She’s not gonna go with you, bonehead,” Seifer said, looking down the barrel of his gunblade at the tip of the sword held inches from Shadowsmith’s face.

“Thank you, Seifer,” said Y’shtola, rolling her eyes. Though it was rather uncouth, his aggression helped remind her of the folly of joining Shadowsmith. “I’ve heard enough. I care not for the knowledge of my own future – that may be perhaps the only thing I’d like to remain a mystery. Seifer is right, Shadowsmith. I will not go with you.”

“Wouldn’t be surprised if you were a bit tempted, though,” Thancred said, gripping his daggers to prepare for a fight.

The Shadowsmith vanished in a flash of light, then reappeared at a higher vantage atop another crystal. “All right,” he said, sighing. “That was my only offer. Thank you for the information you have provided, but we are done here. I’m not going to waste time fighting you.”

A Torsion opened up behind him and he vanished into it. This time, he didn’t reappear.

“Yet another foe to contend with,” Thancred said, dismissing his daggers. “Splendid.”

“We’ve no shortage of them, true,” said Papalymo. “What do we do now?”

Shantotto laughed. “Ohoho! What an intriguing fellow! Seifer, that was quite the bellow. But your assault prevented us from learning more – Shadowsmith was far from being a bore.” Y’shtola thought she saw Shantotto’s eyes glow. "With Y'shtola does my thirst for knowledge compare. But to trust me? He wouldn't dare. On that account was Shadowsmith wise, but he and you have kept me from my prize."

“By that, I think the professor means you should start running,” Y’shtola advised Seifer.

“Damn it, I’m no chicken-wuss! I’m not afraid of her!” Even so, he backed away, eyes wide.

Shantotto smirked, and that was all it took for Seifer to swallow his pride and run.


Character abilities

Shadowsmith (Unique - Grimoires) Ice/lightning/darkness magic dmg, BRV manipulation, EX charger

15: Stormspell Strike

35: Chilling Blizzard

EX: Lunar Dragon

LD: Deadly Innocence

FR: Corrupted Story (with Shuyin)

BT: Soul of Nihility

Burst theme: “Shadowsmith’s Theme," his own character theme, which is actually very cool

All of his abilities barring his Force ability come from skills that he knows, either while he is briefly playable or during his boss fight. Like Xande, he is a magic attacker who uses three different elements in battle - in his case, Ice, Lightning, and Darkness with the associated Imperil debuffs. He's primarily a magic attacker despite being a jack-of-all-trades similar to Tyro in game. Since he also notably uses Entrust to charge the soul breaks of his allies, he can grant his current BRV value to party members (which is sapped from enemy BRV) and help recharge their EX abilities.

Notes:

This chapter is more of a heavy lore discussion, but it leads into future plot developments I have planned. I hope you enjoyed it regardless! I never thought I'd have so much fun writing Shantotto's dialogue!

Chapter 18: A5C3, Part 1: Into the Deep

Notes:

Sorry that this chapter took a bit longer than intended. I came up with a new mechanic/weapon tier and had to go through and come up with a 7th and final ability for every character, new and old and future. Absolutely useless to this story but it served as effective procrastination from writing. I'll go into more details below with the first characters to get this new ability.

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Shadowsmith with Shuyin: Both are a dark reflection of a hero (Tyro and Tidus, respectively), identical to them in some way, who lost someone that they loved. Shadowsmith is a version of Tyro from the future and Shuyin is essentially a version of Tidus from the past.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Act 5, Chapter 3, Part 1: Into the Deep


Rikku ( Final Fantasy X )

Voiced by: Marika Matsumoto

One of the Al Bhed, she is Yuna’s cousin and joined her as a guardian to save the world from Sin two years ago. Now spending her days as a sphere hunter, she travels the world as one of the Gullwings. Though she claims to enjoy her life, she can’t sit still for long.

FFX Rikku


Aria Benett ( Final Fantasy III )

Voiced by: Ayumi Tsunematsu

A priestess who serves the crystal of water. While trying to restore the crystal’s light, she is shipwrecked and ends up traveling alongside the party to the Temple of Water after they find her. She is prepared to give all to preserve the light of the world.

Aria


Hauyn ( World of Final Fantasy )

Voiced by: Maaya Uchida

A young summoner raised by Lusse, Lann and Reynn’s mother, whose personal Mirage is Siren. Imprisoned in a cage for hundreds of years due to the recklessness of her siblings, she bears a grudge toward them and resolves to save their parents on her own. Though she doesn’t hesitate to berate the twins for their failures, she has a kind heart underneath it all and deeply cares for her adoptive family; with them she often goes by the nickname “Wyn.”

Hauyn


RIKKU


When Rikku met the girl in the white dress speaking of crystals and sea monsters, she assumed the girl had some kind of amnesia, since it sounded like nothing Rikku ever encountered. But no one had been affected by Sin’s toxins in years.

But once she got a good look at the ships, Rikku started to think she might have been the one who wasn’t quite sure what she was talking about. It was as if she wasn’t even on Spira at all. Now that she thought about it, she wasn’t sure how she found herself marooned on a graveyard of wrecked ships in the middle of the ocean in the first place. Maybe she was the one with amnesia.

All of them were made of wood rather than the metal of Al Bhed ships, with huge sails of rotting canvas unlike those used by the rest of Spira. Hulls had been punctured and torn apart by the tides – or perhaps something else, like fiends – and infested with barnacles. Masts had been felled like trees, bridging the gaps between some of the ships, many of which had been mostly submerged. But the one that Rikku and her shipmate were on felt safe enough, at least for now.

The shipwrecks made a ring around an island of coral at the center, a rainbow sea fortress of hundreds of colors and styles of coral. Some of it protruded from the water, strange textures and shapes that made her long for the sunny beaches of Besaid. Beyond the shipwrecks, she saw only endless fog.

Despite her confusion, she could only rub her hands together and grin at the sight of all the ships. “Looks like a hotbed of treasure to me! What do you think, Aria?”

The girl in the white dress frowned. “I am capable of swimming, but it looks dangerous. Perhaps we should stay up here.”

Rikku glanced over her long, sleeveless dress and sandals. Not really ideal for swimming, she had to admit. “Don’t worry, I used to go deep sea diving on a salvage ship all the time. I’ll be fine! You just sit tight and I’ll be right back, okay?”

Before Aria could protest, Rikku dove right into the water.


TIDUS


Tidus smelled the sea before he saw it.

It came into view when he crested the rocky trail to a sheer drop, a cliffside that loomed over a rocky shoreline far below. The greenish water looked calm, perfect for practicing in, with an overcast sky that didn’t quite seem to be ready to break with rain yet. Below, on the shore, he saw a single wooden dock, rickety and sagging with age, a long metal tube bobbing next to it. He took a moment to catch his breath as the others joined him.

“Hey, there’s people down there,” Tidus said, pointing. “Think Mog’s with them?”

After they traveled from the landscape that resembled Mushroom Rock Ravine, where they had met Shuyin, they all heard a moogle’s cry ringing through their heads. Terra had thought it was Mog calling out to them, so they followed it here.

“People, or manikins?” Paine asked.

Maria, the one among them with the keenest eyes, peered down the shoreline. “Those are people! I see one of the Class Zero uniforms, and a chocobo. That must be Chichiri!”

“They’ve got a submarine!” Tyro exclaimed. “I wonder where they found it.”

Yuna gasped when she made it to the top. “What a view!”

His heart soared and he smiled as he grasped her hand. She wasn’t out of breath at all; she handled the climb better than he did. He wasn’t looking forward to the climb down to the shore, though. Right when he started the descent down the steep and narrow pass, Yuna whistled, sharp and high enough to carry to the others down at the shore, grinning at him with pride.


The waves swept against the rocks as they approached the submarine dock, where Ace and Krile waved to welcome them. Chichiri the chocobo stood with them, warbling happily as Tidus and the others arrived, but another chocobo that looked a bit like a very large chick sat with her, alongside a girl he didn’t recognize. Carbuncle sat curled up on the dock with his tails wrapped around him, ignoring their arrival, while Mog floated above them all. His pom pulsed with a gentle light.

“Mog, it worked!” Krile said, once Tidus and the others were within earshot. “You did it!”

Tidus beamed, glad to see them all okay. “Hey there!”

“What’s Mog doing?” Terra asked, looking up at the moogle with worry. “Is he alright?”

“Yes, he’s fine,” said Ace, putting a hand on his hip. “When we found Cid Highwind, he had the suggestion of ‘broadcasting’ dimensional coordinates, like a radio. But rather than building one, Mog said he’d try to use his pom. Instead of using the coordinates to track all of our lost friends, this way everyone can come to us.”

Tidus had no idea what a radio was, but either way that sounded like good news. “Cid’s here?”

“Yeah, he’s inside the submarine, trying to get it repaired,” said Krile. “Luckily, we found all the right people to get it moving again! Cid Haze is in there, too, along with Xezat and Luca.” The little chocobo chirped, and Krile laughed. “Oh, how could I forget? Meet our new friends, Chocobo and Shirma.”

“Pleased to meet you!” said Shirma, after they finished their introductions. “Mog, why don’t you take a rest? You’ll overexert yourself.”

“I can’t,” Mog said, his voice strained. “I’ve… got to work harder to find everyone again, kupo. I promised myself I’d never lose you all… a second time.”

Yuna reached toward him, brow etched in concern. “Oh, Mog…”

“Just wait, kupo,” Mog said, quivering with effort. “Others are close by.”

No sooner than the words were out of his moogle mouth, they heard a roar coming from the ocean. The Spirans reacted with immediate alarm, but a massive blue sea creature with a long neck swam toward them with riders on its back. As it came closer, Tidus beamed when he recognized Faris, a pair of Lilikins he knew to be the twins, and Enna Kros. The latter calmly sat with a mug of what surely had to be coffee in her hands, apparently not spilling a drop.

“Amazing!” said Krile, clapping her hands together. “That’s Syldra! Faris found Syldra!”

“Who’s Syldra?” Terra asked.

“Her best friend,” said Krile, beaming.

“That’s not all, ya?” a familiar voice called out. From further down the shore, opposite from where Tidus and the others arrived, Wakka walked in the lead of a group that consisted of Lulu, Kimahri, Auron, the Onion Knight, Desch, and Luneth. Tidus and Yuna both waved. “We made it!”

After that, Mog’s pom finally stopped pulsing with light and he lowered, and Shirma caught him in her arms. “See, Mog?” she asked. “Your hard work has paid off. You can rest now.”

“Thank you, kupo,” Mog said. “I’ll keep working hard after a little shut-eye, kupo…”

Once everyone gathered together on the shore and made their introductions, Carbuncle stood and stretched. “Now, if you’re all ready,” he said, leaping to Chichiri’s back for a higher vantage point. “See that shipwreck out on the water?”

Tidus used his hands to form circles around his eyes in an attempt to focus his vision more. “Uh, I think so. In all that fog?”

“Leviathan is there,” Carbuncle said, with all the care of a behemoth. “Deep underwater. You will have to be ready to face him.”

“Then we’re lucky to have a submarine,” Desch said, as Xezat climbed out of it. “But I’m not sure it’s wise to confront a creature like Leviathan deep underwater, where he has the advantage. Where’d the submarine come from, anyway?”

“We found it here,” said Xezat, stretching out his back. “The Cids, Luca, and myself met our manikins not far from here and they brought us to it. We’ve been trying to get it fixed up and ready to go, but no luck so far. Even with all our brilliant minds together.”

Luca’s head popped out of the top of the submarine next. “Eh, submarines aren’t dwarven technology. We’ll just need more time before we get it moving.”

“Time is one thing we don’t have a lot of right now,” said Ace. “Mog mentioned earlier that he sensed some lights in the shipwrecks. And Leviathan may realize we’re here and wash us all away with a tidal wave before then.”

Lulu stepped forward. “Can we find some way to distract him, then? Or lure him to the surface, where we can fight. At least so we can buy enough time to retrieve the people trapped there.”

“It sounds dangerous,” said the Onion Knight. “We may only be able to send a few. The rest of you will need to get to high ground.”

Chocobo let out a chirp that sounded like a protest. “Not a chance,” Krile translated. “We can’t leave the ones working on the submarine here alone.”

“Syldra can ferry a team out to the shipwreck, right girl?” Faris asked, scratching the beast’s neck. “Not counting our Lilikin mates, I can take two more.”

Reynn groaned. “Did we just get voluntold to go?”

“What’s wrong?” said Lann. “We can totally kick Leviathan in the tail! And we’re small, so we’re one fighter for the price of two!”

“Wrong way around, brother. We’re two for the price of one on Syldra’s back.”

“I’m going,” said Onion Knight. “I’m still your leader, and I let the group fall apart again. I’ve got to fix this.”

Yuna shook her head. “No one blames you.”

“I’m going, too,” Luneth said, and he strode into the surf before the Onion Knight could protest. The Onion Knight and Desch exchanged a look, but neither of them stopped him.

Chocobo chirped and made to follow along, but Shirma blocked his path. “Maybe you should sit this one out, Chocobo,” she said. “You can’t expect yourself to do everything, you know.”

“C’mon, Wakka!” said Tidus. “We can swim alongside them.”

Wakka clenched his fist. “You know it!”

“Me, too,” said Paine. When Tidus looked at her in surprise, she shrugged him off. “What? I know how to blitz. So does Yuna, but I don’t think she’d keep up in the water dressed like that.”

“Don’t drown out there,” said Auron, never one for softening his advice. “Know when to pick your battles. Go, find whoever is trapped there, and bring them back.”

Enna Kros nodded. “He’s right. To face Leviathan, we’ll need the strength of all of us. Don’t do anything stupid, Lann.”

“Hey! Why’d I get singled out?”


LUNETH


“So, how’d you find Syldra?” Luneth asked, once they got moving across the water.

“She rescued me,” Faris said proudly, standing at the base of the sea monster’s neck. “After the airship went down, she found me clinging to some of the wreckage in the sea. Think I wished for her to come to this world, and she came.”

“Do you think if we wish really hard, Leviathan won’t find us?” Reynn asked. “I’m worried about Tidus, Wakka, and Paine. They may swim fast, but they can’t keep up with Syldra.”

Luneth looked back at the three swimmers trailing behind them. “Dunno. The others back at shore are thinking of a way to lure Leviathan out when we’re ready to fight, aren’t they?”

“They are,” said the Onion Knight. “We can’t fight him now – not until we can ensure the people stranded on the shipwreck are safe. We’ll have to use that submarine to lure him up once we’ve got them.”

“I know that,” Luneth grumbled.

The mass of ruined ships and thick fog creeped closer, some bowheads and hulls towering high above them. Syldra passed into the ring of ships and Luneth realized this place was an entire ship graveyard. It was eerily quiet, with only the distant groan of rotting wood echoing across the waves.

“Okay, I instantly regret coming here,” said Reynn. “This place is creepy.” She let out a sudden shriek and jumped up into Luneth’s arms when Paine’s head appeared above the water.

“Do that again and I’ll give you a real reason to scream in terror,” Paine said, swimming ahead. Reynn let out a breath of relief and dropped from Luneth’s arms.

Lann pointed to the left of the coral island in the center of the graveyard. “Uh… you mean a reason like that?”

Following the direction of his fingerless hand, Luneth’s eyes widened when he saw a lonely figure standing at the bow of a ship, white dress billowing.

Reynn shrieked again, and this time she jumped into Faris’s arms. “A ghost!”

Rather than reacting with fear, Luneth felt a sudden pang of recognition. “Wait, I know who that is!” he said.

The Onion Knight beat him to it, making Luneth’s stomach drop. “Aria!?”

This world couldn’t be so cruel. It had to be his Aria. It had to be.


“I’m sorry, could you please repeat that? You said this is a new world?”

Syldra ferried them over to the ship where they saw Aria and Luneth’s heart wrenched when her eyes lit up upon seeing the Onion Knight. He saw his answer there. She had no idea who he was, just like Desch and Cid. At this point he would have even been open to Xande recognizing him.

“It is,” said the Onion Knight. “Not like the floating continent and the lower world, like at home. But we’re in a brand new place.”

Aria smiled, full of affection for the Onion Knight, which he returned. “In any case, I am glad to be here with you, my friend.”

“This takes me back,” said the Onion Knight, looking around the remains of the ship. “I first found you at a place like this, didn’t I?”

Luneth grit his teeth. “You didn’t. I did, with my friends.” He turned to Aria, his chest aching. “Don’t you remember, Aria? The things we went through. I was there when you…” He swallowed his words, unable to finish.

Aria frowned, her eyes soft. “I’m sorry, I really don’t recall ever meeting you.”

“Let it go, lad,” said Faris. “I’m sure your friends will show up eventually.”

“But Aria is one of my friends!” Luneth insisted. “Someone very important to me. I don’t even know the Onion Knight. He wasn’t there!”

“We already explained it to you,” said the Onion Knight, with the air of one of the elders at Ur explaining something to a child. “There are different worlds out there and many of them have things in common. You just happen to be from one that’s very similar, but it’s not the same.”

“Stop explaining it to me like you’re pretending to be an adult,” said Luneth, clenching his fists. “You don’t have to repeat yourself. You’re just some kid, too!”

“Well, you’re acting like a kid!” the Onion Knight retorted. “Just accept that things are different in this world!”

“Yeah, lots of our friends don’t know us here,” said Lann. “You get used to it.”

Aria clasped her hands together. “I’m sorry if I am the cause of this…”

Luneth was about to tell her otherwise, but Paine interjected. “Can we discuss this later?” she said. “We’ve got Aria, so we really need to get out of here before Leviathan shows up.”

“Oh, no!” said Aria. “We can’t leave yet – I am still waiting for that girl to return. She went diving for treasure.”

“There’s someone else here?” Tidus asked. He pumped his fist. “Alright, let’s go find her! We can handle the swimming.”


RIKKU


Below the island of coral, Rikku found what looked like an old temple beneath the waves.

Its flooded halls were lit by glowing crystals and twisting blue coral, dim and otherworldly. Pearls inlaid in the walls also pulsed with a gentle light, but Rikku couldn’t pry them free. She swam through the mysterious ruin, eyes peeled for anything valuable or even something to denote where in Spira she could be. She saw no faded writings or statues of high summoners that she recognized, no ancient Yevon secrets or even broken machina.

But as she swam through a hall of fluted pillars, many of which had crumbled to the floor, she began to think this was a wasted effort and considered swimming back up to find Aria. As for what to do after that, she had no idea.

At the end of the hall, she saw something glowing brighter than everything else she had seen so far. As she approached, her eyes widened and she almost gasped when she saw that it was a barrier or cage of some sort – with a girl inside.

She had white hair and a black hood, and if it wasn’t for the fact that she was standing up straight Rikku would have thought she was sleeping. The glowing cage kept the water away from her – the girl was as dry as she’d be on land.

When Rikku approached, the girl’s eyes opened. And Rikku almost shouted out in alarm. Whoever she was, she needed help – and Rikku wouldn’t just leave her down here. She swam to the base of the cage, looking around it for some kind of hidden switch or something.

“No, don’t touch it!” the girl said. Rikku heard her clear as day, as if the water didn’t separate them. “You can’t let me out!”

Rikku frowned and put her hands on her hips, wordlessly trying to communicate her incredulousness. What was she supposed to do, just leave her here?

“If you come too close, Leviathan will notice!”

Elsewhere in the temple, something shook. Rikku looked up and around, preparing to dodge out of the way of falling rocks or crumbling infrastructure, since this temple didn’t exactly seem to be the most secure ruin she’d found. But then she noticed the water current strengthening, as if it was trying to pull her away from the girl in the cage.

“Oh, no,” the girl said. “He knows you’re here!”

Before Rikku could grab onto anything, the current dragged her into the darkness of the deep.


PAINE


No sooner than Paine, Tidus, and Wakka jumped back into the water, the current strengthened and dragged them in a ring around the coral island at the center. Even Syldra fought to stay afloat. She distantly heard Faris shouting but the water grew stronger, powering into a roar that drowned out everything else. She tried to cling to whatever she could find, but every floating piece of debris slipped through her fingers.

Leviathan had awoken.

There was no other explanation for the sudden change in the water. She lost sight of Tidus and Wakka in the struggle. They had all been captured in a whirlpool, with even the shipwrecks rocking and getting torn to pieces. The water spread away from the coral in the center, extending out to the ring of shipwrecks and revealing a towering shape beneath the sea. Something dark and serpentine swam in the opposite wall of water that Paine just barely saw through the frothing whirl. She kicked and fought to keep her head above the water, coughing out the sting of salt in her throat and eyes, but above all she couldn’t let herself panic. If she panicked, she’d drown.

She couldn’t spare a thought for the others. The water dragged her closer to the structure hidden beneath the coral, swallowing her in its depths.


The sound of water dripping into puddles roused her back to consciousness. Paine’s whole body felt bruised as she struggled to her feet, the sharp tang of low tide assaulting her nostrils. Fish flopped against the ground. Beyond the hall she’d found herself in, she heard the roar of water, like a river, and when she looked she saw the whirlpool making a wall that blocked her inside of the structure that had seemingly been completely submerged before. How nice of Leviathan to leave them a pocket of air.

“Paine!” she heard Tidus shout, and his footsteps splashed as he ran down the hall. “There you are!” Wakka, the Onion Knight, Luneth, Aria, Faris, Lann, and Reynn followed behind him, all looking as waterlogged and miserable as Paine felt.

“Oh, praise be,” Wakka said, doubling over. “We all made it. Everyone’s okay, ya?”

“Do you need any healing?” Aria asked her. “I can help.”

“I’ll live,” Paine said, waving her off and stretching out her shoulder. “We’ve got to find a way out of this, fast, before Leviathan decides to drown all of you. And I imagine the water rushing back into this temple would crush those of us who wouldn’t immediately drown against the walls.”

“Thanks for painting that pretty picture,” Reynn piped up.

“You should worry about yourself first, Aria,” said Luneth. “You don’t feel ill or anything, do you?”

Aria smiled at him. “I do not,” she said. “Thank you for asking.”

“I hope Syldra had the good sense to swim away,” said Faris, looking out toward the wall of water. “She doesn’t do well with whirlpools.”

“Does anyone recognize this place?” the Onion Knight asked. “This doesn’t look like the Water Temple from our world, Aria. How are we supposed to get out of here?” Luneth scoffed at his words, and Paine had to admit she couldn't exactly blame him - it was as if the Onion Knight was reminding him that he and Aria knew each other, and Luneth was the stranger.

“This sorta looks like the Sunken Shrine,” said Reynn. “Remember, Lann? Where the Quacho Queen lives.”

“Oh, sure, of course I remember her,” said Lann. “But this can’t be our Sunken Shrine. The acupuncture’s all different.”

“Do you mean ‘architecture,’ dummy?”

“Before we go anywhere, I’m worried for Rikku,” Aria said. “I hope she’s okay…”

Paine, Wakka, and Tidus all looked at each other. “Wait, did you say Rikku?” Tidus asked, eyes wide. “You met Rikku!?”

“Oh, I’d recognize that loudmouth voice anywhere! Yeah, the one and only!” said a loudmouth voice down the hall that Paine recognized at once. Rikku stepped into the light of the hall, her scarf sopping wet, bearing a grin so wide it almost hurt Paine’s cheeks. “Look at all you guys! What’re you doing in this place?”

“We can ask the same of you,” Paine said, smirking. “Nice of you to join us, Rikku.”

“Yeah, you sure took your time!” said Wakka.

Tidus scooped her into a hug. “I almost thought you’d never show up!” he said. “Yuna and the others will be so glad to see you. We’ve got lots of friends to introduce you to.”

Rikku looked around at the others. “Um, yeah – to be honest, I’ve got no idea what’s going on. Who are these people?” She waved at Aria. "Well, besides Aria, of course."

“Well, first off, we’re trapped down here because of a giant magical sea monster named Leviathan,” Paine explained. “So there’ll be time for catch-up later, assuming we get out of here alive.”

“Always the doom and gloom with you, Dr. P,” said Rikku, balancing on the balls of her feet. “But, uh… that Leviathan thing might be sorta my fault…”


HAUYN


She knew something was wrong with the man pacing outside of her cage. His eyes were hard and piercing, like a predator’s, as he watched her. Despite the water that had just drained out of the shrine, he looked completely dry, like he had expected it to happen. Even before he spoke, she knew he wanted something of her. He looked a tiny bit familiar, but she couldn’t place it.

“You’re a summoner, aren’t you?” he asked. “Are you the one who summoned that serpent? Is it protecting you?”

“Protecting me?” she retorted, glaring. “Does it look like it’s protecting me? I’m down here in a cage. I’ve been imprisoned.” By who or what, she didn’t know. She had woken up here, locked in a crystal cage seemingly deep in the ocean. The girl from earlier was the first human she had seen, and now this man with the intense stare had come. “I didn’t summon Leviathan. It was here before I was – he spoke with me before he went into a frenzy.”

“Can you control it?”

“I can’t do anything from in here,” Hauyn replied. It wasn’t the first time she had been locked in a crystal cage, after all. She knew how it worked. For all she knew, she could have been locked down here for centuries. Maybe it was Lann and Reynn’s fault again. “Who are you?”

“My name is Shuyin,” he said. “And I can let you free. I just need your help to control Leviathan. Together, we can use it to stop anyone who’d oppose us.”

Hauyn stepped away from the bars of the crystal cage. “Oppose us in what?”

“Ending this battle,” he said, spreading his arms wide. “I’ve only just come to this world, but it’s full of so much fighting. So much pain.”

Hauyn’s mouth twisted. “You’re from a different world?” But she supposed that would answer some questions, like why summoning Siren or Carbuncle didn’t seem to work the same way. This Leviathan also didn’t seem to be part of the Pleiad. “That won’t work, though. Leviathan is not my Mirage. He wouldn’t listen to me. At best, maybe I can calm him down… he seemed kind, back when I first woke up. But something changed.”

Shuyin’s eyes narrowed. “If you can’t help me, then you’re useless to me. I’m leaving.”

“No, wait!” she called out to his retreating back. “Help me, please! I can’t stay down here… can’t stay in this cage again! Come back!” She shouted as loud as she could to no avail. “Come back, please…” She should have let that girl free her. Even if she would have drowned. But now that the water wasn’t here, this was her best chance to escape. Shuyin couldn’t just leave her here.

She sank to her knees, hopelessness bubbling up in her chest like bile. For all she knew, she would be down here for an eternity. And worst of all, she’d never know why. “Reynn, Lann… Lusse… Where are you?”


New ability: Ultimates! Mostly for those who, even with Bursts, still never got their most iconic/most powerful ability.

The way I imagine them working is that they are one-use skills, but unlike Bursts not all of them just do damage. The main thing, though, is that they bestow a permanent effect on the user after it is used that does not use up any buff slots or overhead mechanics, which enhances something they currently do or gives them a new function altogether. Some may want to be triggered ASAP, some may want to wait for something like a Burst phase or Force Time for maximum damage. So here are the first two examples:


Character abilities

ULT updates:

Terra ULT: Trance Holy Combo

Effect: Terra maintains her Trance form for the rest of the battle, increasing her damage dealt. "Holy Combo" is one of her abilities from the Dissidia games.


Squall ULT: Lion Heart

Effect: All attacks break through enemy shields, such as BRV Barriers. This, of course, is his most powerful Limit Break.


Rikku (Fist) Non-elemental melee, debuffer, buffer, Esuna, defense reduction, healer, rainbow dmg, dmg immunity

15: Hazardous Shell (becomes Hi-Potion when using Mix)

35: Frag Grenade (becomes Bomb Fragment when using Mix)

EX: Mix (becomes Light Curtain when using Mix)

LD: Al Bhed Potion (becomes Door to Tomorrow when using Mix)

FR: Machina Mayhem (with Luca)

BT: Guided Missiles (becomes Blessed Gem when using Mix)

ULT: Chaos Grenade (Effect: Rikku Uses items as she selects them for Mix)

Burst theme: “Launch,” which plays when the Fahrenheit first takes flight

Alternate Skin: Dive suit

 

Finally, here's Rikku! I had a lot of fun designing her kit. At her base level, she is a debuffer and buffer with some healing abilities. Her main mechanic comes from her EX, where she uses her famous "Mix" ability to combine two items together for a brand new effect. Once she uses Mix, the ability buttons change to the items that need to be selected for the combination, with the full set of outcomes listed below! Her Burst is "Guided Missiles," which is the action command from the airship during boss battles on top of it. Her ULT is a Mix command, and the ULT Effect is that whenever she uses Mix, she also "Uses" items as she's mixing them together (so High Potion to heal the party, then Bomb Fragment to damage enemies, and then they combine into "Mega NulAll."

 

Light Curtain + Bomb Fragment = Mighty G (Damage reduction, fast EX recharge)

Light Curtain + Door to Tomorrow = Hyper Mighty G (Phys dmg immunity + regen)

Light Curtain + Hi-Potion = Megalixir (Full heal, battery)

Light Curtain + Blessed Gem = Megalixir

Bomb Fragment + Hi-Potion = Mega NulAll (Magic dmg immunity + regen)

Bomb Fragment + Door to Tomorrow = Quartet of 9 (Rainbow damage for Rikku, fast EX recharge)

Bomb Fragment + Blessed Gem = Cluster Bomb (Repeated fire damage, fast EX recharge)

Door to Tomorrow + Hi-Potion = Hyper Vitality (Party Max HP Up, Max BRV Up)

Blessed Gem + Hi-Potion = Megalixir

Blessed Gem + Door to Tomorrow = Trio of 9999 (Rainbow dmg for party)


X-2 Rikku

And that's not all! With Rikku, there's another new mechanic -- she gets the "Cecil/Yda" treatment, but it works a little differently. You'd pick the character's "dressphere" like you would their costume, and it is done only outside of battle. This way, for someone like Yuna, you could use her Gunner abilities but she would have only taken the Gunner appearance if her costume was bought, lol. So technically it is the same character unit.


Rikku (Daggers) Non elemental melee damage, delay, free turns, restore ability usage, position based

15: Borrowed Time (delay and free turns with HP+)

35: Stash Abilities

EX: Homing Ray

LD: Howitzer (if Rikku is on the left: adds party "Protector" BRV shields; if Rikku is on the right: adds party turn rate up "Booster"; if Rikku is in the center: she does a double Howitzer)

FR: Starry-Eyed Hunting (with Locke)

BT: PuPu Platter

ULT: Vajra (Effect: Rikku becomes immune to status effects)

Burst theme: “YRP, Fight No. 1,” which plays during the first boss fight of X-2

This kit is much simpler, but sometimes simpler is better, right? "Borrowed Time" comes from her Thief dressphere, which delays the enemy and gives Rikku two free turns with her HP+. "Stash" is an Alchemist ability. In this case, she can actually restore a party member's last used ability stock by 1. Her EX, LD, and ULT come from her ultimate dressphere, Machina Maw -- her LD changes depending on her position in the party, similar to Paine's mechanic. Her BT, PuPu Platter, is a special ability unique to Rikku with the Mascot dressphere.

Her ULT effect makes her completely immune to all negative status effects.

Notes:

Those ability notes at the end were getting super long so I'll stop there. I hope you enjoy reading that stuff too! Please comment and let me know what you think!

Chapter 19: A5C3, Part 2: Ode to Water

Notes:

This one got a little long -- whoops! Though it may just be the page count because it's heavier on dialogue.

Last chapter's Force partnerships:

X Rikku with Luca: Both are mechanically-inclined daughters of the leaders of their respective races. Furthermore, one is a daughter to Cid, and the other is an apprentice to Cid.

X-2 Rikku with Locke: Both are like-minded treasure hunters that take a protective role over a summoner.

I forgot to mention this before, but in cases like this where the character has a "job switch," they may not always have a different Force partner from their original. In fact, the Force ability might just be copied - I had to do this because I had some characters left over after planning Force partnerships and nowhere to put them, so I stuck them with characters who get the same treatment as Cecil/Yda/Rikku. It was either that or giving one character two Force partners at once, for trio attacks! Which could have been cool, but eh.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Act 5, Chapter 3, Part 2: Ode to Water


YUNA


While many of the others went up to higher ground for safety, Yuna stayed at the shore. The sea looked dark and foreboding compared to earlier, with swelling clouds gathering over the distant shipwreck. Waves continued to lap at the shore in a continuous rhythm; a steady pulse before the storm broke out. It did nothing to ease her nerves.

Carbuncle stood at the end of the dock, looking out toward the sea. “Leviathan stirs,” he said. “Regardless of whether or not the others are ready, we should prepare for battle.”

“I will not stay behind,” Yuna said, following Carbuncle’s gaze. She may have not been familiar with this aeon of water, but she knew she could make a difference in this battle. “I am joining, whether I go by submarine or if I need to fly there.”

Lulu stood at her side. “I’m coming, too. Wakka is there,” she said, the only explanation needed. Kimahri said nothing – if Yuna was going, she knew there was no question about him joining the fight as well.

Xezat, the one with the most submarine experience, nodded to them. But he looked back inland, past Yuna, Lulu, and Kimahri. He whistled. “Might be a squeeze, but I don’t think he’d sit this battle out.”

Yuna turned to see who else would be joining. The Warrior of Light had found them again.


REYNN


“Ohh, but you two are just so cute!” Rikku cooed, squatting down to pinch Lann’s cheeks. “I wish I could go to your world so I can shrink down to be super tiny!”

“But we do know you in our world,” Reynn said, as Lann ineffectively tried to bat her away. She was just glad that Rikku wasn’t doing that to her. “It’s actually reversed there – we can get big or small whenever we want, but all the rest of you are Lilikins.”

Tidus gave Rikku a perplexed look. “Why do you want to be tiny?”

“Because it’s cute, duh!” Rikku retorted, standing up straight. “But you know me in your world? So there are two of me out there…”

“One is enough,” said Paine.

Rikku grinned. “It’s okay, Paine. I know you missed me.”

“She’s always running off looking for her ‘trejjies.’ Totally hard to pin down,” said Lann.

“Yeah, that sounds like Rikku,” said Wakka, continuing on their path and ducking underneath a fallen pillar propped up by the wall.

“Hey, I’ve never said the word ‘trejjies’ before!” Rikku protested as they all walked ahead. “But now that you mention it, that’s a pretty cool word. Other me sounds like she knows her stuff.”

Paine cleared her throat. “Can we focus? We split off from the others to cover more ground and find this caged girl before Leviathan floods out this temple again, but if we fool around we’ll all end up drowning.”

When Rikku mentioned that she met a girl in a cage, Reynn didn’t want to immediately get her hopes up. Her heart broke all over again for her sister, trapped once again somewhere dark and alone. Was it their fault again? Did something happen that they had forgotten?

“Hey, sis,” said Lann, walking up to her side. “Are you thinking that it’s… her? Y’know, it’s weird if it happened twice, but someone says ‘girl in a cage’ and that’s the first person to come to mind.”

“Ugh, Lann,” said Reynn, grimacing. “I was just thinking that I didn’t want to get my hopes up that it’s Wyn! Now that we’re on the same page that makes it worse.”

Lann frowned. “Why would it be a bad thing? We’d get to see her again!”

“Because we don’t know why she’s trapped down here,” Reynn said. She took a deep breath. “What if it’s something that we did again? When I think of her stuck in this place… who knows how long she’s been here? What if she got summoned to this world ages ago and she’s been trapped all this time?”

“If it’s our fault, then we’ll free her again,” Lann said. “Simple as that! And she’ll be angry, and maybe belate us a bit, but then things will be all good again. And besides, there’s no way she’d have been stuck in this world all that time – Mog would have sensed her Light! Wyn’s really Light-y, I’m sure.”

Reynn looked away, unable to help her smile. “Yeah, maybe you’re right,” she told him, against her better judgment. “And it’s ‘berate,’ by the way. But either way, it is a belated rescue. This time, we’ll do it right.”


LUNETH


Luneth really, really wished the Onion Knight had gone with the other group to find the caged girl that Rikku had seen. Instead, he had to watch him and Aria talk with each other and  laugh with each other as they searched for a way out among cisterns that had long since broken and drained. This wasn’t fair. Luneth had been so happy to see that she lived in this world. But… if this really wasn’t the Aria that he knew, did that mean the one from his world really was lost?

“Hi, Luneth,” said Aria, startling him from his thoughts. He hadn’t noticed that the Onion Knight and Faris had gone on ahead. “Apologies if this is too forward of me, but… are you okay?”

Luneth exhaled. “You can ask me anything, Aria. You may not know it, but in my world we really are friends,” he said. “I just… I’ve been thinking about how the version of you from my world sacrificed herself for me. The Kraken attacked us from behind, but you saved me. I owe so much to you… but it hurts that you’re not the same Aria. That you don’t remember.”

Aria grabbed his hand, taking him by surprise. “For what it’s worth, I believe you,” she said. “I’ve only just come to this world, and there are so many things that I do not know. But it does seem strange that those events happened exactly the same as in my memories, just without you in them.”

“I don’t seem to be in anyone’s memories,” Luneth said, sighing. But the fact that Aria believed him meant more to him than he could say. “None of my friends are here.”

“Well, it seems to me that there are many new people here,” said Aria, smiling. “While you wait for more of your friends to arrive, why don’t you take the opportunity to make new ones?”

Luneth smiled back. “Yeah, you’re right!” He had been so focused on everyone forgetting him that he didn’t think of making any new memories to treasure. It may have felt like he had been replaced, but dwelling on that pain wouldn’t do him any good.

Aria let go of his hand and gestured to herself. “And you can start with me,” she said. “Please think of me as the Aria that you know. I would be honored to be your friend, Luneth.”

“Thank you, Aria,” he said. “I’m pleased to meet you!”

The shrine’s foundation shook. Further down the hall, stone ground against stone as pillars fell and walls crumbled. Luneth and Aria grabbed each other for balance as the floor shifted. The flow of water intensified outside, but he heard it falling and churning elsewhere in the shrine.

“Is Leviathan flooding the temple?” Aria asked, eyes wide.

“Back to the stairs!” the Onion Knight shouted back at them. “C’mon, we need to get to higher ground!” Though considering the entire shrine had been submerged before they arrived, Luneth wasn’t sure how high they could go.

“Incoming!” Faris warned, and the water rushed in faster than any of them could have anticipated.

It swept at their knees, nearly making them buckle. Each of them grabbed onto whatever they could grab – Luneth found a crumbling statue of a mermaid. The Onion Knight almost lost his balance as the current pushed him back to Luneth and Aria, but Luneth reached out his hand and grabbed the other warrior’s arm. Though the current didn’t relent, it also didn’t intensify, and the volume of water continued to flow no higher than Luneth’s knees. The Onion Knight was right – they could buy more time by going up another floor.

“Thanks,” the Onion Knight said to Luneth.

In response, Luneth nodded back. “Don’t mention it.”

They fought their way to the stairs, an uneven jumble of partially broken steps that looked as if they had been carved into the wall. Further down the hall, they saw through a window to the currents outside. The whirlpool around the shrine continued to spin, but something had crashed against the temple, cracking against the wall and extending the hole. The object was dark and cylindrical, a piece of metal that made Luneth gasp.

It was the submarine.

“Did they start the attack already?” the Onion Knight asked, trying to force his way over to it. “Or… did Leviathan drag it out into the sea?”

“That was quite the crash,” said Faris. “Aria, I reckon they’ll need healing!”

The hatch opened, revealing a horned helmet. The Warrior of Light tumbled out, splaying over the steps, but the Onion Knight caught him and propped him up with his arm. Kimahri emerged next, helping Yuna, Lulu, and Xezat up and out – all of which looked to be in considerably better condition. Carbuncle popped out last, dizzy but unharmed.

“Are you okay!?” the Onion Knight asked, slinging the Warrior’s arm over his shoulder.

“He shielded us,” said Yuna, casting a soft glow from her hands to heal him while Aria looked over the others.

“I’ll be fine,” said the Warrior of Light, standing straight. Luneth thought he always looked unflappable. “The real battle is yet to begin.”

“I take it you’re one of the ones who was stranded here,” Lulu said to Aria.

“Yes, my name is Aria,” she replied with a warm smile. “I am pleased to meet you all.”

“We found one of your friends here, too,” said Luneth. “Her name is Rikku. She’s with the others – we’re looking for someone else who’s trapped here.”

Yuna’s face lit up. “Rikku! That’s wonderful news!”

The Warrior of Light stood at the bottom of the stairs, just above the flow of water flooding this floor of the temple. He looked down each hall. “This is very unusual,” he said. “It’s not often we come to environs that resemble my world. I know this place – we are in the Sunken Shrine, home of the water crystal.”

“And this is not so unlike the Temple of Water in my world, where our crystal is kept!” Aria exclaimed.

“Maybe our worlds have more in common than we thought,” said the Onion Knight, and Luneth found himself nodding along.

“Come,” said the Warrior of Light. “Let us regroup with our allies and prepare for battle.”


REYNN


Rikku led them through so many halls that Reynn was convinced she had gotten them lost. Despite the urgency of the situation and the fact that she knew it wasn’t the Sunken Shrine from her world, Reynn kept expecting to see quachos behind every corner. Past the statue of a headless mermaid, they found a room with high, pointed arches and a cylindrical, glowing cage of light.

Inside, she recognized Hauyn at once.

“Wyn! It is you!” Reynn cried, rushing to the center of the chamber. Around its edges, water flowed through divots in the floor and the light from the cage refracted off it, dancing against the wall in a shimmering mosaic. Basins of water and broken ceramic ewers littered the chamber, worn away and faded with age. “How did you get here?”

Hauyn blinked as she watched them arrive. She almost seemed as if she didn’t truly believe they were there. “Reynn? Lann? You remember me this time?”

“Of course we remember you!” Lann exclaimed. “But how’d you get so big? When we came to this world, we were stuck in our Lilikin forms!” She indeed towered over their heads, like all their other friends.

“I don’t know,” she said. “I just woke up here, and this is… how I normally look?” She scanned all of their companions, eyes widening on Tidus. “You…”

Tidus bunched up his shoulders. “Huh? Recognize me from your world?”

“We’ll get you out of there,” Reynn said, deciding to leave the question of her recognition for later. “We’ll break the cage just like last time – just stand back!”

“Yah!” Lann exclaimed, punching the cage with his gauntleted hand.

“Was something supposed to happen?” Tidus asked, after a lengthy pause.

“Yes, it was supposed to break,” said Lann, trying again. “But my powers aren’t working right!”

“And I can’t even dismantle it,” said Rikku, approaching the cage to examine it. “What is this thing even made of?”

“We’re an Architect and a Breaker, like our parents were,” Reynn explained to the others. They should have been able to break Wyn free with no effort. Lann was the one who had created the original cage in the first place. “Maybe it’s because we’re Lilikins?”

“So change back,” Hauyn said. Magic popped and she appeared as a Lilikin, and then back to her Jiant form. “Can’t you switch back and forth like normal?”

Lann jumped back. “Whaaa!? No way! I thought Enna Kros was only a Jiant because she was … y’know, Enna Kros! But you can switch back and forth too? Not fair!”

“Wait, you guys don’t always look so small?” Wakka asked.

“We’ve been trying to tell you all that from the beginning!” said Reynn, rubbing her temples. “Ugh! Was it really just a matter of willing ourselves to go Jiant all this time? I mean, if Palom and Porom turned to adults, I don’t see why we can’t become Jiants…”

“It’s about will, huh?” Lann asked. “Okay, here goes!”

He spread his legs, bending them at the knee with his arms spread out on both sides. If he had muscle definition in this form, Reynn would have thought he would be clenching every muscle in his body. His face screwed up in concentration, then shut his eyes and started grunting. Then the grunts turned into a growl as he invoked whatever energy he could draw from inside.

“What’s he doing?” Paine asked, something like a grimace on her face.

“I’m concentrating,” Lann said. “Rahhhh….!”

“Don’t hurt yourself now,” said Reynn.

“I got this! Stand back and prepare for my macho form!”

She put a fingerless hand on the bars of the cage, locking eyes with her sister. “I think I haven’t been able to transform yet in this world because you haven’t been here, Wyn. Right now… I feel small. Childish. And for a long time, that was how I felt through our childhood. You’re our older sis, but we failed you. We should have looked out for you more like you looked out for us. I’ve kind of just been going along with the flow since we’ve been here, fighting to protect this world and our own by extension, but now that you’re here… I want to be bigger and stronger to protect you now, too.”

Hauyn grasped her hands through the bars and smiled. “We’ll protect each other,” she said. “You’ve got a lot to fill me in on. And look – you really have grown while you were talking.”

Reynn looked down at her feet, noticing that they suddenly looked a lot farther away. “I did it,” she said.

“Aw, lame!” said Lann, who was still a Lilikin. “Why can’t I get bigger too?”

“Perhaps you need to find your light, as your sister did.” Armor clinked from one of the other archways and Reynn gasped when she saw the Warrior of Light stride into the room. Yuna, Lulu, and Kimahri entered behind him.

“You found us?” Reynn asked, grinning.

“Yunie!” Rikku exclaimed, rushing over to squeeze Yuna into a hug. “Lulu! And Kimahri, too! Ohh, it’s so great to see you guys again!”

“Rikku!” said Yuna, squeezing her back. “I promise, it’s been a lot longer for us.”

“YRP is in the house!” said Rikku, pumping her fist. “What, Auron didn’t wanna come down here to see me?”

“Sir Auron would prefer to see you on dry land,” Lulu quipped. “As do we all. Then we can have a proper reunion.”

“Let’s hurry it up, then, and find Leviathan,” said Paine.

Wakka slapped his forehead. “Lu, are you crazy, coming down here? What if you drowned?”

“We nearly did,” Lulu responded icily. “So make our trip worth it.”

“We’re trying to free our sis from the cage,” Lann said. 

When Reynn turned to look at him, she jumped up in surprise. “Whoa, you got bigger again!”

Lann looked at himself and jumped, too. “I did!? Awesome!”

“I think I can help,” said the Warrior of Light, approaching the cage as the others made their introductions. “Somehow… this cage reminds me of Materia and Spiritus.”

“Both of them?” Reynn asked. She clutched her dagger tightly. “Well… if that’s the case, you’re gonna have to help us break it, right?”

Lann flexed his gauntlet again. “Don’t know what Materia and Spiritus have to do with this thing, but let’s do this! Stand back, Wyn!”


TIDUS


Reynn and Lann both wrapped Hauyn in a hug when she was freed from the cage, which she returned. He thought he saw some tears fall down Hauyn’s cheek, but she hurriedly wiped them away. Then her eyes hardened as she looked past them all at someone behind the crowd, entering from yet another archway.

“It’s him,” she said, and the coldness in her tone seemed to suck the jubilation out of the room. “He wanted to use me to control Leviathan.”

Like the last time Tidus saw Shuyin, it was like looking into a mirror.

“Shuyin,” said Yuna, an uncharacteristic hardness to her voice. Or maybe it was born from her journey to save Spira from him. “What are you doing here?”

Rikku pointed at him. “Yeah, what is he doing here?”

“Tidus. Dude!” said Lann. “You never told us you were a twin!”

“I’m not,” Tidus replied, clenching his fists.

“I need the help of a summoner,” Shuyin said, glancing toward Hauyn. But then he fixed on Yuna. “Or two. You’re a summoner as well, aren’t you?”

“Not anymore, zangvyla !” said Rikku. “Get with the times! Oh wait, you’re long dead.”

Shuyin sneered at her. “I’m very much alive.”

“And Yuna’s sort of a summoner again, y’know?” Wakka said to Rikku, scratching the back of his head. “We’ve got to catch you up on some things.”

“As if we’ll let you just take control of Leviathan,” said Paine, hefting her sword. “You don’t have Vegnagun here, so you’re just going to try and destroy the world in a different way, huh?”

“What do you know of Vegnagun?” Shuyin lunged forward so quickly Tidus thought he was about to attack. “Why do you all think you know me!?”

Tidus summoned his sword to his hand and took a stance, and faced Shuyin while glancing back toward the others. “Yuna, everyone – you all go ahead and deal with Leviathan. I’ll handle Shuyin!”

“We will leave this to you,” said the Warrior of Light, leading the others away. “Be safe.”

Yuna, Wakka, and Rikku lingered. “But… do you have to fight him alone?” Yuna asked.

“You’re needed more to fight an aeon,” Tidus replied. He grinned at her. “I’ve got this!”

Shuyin looked at him – really looked at him – for the first time, and his eyes widened before narrowing into hateful slits. “I don’t understand,” he said. “What kind of trick is this?”

“C’mon, Yunie,” said Rikku, pulling Yuna by the hand. “Let’s give Tidus a chance to sock him one. It’s only fair!”

Yuna squeezed his hand and looked as if she was about to say something else, but thought better of it and fled with Rikku and the others.

Tidus smirked at Shuyin. “To answer your question, there aren’t any tricks. But I have no idea why we look alike. You’re from Zanarkand, right? So am I.”

“This isn’t possible,” Shuyin said, crouching into a stance that mirrored his own. “Aren’t we in a different world?”

“Yeah,” said Tidus. “We are. But we come from the same place. Maybe there’s more to it. But y’know what? I don’t really care. All that matters is stopping you.”

“You love that girl, don’t you?” Shuyin asked, taking Tidus off guard. “What would you do if she was cruelly taken from you? How far would you go? Would you make them all pay?”

“That’s where we’re different,” Tidus replied, locking his eyes with Shuyin’s. “I wouldn’t lose Yuna.”

Shuyin’s eyes widened, and then pure rage overtook the features that looked so like Tidus’s own, and he lunged forward with his blade and the intent to kill.


RIKKU


“Sir Xezat is working on repairing the submarine,” Yuna said, running alongside her after the others. “We left the Onion Knight and the others to guard him.”

“We must hurry before Leviathan floods this place,” said the Warrior of Light.

Rikku felt the floor vibrate under her feet. “Uh-oh,” she said. “I think you spoke too soon.”

“Hurry it up!” Paine shouted as they all sprinted. “This floor’s about to go!”

Rikku pumped her legs as fast as they would go. Holding her breath for hours underwater wouldn’t do her any good if the current slammed her body against stone. Despite that thought, running alongside Yuna and Paine – and even Wakka, Lulu, and Kimahri – made her nostalgic for the good old days. They found the submarine at the end of another hall with a cluster of others Rikku didn’t know guarding it, and as soon as they saw the water coming after them no one questioned twice when it was time to pile back in. Outside the shrine, the wall of water whirling around them looked like it was falling apart, cascading down in a frothy roar. If it all came down at once, she doubted the shrine or the little submarine would be able to take it.

The Warrior of Light ushered them all inside before going in himself – surprising her with his old school chivalry – and as soon as they closed the hatch, the submarine lurched as water impacted it from the outside. It was cramped. Really, really cramped. Rikku fell into Yuna, and then Wakka, and then someone she didn’t know as they all tumbled through the tiny space and the water threw them back and forth. She managed not to hit her head as an old man that sounded a little like her dad yelled that the sub wasn’t ready yet.

“Just get us to the surface!” Wakka shouted over the din.

Dark magic swirled around them and Rikku groaned – what now? But it pinned her to the floor, and she realized it was a Demi spell. She wondered, briefly, if that was Lulu’s doing. Somehow, one of the Lilikins ended up in her arms – they had the good foresight to shrink themselves down for such a tiny space. With the spell holding them down, they all stopped flying around the sub.

“Gonna be hard!” the old man crowed back. “Currents are dragging us deep! We didn’t have time to pressurize!”

Rikku’s head started to hurt – a sure sign that they were descending fast. She had to help. “Do we have a visual on Leviathan?” she asked. “Does this thing have depth charges!?”

“I do believe it does!”

Rikku squeezed the poor Lilikin in her arms and braced herself. “Then what are you waiting for!?”

The old man straightened his crooked, horned helmet. “For us to stop moving so much, for one!”

Something smashed into them and roared so loud it shook the whole submarine. Yuna locked her arm into Rikku’s, stuck between a bolted down chair and Rikku herself, and looked up. “Was that Leviathan?”

“No,” said someone else – someone she hadn’t met yet, their voice dripping with pride. “That was Syldra! She’s pushing us up!”

It wasn’t just the gravity spell that pushed them against the floor now, but the force of them rising quickly toward the surface. The old man shouted that they had breached, and for a moment silence reigned until the Warrior of Light opened the hatch and looked outside. Sunlight poured in.

“We can climb onto the shipwrecks,” the Warrior of Light said, helping some of the others out of the sub. “It’s not any safer, but more of us will be able to attack.”

“I’m staying in here,” Rikku said, releasing poor Lann from her arms. She glanced back at the engineer. “I’ll be more useful with some good missiles. You with me, old man?”

“The name’s Xezat, brat!” he said, but he grinned.

“It’ll be no use if we can’t get him to swim to the surface,” said Paine. “How will we do that?”

“Leave it to me,” said Hauyn, flourishing a dagger. “No sea monster can resist Siren’s song.”


TIDUS


Tidus pressed himself against the wall and braced with a heavy stone basin as water flooded into the chamber in the midst of their fight. He saw Shuyin copy his move just in time to avoid getting flattened by the current. The water came all at once, slamming into them with all the force of a chocobo stampede. Tidus kept his head down and his limbs locked into place, shaking with the effort to keep from slipping. It felt like it lasted forever, an unceasing deluge that threatened to entomb them here for eternity.

The force finally stopped, leaving them in silence.

Before Tidus could shake the feeling back into his limbs, Shuyin darted through the water like a fish – or a blitzer. In one smooth motion, he sliced at Tidus, but Tidus managed to block it with his own blade. With neither of them impeded by the flooded shrine, they continued their battle.


LUNETH


The hooded girl – Hauyn – raised her dagger up high as she stood at the bow of a ruined ship, and from the winds a womanly figure materialized at her side. She had wings, with green feathers and hair that seemed to meld together into one, with an additional pair of wings that bore her aloft. Without waiting for a verbal command, she unveiled a harp and delicately strummed along its strings, her wordless voice ringing out over the ring of shipwrecks in a melody that Luneth found haunting.

Though the whirlpool around the shrine had collapsed, the water continued to churn. The party had positioned themselves roughly equidistant around the shipwrecks to attack Leviathan from as many sides as possible once he emerged. Aria had volunteered to perform a prayer to the water to keep it calm so they could battle without getting pulled under the waves. While the song continued, Luneth gripped his handaxes and waited.

The anticipation was broken by the sound of muffled explosions deep under the water – the weapons Rikku shot at Leviathan from the submarine. A wall of water burst from the surface, revealing Leviathan in all his glory with a roar that shook the heavens.

His serpentine body coiled, fins splayed out and fangs bared, towering high above their heads. Orbs of water hovered in a ring around his maw, orbiting like liquid stars, and launched in all directions toward his attackers. Luneth dived out of the way before he could see how the others fared, cursing to himself that Leviathan got the first attack despite their preparedness.

In the air, something screeched as a draconic figure descended down on Leviathan, pecking and clawing at his eyes – one of the summoned beasts that belonged to Yuna. Then Wakka’s blitzball slammed into Leviathan’s face, followed by a barrage of thunder magic that lanced up and down his spine. Leviathan shrugged off their attacks and swung his tail at Wakka’s ship, smashing it in one strike while Wakka went sailing through the air. Paine dove into the water to get him while Lulu kept his focus with a storm brewing above his head.

The Onion Knight ran across the wreckage firing ice and lightning magic from the tip of his sword, scurrying from mast to balustrade to run ahead of bullets of water headed his way. Luneth realized Onion Knight was coming in his direction just in time for Syldra to burst out of the water, clamping on Leviathan with her teeth while Faris clung to her back. Lann and Reynn summoned dragons that appeared in their portals and unleashed breaths of fire and plasma.

Carbuncle wasn’t near Luneth, but he heard the creature’s voice clearly. “Do not hesitate!” he called out. “Leviathan may have been your friend, but you must defeat him to free him from this imprisonment of the mind!”

Siren’s magic carried Onion Knight to safety, but closer to Luneth who stood guard over Aria as she continued to pray. Leviathan focused his ire on all of them at once, but when Luneth prepared to defend himself a glowing magical shield sprung to life to defend them, and then the Warrior of Light appeared with light searing at the end of his blade. He hurled the energy at Leviathan, making the monster screech in pain and dive back into the water. The Warrior of Light stayed on the move, leaping from ship to ship to follow its destination under the water with surprising agility considering his heavy plate.

Distracted by trying to predict where Leviathan’s head might resurface, Luneth didn’t pay enough attention to the tail.

It shot from the water like a lance, blindingly fast and too swift for Luneth to react. He gripped his axe and prepared to be disemboweled by the barbs at the end of the tail, but someone pushed him out of the way. As he fell, he spun to see that it was Aria who pushed him, and his scream died in his throat when he replayed the memory of Aria – his Aria – pushing him out of the way of a different attack… And here he was, powerless to watch it happen again.

But this time, the Onion Knight was there, cutting Leviathan’s tail and cleaving the barbs before they could impale Aria.

Stunned, Luneth could only gape while the Onion Knight nodded to him. “I wasn’t about to let that happen again,” the Onion Knight said before leaping back into the fray.

“Luneth, are you hurt?” Aria asked, pulling him to his feet.

“You saved me,” he said, still trying to process that the Onion Knight managed to save her this time. “Even though you barely know me. Thank you.”

“Well, we’re friends, aren’t we?” she asked, smiling. “You’d do the same for me!”

Yuna’s Valefor gathered energy at the end of its beak and launched it down at Leviathan, solidifying into a ray that exploded upon impact. Below the water’s surface, more of the submarine’s depth charges launched and struck, making Leviathan roar louder in pain. Kimahri leapt from one of the ships onto his back, piercing scales with his lance. The serpent tried to retaliate and strike Lulu, but Faris and Syldra appeared in his path and rammed into him. Hauyn commanded Siren like a conductor, weaving her dagger while Siren blasted Leviathan with music and wind.

Water circled around Leviathan and rose into a tower of seafoam. Leviathan swam to its top, and Luneth knew this was going to be his final – and his ultimate – attack. Aria knew it as well, clasping her hands together to conjure a barrier of soft blue energy around them just in time for Leviathan to crash back against the surface of the sea, cratering it with his impact.

The ships rocked with enough force that Luneth was nearly hurled from the deck. The tsunami crashed with the sound of cannonfire, water raining down on them in a torrent and hurling waves in every direction. Luneth clung onto Aria with one hand while the other gripped the gunwale with all the strength he could muster. Aria’s shields protected them from the bulk of the attack, and if he was struggling this much to hold on he feared for the fates of the others.

When it finally calmed, he looked up to see Leviathan’s shimmering form hovering above the water. Hauyn flew in Siren’s arms while the Lilikin twins clung to her feet. Valefor circled in the air with Yuna and Lulu on its back, searching for the others. Luneth couldn’t see anyone else in the immediate aftermath of the attack, but a voice rang out in his head.

You have my gratitude for freeing me from that pall of misery ,” said the voice – Leviathan. “ Dark forces clouded my mind, tainting our pure desires to protect this world. Your gods foresaw this, keeping me bound to the caged summoner to prevent my maelstrom’s rage from wreaking destruction upon this world. In that, they pass their sincerest apologies .”

Siren flew to drop off Hauyn and the twins near Luneth and Aria, then took to the air again to look for the others. Hauyn lowered her hood. “So it was the work of gods that kept me imprisoned here? I suppose if it was for the sake of protecting others, I can’t blame them…”

Reynn turned to her larger form and stomped her feet. “What do you mean? It’s okay to be mad that Materia and Spiritus put you in a cage like that again! Who cares if it was to protect us all? Whenever we see them again, or break them free of that crystal, I am gonna give them a piece of my mind!”

Hauyn placed a hand on Reynn’s shoulder. “It’s okay. Really. After all, you came and freed me. I understand why it had to be done.” She looked back up at Leviathan. “Thank you – I could tell you were trying to fight through whatever it is that has a hold over you. That last attack… you directed it to cause as little damage as you could.”

“Whoa, Leviathan’s got a deeper voice than I remember,” Lann asked, tapping his lips. “Cool, good for him!”

Luneth couldn’t help but chuckle. “That’s your takeaway from this?”

I now bestow upon you my magicite ,” Leviathan continued, descending toward Hauyn. The light around him intensified, and when it died down a piece of crystal hovered in his place, coming to rest in Hauyn’s hands. “ Safeguard it well .”

“We will,” said Hauyn. When she turned back to the others, she took a deep breath. “Now, we have to find everyone. I think they all made it through that attack, but…”

“Well done, all of you,” said Carbuncle, somehow unharmed in the battle. Though he did look a little like a wet cat.

The submarine surfaced, revealing Rikku who stumbled dizzily out of the hatch, and shortly after Syldra did as well with Faris on her back – along with an unconscious Tidus slumped in Faris’s arms.

“Found him floating down there,” she said, her expression grim. “Think he’s alive, but…”

“Tidus!” Yuna swooped down on Valefor, dropping into the water to swim to Syldra’s back.


YUNA


Back on dry land, Yuna sat by the warm fire with all of her dearest friends, Tidus’s head resting in her lap while she stroked his hair. Tidus, Kimahri, Lulu, Wakka, Rikku, Auron, and Paine were all here – she felt complete, especially with even her father somewhere in this world. Though he wasn’t with him now, she felt comforted by the fact that he was safe. She was reminded of another moment with them all seated around a fire, but the melancholy of that night felt like a distant memory.

“I pity Shuyin,” Tidus said suddenly, staring up at the sky. “Even here, in this world, he’s only focused on his loss and hatred. We didn't get to finish our fight because he escaped into a Torsion, but I know we're gonna see him again."

“He had a tragic story,” said Rikku, somber in a way that Yuna rarely saw. Rikku understood his pain, as she had admitted to Yuna once before.

“I want to know about it,” said Tidus, his gaze switching to Yuna’s eyes. “Can you tell us, Yuna? All of it?”

She thought of Lenne, who had wanted them to try and save Shuyin’s soul. Perhaps, throughout their adventures in this world, they may have the opportunity to save him again.

She would have to try.


New form (I won't do this for every new costume, just for those who can or do change their appearance for story purposes so you know what they look like):

Jiant Lann and Reynn

Jiant Lann and Reynn


Character abilities

ULTs (I am just going to go in order starting with FFI to save myself the headache):

Warrior of Light ULT: Oversoul

Effect: When shielded, party members gain BRV as enemies attack.

This ability name comes from his EX Mode in Dissidia 012.


Garland ULT: Indomitable Resolve

Effect: Garland cannot be broken.

This ability name comes from his EX Mode in Dissidia 012.


Aria Benett (Staff) Water magic damage, healer, revival, water enchant/imperil, enchant enemy attacks to water -> absorb water

15: Water Maiden’s Blessing

35: Healing Spring

EX: Flood

LD: Crystal Protector

FR: Crystal Resolve (with Leonora)

BT: Wave of Rebirth

ULT: Aquaveil (Effect: Dispel-proof)

Burst theme: “Elia, the Maiden of Water,” Aria’s character theme

Since Aria's a guest character with only some basic white magic, I had to take some creative liberties. She copies Leon's mechanic where he enchants enemy attacks to the Darkness element and then gives the party a buff to absorb Darkness damage, but in her case she uses Water. Rather than focusing on damage like him, though, she is more of a support unit with healing and revival capabilities. Her ULT effect prevents her from losing buffs to enemy attacks for the rest of the battle, and her Burst theme has the distinction of being the first character theme in the franchise.


Hauyn (Dagger) - Non-elemental magic damage, auras, buff extender, no BRV breaks against party, HP/BRV regen, HP Silence

15: Lunatic Voice

35: Balancega

EX: Endless Blessings

LD: Topaz Light -> enables “Searing Light” follow up

FR: Weight of a Legacy (with Sarah Burtgang)

BT: Silent Voice

ULT: Prism Break (Effect: HP Silence duration extend)

Burst theme: “Another World of Battle,” battle theme for later dungeons

Hauyn is not directly playable in battle, but she does fight in cutscenes and her partner is Siren so she gets the abilities of the Siren Mirage, including some supportive auras. She shuts down enemies with a potent HP Silence (with a permanent duration increase thanks to her ULT effect). Balancega is a spell that keeps allies from being broken for a few turns. Though she was never directly shown to summon Carbuncle, her "Who's Who?" entries mention that she also once had a Carbuncle partner as well that was taken away from her, so I gave her a Topaz Carbuncle ability with a follow-up attack. The name of her ULT is an original, referencing her breakout from the crystal prison. Overall she's a pretty good utility fighter.

Notes:

I may get the next Lost Chapter out before Rebirth comes out, but once I start playing, I'll be honest: I may not update until I beat the game (which should be less than a week).

Please leave a comment to let me know what you think!

Chapter 20: Idle Chatter I

Notes:

This one is the first of a series I'll be doing throughout the story where the characters are kind of just hanging out. Talking about their experiences, relating to the others. In game these are the random little cutscenes interspersed throughout the story chapters, but it's difficult to fit them into the flow of a chapter in fic form. But it was important for me to include scenes like this because they are part of what makes me enjoy the game so much.

These will be short, low context scenes placed in no particular chronological order with the rest of the story unless specifically mentioned. I don't normally write in a script style, either, and I did it that way to knock these out quickly.

Last chapter's Force partnerships:

Aria with Leonora: Both are "Crystal Maidens" serving an elemental crystal; Aria with Water and Leonora with Earth.

Hauyn with Sarah Burtgang: Both are adopted daughters who struggle to carry on the legacy of those who came before them, Hauyn with her parents and Sarah with her lost kingdom. Both also have a similar personality and are associated with summons.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Idle Chatter I


Scene 1: To Be an Oracle


( Lunafreya, Ryne, and Shirma explore a snowy forest )

RYNE: I’m glad the three of us are getting to spend some time together.

SHIRMA: Oh? Me too, Ryne! It’s been great to meet you both.

LUNA: We make an unlikely trio, do we not?

RYNE: Well, I’m not so sure it is that unlikely – Thancred tells me you’re an Oracle of Light, Lunafreya. Is that so?

LUNA: Indeed I am. It is my sacred duty to travel the land and help purify it of darkness, and to heal those who are suffering. It is a gift passed down through my family, chosen of the gods.

SHIRMA: Wow! Did you know I was an Oracle of Light, too? But in my world, it is the duty of the four oracles to watch over the guardians of Lostime, where I live. We are supposed to keep them safe. But, well…

RYNE: It doesn’t always go how you plan, does it?

SHIRMA: No, not really.

RYNE: I am known as an Oracle of Light as well. In my world, overrun by Light, the oracles before me were raised to battle the sin eaters, vicious monsters that painfully turn people into more sin eaters. I alone am immune to their corruption. It was always so lonely…

LUNA: It sounds like it is a heavy burden to bear for all of us.

RYNE: It became better when I made my friends. When Thancred rescued me from where I had been locked away.

SHIRMA: Locked away? You mean they didn’t want you to use your power?

RYNE: It’s complicated… but things are better now. We stopped the encroaching Light.

SHIRMA: I’m glad to hear it! It felt lonely at times for me, too. But my sister is the Oracle of Darkness, so that always made it easier. Do either of you have someone like that?

RYNE: Oh, I do! Well, of a sort. Her name is Gaia, and she is someone very dear to me. What about you, Lunafreya?

LUNA: Please, just Luna is fine. But… no, there is no ‘Oracle of Darkness’ in my world. To be honest, it is a rather strange concept to me. But I suppose… Ardyn might be the closest equivalent?

RYNE and SHIRMA ( looking at each other ): Oh…

LUNA: What is it?

RYNE: I’m not so sure it is the same…


Scene 2: Callers’ Conundrum


( Rydia, Terra, Aerith, Squall, Eiko, Yuna, Ashe, Sazh, Y’shtola, Noctis, and Joshua in the Underworld )

RYDIA: We’re not so far from the Feymarch, where the eidolons live! I wonder if we can go visit?

YUNA: Would they even be there? Other than the twelve who protect this world, it is empty of all the other aeons. Though it does sound like a wondrous place, where they all live together…

EIKO: Hey, I was wondering. Why don’t you call them eidolons, too?

YUNA: Well, I suppose I haven’t really thought about it. The teachings of Yevon speak of them with that name.

Y’SHTOLA: It is representative of our different cultures. Language evolves in all different ways – our common tongue notwithstanding.

TERRA: In your world they are known as primals, if I remember correctly? And I was told they are violent and dangerous there…

Y’SHTOLA: Indeed – and just being in the presence of one risks your mind becoming enthralled by them.

TERRA: That’s horrible. ( Pause ). The Feymarch sounds similar to the Esper World, where they all lived before the Gestahlian Empire invaded.

ASHE: The espers I am familiar with come from their own domain, as well. But they are so unlike all of those that you are familiar with. It is strange that my world seems to be the outlier.

SAZH: We use ‘eidolons,’ but some of the ones I hear all of you talking about sound more like fal’Cie names, to me. My eidolon, Brynhildr, can transform into a car! Can any of yours do that?

SQUALL: I think you’re alone in that.

NOCTIS: They’re Guardian Forces in your world, right? That… take your memories away?

SQUALL: Right.

EIKO: That’s scary! Why are all the eidolons from other worlds so weird!?

YUNA: We should be respectful of the ways of other worlds, Eiko.

JOSHUA: In my world, we call them Eikons. And those who transform into them are known as the Dominants.

Y’SHTOLA: The term ‘Eikon’ is not unheard of in my world, either.

AERITH: They don’t even have a proper name in my world. They’re just powerful beings whose essences are contained in the materia.

NOCTIS: Maybe we should take a vote on a common term to use. I say ‘Astrals.’

EIKO: Eidolons!

SAZH: That’s got my vote.

TERRA: In the essence of fairness, what if we came up with a new name for them? Just to use in this world? They do have a different purpose here, after all.

EIKO: …Eikolons.

AERITH: Vetoed! You just want your name in there.

EIKO: Nuh-uh! It… it’s a combination of ‘Eikon’ and ‘Eidolon.’

NOCTIS: Why’d you pick Joshua’s term for it?

EIKO: Well… because.

NOCTIS: Nice try.

RYDIA: Some used to call them ‘phantom beasts.’ So… perhaps Phantoms?

SAZH: Sounds a bit spooky.

ASHE: Yes… I am not so sure I would refer to them as ghosts.

( Enter Carbuncle )

RYDIA: Oh, good timing! We were just talking about what to call the eidolons of this world. Do you have an official name here?

CARBUNCLE: Before all of you showed up, we didn’t have a need for something to call ourselves. So, no.

Y’SHTOLA: Since your domain is the World of Illusions, and along the lines of Rydia’s idea… What do you think of Phantasms?

TERRA: I think we should leave the choice to Carbuncle.

CARBUNCLE: I don’t hate it. But it does not sound all that impressive to me. What about ‘The Guardians of the Phantasmagoria'? That name is one worthy of our splendor.

AERITH: Too long!

JOSHUA: I am not sure what that means.

EIKO: I still like Eikolons.

(In the end, they could not come to a consensus.)


Scene 3: A Youthful Perspective


( Vivi, Eiko, Palom, Porom, Yuri, Lann, and Reynn are on a sandy beach together, under the bright sunlight )

VIVI: I feel like the kids among us keep growing up.

EIKO: Yeah, that’s right! Palom and Porom used to be the youngest. But now they’re old. I wonder if I’ll suddenly remember that I am a mature and beautiful woman and get to grow up too?

LANN: Don’t count on it.

EIKO: Hey!

VIVI: Hey, Eiko. Are we the youngest now?

YURI: I’m really young, too! And don’t forget Chelinka and Joshua.

POROM: I feel like we’re going to be excluded from a lot of the fun now…

PALOM: Now I know how Hope feels. Even though we’ve had the memories of being adults for a while, it’s like they forgot until we got bigger like this.

VIVI: I hope you don’t suddenly get old like the rest of them, Eiko. I like you just the way you are!

EIKO: Aw, thanks, Vivi!

REYNN: Wait. Did you guys think that Lann and I were little kids because we were stuck in our Lilikin forms before?

( Everyone stops and looks at Reynn and Lann in silence, unwilling to admit it )

LANN: Seriously!?


Scene 4: It’s Hard to Stand on Both Feet


( Red XIII, Jack [Type-0], Queen, Kimahri, and Mog [VI] are patrolling ancient ruins )

JACK: Nanaki, you’re really good at tracking! Is it because you have such a strong nose?

RED XIII: As a matter of fact, I do.

JACK: Hey, Kimahri, Mog – are you the same?

QUEEN: Jack! You can’t just ask them questions like that! That is so insensitive!

MOG: Moogles aren’t known for our strong noses, kupo.

KIMAHRI: Kimahri not insulted. Ronso noses may be stronger than others’, but not like Nanaki.

RED XIII: Both of our peoples come from a long line of warriors, don’t they? Perhaps we have more in common than we think.

KIMAHRI: Nanaki’s strengths are Nanaki’s. Mog’s are Mog’s. Kimahri’s are Kimahri’s, and Jack’s are Jack’s.

MOG: None of you can dance like a moogle does, that’s for sure, kupo!

RED XIII: That is something I’ve never really been able to do. I’ve tried to stand on two feet before… and though I did well, I think dancing may be out of my range.

JACK: I wish I could run on all fours like you! And that I had a moogle pom!

QUEEN: Jack, why are you so weird?

KIMAHRI: Kimahri also wishes he could run on all fours. Kimahri would run faster than wind.

MOG: It might be nice to have Kimahri’s muscles, kupo.

QUEEN: Ugh. Well, if we’re all admitting things… Nanaki does have a cool tail…


Scene 5: Dresspheres


( Rikku, Yuna, Thancred, and Iris are battling monsters in an open field. After the last monster is dispatched, Rikku turns to Yuna )

RIKKU: Yunie, I’ve been wondering – did you forget all your dresspheres? Why are you always in your summoner getup?

YUNA: Well… I didn’t forget them. I just don’t have them in this world.

RIKKU: Oh! Well, luckily for you, I brought along a bunch. Here, take it! I’ve got your grid, too!

IRIS: What’s a dressphere?

RIKKU: They’re spheres that hold memories, and when fixed to a garment grid, you can use them to change your clothes and access all new weapons and skills. Yunie stopped being a summoner over two years ago, and now she can do a bunch of different things!

IRIS: Wow, really? Can I see?

YUNA: Um, sure thing! I’ll change right now.

( Yuna does so, equipping her Gunner dressphere and changing her clothes in a flash of light. After changing, she brandishes her pistols )

IRIS: Wow! I didn’t know you could do that, Yuna!

THANCRED: That’s an immensely useful item to have. It makes it easy to change your fighting style on the spot. We have something somewhat similar in my world, though they’re rare beyond belief – soul crystals, which access the memories of past wielders to imbue the bearer with new skills.

RIKKU: Why don’t you give it a try?

THANCRED: I just might. That would make it effortless for me to use either my gunblade or daggers, no matter the mission.

RIKKU: I don’t have one for gunblades, but… Here, try this one!

( Thancred accepts the sphere and the garment grid, and when he changes his clothes, he is wearing spiked shoulders lined with fur, bear claws as gloves, fur-lined boots, and a very short kilt around his waist. Other than body paint on his exposed skin, and two horns on his head, he is not wearing anything else )

RIKKU ( whistles ): Lookin’ good, Thancred!

IRIS: Well. I’m not complaining. But maybe I’ll pass on trying it out, too.

THANCRED: This is… not what I had in mind. But I make it look breathtaking, I’m sure.

YUNA: You make a great Berserker.

RIKKU: Maybe we can make a sphere just for you next time.


Character abilities

ULT updates:

Maria (FFII)

BT: Love and War

ULT: Ultima XVI

Effect: Permanent HP Drain

Burst theme: “Battle Scene,” the music for regular encounters

She already has a Force ability and partner, so all she needed was a Burst (and now an ULT), so you can have both at once. Her Burst is an original with no precedent. Her ULT is the highest level of the Ultima spell, bringing her back to her common black mage roots in other adaptations. The effect lets her drain enemy HP and overheal for the party with every hit for all of her abilities, that never runs out.


Leon ULT: Darkness Breaker

Effect: When party members are attacked, counter with Scourge

Alternate Skin: Black Knight

I think I got his ULT ability name from one of his Record Keeper Soul Bursts. It gives him a new counterattack ability, the Scourge spell from II. He also gets his fully armored Black Knight appearance as an alternate skin.


Gunner Yuna (Guns) Non elemental magic damage, position based, multiple BRV dumps, battery

15: Enchanted Ammo

35: Scatterburst

EX: Trigger Happy

LD: Floral Fallal Magisol (if on the right; offensive buffs), Ash Panic Floralysis (if on the left; debuffs), Silent White Honey (if in the middle; Regen and HP Silence)

FR: Banishing Stroke (with Bartz)

BT: Moogle Beam

ULT: Great Whirl (Effect: Transformation, extra damage)

Burst theme: “YRP, Fight No. 3,” X-2’s battle theme

Alternate Skin: Songstress dressphere

And here we are with Yuna's job change. This is one that I've always wanted in game. All of these abilities come from Gunner or Floral Fallal, with her Burst coming from her Mascot dressphere. Despite using a ranged weapon, she focuses on magic damage with lots of BRV dumps, especially with Trigger Happy. Like Paine (and Gullwing Rikku), her LD is position-based - but the difference with Yuna is that the name and function of the ability outright changes depending on if Yuna's in the left, right, or center position. The names come from combinations of Pistil abilities. "Great Whirl" is her strongest Floral Fallal skill, and upon using it she takes on the appearance of her Floral Fallal dressphere for extra damage all around.

Though Rikku is an example of a unit like this having two different Force partners, most of them will have the same Force partner they do in their "base" form (and for the record, they don't appear as Force partners twice for other people - so Yuna will always just be Rinoa's partner). Though perhaps the animation would change. Instead of summoning Yojimbo, Yuna might transform into her Samurai dressphere and join Bartz in attacking.

Notes:

If anyone has specific requests for character interactions you'd like to see, this is where I can include them!

Chapter 21: Lost Chapter: Echoes of a Rewritten Time

Notes:

(See the end of the chapter for notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: Echoes of a Rewritten time


Lilith ( Final Fantasy XI )

Voiced by: Emiri Kato

A version of Lilisette from an alternate timeline where the Shadow Lord was never defeated. She forged a pact with Odin in order to end the Crystal War, but in the process learned that in order to continue her existence, Lilisette and her timeline had to end. To preserve her life and the future she fought for, she battles against the goddess Altana Herself.

Lady Lilith


LILITH


Despite her presence in the hellish landscape that stretched into this eternal space between dimensions, Lilith knew that she lived again. This was not an afterlife.

She did not know how. Divinity had been fleeting, slipping away like the sands of time between her fingers. Atomos had devoured her as it tried to devour her timeline. Yet here she stood, standing underneath its gaping maw like she teetered on the edge of an event horizon. Dark towers leaned toward it as if craving the empty sky. Had it regurgitated her? Spit her out somewhere else, in a different timeline, a different universe?

She knew this place. This was the Walk of Echoes. Her salvation. Her moment of defeat.

Lilith called to her Spite Wardens. None of them answered.

When that failed, she instead thought of the girl. That foolish child with her enviable innocence. As soon as she pictured Lilisette in her mind, darkness swirled in front of her. A portal, of some sort. Or a window.

Through it, she saw bright sunlight. Flowers bloomed on an open field. She saw Lilisette dancing alongside a stream unburdened by the weight that should have been draped across her shoulders. Another girl walked alongside her; another adventurer, perhaps. A friend.

Lilith’s fingers curled into a fist. That was not her timeline, not her world. Lilisette had promised to go to the world of strife in Lilith’s place, to close the gate between their worlds and take on the mantle of Lady Lilith. To lead mankind to a brighter future. Yet here she was, traipsing about in a world at peace, nary a day older, back in her own time. She had broken the promise she made to Lilith. Abandoned it.

But how? Something wasn’t right. If Lilisette never went to Lilith’s world, then both of their worlds would have been devoured by the cavernous maw. Cast to the void.

“What the hell is this place?”

The sudden voice startled her. Lilith turned to regard the man who had entered the Walk of Echoes, face harsh as if smelted from steel. A scar crossed the bridge of his nose and his short messy hair looked uncombed, adding to his rugged appearance.

“How have you come to be here?” she asked back. “Only those who get swallowed by a cavernous maw come to this place. And they should all be gone.”

“I don’t know about that,” he said. “I went into a Torsion. Like that one behind you.”

Lilith looked back toward the window through which she viewed Lilisette, and waved a hand to will it closed. To her surprise (well hidden, of course), it vanished.

“Tell me the state of the world outside,” she said. She hated feeling ignorant. She would not let him have control of this conversation.

“I don’t listen to anyone’s commands,” the man replied. “Did you summon this place here?”

Lilith furrowed her brow. He was an impertinent one. “Summon?”

Two others walked up the steps behind the man, appearing at his side as if they were allies of his. One was an Elvaan with ashen skin, dressed all in black, while the other was a girl with bandages around her arms and legs. Lilith’s wings unfurled, prepared for the possibility of them attacking. She would make them rue their recklessness.

“Don’t mind Jack,” said the girl, unperturbed by Lilith’s appearance. “He doesn’t like explaining things to newcomers. I’m Neon, and this is Astos.”

“Newcomers?” Lilith asked, scoffing. “You three are the newcomers here, to my domain.”

Jack smirked, but it was Astos who answered, calmly sweeping his hand out over the dark wasteland. “Though this may resemble a place you know, it is a mere reconstruction – though an unusual one, since the space inside the Torsions is typically a black void. You have been summoned to another world in order to do battle on behalf of two gods.”

Lilith sneered. “Two gods? I will take no part in such a thing. Begone from here, before I smite all three of you where you stand.”

“You seem like someone who’s drowned in darkness before,” Jack said. “And with a poor opinion of divinity to boot. You don’t want to be our enemy. We’ve never cared much for the gods ourselves.”

“If you are about to suggest I join your merry little band of adventurers, shut your mouth and forget you ever thought of it.”

“No such thing,” said Neon, crossing her arms. “Jack’s pretty picky about who he lets with us. He was just making an observation.”

“And a thinly veiled warning,” said Astos, eyes passing over her wings. “Why were you scrying on someone through the Torsion? I saw that redheaded dancer and one of the Class Zero cadets. Which one of them interested you?”

“It is of no concern to you,” Lilith said. Something about this Elvaan’s energy unnerved her. He seemed like he held a power unlike that of the others. But even Jack had a darkness about him, as hungry as Atomos.

Astos held out a hand. “We believe it is. Those are allies of ours.”

“Hard to narrow down which cadet it is, but the other one sounds like Lilisette,” said Neon. “If you’re a threat to one of them, we’ll have to give them a warning.”

Lilith waved a hand dismissively. “Do as you will. But if she was summoned here as well, then perhaps she need not be my enemy this time.” She floated upward and lounged on an invisible throne, tapping her outer thigh. “Actually, you may deliver a message for me. Find Lilisette and tell her I am here. And that I am… disappointed that she broke her promise.”

Jack turned around and walked away, causing her to shoot a glare at his back. “I’m no errand boy. I’m out of here.”

Neon frowned. “What promise? If it’s something related to your home, she had no more agency in coming here than you did.”

Lilith leaned her cheek against her fist and waved the remaining two away. She cared little and less about hearing excuses. “Begone from here. I am done talking to you.”


LILISETTE


“Ugh, I don’t even know where to start in finding everyone again,” Lilisette groaned. “How’d we get separated from literally every other person in our party?”

Rem walked alongside her, giving her an encouraging smile. “Look on the bright side. At least we’re not alone, we weren’t wounded in the airship crash, and we have this stream to guide us.”

“Guide us where?” Lilisette asked. “It’s not like it’ll lead to any recognizable landmark. We’re in the middle of nowhere, Rem.”

Rem sighed. “I suppose you’re right. We don’t even know if anyone got hurt. I’m trying to keep a smile on, but I’m really worried.”

Lilisette had no words for her. Instead, she lowered her head as they walked, careful not to step on the wildflowers growing along the banks of the stream. She was worried for the others, too, but Rem had her close friends to occupy her thoughts. Lilisette, despite making friends since she had come to this world, really didn’t have anyone else close to her here like Rem had Class Zero. She missed Troupe Mayakov. She even missed Cait Sith. And most of all, she missed…

“Oh, Lilisette! Look!” Rem called out suddenly, pointing further ahead. “It’s that girl Neon – the one who travels with Jack Garland.”

She didn’t look as surprised to see them as they were to see her. Neon walked toward them with purpose, but not urgency – telling Lilisette that for whatever reason, Neon had sought them out. But she smiled rather than wearing a grave expression, meaning it wasn’t an emergency. Lilisette’s guard fell.

“Here you are,” she said, running the last few steps. “Astos told me I’d find you here.”

“You were looking for us?” Lilisette asked.

Before answering, Neon looked around. “Where’s everyone else? Are you two alone?”

Rem put both hands over her chest. “Our airship went down. We were separated from everyone.”

Neon frowned. “Oh, no. We didn’t realize. Do you need help?”

“Astos knew where we were?” Lilisette asked, brow furrowed. “Could he find everyone else?”

“I think so, if he focuses hard enough on it,” Neon replied. “I don’t think it’s any different from how our enemies show up out of nowhere to bother us. But, er, don’t tell Astos I made that comparison.”

“It’s good to see you, Neon,” said Rem. “I’m glad to see you’re doing okay. But did you come find us to tell us something?”

Neon nodded. “Yes, and to give you a warning. We met some lady who mentioned you by name,” she said, looking at Lilisette. “She said she was disappointed or something by a promise you broke. Tall lady, black dress, horns, wings. Does that ring any bells?”

Lilisette felt queasy. “Oh, of all the people… Yes, that sounds like Lady Lilith. I fought against her in my world. We both traveled back in time, but she came from further in the future than I did. From… my future,” she said. Perhaps if she kept it vague, they wouldn’t pepper her with questions. “When we defeated her, I ended up going to her timeline to protect it in her place.”

Rem covered her gasp. “You left your home behind to go save hers? That's very brave of you!”

Neon scrutinized Lilisette in a way that made her think the other girl might have realized she was hiding something. Or maybe she thought Lilisette and Lilith looked similar. “Well, she also mentioned something about how maybe you might not have to be enemies in this world. But either way, she seemed like a piece of work.”

“I heard that.”

A Torsion opened and Lilith herself walked through it, arms spread and wings unfurled. Lilisette stood her ground as both Rem and Neon backed away with their weapons drawn. Lilith had eyes only for Lilisette, a devious smirk splitting her lips as she stared down at her.

“Why’d you make me deliver that message if you were just going to show up anyway?” Neon asked.

“So this is where you’ve been, little girl,” said Lilith, ignoring Neon. She slowly raised an arm as she approached, but it shot toward Lilisette with sudden force and speed.

“Lilisette!” Rem cried out.

Rather than striking her, Lilith’s clawed hand gripped Lilisette’s cheeks – hard enough to sting but not to draw blood. Lilisette grimaced but didn’t pull away, and she waved the other two off before they could attack Lilith in retaliation.

“If one little lie passes through those lips I will make sure you regret it,” Lilith said. “Did you do everything in your power to protect my timeline?”

“I did,” Lilisette answered through smushed cheeks. "And still was, before I was summoned here."

“And did you work to lead them to an age of peace?”

“Working on it,” Lilisette said. As if that could be accomplished in a short time!

“And if you had the chance, would you leave this world to return to your own, or to my timeline?”

Lilisette pulled away from her grip. “I made a promise, didn’t I? No matter what, I intend to keep it.”

Lilith’s shoulders straightened. She looked satisfied. “Very well. For now, I shall not oppose you here.” Her wings flared. “Though I suppose the whim may strike. This is not an offer of friendship. This is not even a peace offering. If you oppose my efforts to send you back to our world and my timeline, then we shall once again be foes. Do I make myself clear?”

Lilisette scowled. “As if I’d do that!”

Lilith nodded. “Good. Until next time, then.” The Torsion opened up again behind her and she vanished into it, not taking her eyes off of Lilisette’s until she was gone.

Neon put her hands on her hips. “What’s her deal?”

“It’s a long story,” said Lilisette, rubbing the feeling back into her cheeks. “Despite what she said, we’ll need to watch out for her in the future. She can be bad news, if she wants to be.”

“What a fearsome person,” said Rem.

“While we’re looking for everyone else, why don’t you two travel with our group?” Neon asked them. “It’ll be safer for you – especially with people like her around. Jack wouldn’t mind.”

Lilisette nodded as Rem graciously accepted her offer. Lilith was most assuredly not one of the people she missed from her adventures, but in a way, she was the most familiar person Lilisette had in this world. She wouldn't have gone as far as to say she felt lonely, or that Lilith made it better. But Lilith being here was a reminder: she still had a world full of people counting on her back home and the faith of one person in particular. That thought, above all, would keep her company - always.


Character abilities

ULT Updates:

Leila

FR: Open Seas (with Lion)

BT: Stormcall

ULT: Armada (Effect: Follow-ups)

Burst theme: “Battle Theme B,” which plays during several boss fights

Both Leila's Burst and Ultimate are original abilities. Sadly, Faris was already taken as a Force partner, but Lion is the next best thing. Her ULT effect gives her a new follow up, which would be cannonfire like Faris's ability.


Minwu ULT: Seal of Heaven (Effect: Extra trap damage)

The name of his ULT comes from Record Keeper, and improves his trap damage overall.


Lilith (Unique - Crowns) Non elemental magic dmg, turn deletion, buffer, healer, follow ups

15: Durance Whip

35: Moonlight Veil

EX: Dark Moon & Dark Sun

LD: Subjugating Slash

FR: Lost Future (with Shadowsmith)

BT: Spite Tempest

ULT: Ancient Dark Magic (Effect: Transformation, extra damage)

Burst theme: “Goddess Divine,” final boss theme of Wings of the Goddess , against Lilith Ascendant

Lilith's abilities all come from her boss fights, both in her normal form and in her Lilith Ascendant form. After using her ULT, she keeps her Lilith Ascendant transformation for the remainder of the battle and does extra damage. Overall, she is a non elemental magic damage dealer with turn deletion, buffs, follow ups, and even healing capabilities through her Moonlight Veil ability, though her main focus is damage and turn deletion, so she could be thought of as a more supportive Cloud of Darkness.

Notes:

As I mentioned, the next chapter might be a little longer in coming because I'll be playing Rebirth. I'm glad I got this one out before then! By sheer and genuine coincidence, the next character will actually be another from FFVII. So I guess that's pretty good timing!

Please leave a comment if you're enjoying!

Chapter 22: Lost Chapter: Director's Orders

Notes:

So it took me about a week longer than expected to finish Rebirth! I really enjoyed it (it took me about 95 hours to beat...) but now I can get back to regular posting!

This chapter has very minor Rebirth spoilers, incidentally -- though just in regard to this character's moveset, which I will detail at the end of the chapter.

Last chapter's Force partnerships:

Leila with Lion: Pirate gals, why else?

Lilith with Shadowsmith: Both of them are the future version of a protagonist twisted into becoming an antagonist, with goals of saving their future.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: Director's Orders


Tseng ( Final Fantasy VII )

Voiced by: Junichi Suwabe

Director of Shinra’s General Affairs division known as the Turks. His history has long been entwined with the company’s and he spent most of Aerith’s youth monitoring the Ancient, eventually growing feelings for her. Ruthlessly efficient and stoic, Tseng will do anything his boss asks.

Tseng


LAGUNA


In his travels to find the others, Laguna had found himself in the strangest temple he had ever seen, and that was saying a lot. The architecture blended together all kinds of geometric shapes, hard angles melting into soft spirals and curves. Though its age seemed obvious to him – ancient, even – he found it odd that nothing seemed to be in rough condition. No crumbling arches, pockmarked floors, or fallen statues blocked his way. He supposed that must have been the doing of the World of Respite.

Worst of all, he was lost. Hopelessly lost. And this place was a labyrinth.

He had discovered it deep in the woods where he had found himself after Kuja had teleported him away from the crashing airship, though it seemed that Kuja had misjudged the distance because now Laguna had been left by himself. Figuring the temple would be a recognizable landmark with the potential for finding the others, he went inside with little regard for his safety. But now the monsters were the least of his concern.

He heard the sudden hail of gunshots and he ran toward the sound, bounding around corners with his own gun ready. The roar of monsters intensified as he drew near, torches dancing in their sconces and casting frantic shadows in his wake. When the halls opened up into an expansive chamber, he saw a man in a pressed suit shooting monstrous lizards with a handgun and alternating with kicks and palm strikes. Laguna opened fire against the monsters furthest from the stranger, but after two of the lizards went down under his gunfire another two appeared. He kept them away by hurling a grenade, but when he turned it was too late to avoid a fireball headed his way from the gullet of another while he had been focusing on his targets. He barely had any time to curse his lapse in attention – rookie mistake.

“On the ground,” the stranger calmly ordered, and Laguna dropped just in time for the fire to sail harmlessly over him. Though he had been left open to attack, the other man dropped down on the lizard from above, striking it right in the jaw with his heel. Laguna let out a sigh of relief when he realized that was the last of the monsters.

“Thanks for that save,” Laguna said, pushing himself back to his feet. “I came here to save you, but it looks like you did the saving.”

“I was rapidly becoming outnumbered,” the man said, adjusting the cuffs of his suit. His long, straight hair barely looked out of place. “Your aid was timely. Thank you.”

Laguna grinned. “Of course! My name’s Laguna. Need help getting outta here?”

“The name’s Tseng,” he replied, not so much as cracking a smile. “How did you get here? This place shouldn’t exist.”

“I found it in the woods,” Laguna said, scratching the back of his head. “I thought it would be a good place to find my friends, but so far I’ve had no luck. You know this place?”

Tseng nodded. “This is the Temple of the Ancients. Not the sort of place you just stumble into. To be honest, I’m not sure how I got here – I suspect I may have been taken against my will.”

Laguna gestured to himself. “Though it may look like it, it’s not really the same place as you know. Follow me – let’s try to find our way out of here. And I’ll explain everything!”


CLOUD


With only Aerith, Rufus, and the Turks for company, Cloud was already on edge as they made their way through the dense, overgrown forest. When they broke through the foliage to find themselves under an open sky again, Cloud slackened in shock when he saw a familiar rope bridge spanning across a gap to stone walls and the terrible memory they housed within.

“Well, well,” said Rufus, stepping past Cloud to take in the full view. “The Temple of the Ancients. I wonder who summoned it here?”

Reno, Rude, and Elena turned to Aerith, who only shook her head and shrugged.

“I think… it was me,” Cloud admitted, clenching his fists. It had to be. His memories had only just returned – it was cruel of this world to taunt him with such a shameful memory so soon after he knew its significance. Going into the labyrinthine temple was the last thing he wanted to do.

Aerith frowned at him, her eyes soft with sympathy. “We don’t know that for sure. I’m sure none of us have fond memories of this place.”

Elena crossed her arms. “Yeah. This is where you took out the director. Don’t think I’ve forgiven you for that.”

Cloud glared, the memory of their scuffle at the Icicle Inn resurfacing. He still wasn’t used to all of these memories popping up without warning, along with sharp pains in his skull. “I told you, that wasn’t us. And he didn’t die.”

Rufus waved a hand. “I’ve never been here, so none of my memories summoned this place. Though to be honest, I am eager to see the inside.” Ignoring the protests of his subordinates, he walked across the bridge with Darkstar following at his heels.

Aerith lingered with Cloud while the Turks followed their boss. “In our world, the temple itself was the Black Materia. D’you think that means the Black Materia exists in this world as well?”

Cloud grit his teeth and looked down at his feet. “I don’t know.”

Aerith leaned forward to catch his eye, furrowing her brow. “What’s wrong?”

He didn’t know where to begin. Since the return of his memories, he had to contend with the knowledge that he had lost Aerith. That everything he knew of his identity had been a lie but also something he had resolved years ago. His false memories clashed with the real ones; his mistaken time as a member of SOLDIER, the Nibel Reactor, the remainder of their adventure to defeat Sephiroth, the Geostigma crisis and clashing with Kadaj only to regard him as a friend – even a brother – in this world. Every wonderful and terrible memory had come flooding back in equal measure, not dulled by the passage of time, and it made him feel more tangled than ever before, mixing with the memories they had made in this world. And now he knew that there were even more, endless cycles of battles in the other world that he didn't remember but keenly felt as another hole in his memories nonetheless. He had been ready to take them all back, good or bad, but he didn’t account for how his previous memory issues would be compounded by having it all restored at once.

“Nothing,” he answered. He turned away from her. “Everything. I don’t know.”

“Cloud, you can tell me,” she said.

He let out a heavy sigh. “This is where I let Sephiroth take control,” he said. “Where I gave him the Black Materia. And where I hurt you.”

Aerith straightened. “I already told you, I understand what happened. There’s nothing to feel sorry about.” She crossed her hands over her heart. “Besides… despite everything, there is one good thing about this place. The last time we all fought together was while we were here.”

Trust Aerith to regard that as a fond memory whereas for him it was another reason to hate this place. “C’mon. We should go after the others.”


LAGUNA


“Kiros! Man, am I glad to see you!”

They found Kiros in a long chamber lit with braziers that seemed to cast the walls in gold, his back to them as he examined murals on the walls surrounding an altar at the end of the chamber. Upon hearing Laguna’s voice, Kiros turned to them and offered Laguna a smile.

“Ah, there you are,” he said. “I was getting concerned that no one else would be here.” He glanced at Tseng, who still stood at Laguna’s side and quietly absorbed everything Laguna told him about this world. “Who is your new friend?”

“This is Tseng,” Laguna said. “This temple seems to be from his world.”

“Could it be something you have summoned?” Kiros asked. “Tseng, I would advise not following Laguna through a labyrinth such as this. He could get lost going in a straight line.”

“Is that so?” Tseng asked, peering at Laguna with a straight face. “I am not sure how I would have summoned this temple, but I did nearly face my end here.”

“Don’t listen to Kiros,” said Laguna, laughing off the barb. “My sense of direction has gotten better over the years. I mean, I am the president of an entire country, and all.”

“Interesting,” said Tseng, which to Laguna felt sort of damning, making him hang his head.

Kiros covered his smile. “Believe it or not, he makes a fine president.” He looked Tseng up and down. “Could it be you are a member of the Turks? You dress similarly to them.”

“Very astute of you,” Tseng replied. “As a matter of fact, I am. Are you familiar with my associates?”

Then it clicked for Laguna – Tseng had been comparing him to his president, Rufus. “We do know them! And Rufus, too.”

“Even the president is here?” Tseng asked, propping his elbow up on his arm. “I have been complacent in my duties. But before we leave… it seems even this version of the temple has something we need.” He approached the altar, and for the first time Laguna noticed something that looked like a crystal on a dais. “I would advise you two to begin running now.”


CLOUD


Not long after they entered the temple, the ground started to rumble. Dust shook from the walls and ceiling as the sounds of crumbling stones rang out through the halls.

“What’s happening?” Cissnei asked, bracing herself. “What has triggered this!?”

Aerith gripped Cloud’s shoulder for balance. “Was the Black Materia here after all?”

Cloud grabbed her hand and pulled her along. “Even worse, it’s like someone’s taken it.”

“We need to get a move on, people!” Reno shouted out, leading the charge back toward the entrance. Rude urged Rufus along while Cissnei and Elena took the rear, rushing past monsters in their hurry to escape. Cloud wasn’t sure if they had time to stop and concentrate long enough to summon a Torsion.

“C’mon, not much further!” Elena yelled. “We weren’t far from the entrance!”

Cloud picked up the pace when he saw sunlight, and when he burst free of the temple he turned back to look at it as it began to shrink in size, just as it did back in their world. Aerith doubled over to catch her breath while Cloud’s mind raced at the possibilities. Was Sephiroth behind this? If it was the Black Materia, it had the potential to fall into the hands of any of their enemies – he didn’t know which one of them would be the worst. And there was also Rufus to consider, who had a pondering expression with narrowed eyes. Perhaps he was thinking about what to make of this development as well. Or wondering how to turn it into an advantage.

He heard shouts from inside the temple and his eyes widened when he recognized Laguna and Kiros running for their lives as everything fell apart around them. Together they leapt through the entryway just in time for the temple to shrink to a size small enough to crush them, crashing against the ground with chests heaving.

“Laguna! Kiros!” Aerith exclaimed. “What were you two doing in there?”

“Wandered… in,” Laguna said through heavy breaths. “Ugh… My legs… are gonna fall off!”

Kiros pushed himself to his feet, eyes widening when he looked at Rufus and the Turks. “We met one of yours in there,” he said, once he caught his breath. “His name was Tseng. I’m sorry… he seemed to know what would happen when he took the object from that altar. He didn’t follow us out.”

“Impossible!” Elena exclaimed, lunging toward him with her fists clenched. “The director wouldn’t do something so reckless!”

Aerith’s shoulders fell. “Tseng…”

The temple finished collapsing in on itself, and in its place was a crater with a crystal floating in the center. Rude held out his hand for it before Cloud could, and it drifted over to him.

“It’s one of those energy crystals,” Rude said. “Thankfully not the Black Materia.”

“All that, and it wasn’t even the Black Materia?” Rufus mused. “Disappointing.”

“But sir, the director…” said Elena, weakly.

“I find it hard to believe he was in there,” said Rufus. “As you said, he wouldn’t do something so reckless.”

“Maybe he used a Torsion to escape,” Cissnei suggested.

“Hm. A Torsion? I wasn't aware those were able to be controlled. Perhaps in the future I will consider it as an option."

The voice came from behind them and Cloud spun to see Tseng, perfectly unharmed.

Elena let out a sigh of relief. “Director! You’re okay!”

“Of course. I’ve been in this world for some time now. Luckily, I met a Manikin who was willing to venture into the temple in my stead to assess the threat and possibility of the Black Materia being here. I have been out here the whole time.” Tseng folded his hands behind his back. “I regret not finding you sooner, sir. That is my failing and I take full responsibility.”

“You’ve failed nothing,” said Rufus. “Good job discerning the truth here. This crystal can prove useful to us, and though it is not as dangerous as the Black Materia I would rather keep it out of the hands of… unsavory people.”

“Wait… you sacrificed a Manikin just so you could figure out what the temple was?” Laguna asked. “And he also lied about being new to this world! Not cool, man. Why?”

“That Manikin was a copy of me, and thus he understood the need to find out about the temple,” Tseng said. “Were you familiar with that Manikin? I had not meant to deceive you, if you thought it was truly me.” He turned to the other Turks. “Reno, Rude, Elena – I’m disappointed that you allowed the president to do field work like this. And Cissnei, I was under the impression that you had retired from the Turks.”

“We’ll do better next time, sir!” said Elena.

“For the time being, I have decided to continue my employment,” Cissnei said, shrugging. “Company’s a bit shorthanded in this world, anyway.”

“Aw, man,” said Reno. “Things are about to get real serious, huh. Just please don’t make us do paperwork here.”

“Fine,” said Tseng. “If you don’t want to get paid, that is. I was going to make adjustments for back pay once we returned home, but if you would prefer I didn’t…”

Rude rapped Reno on the head while the latter groaned.

“Cloud, is this guy bad news?” Laguna asked, jerking his thumb toward Tseng. Cloud shook his head and shrugged – having Tseng here was only a concern depending on Rufus’s goals, which were as mysterious as always.

Aerith smiled. “It’s good to have you with us, Tseng.”

Tseng regarded her for a moment, and it seemed that his professional composure might break and he would crack a smile, but he only nodded. "I am glad to see you well, Aerith."


Character abilities

ULT updates:

Onion Knight

ULT: Forbidden Wisdom & Power (Effect: Does not get delayed when broken)

Alternate Skin: Sage

His ULT ability name comes from some of his Record Keeper skills, which are called Forbidden Wisdom and Forbidden Power, once again referencing the combination of his Sage and Ninja jobs. After use, whenever he suffers a BRV break, his turn no longer gets pushed back. I'd also love to see him get the Sage costume, since he got Ninja as another skin!


Cloud of Darkness

ULT: Flood of Darkness (Effect: When deleting, gain a free turn)

Alternate Skin: Original appearance

Not really much to say here -- the Flood of Darkness is its ultimate goal, and I believe also the name of some abilities in spinoff media. Whenever the Cloud of Darkness deletes an enemy turn after use, it gains a free turn. And as an alternate skin, it gets its original appearance from FFIII, rather than the appearance it started taking from Dissidia onwards.


Tseng (Guns) Non-elemental ranged damage, free turns, linked attacker, launch support, turn manipulation

15: Palm Strike -> Pistol Shot follow up

35: Asuran Shockwave

EX: Vortex Kick (starts with Knifehand Swipe and Furore)

LD: Instant Chi Blast

FR: Efficiency (with Kiros)

BT: Air Raid

ULT: Last Order (Effect: Enemies take longer to recover from BRV Break)

Burst theme: “The Turks,” the Crisis Core version

Alternate Skin: His Crisis Core and Remake appearances

So as for the spoilers I mentioned in my author's note -- he is a boss battle in Rebirth, marking his first time appearing as a boss in the Compilation (not counting Before Crisis, which featured him as a boss in the training mode, but he had no unique abilities to my knowledge). So it was pretty fortuitous for me. Before this, he had mostly original ability names. Now Palm Strike, Asuran Shockwave, Vortex Kick, Knifehand Swipe, Furore, and Instant Chi Blast all come from his boss battle! "Air Raid," his Burst, comes from Zack's DMW ability in which he "summons" Tseng for airship fire, which in that game is called "Air Strike." His ULT is technically original but it is meant to reference the Last Order anime OVA depicting the Nibelheim incident, as narrated by Tseng. The animation involves a combination attack from every Turk: Tseng, Reno, Rude, Elena, and Cissnei.

For his Burst theme, I've always found that version of the Turks theme very catchy, and he's a prominent character in that game so I gave it to him.

He is a linked attacker who gets some free turns and turn manipulation. Previously, I have added new launch mechanics called spiking and juggling, so here's the third and final one - it's called launch support. A launch supporter does some extra damage during the launch sequence by providing attacks from the ground after each member of the launch sequence does their attack. The longer a launch sequence is, the more effective they are, so they would benefit from a "juggler" ally.

Notes:

Hope you enjoyed this chapter! Please leave a comment if you can :)

Chapter 23: Lost Chapter: The Bedeviled Bookworm

Notes:

I was always a little annoyed when Opera Omnia introduced so many characters from the same game close to each other, and here I am doing the same with FFIII. It's kind of just how the Force partnerships fell, and it helped frame the plot. After this, there will be one more FFIII character in a few chapters and then we'll take a break from them for a while!

By the way, I started watching the chapters they added to Youtube that we never got in Global. I just have the final chapter to go, but we can assume some of those events don't happen for the sake of this story. For one thing, none of the characters get sent home! And it seems like Materia and Spiritus come back. As of now, in Opus Divinitas they are still in their crystals.

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Tseng with Kiros: Both of them are the extremely competent assistant to a president.

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: The Bedeviled Bookworm


Arc ( Final Fantasy III )

Voiced by: Natsuki Hanae

A timid boy raised alongside Luneth in Ur. While initially fearful, his friendship with Luneth helps him to find his inner bravery which he puts to great use as a Warrior of Light. Arc enjoys reading and studies to accrue knowledge of the world.

Arc


ARC


He discovered the town just before night fell, a sleepy village just at the edge of the desert. Most of the homes had already lit their lanterns for the evening, but as far as he could tell they had no guards or gates. The blazing heat of the sun had parched his throat and as he ran a hand through his hair to shake out the sand, he longed for an ice cold drink and a night at the inn. Then he could wait for his friends to find him – wherever they were.

As Arc approached the village outskirts, his eyes widened when he recognized it as Kazus. How strange! He didn’t remember being anywhere near Kazus.

Within the confines of the village, he stopped and looked around at his surroundings. It felt quieter than he remembered. A pall seemed to hang over it, suppressing noise of the outside world in a way that reminded him of when Kazus suffered from the djinn’s curse. Despite the lingering heat, a chill swept over his spine.

He heard something cackling and spotted an imp-like creature at the source of the noise, swathed in shadow with red eyes and tiny wings. When it saw that he spotted it, the creature flitted out of its hiding place under the eaves of a home and flew toward Arc with its teeth glinting and tongue lolling. Before it could reach him, Arc opened his tome and unleashed a thunder spell to strike it down in midair.

Something else struck him in the back of his head, causing him to let out a yelp. He spun with his heavy tome swinging, just missing another imp as it skittered away from the blow with a cackle just like the first one.

“What’re you even doing here in the middle of town?” Arc asked, furrowing his brow. Just as he prepared to cast another spell to take it out, he heard more laughter ringing out all around him and another imp swept at his feet and made him fall.

Townspeople emerged from their homes, pointing at him – and it took Arc a moment to realize they were all laughing at him. But these weren’t normal townspeople.

They appeared to be ghosts.

About a dozen faceless and colorless ghosts emerged, their voices echoing into a cacophony of jeers.

“Ha! They totally got the sneak on you!”

“This dumb kid got taken out by a bunch of imps, of all things!”

“Even I could fight better than that!”

Arc shuffled back to his feet and looked around at them, frowning. On a second look, they didn’t appear to be ghosts like the cursed townspeople of the Kazus he knew. These people were solid, pushing open doors and leaning against window sills. They looked to be made of a crystalline substance, if anything.

He felt as if he had fallen into a prank. Or a trap. “Is Takka here?” he asked them, gripping his book.

“What do you care?” one of the crystal people asked. “You don’t live here.”

“Yeah, we don’t need a wimp like you here!”

“What on earth is going on?” Arc asked himself. “If I did anything to offend, please let me know.”

A girl with pink hair appeared down the road from further in town, running toward him. “Hey! Are you just gonna let these Manikins talk to you like that?”

“Manikins?” Arc asked, looking between the girl and the townspeople. She gestured for him to follow her away from the manikins who pointed and whispered and laughed behind their hands. “What are they? I’m glad to see someone unaffected by whatever curse has stricken these people.”

The girl shook her head. “It’s no curse. They’re beings that live in this world.”

Arc felt like he knew what she was going to say next. “But I don’t live far from here and I’ve never seen them before. Do you mean I’m in a different world?”

“You catch on quick,” she said. “My name’s Ritz.”

“Um, Arc,” he said, his mind whirling. How did he even end up in a world with a town that looked just like Kazus?

“Why’d you let those guys talk to you like that? You should stand up for yourself!” she said, stopping in front of the inn. 

A gust of wind blew grains of sand in from the desert and Arc squinted. “Oh, that was nothing, really,” he said. “I’m used to that sort of thing, and it doesn’t bother me anymore. I was just more perplexed than anything.”

“Me too, to be honest,” she said, rubbing her chin. “Manikins don’t normally act like that. And they certainly don’t gather together like this to live in towns, either.”

“Like everyone says, they’ve been changing,” said another boy who approached. He adjusted his red cap and huffed. “It really bums me out to see copies of our friends acting that way!”

“Luso! You came back quickly. Did you find anything?” Ritz asked. “Any clue as to where our friends are?”

Luso chopped a hand into his palm, eyes shining. “Oh, yeah! I found Mr. Cid!”

Arc straightened. He had been trying to make sense of their words – and the situation as a whole – but he perked up at the mention of the familiar Cid. “Cid’s my friend! Can you please take me to him?”

Luso scratched the back of his head. “Well, pretty much all of us know a Cid, but maybe he could be yours!”


LUNETH


Luneth found Cid Haze and the Onion Knight deep in discussion when he returned to the campsite, a bundle of firewood in his arms. So close to the desert, wood had been sparse, but he found enough for a good campfire just as night fell. Both the child and the old man fell silent as Luneth approached.

“You went out to gather firewood alone again?” the Onion Knight asked, frowning. “You really should take someone with you. Just in case.”

“It’s okay,” Luneth said, shrugging after he deposited his load at the edge of the circle. Their friends had begun to lay out the sleeping rolls even though they had no real need to sleep. No one wanted to travel miles and miles without rest, even in this world. The search for all of their other friends hadn’t ended yet. “Any luck out there?”

Cid put his hands on his hips and grinned. “You’ll never believe it, my boy! I found a town that looked like Kazus. I found Luso there, and he said he’d go fetch Ritz before followin’ after me.”

“You know Kazus, right?” the Onion Knight asked.

Luneth’s eyes widened. It was rare for the Onion Knight to acknowledge one of the similarities between their worlds. “Yeah, where the townspeople got cursed into being like ghosts. Including you, Cid.”

“That’s right,” Cid said, nodding. “But there’s another thing – Luso told me the Manikins’ve been acting strange there.”

“They are living together as if they are regular villagers,” said the Onion Knight. “Though rather mean-spirited ones, if what Luso says is true. Want to come with us to investigate?”

It felt a little bit like a peace offering. “Yeah,” Luneth said, accepting it. “Let’s go!”


The village looked exactly like the Kazus Luneth knew. Other than the Manikins in the windows and wandering the darkened streets, he would have thought he’d gone back home.

“There’s no mistaking it,” said the Onion Knight, confirming Luneth’s thoughts. “Who could have summoned Kazus here?”

“Guess Manikins don’t need to sleep either,” said Luneth. He approached one of them outside a storefront off the main throughway. She looked like Lulu, with her braided hair and long, fur-lined dress. “Hi, d’you know who summoned this town here?”

“Who knows? It’s our home now,” she said, faced etched in a grimace he never saw on the real Lulu. “Buzz off!”

When she turned her shoulder on him and walked away, the Onion Knight walked up to his side. “They’re pretty defensive of their town, huh?”

“You sure these aren’t those Dark Manikins you guys met a while back?” Luneth asked. “They’re… not friendly. I mean, Lulu's not the friendliest person out there, but she's not like that."

The Onion Knight shook his head. “No, Dark Manikins acted mostly like us. These have neither darkness nor light, apparently. I wonder what has influenced them to act this way?”

Cid stroked his beard. “I don’t think it was anything. If you ask me… they’re just like kids.”

“Hey, you guys!” a voice called out to them. Luneth grinned when he saw Luso. “Finally, we found you!”

“Glad to see you, too,” the Onion Knight said as Luso approached with Ritz. “And with a new ally besides.”

Luneth jumped when he saw who accompanied them, trailing at their heels. He would have known that bookish boy with his green coat anywhere. “Arc! Is that really you!?” Luneth ran past Luso and Ritz and grabbed Arc by the hands, jumping up and down. “Please, please, please tell me you remember who I am! You do know me, right?”

Arc blinked as if in a daze. “Know you?” he said. Luneth’s heart fell. “Of course I know you! You’re my best friend – why wouldn’t I remember you, Luneth?”

Luneth’s face split into a grin and he threw his arms around Arc in a hug. “Oh, finally! I was starting to think I was dreaming everything up somehow!”

“I’m still not really sure what’s going on,” Arc said, adjusting his collar. “But I’m happy to see you too!”

“Let me introduce you,” Luneth said, turning back to the Onion Knight and Cid. “These are… some of my friends. Onion Knight, Cid, meet Arc. We grew up together.”

“Um, but I know Cid,” said Arc.

“Sorry, but I don’t know you, lad,” said Cid. “But Luneth sure spoke of you a lot, so in some ways it feels like I do!”

“Remember what I said about different worlds?” Ritz interjected. “Things may not be as familiar as they seem here.”

“It’s great to meet you, Arc,” said the Onion Knight. “And I’m glad Luneth won’t feel lonely anymore.”

“Hey, that makes it sound like I wasn’t making friends,” Luneth protested with a scowl.

Arc put his hands on his hips and tilted his head. “Well… it’s a lot to wrap my head around, but I think I understand. I’d still like you to fill me in on the whole story later, Luneth.”

Luneth beamed. “Will do!”

Ritz turned to the Onion Knight. “Back to the matter at hand… the Manikins. Since you have the most experience with them, what do you think we should do?”

“I’m not really sure there’s anything to do,” the Onion Knight replied, lips pursed in thought. He looked around at the town and the Manikins as they walked the dusty streets under the moonlight. “I think Cid’s right. It’s like they’re kids blundering their way through the world.”

“Might be they need someone to look after ‘em, then,” said Cid.

Luso put both hands behind his head. “Nah, I’m not sure they do. When I met my Manikin, he wanted to make his own path. If they’re really learning how to be people, maybe we should let ‘em do it on their own.”

Cid let out a low whistle. “Well, not sure if it feels right to leave a bunch of kids like them alone… my wife sure wouldn’t stand for it.”

“Hmm… How about this?” said Arc, tentatively raising his hand for their attention. “I’ve read in a book that imps like to cause lots of mischief, and I saw a couple around town before. Maybe if we get rid of them, it’ll give these Manikins a good start in their town…”

“Sounds like a good idea. Maybe it’ll make them less inclined to bully people, too,” said Ritz. She pointed toward where Takka’s smithy would have been. “I think I see them playing with that anvil over there!”

Arc pulled out his tome, lightning crackling among its pages. His eyes twinkled with confidence. “Let me handle this.”


Character abilities

Previous Character Updates:

Desch

BT: Devoted Heart

ULT: Primeval Lightning (Effect: Paralyze duration extend)

Burst theme: “Battle 1,” the standard battle theme

Alternate Skin: The version of him that appears in the Yoshitaka Amano artwork

His Burst name is an original, referencing his love for Salina. His ULT comes from an ability he has in Record Keeper. After using it, every time he inflicts Paralyze on a foe it will last longer.


Cid Haze

ULT: Soaring High (Effect: Party stat boosts with each ability used)

He already has the rest of his moveset shared in his debut chapter, so this is just his ULT. It's another original, and after he uses it, he gives the party stat boosts every time he uses an ability. They start small, but it adds up over time and they are permanent, and don't use buff slots.


Arc (Unique - Tomes) Lightning magic damage, unique stacking imperil, follow ups

15: Study

35: Wind Shear

EX: Spark: Thunderstorm

LD: Item Lore: Zeus’s Wrath

FR: Thundersnow (with Ritz)

BT: Magus Flare

ULT: Bahamur: Rend (Effect: Stronger follow ups)

Burst theme: “Dungeon,” the dungeon theme

Alternate Skins: Scholar, Magus appearances

His abilities, like Luneth, have a couple of different job sources, and he's mainly a Lightning element magic attacker. Study comes from Scholar, which allows him to inflict a unique imperil debuff on enemies that actually stacks with other imperils so the whole party does extra damage. Wind Shear he borrows from Onion Knight's Dissidia NT moveset, like Luneth does. Spark is a Summoner spell, which summons Ramuh to cast Thunderstorm. Item Lore also comes from Scholar -- I know it's not the best job out there by any means, but character-wise it's really fitting for Arc and it enables him to use the Zeus's Wrath follow up attack. "Magus Flare," his Burst, is a Black Magic spell that comes from Magus, obviously, and Bahamur (not a typo) is another Summoner spell, since he is occasionally associated with Bahamut, such as in Memory of Heroes. After using his ULT, his follow up attacks get a damage boost.

Chapter 24: Lost Chapter: Eternally Optimistic

Notes:

I hope everyone doesn't mind another FFD character!

I started watching the Opera Omnia final chapters on YouTube, and it is safe to say the events that happened in that last chapter are definitely not being considered at all for this fic.

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Arc with Ritz: Both have dealt with bullies in their backstory and throughout their games go through a character arc of learning to overcome them. And while Arc loves books, Ritz loves video games.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: Eternally Optimistic


Sol ( Final Fantasy Dimensions )

Voiced by: Katsuyuki Konishi

A youth from the village of Lux who dreams of one day becoming a soldier for the Avalon Empire in order to ride on their fabled airships. Though a student in swordsmanship to the more experienced and level-headed Aigis, he can be brash and insensitive at times. He has been friends since childhood with Glaive and Diana, though when Sol is chosen to be a Warrior of Light, they find themselves on separate journeys.

Sol


SARAH


Life with her new companions in a strange new world never stopped being eventful. Flying on the back of Hiryu, Lenna’s wind drake, they watched the patchwork world pass by underneath them. The hodgepodge of different environments changed as rapidly as the weather did in this world, making her head spin as they flew over forests, deserts, swamps, and snowfields in rapid succession. She didn’t think it would be something she’d ever get used to, but Lenna, Lightning, Sherlotta, and Nabaat all seemed to have been in this world long enough to become accustomed to its strangeness.

One afternoon, they landed in a meadow to let Hiryu rest. In her travels with her friends back home, stops like this were a time to gather materials for food and cook over an open fire, bonding over their meals. But here, where they didn’t hunger, they mostly just took the opportunity to stretch their legs and get some space from each other. It all felt rather… empty.  Apparently they had many, many more allies that they had lost track of in a recent airship crash, so things were quieter for everyone.

As she knelt among the flowers, one in particular caught her eye. It had soft pink petals edged in white, with a sheen that made them reflect sunbeams. Sarah lay down next to it, using her arm as a pillow as her fingertips ghosted along its petals. She smiled as this particular flower brought back fond memories of Argy, the gynoid that had called her “mother.” And the one who Argy had called “father”...

“That’s a really pretty flower,” Lenna said. “Is it one you know?”

Sarah abruptly sat up. She hadn’t heard Lenna approach. “Yes, it is. In my world, we call it an Espilia flower. It’s a symbol of hope.”

“Is there something in particular you are hoping for?” Lenna asked, her prodding gentle. Sarah may not have been adept at showing it, but she did find herself growing to appreciate Lenna’s company.

Sarah dared not voice it. Instead, she picked the flower, which according to the superstition killed your hopes with it. But as she held the flower up to her eyes and gazed across the meadow, she spotted a figure running toward them.

“Sol!” Sarah exclaimed, pushing herself to her feet.

“Sol?” Lenna asked, but then followed Sarah’s eyes and joined her in standing. “Oh! Is that someone you know?”

“Heeey!” he shouted out as he approached, his wind-tousled hair bouncing. “Sarah! Is that you?”

Sarah smiled at the Espilia flower in her hand. “Why, of course it is. I am heartened to see you again.”

“You gotta come look – there’s this really cool monster down this way,” he said, barely even pausing to catch his breath. He rocked on his heels, ready to go back the way he came whether she liked it or not. “It seemed dangerous!”

And then he ran off again before she could get out a response.

Lenna watched him go. “Is he… always like that?”

Sol had never been one to stand still for long, and as happy as she was to see him again she wouldn’t have expected anything less from him. “He is indeed. Let’s hurry after him.”

He acted as if nothing had changed as he led them on a chase down a ridge, too far ahead to converse with them. Sarah didn’t mind at all – she felt her worries carry away on the wind as they ran in his wake. She never knew why he had this effect on her. As she ran, she let the flower drop from her fingers. Sarah had little need of vague hopes now. Perhaps their other friends would not be far behind.

Sol stopped at the bottom of a slope, crouching behind a mossy boulder and holding his finger to his lips so they’d keep their voices down. Grinning, he gestured over the top of the boulder to his quarry.

It was a giant boar monster, huffing and snorting as it nosed for truffles in the grass. Bigger than a chocobo, it had two massive sets of horns, one of which had broken, as well as tusks that could impale them as easily as any lance. Bristly black hair and quills ran along its spine, every inch deadly.

“Hiding like pitiful insects, are you?” a voice boomed out. Behind them, darkness swirled and a hulking armored figure stepped out of a Torsion.

Lenna stood with her bow drawn. “Exdeath! What are you doing here!?”

“Aw, c’mon,” said Sol. “Now that monster’ll know we’re here.”

“I think we have more pertinent things to worry about, Sol,” Sarah advised him, following Lenna’s lead and drawing her weapon. Even having foes like this appear at inopportune moments felt just like their adventure together.

The knight, Exdeath, raised his own sword which floated inches from his gauntlet. “I am here to eliminate you – to hunt you down and expose your viscera to the light of day!”

“That sounds gross,” said Sol.

“Do not take him lightly,” Lenna warned. “Exdeath is a terrible foe.”

“What does he want?” Sarah asked, eyes fixed on the knight. Something about him seemed otherworldly, yet familiar – as if no mere man was underneath the armor, but a hollow and eternal darkness.

“It seems death and mortality have returned to this world. Now you shall perish!” Exdeath roared, which was the only warning for his attack. He thrust his hand forward, blackness swirling into existence. Sarah, Sol, and Lenna all dove out of the way, and the energy devoured the boulder, cutting a perfect sphere in the rock.

“Huh? That looked like the Nil!” Sol exclaimed, voicing the horror in Sarah’s thoughts. The levity disappeared from his face as he unsheathed his blade and attacked, swinging at Exdeath while using his buckler to block Exdeath’s retaliatory strikes. Lenna cast a spell on Sarah and she felt her limbs lightening as she rushed to join Sol’s side, both swords dancing in sync to strike around Exdeath’s solid defenses.

Flares of darkness and light burst from Exdeath’s fingertips. Sarah conjured a barrier to defend herself from the worst of it while Sol leapt high above, coming down on Exdeath with a series of kicks. The warlock responded with a gravity spell that slammed Sol into the ground. A rain of arrows, courtesy of Lenna, hammered against his armor and before he could strike back against her with a spear of lightning, Sarah streamed holy light at the end of her blade and struck him as a distraction.

The earth trembled. The sounds of snorting and squealing behind Sarah indicated to her that the boar had not only noticed them but taken offense to their presence. It charged and Sarah threw herself out of the way. Exdeath, on the other hand, showed no such reservation and stood his ground.

“You will not stand against me, beast,” he said, dropping an orb of darkness right over its head. The dense concentration of energy made the boar squeal out in pain and then crash into the ground, coming to a stop right at Exdeath’s feet.

Sol stood again, glaring at Exdeath with his sword raised. “Whoever you are, you’re just like the emperor! You have no regard for life at all, do you? Using the Nil like that… it’s despicable!”

“What is this ‘Nil’ you speak of?” Exdeath asked. “I wield the power of the Void. It is supreme – greater than all other forces.”

“I dunno, if you ask me, your capacity for saying a whole lot of nothing is the only ‘supreme’ skill you have.” Behind him, Sherlotta had appeared with Lightning at her side, both ready for battle.

Lightning held her blade forward. “Enough, Exdeath. Now you’re outnumbered.”

“You think a mere five warriors is enough to give me pause? Mwahaha!” Magic built up around Exdeath’s form, fierce winds threatening to make them all topple. Before he could renew his assault, another Torsion opened up at his back and the wind reversed direction, sucking Exdeath into it. “Nooo…!”

Exdeath lashed out at the Torsion, making it grow and become erratic. Now it threatened to pull all of them inside of it. Sarah braced herself as much as she could, looking around for the source of the new Torsion – and saw Nabaat straining to maintain it on its other side.

“Who dares…!?” Exdeath growled. “Wait, are you Bartz?”

“You’re goin’ down!” Sol shouted out suddenly, leaping into action. He slammed into Exdeath with his shield, sending Exdeath reeling with the force that pulled away at him, but the Torsion yanked Sol off of his feet as well. Right as Exdeath was pulled into the Torsion, it vanished, releasing Sol and all of the others from its hold.

Sarah propped herself up with her knees as she caught her breath. “Is everyone unharmed?” she asked.

“I’m fine,” said Lenna. She smiled at Sarah. “You know, perhaps Exdeath was right. Sol did remind me of Bartz just now."

Sarah smiled back. “Then I fear the day they meet each other.”

“What’d that guy say about our butts?” Sol asked, scratching his head. Both Sarah and Lenna fell into a fit of giggles.

“Nabaat, what was that about?” Lightning asked, marching up to the other woman. “That was risky.”

“How have you all never thought to just summon a Torsion on your enemies?” Nabaat asked, brushing her hair over her shoulders. “Honestly, it is a simple solution and would avail you against any undesirable foes.”

“You almost took this new guy away, too,” said Sherlotta. “Sol, is it?”

Sol grinned. “You got it. Whatever that thing was, that was cool. So thank you, Nabaat!”

Nabaat folded her arms. “I accounted for the possibility that the strategy would work against us. Of course, there is the possibility that Exdeath will just return, so we shouldn’t linger here.”

“Aw, shame about the boar, though,” said Sol, looking over at the creature’s prone form. “Looks like Exdeath killed it…”

“And after it tried to protect us, too,” said Lenna, kneeling next to the carcass. “How awful… but this is also very strange. Monsters usually vanish into Torsions after being defeated, yet this one lingers.”

“Maybe battles won’t be so tidy anymore,” said Lightning.

“Shall we give it a burial?” Sarah asked. It seemed like the right thing to do after its untimely end, but she never gave much of a second thought to monsters they had slain before. Now that it hadn’t vanished, it seemed like a new sense of permanence had fallen over the world. “Do we think this will continue to happen to other monsters?”

“Well, I would say it is less of a monster and more of a regular animal,” said Lenna.

“Only one way to find out,” Sherlotta said, shrugging. “But like Nabaat said, we shouldn’t stick around here.”

“Aw, it sure does stink to leave this behind,” Sol said. “This thing would make such a great meal. Anyone else starving?”

No one answered immediately. Now that Sol mentioned it, Sarah did feel an emptiness in her belly. She thought she even heard someone’s stomach growl.

“Hmm… This is unusual,” Sherlotta admitted first.

“I almost forgot what hunger felt like,” said Lightning. “This want for food is another sign of our mortality, isn't it?"

"To no longer eat just for the simple joy of it," said Nabaat. "It is like this world is becoming more like our home worlds."

Lightning put a hand on her hip. "Say, this boar…”

“We can’t!” Lenna interjected. “We need to move on before Exdeath returns. Though now that we are six, we can no longer fit on Hiryu’s back. We will have to walk until we find the rest of our companions.”

Sol turned to Sarah as the others began to leave. “Hey, Sarah. So… what’s going on here, anyway?”


Character abilities

Previous Character Updates:

Luneth

ULT: Strong Heart

Effect: Boost to Launch damage

Not much to say on this one. Strong Heart is his Limit Burst from Brave Exvius. It gives him a boost to overall launch damage.


Dark Knight Cecil:

ULT: Shadowbringer

Effect: Last Stand leaves Cecil at 25% HP instead of 1%. If he takes fatal damage again afterward before being healed, it then brings him down to 1%.


Sol (Swords) Non-elemental melee damage, Self-buffing, offensive auras, critical counters, break BRV shields

15: Piercing Blast

35: Battle Arts: Strike

EX: Earthshatterer

LD: Enraging War Cry

FR: Light Warrior Radiance (with Luneth)

BT: Mighty Double Assault

ULT: Howling Gale (Effect: Instant turn when breaking foe)

Burst theme: “Journey of Light,” theme for the World of Light

As mentioned in Sarah's blurb, this game uses a job system with abilities that can combine with those used by other party members to form "Fusion Abilities." None of them have any canon jobs, but the one time they are all depicted in artwork with an assigned job, Sol is a Warrior. However, I gave him abilities and Fusion abilities from both Warrior and Monk, neither of which are restricted to the Warriors of Light. I really wanted his main weapon to be Fists for some variety with his fellow party members, but even in the story he is training in swordsmanship so I felt like I couldn't avoid it. For the ULTs of the Dimensions cast, I gave them abilities belonging to one of the Four Generals/Four Divine Generals (recurring bosses) that are associated with them. For Sol, he is most associated with Vata, the Wind General.

He is a pretty typical non-elemental melee damage dealer with some self-buffing and offensive auras for the party. He also has a counterattack that always deals critical damage, and his 15 CP ability allows him to break enemy BRV shields, for foes that have them.

Notes:

I never thought I'd write out a character literally saying "Mwahahaha," but I had to because it's Exdeath. And it was actually kinda fun.

Next one is a story chapter, and one I have been personally looking forward to ever since I decided to start writing this story.

Please leave a comment if you are enjoying!

Chapter 25: A5C4, Part 1: The Seed of Despair

Notes:

Wow, I knocked out this chapter quickly, huh? I know that when I'm excited about a chapter, it either takes forever because I stress about it or the words just flow across the page.

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Sol with Luneth: Both are Warriors of Light with an outgoing, friendly personality, and both can be brash and hotheaded at times. Both of them are also associated with wind.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Act 5, Chapter 4, Part 1: The Seed of Despair


Wol & Echo ( Mobius Final Fantasy )

Wol voiced by: Nobunaga Shimazaki

Echo voiced by: Sakura Tange

Wol : A warrior who woke up on the shores of Palamecia one day with no memory of anything, even his name. He is known as a “Blank” and bears the name of a prophesied “warrior of light.” He journeys to understand the prophecy despite his doubts about it.

Echo : A spirit from the mountains of Palamecia, one of many assigned to guide the Blanks. Playful and mischievous, she balances out Wol’s cold sarcasm.

Wol and Echo


Raffaello ( Final Fantasy Fables: Chocobo’s Dungeon )

Voiced by: Yuko Sanpei

A purehearted boy who hatched from an egg that fell out of the sky. As he grows at an accelerated rate, he befriends Chocobo and Shirma and aids them in delving into the memories of Lostime’s townspeople. Adventurous, though not without a curious and contemplative side, which comes out the more he feels the mysterious power inside of him growing.

Raffaello


Edea Kramer ( Final Fantasy VIII )

Voiced by: Atsuko Tanaka

The Galbadian Sorceress who instigated the war by murdering President Deling. With her motives shrouded in mystery, she seeks the White SeeD ship, which bears Ellone. In reality, Edea is the wife of Headmaster Cid and kindly Matron of the orphanage, victim of mind control by the future Sorceress, Ultimecia.

Edea


SQUALL


Squall had never thought that Balamb Garden in its entirety would make its way to this world.

They had discovered it after traversing a mountain pass and coming to open fields that he had immediately recognized as the Balamb region – his home. Even the breeze coming in from the sea smelled the same, but Zell had been disappointed not to see Balamb town as well. Squall had to hold himself back from reminding him that it wouldn’t be the same, anyway.

Selphie bounced up at Squall’s side and grinned. “Hey, Squall. Are you thinking what I’m thinking?”

“I won’t know unless you tell me.”

“We could use the Garden,” she said, clenching her fists. “As our perfect new base! C’mon, imagine the looks on everyone’s faces when they’d see it taking off in flight!”

He had, in fact, been thinking what she was thinking. Aside from the fact that it could fly, it was big enough to have room for their entire party and more besides, with all of the resources they’d need if hunger and rest were becoming a concern again. Logistically, it made the most sense for them. When they reunited with Balthier and Fran days before, they had managed to summon their airship the Strahl , but unlike their previous airships it didn’t expand on the inside anymore. Selphie was right – Balamb Garden would be perfect.

“What’s this? A town from your world?” Cecil had quickened his pace to catch up with them as they made their way to Garden in the distance. “It cuts an impressive figure.”

“It’s our school,” Squall said. “And it actually fl – ”

“ – Flabbergasts me how big it is sometimes, yeah!” Selphie interrupted, winking at Squall. So she wanted to preserve the surprise. Got it.

“A school,” Cecil repeated, rubbing his chin. “How interesting. I look forward to seeing it on the inside.”

Since the Falcon went down, they had discovered many of their scattered companions, but they still had more to find. They’d found all of Squall’s fellow SeeDs sans Seifer, most of Cecil’s group, Zidane, Noel, Serah, Hope, and Sazh. Balthier and Fran had gone off on their airship to search for the others and bring back as many as they could carry.

As they approached Garden, they saw a scuffle ahead between a swordsman and several Manikins. Though the silver-haired swordsman appeared to be handling himself well, Cecil rushed to his side.

“Please, sheathe your swords!” he called out. “We may be able to talk instead of coming to blows.”

“With these?” the swordsman asked, deflecting a blow and jumping away from his foes. “They’re mindless monsters.”

“Hey, one of them is me!” Selphie said. “Manikin-me, chill out!”

Squall paused. Though these did appear to be the mindless sort of Manikins they first encountered, he wasn’t sure if they could grow into being like Dark Manikins or even the Neo-Manikins (as Selphie had dubbed them, which managed to stick). But their attacks didn’t relent, and if they didn’t act then the Manikins would kill them. Squall struck back alongside the stranger, cutting down the Manikin of himself while Selphie struck her own copy.

“It is a shame it had to come to this,” Cecil said, slicing across the Manikin of Zell.

“Thanks for the help,” said the stranger, once the Manikins were gone. “This place is swarming with them – and they all look like some of you.” He didn’t dismiss his sword, eyeing Squall and Selphie. “Big group, huh?”

“It’s a long story,” Squall said. “But those were Manikins, and you’re in another world. The rest of us won’t attack you unless you give us reason to.”

“That’s his way of saying, ‘Hey there, I’m Squall.’ But my name is Selphie,” Selphie said. “What’s yours?”

“Call me Wol,” he replied. “Trying to get inside this place?”

“Yeah,” said Squall. Though the other man’s guard stayed up, he didn’t seem suspicious. “It’s our school.” He wasn’t sure how they’d deal with all of the Manikins inside the Garden, but first they’d investigate and figure it out from there.

“You don’t remember me, do you?” Wol asked, making Squall do a double take at the man.

“Yet another version of me out there?” Squall grunted. Knowing one lived in Lann and Reynn’s world was strange enough, but a third? “Don’t put much thought into it. Apparently there are lots of us out there.”

“Not so sure about that,” Wol said. “You came to Palamecia, but I guess you forgot.”

Squall frowned. “That’s not something I’d easily forget.” But he supposed memory issues were nothing new. Just how much was missing? The idea that he had gone to another world - in addition to this one - and forgotten about it was preposterous.

Cecil looked between them. “We can discuss if there are others from your world among us, Wol. Or perhaps you’re both just from the same world.”

Selphie gasped and her finger shot up toward the sky. “Whoa, what’s that?”

Something ovular dropped to the ground faster than Squall could identify it, heavily enough to make a small crater not far from them. Selphie ran toward it first, while the others followed upon hearing the crash it made when it landed. Putting the matter of Wol aside for now, Squall approached as everyone crowded around the fallen object.

“Is that… an egg?” Serah asked.

“Can’t be,” said Zell. “Fall from that high? It would’ve shattered.”

No sooner than he had finished speaking, a crack appeared in the shell. And then it wiggled.

Selphie knelt down next to the impact crater. “Wow, it’s hatching!”

“What kinda bird egg falls right outta the sky like that?” Raijin asked, crouching for a closer look.

But rather than the beak of some kind of chick, the hand of a human baby punched through the shell.

“CHILD?” Fujin exclaimed.

“Guess this isn’t normal here?” Wol asked with a wry grin. He managed to look just as unfazed as Squall did, on the outside.

“Not in the least,” Squall said. Looking around at all the others, Squall registered the unabashed shock on their faces; Ceodore had actually fallen over. Apparently children hatching from eggs were just as unheard of in their worlds, thankfully.

Rosa was the first to approach the baby pushing its way out of the egg, giving the rest of them a reproachful look. “Honestly, a baby shows up and all the rest of you can do is stare?” she asked. She looked it over, apparently decided that it seemed unharmed, and then swaddled it in extra cloth before hugging it close. “What an adorable child! Where did you come from, little one?”

Hope peered around the taller crowd to look at the baby. “Babies are being summoned here now? That’s just…”

“Wrong,” Rosa finished for him with an uncharacteristic scowl. “Babies can’t fight. What is that crystal thinking?”


QUISTIS


“According to Wol, he has another friend who went to investigate the inside of Garden,” Quistis said, sitting outside with the others while they formulated a plan to get past all of the Manikins. “This ‘Echo’ hasn’t returned yet, meaning that she may be in trouble. To that end, we may have to herd the Manikins into the training center while you, Irvine, will lock them in. Irvine?”

He had been gazing over at Rosa and the baby. Sazh and Cecil had been taking turns with the boy as well, and Irvine looked a little wistful. “I’m listening,” he said, turning back to Quistis. If it was anyone else, she would have doubted him – well aware of the behaviors of students who daydreamed from her instructor days. But she couldn’t blame him. Looking at that infant surrounded by three experienced parents, who took to babysitting with no hesitation, made her wistful too. She didn’t know yet how they would be able to look after a baby in a world as dangerous as this one, but she figured he was in good hands. She didn’t want to admit it, but it made her a little jealous.

“What the – ?” Sazh suddenly exclaimed. When Quistis looked back at him, her jaw dropped. “This baby can fly!”

It hovered above Sazh’s head, giggling and cooing and supported by no wings – seemingly only magic.

“As ridiculous as it sounds, maybe it is part bird after all,” Noel said, eyes wide. “Or maybe aegyl, like Llyud?”

“Oh, get him down before he falls!” said Rosa. When Sazh and Cecil tried reaching for him, the baby wove between their hands and instead flew toward Garden – and the den of murderous Manikins.

“You’ve got to be kidding me,” said Zidane. “Alright, let’s hurry after him!”

“There goes our plan,” said Quistis, following as the others rushed ahead. She ached with longing for home as Balamb Garden loomed overhead. Everything looked the same, down to the empty parking lot just outside the gate. The entrance gate itself was locked tight, but the baby flew right over it.

“This is about as far as I got,” said Wol. “Get ready… the Manikins should be showing up any minute now.”

They used to fight Manikins without a second thought. But now, after meeting the Dark Manikins and Neo-Manikins, Quistis found herself hesitating. As Wol predicted, many of them started appearing at the gate, manifesting from swirls of black energy. Squall, Rinoa, and Angelo fought at the front as more and more kept appearing, but shortly into their battle Quistis realized these Manikins were only copies of the same group of people: Squall, Selphie, Zell, Irvine, Seifer, and herself. She spotted no one else among them.

But behind the gate, she spotted a figure in a slim, dark purple dress approaching. A golden, fan-shaped ornamental crest had been fixed to her back with a train of silk falling from it. Quistis felt her heart leap when she recognized the woman, but her hopes quailed when she saw the cold hatred in her eyes. Sorceress Edea had come. Their Matron.

“Is this it?” she asked, and though she did not shout they all heard her clearly even over the sounds of battle, her voice projected with magic. “The time has come. You’re the legendary SeeDs destined to face me?”

“Matron! It’s us!” Irvine shouted out. “Don’t tell me…”

“She’s possessed again,” Squall finished for him, his voice low and cold.

“Die at the hands of these puppets,” Edea continued. “They shall consume you and you will never again walk in the light of this world.” She turned away from them without a second glance, leaving them to their battle as she vanished into a Torsion.

“What do we do?” Selphie asked, swinging her nunchaku before backing against Quistis. “There’s too many of them!”

Wol sliced and shattered a Manikin of Seifer. “Looks like they’re filling in at our backs, too. There’s no retreat.”

Rinoa unfurled her angelic wings and her voice changed with them. “I will handle these. If a Sorceress summoned them here, then a Sorceress can banish them.”

Rinoa hovered above them all and magic flashed from her hands. Harsh winds blew and gathered the hordes of Manikins together while Comet spells rained down around the ones closest to the gate. Just as Quistis was about to renew her attack on the ones at their backs, more comets crashed onto the field just outside the parking lot. Rather than Rinoa being the source, however, Golbez drifted in with his shadow dragon coiled around him.

“Golbez!” Zell shouted out in greeting. “Nice timing, man!”

“Thank you, brother,” said Cecil, finishing off the last of the stray Manikins. “Your arrival is timely.”

“I come ahead of another group,” said Golbez. “Which includes both Mog and Carbuncle. They are coming, and Carbuncle believes one of the summoned beasts is in this place.”

“We can’t wait around for them to get here,” said Edge. “There’s, uh, a baby that got summoned to this world now. And he flew inside.”

“I agree,” said Rydia. “We have to go inside now. How do we get through these gates?”

“Break them down?” Ceodore suggested.

Quistis couldn’t shake the identities of the Manikins. “Maybe the gate will let us through if we show it our SeeD tags.”

Squall, closest to the gate, held up his tag as Rinoa’s wings faded. As Quistis predicted, the gates swung open for them. “Do you think Matron wants us to follow?” he asked.

Edward’s expression was soft as he looked at Squall. “She is your mother?” he asked.

“She’s the matron of the orphanage we all grew up in,” Quistis explained. “She’s a Sorceress like Rinoa, but for a while we believed her to be a foe until it turned out she had been possessed by Ultimecia the whole time.”

“I’ve had enough of Ultimecia,” Zell said, scowling. “When’s she going to learn to give it up already? And here she is possessing Matron again!”

“Then this means all we have to do is find Ultimecia,” said Selphie. “And give her a good knockout to free Matron!”

Squall’s expression darkened. “My guess is that she’s inside Garden. Let’s go.”

“If it is a matter of possession, let me accompany you,” said Golbez. “I know a thing or two about that. I will help you stop Ultimecia.”


GOLBEZ


Balamb Garden seemed to Golbez a spacious palace rather than a school, with domes and a levitating ring that could be seen from the first floor entrance lobby. He tried not to gawk, too focused on the task at hand, but the whole structure seemed a technological marvel, with a central tower that Quistis explained housed a lift that went to the other floors.

He ached with sympathy for the woman named Edea, forced to fight against those she considered family, slave to her own body. He had known Ultimecia possessed such skills, but thus far she had only ever used them once, on Lunafreya. Perhaps that had changed as she became increasingly driven and desperate to eliminate her foes. He would not stand for her schemes any longer. Not after what Golbez had been through with…

“The directory is up ahead, but why don’t you give everyone a tour, Squall?” Rinoa asked with a grin, interrupting Golbez from his thoughts. “I seem to remember you’re pretty good at them.”

“We don’t have time to fool around,” he said.

“How big is this place?” Sazh asked. “We’ve gotta find that baby before he gets hurt.”

“Whoa, what the heck is that thing?” Selphie asked, pointing straight ahead. “That’s never been there before!”

A white object, like a large egg or cocoon, rested in front of a simple map of the school. Feathers curled around it and it gently pulsed, giving Golbez the impression that something might burst out of it at any moment. He had never seen anything like it.

“Perhaps there is a monster of some sort growing inside of it,” he said. “Shall we destroy it before it hatches?”

Lights twinkled in front of him and they coalesced to form a little fairy, of all things. “No, don’t do that!” the fairy exclaimed, wings fluttering in agitation. “This sounds crazy, but there’s a little baby in there!”

“Crazier than a fairy randomly popping up?” Selphie asked, hands on her hips. “What’s going on?”

“Wol, tell them they can’t!” the fairy said, whirling on Wol.

He waved her away. “This is Echo, the one I told you guys about,” Wol said. “Normally, I’d say fairies can’t be trusted… but we did see that baby fly in here.”

“Thanks for that glowing recommendation,” Echo said, scowling at him. “I was gonna try to sneak my way out of here when I saw it fly in and then form… whatever that thing is.”

“Wol, you didn’t mention your friend was a fairy!” Rinoa said, eyes wide with awe.

“Well, this proves we’re in a different world,” Wol said to Echo, shrugging. “Normally, other Palamecians can’t see fairies like Echo.”

“I used to pull the wings off of butterflies like you when I was a kid,” Selphie said, smirking at Echo.

Echo fluttered away from her. “Don’t even think about it!” She hid behind Wol’s shoulder. “Wol, who are these psychopaths?”

“Selphie, behave,” said Quistis.

“I only did that to the already dead ones, of course,” Selphie clarified.

“Well, I’ve always liked butterflies,” said Irvine. “Echo, did you happen to see a woman in a purple and black dress? Lots of feathers?”

“Oh, yeah,” said Echo, peeking out from behind Wol. “She’s pretty freaky. She seems to be controlling all those crystal people.”

Quistis held a hand over her mouth and gasped. “Oh, no! What if it’s mass hypnosis, and we have been fighting Neo-Manikins all along? Remember, like she did to the crowds at Deling City?”

“I don’t know,” said Squall. “Why would the Manikins only be taking our appearance? I think she created these Manikins herself.”

Golbez nodded. Even while he suffered at the hands of Zemus, he still found subtle ways to reach past the darkness enshrouding his mind. “It is possible. The real Edea may be trying to signal that she remembers you all, deep down inside.”

“We’ve already forgotten her once before,” said Zell. “Because the GFs took our memories. And we didn’t see any Manikins of Rinoa – just us, from the orphanage. I think Golbez is right. We've got to let her know we're getting her message."

“Is this place significant to her?” Cecil asked. “Or did you only know her from the orphanage?”

Quistis shook her head. “The headmaster of this school is her husband, Cid. He formed Balamb Garden with her in order to defeat Sorceresses, specifically the one from the future: Ultimecia, who possessed Sorceresses throughout time to act in her stead and bring about Time Compression.”

“That’s why SeeD was made,” said Selphie. “Our true purpose was to fight the Sorceress. Well, not Rinoa, obviously. Our Matron was always kind, but after we forgot her and met her again, it was after she came under Ultimecia’s control. I don’t understand how this could’ve happened a second time…”

“For possession to take hold, one must have some sort of darkness already in them,” said Golbez. He did not want to elaborate on his own, but he continued. “A doubt. A fear. Perhaps rage. Ultimecia must be preying on feelings that Edea has locked within her heart.”

“I can’t imagine someone like Matron having that kind of darkness in her,” said Irvine, head lowered.

Golbez turned to Echo, letting them stew with that thought. “What of a woman in a red dress, with black wings? Did you see aught of her?”

Echo rubbed her long sleeve against her cheek, thinking. “Well… that sounds like Ultimecia, but I haven’t seen anyone else here.” She paused. “Why don’t you seem surprised or impressed that I know who Ultimecia is?”

Before Golbez and the others could consider their next move, the cocoon trembled. The wings cradling it unfurled and it glowed with a blinding light, forcing them to shield their eyes, and when it faded they saw a young child standing there, appearing younger than even Eiko. He had the same green hair as the baby, a scarf around his neck, and trousers. He looked up at them, blinking.

“Hi!” he said, giggling, when they had all been stricken silent.

“No way,” said Zell. “The baby got older? So… it’s like Palom and Porom?”

“I’m Raffaello!” he exclaimed. “I wanted to get older so I could talk to you all!”

Rosa knelt down next to him, straightening her robe. “Raffaello, please be more careful in the future. If you fly off, we can’t protect you. This place is dangerous.”

“No danger,” he said, giggling again.

“So first this egg falls out of the sky, hatches into a baby that flies into a hotbed of monsters where it turns into a cocoon, and now it’s suddenly older?” Wol asked. “Something’s suspicious here.”

Raffaello pouted. “I told you, I just wanna be friends!”

Rosa shook her head at Wol. “He’s just a child. We are ignorant to the ways of other worlds, and we do not know from which one he hails yet. I ask that you hold your suspicion in check for the time being.”

Sazh crouched down next to Raffaello and ruffled his hair. “Hey, little guy. Mind telling us why you ran in here?”

“Well, lots of people are comin’ from far away,” he said. “I got a bit scared, but now I think they’re friends of yours. They’ve got the same warm feeling as you.”

Golbez tried to make sense of his words. Could this child be more powerful than he seemed? “It is true that more of our party is on the way here, our two leaders among them. Are you saying that you can detect their presence?”

Raffaello nodded and grinned. “Yeah! I think they’re right outside now, too.”

“I will bring Raffaello out to them,” Rosa said, grasping his hand. “This is no place for a child such as him.”

“But I wanna help!” Raffaello protested. “I can show you the way to that evil lady.”

“She’s not evil,” said Squall. “Just under mind control. Unless you mean Ultimecia?”

“No, I meant that lady,” said Raffaello, pointing toward the center lift. All of them looked up at the top of the stairs where they saw Edea. Her right hand raised toward them, ice magic swirling in orbit around her and solidifying into deadly spikes. Thrusting her hand forward, the ice rained down on them, sheer cold permeating the lobby as the shards cut through the air like knives.

“Begone, SeeDs,” she said. “You may have prevailed over those puppets, but you shall not defeat me.”

The mages conjured barriers to protect them from her assault while Rydia stepped forward to summon and Yang leapt toward Edea with a flying kick.

“Wait!” Irvine called out. “She’s our Matron, we can’t harm her!”

Yang landed on the top of the directory but was forced to dodge out of the way of another magic blast. “What would you have us do?”

“Matron, don’t you remember us?” Zell asked. “From the orphanage! We know you do!”

“You can do it,” Selphie urged her. “Break free from Ultimecia’s control!”

Edea’s face showed cool indifference. “You SeeDs are a scourge upon this land. You hunt Sorceresses like animals, slaughtering us until we pass our powers onto another just to continue the cycle. I will visit that pain – that endless cycle of the deaths of countless women – upon you now.”

“Would your feelings reach her?” Zidane asked, daggers ready. “What if we called out to Ultimecia directly, instead? Remember, she’s just lonely!”

“That’s a good idea,” said Noel. “C’mon, Ultimecia – let Edea go! Your battle is with us!”

“The seed of darkness and despair has been planted,” she said. “And soon you shall all perish.” She waved her hand and fire and lightning bloomed, searing the floor around their barriers. Raffaello let out a scream and cowered, clamping his hands over his ears.

Rosa looked back at Raffaello as she held both of her hands forward to maintain their defensive barrier. “We need to get Raffaello out of here!”

“We need some kind of offensive,” Squall said. “I know we can’t hurt her, but it was battling against her that freed her from Ultimecia’s control in the first place. And then she gave up her Sorceress powers to Rinoa, making her useless to Ultimecia. We’ll have to do the same thing here.”

Rinoa clenched her fist and nodded. “Right. I’ll take her powers again.”

“Between all of us, we can take her,” said Cecil. “Brother, you and I will distract her.”

Golbez nodded, leaving the protection of the barrier to attack her from the left while Cecil went right in a pincer attack. As he wove more spells and stayed on the move to dodge Edea’s, he couldn’t help but think of where Ultimecia could be. Hiding in the shadows seemed unlike her – from all the time he knew her in this world, he had thought she would have shown herself to gloat by now.

Golbez stopped. Something wasn’t right. “Why would Ultimecia use mind control?” he said aloud. Though she had used it on Lunafreya, she had meant to mislead and deceive them then. But Squall and the others knew her well, and she must have known they would see right through it at once. “Was that not her tactic only because she struggled to directly intervene in affairs from the future?”

As he spoke, a bright flash of light shone forth from the rest of the party, and when he turned to look at it, he saw another cocoon where Raffaello had been standing.

A sharp, brutal pain erupted in Golbez’s shoulder in the gap between his armor. His inaction had cost him – Edea’s ice pierced him straight through the shoulder, coming out bloody on the other side. He grunted in pain as cold spread through his body and his breaths quickened, becoming shallow. He put pressure on the wound, but his vision swam.

“Brother!”

“Golbez!”

Darkness flooded his vision and darkness took him in its embrace.


Character Abilities

Previous Character Updates:

Paladin Cecil

ULT: Final Fantasy

Effect: Party stats up with each ability used

Paladin Cecil's ULT name is actually the name of a Band Attack in The After Years where he combines power with Rosa, Rydia, Edge, and Kain. It has the effect of boosting party stats with each ability use thereafter, by a small amount that stacks.


Rosa

ULT: Holy Burst

Effect: Revives fully heal & restore 1 ability use

Similar to Cecil, Rosa's ULT is also a Band Attack. Every time she revives an ally after use, they restore full health and even one ability use. Side note, I've been loving how these ULT updates have been aligning pretty well with the relevant characters for the past few chapters!


Lulu

FR: Maelstrom Fury (with Edea)

BT: Onion Knight Ultima

ULT: Death (Effect: After enemies target Lulu, they suffer BRV Break)

Burst theme: “Assault,” played when Yuna’s guardians rescue her during the wedding, and a number of battles against Sin

In keeping with the naming theme of her abilities Fire Moomba and Stinger Mog, her Burst references the name of her Celestial Weapon, the Onion Knight doll. "Maelstrom" is a spell that Edea uses so I combined them together into their Force ability. Her ULT insta-breaks any enemy that tries to target her, after their turn.


New Character Updates:

Wol & Echo (Greatswords) Non-elemental melee damage, auras, overhead buffs (free instant turns with Break)

15: Onion Dicer

35: Echoing Cut

EX: Radiant Sword

LD: Breaker’s Gift

FR: Chaotic Dance (with Jack Garland)

BT: Burst Flare

ULT: Aubade Cantata (Effect: Instant Break every time he strikes enemy weakness)

Burst theme: “Warrior Battle Theme #1,” the battle theme for Warrior-style jobs

Though Wol is capable of using any job, I kept him as mostly a melee attacker here with ability names coming from his various special jobs. His EX, Radiant Sword, comes from his portrayal in Theaterhythm Final Bar Line. His 35 CP ability, Echoing Cut, is an original ability name though and I did it to incorporate Echo into the attack. Breaker's Gift is all Echo, though, and allows Wol to get a free instant turn when he breaks a foe. Speaking of Echo, I decided to combine them both into one character rather than making Echo her own unit (like Record Keeper did) because I thought it would make them more unique. They've got a Yuri & Chelinka situation going on, and in the original Mobius game Echo isn't directly a party member anyway.

Though his ULT effect is pretty strong, Wol has no way to strike enemy weaknesses himself, so he works well with someone who uses an enchant or imperil. He also has some offensive party auras, and Breaker's Gift, as mentioned above, has him revolving around breaking foes.

Notes:

Raffaello's character art at the beginning comes from his appearance in Chocobo GP, rather than Chocobo Fables: Chocobo's Mystery Dungeon. In the latter game, the only artwork of his oldest appearance is very sketchy concept art, and I didn't want to use his preteen appearance as his default form.

Chapter 26: A5C4, Part 2: Ode to Darkness

Notes:

Hoo boy, there's a lot going on in this chapter. Maybe I should try to focus on making the Part 1 chapters longer to take away some of the Part 2 events...

Last chapter's Force partnerships:

Lulu with Edea: Both are elegant black magic casters and two of the few playable mothers of the series.

Wol & Echo with Jack Garland: Both are sarcastic warriors in defiance of a destiny that are from a reinterpretation of FFI.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Act 5, Chapter 4, Part 2: Ode to Darkness


SHIRMA


Shirma had been told they traveled with many, many companions. But she didn’t expect to see this many people all gathered together, chatting and catching up and embracing from the joys of their reunions. As she stuck by Chocobo, happily greeting everyone who came her way, she thought to herself that remembering all of their names would be a new kind of training in and of itself.

“Even Balamb Garden’s here now, huh?” Seifer asked, looking ahead at the towering structure with its floating rings. “I gotta go in and find my posse.”

“Hold it,” said Carbuncle. “Before we go, we must procure a plan. One of the summoned beasts is inside, I am fairly certain. But something about it has become… muddled.”

Y’shtola’s ears perked up. “In what way?” She looked around, eyes passing over Shirma, Chocobo, and Hauyn. “Before we delve deeply into this conversation, might we bring all present up to speed? I see we have some new companions since we have all been together last.”

Shirma cleared her throat. “My name is Shirma, and this is Chocobo. We’re here to help! Chocobo is stronger than he looks.”

Chocobo chirped happily and held up his wing.

An old man who had arrived with several others in a glossy black vehicle held up his hand and gave them all a regal nod. “I am Regis, father to Noctis. It is my pleasure to meet you all.”

“Our group met Sarah and Sol,” said Lightning, looking around. “I don’t see them now, but they’re somewhere nearby.”

“We’ve got all the Turks here now, too,” Cloud said, putting a hand on his hip. “Their director Tseng has joined us. I think they’re already scoping out the area.”

“Arc’s here, too!” said Luneth, looping an arm around his friend’s shoulders, who blushed in embarrassment.

“Not to mention Rikku, Aria, and Hauyn,” said the Onion Knight. “When we met them, we found Leviathan, too, and attained his magicite.”

“And don’t forget the Chocobo eidolon’s magicite as well,” Ace reminded him.

“Now that makes three, with Alexander,” said Garnet. “Three eidolons who are now under our protection, free of the corruption that has been plaguing them. We still have far to go, but we are making progress.”

“That said, we have new – or rather, old – enemies that have appeared here, as well,” said Yuna. “Like Shuyin.”

“And we met a man who called himself Shadowsmith,” said Y’shtola. “I believe you are acquainted, Tyro?”

Tyro’s jaw dropped. “Shadowsmith is here?”

“Lady Lilith, too,” said Lilisette, scowling. “From my world.”

“Despite the presence of new villains, I am heartened to see us all together again,” said the Warrior of Light. “Let us take joy and relief from everyone being reunited.”

Carbuncle had been focused on the direction of Balamb Garden, tails flicking irritably. He spoke over their discussion. “Now that we are all caught up, can we please focus on the present? I think I have determined which summon we are dealing with. I am not sure what form he has taken, but the darkness I sense is unmistakable: Diabolos should be inside.”


HOPE


Hope assisted Rosa and Porom in healing Golbez after they had managed to get him away from Edea, leaving combat with the Sorceress to the others. Porom floated him away from the battle and to the entrance and the three of them focused on fixing his wounds.

“Hang in there, Golbez,” Hope told him, gently removing his gauntlet and pauldron to reach his shoulder. “Cecil and Ceodore are fighting for you, okay?”

Golbez responded with a weak groan. Blood pooled underneath him, staining his black armor.

Beyond the entrance gate, Hope spotted more of their missing allies and his face lit up when he saw them, but Rosa and Porom remained deep in concentration. Now, Golbez would have a whole team of healers.

Most of all, he was happy to see Lightning in the lead. “Hey, Light! Great timing,” he said, as Rem, Minwu, and Aerith made a beeline for Golbez. “We’re going to need all the help we can get – there are tons of Manikins here.”

“No time for reunions, right?” Lightning asked, smirking. “Just fine by me.”

Laguna pumped a fist into the air. “Well, I disagree! It’s great to see you guys again!”

Hope nodded to Rosa and Porom. From what he could tell, they had managed to stabilize him. “I’m going back in – they’re going to need some support.”

Rosa barely looked up from Golbez, sweat beading on her brow. “Look after Raffaello, please,” she said. “Be there for him when he emerges from the cocoon again.”

“Uh, okay,” Hope said, not sure what he would do with the kid when he changed. They still knew next to nothing about him. Hope couldn’t deny his curiosity about the boy, but he wasn’t sure how he would be able to look after Raffaello in the midst of all the fighting. While he pondered what to do about Raffaello, he spotted Joshua behind Lightning and Laguna, frozen in place as he looked at Golbez. “Joshua? Are you okay?”

“Hey, kiddo, what’s wrong?” Laguna asked, crouching down to his level.

Joshua stared straight ahead, unblinking, but his breaths became rapid. He stumbled backward as if he’d been struck, landing hard on his back.

“Joshua!” Hope said, rushing to his side. The other boy propped himself up, tearing his gaze away from Golbez, face pale. Hope wondered if it was the sight of blood. “Do you need to go back outside?”

“N-no!” Joshua exclaimed. “I’m fine, let me come with you!”

“There’s no shame in turning back,” Lightning said. “If you’re gonna freeze up like that, it could mean the end.”

Joshua shook his head. “I’m… I’m okay. I was just… surprised.”

Hope let out a sigh, recognizing a bit of himself – the desire to prove that he wasn’t just a kid to be left behind. “It’s okay. If you’re serious about joining us, I’ll watch your back.”


Hope returned to the entrance lobby with the others in time to see that Edea was gone, but Squall had begun giving orders to their companions so well that Hope thought he was a natural at it. When they arrived, his eyes widened when he spotted the empty cocoon and an unfamiliar boy standing next to it.

He still had the same green hair, but now he appeared to be a teenager, perhaps around the age of Hope’s physical body or younger. He had more clothes than before, with gloves, a scarf, and a wing-like ornament at his back. He looked a little out of place compared to the others, who prepared for further fights with Edea and the Manikins, but his eyes lit up when he saw Hope arrive with the others.

“Hi, Hope,” he said. “Look, I’m older again! Now we’re close to the same age!”

Hope scratched his cheek. “Well, about that…”

“Um, hello,” said Joshua. “You must be Raffaello.”

Raffaello grinned. “I am. Wow, there are really so many of you – I can’t wait to become friends with you all.”

“Agreed,” said Hope, though inwardly he mused that right now wasn’t really the time for that. He still seemed so childish even though he had changed so rapidly. “But first, we have to deal with the Sorceress. Squall, is there a way we can help?”

Squall took a moment to consider his request, glancing at Raffaello and Joshua as if measuring them. “Zell’s at the cafeteria, Selphie the quad, Quistis the classrooms, and Irvine the training center. You’ll come with Rinoa and I to the ballroom. Matron has retreated, but she should still be around here somewhere. Ideally, she’ll lead us right to Ultimecia.”

“Assuming she’s even here,” Lightning said.

“If she’s not, then fighting Edea will still free her,” Squall said, but Hope wasn’t sure how confident he was in that.

“A ballroom?” Raffaello asked, grinning. “I’ve never seen one before.”

Hope exchanged a glance with Squall and Rinoa before responding to Raffaello. “Remember, we’re not here for fun. Okay?”


Preteen Raffaello


Balamb Garden was bigger than it looked. Squall led them down a hall that led to an outdoor area called the quad, then broke off down a separate corridor to an expansive ballroom with marble floors and a high, windowed ceiling, dome-shaped with an upper area that looked out over the dance floor. Pillars lined the outside of the room and banquet tables draped in blue and white cloth contributed to the opulence, but Hope’s eyes were first drawn to the grand crystal chandelier hanging from the ceiling.

Then he saw the figure in the middle of the ballroom. Though her back was to them, her red dress and black winged ornament were unmistakable. 

“Ultimecia! You really are here,” Rinoa said, her weapon fixed to her arm.

Squall’s voice came out low and harsh. “Let Matron go.”

Ultimecia turned to them, her movements slow and languid. “Matron? Your dear mother?” She regarded them with vague amusement. “I have nothing to do with her actions here.”

“Don’t lie,” Squall said, drawing his gunblade.

“What would I have to gain by lying to you?” Ultimecia asked. “You would bare steel against me regardless of what I say or do.”

She had a point. Hope glanced at Raffaello and Joshua to make sure they stayed back before speaking. “If you’re not the one controlling Edea, then who is? What are you doing here?”

“That Sorceress and I are intertwined,” Ultimecia said. “It is true that I once took dominion over her mind, but she is also the one to whom I bequeathed my powers. As I am sure you well remember,” she said, directing her gaze to Squall. Then to Rinoa, she added, “As you once offered to take from me.”

Rinoa frowned. “So?”

Ultimecia spread one arm wide, as if to encompass the ballroom. “So I sensed her arrival to this world. And furthermore, a great nest of darkness has grown here.” She smiled. “And I must admit, this ballroom very nearly compares to the one in my castle. But, of course, I require no reason to go anywhere – I venture where I please.”

Raffaello wrung his fingers. “A nest… of darkness?”

“What darkness are you talking about?” Hope asked.

“Diabolos,” Joshua said, his sudden declaration taking Hope by surprise. “Or, well, I think that was his name. Carbuncle mentioned that he sensed an Eikon of darkness here.”

“A Guardian Force, is it?” Ultimecia asked. “There you have it. I am not to blame.”

“If it’s Diabolos possessing her, then we’ll free her regardless,” Squall said. “Whether you’re lying or not, if you intend to use that darkness, we’ll stop you.”

“You’d save her even though your beloved Matron has subjugated countless people?” said Ultimecia, unmoving. “Her mind was in my grasp, but I could not have taken hold without darkness already within her. She is a Sorceress.”

“We don’t care,” Squall said. “Everyone’s got some kind of darkness in them. Everything she did, you forced her to do.”

“It was not the darkness in Edea that compelled her to evil deeds, but your influence.” Golbez had arrived behind them, unarmored and supported by Cecil with bandages around his shoulder. “It is your actions that are unforgivable, not hers.”

Ultimecia narrowed her eyes. “Struck a nerve, have I? It matters not. You children shall never understand me, as you have proven time and time again.” She scowled at them one final time and then vanished in a flash of light.

“She’s got it the wrong way around,” Rinoa said, shoulders dropping. “But I guess that’s why she always feels so lonely.”


ASTOS


The darkness here was palpable.

He had no idea how none of the others could sense it as keenly as he did, the gloom so deep and all-encompassing that Astos felt on the verge of letting it embrace him. It was so stifling that he did not know from whence it came, nor how to track it. Yet Diabolos did linger here, hidden amongst the shadow. Was it the matron at its source? The child? Or perhaps even the man in whom he saw something of Jack…

He followed Wol at a distance, praying he was not wrong.


JOSHUA


“Joshua, you’re improving by leaps and bounds with your battling,” Hope said, catching his boomerang after the Manikin had been dispatched. “I know I can trust you to lead the way with your sword.”

Joshua felt his face redden. “My skills pale in comparison to my brother’s,” he said. It felt strange to talk to Hope sometimes – though he seemed scarcely older than Joshua on the surface, he had learned that Hope was older than even Clive. “But thank you.”

“Don’t sell yourself short,” Raffaello said. “I don’t think I could fight like that.”

“Can you wield any weapons, Raffaello?” Hope asked. “We may not always be here to look out for you.” Though Squall, Rinoa, Cecil, and Golbez led the way, dealing with the majority of their foes, some made their way through their defenses to Joshua and the others in the rear. He found himself astounded by Golbez and his capacity to keep fighting despite his wounds, but watching him together with Cecil made Joshua fervently wish he could look out for Clive the same way.

Raffaello gave Hope a wistful smile. “I’m not sure. I can’t really remember.”

Joshua supposed he had been improving. Before coming to this world, the only real combat he had ever seen was during that terrible night. Though he had been hesitant to wield a blade after arriving here, something about it felt natural in his hands in a way it never had before. Even his fire magic had come easier to him lately. He wondered what kind of warrior he may have become if only he had survived that night. Maybe he would have even become as strong as Clive one day.

It hurt to think about, so he tried to continue the conversation to distract himself. “Is there anything you remember of your world, Raffaello?”

“Oh yeah, plenty,” he said, putting his hands behind his head as he looked up at Balamb Garden’s rings overhead. “I remember a town named Lostime and getting to know all the people there. Stella’s great food, and playing with all the other kids. One of my favorite things is to look out over the water. And most of all, I remember my friends! Chocobo, Shirma, and Cid.”

“Oh, that’s great!” Hope said with a grin. “We know Chocobo and Shirma – they’re here with us!”

Raffaello beamed. “Oh wow, really? I should’ve known! They’re both really strong. And very, very brave.” He let out a sigh as he looked down the walkway that led to a place labeled as the library, where Squall and the others had gone.

Joshua wasn’t sure if it was a sigh of contentment or stress. “Is something wrong?” he asked.

Raffaello turned back to look at them. “If I tell you guys something, do you promise not to tell anyone?”

Hope exchanged a glance with Joshua and paused only a moment before nodding. “Promise. What is it?”

Raffaello stared expectantly at Joshua, who set his jaw. “I promise, too.”

“At home, I felt like no one could really understand me,” Raffaello said. He put a hand over his chest. “As I got older… even now, I’ve felt so lonely in ways I can’t even describe. I try to put on a happy face, but sometimes it’s really hard.”

Hope frowned. “But didn’t you have people you could trust, like Shirma?”

Raffaello shuffled his feet. “Oh, I did… And she really did try. So did Chocobo – did I tell you I could understand animals?” His face brightened for a moment before becoming somber again. “But I dunno… Sometimes I feel this darkness inside of me. Is that… normal, like Squall said?”

“Well, you heard Squall,” Hope said, after a brief pause. “Everyone’s got some. For a while, I wanted revenge against someone and pursued it at the expense of everything else. And trust me, too much light inside you is no good for you either.”

Joshua didn’t know what to add. Did he really have darkness of his own on the inside? His whole life, he had been taught that the Phoenix was something pure, even holy – as was its Dominant. His encounter with Alexander swam back to the surface of his mind, as did the darkness that Ravus gave him. He wasn’t sure if it was still inside him or not. He tried to imagine what his father would say, but when he spent too long thinking of the words, the moment had passed.

“Okay, if you say so,” Raffaello said, wringing his fingers and swaying on his heels. “Thank you… I was just worried. That Diabolos guardian sounds scary, and I don’t wanna give him more darkness, y’know?”

“I’m not sure if it works like that,” Hope said, chuckling. “Besides, it sounds like he’s busy with Edea, anyway – if what Ultimecia says is true. So it’s not like Diabolos is inside you, either.”

“I don’t think there’s anything scary inside of you, Raffaello,” Joshua said. “I haven’t known you long, but I already feel that we are friends.”

Raffaello beamed again. “I’m glad to hear you say that! Me too. And thank you both, I feel a lot better now!”


SHIRMA


More and more Manikins kept showing up in the entrance lobby, giving them little space to push past or even hold their position. But as Shirma supported those who were fighting, she nearly dropped her staff when she heard a name she recognized being thrown around.

“Can’t believe that Raffaello kid went out there with them,” said Raijin. “Wasn’t he just a baby a little bit ago?”

“Wait, can you repeat that, please?” Shirma asked. “You met a baby named Raffaello?”

“We did,” said Porom. “He fell right out of the sky from an egg earlier today – but then he went into a cocoon twice, and grew older both times!”

Shirma put a hand over her mouth. “So quickly? Oh, no…” She didn’t know what he remembered, if anything. But he could not grow up. Not here. Not now. She glanced down at Chocobo, who gave her a determined set of the brow and wiggle of his tail feathers. “Please excuse us!”

With Chocobo at her heels, they ran through the battle to find their dear friend Raffaello.


HOPE


“Hey, Hope? Joshua? Can we go back to the ballroom, please?” Raffaello asked. “Something Ultimecia said really stuck out to me. About how she sensed a ‘nest of darkness.’ Maybe it was right there, and we were missing it.”

Hope folded up his airwing and pocketed it, feeling the strain of all the fighting that continued throughout Balamb Garden’s halls. “Let’s tell Squall and the others,” he said. Joshua heaved in deep breaths, his sword arm shaking from exhaustion. Hope wondered how much he had left in him – he should have noticed earlier that Joshua had been tiring. “Joshua, maybe you should go back. You need to rest.”

“So do you,” Joshua replied, doubled over.

“I’m sorry I haven’t really been able to help,” Raffaello said, staring down at his feet.

Wol ran up to them with Echo the fairy trailing behind him, as well as Quistis. “There you are,” he said. “There’s been no sign of the Sorceress.”

“We’re holding every area of Garden so far except for the ballroom,” Quistis added. “The fighting has been tough, but thankfully we’ve got the numbers again. The Manikins keep coming, so we are led to believe that Matron is still here, summoning them. Do you want to give the order to check there, Commander?”

Hope thought he saw Squall roll his eyes at her teasing use of his title. “We’ll go,” he said.

“Raffaello just suggested the same thing,” Hope said. “Maybe Ultimecia was being literal when she said she sensed the ‘nest of darkness’ there, whatever that means.”

Raffaello looked at Hope appreciatively as the others agreed and they made their way back to the quad. Hope kept an eye on Joshua, wondering why he seemed so eager to prove himself, hanging back with them as they trailed behind the others again.

“Maybe I’d be able to help more if I was older,” Raffaello said, tugging on his scarf. “I bet I’d get all my memories back. And I’d be strong!”

“Maybe you could,” Hope said. “Can you control if you go into one of those cocoons again?”

“Sorta,” Raffaello responded. “I have to be ready for it, you know? But to be honest… I’ve been a little afraid to grow up.”

“Afraid?” said Hope. He scratched his chin as they walked. “Well… that’s only natural. But to be honest, it’s never as scary as we think. It still is, to some extent – but I think it’s worth it.”

“How do you know?”

“Well… I never told you, but I’m actually older than I look,” Hope said. “I’ve just been in my younger body in this world.”

“Wow, really? I thought you were pretty wise for a kid!” Raffaello said, laughing. They arrived back at the ballroom, but everything appeared to be just as they left it. No Edea, no Ultimecia, and no Manikins. 

“This is so frustrating!” Rinoa exclaimed. “She has us going in circles.”

“She’s tiring us out by making us face endless hordes of Manikins,” said Wol. “Not a bad tactic, really.”

Joshua leaned against the wall and sunk down to the floor while the others discussed what to do next. Hope went to him, kneeling down to ensure Joshua didn’t need any healing.

“Good,” Hope said. “Sit down and take a break. You’ve earned it.”

Joshua gave him a weak smile. “Thanks.”

Raffaello approached them, crouching down on Joshua’s other side. His lip trembled. “Guys, I… I don’t feel so great. I think the time’s coming.”

Hope frowned. “Another cocoon? To be honest, I don’t know if it’s the best timing.”

“I dunno, I…” Raffaello stood up straight and looked around, then grabbed his head. “I don’t think I’m ready.”

Hope felt way out of his depth between both preteens. “It’s okay, Raffaello,” he said, trying to come across as comforting as he could. “Everyone has to grow up sometime. I guess for some of us it just comes faster.”

Raffaello pressed his fingers to his face so hard that his knuckles turned white, and Hope realized that he seemed to be in real pain. “No… No! I remember now. I can’t… I can’t get any older!”

By now, the others had heard him and came back to the entrance of the ballroom. Cecil knelt down to Raffaello, but Raffaello pulled back so roughly that he almost fell back against Joshua, who scrambled to his feet. Hope stood in front of Raffaello, trying to get the other boy to look at him.

“Raffaello, listen to me,” Hope said, grasping at anything he could think of. “You’ll be okay! I promise you. Hey, what if I grow up alongside you? Would that make you feel better?”

Raffaello took in deep breaths. “W-would you?”

Hope nodded. “Yeah,” he said. “I won’t go in a cocoon like you do, but if Palom and Porom can do it, then I can too. I’ll be right there with you, buddy – and we’ll face whatever’s on the other side together.”

“Thank you,” Raffaello said. “I’m still scared… but maybe it’ll be worth it. It’s building up in me so much, I don’t think I can stop it. Maybe this time it won’t be so dark and terrifying.”

Hope smiled. “Y’see? You remember now that you did it once before. So you’ll do it again. And me? Well… I guess it’s about time I go back to my normal self. When I came to this world, I think I subconsciously picked my younger body because that’s how Light knew me best. And it felt great to be with her again – and all the others – like the old days. But now, I’ll show them the real me. And I’ll be standing beside them this time.”

A warm light enveloped them both as their willpower flared, and when it faded, a cocoon of white feathers enclosed around Raffaello while Hope found himself an adult again.

“Wow, Hope!” Rinoa said, grinning. “I knew it’d happen sooner or later, but it’s wild to see you growing up like that right before my eyes!”

Hope scratched the back of his head sheepishly. “Well, I’ve been an adult this whole time. Kinda felt like I had no choice, y’know? Raffaello would’ve gone into full panic mode. It seemed like it was gonna happen whether he liked it or not, so I figured I’d make it easier for him.”

The ballroom doors slammed open to reveal Chocobo rushing toward them with a chorus of urgent warks. Shirma tumbled in behind him. “Raffaello!” she called out. “Is he here?”

“He is,” Cecil said, gesturing to the cocoon with a frown. “Is something the matter?”

“He’s your friend, right?” Rinoa asked. “Aren’t you excited to see him?”

Chocobo slid to a stop in front of the cocoon, flapping his wings frantically as he turned back to Shirma.

“Oh no…” Shirma said, hugging her staff. “We’re too late!”

“He’ll come out soon,” Hope assured her. “It’s been pretty quick the past few times.”

Darkness burst from the pure white feathers of Raffaello’s cocoon, a deluge of shadow that swept over them all. Hope crossed his arms in front of his face, feeling the surge of power threatening to rip away parts of his being.

“No way…” Hope said. “Was Diabolos really in Raffaello all along!?”

Shirma shook her head, just as frantic as Chocobo. “No, you don’t understand! Every time Raffaello goes into his cocoon, the Destroyer’s power comes out more and more!”

“‘The Destroyer’?” Golbez asked. “What does it have to do with the boy?”

“The guardian of darkness, a being so terrible that myself and all the Oracles had to seal it away,” Shirma explained. “We couldn’t fight it. It… killed so many people. To free itself, it created Raffaello. He didn’t know he had the Destroyer in him, honest!”

“And its darkness is ripe for the taking.”

Edea appeared in the center of the ballroom, a halo of ice shards around her head.


ECHO


“I didn’t know Raffaello was being literal about darkness in him!” Hope said, turning with the others to face the Sorceress. Dark, magical forces pulsed around Raffaello’s cocoon, and Echo hung as far away from it as she could. It made her feel sick to her stomach.

“You mean he told you and you ignored it!?” Echo waved her arms at him.

“I just thought… teenage melodrama, and all that,” Hope admitted. “Squall, Rinoa, what do we do?”

“Don’t give her the chance to attack,” Wol answered for him, rushing forward with his blade. Edea didn’t move, instead conjuring a force field that blasted him backward and then rained ice spears from above. Echo flew to his side, enchanting his blade and doing a quick once-over for wounds – not that she would let him see her concern. “Don’t pretend to be worried,” he said to her, smirking.

Echo scoffed. “As if!”

Squall, Rinoa, and Quistis attacked together next, with Rinoa shielding them as the others struck from both sides. Edea crossed her arms at her elbows and darkness swept over the floor, bypassing Rinoa’s defenses. Squall leapt over it but the dark flood held Quistis down like sludge, dragging her to the floor. White wings erupted from Rinoa’s back as she floated above the darkness, her magic lifting Quistis from the mire as she simultaneously pelted Edea with meteorites. They battered against Edea’s shields, but she punched toward Squall as he approached and a whirl of magic struck him in the chest. Cecil rushed forward with a blade of light while Wol renewed his attack.

“What do we do about this Destroyer?” Golbez questioned Shirma, swathed in his shadow dragon.

Chocobo chirped at him while Shirma answered. “Chocobo defeated him once. And together, we will have to do it again!” she said. “Or… I hope we can. Before, we had my sister, the Oracle of Darkness, to help us contain it.”

Echo peeled her eyes away from the battle against Edea to focus on the cocoon. “Well, did you guys even consider that it might not be the Destroyer in there at all?” she asked. Traveling so long with Wol, she had become accustomed to questioning things rather than just accepting whatever was laid in front of her. “What if it is Diabolos, like Hope said?”

Golbez considered her words with a low rumble, turning back to the cocoon with a sweep of his cape. “But if Diabolos is in here, could Ultimecia be possessing Edea after all?”

“Matron!” Seifer bellowed, entering the ballroom with his gunblade ready. Selphie, Zell, and Irvine were right behind him. “Snap out of it!”

“That damned Guardian Force needs to let her go,” Irvine said, holding his shotgun but not yet aiming it.

“Hey, what if we try using our will to reach out to her?” Selphie suggested.

“Yeah!” said Zell, pumping his fist. “I know I always had Ma, but I treasure my memories of Matron, too!”

Edea drifted high into the air, close to the windowed ceiling and unaided by wings. “You think me a slave to that mere beast?” she asked, hollow laughter ringing out through the ballroom.

Echo was about to question her words when another pulse of darkness, stronger than all the others, burst forth from Raffaello’s cocoon. When it cleared, in its place was a being with six moth-like wings and two dark, spiky growths that looked like eyes emerging from its back. A humanoid figure that vaguely resembled Raffaello grew from the center of the being, but pure white and terrible, face contorted in agony.

Shirma stepped back on shaky legs. “It’s really him… the sacred beast of darkness. The Destroyer!”

Wol pivoted from his attack against Edea and rushed directly toward the Destroyer in a move that surprised Echo, reckless and straightforward and so unlike Wol. “At last,” he said.

Echo put her hands on her hips. “Huh?”

Before Wol could reach the Destroyer, a spear of darkness impaled him through the chest, halting him in place as Echo felt her own heart drop. It held Wol suspended for just a moment before the darkness dissipated. A man she didn’t recognize stood on the upper level, hand still raised from the magical attack he conjured to strike Wol.

“Astos!” said Golbez. “What is the meaning of this?”

Echo fluttered to Wol’s side as he collapsed. “Wol, stick with me!”

“Stay back, fairy,” said the man, Astos. “That is not your friend. It was hard to identify with all of the dark forces at play here… but he is the one who has Diabolos inside of him.”

“No way,” said Hope. “But if Diabolos is in Wol, and the Destroyer’s in Raffaello… then what’s controlling Edea?”

Echo gasped as something inky and black poured from Wol’s wound, pooling on the floor before it swelled into a perfect sphere of darkness, completely enshrouding him. Demonic wings flared from the sphere, which melted away to reveal a humanoid figure with black and red skin, stretching up to its full height.

Wol’s limp body fell to the floor, a discarded shell. Diabolos had finally shown itself.


EDEA


The thrill of so much power concentrated into one place made everything else insignificant. The humans on the ground below her were as insects, trilling in fear and letting it control them. They cowered and they crawled while Diabolos and the Destroyer clashed, a tempest of darkness and despair.

“Are you certain, my dear? It will cause them – and you – nothing but pain.”

“I am, my love. As sad as it is, this future is set in stone.”

Diabolos flapped his wings, carrying him toward the ceiling of the ballroom so that the moon framed his form. A cloud of miasma exhaled from the Destroyer’s wings as magic blades sliced through the air toward Diabolos, who instead held out his claws and dark magic made them drop to the ground below. The pathetic humans scattered, retaliating with their feeble attempts at what they called magic.

“They’re called SeeDs, you said? Then we will grow for them a wonderful Garden. One they can call home.”

“No matter what we call it, it doesn’t change what we’re raising them to be.”

The Destroyer’s power would belong to her. Diabolos would be slain. Then the humans could die. They were unworthy. Unevolved. She just had to ensure Diabolos lost this battle. Her magic bloomed in sickles of ice around Diabolos, then she conjured a maelstrom of energy to swallow him. But he roared, an otherworldly sound, and glyphs shone in a circle of red light.

“But why? Why do you have to leave so soon?”

“Soon, I think, I will become a danger to them. Our precious children. Our soldiers. I’m sorry, my love – but I will have to leave them to you now.”

“There are some days I want to curse him. The one who appeared to you that day, who told you all this…”

“You can’t. You must love him, look after him as you would your own son. Even as you raise him to be a killer. You must bear the rest of this burden alone, but it will be a sin belonging to both of us. Forever.”

The room quaked as the glyphs exploded. Mages and the young Sorceress made feeble attempts to protect their friends. The Destroyer let out a howl so piercing that it caused even Edea some pain; Diabolos dove down with claws swiping, but the Destroyer conjured a sword to block his strike. Gravity spells attempted to crush the Destroyer beneath their weight, but the monstrous beast moved with inhuman speed to the other side of the ballroom. Diabolos ascended once again, gathering together an orb of pure shadow.

“Edea, how long will it be until we can see each other again?”

“I don’t know. But I promise we will be together again… I want to give you this.”

“A lamp?”

“A magic lamp. Like one from the stories you enjoy so much. A guardian dwells inside – one who will protect you while I am unable.”

The memory tugged at her. Diabolos unleashed his ruin just as she clutched at her temples, groaning and writhing with pain in midair. She knew Diabolos. This was wrong.

Black wings embraced her and she realized another had joined her, hands held inches from Edea’s face. Golden eyes met Edea’s own, but only for a fleeting moment. She knew those eyes. They haunted her dreams.

“Resist. You are a Sorceress – do not let this foreign intrusion take dominion over your mind.”

Her eyes burned. Her head swam, grasping in vain for memories that eluded her. “How…?”

“Give name to this presence that has staked a claim on you. And then force it away.” She heard a lilt of humor in the voice’s tone. “You may even think of your… connections, to force it out.”

Her memories. No, this dark force could not take her memories. The field of flowers, the children. Cid. And when she held the image of all those things in her head, clutching it close to her chest, she named the dark presence looming in her mind:

“Ze… mus…”

The scream reverberated through her entire being and through the ballroom, and then Edea fell.


SQUALL


Squall shouted as he watched Matron fall, running to catch her. Golbez beat him to it, his shadow dragon coiling around her prone body and gently resting her on the floor. While Diabolos and the Destroyer continued their battle, thrashing and clawing each other with animalistic rage, Squall knelt over Matron as he glared up at Ultimecia.

“What did you do to her?” he asked.

She regarded him with half-lidded eyes. “I freed her, you fool. That dark presence will plague her no more.”

Squall unclenched his fists. “Why?”

“Did she say… Zemus?” Golbez asked, shaken.

Before Squall could say anything else, Ultimecia vanished. Without Edea hurling magic and catching them in the crossfire, the rest of his companions were able to contribute to the fight again. Astos and Jack Garland led the charge against the Destroyer, supported by Hope, Joshua, Chocobo, and Shirma. Rinoa and the others joined Cecil in subduing Diabolos.

“C’mon, we know darkness,” Jack growled, his sword cleaving the Destroyer’s tendrils. “Don’t let it win.”

“Raffaello, we know you’re in there, just like last time!” Shirma called out. “We’ll never, ever give up on you!”

“Break free, I know you can!” said Hope.

“We’ve no choice but to prevail,” said Cecil, his blade glowing with holy light to ward away Diabolos. “This darkness will yield to us, as it always does.”

While Diabolos quailed under Cecil’s light, Squall took the opportunity to bear his gunblade aloft as he moved to strike. With the end of his blade glowing a frigid blue, he slashed toward Diabolos just as Chocobo, Shirma, Hope, and Joshua focused all of their power together to vanquish the Destroyer. Their light united against the warring dark, overpowering and isolating the forces of the Destroyer and Diabolos. Squall’s arms shook with the force of the power as he cleaved at the Guardian Force, the radiance and darkness blinding in equal measure. When Diabolos finally faded away and his gunblade met no more resistance, he stumbled forward until he regained his balance. The magicite clattered to the ground.

“Freed from my chains by mere mortals… I bestow upon thee this magicite. Guard it, for darkness yet stirs at the heart of this world. Scour the shadows in the endless dreams of mortal slumber and thou shalt find it.”

Diabolos. His words festered in Squall’s mind, a garbled tongue that he nonetheless perfectly understood.

Just like Wol and Edea, Raffaello appeared unconscious where the Destroyer had been, once again older.

Shirma rushed to Raffaello’s side, propping him up with her arm while she provided healing with her other hand. “Oh, please be okay!”

Wol stirred first after Hope kneeled over him, clutching his head as he pushed himself into a sitting position. “Damn, that Diabolos…”

“How has he been inside you this entire time?” Echo asked, zipping over him in an agitated flight display. “Really, we went through all of that thinking nothing was wrong with you! Then you pull this!”

“Pipe down,” Wol said, waving her off. “Dunno when he took control.”

“Remember what we told you, last time?” Echo asked, hands on her hips. “Stop trying to make a habit of this.”

Chocobo warbled over Raffaello, whose eyes fluttered open. “Shirma…?” he asked.

She hugged him tight around the neck. “Raffaello!”

“I’m so sorry,” he said, sitting up. “I can’t believe I let the Destroyer take me over again. I don’t deserve to be with you guys – maybe I should go traveling on my own, just like I did back home.”

“I don’t wanna hear any of that!” Shirma admonished him. “Not here, not now, just after we got you back. You guys don’t mind letting Raffaello come with us, right?”

“Not at all,” said Hope, grinning.

“Yes, please stay with us,” said Joshua. “We’ve only just become friends.”

“You’re not the only one with something dark in you,” said Astos, gesturing to both Wol and Jack. “You are in good company.”

“Guess you’re including me in this group now, huh?” Wol asked, leaning on his sword to help him stand. “Don’t worry – I don’t intend to let any dark beings hitch any more rides. There’s still a lot I need to understand about this world, and I expect to get answers traveling with you all.”

Squall, Zell, Quistis, Selphie, Irvine, and Seifer all crowded around Edea as she returned to consciousness. Selphie whooped as she awakened, but Quistis shushed her.

“She has been through a great ordeal,” Golbez said. “She will need time to rest.”


At the headmaster’s office, Squall stood with Rinoa, the Onion Knight, Warrior of Light, Cecil, Selphie, Cid Highwind, and Edgar as they looked out of the window toward the school below. Selphie was the one who had insisted on bringing the latter two up to the office. Squall and Rinoa were the only ones who knew the reason for her restless excitement; the others must have thought she had too much coffee again.

Though Squall had a lot on his mind – particularly Edea’s wellbeing, whoever Zemus was, and why Ultimecia of all people appeared to help Edea, Diabolos’ warning – he couldn’t deny that they had accomplished a lot today. It made him wonder if this world would summon even Sis, so that everyone he cared about would be together. Perhaps Selphie’s anticipation was infectious.

Squall crossed his arms and smirked as the entire Garden rumbled. “Look outside – you’re all in for a treat.”


New Character Skin: Adult Hope

Adult Hope


Character abilities

Previous character updates:

Rydia

ULT: King and Queen of the Feymarch

Effect: Blink also deals damage upon hit

Her ULT is an original that summons both Leviathan and Asura together. Afterward, any enemies that attack an ally with Blink on take damage.


Golbez

ULT: Cosmic Ray

Effect: Forced weakness to Dark

His ULT name comes from his Dissidia 012 moveset. Afterward, enemies suffer a permanent forced weakness to the Dark element.


Raffaello (Swords) Melee non elemental damage, turn warp, self buffs, HP Regen

15: Memory Cut (Enemy cannot target Raffaello)

35: Aero Blade

EX: Timeless Power

LD: Sealed Destroyer (Changed BRV and HP attack, higher damage with HP cost)

FR: On Wings Aflame (with Joshua)

BT: High Speed Black Cloud

ULT: Nightmare Guardian (Effect: Transformation, extra damage)

Burst theme: “Battle with Raffaello,” a remix of “Battle on the Big Bridge” that plays during the Raffaello boss fight

Some of Raffaello's abilities, such as Aero Blade and High Speed Black Cloud, come from either his boss fight or his unique ability as a playable Buddy, where he wields a sword. Memory Cut is original and inflicts a debuff on the enemy where they cannot target Raffaello with any single target abilities. His EX, LD, and ULT refer to story events. His LD, when used, gives him new HP and BRV attacks that do more damage with an HP cost.

Overall, he is a melee non-elemental damage dealer with turn warping capabilities, self buffs, and party HP Regens. His ULT effect allows him to transform into the Destroyer, giving him extra damage.


Edea Kramer (Unique - Crests) Ice/holy magic dmg, ice/holy imperil, ice enchant, defense piercing, BRV reduction, EX recharge

15: Astral Punch

35: Sorceress Blizzaga

EX: Ice Strike

LD: Great Attractor

FR: Frigid Future (with Lilith)

BT: Maelstrom

ULT: Holy Judgment (Effect: BRV barrier after every EX usage)

Burst theme: “FITHOS LUSEC WECOS VINOSEC,” the parade theme in Deling City

Alternate Skin: Her black dress with her hair down like in the ending cutscene and in flashbacks, and her fully masked appearance from her introduction

Edea's unique weapons are her back fan things, which I'll call "crests." Most of her abilities come from her various boss fights, though Ice Strike is her personal Limit Break when she's a playable guest. Her LD comes from Ultimecia's boss fight, though. For the FFVIII cast, most of them have an ULT that comes from one of the Guardian Forces that are associated with them or loosely associated - in Edea's case, she gets Alexander, who can be Drawn from her in one boss fight.

She's mainly an Ice and Holy mage with the associated imperils, and she also has a party Ice enchant. She's capable of piercing enemy defense values so she's great against high defense foes, while also reducing enemy BRV regardless of damage dealt. She can also recharge party EX gauges faster. Her ULT effect allows her to give a temporary BRV barrier on party members after every EX usage).

I wish "Premonition" went to Edea for her Burst theme, but Rinoa took it first. :(

Notes:

For the record, Raffaello's default appearance is the one I showed at his bio in Part 1, which is his oldest form.

For those who may not know, the "Warrior of Despair" storyline in Mobius kind of parallels this one. In that story, the audience was led to believe Graff was the titular Warrior of Despair, but it turned out to be Sophie. However, there's a later twist where it turns out it's actually Wol.

Because this chapter got so long, there are some events in this chapter I had to move into the next "Idle Chatter," which will be in the next update.

And with this, now Hope also gets his adult form! Like Palom, Porom, Lann, and Reynn, it is just a costume change rather than a brand new unit. I totally did not realize I had them all changing in consecutive main story chapters until I got to Lann and Reynn, and by then it was too late - the story just kind of easily focused on them!

Chapter 27: Idle Chatter II

Summary:

Last chapter's Force pairings:

Raffaello with Joshua: Both are young boys who grow over the course of their story, who both have a powerful dark force sealed away inside of them.

Edea with Lilith: Lilith is essentially a reference to Ultimecia, being a Sorceress from the future.

Notes:

(See the end of the chapter for notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Idle Chatter II


Scene 1: New Transfer Students


(Selphie, Cinque, Deuce, Queen, Vivi, and Arc walk together through Balamb Garden’s second floor hallway)

CINQUE: Wow, Selphie! Was this place really your home and your school? It’s amazing!

QUEEN: I mean, it’s nice and all – but it shouldn’t really be that surprising for you, Cinque. Akademeia’s not that dissimilar.

DEUCE: Well, Akademeia doesn’t fly.

VIVI: I’m excited that this is our new home! Can you please show us around, Selphie?

SELPHIE: Of course! Y’know, this reminds me of when I first transferred to Balamb and Squall gave me a tour. Really takes me back – it’s so cool that I get to do the same for you guys now! It’s like you’re new transfers, too! So to start with, down these halls are all the classrooms.

VIVI: Miss Quistis and Miss Serah will love those, I bet! I’m excited to get to use them – I wonder what sorts of things we’ll be able to learn in a real classroom like you have here.

(Scene change – the tour has moved downstairs, around the main circuit)

SELPHIE: Down that way’s the cafeteria. The food here’s great! You gotta be quick, though – hot dogs are always the first thing to go. Zell’s always missing them.

ARC: Hot… dogs? Will our chefs even cook the same foods here as they did in your world?

DEUCE: Well, we should tell Ignis and Quina to follow Balamb’s recipes! Then we’ll get an authentic experience.

SELPHIE: Further down this way’s the infirmary. Back home, we had Dr. Kadowaki to look after us. I guess here all of our healers will take turns, huh? But my favorite place is the quad! It’s a really fun outdoor area where students go to relax. Remember how I told you guys I was part of the Garden Festival Committee? That’s where we’d put on our shows and performances!

DEUCE: Ooh, I can’t wait to play there! I saw the stage earlier. It’s so lovely!

CINQUE: And this way’s the dormitory? I’m so excited to get my own room again!

SELPHIE: Yeah, there’s plenty of room for all of us! But be careful going down to this next area. That’s the training center – some of the kids call it the monster lair, and for good reason!

VIVI: Monsters? Right in your home? Wow!

SELPHIE: It also gets locked up at night, but I’ve heard rumors about ‘secret meeting places’ there…

DEUCE: Ooh…

QUEEN: Sounds like plenty of opportunity for gossip.

ARC: Oh! This last section – a library? I am looking forward to seeing what kinds of books you have there.

VIVI: I see a lot of our friends in there… I didn’t expect to ever see a library so crowded!

SELPHIE: I guess we really do have a lot of bookworms in the group. Y’shtola, Shantotto, Serah, Minwu, Cid, Cid again, Arciela, Hope, Desch, Garnet, Lenna… I’ve never seen this library so full of people!

QUEEN: I’m sure Trey is in there, too. I’m also really looking forward to some time with the books.

ARC: I guess I’ll have to find somewhere quieter to read…


Scene 2: Choco-Boco-Mart!

Chocolina

Chocolina voiced by: Seiko Ueda


(Lann, Serah, Sazh, Lightning, Enna Kros, Chocobo, and Gilgamesh are walking together through the first floor lobby, where they encounter a strange woman in red with a chocobo plumage tail and hat, with sleeves that made her arms look like wings)

SERAH: Whoa! Wait a minute, is that Chocolina? When did she get here?

LIGHTNING: No idea. But she always did have a knack for showing up randomly.

LANN: Chocolina? Don’t you mean Tall Chocolatte?

CHOCOLINA: Welcome to my brand new Choco-Mart! It’s good to see you all again. Bet you’ve been waiting for me, huh? And I’d prefer if you called me Chocolina here, Lann.

LANN: How’d you even get here? Shouldn’t you be in Nine Wood Hills?

SERAH: Wait, you know Chocolina too?

SAZH: Who is this lady? Something about her seems familiar…

ENNA KROS: This isn’t that surprising. She always had a tendency to cross dimensions whenever she felt like it.

LIGHTNING: So she can cross through time and space even without being summoned… that goddess really gave you tons of power, huh?

GILGAMESH: A fellow dimensional traveler? Wow, she’s a choco-gal after my own heart!

LIGHTNING: What’re you even doing here, anyway?

CHOCOLINA: Well! Now you’ve all got a permanent base with plenty of space – perfect for setting up my new shop! I can sell you all sorts of materials, foodstuffs, late night snacks. Whatever you like! I know everyone’s getting a little peckish now.

SERAH: Wow, so you knew what’s been going on here all along? Amazing…

SAZH: Chocolina… you don’t mean…

CHOCOLINA: Oh, hold that thought, Sazh! The best is yet in store! Maybe even my store – I’ll pop on back to your worlds any time my choco-stock is running low, so give me a holler if you need! Maybe I’ll even get some supplies to help you personalize your fancy-schmancy new dorm rooms. Ooh, now that’s a million gil idea!

CHOCOBO: Kweh!

CHOCOLINA: And I love that you’ve got a chocobo fighting alongside you now! As you should – we’re the best party members you can find, anywhere! Guaranteed!

GILGAMESH: She’s got some great energy!

SERAH: You know, she’s kind of like a mercantile version of you, Gilgamesh. But instead of an obsession with swords, it’s all about her choco-mart.

ENNA KROS: She’ll surely be helpful to have around. I wonder if she’s bound by any of the same rules as me.

LANN: Wait! I just realized – we don’t even have gil here!

SAZH: Huh? We’ve found plenty. You just haven’t been saving.

LANN: Oh... guess not.

CHOCOLINA: Well… I suppose for my grand opening, I’ll do a mega choco-boco sale! I can’t wait to do business with all my favorite people again!


Scene 3: Lord of All Waters


(Rydia, Lunafreya, Firion, Yuffie, Garnet, Thancred, Hauyn are sitting together in the quad, around a table with the piece of Leviathan’s magicite)

LUNAFREYA: It sounds like it was a fearsome battle, facing Leviathan as you did. I am glad to hear that you prevailed, and that you are here with us now.

HAUYN: Thank you. It was due to everyone’s combined strength. I never knew Leviathan was so powerful! In my world, she was one of the Pleiad’s Seven, who wreaked havoc on the world under the servitude of the Demon Dyad… in other words, Lann and Reynn. But I had only heard the stories.

YUFFIE: Well, of course Leviathan’s powerful! He’s the guardian deity of Wutai, after all!

LUNAFREYA: She’s a capricious deity in my world. When I entreated her for her power, she nearly flooded all of Altissia.

GARNET: And that was a pilgrimage you had to do alone, correct? How horrifying… I too lack fond memories of Leviathan, despite his appearance in legends as a protective dragon god. Though perhaps I sought his powers for the wrong reason, at the time.

THANCRED: I know Leviathan as the Primal of the sahagin. A nasty folk, at times, as I am sure you are all aware. We call those who have been enslaved by his power ‘the Drowned.’ As you can imagine, it is not a pretty sight.

FIRION: We encountered Leviathan in the sea – it was quite the monster, known for swallowing entire ships. We even went inside its belly because it swallowed something we needed, and met our friend Ricard there.

YUFFIE: Man, no offense, but Leviathan sounds terrible in all your worlds.

RYDIA: Not in mine. Though I first met Leviathan when he attacked my ship, he was coming to find me. He brought me to the Feymarch and he raised me there. He’s very dear to me, like a father.

HAUYN: Sounds like you have many fond memories of him. Though Leviathan used to be pretty scary, Lann and Reynn got her to soften up. She was a big help in all their battles.

GARNET: You have our sincerest apologies for speaking of Leviathan as we did, Rydia.

RYDIA: You don’t have to worry, I know how they all seem so different in each world. I hope you’ll all get to meet my Leviathan one day – he’s even the king of the Feymarch, ruling alongside his queen, Asura!

YUFFIE: I don’t know who that is, but she sounds cool! Is she another sea serpent?

RYDIA: Well, no, actually… She looks nearly human.

THANCRED: Ah, so that’s how it is.


Scene 4: Supply and Demand


(Ciaran, Shirma, Ignis, Yuri, Layle, and Noctis are standing together in the fields outside of Balamb Garden)

CIARAN: You know, this’ll be perfect!

NOCTIS: Perfect for what?

CIARAN: Starting a farm! Now that everyone needs to eat real food again, and we can’t just summon it up with willpower anymore, we’re going to need to grow our own food. Chocolina’s market will just be enough to get us started.

IGNIS: I am in full agreement. Quina is perfectly at home in the kitchens, but they will not be able to provide sustenance for all of us forever. I will be helping, of course, but we will need fresh produce.

NOCTIS: Are you a farmer, Ciaran?

CIARAN: You bet I am – I came from a family of them back home. And I can tell you right now, this soil will be great. It’ll feel really good to till the fields again.

YURI: And we can get cows, goats, pigs… We’ll need all sorts of livestock.

NOCTIS: Wow, I don’t think I’ve ever seen you so fired up, Ciaran.

LAYLE: You two are such typical Clavats. Besides, won’t we need to stick around here permanently to have a farm? Balamb Garden can move.

IGNIS: That is true, but while it is good to have mobility perhaps it would behoove us to remain stationary most of the time.

SHIRMA: I will help as well! My aunt and I live on a farm back home. I’ve got plenty of experience in growing vegetables.

NOCTIS: I’ll do all the fishing necessary so we can get some great seafood dishes, too. Vanille and Noel can do the hunting, and Arciela the foraging.

LAYLE: Well, count me out – I hate farmwork.

SHIRMA: Hmm… your gravity powers would be quite helpful with moving around heavy equipment. We don’t have it yet, but I’m sure the machinists will help us build it all.

CIARAN: This is great! I can’t wait to get started!

LAYLE: How did I get stuck helping…?


Scene 5: Dark Messenger


(Zell, Prishe, Reynn, Papalymo, Braska, and King sit together at a table in the cafeteria, keeping the Diabolos magicite at a safe distance)

BRASKA: We don’t have Diabolos in my world. May I ask what he is like?

ZELL: He’s a real tough Guardian Force. We found him in a lamp that our headmaster gave to us. Sucked us into a whole different dimension and everything to battle us.

PRISHE: Ah, the Diabolos in my world does stuff with other dimensions too! In Vana’diel he’s what we call a Terrestrial Avatar, and the lord of a realm called Dynamis. Bit rough, but he took humanity’s side. Just a bit awkward about it, is all.

KING: Awkward?

PRISHE: Y’know, saving people by imprisoning them in a realm of dreams where they’re locked in eternal conflict. Stuff like that.

PAPALYMO: That’s not what I'd call… Oh, nevermind. I’ve heard tell of Diabolos as a deadly Voidsent, sealed away in a lost city for centuries. Certainly not a friendly fellow.

REYNN: He’s another one of the Pleiad’s Seven who served Lann and I. Just as destructive as the rest of ‘em, but loved slipping into people’s dreams to torture them.

ZELL: And he… served you?

REYNN: We kept him under control, I swear! But after we vanished from the world, he kinda became extra cunning and scary. When we came back, we sternly told him to stop.

BRASKA: ‘Sternly told him’? That was all it took?

REYNN: We were, um, extra stern. Might have involved hitting him really hard.

KING: He’s a Verboten Eidolon in my world, one of the many summoned for purposes of war. Though it’s a bit odd that he’s not particularly common in other worlds.

PAPALYMO: He seems to be as frightening as he looks in all of them.

BRASKA: I agree. Now that we have his magicite again, I must admit that I am quite relieved he has returned to being our protector, rather than a foe.


Scene 6: Mirrored Worlds of Light and Dark (requested by Mecho101)


(The Warrior of Light, Wol, and Mog [OO] are scouting the mountains outside of Balamb Garden when they run into Jack Garland)

WARRIOR OF LIGHT: Jack. It is unusual to see you traveling alone. Haven’t you decided to stay with us at Garden yet?

JACK: Nah. We’ll drop by sometimes when Astos and Neon complain about wanting a roof over their heads, though.

MOG: What brings you here, kupo?

JACK: (Pointing at Wol) I was looking for that guy. The one who lost control of his darkness.

WOL: And why’s that?

WARRIOR: As you know, Jack, that was the doing of Diabolos.

WOL: No, he’s right. I did lose control. And it wasn’t the first time. I was once caught in a web of lies of my own making and it made me fall to despair. And I lied to someone important to me.

JACK: You can learn to control that darkness, you know. That is, if you’re not afraid of losing your light, too.

WOL: Your offer sounds pretty suspicious.

WARRIOR: Jack can be trusted.

MOG: All of our warriors have light, Jack. Even you, kupo.

WOL: Your surname’s Garland, right? I knew someone with that name. And you remind me of him. The fallen knight.

JACK: Popular name for knights.

WOL: I’m betting yours is a similar story, huh.

WARRIOR: We know another warrior here by the name of Garland, who hails from my world. He was indeed once a heroic knight before he fell to darkness. You are sure to meet him eventually, Wol.

WOL: How do three different worlds have a man with a similar name and background?

MOG: Lots of worlds have similarities, kupo.

WOL: That answer’s not good enough for me. I got as far as I did by questioning things about my journey that everyone just accepted as fact. So I’m not about to stop now. The Blanks who kept quiet all died before they could fulfill the prophecy. 

JACK: I come from a world closely intertwined with our knight in shining armor here. Beyond that, I’ve got no idea.

WARRIOR: Is that so? The Garland I know did seem quite fixated on you.

WOL: You mean you never knew? Never thought to ask him?

WARRIOR: Should I have? I am content with what I know, and with my duty to fight in this cycle as I have countless times before. In fact, I take pride in this duty. Perhaps it is because this is my world.

WOL: Ugh… ( Pauses ) I don’t get it. So you’re from this world, yet Jack’s is related to yours?

JACK: Time loops complicate things. So do prophecies and the damn Lufenians.

MOG: I am still trying to understand it myself, kupo, but it seems some worlds may be closer to each other than others within the Interdimensional Rift. And some may be extra super close – close enough to influence other worlds! Tyro’s world or Enna Kros’s world are another example, kupo. I’ve been thinking of them as a ‘nexus’ of sorts.

WOL: And how do you know this?

MOG: I’m a spirit from the Rift, kupo!

WOL: Of course you are… Well, Palamecia’s a world that’s constantly shifting, too. One that was also caught in time loops thanks to a prophecy. I was a blank slate that woke up in that world, so who knows where I really come from.

WARRIOR: Perhaps you may learn the truth in this world.

WOL: I hope not. I better not find out I’m Jack’s brother or something – that’d be terrible.

JACK: Don’t get your hopes up, bro .


Scene 7: The Sorceress and the Lunarian


(Edea rests in an infirmary bed when Laguna arrives)

LAGUNA: Hi there, mind getting some visitors?

EDEA: Not at all. To what do I owe this pleasure, Mr. President?

LAGUNA: Ahh, Laguna is fine here. It’s nice to properly meet you – I know we didn’t really get the chance to talk when you came to Esthar.

EDEA: True. Seeing Dr. Odine had been my main intention back then. I apologize for not introducing myself.

LAGUNA: No, no. I, uh… came here to thank you, actually. Y’see, I…

EDEA: You’re Squall’s father.

LAGUNA: How did you know!?

EDEA: Ellone told me.

LAGUNA: I see, well… Thank you for raising him in my stead. If I only knew… No, I won’t make excuses. I would’ve been a lousy father. But it means a lot to meet you.

EDEA: In truth, I barely raised him myself. I took part in creating a military academy where my husband and I trained him and the other children to be mercenaries and killers. It is nothing you should be thanking me for.

LAGUNA: Maybe… But after Raine died, you took him in. And Ellone. And that’s something I should’ve been there to do. So you have my gratitude.

EDEA: He’s grown up to be a strong man. You should be proud. Does he know yet?

LAGUNA: I am proud. And… I’ve been a coward about it. But I think he knows by now.

EDEA: Of course he knows. Squall isn’t an idiot. What I meant is – does he know you are proud of him?

LAGUNA: Ah… It’s a conversation I’ve been meaning to have. I kinda worry that it isn't really my place. He doesn't need me.

(The doors slide open to reveal Golbez and Fusoya, who enter the room)

FUSOYA: Are we interrupting?

LAGUNA: Well, sorta…

GOLBEZ: I am sorry, Edea. But there is a conversation we need to have now that you are awake.

EDEA: I expect so. Zemus is familiar to you, isn’t he?

GOLBEZ: He once enslaved my mind, as he did yours. We did not know he had come to this world.

EDEA: I am sorry he did that to you. And I am sorry for wounding you, Golbez. I hope you have recovered.

GOLBEZ: I am recovering well, thank you. You have been through much worse of an ordeal. Is there anything you might have been able to glean of his plans?

EDEA: I’m sorry, but no. When he was in my mind, it was like I was lost in a sea of pure malice. He hates us all with every fiber of his being. Who is he?

FUSOYA: Zemus is a Lunarian, like I am – a sorcerer from the moon. He sought the eradication of humanity until the other Lunarians sealed him in a deep sleep, as the rest of us preferred to live in peace with the humans.

GOLBEZ: But he has terrible psychic powers. Even within the seal, his mind reached out. And it found me, as a young boy, forcing me to do evil deeds in his stead to accomplish his goals and free him.

LAGUNA: That sounds kind of like Sorceress Adel. We sealed her in orbit and she found ways of reaching out, too.

FUSOYA: Now that Zemus is in this world, we must remain ever vigilant. It is impossible to tell what he could be planning, or when he may strike again.

GOLBEZ: I knew this day would eventually come…


Character Abilities

Previous Character updates:

Fusoya

ULT: Moonlight Mark

Effect: Damage attacks also heal allies

I believe the name of this one came from Record Keeper. Any time he damages a foe, he also heals and batteries his allies.


Rubicante

ULT: Malebranche

Effect: Absorb elemental BRV damage

His ULT name is an original, which comes from the general name given to the demons in the Divine Comedy, from which the Four Archfiends and Golbez get their name. After using it, Rubicante then absorbs all elemental BRV damage. Though his cloak normally lets him absorb ice, I thought that might be too weak of an effect, so I let him absorb them all. :P

Notes:

So Chocolina's mostly just here for fun - I don't imagine her being a playable character because she never fights. But she's canonically able to cross dimensions, pretty much just like Gilgamesh. So she's here to run her shop! I've also been on an Animal Crossing kick again, and having a ton of fun decorating people's houses, so it got me thinking... how fun would it be to decorate rooms in the dorms for each FF character!? I'd totally play a game about that. I can't be the only one, can I?

Next up, a new Lost Chapter... and here's a hint, their name begins with the letter "G."

Chapter 28: Lost Chapter: A Life Devoid of Honor

Notes:

The bane of my existence are the characters who don't have clear profile images. This is, regrettably, most of the Tactics cast... So, for this example, I am using his character art from War of the Visions. As for what I'll do about the other Tactics characters who aren't in WOTV... that remains to be seen.

On another note, somehow this story hit 100k words already??? Insane. I feel like we've barely begun.

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: A Life Devoid of Honor


Goffard Gaffgarion ( Final Fantasy Tactics )

Voiced by: Tessho Genda

A veteran of the Fifty Years’ War who was disgraced for his use of barbaric tactics. Turning to life as a mercenary after years of battle achieved him little of note, he takes Ramza under his wing until it comes to light that Gaffgarion had been in Dycedarg Beoulve’s pocket all along. Though they came to blows, Gaffgarion earnestly sought for Ramza to understand his cynical worldview before he perished in battle.

Gaffgarion


RAMZA


Mustadio had been right. It truly was Lionel Castle that loomed in the distance, stronghold of Cardinal Delacroix. One of the hosts of the Lucavi.

“It beggars belief that the cardinal of all people would be summoned here,” said Agrias, standing alongside him in the fields surrounding the castle. The walls nestled up against a mountain not unlike the castle in Ivalice, easily defensible from invaders. The gate had been sealed shut as if ready for a siege, and it reminded Ramza of the time they had been the ones to penetrate its defenses. It was far from a fond memory. “Though I suppose anything is possible.”

“If it is the cardinal, we can only hope this world summoned him sans auracite,” Ramza said. “Then, perhaps, we need not worry.”

Mustadio scoffed. “Experience tells us that our adversaries find some way to empower themselves regardless. T’would be better to hope one of us summoned this castle rather than an old foe.”

“Would that we could be so fortunate,” Agrias responded. “Mustadio, you are certain you saw those Neo-Manikins gathering here?” It was his scouting mission that alerted them to the castle’s presence in the first place, and the second time that Neo-Manikins had been observed to gather in such large quantities. It necessitated a look.

“Lady Agrias, you wound me,” Mustadio said, dramatically holding a hand to his chest. “I’m sure of what I saw.”

“Checking status of master’s biological integrity,” said the hulking Construct 8. “Results: healthy. Corrective actions unneeded.”

“I meant it figuratively, big guy. Please don’t hurt Agrias.”

Two others traveled with them, Angeal and Cyan. Angeal gestured back the way they had come. “Should one of us head back to Garden for reinforcements? It’s best not to do something rash with these sorts of things.”

“This is the domain of a powerful man who was once our enemy,” said Ramza. “But there are others who may have summoned it here.” Including, potentially, the old knight who Ramza had once respected.

When they came to the gate, they found Manikin guards on the other side, silent and motionless, but others looked busy within the castle bailey. Distant snippets of conversation carried to them – a debate about monsters they'd encountered, an exclamation of surprise, small talk about the weather, even declarations of love. It seemed almost… normal, as they carried baskets of crystals across the bailey, along with weapons, tools, fibers, or lumber.

“These Neo-Manikins make a mockery of hume life,” said Agrias.

“No… I’m not sure it is a mockery,” said Mustadio. “They’re learning.”

“Can we call it learning if it is mere imitation?” Agrias asked. “Though I suppose you may be right. We cannot be sure.”

“Halt! Who goes there?” called a voice from above. When they all looked up to the top of the gate, they saw a Neo-Manikin of Yuffie with her hands on her hips. “You come before the lady of this castle. It is by my decree that outsiders are permitted to pass in or out. What is your purpose for traveling here?”

“Oh, don’t tell the real Yuffie about this,” Mustadio said, low enough so that the Manikin couldn’t hear. “It’d go right to her head.”

“We come to investigate this castle,” Ramza responded. “Its appearance is a concern of ours, as we may have a foe inside.”

“And why would we let those who cut us down by the hundreds – perhaps thousands – inside our home?” the Manikin responded. “What would stop you from slaughtering us all in pursuit of this singular foe?”

Ramza’s answer died in his throat. How could he blame them for thinking that?

“Thou art mistaken,” said Cyan. “We battle only in defense of our own lives.”

“Says the one who cannot die. We were simply in your way – there’s no denying it.”

“Urgh… I fear I would give offense should I mention that our foes were only their mindless cohorts,” said Cyan. “Though it would seem they are unaware of our recent plight.”

“We have always been sympathetic to your Dark Manikin brethren,” Agrias said to the Manikin. “Those we fought only to free them from the shackles of enemies with dastardly whims, who took advantage of their lack of hearts.”

The clatter of plate and chain mail alerted them to the approach of someone from behind. “It is useless to argue with these uncanny artifices.”

The voice chilled Ramza. He recognized it before he turned to look, the ringing of drawn steel from Agrias echoing in his ears.

“It’s you!” said Agrias.

“Gaffgarion,” said Ramza. The old knight appeared as if he hadn’t changed at all, with armor rusted in places after years of his hardened mercenary lifestyle, particularly corroded around his gauntlets. Ramza tried to keep his voice carefully measured. “I knew that seeing you here was not outside the realm of possibility. Though I must ask – why have you summoned the place where you once met your demise?”

“I summoned this place here, you say?” he asked. He did not seem fazed by Agrias’s sword pointed at him. “Perhaps that is precisely the reason. Until this moment, I assumed I was in one of the hells. Either there is something afoot, or you’ve also met your grave earlier than even I expected, boy.”

“Fortunately for you, you’re alive again and in a new world,” Mustadio told him with a look of distaste. “Quite unfortunate for us, though.”

“He is thine enemy, I take it?” said Cyan, following Agrias’s lead in drawing his katana.

“He is a Fell Knight who abandoned all honor and gave us up for coin,” said Ramza. Despite his charges, he still hadn’t drawn his own sword.

“You abandoned your honor?” Angeal asked. “Then what is even left?”

“What use is honor in a world ruled by gold and power?” Gaffgarion retorted, apparently at ease, but Ramza knew him well enough to know the mercenary would be ready for battle at a moment’s notice. It was as if he kept his blade sheathed only because Ramza did. “Ramza, my boy, it seems that once again you’ve surrounded yourself in a haze of lofty ideals, with companions bearing your fumid torches.” He sounded almost disappointed.

“Is that not an indication that others share my view?” Ramza asked. “That I am not alone, as you once tried to claim? I say those torches shed light, not smoke, and I bear it alongside them.”

“You who have cast aside your blood for notions of an unattainable romantic dream will always be an anomaly in Ivalice.”

“Well, good thing we’re not in Ivalice, then,” Mustadio replied. “Money and nobility are nonexistent here. But what you may not know is that we succeeded. We fought the Church and the Knights Templar and found its corruption at the source. The war has ended, and Ivalice has a new king.”

Delita. Ramza wished he could have stayed to support his friend. But Ivalice had stopped being safe for them. He wished he could be sure Delita’s reign would be a peaceful one.

“And with Ovelia at his side as queen,” Agrias said. “The princess you once tried to murder. Together, they will stop at nothing to guide Ivalice into a new era.”

“What a foul knave!” Cyan exclaimed. “To think thou wouldst commit such underhanded tactics!”

“We stopped Dycedarg as well,” Ramza informed Gaffgarion. “If anything went up in smoke, it was his schemes.”

Gaffgarion scoffed. “No matter what you do to upend the plot at its roots, yet more corruption would just quicken in the hole you left behind. Is that not so even here? These facsimiles in Lionel have already established their own balance of power. Is that not an indication? Even if money and nobility are as nonexistent as you claim? Corruption is a cancer, aye – but it is natural.”

“Mustadio mentioned how this world has brought you back to life,” said Angeal. “But has it, really? To me you seem like a man with nothing to live for. Someone without the courage to change what he sees is wrong with the world.”

“I put my head down and ensure I’m on the winning side,” Gaffgarion said to Angeal with a grunt. “Where goes coin and clout, so do I – it is the only way to survive in a world such as ours. It may be different where you hail from, but in Ivalice, survival is a path paved in the blood of the trampled. And so far, I see no difference here. Who do you subjugate so that fearsome sword on your back scarcely sees direct battle, with its lack of scrapes and scuffs? What’s it for, then?”

“This sword’s a symbol of something I don’t believe you’d ever understand,” Angeal said, his voice cold.

“Thou dost journey on the path of a craven,” Cyan spat. “And if the bloodshed is of thine own making, then I say that is no path of survival at all.”

“My friends, please disregard his words,” Ramza said, holding his hand out. This had gone on long enough. “Gaffgarion means to goad you into battle in a feeble attempt to prove his words true.”

“Is that wisdom I hear in your words, boy, or coy misdirection?” Gaffgarion asked. “Either way, it seems you’ve grown. I acknowledge that you seem to have survived Ivalice at its dirtiest and foulest, but what is next for you? How do you expect to stay above the tide of blood?”

Ramza shook his head. “I have no answer for you, Gaffgarion – despite my successes I know not what the future brings. But rather than trying to drag us down into the muck with you, why don’t you join us in the light? Perhaps one day you may understand my views as you tried to teach me yours.”

Gaffgarion responded with a bellowing laugh. “Even though we traded blows – though you emerged the victor, even! – you persist in extending the hand of friendship. That’s an admirable trait, my boy. At least, in fairy tales.”

“How dare you?” said Agrias. “Ramza affords you more grace than you deserve, cur.”

“Are you all quite done down there?” the Yuffie Manikin called from above. “As amusing as this is, I’ll not have you debating on my doorstep. Begone from here – this is our castle. We want nothing to do with you people!”

“As the lady of the castle demands,” said Gaffgarion with a sardonic bow that he gave without taking his eyes off Ramza. “We commoners of the muck know our lot in life.”

“Their lives are new,” said Ramza, gesturing toward the Manikins. “They do not know any better. We can teach them and build a peaceful realm with our own hands.”

“Not with me,” said Gaffgarion, shaking his head. “Not with me. My hands are too bloody for this fresh new world – all I would do is sully it. You go your way and I will go mine. Perhaps I will find a new master, though one less cruel.”

Ramza watched him go as he departed with his companions in the opposite direction. Despite everything, he quietly wished Gaffgarion the best.


“I’m surprised you offered to let him come with us, Ramza,” said Mustadio, once Balamb Garden came back into view. “I don’t think I could ever trust that conniving bastard.”

Ramza didn’t think of his former employer as a conniver. Just a rusted blade wielded by those higher than him. “Who knows? We may see him again one day, and he could change. Others in this world have.”

“I fear you give him too much credit, but whatever you may decide to do about him, I would support it,” said Agrias.

“He was right about one thing, though,” said Angeal. “We’ll have to offer the Neo-Manikins our hand of friendship. And like you said – we’ll teach them.”

“As dishonorable as Gaffgarion is, I fear he may join forces with the likes of Kefka,” said Cyan, scowling. “Let us hope they never come to meet.”

Ramza shook his head, remembering his service as a mercenary – the darkest time of his life, yet perhaps the most educational. Today felt like a failure in some ways, but he could learn from it. “Though he lacks honor, Gaffgarion would not ally with such a monster. There are some lines that I truly believe even he would not cross. Despite everything he has done, I have hopes that one day I will reach him.”


Character abilities

Previous character updates:

Kain

ULT: Cross Slash Prime

Effect: Follow-up damage increase

Kain's ULT is another Band ability from The After Years that he does with Ceodore after his true identity is revealed. After use, it enhances all of his follow-up attacks.


Porom 

FR: Prodigious Healing (with Alphinaud)

BT: Pure White Magic

ULT: Break Breaker (Effect: Doublecast)

Burst theme: “Palom and Porom,” the DS version

Porom gets her FR, BT, and ULT update! Both Pure White Magic and Break Breaker are Band abilities from The After Years. After using her ULT, she double casts all of her abilities aside from her Burst and FR.


Gaffgarion (Greatswords) Dark melee damage, HP drain, BRV to zero, dark/melee imperil

15: Duskblade

35: Sanguine Sword

EX: Shadowblade

LD: Abyssal Crush

FR: Cold Precision (with Tseng)

BT: Infernal Sacrifice

ULT: Cimmerian Edge (Effect: When striking native dark weakness, attack twice)

Burst theme: “Backfire,” a battle theme that plays in the last battle against Gaffgarion

Gaffgarion only gets a couple abilities with his unique Fell Knight class - certainly not enough for a full moveset - so I gave him some from the Dark Knight class available to everyone else (with his BT being a slightly modified one). His ULT is a Brave Exvius Soul Burst ability.

He is a Dark elemental melee attacker who can drain HP for healing, reduce enemy BRV to zero, and imperil enemies for both Dark damage and melee damage. With his ULT effect, if he strikes an enemy that is natively weak to the Dark element (meaning they don't need an Imperil to deal weakness damage), he will execute his ability twice.

Chapter 29: Lost Chapter: The Hermit's Wisdom

Notes:

As I mentioned in Arc's chapter, this'll be the last FFIII character to show up for some time.

Last chapter's Force partnerships:

Porom with Alphinaud: Both of them are the more polite twin with a preference for healing magic.

Gaffgarion with Tseng: Both are cold-hearted and willing to do anything for the right price if the job requires it, with a hint of their own morality buried deep down.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: The Hermit’s Wisdom


Doga ( Final Fantasy III )

Voiced by: Naoki Tatsuta

A powerful wizard and student of the great magus Noah alongside Unei and Xande. Gifted with mastery of magic after his master’s passing, Doga lives as a recluse until he decides to help the Warriors of Light defeat his former peer, Xande. He has a close friendship with the moogles.

Doga


STRAGO


His back ached. His feet ached. His knees ached. Oh, how he had enjoyed the reprieve this world had given him from the woes of aging. If anyone cared to hear his opinion on the matter, he would tell them the world was just fine the way it was before, thank you very much, and that those young gods should change things back, wherever they were now. So he found himself a little more curmudgeonly than usual when he had gone on this monster hunt with some of the others, and when he got separated from them he wasn’t sure if they were in too much of a fuss to find him again.

Walking through a stony mountain pass, he discovered a somewhat hunched figure in a hooded red cloak and robes, stroking his impressive mustache as he mumbled something at the rock wall in front of him.

“Hello there,” Strago called out as he approached. Oh, why couldn’t he remember this man’s name? He felt certain he should at least know the older folk of the party. Or perhaps this one was new. He couldn’t keep track anymore. “Did you lose the others?”

“Lose anyone? Oh, no,” the other man replied. “Every person I know appears to be in order. Though there are not many people I really know anymore. What I have lost is my grotto.”

“Eh?” said Strago, scratching his brow. “How do you go about losing a whole grotto?”

“Oh, you know how things are,” he replied.

Ah, so he couldn’t have been new, if he was already familiar with the way things shifted around here. “Does finding it involve looking at this rock wall?” Strago asked, after a moment of looking at the mountainside with him.

The other old man pointed toward the ground. “See that little hole down there? It appears to be the entrance to a cave. I believe I must miniaturize myself to enter.”

Strago hummed. “Is that so? I don’t believe I’m familiar with that sort of spell, I am sad to say. My expertise is in monster spells – blue magic.”

“Oh, very good, very good,” the man mumbled back. He still appeared rather distracted; Strago wasn’t sure if the man heard him.

“What was your name, again?” Strago asked, a little louder. “You have my deepest apologies – I appear to have forgotten!”

“Oh, not to worry,” said the man. “I am the magus, Doga. There are a great many people in this world, you can’t be expected to remember them all.”

“That’s what I keep trying to tell them!” said Strago. “Thank you, friend.”

Doga tapped the stone in front of him with the head of his staff. “I apologize, but I must continue my search now. Good day to you.”

“And to you,” Strago said. Doga waved his staff and in a whirl of magic, reduced himself to a fraction of his height to disappear into the tiny cave entrance. “My word! What a wonderful display of magic.”


Strago found the others again just in time for them to defeat the monstrous spider they’d been hunting, further down the path where he had run into Doga. He wondered if Doga must have just missed them.

“Oh, I was hoping to find this monster first!” said Strago. “Just to show it the what-for!”

“There you are, Strago,” said Aria, spotting him first. “We were worried about you.”

“We had begun to assume the worst when you hadn’t shown up again,” said Leonora, frowning. “Please be careful when you go wandering off!”

Strago was pleased to hear they didn’t just forget about him, but he couldn’t just let them know that. “Oh, no need to fuss about little old me. I can handle myself!”

“You do not have need of healing, I trust?” said Minwu.

“I am doing just fine, thank you for asking!” said Strago.

“Ugh, look at him preen under their attention,” said Kuja. “I am certain the old coot wandered off on purpose.”

Strago shook his fist at Kuja. “Don’t think I didn’t hear that!”

“Too bad we didn’t bring Relm along,” said the Onion Knight, his lips quirked into a smile.

“What, you think I need a babysitter?” Strago groused. “Honestly, I am sure none of you ever treat Doga this way!”

Luneth and the Onion Knight looked at each other in surprise, then back to Strago. “Wait, did you just say Doga? You met Doga?” Luneth asked.

Strago crossed his arms. “Eh? Of course I did! We old folks can go exploring on our own every so often without supervision, I’ll have you know!”

“Strago, Doga isn’t a member of our party,” said the Onion Knight. “We didn’t even know he joined us in this world!”

“Ahh, is that so?” said Strago, tilting his head as he stroked his beard, trying to remember. “You know, I thought he looked unfamiliar. Glad that my memory isn’t failing me yet!”

“Um…” said Leonora, but he suspected she was too polite to say what she was thinking, and didn’t say anything more.

“Is this ‘Doga’ from your worlds?” Minwu asked Luneth and the Onion Knight.

“Yes,” said the Onion Knight, turning away from the bright sunlight to look back through the mountain pass, from which Strago came. “He’s a powerful mage – one of the former students of the Archmagus Noah, just like Xande. Strago, can you show us where you met him?”


“Down into that tiny hole?” said Kuja, sneering at the cave entrance Doga had disappeared into earlier. “You cannot expect me to debase myself by squeezing in there.”

“Does anyone here know the Mini spell?” Luneth asked. 

“Why would I know such a useless spell?” said Kuja, with an upturned nose.

“I know it,” said Leonora, raising her long sleeves. “Don’t be silly, Kuja. It certainly has its uses!”

“I can cast it as well,” said Minwu.

“That Doga could use it, too,” said Strago. “So surely it must be a respectable sort of magic!”

“Doga’s the master of all kinds of powerful magic,” said the Onion Knight. “That was the gift he received from Noah.”

“Whereas Xande received the gift of mortality…” Leonora mused. “When the two are compared side by side, I think I can see why Xande felt he had been disrespected by his master.”

“And yet, I believe a shortened life makes you appreciate the value of everything in it much more,” said Aria.

“That can be seen even here, in this world,” said Minwu. “As we are losing the protections that made us all immortal… the little pleasures of life are returning to us. The taste of a warm meal, a dreamless sleep, the reward of a breathtaking view after the struggle of the climb.”

“Yes, yes,” said Kuja, waving his hand at them. “So make us smaller before I change my mind.”

Minwu cast the spell on Kuja first, then made his way to the others. Leonora smiled at Strago before casting it on him. “Okay, Strago!” she said. “I hope you are ready.”

“As ready as I’ll ever be,” he said, and then the world stretched far beyond his reach as he found himself closer to the ground. He stretched out his back until a jolt of pain rattled his bones. “Ah… I suppose it was just a feeble hope that my aches and pains would reduce, too.”

“Hmm, I’m sorry,” said Leonora, shrinking down at his side. “I’m afraid the spell doesn’t work that way.”

“This master of magic better be worth finding,” said Kuja. “I have never felt so humiliated in my life. I feel like an insect.”

After passing into the cave, they realized they would be forced to keep their current sizes because the tunnels were far too small to accommodate their normal heights. Strago just hoped they didn’t run into any monsters that would be extra terrifying in their current forms. A few of them cast mage lights to guide their way, but every shadow felt particularly threatening.

“This is delightful,” said Aria, looking around at the tunnel. “I believe we are even smaller than the Lillikin forms of Hauyn and the others!”

“Without a point of comparison, it feels like we’re in any other cave,” said the Onion Knight. “Regardless of size. It would be different if we saw an animal or something.”

“There’s a Manikin ahead,” said Minwu, pointing further down the tunnel. “I do not recognize him.”

“Ah, that’s Doga!” said Luneth. Even the Manikin had been shrunk down to their size; Strago found this whole ordeal a little less exciting than he would have expected. “Hey there! Have you seen, uh, the other Doga?”

“As a matter of fact, I have,” said the Manikin. “How strange! So many new strangers in my cave in one day, one of which looked like me. I must apologize – I am not very used to visitors.”

“The other Doga lived on his own, too,” said the Onion Knight. “He even protected his manor in a whirlwind to deter visitors – all except the moogles, of course.”

“Ah, a magical whirlwind?” said the Manikin. “What a novel idea. Please, don’t let me hold you. Go on and search for your friend – but beware, there are some deadly serpents that live within this cave.”

“Thank you very much!” said Leonora, bowing deeply to him. “Please be safe, yourself. Monsters have been known to attack Neo-Manikins like you.”

“Oh, my dear, there is no need to worry for me,” he responded. “I have only just awoken, but I feel my body just brimming with magical power!”

“Well, if you’ve only just become sentient, no wonder you’re not used to visitors,” Kuja said, rolling his eyes. “Shall we continue on, then?”

True to the Manikin’s word, a snake with brown and green scales appeared down the next tunnel, hissing from the moment it saw them, yellow eyes aglow. Fangs larger than the Onion Knight’s sword dripped with venom as it prepared to strike. If they were their normal sizes, it likely would have fled without a fight.

Luneth went on the attack first, swiping faster than the snake could, but his axes bounced harmlessly off its scales. The snake struck blindingly fast but its head repelled off of a barrier hastily conjured by Aria. Kuja blasted it with a surge of holy magic from below and Strago conjured a hail of needles, making the serpent hiss and cower away until it fell to the ground with final twitches before fading away.

“Don’t you know, Luneth?” the Onion Knight reprimanded him. “Magic is the way to go when we’re smaller!”

Luneth eyed the spot where the snake faded away as he rubbed the back of his neck. “Yeah, yeah…”

“While you fought, I saw a figure in a robe of red and orange further down this path,” said Minwu. “Let us hurry, and we may catch up to him.”

“I’ve had enough of this already,” said Kuja, scowling. “Even pests like that serpent believe they can stand up to me like this.”

Strago laughed into his hand. “Oho! Kuja, I think you would benefit from this new perspective, wouldn’t you say?”


“How did we keep missing him?” Luneth asked, once they made it outside of the cave through an equally small exit on the other side. “He’s an old man! He can’t have gone that far!”

“Perhaps he’s as spry as I am!” said Strago, trying not to take offense to his comment.

A shadow passed over them, and when Strago looked up, his eyes nearly bugged out of his skull when he recognized the giant moogle floating above them. “M-M-Mog!?”

“Kupopo!? How did you all get so tiny?” Mog asked, floating down to look at them more closely.

Echo the fairy floated next to him. “Oh, wow! You’re all my size now!” She descended to their level and danced in circles around Leonora and Aria. “It’s like you’re all little fairies too!”

“Minwu, end this spell at once,” Kuja ordered.

Before he could, the ground rumbled as something enormous and heavy approached them – a tower of red and orange. Strago prepared for a fight until he realized it was the same man he had met earlier – Doga.

“Oh, look at this. A moogle!” said Doga. “How fortuitous. Might you know where my grotto has gone, young one?”

“Uh, kupo?” said Mog. “I don’t know where there are any grottoes. Are you a new ally, kupo?”

“Doga, down here!” Luneth called, jumping up and waving.

“What’s this?” Doga asked, peering down at them. His hood shadowed most of his face. “Did a monster cast this curse upon you?”

“No, not at all,” said Minwu, waving his staff. All of them turned back to their normal sizes – with the exception of Kuja. “Ah, this is better.”

“What is the meaning of this!?” Kuja exclaimed, floating up to Minwu’s eye level. “Change me back this instant!”

“My sincerest apologies,” said Minwu. “But I appear to have depleted my mana.”

"You and I both know that isn't true!" Kuja exclaimed. "Your magical reserves don't hold a candle to mine, but I know you're not exhausted!"

Leonora hugged her staff. “Um, I can…”

“Leonora, do not overexert yourself,” Minwu said. “You need rest as well.”

Strago turned away from that growing fiasco to speak with Doga. “My apologies for earlier,” he said. “I’d thought you were part of our group already. You should have said something – we could help you find your grotto!”

The Onion Knight readjusted his helm before speaking. “Doga, it’s good to see you here. I’m not sure we’ll find your grotto, though – right now, we’re in a different world.”

“Ah, is that so?” said Doga. “Well, perhaps I will take you up on your offer to help me find it. What’s your name?” he asked Strago.

“I am Strago Magus, Blue Mage of Thamasa,” said Strago, with a flare of his cape. “And I will certainly not forget your name after this brouhaha!”

“I look forward to traveling alongside your party again, Luneth – and my dear Onion Knight,” Doga said, turning away. “Now, to continue my search…”

Luneth gaped. “Wait, does he…”

“...Know us both?” the Onion Knight finished, equally stunned. “Wait, Doga!”

“Now that is mystifying,” said Aria, clasping her hands together. “Do you think he would explain?”

“Doga! How do you know us?” Luneth said, following after Doga, but the old man hummed, as if ignoring him.

Strago turned back to the others when he heard an explosive burst of magic. “I needn’t remind you that my magical prowess is no less diminished with this size!” Kuja yelled as he pursued Minwu, still just as tiny. “Minwu!”

Leonora frowned, her eyes soft with worry. “Oh, I do hope Minwu knows what he is doing,” she said. “And that he is not just antagonizing Kuja… But Kuja seems to have forgotten about me, hasn’t he?”

“Perhaps you should be thankful for that, lass,” Strago advised.

“I wonder if it’s a matter of pride, kupo,” said Mog.

“Come on, Kuja!” Echo called. “Being the same size as me isn’t so bad!”


DOGA


Doga hung at the rear of their traveling party after the Onion Knight and Luneth eventually tired of peppering him with questions that he wouldn’t answer. They would find out on their own time.

When the others walked ahead, a figure flashed in front of him – red-eyed and heavily muscled, with silver hair and an ornate staff. Doga recognized his fellow student at once. “Xande,” he said. “Those boys told me that you had been summoned here as well.”

Xande didn’t attack. Didn’t so much as sneer at him with hatred or malice. “Did my will reach you, within the Spirit?” he asked.

“That place I have been pulled away from, to be summoned here?” Doga asked. “If it did, I have no memory of it. Perhaps my soul has been washed clean of its experience in the afterlife.”

“To think you would be summoned here as well,” said Xande, crossing his arms. “And Unei?”

“I don’t know if she has arrived here,” Doga admitted. “Even if she did, you know her. She would be dreaming away.”

Xande turned away from him. “We are not done yet,” he said. “Rest assured, I will make you understand Noah’s folly.”

He vanished just as swiftly as he arrived, and Doga stared at the place where he had stood. “Perhaps one day you will, old friend.”


Character abilities

Previous character updates:

Ursula

ULT: Delta Evolution

Effect: Break will also delay foe 1 additional turn

Ursula's ULT is, like many of the others, another Band ability - in this case, a combination attack with Ceodore and Luca. It has the benefit of delaying an enemy 1 additional turn every time she breaks her foe.


Leonora

ULT: Dualcast Tri-Disaster

Effect: When below Max BRV, deal rainbow damage

Tri-Disaster is a Band ability she uses with Palom and Rydia, in which they all combine their black magic together. The only addition is that she dualcasts it, since she's one of the Dualcast users of the game. After use, any time she has less than Max BRV she will deal rainbow damage.


Doga (Staff) Fire magic damage, Fire enchant/imperil, offensive auras, party linked attacker, Petrify

15: Flare

35: Firaga

EX: Clone’s Breakga

LD: Dualcast Shadowflare

FR: Sagacious Teachings (with Fusoya)

BT: Master of Magic

ULT: Monstrous Magus (Effect: Maintained transformation, stronger attacks)

Burst theme: “Doga and Unei/Now I Know the Truth”

When he joins as a guest party member in game, he sometimes casts Flare and Firaga in battle. His EX comes from one of the Doga's Clone enemies, so the animation might involve him casting Breakga alongside one of his clones. I cannot find in my notes where I got the name for his LD, so it is probably original, like his Burst and ULT names.

He is mainly a fire mage, packaged with the matching enchant/imperil. He also has some offensive party auras as well as being a linked attacker, since his function as a guest is to follow up on the party's attacks. With his EX, he can inflict the Petrify status, which is an instant break and turn deletion packed into one debuff. After using his ULT, he will transform into his monstrous boss form.

As a little fun fact, his Burst theme is my absolute favorite song in the entire franchise (though I think the version from XIV is my personal favorite rendition of it).

Notes:

Next character hint, since I enjoyed seeing the guesses last time: They have a crown, but they're no king.

Chapter 30: Lost Chapter: The Aroma of Flowers and Rainbows

Notes:

Fast update this time! I'm still having lots of fun writing this, so it's been easy! But I keep adding more characters to the lineup. Someone stop me...

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Doga with Fusoya: Both are old, wise, wizardly figures that have a connection to the main villain and reveal a lot about the villain's nature.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: The Aroma of Flowers and Rainbows


 

Tama and Serafie ( World of Final Fantasy )

Tama voiced by: Ayana Taketatsu

Serafie voiced by: Eri Kitamura

Tama: A fox-like Mirage and trusty navigator to Lann and Reynn. Bearing a multitude of strange and unusual powers, she supports the twins on their journey to restore peace to Grymoire. Upbeat and perky, she’s good at letting a joke run its course.

Serafie: A pixie Mirage who manages the twins’ Prisms and knows all sorts of things. Queen of gossip and rumors, she’s otherwise too laid back to fuss over much. She and Tama go way back with Enna Kros – even before the latter’s days of godhood.

Tama & Serafie


REYNN


Reynn kicked her legs as she lounged on a bench in the quad, stretching her arms back to bask in as much sunlight as she could. Balamb Garden was wonderful as their new home – spacious, cool, and with tons of places to explore or relax. In some ways, it even reminded her of Nine Wood Hills. Most of all, it just felt good to be a Jiant again. She wasn’t sure if anything could spoil her mood right now.

Aaiiiieeeeeeeeee ! Don’t eat the-me!”

She jumped up at the shrieking sound, just barely catching the sight of a blur of white fur flying by. Magic rent the air in front of the quad stage and a portal opened up – tall and with a familiar glyph, rather than a Torsion. The furry blob stopped long enough for Reynn to recognize it before it disappeared into the portal.

“Tama!” Reynn exclaimed, too shocked to call out anything else.

Quina bounded into the quad, looking around hungrily with their tongue flapping. “Wha? Where yummy go!?”

Red XIII had been dozing in the sun off in the grass, but he opened his eye when Quina passed. “Were you hunting that fox creature?” he asked, without lifting his head from his paws.

Sol came running out behind Quina. “C’mon, Quina – that thing was totally talking. We can’t eat things that talk to us!”

Reynn jumped to her feet and stood in front of Quina, crossing her hands together to block their path. “No, no! You can’t eat Tama – she’s a friend!”

Quina looked at her with something that looked a bit like disappointment – she couldn’t really tell. “I no can eat? Big shame… friend look tasty. Why Reynn have tasty friend?”

“I, er… what?” Reynn sputtered out.

“Tama have tail gummies,” said Quina, leaning forward excitedly. “I can eat tail gummies, yes?”

Reynn was about to loudly protest eating any part of Tama, but then she thought about it. “You mean… the stars on her tail? You think they’re gummies? I, uh, never thought to ask what they were made of, now that you mention it.” She shook her head, dismissing that train of thought. “You’d have to ask her first!”

“O-K,” said Quina. They pointed ahead at the Gate with its swirling energy. “I go in there now.”

“What is that thing, anyway?” Sol asked, gesturing to the Gate.

The Gate shifted and then abruptly shrunk in size the moment Quina took a step closer. Red XIII stood up and plodded over to them to examine it closer, sniffing the air curiously.

“It’s a Gate,” Reynn said. “Tama opened them for us, and Lann and I used them to get around Grymoire. Usually they bring us to Nine Wood Hills, but… I don’t know where they’d go in this world. Either way, I wanna go inside and find Tama. She’s a good friend.”

Enna Kros walked out onto the quad from inside the school. “That Gate does indeed lead to Nine Wood Hills. But is it the real one, I wonder? In all likelihood you’ll still be in this world, but we won’t know until we go in, will we?”

Quina, who had up until this point shown remarkably more constraint than usual, went through the rapidly shrinking gate without another word. She was starting to think the gourmand had barely any sense of self-preservation.

“Ack! We gotta go before they try to eat Tama! Or parts of Tama!” said Reynn. Red XIII beat her to it, then Reynn followed right on his tail, with Sol and then Enna Kros taking up the rear.

When the light faded and Reynn opened her eyes again, she found herself in the breathtakingly familiar Sylver Park, with its lush greenery and water garden. Even the flowers smelled the same. She gasped as she took in the sight, smiling and waving her arms. It made her realize she may have been more homesick than she thought. “Wow, it really is Nine Wood Hills! Ha, Lann and Wyn have got to see this.”

“Hm, I’m afraid it isn’t the genuine article,” said Enna Kros, striding out of the Gate behind her. “Just a recreation, like everything else.”

“Oh. Well, it’s still nice to see it,” she said, shrugging. She hadn’t bothered to get her hopes up; questioning Enna Kros, who created Grymoire in the first place, would be pointless. Tama was good, but not that good. “Besides, the Nine Wood Hills we know is an illusionary copy of the original, isn't it? C’mon, follow me to Plaza 99! Looks like Quina’s heading there.”

“Wait, is that Edward?” Red XIII asked, nose pointed toward the plaza. On the path there, they found Edward playing his harp with an audience that consisted of Serafie – and a moment later, Reynn spotted Tama hiding between his legs. He looked perfectly at home sitting on a mossy boulder, the gentle notes of his music echoing through the mostly empty garden. It sounded almost surreal.

“Tama! Serafie!” Reynn called out, running over to them. She felt a little bad breaking the spell, but she couldn't hide her excitement over seeing them. “Wow, you’re both here!”

“Of course we are,” said Serafie, in her usual drawl. The pixie yawned. “Were you expecting anything different?”

“We’re not in our world anymore,” Reynn said. “So… yes, kinda.”

Serafie took a moment to digest that information. “Oh. Sure.”

“How’d you get here, Edward?” Sol asked. "You are our Edward, right? Not some copy living in this world?"

“Well, I was playing back at Garden earlier when this wondrous sylph appeared,” Edward explained. “She seems to adore it so she brought me here to continue playing. I quite enjoy their company. And don't you worry, I am the same Edward you know from the World of Respite.”

“Pixie, not sylph,” Serafie corrected him. “What can I say? His voice is like silk.”

“That the-scary one isn’t with you, are they?” Tama asked, quivering from behind Edward.

“Quina is here, but they know they can’t eat you now,” said Red XIII. He looked toward Quina, who approached and then fixed their eyes on Serafie. “Right, Quina?”

“I allowed to eat bug?” they asked, arms swinging as if raring to start eating at any moment. Their tongue lolled - Reynn was just thankful they weren't a drooler. That would get messy fast.

Edward laughed, his fingers pausing on the strings. “Sorry, Quina – Serafie’s not a bug, and she’s not for eating, either. She’s a lovely little pixie friend of Reynn’s.”

“Yeah, I’d rather you didn’t,” said Serafie, who looked rather unconcerned about the whole thing. “I get indigestion sometimes. So you’d probably get it from me.”

“That’s not how that the-works,” said Tama, floating out from behind Edward with a scowl. “Indigestion is not the-contagious!”

“Can Quina even get stomach aches?” Sol asked, scratching his head. “I’ve seen them eat all kinds of things! Stuff I didn’t think you could even eat!”

“As long as you no rotten,” said Quina. “And you no look rotten. So I can have taste?”

“Ugh,” said Serafie, groaning in full resignation of her fate. “If you must. Goodbye, cruel world…”

“Yes, eat the-Serafie!” Tama exclaimed. “Just the-stay away from me. Even though I would taste the-wonderful, like buttercream and warm hugs. But you’re the-not gonna get the chance!”

“What do warm hugs taste like?” Sol asked. “Now I’m a little curious…”

“Ah, this reminds me of home,” said Enna Kros, crossing her arms and smiling.

“Anyway,” said Reynn, before the tangent could go off the rails even further. “Tama, how’d you make a Gate, anyway? Most people use Torsions to get around this world.”

“The-Torsions?” Tama asked. “Oh. I guess I can’t make the-Gates anymore, then.”

“Huh? That’s it?” Reynn asked. She slumped over. “Oh, that would’ve been so convenient for getting around.”

“Now that she knows about Torsions, she can’t make Gates anymore,” said Enna Kros. “Even Tama is bound by some laws, it seems. But really, Torsions are just fine for getting around, too. Not to mention the Garden. I wouldn’t worry.”

“Before you arrived, Serafie was telling me about all the ways she helped you in your adventures,” said Edward. “She helped you with all the ‘Mirages’ you captured?”

“Yeah!” said Reynn. “Hey, Serafie – can we get them back so we can summon them in this world again?”

“None of ‘em are here,” said Serafie. “So no. Sorry.”

Reynn frowned. “Uh… Well, then how about you, Tama? We’ve been worried about how we can die lately in this world. Can you save our souls again like you did back home?”

“Also the-no,” said Tama.

“You can make those Gates, hold Mirages, and save their souls from death?” said Red XIII, tail flicking with interest. “You are more powerful than you look.”

“I am the-pretty big deal, yeah,” said Tama. “But if you say the-things are different in this world, then I can’t do all that anymore.”

“So if you can’t do any of that, what can you do?” Reynn asked.

“If you find stuff on my head again, you can help yourself to it,” Serafie suggested. Reynn was about to tell her that wasn’t as helpful as she thought it was, but Sol jumped in front of her.

“Whoa,” said Sol. “Stuff just shows up on your head?”

“Yeah,” said Serafie. “Sometimes.”

“We should head back to Garden before the Gate closes all the way,” said Enna Kros. “Don’t want to miss our chance. Tama, Serafie, why don’t you two come with us? We could use your help in saving this world and the people in it.”

“Saving the world, huh?” said Serafie. “Again? Well… sure, I guess you can count me in.”

“We can help the-fight your enemies!” said Tama. “Serafie will try to the-slack off, but I won’t let her.”

“I’m glad to hear it,” said Reynn, grabbing Tama out of the air and hugging her close. “I don’t just appreciate you for your navigator abilities, Tama. I really did miss you!”

“Aww, I the-missed you too, Reynn! Even idiot Lann!”

“I’ll keep playing for you whenever you like,” said Edward. “And we’ve got plenty of musicians in our party – perhaps you can sing for us, Serafie, like you mentioned earlier.”

“Me? Sing?” said Serafie. “Oh, maybe if I go full diva…”

“Anyway,” said Enna Kros. “Before we head back, there’s just one thing I think we should bring along with us. Something that we’ve been missing.”

“Oh?” said Red XIII. “What could a god possibly have need of?”

“Nine Bean Coffee, of course,” she replied. “Balamb Garden is seriously lacking in cafe options.”

Reynn drew back, surprised. “Eh? The whole cafe!? Don’t your rules, er, prohibit that sort of thing?”

Enna Kros turned and faced Reynn head on with such a penetrating, threatening stare that Reynn felt a sudden cold breeze gusting through the park. “No one has to know. This time.”

Reynn gaped. She had to be kidding. “Wait, so you can just break them if it’s convenient for you? Don’t tell me those rules you’re always going on about are just arbitrary!”

“Of course not,” she replied. “But many worlds are still unaware of the wonders of coffee. We can bring that to them.”

“Coffee just fine,” said Quina. “I bake yummies for cafe! But I no going between cafe and cafeteria at same time. Someone else will work cafe.”

Reynn sighed. “Lann worked as a barista back home. I guess I gotta help him out, huh? It’ll probably be way busier than it was at Nine Wood Hills…”

“Time to go back?” Red XIII asked, gesturing with his nose toward the Gate.

“Yes, let us return before time runs out,” said Edward.

“You better not have any other the-friends who want to eat me!” said Tama, drifting through the Gate. “I’ll have the-words for them if so!”

“I saw lots of people when I went to go pick up Edward,” said Serafie. “Well… Looked like lots of cool stuff there, I guess.”

Reynn glanced back at Enna Kros, who had started heading toward Nine Bean Coffee without any more hesitation. It’d be nice to have the coffee shop back, she thought, but nothing beat reuniting with friends. When she saw Quina jump back through the Gate, Reynn realized she had forgotten something. “Oh, I forgot to ask Tama! Are the stars on her tail actually gummies…?”


Character Abilities

Previous Character Updates:

Luca

ULT: Phase Cutter

Effect: Thermal Rays triggers twice

Phase Cutter is actually a piece of equipment in The After Years - the most powerful that can be given to Calca and Brina. After use, Calca uses his "Thermal Rays" follow up attack twice in a row, every time.


Bartz

ULT: Good-Luck Charm

Effect: Stat increases for every ability used

His ULT ability comes from his EX in the previous Dissidia games, which generally served to give him huge buffs. Following that, the ULT effect increases all of his stats a small amount after each ability use for the rest of the battle.


Tama & Serafie (Unique - Crown and Watering Can) Fire/Wind/Holy magic dmg, Fire/Wind/Holy imperil, instant break debuff, buffs, battery, HP Silence

15: Foxfire & Aero

35: Faith & Tickle

EX: Banishga & Aeroga

LD: Transfig Diva Voice

FR: Navigators’ Field (with Raffaello)

BT: Transfig Blazing Blossomstorm

ULT: Timewalk & Loud Whisperwind (Effect: Transformations, extra damage)

Burst theme: “Mega Mirage Melody,” Mega Mirage battle theme

Alternate Skin: 2P Tama and Serafie

I decided to group these two together into one unit, just like Lann and Reynn. They're both fully playable Mirages in their game with their own movesets so I just combined them together. Tama uses different crowns as weapons while Serafie uses watering cans. All of their abilities are usable in game with slight variations - for their LD, Serafie Transfigs into her Diva Serafie form, and instead of calling the ability "Silent Voice" like in game, I decided to name it Diva Voice instead since Hauyn already has that ability name. For her Burst, Tama transforms into Tamamohimé - but since the twins already stole that for their Burst, she combines her Blaze and Blossomstorm abilities. Their ULT, Timewalk & Loud Whisperwind, are not actually usable as player Mirages; Tama and Serafie use those skills when fought as a boss battle in Maxima.

They use a total of three elements in their moveset - Fire, Wind, and Holy, with the requisite Imperils. "Foxfire & Aero" inflict Fire and Wind damage. "Faith & Tickle" is a magic attack buff for the party and a debuff that causes the next attack inflicted on the foe to instant Break them (since Tickle makes stacks topple). "Banishga and Aeroga" is Holy and Wind damage. "Transfig Diva Voice" is a Wind damage attack that also inflicts HP Silence. Their ULT effect, like other transformations, enables them to permanently transform into their Diva Serafie and Tamamohimé forms, which lets them do extra damage for the rest of the battle. While it does do some damage, it's mainly for healing and revival, unlike most other ULTs - unlike Bursts, ULTs don't solely deal damage.

Notes:

Next character hint: I'm in the mood for some dessert... (I gotta keep them at least a little vague so it's not an obvious giveaway!)

Chapter 31: Lost Chapter: A New Clan

Notes:

Last Chapter's Force partnership:

Tama & Serafie with Raffaello: Tama and Serafie navigate Lann and Reynn through the world while Raffaello navigates Chocobo through memories. At one point, Tama is removed from everyone's memories and Raffaello can restore them, but he is dangerous because he was removed from everyone's memories too (as the Destroyer).

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: A New Clan


Montblanc ( Final Fantasy Tactics Advance )

Voiced by: Hyosei

Leader of Clan Nutsy who guides Marche when he arrives in the fantasy land of Ivalice. An experienced adventurer and loyal friend to Marche and everyone in his clan, his talent in magicks and strategy helps lead them to victory on many occasions. Known to keep an eye on his six younger siblings, and though responsible, he can sometimes be a little gullible.

Montblanc


MONTBLANC


Montblanc held his staff in a defensive stance as he eyed the pack of wolves that had completely surrounded him.

He’d made a rookie mistake. Though he thought he knew his surroundings, something about Giza Plains seemed off; so much that he had gotten himself lost and disoriented and surrounded by monsters that seemed much deadlier than the normal fauna of this area. He raised his staff and called down a jolt of lightning, making them back away from him, but they slavered and growled and didn’t seem likely to back down anytime soon.

“How did I get myself into this, kupo?” he said.

A man with long hair and a noble bearing appeared behind the wolves, regarding Montblanc and his foes calmly. “Do you require aid?” he asked.

“I certainly wouldn’t deny it, kupo!” Montblanc replied. One of the wolves snarled and lunged at him, but he managed to strike it first with ice. After that first attack, all the others bared their teeth and pounced at their prey, but Montblanc’s savior punched the ground and a pillar of energy wiped out a wave of his would-be predators. Montblanc flapped his wings just enough to carry him out of the reach of another’s bite, then struck with lightning again. After they saw him fighting back, the rest of the wolves yelped and dispersed, fleeing back to their den. “That was a close one, kupo. Thank you!”

“You are most welcome,” the hume said, folding his hands behind his back.

“This might sound crazy, kupo, but I don’t think this is the Giza Plains I know,” Montblanc said. “I don’t see any muscmaloi around, for starters.”

“If you know Giza Plains, you must hail from Ivalice,” said the stranger. “Rabanastre is typically visible from the plains, yet it isn’t here, either.”

“Rabanastre, kupo?” Montblanc asked.

The man put a hand over his chest, bending just enough to barely be considered a bow. “If that is not a familiar name to you, then you must be from another Ivalice. Let me explain. You may call me Vayne Carudas Solidor, and I am at your service, master moogle.”


RITZ


“This looks like Giza Plains to me,” Penelo said, pointing at a collection of tents. “Look, that’s one of the hunter camps. Vaan and I used to come out here all the time.”

“Hunter camps, kupo?” Mog asked, twirling his lance. “That means there’s lots of big nasties around, huh? I’m ready for them, kupo!”

Ritz knelt down to run a hand through the dry grass, searching for an herb called muscmaloi that she often had to pick for various odd jobs. “I know a Giza Plains, too,” she said. “But I guess this is different from the one I know in dream Ivalice.”

Doga walked up next to her, peering at the spot on the ground she examined as he leaned on his staff. She wasn’t sure why the old wizard had come with them; Desch had mentioned he was a bit of a recluse. But he did seem to like Mog. “My friend Unei would say that most dreams have a basis in reality,” he said.

“So does that mean my Ivalice was based on Penelo’s?” Ritz asked, standing up straight.

Penelo smiled. “A dream version of my world… that sounds wonderful.”

Ritz shook her head. “It was pretty great, but don’t get the wrong idea. That world had its fair share of problems, too – deadly monsters, corrupt Judges, harsh laws. I miss it a lot, though.”

“I cannot say for certain if your world is based on theirs,” said Doga. “There are countless worlds out there. An infinite number of them, I’d suspect – as numerous as the stars. But many of our worlds seem to have similarities to each other, so perhaps your dream world could have been based on any number of them.”

“That’s just confusing,” said Luso, throwing his hands up in the air. “It’s weird that Ritz’s book took her to some dream world, but mine took me to the one where I met Vaan and Penelo.”

“Doga’s explanation wasn’t that confusing, kupo,” said Mog, planting the butt of his lance in the ground and putting a hand on his hip. “I bet even Umaro would’ve understood that.”

“Hey! I don’t know who Umaro is, but that sounded like an insult!”

Ceodore laughed but patted Luso sympathetically on the back. “Don’t worry, Luso – I knew what you meant!”

Ritz had to admit, she had no idea why some grimoire in St. Ivalice would take Luso to a completely different version of Ivalice. But then again, once she weaseled out of him that he was from St. Ivalice too, after her initial surprise she realized that she didn’t recognize the name ‘Luso Clemens’ from school at all. She wondered if there were even two St. Ivalices… if so, then maybe Doga was right about there being countless worlds. Or maybe it was pointless to try and make sense of ridiculousness.

Ceodore furrowed his brow and pointed. “Hey, I just saw a person with wings flying around down that way. It looked like they were fighting something!”

Ritz followed his line of sight and saw the silhouette of a black-winged figure, along with the flash of lightning. “There’s definitely a fight going on there. Let’s go!”

When they got closer, it was Penelo who recognized one of the combatants first. “Wait, that’s Feolthanos! What’s he doing here?”

“And… is that Vayne he’s fighting?” Ceodore asked. 

Mog pumped his little legs to keep up with them. “An enemy against an enemy, kupo… should we be helping?”

“Let ‘em fight it out, huh?” said Luso. “Wait… is that a moogle fighting with Vayne?”

“A moogle?” said Ceodore. “That looks like a hummingway to me.”

“A whatingway?” said Luso. “That’s definitely a moogle!”

“Perhaps we should stop arguing while there is a battle,” said Doga, who lagged a little behind them.

Mog leapt the rest of the way, launching himself high into the air with his lance coming down on Feolthanos. The aegyl banked out of the way of the attack. When Mog landed, he flourished his weapon at Feolthanos. “I’m more inclined to attack our more recent enemy, kupo! And there’s a moogle on this side!”

Ritz recognized the other moogle as she neared, eyes widening. “Montblanc!”

“Kupo!” Montblanc replied, just as surprised to see her. “Ritz, is that you?”

“Vayne!” said Penelo, sliding to a stop with her dagger bared. “What’s going on here? Montblanc, why are you fighting alongside him?”

“Uh… kupo?” said Montblanc. “Vayne saved me earlier.”

“Might I suggest exchanging pleasantries after this foe is defeated?” Vayne suggested. Ritz immediately disliked the man; something about his expression made her think of something slimy. If he was an enemy of Penelo’s, that was enough for her. But the winged man, Feolthanos, paused only for a moment to watch them with a solemn silence; raising his sword, he churned magicks in the air that came crashing down on them. That made things easy – his action meant he was the more pertinent foe for now.

Doga was the first to retaliate with a lash of fire, and Ritz didn’t want to give Feolthanos a chance to swoop down on them so she summoned rain. Mog leapt up at him again, but Feolthanos slashed him out of the air, sending him crashing back down to the ground. Shrugging off both spells, he dropped with his sword pointed toward Doga, but Luso and Ceodore stepped into his path with their own blades readied. The three fighters parried each other’s blows in a complicated dance of swordplay until Feolthanos blasted them away with magicks from his free hand.

Ritz compelled the grass to coil around his ankles as she took their place with a thrust of her rapier, binding him to the ground. His sword came much faster and heavier than she expected, jolting her arm and leaving her open until Doga conjured flames to distract Feolthanos before he could strike. Penelo had healed Mog, who returned to the battle with a dance that augmented Ritz’s rain, and Vayne joined the brawl with a sweeping kick that forced Feolthanos to use his wings again to right himself.

“What’re you all doing, kupo?” Montblanc called out. “How’re we supposed to fight him without a Judge?”

“Things are a bit different here, Montblanc,” Ritz informed him, wiping her wet hair from her face. The rain died down and Feolthanos ascended again, giving them breathing room.

“What are you two doing fighting against each other, anyway?” said Penelo. “You both hate the gods, don’t you? I’d sooner think you’d be allies… not that I want that, mind you.”

“It takes more than similar goals to unite two ideas,” said Vayne, massaging his wrist. “Besides, he seeks godhood, and I prefer Ivalice to be in mortal hands.”

“I owe no explanation to you,” said Feolthanos, speaking for the first time. “This insolent hume seeks my power for his own ends. I am bereft of the auracite because it is in the hands of this man.”

“Ah, so Vayne hit you first,” said Doga, chuckling. “I am reminded of squabbling children.”

“Kupopo? Vayne, is that true?” said Montblanc. “You told me Feolthanos was hunting you, kupo!”

“And Ritz was an enemy of yours once upon a time, was she not?” Vayne said. “You said as much when you inquired about whether your friends were in this world. You are a mage of considerable talent – might we join forces to keep power out of the hands of those who would abuse it?”

Ritz felt the others’ eyes shoot between her and Montblanc. “We did fight each other a couple of times,” Ritz admitted. “But we don’t have to here.”

“What do you want with the auracite?” Penelo asked. “Montblanc, Vayne’s no good – you know that. He conquered Dalmasca and almost destroyed Rabanastre!”

“Kupo?” said Montblanc. “Who are you?” He shook his head. “Sorry Vayne, but I can’t abide stealing and lying about it, kupo! Ritz and I may have fought before, but I know her, kupo.”

“Very well. ‘Tis a pity,” said Vayne, disappearing in a flash of light just moments before Feolthanos could strike him.

“You have no quarrel with us today, Feolthanos,” said Doga, holding up his hand to stop Ritz and the others from attacking him. “Begone from here – it seems to me that Vayne is your foe.”

Feolthanos clenched his jaw, grip tightening on his blade. Shooting one last glare at them, he vanished into a Torsion, presumably to pursue Vayne.

Ceodore let out a sigh of relief. “Between the two of them, I had no idea what was going to happen. I wonder what Vayne is up to…”

“Maybe he’s just looking for more power, kupo, as usual!” said Mog, stomping both of his feet. “That Vayne causes nothing but trouble!”

“And I think Llyud was right about Feolthanos,” said Penelo, tapping her cheek. “He seems… a little more emotional than usual.”

Luso squatted down to Montblanc’s height, grinning. “It’s good to see you, Montblanc!”

“Um… why does everyone seem to know me, kupo?” Montblanc asked.

“Aw, c’mon! Missing your memories?” Luso asked. “You joined up with Clan Gully for a bit, remember?”

“You don’t know Luso either?” said Penelo. “I thought maybe you just might not remember me because it was Vaan who did most of the Clan Centurio business, but we fought alongside you in Clan Gully as well. But if you don’t even know Luso… I guess you’re from Ritz’s Ivalice?”

Luso stood back up and whispered to Penelo. “Does that mean he’s from the… y’know, D-R-E-A-M Ivalice?”

“I can hear you, kupo, and I am aware that the Ivalice I come from is a dream world,” Montblanc said, sniffing. “I don’t know of any Clan Gully or Clan Centurio – I’m from Clan Nutsy. But that doesn’t mean that I’m a dream, kupo!”

“No, I suspect not,” said Doga. “You seem as real to me as anyone else. It is nice to meet you, Montblanc.”

“I really thought he might be a hummingway,” said Ceodore, scratching his chin. “In my world, they’re rabbit people who live on the moon.”

“You can’t call a moogle a rabbit, kupo!” 

“If he kupo’s like a moogle and he’s got a pom, then he’s a moogle to me, kupo,” said Mog. “Welcome to the team! But, uh… is there some history between you and Ritz, kupo?”

Ritz clasped her hands behind her back. “Well, Clan Ritz and Clan Nutsy were opposed for a while. It’s a long story. But Marche is a friend we have in common.”

“Is Marche here, kupo?” Montblanc asked, looking at her hopefully.

Ritz shook her head. “No… it’s just the two of us. Not even Shara’s here.”

“Well, if you two are able to get along now, then there’s no harm, right?” said Penelo. “C’mon, we should head back to Garden before Giza Plains has its next rainy season. We can introduce everyone to Montblanc there!”

“It’s good to have another moogle in the group, kupo,” said Mog, turning to depart with her and the others. “The other Mog will surely be happy, too!”

Ritz hung back as the others walked ahead. She weighed her words for a moment, hesitant to speak them, but forced them out. “Montblanc, can we talk really quick?”

He stopped with her. “What is it, kupo?”

She twisted her fingers as she spoke. “I need to know… what happened to everyone in Ivalice after you and Marche destroyed all the world threads? We went back home to St. Ivalice, but…”

Montblanc gave her a soft, almost sad smile. “I don’t know, kupo. The world changed… and then I don’t remember what happened after that. I woke up here, kupo.”

“That’s what I was worried about,” Ritz said, sighing. “I guess we won’t know for sure. Do you have any regrets about it?”

“Of course not, kupo,” he replied. “If I knew I was going to, then I wouldn’t have helped Marche. I wanted to stop the lies spread by the palace. I think… in the end, it was all worth it for me, kupo. Even if I can’t remember, I think life did go on.”

“Though that Ivalice was a dream world, I’m pretty sure this place is real,” Ritz said. She felt the excitement bubbling up in her; she hadn’t voiced these thoughts to anyone yet, too afraid that if she spoke them into existence things would crumble around her. But she had been here for some time now, and it felt different. “And… if this world is real, then you and Marche won’t have to end it. We won’t have to go home this time. We just have to wait for everyone else to get summoned here, and then we can all be here together!”

“Is that so, kupo?” Montblanc asked, considering her words for a moment as he thoughtfully chewed his lip. “If that’s the case, I hope you’re right. It’d be nice to be friends with you this time, kupo!” He furrowed his brow. “Even though you’re all crazy to carry out engagements without the Judges here, kupo! Is it always like fighting in a jagd?”

Ritz grinned. Though she revealed her secret hopes, nothing fell apart, and it felt like a burden had lifted from her shoulders. “Unfortunately, yes – but we’re trying to fix all that. Well, we do have one Judge, Gabranth, but he’s not really the same kind… Ah, that doesn’t really matter.” She hurried after the others, ushering him along. “I just want to say – thank you, Montblanc! I completely agree!”


Character abilities

Previous character updates:

Lenna

ULT: Antilixir

Effect: Always deal critical damage

Lenna's ULT is a Mix (Elixir + Dark Matter) that comes from the Chemist job. After use, she will always deal critical damage.


Faris

ULT: Killer Cannon

Effect: Increased follow up damage

"Killer Cannon" is a Cannoneer ability. Open Fire is the more useful ability, which she already has, but Killer Cannon is a special cannonfire combination which in game deals more damage to human enemies. It doesn't have that trait here - instead, the ULT Effect is that she deals increased follow up damage in general.


Montblanc (Staff) Ice/Lightning magic damage, Ice/Lightning imperil, EX recast, Slow, turn steal

15: Quicken Blizzard

35: Thundaga

EX: Time Combo

LD: Slow

FR: Moogle Mirage Melody (with Tama & Serafie)

BT: Nutsy Flare

ULT: Trinity Combo (Effect: After using EX, all enemies get full imperil for 2 turns)

Burst theme: “Painful Battle,” the theme of non-hostile battles, such as in “A Moogle Bride,” a quest involving Montblanc

Though Montblanc can use any job, his default job is Black Mage and he is typically portrayed that way in his appearances. I gave him Black Mage spells and also Time Mage (the only other Moogle spellcasting job) for variety, and also because there are few Time Mages in the series. Thundaga is a Black Magic spell, obviously, while Slow comes from Time Mage, but he combines both jobs together for "Quicken Blizzard," while his Burst, "Nutsy Flare," is an original spin on a typical Black Mage spell. Combo abilities are a gameplay mechanic in FFTA, one for every job, but for the life of me I cannot remember where I got the "Trinity" part from in his ULT. I think I just liked the sound of it (maybe because it reminds me of Kingdom Hearts...? Lol).

He is primarily an Ice and Lightning magic damage dealer with imperils for both. Quicken Blizzard allows him to turn steal. He can also double cast his EX ability thanks to "freezing time." He has the unique debuff Slow, which delays enemies and makes them have fewer BRV attacks/HP dumps on their turns, which is probably his biggest use in battle. After using his ULT, all enemies have lower resistance to all elements for 2 turns.

Notes:

Though Ritz is a playable character in FFTA, she really only becomes playable in the post-game storyline, which is more or less an "alternate ending" where most of them don't end up going home. So this is following the "canon" storyline, where the St. Ivalice gang did all go back together, meaning this is technically the first time Ritz and Montblanc are in the same party.

Next character hint: A musical character who is safely held.

Chapter 32: Lost Chapter: Renewing Friendship's Melody

Notes:

Wow, here I am keeping the pace of a new Lost Chapter every two days... definitely won't be that quick for the next one, which will be a story chapter. I might've mentioned this in a previous note, but I do want to keep around 5 Lost Chapters between each story chapter. It used to be 3-5 on average, but now it's a solid 5 because I keep adding characters...

Anyway, this character was added to the roster very recently, so she was pretty lucky to make the cut. I think it's about time I mention my criteria for how I decide on additional characters. It's slightly different for offline games and MMOs, so here is my MMO criteria:

- 2-3 characters per major storyline OR major character overall (such as the Scions from XIV, or XI's "leading ladies")
- Primary humanoid villain
- Must appear in the main story instead of just side content
- Some kind of relationship/meaningful interaction with at least 1 other character
- They are prominent in the story with combat ability

So this new character is a representative from the Chains of Promathia storyline, whereas Lilith fulfilled the criteria for a Wings of the Goddess character + a primary villain. Originally, this character wasn't in it but I made room for her by "reclassifying" how another character counted for a different story.

I'll go into my offline game criteria with the next chapter, I think.

Anyway, last chapter's Force partnership:

Montblanc with Tama & Serafie: All three are cute "mascot" characters who guide the heroes on their journey.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: Renewing Friendship’s Melody


Ulmia ( Final Fantasy XI )

Voiced by: Nana Mizuki

Granddaughter of one of the elders of Tavnazia Safehold, where her people took shelter after the fall of the Marquisate near the end of the Crystal War. A talented singer for the Cathedral Choir, she was one of the first people to show kindness to Prishe, and subsequently became her closest friend. An elvaan who is demure and sometimes shy, she learns to stand up to her strict grandfather and is the only person capable of performing the last verse of the Lay of the Immortals, which can awaken the sleeping gods.

Ulmia


PRISHE


Prishe let out a jubilant shout as she leapt up over the bugard’s head and crashed down in a heel kick right on its skull, then punched so hard with a fist wreathed in wind that she blew all the leaves off a treant. She followed it up with a spinning kick that tore through the treant’s defenses, then rolled, crouched, and sprung up underneath the bugard’s chin in an uppercut that sent it flying. Both of her foes toppled and she went right on to the next.

“Wow, Prishe sure does have a lot of energy today!” said Vanille, following behind Prishe with her staff ready but nothing to really fight with it.

“Well, can you blame me?” Prishe shouted back, dodging the next bugard’s tusks before it could gouge her. “Look where we are!”

Rikku rushed toward a bugard with her daggers spinning. “It’s super pretty, but leave some fiends for the rest of us!”

Prishe finished off the last monster with a dropkick and then stood up straight, arms spread wide as if to encompass all the beauty of Lufaise Meadows for her companions. Tall grasses dotted with flowers stretched to the horizon, with lush forests swaying gently in the wind. Rams and sheep grazed and dozed at the edges of placid ponds. The whole sight made her ache for home more than anything else since she had come to this world and she couldn’t help but continue grinning.

“Welcome to Lufaise Meadows!” she said.

Celes sheathed her sword. “Is this place meaningful to you?”

“Sure is,” Prishe answered. “The place where I’m from, the Tavnazian Safehold, is near here. Well, I know it won’t actually be here in this world – but if this is here, then someone must’ve summoned it. And I think I have a good idea who did.”

Zack put his hands on his hips and grinned along with her. “Well, spill the beans! Who is it?”

“I’m thinking we’ll see Ulmia here,” Prishe said, clenching her fists excitedly. “She’s my best friend. If it’s anyone else, well… there’s a couple bastards it could be, but my bet’s on Ulmia.”

“I’m looking forward to meeting her, too!” said Vanille. “This meadow is beautiful, and it feels so peaceful. I can only imagine what it’s like to live here. Oh, I wonder if we can bring some sheep back for Ciaran’s farm?”

Rikku waved her arms at her. “What d’you expect us to do, carry them back?”

“It wasn’t always great here,” Prishe admitted, ignoring Vanille and Rikku's exchange - they'd figure it out. “It’s thanks to Ulmia that I even like Tavnazia at all, really.” She crouched down and hugged her knees, blanching as another thought occurred to her. “Well… I guess it’s not totally guaranteed to be Ulmia. I hope it’s not those damn Chebukki triplets. Those kids are way brattier than Palom ever was."

“Let us be swift in finding her,” said Celes. “It wouldn’t do to leave any new companions on their own for too long. Do you know of any particular places she might be?”

Prishe jumped up to her feet again. “Yeah, for sure! There’s one place Ulmia always liked going to sing…”


ULMIA


Her voice carried through the air as she sat at the cliffside, fingers gliding along her harp in tune with her song. The wind gently brushed her hair and the flowers at her feet, filling her nose with the fragrances of Lufaise Meadows. No matter how she felt, singing here never failed to bring her a measure of peace.

And peace she did find. Though she had found herself in this strange copy of her home, the town itself was nowhere to be seen. Even the ruins of the city proper were gone, and she did not quite know what to make of it yet. She also failed to find any people, much less Prishe. But she was safe here, happy in the embrace of her favorite melodies.

“What’s that terrible racket? It’s making me sick! Sick, sick, sick!”

The shrill voice behind her made Ulmia tense up, startled enough that she stopped playing. “Oh, my apologies, I hadn’t…” She turned to regard her surprise audience, eyes widening when she took in the sight of the figure with a painted face and garish clothes, as if like a jester. “...realized someone was here,” she finished.

“What makes you think you can interrupt my perfectly good day of blowing up Manikins by playing that earsore you call music!?” He clenched his fists and shook them at her, then dropped to the ground and rolled as he kicked and beat the grass. “I hate it, hate it, hate it!”

Ulmia stood and put a hand to her lips. “As I said, I am terribly sorry…” But when he didn’t stop, her eyes lit up as she realized what this was about. He may have been a little rude, but fools had a part to play whenever she heard about them in stories. “Oh, right! This is a performance, isn’t it? Blowing up… mannequins, you say?” Prishe sometimes practiced her martial arts on her training dummies, and she seemed particularly overjoyed whenever she punched them hard enough to make the wood shatter. “I have a friend who would sometimes do the same. She didn’t always know her own strength.”

The stranger froze his childlike tantrum and stared at her. “Oh?”

She wondered if there was something else he expected her to do. Whether she was supposed to continue playing music for his silly tantrum or play along. Perhaps she was meant to react with fear? Or joy? “Is there another song you’d like to hear instead?” she asked, smiling at him.

He somersaulted to his feet, then jumped up into the air where he remained, floating into a lounging position as he scratched himself and yawned. “Why do you think I’d want to hear any song?” he asked, rolling his eyes at her.

Ulmia clapped her hands at his display, laughing. “What a wonderful acrobatic stunt – and display of magic! You make it look so effortless.” He looked perplexed by her reaction, sitting up straight instead of lounging. “Well, to answer your question, wouldn’t music be a lovely accompaniment to a performance of yours?”

This time, it was his turn to laugh, a guffaw so loud that it disturbed the nearby wrens. “The only music I like is the sound of screaming!”

Ulmia’s smile faltered as she shook her head. What had she gotten wrong about this man? “That is a horrible thing to say. You are dressed as one who lives to spread happiness and joy. Why do you not live up to that ideal?”

“Enough of this! This is the part where you scream and wail and run away as I roast you alive,” he said, floating closer to her. She backed away toward the cliffside, wondering if she got herself in way over her head. “Oh wait, looks like you have nowhere to go, lady!”

Her grip tightened on her harp. His painted face showed no hint of jest or remorse – how had the situation changed so swiftly? “Did I do something to offend?” she asked.

The clown’s face contorted into a horrid grin. “Your whole existence off – ”

Then she saw Prishe appear as if from nowhere and slug him across the jaw.

“Don’t even try laying a finger on her, Kefka!” Prishe exclaimed, as the force of her strike sent the clown rolling across the grass. She rubbed her knuckles as four more strangers came up behind her.

“Prishe!” said Ulmia.

“You worm! How dare you!” Kefka yelped, flapping his arms. “You’re worse than a worm! Worse than the dirt that clings to a worm! Now I am going to wipe you from the face of this earth!”

“Oh, please don’t do that,” Ulmia said. “Kefka, was it? There is no need for this misunderstanding. If you would just like someone to watch you perform, you need only ask. Or perhaps we could even share the stage together.”

Kefka sputtered. “What? What makes you think anything besides the promise of sheer destruction would bring me joy? Seeing you all dead and strung up in a monument to nothingness is my only goal!”

Ulmia shook her head. “Well, I have seen a Keeper of the Apocalypse more fearsome than you. You’d be better suited to bringing smiles, as I said.”

“Uh, Ulmia, you’re just gonna make him angrier,” said Prishe.

“Haven’t your parents ever told you not to judge a book by its cover?” Kefka asked, after he recovered the use of his words again. “Oh, puh-lease. Now you’ve got me teaching clichés. I’m outta here – bye bye!”

When he vanished in a flash of light, Prishe and all of the others turned to Ulmia in disbelief.

“Amazing,” said a girl with bright red pigtails. “You got Kefka to leave without a fight!”

After Prishe made the introductions, Ulmia put a hand over her heart. “I apologize. I hadn’t realized Kefka was such a hated foe.”

The one named Celes shook her head. “No, Vanille was right. It’s quite something to make someone like him just leave. After our most recent run-in with him where he destroyed our airship, I wasn’t planning to back down, myself. Yet with only six of us we would have been hard-pressed to fight him. Even so, even thinking of the possibility of sharing a stage with a monster like him is enough to turn my stomach."

Rikku grinned. “That was my first time meeting Kefka, but I’ve heard all kinds of things about him. Just imagining you performing with that guy is outta this world. From the way Prishe was talking about you, though, you could totally do your own concert!”

Ulmia blushed. “Oh, if only you could hear the Cathedral Choir in its entirety. On my own, there is no way I would compare.”

“You sang for a cathedral, huh?” Vanille asked. “Sounds like you have fonder memories of that than I do.”

“Oh, yes,” Ulmia said, unsure what to make of Vanille’s comment. “Apologies if that comment stirred up anything unpleasant.”

“No, no, not at all!” Vanille said. “I’m sure Luxerion was way different than anything in your church.”

“We gotta introduce you to the others,” Zack said. “I’m sure we’d all love to hear you sing – we even have a stage for it back home!”

Ulmia hugged her harp close. “A stage? I am just fine performing in nature, like this…”

“Nah, you can have a whole new choir to sing with here,” said Prishe. “Celes has been pretty quiet about it, but she loves singing, too!”

“E-excuse me!” said Celes, turning away abruptly. “I’m a general – I’ve never performed in a choir!”

“And wait ‘til we tell ‘em all about how you stood up to Kefka,” Zack continued, clenching his fist. “Getting a guy like that to leave without fighting! You’re so brave, Ulmia!”

Oh dear – they had all gotten the wrong idea about her, hadn’t they? “You misunderstand. Between the two of us, Prishe is the brave one. And she is quite talented at singing as well, I promise you.”

“How many times do I have to tell you, Ulmia?” said Prishe, bouncing on her feet. “You’re braver than you give yourself credit for – and the better singer! Now let’s go, I’ve got so many things to show you. I’ve been waiting so long for you to join us!”

When her best friend ran ahead, headfirst into a new adventure as always, Ulmia smiled to herself. No matter what they faced, Ulmia would fight right alongside Prishe for as long as she was able.


Character abilities

Previous Character Updates:

Gilgamesh

ULT: Gilgamesh Morphing Time

Effect: Transformation, increased damage

Alternate Skins: FFVII, FFXII, FFXIII-2, FFXIV appearances

His ULT, of course, comes from his iconic transformation and his EX Mode attack in the original Dissidia games. After use, he gets to keep his multi-armed transformation and does more damage all around, like the other transformation characters. As alternate skins, he gets his various appearances from other games!


Dorgann

ULT: Mastered Holy Blade

Effect: Break delays enemies 1 extra turn

I gave Dorgann a Spellblade skill for his ULT, in keeping with his portrayal in this game. He also references the "Mastery" mechanic with it. After use, every time he breaks an enemy their break pushes them back one additional turn.


Ulmia (Unique - Harps) Non-elemental magic damage, buffs, buff improvement/extension, regen, battery

15: Blade Madrigal

35: Pianissimo

EX: Mage’s Ballad III

LD: Sentinel’s Scherzo

FR: Astral Song (with Lunafreya)

BT: Victory March

ULT: Clarion Call (Effect: Buff limit on party increased to 8)

Burst theme: “Memoro de La Stona,” the plot-important hymn to awaken the sleeping gods that she can sing

Ulmia's skills all come from her abilities as a Trust ally, or general abilities available to the Bard class. Unlike Bards in XI, though, some of these songs actually deal damage, like Blade Madrigal.

She has a unique mechanic with her Pianissimo skill. She selects an ally, and all active non-unique buffs on the party focus on that ally with triple potency & duration, while also effectively casting Dispel on her other allies. Not sure if that's actually terrible in practice, but she's got plenty of buffs herself that she can cast back on them (remember how I said I'm not good at balancing? I just like coming up with the general ideas, lol). After using her EX, allies do not spend any ability uses for 2 turns. Her LD, Sentinel's Scherzo, gives the party a big defense boost and Last Stand. She has a unique ULT effect where she raises the buff cap on allies to 8 slots (which can only be taken up by buffs, not debuffs), further cementing her role as a buffer. In addition, she generally has regen and battery capabilities.

Notes:

Alright, as I said in the beginning note, next one is a story chapter - we're up to Chapter 5 now! So no hints for the next 3 characters, sorry! ;)

Chapter 33: A5C5, Part 1: Lore Etched in Lightning

Notes:

Last time I promised I would reveal my character criteria for the single player entries, so here you go:

Requirements for single player entries:
- They must be from a FF title (or closely related spinoff that isn’t the start of its own series - so no Kingdom Hearts or Bravely Default, but I will have some Vagrant Story rep, for example)
- They are a fully playable or temporarily playable party member or guest (though not all playable characters from the Brave Exvius series, there are just way too many)
- Sub bullet to this one: They must be named and unique. So none of the Phantom Train ghosts from VI, or even VI's Biggs and Wedge because they have generic appearances and identical abilities with little to no personality.
- They are prominent in the story with combat ability* (*this is excusable if few representatives from their game, such as with Sherlotta)
- They are a recurring humanoid boss
- They must have some kind of relationship/meaningful interaction with another character
- They are a primary/prominent combat-capable humanoid villain

All that said, there are occasional exceptions! Both in favor of a character addition or against them to exclude the character. I'll discuss those as they come up.

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Ulmia with Lunafreya: Both have a unique and plot-important ability to awaken the gods.

Alright, let the "la-HEE"s commence (if you know, you know).

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Act 5, Chapter 5, Part 1: Lore Etched in Lightning


Emet-Selch ( Final Fantasy XIV )

Voiced by: Hiroki Takahashi

One of the three Unsundered Ascians who engineered the plot over eons to Rejoin the worlds and break the chains binding Zodiark, their god. An unmatched sorcerer of the ancient world, he longs to restore his civilization to its former glory. As a member of the Convocation of Fourteen, the name “Emet-Selch” is a title for the one who oversees the flow of the Lifestream; to his closest friends he was simply a man who could be affectionately pestered until he followed their whims.

Emet-Selch


Zangetsu ( Final Fantasy IV: The After Years )

Voiced by: Kazuhiro Yamaji

One of the Eblan Four and the eldest of Edge’s ninja apprentices. Known as Zangetsu of Lightning, he greatly admires his master despite being much older, and considers himself a “late bloomer” in regards to becoming a shinobi. Sprightly and always seeking to learn new things, he oft shares his wisdom with his fellow apprentices.

Zangetsu


Princess Sarah ( Final Fantasy )

Voiced by: Yoko Asagami

The elder princess of Cornelia and symbol of hope for her people. After being kidnapped by the errant knight Garland, it sets into motion a series of events that results in all four of the world’s crystals losing their light, yet also the salvation of her world. A dreamer at heart, Sarah adores her younger sister and playing music with her lute.

Princess Sarah


RYNE


Carbuncle’s tails waved rhythmically as Ryne and the others followed him along the sun-dappled trail after he had caught another whiff of a nearby Primal. She had been so transfixed by watching him walk ahead of her that she hadn’t even noticed the trees thickening until Y’shtola pointed out where they had arrived.

“Well, this is unexpected,” she said. “It seems we have come to the Rak’tika Greatwood.”

Ryne looked up. Lush greenery stretched high into the sky, leaves and branches overlapping into a thick canopy that cast more shadow the deeper inside they ventured. Moss and lichen crept over the trees and the ground, soft and loamy with a body of water in the distance that she recognized as Lake Tusi Mek’ta. The bulbous tree at the center of the lake glowed with inner aether, guiding travelers through the occasionally perilous and difficult to navigate wood.

“Where those who worshiped the dark took shelter from the all-encompassing light of the First Shard…” Alphinaud said, his voice almost reverent. “I will never forget our journey through here.”

Garnet turned to Ryne. “The First Shard… the reflection of the world where you come from, if I remember correctly?”

Ryne nodded. “It is. Though I only came here for the first time with the Scions.” She smiled as she looked toward Y’shtola. “Y’shtola lived here for a time. Perhaps since we are once again under its boughs, we should all resume calling you ‘Master Matoya,’ like we used to?”

The Warrior of Light’s armor rattled as he moved from surveying their surroundings to regard Y’shtola. “You went by the name Matoya? I am familiar with that name.”

Y’shtola sighed, looking away from them both. “That will not be necessary. It is customary among the Night’s Blessed to use a different name, so I borrowed the name of my master while I lived among them.”

“And these people were devoted to the dark?” Arc asked. “That sounds like the practices of ancient people in my world.”

Alisaie raised a finger as if she was in a classroom. “In a world where light-aspected Sin Eaters caused terror for a hundred years, it was only natural for people to turn to worshiping the dark.”

“Thankfully in this world we have restored balance between light and dark, so we should not encounter these Sin Eaters,” said the Warrior of Light. “Y’shtola, since this place is familiar to you, would you mind taking the lead?”

“Not at all,” she replied. “I would be pleased to come across the Ronkan ruins here, as well – if we are fortunate, we may even glean knowledge of the state of this world from their ancient tablets… provided it is not just the same writing I have discovered on the First.”

“Ronka!” Krile exclaimed. “We have an ancient Ronkan Empire in our world, and we’ve found plenty of their ruins. I wonder if they look the same here!”

“Another fascinating similarity,” said Y’shtola, her flattened ears betraying how much she sought to sink her teeth into this mystery. Ryne herself didn’t know what to make of Krile’s world having something in common with the First. “Carbuncle, have you yet determined which Primal is our quarry this time?”

Carbuncle sniffed the air, stopping his determined stride to turn around in circles. Ryne was reminded of a hunting hound. “Based on the concentration of lightning aether… I am thinking this time we are to deal with Ramuh.”

The others of their current travel party – Rydia, Terra, and Tama – all reacted with recognition. Tama spun and rose higher into the air. “Ramuh? He’s the-always been the strictest of the Pleiad! He can keep all the other the-rogue summons in line once we find him!” she said.

Rydia faltered a little bit at Tama’s words. “Strictest? Well… he is known to dole out judgment on the wicked with his lightning bolts. So he might be really dangerous, but he is also wise. I can’t imagine that he wouldn’t hear us out, at least!”

“Ramuh is indeed a wise sage in my world, as well,” said Terra. “It was his mind that called out to me when I lost control of my powers and rampaged, and he watched over me while I recovered. I have so much respect for him… so if he has been corrupted, I want to reach out to him this time and return the favor.”

“And if we can speak to him, then we may not need to find those ruins,” said Garnet. “Ramuh is an eidolon with great knowledge of ancient lore and legends. He could tell us all we need to know.”

Krile pumped her fist into the air. “This seems like just the kind of place he’d be, too. In stories he was always the sort of wise old sage to wander around in the forest. That’s how we found him!”

“It’s amazing that he is so similar in all of our worlds,” said Arc. “His great power and wisdom would surely be a boon to have.”

“Though it is strange he would appear here in the Rak’tika Greatwood, and not where we encountered him in our world,” said Alphinaud, rubbing his chin. “Do you remember, Y’shtola? He is the deity of the sylphs, so it was in the depths of the forested Sylphlands where the Scions met him.”

Y’shtola peered at Alphinaud from the corner of her eye. “It is perhaps you that needs your memory triggered. I seem to recall that you were not present for that debacle. Traipsing about in that labyrinth of a forest as we contended with tracking him down, suffering the trickery of those sylphs, while you were otherwise occupied with your Crystal Braves.”

Alphinaud’s shoulders slumped. “Ah, right…”

“Open mouth, insert foot,” said Alisaie, chuckling. “When will you learn, dear brother?”

Ryne laughed as she walked along. Though she did find it strange that their Primal would choose a locale on the First for his appearance, she did recall a version of Ramuh that they had summoned to surge the barren lands of the Empty with lightning aether. “The Ramuh I know has the lower body of a horse,” she said.

Everyone stopped to look at her. “Er, what’s wrong with the Ramuh of your the-world?” Tama asked.

Ryne blushed. “Well, perhaps those were different circumstances…”


FANG


Cater ran ahead with her magicite gun, firing magical blasts that covered the vines and tendrils of a plant monster in a layer of rime. With it frozen in place, Kimahri took the chance to leap up high and impale it on his spear, while Gabranth sliced off the other vines that flailed in its death throes. Fang turned her attention back to the giant horned beetle caught between her and Lightning, finishing it off with a shout of triumph before it could skewer either one of them.

Fang breathed in deep of the forest, exhaling with a grin. The Rak’tika Greatwood smelled alive, earthy and wet and fragrant with flowers and ferns. Birds and insects trilled in the distance, coming together in a chorus the likes of which they rarely encountered in this world.

“Enjoying yourself?” Lightning asked, dismissing her blade.

Fang propped her spear up on her shoulder. “That obvious, huh?” Out of habit, she knelt to check the severed vines of the plant monster for leaves or fibers they could use. “So this Ramuh’s an old man in every world? I know he’s given us his power a few times here, but how sure are we that we can find him?”

“It won’t be hard,” said Cater. “Just gotta find an old coot slinging lightning around. Aren’t you guys familiar with him?”

“Ramuh’s a fal’Cie in our world, but not an eidolon,” said Lightning. “It’s actually Odin who wields lightning for us.”

“I have no knowledge of Ramuh,” said Gabranth. 

Alongside him, Kimahri shook his head. “Kimahri knows only Ixion.”

“Well let’s hope he’s not hiding inside someone like Alexander and Diabolos were,” said Fang. She smirked at Lightning. “Or maybe he liked the sound of your name and hitched a ride.”

Lightning scoffed. “As if. Well, this is great. None of us really know him.”

A cracking noise split the air, like the snapping of a tree, causing all of them to turn in the direction of the sound.

“But we do know what thunder sounds like,” said Fang. “Let’s go!”

They ran through the trees, leaping from root to root over the shallow parts at the edge of the lake. After Fang cut through a canopy of vines, they emerged in another clearing where an old man swung lightning at the end of his staff to smite a raptor. He jumped up high, spreading his arms so that his clothes fanned out, floating on the wind for a moment out of his enemy’s reach before crashing back down and spearing it with the sound of another thunder strike.

“Well, that was easy!” Cater exclaimed, taking aim. She fired her gun just as everyone drew their weapons, but Ramuh crossed his staff in front of himself to block the attack.

“What is the meaning of this?” he asked, lightning crackling at the end of his staff. “Who might you young folk be? I believe this is a misunderstanding!”

“Eh, save it, Ramuh,” said Fang, hefting her spear as she approached with Gabranth and Kimahri. “Easy now, old man – they tell us you’re wise, so do the wise thing and stand down.”

“Ramuh?” said the old man, blinking. His perplexed reaction gave her pause. “You stand before Zangetsu of Lightning, of the Eblan Four! Is Ramuh not the name of an eidolon?”

“Are we mistaken?” said Gabranth, sword arm faltering.

“That’s what one of the corrupted eidolons would want us to think!” said Cater, taking aim again. Fang was about to reach out and stop her, thinking they should at least hear him out, when a rain of shuriken struck the ground in front of her and a cloud of smoke appeared just as she shot her gun. When the smoke cleared, Edge stood in front of the man who called himself Zangetsu.

“Just in time,” said Edge, weapons drawn. Shadow had appeared as well, standing on Zangetsu’s other side. “It’s alright, Cater. He’s one of ours.”

“Master!” said Zangetsu, lowering his weapon – which Fang realized was a spear, not a staff. “Might you explain what is going on?”

“Master?” Fang asked. “Don’t you mean student?”

“Not by any means,” said Zangetsu. “I am one of Master Edge’s ninja apprentices.”

“Whoa, that’s cool!” said Cater. “Sorry for almost shooting ya, old man.”

“I think we got off on the wrong foot,” said Lightning. “Edge, care to introduce us?”

After they had filled Zangetsu in on his summoning, he seemed to take it in stride.

“It’s the ninja fortitude,” Cater said. “Cool, calm, and collected! Edge must be a great teacher.”

Zangetsu shook his head. “When you get to be my age, little surprises you. And I like to keep an open mind – you never know when a new experience may come your way. I’d say this certainly counts!”

“The others aren’t here yet, are they?” Edge asked. “You’re the first of the Eblan Four to make it to this world, Zangetsu.”

“If they are here, I am unaware of it,” he said. Zangetsu bowed deeply to them all, as if presenting himself as a student to each of them. Fang scratched the back of her head, unused to such formality. “But if I am the first, then I must represent your teachings to the best of my ability! It is my pleasure to meet you all.”

“It takes a great master to inspire such loyalty,” said Gabranth. “Edge must be a skilled teacher.”

“Yeah, yeah,” said Edge, face unreadable beneath his mask, but he appeared to retreat into his scarf a little. “Let’s not overdo it, now. Zangetsu, we’re here to look for Ramuh. Let’s show everyone what the Eblan Four are made of and put those surveillance skills to work.”

“Of course, Master!” Zangetsu replied, and he leapt into the trees to flit among the treetops without another word.

Shadow crossed his arms. “Where can I get students like that?” he said. He disappeared in a flash as well, no doubt off to join Zangetsu in the search.

Fang hung her spear on her back, exchanging a glance with Kimahri and Lightning. “That old man’s got more energy than I do. Then again, I think it’s a safe bet that I’m older.”


RYNE


The settlement of Slitherbough that normally should have been in Rak’tika Greatwood wasn’t there – rather, they found only the tunnels and caves that the Night’s Blessed used as their homes. It was like they had found the ghost of a village instead, a memory of what had once been there. Continuing onward with Thancred, the twins, Tyro, Fran, and the Warrior of Light, however, they eventually came across wooden platforms raised high around the trunks of trees: the village of Fanow.

“The likeness to my home village of Eruyt is… comforting,” Fran said, pausing at the village entrance before it ascended on a ramp into the treetops. “If viera live here as well, then our cultures really are not so unlike each other. For a blessing, this Wood does not reject me, but neither can I hear Its voice.”

Rather than viis – the viera of the First – Ryne spotted Manikins peeking at them from higher up. “Just like we hoped,” she said. “We can ask these Manikins if they know anything of Ramuh.”

“Tread carefully,” said Thancred. “We can’t be sure if they are open to visitors.”

“Oh, it appears that they are,” said Alisaie, with surprising venom in her voice.

Ryne followed her line of sight and gasped when she saw the figure in black and gold, with a streak of white through his otherwise dark hair. He stood among the Manikins with his slouched posture as always. Ryne could see the tiredness in his eyes when he noticed them at the same time as they noticed him. His nostrils flared and he strode toward them purposefully, descending down the ramp without pausing even as Thancred, Ryne, and Alisaie drew their weapons.

“Twelve forfend… Emet-Selch!” Alphinaud exclaimed.

“You,” Emet-Selch said, stopping barely a stone’s throw away. He still stood higher than them, pointing a finger at their group. “It’s not enough that I was ripped back from my endless rest, mired in a world that seems a pale shadow of a reflection , but lo and behold I find you lot at the center of it all. I thought I was clear that I was not to be disturbed again from my impending dispersal into the Lifestream?”

“A foe, I take it?” asked the Warrior of Light, following their lead in drawing his sword.

“Not one I remember from their records,” said Tyro.

“One of our mightiest and most despicable,” said Thancred, fists clenched over the hilts of his daggers. “An Ascian. And an Unsundered Paragon, no less – a sorcerer of the ancient world that caused the demise of untold people and worlds.”

Emet-Selch scoffed at him. “This again? Yes, yes, your unbendable will prevailed against mine. Now where is your oh-so-esteemed ‘Warrior of Light and Darkness’ friend? Your numbers appear to be lacking, and I would sooner converse with the one who is usually more amenable.”

“They’re not here,” Alphinaud said, guarded. “This is no mere copy of the First Shard. We find ourselves in a completely different world, where the dead have come back to life along with those of a myriad of other worlds.”

“And aren’t you lucky to be one of the warriors chosen to populate it,” said Alisaie, scowling. “We’re about as happy for it as you are. But as you said, we’ve defeated you once – we can do it again.”

Emet-Selch rolled his eyes. “I’ve heard all your empty platitudes of friendship and determination so I’d rather not suffer them again. Did it even occur to you that I may not be here for a fight? Clearly you all have me at a disadvantage, newly revived and as helplessly ignorant about the world as a babe.” He took a few more steps in his descent, making them all brace themselves again, but stopped when he was at level with them. “So here I am, at the mercy of what information you’d all care to share.”

“And you’d expect us to trust you not to use it against us?” Alisaie asked through grit teeth.

“You should never trust me,” Emet-Selch said with a shrug. “But fine, if you prefer to hold your cards close, what of you?” He looked toward the Warrior of Light, Tyro, and Fran. “I haven’t a clue who you are, so I assume we have not wronged each other already. Are you more willing to share?”

The Warrior of Light looked back at Thancred, Ryne, and the twins, hesitating a moment before turning back to Emet-Selch. “This is all knowledge that the gods would typically impart upon their chosen warriors, so in their absence I see no reason why you should not know. This is a world that is ever-growing and ever-changing, with warriors from many worlds chosen to defend it from threats of all kinds – though there are some summoned who wish it harm. It is meant to be a World of Respite where we no longer suffer death, but those who uphold those protections have fallen to a corruption that endangers us all.”

“I think that about covers it,” said Tyro. “The short version, anyway.”

“Happy now?” said Alisaie. “So now you can go on your way.”

Emet-Selch said nothing for a moment, looking over their party. Ryne found herself thinking that she had never seen him look so alone. He let out a heavy sigh. “I’m not so sure I will,” he said in response to Alisaie. “I feel I will regret this immensely – but I propose cooperation. As we once had in this very forest.”

“After you ended it by quite literally shooting one of our allies in the back?” Thancred asked, brow furrowed. “I don’t think so. You’ve said yourself that you find humanity to be wanting. Pardon us if we have no reason to assume your viewpoint has changed.”

“Even after I conceded that you won?” Emet-Selch asked, scoffing again. “After you proved that your people could overcome what the Unsundered of eld could not. Your precious friend summoned Hythlodaeus and myself from the Lifestream for aid in your titanic clash against that entelechy, and we answered . We entrusted our legacy to you.”

Ryne frowned and looked at the others. “Entelechy? Do you know what he refers to?” Did something else happen with Emet-Selch after they returned to the Source? She gasped as she remembered their friend coming back to the First to inform her of the phenomenon plaguing them on the Source. “Is this related to the Final Days? It was my understanding that dynamis was threatening the Source and all the Shards, but you all stopped it.”

Alphinaud floundered before finding his words again. “No, that does not sound familiar. The concept of the same Final Days that brought an end to the Ancients also affecting our time is frightening, but I am heartened to hear that we stopped it. Though it is disconcerting that we still lack memories.”

Emet-Selch raised an eyebrow. “Is that so?”

He looked like he was about to say something more when a booming noise erupted from deeper in the forest, so clamorous that it made the trees shake. The Manikins in Fanow scattered as the booming became louder and a moment later Ryne realized it was the roll of thunder. Flashes lit up the sky – penetrating even the thick canopy – and a few bolts struck the trees, making them burst into flame.

“Ramuh approaches,” said the Warrior of Light, and no sooner than he had spoken, a pillar of lightning coiled in the space just beyond Fanow, coalescing into a crackling snake before a flash of blinding light revealed the wizened Ramuh in its place. His beard rippled as magic flowed from the end of his staff which he held aloft to summon stormclouds just above the treeline. “He is targeting the Manikins!”

Fran made her way to higher ground first, shooting arrows as she ran that fizzled before they could strike Ramuh. Alisaie followed right at her heels with an assault of magical gemstones blooming in the shape of a rose, gathering Ramuh’s attention and interrupting the judgment he had been about to serve to the Manikins.

“Lure him to solid ground!” Thancred exclaimed, joining the fray with his daggers. He made his way to attack from another angle alongside Tyro, Alphinaud, and the Warrior of Light, leaving Ryne alone with Emet-Selch.

The air felt heavy with the pulse of electricity as Ramuh’s magic hummed. Ryne watched him focus his ire on Alisaie and Fran and then turned to Emet-Selch, who stood still with a sullen frown as he watched the battle unfold. “You have to help us!” she said.

He looked from Ramuh to Ryne as if he had forgotten she was there. “What?”

“I know how much power you wield,” she said. “Once, you had refused to help us in battle, insisting that we had to face our foes on our own. But I ask you again, knowing all I do now: you can aid us, as a show of good faith.”

He looked away from her with a groan. “You pester me.”

“Please,” she said, putting a hand over her heart. “I know this is in your power, Hades.”

“You know, it’s improper to use the name of a Convocation member like that.” Emet-Selch dragged a hand down his face and pinched the bridge of his nose. “Fine, fine! As a show of good faith. If only to put a stop to your incessant begging.”

He walked toward Ramuh, held his right hand straight up in the air, and snapped his fingers.

An orb of darkness cut a hole in the air in front of Ramuh, devouring the conjured cage of lightning he summoned around Fran and Alisaie’s tree. Black chains shot from the orb to coil around Ramuh’s staff, yanking him toward the ground. Emet-Selch threw out another hand and spears of darkness materialized around Ramuh, striking and piercing his defenses. Ramuh groaned with a rumble that sounded like more thunder, releasing more lightning with a clap of his hand against the ground that spread out in a shockwave. Emet-Selch floated above it, but then snapped his fingers again and they all disappeared in a flash of light.

Ryne fell to her knees in a different part of the forest, blinking away the patterns of lightning on the backs of her eyelids. Emet-Selch stood before them all as the others stood back on their feet. He had teleported them all away.

“He was preparing a spell I am not sure you would have withstood,” Emet-Selch said, before any of them could question him. “I judged it necessary to save all of your lives.”

“You have our gratitude,” said the Warrior of Light, looking around at all of the others as if to usher them to say the same.

Tyro sat down and opened his tome. “How strange… Ramuh used attacks I’ve never seen before…”

“I am not certain if the Neo-Manikins managed to escape,” said Fran.

“Those ‘Manikins’ were able to run thanks to your foolish and heroic charge,” said Emet-Selch, lips pinched as if he tasted something foul.

Thancred and the twins seemed as if they struggled to bite their tongues, but Ryne put a hand over her heart as she turned to Emet-Selch. “Thank you,” she said. “Now that we know what Ramuh is capable of, we will have time to plan our next course of action.”

Emet-Selch rolled his eyes at her and turned away.


GALUF


After Galuf had learned of the others’ clash with Ramuh, the darkness of Rak’tika Greatwood intensified further as black stormclouds seemed to blanket the entirety of the forest. Thunder shook the earth and lightning occasionally webbed across the pockets of sky they could see through the canopy, but the clouds yet refused to break with rain. It made his bones ache as they descended down a slope toward a collection of pyramids and ruins that the others said had belonged to a Ronkan Empire.

Cecil approached from down the slope with an old man at his side that Galuf didn’t recognize, so he assumed this was their new ally, Zangetsu. “Greetings, my friends – are you well?” Cecil asked, coming to a stop slightly below them. “I’d like to introduce you to Zangetsu, an ally of ours and ninja student to Edge. Zangetsu, this is Galuf, Regis, Strago, and Relm.”

“Another crusty old guy,” said Relm, blanching. “Great.”

“Relm!” Strago reprimanded. “Be polite to our new allies!”

Zangetsu laughed. “No, no – she may be right! It was to avoid becoming ‘crusty’ that I sought to reinvent myself and learn new skills by apprenticing to Master Edge. I cannot fault the youth for perceiving us this way!”

Galuf nodded, impressed. “Oho! So it was as an elder that you decided to do something new? I think all us old men could learn from your example.”

“Yes, I agree,” said Regis, tapping his cane against the ground. “There is always an opportunity to learn new things, no matter our age. That is something I can respect.”

Zangetsu crossed his arms, eyes staring upward as if trying to recall something. “That said, I have been an apprentice for nearly twenty years now. You’d think I’d achieve mastery by this point!”

“Ah, well,” said Regis, faltering slightly. “We all learn at different paces. Sometimes you are not ready for moving onto the next level yet. I see no reason to rush.”

“Other than dying of old age,” Relm quipped.

“Pardon my granddaughter,” Strago said. “She will say whatever comes to mind.”

“There’s no harm in that. She’ll keep us old folks on our toes!” said Zangetsu, grinning.

Cecil nodded to Galuf and the others. “Might you escort Zangetsu to the ruins? Perhaps you can all help keep the perimeter around them safe while Y’shtola and our other scholars do their research. I believe they are surveying the ruins to see what they may find different from Y’shtola’s world.”

“I am told that Y’shtola has a habit of ignoring her surroundings while she works,” Zangetsu said.

“Entrusted with bodyguard work already?” said Galuf. “Of course, we would be honored to help.”

After Cecil left, Strago snickered. “It would be nice to sit and rest once we got there… watch the clouds, reminisce about past adventures…”

“I am not opposed to taking it slow,” said Regis. “There is much to catch Zangetsu up on.”

“Oh, no – I’m afraid there won’t be time for that,” said Zangetsu. “There is much work to be done and foes to fight. Hup, hup – let’s get moving, my friends.”

“Perhaps he has more energy than the rest of us old men,” said Galuf, slumping.

“Y’know, maybe he’s not as crusty as you guys,” said Relm, nodding approvingly. She looked off into the distance, squinting suddenly. “Hey, is there something wrong with the Warrior of Light? And does anyone else hear that music?”

They all turned to regard the knight as he approached, alone, but Galuf strained to hear music. It was so faint that he wouldn’t have noticed it if Relm hadn’t pointed it out. The Warrior of Light barely seemed to register them, walking forward in a way that made him seem almost in a trance. Galuf stepped closer, waving as he entered the Warrior of Light’s field of vision. “Are you all right?” he asked.

The Warrior of Light looked startled to see him. “My apologies, Galuf. But… don’t you hear that melody? It is familiar to me, and I must find its source.”


RYNE


She had never seen the Warrior of Light act this way as they followed him down the trail. He always seemed so stoic, full of purpose – not unlike a certain other warrior she knew – but as the music grew clearer he seemed increasingly concerned, sharing little more than that he knew its source.

“Whatever it is, it is a beautiful song,” said Ulmia. “I believe it is coming from a lute.”

“Do we have time to chase mysterious music through a dark forest with a godlike enemy?” Wol asked. “Ramuh can appear at any time and we still don’t have a plan for stopping him.”

“It is coming from a new ally,” said the Warrior of Light. “I’m certain of it. One that I never expected to see here.”

“Someone from your world?” said Rem, eyes wide. “Wow, that’s rare! After all this time, we still haven’t met any friends of yours. Garland certainly doesn’t count.”

The music stopped. The Warrior of Light tensed for a moment, then quickened his pace, giving Ryne the impression that something had gone wrong. They all followed and it turned into a run – the music had been so soft and gentle that its absence felt like danger. It even made the thunder feel far away.

They came to a clearing where a woman in a dress and lifted veil sat on a log, lute in hand. She didn’t appear to be hurt, or in danger – she had splayed out her sheer golden dress as if she had been sitting and waiting for quite some time. Ryne thought she was beautiful.

The Warrior of Light approached and knelt at the edge of the clearing. “Princess,” he said, head bowed.

The princess raised her eyes, but though she did not stand she appeared to be on guard for the new arrivals. “Sir knight,” she said. “Are you pledged to Cornelia?”

“I am, my lady, ever and always,” he said in response. “Princess Sarah. Are you well?”

“Princess Sarah, of Cornelia?” Wol said to Ryne and the others, still standing at the edge of the clearing. “Heh… figures.”

“I am unharmed, if that is what you mean,” Sarah said, looking past the Warrior toward all the others for the first time. “Though I must admit ignorance to my current situation. I know not where I am.”

“I can tell you all you need to know,” the Warrior of Light said.

“The music only stopped because she needed to tune her lute,” Ulmia said. “Seems there was nothing to worry about after all.”

“Rise, knight of Cornelia,” Sarah said. “Are these friends of yours?”

“Wow, she’s so proper and dignified,” said Rem, clasping her hands together and smiling. “I’m so glad that our Warrior of Light has reunited with a dear friend.”

“Dear friend?” said Sarah, tilting her head. “I’m afraid I do not know this knight personally. But you say he is a Warrior of Light? As if from legend?”

The Warrior of Light stood, but if he was disheartened by her lack of recognition, he didn’t show it. Ryne ached for him, well aware of how it felt to be reunited with friends who didn’t immediately remember her. “So you don’t remember him?” Ryne asked. “Ah… maybe the memory will return, as it has for others.”

“He’s the kind of guy that is right out of a prophecy,” said Wol, smirking. “So yeah, probably the legend you’re thinking of. The rest of us are from different worlds, though.”

Sarah straightened her posture. “Other worlds?” she asked, and she stood to look out further over the forest. “What a strange story… but looking upon this place, I am inclined to believe it. Please, spare no effort in explaining what has happened.”

Ulmia walked up to her side and propped out her arm when the Warrior of Light appeared to hesitate. “I would be happy to tell you what I know,” she said, guiding the princess back down the path they came from.

When they walked ahead, Ryne spared a look heavy with sympathy for the Warrior. “It’s okay to be upset she doesn’t remember you,” she said. “I am sure she will find her fragmented memories here soon enough.”

The Warrior of Light shook his head with a distant smile. “I’m not so sure she will. After Chaos had been defeated, the time loop was broken and it was as if my adventure never happened. So if this Princess Sarah doesn’t know me… then she comes from a world where there was no Chaos or Four Fiends. As far as she is concerned, we have never met before.”

“That’s horrible,” said Rem, putting a hand over her mouth. “After all this time, you finally reunite with someone from your world only for them to have no knowledge of you…”

“Please do not worry for me,” he said. “I think it is better this way.”

When he followed in the wake of Sarah and Ulmia without another word, Ryne exchanged a glance with Rem and Wol. Wol crossed his arms, staring at the Warrior’s retreating back. “He may say that,” he said, “but it’s obvious he’s more bothered by it than he lets on. He should be more open with his friends.”


JACK GARLAND


Though she had pink hair and a golden yellow dress, Jack recognized the woman among the other familiar warriors at once. Princess Sarah, of all people, here? She stood among the pyramids, struck with awe and surrounded by several of the others that seemed to become fast friends with her. She was ethereal. Radiant. Why had the damned crystal chosen her to fight on its behalf? She deserved better than this. 

“That’s Sarah, isn’t it?” Neon asked, walking up behind him. “What’re you doing all the way over here? Go and talk to her.”

Jack stood just beyond the four pyramids that marked the entrance to the Ronkan ruins, leaning against one with his arms crossed. Sarah wouldn’t be able to see him around the corner. “That’s not my Sarah,” he said. “She’s from another world, another time. Lufenian bullshit.”

“You could still stop being an idiot and just talk,” Neon said.

He scoffed. “Nah, it’s better this way.”

Lightning flashed and struck the top of one of the pyramids, splitting the stone at its peak and raining dust and debris down below. Electricity pulsed just above it and in a whirl of robes, Ramuh materialized, arms spread wide as he gathered magic at the tip of his staff. Jack and Neon called their swords and rushed into the fray as smaller elementals appeared – like Ramuh in miniature.

“Ramuh has returned!” someone shouted. “How have we not sensed him coming?”

“He’s summoned egis!” Alphinaud warned, codex opened as he summoned his own Carbuncle. “Be on your guard!”

Jack found himself standing in front of Sarah, who to her credit had not run away. She pulled out her lute and her fingers hovered just above its strings. One of their new allies, a man in black and gold, snapped his fingers and magic flared to life to consume several of the egis at once. The conflagration roared and expanded in Ramuh’s direction, who pointed his staff at the ball of fire and electricity exploded, bursting outward with force and heat. Jack braced his sword in front of himself and Sarah, and then leapt into battle before the smoke cleared.

He cleaved two egis as he made his way to Ramuh, jumping up high to come down on Ramuh with an executioner’s swing. Wordlessly, Ramuh swung his staff and lightning struck Jack from above to stun him before the staff collided with him and flung him bodily into one of the pyramids. Neon shouted something and attacked alongside Y’shtola and Ryne, a gust of wind magic clearing the smoke and dust.

Jack shook his head and leaned on his sword to stand again, but was distracted from Ramuh by an armored figure dashing between the pyramids. He realized a moment too late that it was Garland, and he was fixated not on Ramuh, but on Sarah – and Jack was too far away to stop whatever he had planned. Ramuh became irrelevant. Jack ran to intercept Garland as fast as he could. Sarah herself noticed him too late, turning just in time for Garland to punch a gauntlet into her stomach, making her double over, and then he slung her over his shoulder in one smooth movement.

“SARAH!” Jack shouted, reaching for her. “You bastard!”

Garland barely looked at him and turned away. Just one glance, almost like a taunt. A reminder. A memory.

Jack heard a fingersnap that silenced all other noise. Then light flashed again, and Ramuh’s lightning tore up the ground, and white hot pain lanced through Jack’s entire body.


Character abilities

Previous character updates:

Kelger

ULT: Wild Wolf March

Effect: Increased trap damage

Kelger's ULT name is technically original but it is meant to evoke one of the Ranger's "Animal" abilities combined with the Bard song "Mighty March." I like how his DFFOO skill set gives him some Ninja and Bard abilities because that's just a neat combo, so I threw Ranger in there too. After use, his trap damage is increased.


Xezat

ULT: Dark Flare

Effect: When striking native weakness, attack twice

Though he's typically characterized as a Mystic Knight, he's also noted for his powerful magic abilities. Dark Flare is one of a Necromancer's Dark Arts, and since he's the Dawn Warrior most associated with magic I gave it to him because I thought it would be fun, and a nice balance to Galuf having some Gladiator skills. After use, whenever he strikes an enemy's native elemental weakness (meaning their weakness before any Imperils), he will attack twice.


Emet-Selch (Unique - Gloves) Dark magic damage, BRV poison, overhead BRV storing/release, traps, dark imperil/enchant, FR charger

15: Titanomachy

35: Hellborn Yawp

EX: Shadowstream

LD: Nether Blast

FR: Archmagi (with Doga)

BT: The Dark Devours - Black Cauldron

ULT: Gigantomachy (Effect: Enemies that heal themselves suffer damage instead)

Burst theme: “Invincible,” second phase boss theme against Hades, the final boss of Shadowbringers

Alternate Skin: His appearance in A World Unsundered; his Ascian robe

All of his ability names come from his boss fight as Hades in "The Dying Gasp" duty at the end of base Shadowbringers. He is a heavy damage dealing Dark magic attacker with the matching Dark Imperil/Enchant, capable of using a BRV Poison debuff. He can also store BRV in an overhead buff similar to Astos, he has traps, and on top of that he's a Force charger. His ULT effect prevents enemies from healing or "batterying" themselves. Maybe a pretty loaded kit, but he's a powerful character.


Zangetsu (Spears) Lightning ranged damage, high jump with follow ups, launch counter, Lightning imperil

15: Human Kite

35: Shadowbind Blitz

EX: Flash Twin Break

LD: Mecha-Kite

FR: Battering Storm (with Raijin)

BT: Wheel of Elements: Shock

ULT: Lightning Strike (Effect: Follow up damage increase)

Burst theme: “Land of Dwarves,” map theme for the Underworld, which he is associated with due to spying on the dwarves

Zangetsu's abilities come mostly from his Band options, with Shadowbind and Blitz being two ninjutsu he has access to. His Burst is a Band he uses with the other Eblan Four with a unique addition, "Shock," differentiating it and making it his own. His ULT is an original ability.

Like other spear users, he is a ranged attacker, but one who focuses on Lightning damage with a Lightning Imperil. Similar to Kain and Freya, he has the "high jump" mechanic where he becomes untargetable and uses follow ups.

Also, now enemies can also use some of the mechanics that we use against us - namely, launching. Zangetsu has "launch counter" capabilities, and the way I'd envision that is when an enemy launches any party member, he attacks the foe in response and it deals bonus damage as if the enemy was launched themselves. IDK, I thought it might be fun, and I had to come up with some new mechanics to make each character feel a little different. :P

Notes:

So, regarding Sarah. In DFFOO, I have always liked that the Warrior of Light and Garland are the only two representatives from FFI because they act as great foils/mirror images and balanced foes to each other. That said, DFFOO already played that out for all it's worth IMO, and Sarah herself is an iconic character and playable in several spinoff appearances, so I am justifying her inclusion.

Chapter 34: A5C5, Part 2: Ode to Levin

Notes:

Sorry this one took a while. I had a really busy week last week.

Last chapter's Force partnerships:

Emet-Selch with Doga: Both are ancient and powerful mages noted for being the absolute masters of their art.

Zangetsu with Raijin: Both are sidekicks to another character and they are associated with lightning.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Act 5, Chapter 5, Part 2: Ode to Levin


NEON


With the unpredictability of a summer storm, Ramuh retreated after the combined effort of all their currently gathered mages and fighters managed to overpower him. Neon’s ears continued to ring, deafening her to all other sound, as she stumbled around the Ronkan ruins in the wake of his departure. The storm clouds lingering above the treetops finally broke with rain, pooling at the bottom of the uneven slope and soaking the ground with mud. Neon checked on her allies while the healers went around to administer treatment to anyone who needed them most, but thankfully no one seemed to sustain any serious wounds.

“Jack!” She ran over to her friend when she noticed him stumbling away from the pyramids with angry, jagged burns running up his arms. He didn’t pay them or her any mind, even as his limbs twitched in obvious pain. “Jack, you’re hurt!”

“Doesn’t matter,” he said with a grunt, fixated on stumbling straight ahead. “That asshole’s got Sarah. I’m going to find him.”

“Who does?” Neon asked, catching up to him. The ringing in her ears stopped. “Who has Sarah?”

“Who else?” Jack said through grit teeth. “Garland. And he’s going to pay.”


ALPHINAUD


He couldn’t stop revisiting the memory of fighting alongside Emet-Selch in his head. Walking through the Rak’tika Greatwood, he kept expecting to encounter Sin Eaters, so Alphinaud was already on edge as it was.

Twice now the Ascian had directly offered his aid to the Scions and the party as a whole against Ramuh. Though it was reluctant, though he complained, though he dragged his feet every step of the way, he wielded his considerable power in their favor and Alphinaud wasn’t quite sure why. None of the other Scions trusted him, and with good reason; least of all Lyse and Papalymo.

“I’d heard about your encounters with him in the First after you all came home,” Lyse said, as they searched for any sign of Garland, Sarah, or Ramuh together. The rain continued to fall, putting a damper on their overall search and their moods. “But can we really fight alongside an Ascian? After seeing what he’s like in person, I’m not about to trust him anytime soon.”

“I thought the Scions battled against Emet-Selch?” Prompto asked. “Don’t you know him, Lyse?”

She shook her head. “I left the Scions before they were all called to the First, where they met and battled Emet-Selch. Shame, really – though I was busy helping my homeland, I really would’ve liked to punch some Ascian faces in. I so missed the chance with Lahabrea.”

Ravus flexed his Magitek arm as they walked. “Would you care to explain what an Ascian is? I envision something similar to what Ardyn is.”

“My information may be a little outdated as the fight against the Ascians continued long after I was gone,” said Papalymo. “But we understood them to be immortal, formless sorcerers who sought to bring about the Rejoining and revive their dark god, Zodiark. To accomplish their tasks, they sought to possess corpses or hapless individuals like our dear Thancred. Emet-Selch, from what little I know of him, was one of their leaders. Do I have the right of it, Alphinaud?”

Alphinaud nodded. For all he knew, his own information was outdated as well, especially if what Emet-Selch said about the Scions entreating him for help in their battle against an ‘entelechy’ was true. “Emet-Selch was one of the three Unsundered – those who escaped the Sundering of the ancient world into all of its Shards in order to bind Zodiark, their elder primal. Ascian plots necessitated the destruction of entire Shards and a Calamity on the Source to go with it – catastrophe so overwhelming that it quite literally shaped each era in our world’s history.”

“They destroyed the Shards?” Prompto’s face screwed up in thought. “But aren’t those worlds, like where Ryne lives?”

Alphinaud sighed; if only they understood how thorough Ascian plots ran. But they were starting to see the breadth of Emet-Selch’s monstrosity. “Indeed. By Emet-Selch’s reckoning, he was not committing genocide – Sundered as we are, with our very souls split into many smaller pieces and cast through the Shards, he does not see us as truly living beings.”

“Absolutely mad, the lot of them,” said Lyse, her face darkened. “We’ve lost people we love to Ascians as well.”

Alphinaud’s explanation continued as he noticed the puzzlement flash across Ravus, Prompto, and Kuja’s faces. “Though it would be overmuch to explain the exact mechanism of a Rejoining, they required the engineering of Calamities on our Source world as well as a Shard. To that end, Emet-Selch personally constructed at least two empires in order to sow discord and strife throughout history. Including the Garlean Empire, which embroiled our homeland of Eorzea in war.”

“Two empires?” Ravus asked, eyes wide. “One is disastrous enough. I struggle to think of a more reprehensible foe. Why must we simply tolerate his presence?”

“Yeah, I agree with Ravus,” said Prompto. “Does he want a fight? Should we make him go away?”

“Emet-Selch is immensely powerful,” Alphinaud replied. “If he is predisposed to stay with us, it may not be so easy to dismiss him. He did the same to us in our journey in the First – we had little choice but to let him accompany us.”

Kuja had remained mostly silent as he walked with them and listened, but his lip curled with distaste. “And you say these Ascians possess corpses in order to walk among mortals?”

That raised a good point – Alphinaud did not know if Emet-Selch needed to possess anyone in this world. “At times. We learned that Emet-Selch in particular created a cloning facility for ready-made bodies to inhabit.”

Prompto’s face turned pale. “Clones? Man, this guy had his hands in everything, huh?”

“All that being said, what do we think his goals may be in this world?” Papalymo asked. “Could he perhaps be trying to summon Zodiark here?”

“Remember us. Remember that we once lived.”

Emet-Selch’s words flashed in his memory. “I’m not so sure,” Alphinaud admitted. “He acknowledged that we have won, that our wills prevailed over his. He has accepted that the time of his people has passed, and we have been entrusted with their legacy. I suppose we will have to wait and see if he will show his hand.”

“Does he have aught to do with the Fulgurian, Ramuh?” Ravus asked.

“He does not,” said Alphinaud. “At least, not to my knowledge.”

“A man who accepted the death of his people…” Kuja mused. “A foreign concept. If only a certain someone else could have drawn the same conclusion.” When Alphinaud gave him a questioning look, Kuja waved him off. “Pay no mind to my words – I am just idly wondering to myself.”


RYNE


Their search for Garland and Princess Sarah brought them on the path toward the Qitana Ravel, one of the sacred sites of the Ronkan Empire. The whole time, Alisaie glared at Emet-Selch’s back, prodding him forward as if her eyes were as sharp as her rapier.

“You’re sure we’re on her trail?” Jack asked Emet-Selch with a glower that rivaled Alisaie’s.

“I’ve told you, I can see trails of aether,” Emet-Selch said, rolling his eyes. He looked as if he considered saying something else, but apparently decided against it. Ryne had the distinct feeling that he was hiding something.

“This is the Qitana Ravel,” Ryne said, as they approached the ruin. “Where you once revealed to us the ancient truth concerning Hydaelyn and Zodiark.”

“A stroll down memory lane is the last thing I want,” Emet-Selch said with a scowl.

“That makes two of us,” Alisaie added. “Ryne, let’s not encourage him to monologue at us again, please?”

Princess Sarah of Burtgang gave Jack a contemplative frown. “Jack, I cannot claim to know you well, yet you seem more driven than usual in regard to finding this other Sarah. Might you be familiar with her?”

“It’s nothing to you,” Jack replied with a grunt.

“Perhaps it can give us a hint as to her whereabouts, or what that vile Garland might want with her,” said Zangetsu.

“I’m not so sure I’d call Garland ‘vile.’ He has been open about helping us in the past,” said Alisaie. “If anything, his action to kidnap our newest ally is rather peculiar.”

Jack scoffed. “It’s nothing new for him. He’s… kidnapped Sarah before. You should ask your Warrior of Light for what happened there.”

Alisaie’s jaw slackened, but Jack quickened his pace to signal an end to that conversation before any of them could question him. Ryne knew next to nothing of Garland, yet despite his status as one of their foes no one ever had anything particularly concerning to say about him. As far as their enemies went, Garland seemed to have a code of honor – yet she couldn’t make sense of why he would kidnap the princess. Perhaps Jack had something to hide as well, she thought. 

They descended into a cavern that delved into the ruins, but Ryne spotted a strange light near the end of the tunnel. As they progressed, her eyes widened when the cavern opened up to admit a wondrous sight that she never thought she would see again.

Rather than the crumbling ruins of Ronka, they stumbled upon the shining metropolis of Amaurot, capital of the Ancient world. Skyscrapers stretched to the darkened sky, arranged on a perfect cityscape with a pall of melancholy clinging to its pristine streets like a heavy mist. Just as she remembered, everything here seemed larger than life – from the decorative trees, to the benches, and even the doorways of buildings.

“My word,” said Zangetsu, eyes wide with awe. “What a wondrous sight…”

“Couldn’t help recreating it again for us?” Alisaie asked Emet-Selch.

“I had no hand in this,” Emet-Selch replied, languidly waving his hand in dismissal. “This is merely a lifeless facsimile of Amaurot. This is not my home.”

Alisaie crossed her arms and smirked. “Oh, like the facsimile you made for us deep beneath those dark waters of the Tempest?”

“That was different!” he protested. The look he gave Alisaie was almost petulant. “That was a memory. A monument. An opportunity to educate you Scions.”

“This world calls memories from our homes,” said Ryne. “Perhaps it was you who called Amaurot here.”

“I struggle to comprehend the scale of this place,” Sarah said, eyes drawn to the sky. “I have never seen buildings so tall…”

Jack alone seemed unimpressed by their surroundings. “Garland brought Sarah here?”

“It seems so,” said Emet-Selch. He got that same look as before, as if weighing what he was about to say. This time, he grimaced. “There is something you all should know. For reasons I cannot fathom, in this world all of our souls seem to have the same level of density. You, me, Garland, that princess – all of us. Equal.”

Ryne clapped her hands over her mouth. Of all the things she expected Emet-Selch to reveal, it wasn’t this. “But… how is that possible?” she asked.

“Soul density?” said Zangetsu, crossing his arms. “What does that mean?”

“When our world was Sundered into fourteen pieces, the souls of all of its inhabitants were Sundered as well,” Emet-Selch explained. “Each living being – myself and two of my fellows excluded – became diluted, their souls split among each Shard. This made all of the people mortal. Weak. Unable to manipulate aether to the level that we did in ancient times.”

“Yet here, we are all the same?” Alisaie asked. “But does that imply…?”

“That you are now among the Unsundered?” Emet-Selch finished for her. “Or is it instead that I am now at a fraction of myself, reduced to your level? Without a frame of reference to compare to, I am ashamed to admit that I cannot tell. I’ve been trying to determine as much since I came to this world. It is quite the conundrum.”

“Excuse me if I have no pity for you,” said Alisaie. “Seems that whether you like it or not, we’re equals now – regardless of if we are Sundered or Unsundered.”

“That is enough,” said Sarah, shaking her head. “This is no time for squabbling amongst ourselves.”

Jack kept walking ahead of them. “If you’re all done, we’ve got a princess we need to find.”


SARAH I


Garland brought her to a grandiose palace, empty and spacious, with rows of what could have been benches for giants. Curling designs sprawled across the walls and the floor, decorative and unfamiliar in a way that highlighted how otherworldly it felt to Sarah. Whatever sort of people lived here, she could not discern this chamber’s purpose.

He made no effort to bind her after they came here, and also hadn’t harmed her aside from the initial strike to render her unable to fight back against him. Once he released her into this chamber and closed the doors, Sarah held her hands over her abdomen and let her healing magic do its work to mitigate any future bruising there.

“Will you explain your purpose for kidnapping me?” she asked him. “Or do you intend to hold your silence further? If this is some ploy to hold me ransom, you will be sorely disappointed – we are far from Cornelia.”

“So you truly do lack your memories,” he said. “And it is not the doing of this world, but our own.”

She couldn’t make sense of his words. “I remember enough to know your identity: fallen knight of Cornelia, the disgraced Garland.”

“Hmph,” he said. He turned away from the doors, gesturing to something behind her. “You could not begin to fathom how much time has passed since then. I’ve brought you here for a reason, and it is not for anything as banal as gil. Look.”

She turned, and resting high upon a counter she regarded the most beautiful lute she had ever seen. It looked to be made of a deep mahogany, polished with a sheen that looked almost like a magical glow, inlaid with a gold filigree that swirled like vines of ivy. Its rosette appeared similar to the sigil of Cornelia. Even standing from here, she felt a thrum of power emanating from it. “What… is this?” she asked.

“The Lute of Ragnarok,” he said. “A sacred Cornelian treasure from another world. I’ve been searching for it ever since the summons fell to their corruption – and at last it has been found.”

She had never heard of such a thing. “And you couldn’t bring it to me, rather than forcing me to come with you?”

Though she couldn’t tell with his full suit of armor, she had the suspicion that she managed to fluster him when he cleared his throat. “I could not risk Ramuh destroying it. I believe this has the power to soothe his rampage, and whatever dark force has a hold over them did not want it to fall into our hands. With this, Ramuh may see reason again.”

“So you seek to help us,” Sarah said. She folded her hands together. She had no memory of ever meeting the knight before today, but if he spoke true, he had gone through great pains to help them. Though she had reservations about trusting him considering how he took her, he was not the first one to make reference to something she was forgetting. If only she could remember why he had been disgraced in the first place… “Thank you, Garland. I will ensure it is used to quell Ramuh’s fury. Now… if you could escort me back to the others?”


JACK GARLAND


He hated having to rely on Emet-Selch to track down Garland, but he was at a loss as to what else to do. The moogle couldn’t detect him. Nor could Astos. Something wasn’t right here.

He hadn’t felt such a burning need driving him forward this much since Chaos.

His already bitter mood soured further the more they explored this empty city which reminded him of the Lufenians in so many ways. Jack barely paid attention to the monsters he brutalized with his sword, fists, and crystal, mowing down anything that crossed his path. If Garland wanted a fight, he’d get one.

“Jack, please do not push yourself so hard,” said the Warrior of Light, catching up to him with a wave of radiance from his blade to dispatch a reptilian monster. “You may end up hurting yourself before we face our true foes.”

“You’re not pushing yourself hard enough,” Jack shot back. “Isn’t she your princess to guard?”

The Warrior of Light sheathed his sword, their enemies dispatched, and lowered his gaze in contemplation. “She is indeed. Though I failed to be there when Garland took her, I know that I have saved her before. So I can do it again.”

“That so?” Just some empty optimism again. “If you’re about to preach about hope to me, think again.”

“I heard you were there when she was kidnapped,” the Warrior of Light said, ignoring his barb. “Is it perhaps guilt that drives you to rescue her?”

He didn’t know the half of it. If anyone else asked, he would have assumed the Warrior of Light’s comment to be a return volley. But as always, his intent seemed frustratingly genuine. “Something like that.”

“Well, worry not,” the Warrior responded. “I can’t say what Garland wants with her, but I am confident he would not truly hurt her. We will find her together.”

He remembered the blood. The soldiers who fruitlessly threw themselves at him in defense of their princess, cut down by the dozen in his onslaught. They hadn’t even known that their deaths served as a stepping stone to Cornelia’s true freedom. Jack had hurt – and killed – so many people. And in truth, he didn’t fully know what this Garland was capable of.

Emet-Selch caught up to them alongside Thancred and Terra before Jack could share any more words with the Warrior of Light. “Amaurot is inundated with Ramuh’s aether and his egis,” Emet-Selch drawled. “It makes it difficult to track that knight and princess.”

“We’ve been wondering about Ramuh’s behavior,” Thancred explained. “The more we think about it, the more we wonder if he is testing us in some way.”

“One common trait he has across all of our worlds is that he is never so aggressive,” Terra said. “On many occasions, he seems to only fight us as a test of our skill or resolve.”

“He’s been corrupted,” Jack said, furrowing his brow. “That’s reason enough for his changed behavior.”

“But he has sought us out to attack us more than the other espers did,” said Terra. “And he retreats afterward as well. Even if it is simply the corruption, he seems even angrier than the others were.”

“It is pointless to make sense of his motives when he has said nothing to us,” said Emet-Selch. “I once put the Scions through a test of their resolve myself. And if you must know, their results disappointed me.”

“He speaks in no words we can understand, true,” said Thancred, rolling his eyes at Emet-Selch. “But his tactics suggest he is aware enough to seek us when our guard is down, penetrating our defenses.”

“What do you think he is testing this time?” the Warrior of Light asked.

Terra’s fingers curled around her pendant. “I’m not so sure.”

Jack shook his head. “I doubt it’s a test. You’re just being naive and hopeful. I think he’s trying to fight his way through the haze of darkness clouding his mind. Trying to reach out to us.”

The Warrior of Light, Terra, and Thancred let those words sink in for a moment, hanging between them like the Amaurotine mist. It was Emet-Selch who broke the silence. “Thinking more of my test for our Scion friends, I have to wonder if it really is the same after all.”

Thancred narrowed his eyes. “How so?”

Emet-Selch spread his arms wide. “I sought to determine if Sundered humanity, amidst all of their conflicts and woes, was worthy of following the legacy of my people as stewards to our world. If Ramuh and these other primals were once the stewards of this world, protecting you and yours from suffering pain and death, is it not reasonable to assume they are testing your worthiness as stewards in their place? Or perhaps they have already decided your time here is truly at its end, and you must finally rest to make way for the world’s actual new stewards – those Manikins?”

A silence that was heavier than the previous one fell over them, stifling in its weight as they considered his question. Jack, however, cut through the silence with all the delicacy of a blunt cleaver. “Bullshit,” he said. “Those Manikins just woke up. They don’t know anything yet – they claim to have both light and darkness, or neither, but they’re still weak. If that’s what those gods intend for us, then they’re a hundred years too early.”

Emet-Selch’s brow twitched and he did little to hide his annoyance, but he looked away with a sigh before tensing. “Wait. I sensed a surge of aether. Ramuh is building up to strike again. I suggest going on the attack this time before this flash of lightning fades.”


Y’SHTOLA


“I can sense him again, too. He’s close.”

Carbuncle skittered to the top of a decorative tree lining the streets of Amaurot after his declaration, but Y’shtola didn’t need his ability to sense the primals to know that the storm rolled and swelled ever closer. Static made her skin prickle and hair stand up. Violet lightning streaked across the dark sky, striking repeatedly not far from them as if beckoned by a lightning rod. Petrichor stung at her nose until another bright flash unleashed a rainstorm that drenched them in moments.

“I hope Ramuh’s not in pain, kupo,” said Mog, tugging at his ears. “He’s the one who taught me the human language through my dreams, you know.”

“We’ll be sure to free him from his suffering,” said the Warrior of Light. “And we will dispel the storm to show him the dawn again.”

“No flying for you, Zangetsu,” Edge told his student as they picked up their pace to confront Ramuh. “You’ll be too much of a target.”

“As you say, Master – I will keep my feet firmly planted on the ground,” Zangetsu replied.

It still felt strange to Y’shtola to be able to combat the threat of primals without the risk of enthrallment, even against one who tended to be as benign as Ramuh. But even stranger still was to fight alongside Emet-Selch; in this world bereft of Shards and calamities, empires and dark gods, perhaps they could find some common ground after all. And that common ground would allow them to stand fast against the storm.

They found Ramuh in the canyon between two towers with his staff raised, like a spider perched on its web of lightning. Black clouds swirled in a vortex high above him, his robes and mighty beard rippling under his power and the growing wind. Thunder crashed as lightning struck his staff but he didn’t so much as flinch as he bore the weight of the heavens.

“Can we try talking to him first, kupo?” Mog asked, hesitating in drawing his lance while the others unfurled their weapons.

Y’shtola looked to Jack, who seemed ready to spring into action at a moment’s notice. “Provided our allies are open to communicating first,” she said.

“Fine. No matter what we do, once he’s outta the way I’m going to find Garland,” Jack snarled.

“Ramuh, please heed us!” the Warrior of Light called out. “You are known for being a champion of wisdom and logic. Before you pass your judgment, let us know your purpose! Tell us what has happened to you and your brethren!”

Ramuh looked down at them, but rather than speaking in response, he pointed his staff and all of the lightning he had gathered at its tip exploded out with enough force to gouge the street with a crackling scream. Y’shtola, the Warrior of Light, and Emet-Selch joined their power together to create a triple-layered shield to block his attack, but even that strained against Y’shtola’s mental faculties. Glass shattered as lightning snaked across the surrounding buildings.

“I take it he is not inclined to parley,” said Emet-Selch, as Edge, Zangetsu, and Mog went on the attack together.

“Even if it means fighting against our former allies, we will do what we must to save this world and protect each other,” said the Warrior of Light.

“Yeah!” Edge exclaimed, fire surging from his fingers toward Ramuh. “I’m not gonna roll over and die just because something’s wrong with you eidolons now!”

Y’shtola held her staff high as she gathered magic in her other hand, cradling it between her palm and the head of her staff. Ice and stone converged on Ramuh, but he swung his staff like a hammer and bolts crashed down from the sky to obliterate her spells. More sparks flew toward Edge, but Zangetsu held up his spear like a lightning rod and absorbed Ramuh’s attack while Edge took the opportunity to strike up close. The Warrior of Light shielded him just in time from a swing of Ramuh’s staff, freeing Edge to cut with both of his blades. Ramuh let out an almost bestial roar, but then Mog dropped from the sky and ripped through Ramuh’s defenses.

“This is revenge for earlier!” Jack shouted, hurling himself at Ramuh while the sage buckled under the force of their attacks. His blade cleaved horizontally at Ramuh, who roared again with the rumble of thunder, dropping toward the ground.

“Prepare yourselves,” Emet-Selch said, though he sounded oddly unconcerned.

Lightning pulsed out from Ramuh in all directions, striking Mog, Edge, and Jack and hurling them into buildings. Zangetsu withstood the blast, but Ramuh’s staff slammed into him instead. The Warrior of Light stood alone against Ramuh’s onslaught.

“A little more help would be most welcome!” Y’shtola exclaimed to Emet-Selch, weaving more spellwork to press the attack and distract the primal long enough for the others to get back on their feet.

“Unbelievable, all of you,” Emet-Selch muttered. “Truly, it boggles me that you fail to see the depths of your own folly. Your own hypocrisy.”

Y’shtola unleashed a conflagration over Ramuh, mind whirling with what he could have meant by his words but too busy to dwell on them.

Ramuh turned his ire on Y’shtola, and just as she prepared to face him in a battle of sorcery, she heard gentle music echoing through the empty city streets. Strings thrummed as a softer undercurrent to the thunder above, almost like a lullaby. From behind Ramuh, she spotted Princess Sarah in the lead of a group that consisted of Thancred, Alphinaud, Alisaie, Ryne, Lyse, Papalymo, and a number of others who came to join the battle.

“Princess!” the Warrior of Light shouted out, sword arm raised.

Sarah continued playing, fingers sliding down the lute’s neck while she strummed with her other hand, eyes closed as she slowly approached with the others flanking her, who battled Ramuh’s egis. Ramuh contorted, electricity crackling as he writhed as if in pain from the sound of her music. A low moan escaped his lips, the breath of a man who seemed almost mortal, old and weak. But Thancred and Ryne sliced across Ramuh’s robes with both of their daggers, leaving the twins to drop spells on Ramuh from above. The Warrior of Light was the one to strike last while Ramuh’s defenses were down, spinning and slashing with light that cut a swathe through the air.

Ramuh doubled over and dropped his staff, and the chatter of lightning faded with it. Wisps of darkness emerged from his form, like smoke, before fading away as he lowered to the ground.

“Is it over?” Lyse asked.

“I yield to you, o chosen warriors,” said Ramuh. If it wasn’t for the aether composing his entire being, rapidly fading, Y’shtola would have thought of him as no more than a mortal man. Upon closer inspection, though, he didn’t seem to breathe. “You have fought well, and have my gratitude for guiding me through that storm.”

Y’shtola sensed that they did not have much time left, so she leapt straight to the point. “Can you tell us what it is that’s corrupting you and your kind?”

Ramuh was still, his robes spread and rippling under what power remained. “It is something alive. Malevolent. It seeks to destroy our ability to maintain everlasting life in this world – that power which we have inherited from the dragon god Shinryu.”

More than a few sharp intakes of breath echoed among the gathered warriors. It was Papalymo who recovered from the surprise first. “I had begun to theorize that it was Shinryu who was behind this whole debacle, returned from when we defeated him some time ago. But it was his power that maintained our lives here?”

“It was indeed his power of revival,” said the Warrior of Light, with a solemn frown. “That was how the cycles of battle kept repeating. He had only become our enemy when we sought to break the cycle and find rest.”

Y’shtola raised an eyebrow at the Warrior of Light. That was not the first time he had made reference to ‘cycles of battle’ – just another mystery she had to solve. But he was unflappable, and content with keeping that knowledge close for now.

“Shinryu’s power was not freely given to us, but dispersed upon his defeat,” said Ramuh. “It was a responsibility willingly taken by my brethren. We wished to watch over you, as we do in all of your worlds.”

Y’shtola’s ears perked up. “So it’s true!” she said. “You are indeed the same beings in our worlds?” Her mind raced. Primals of her world were essentially copies of divinities from lore and legends of various races, but she took Ramuh’s words to mean that those gods had an origin somewhere.

“Well, not quite.” Enna Kros pushed her way to the front, winking at Y’shtola. “I know what you’re thinking – and you’re not entirely wrong! I can help explain it from here, Ramuh, since you let the cat out of the bag. No offense, Y’shtola.” She inclined her head in Y’shtola’s direction before continuing. “The espers, or eidolons – or whatever you want to call them – do have an origin world, but in a way that’s kind of similar to the Source and Shards of your world. You can think of the World of Illusions as the ‘Source’ and the dozens of variations of espers as different ‘Shards.’ Even though the way their appearance may be different, or their origins, or the ways they bend to fit the rules of each world, whether they’re fayth or even gods… at their core, they’re really all the same. In most worlds, they may not even know that themselves.”

“And our worlds?” Alphinaud prompted her to continue. “How are they all related to each other?”

“Pressing your luck, aren’t you?” Enna Kros asked, grinning. “The rules prevent me from revealing too much, but since I’m still the only god on your side for now, I guess I can tell you more. The worlds are all separate, but certain ‘nexus’ worlds – like this one, Grymoire, Tyro’s world, or our Warrior of Light’s world – are a bit more connected to others. Some ideas just get picked up across the Rift separating them, you know?”

“Fascinating,” said Y’shtola, tail flicking with excitement. Her world had expanded all over again. She wanted to know more. Needed to know more. Most of the others seemed like they had been struck silent with awe or perhaps confusion, but she wanted the answers to keep coming. “And you? Does your status as the god of one world give you this knowledge of all the others?”

Enna Kros wagged a finger at her. “Come now, do you expect me to tell you everything? There are still rules to follow. And I’m sure the pursuit of knowledge you so crave would be far less satisfying if you had it all just handed to you.” She turned to Princess Sarah. “That Lute of Ragnarok really did the trick – I didn’t really expect that to make it here from Grymoire. To be honest, I don’t think that’ll work so well a second time. I suspect whatever dark force corrupting Ramuh and friends will be ready for it.”

“I’m not so sure I understand, but thank you for that warning,” said Sarah. “This was given to me by Garland.”

“And do you know what’s corrupting them?” Jack asked. Y’shtola caught the look he gave Sarah after she proclaimed where that lute had come from; though he quickly hid it, she saw genuine surprise flash across his face. “I don’t give a shit about all the other worlds. I’d rather just find whatever’s causing all of this and stop it.”

“I’d really rather you watched your language, Jack,” said Enna Kros, sighing. “Or else I’ll have to censor you. But no, I genuinely have no idea this time.”

Ramuh let out a groan like the rumble of thunder. Amazingly, in the midst of everything, Y’shtola had nearly forgotten he was still there. “Chosen warriors, children of other worlds,” he said. “I entrust the safety of my remaining brethren to you. Though we have failed to protect you, you have our unrelenting gratitude for endangering your lives to maintain this cherished world. And thank you, Carbuncle, for being their guide.”

Carbuncle’s tails waved. “It has been my honor.”

“You don’t need to thank us, Ramuh,” said Mog, jumping up. “We love this world, kupo!”

“Mog is right,” said the Warrior of Light. “We will never falter in our duty, for we cherish this world just as much as you and yours.”

Ramuh looked down at them all, smiling in a way that reminded Y’shtola of a grandfather to his grandchildren, and he began to fade away into the aether. His energy coalesced into a crystal of magicite which fell gently into Mog’s hands.

Laughter rang out from the back of the group, which parted to reveal Emet-Selch as its source. Derision was at its core, puncturing their moment of victory with mockery.

“What’s so funny?” Thancred asked. A chill descended over the gloom of Amaurot.

“All of you,” Emet-Selch replied, running a gloved hand through his hair. “All of this posturing to save this world, prattling on about your love for it, your vows to protect it – I’m reminded of myself.”

Y’shtola narrowed her eyes. “Earlier, you called us hypocrites.”

His lips curled into a rueful, empty smile. “Indeed I did. For when I fought, and when I persevered, and when I endured for thousands of years to restore my world and the people that I loved, you declared me and my fellows the villains. You decried our methods, slayed my cohorts, and undid thousands of years of plotting and planning just as we were on the cusp of restoring our people.”

Alisaie looked like she was about to attack him. “You destroyed entire worlds in that pursuit!”

Emet-Selch stood up straight, his face sobering. “Wouldn’t you have done the same?” he asked. “You Sundered were to us what the Manikins of this world are to you, are they not? Now that you and I are alike in our souls, you should see that.”

Thancred clenched his fists. “We don’t slaughter the Manikins by the millions!”

“No, but perhaps you slaughter them by the thousands,” Emet-Selch replied. He looked over each of them, eyes passing over the Warrior of Light, Edge, Sarah, Mog, Jack, and all the others. “How many of you are there? And how many Manikins have each of you cut down in your time here? I spoke to the Manikins in the Rak’tika Greatwood – many of them live in fear of you.”

“That was only in defense,” said Ryne, head bowed. “Now that we’ve learned they are growing and changing, we want to protect and nurture them.”

“Oh, what a noble sentiment,” Emet-Selch drawled. “And what would you do if they fought against you? If they wished you gone from this world, the same way you fought against the Ascians? I somehow doubt you’d simply pass stewardship of this world over to them willingly.”

“We’re not like you,” said Alphinaud, his voice shaking but jaw clenched. “I don’t speak for everyone, but I would accept it. I had thought long and hard of what I’d do if I were in your position, and – ”

“Oh, save it,” Emet-Selch cut him off. “It’s one thing to posture and preen and pretend you would do the right and noble thing, but let us see what would happen if the Manikins did indeed turn against your patronizing attempt to nurture them. You all genuinely disgust me.”

“Then it seems our alliance was once again short-lived,” said Alisaie, glaring.

At her words, Emet-Selch sighed. He looked tired again. “So it was.” He vanished in a flash of light, leaving them in the shell of his former home.

“I don’t know him well,” said Zangetsu, as they all regarded the weight of his disappearance. “But that fellow seemed almost… disappointed. I’d even hazard to say he may have been saddened.”

“Maybe so,” said Alphinaud, frowning. “It’s almost like… he took our determination to save our home world to heart. As if he learned from us.”

“And now he wants to use that lesson against us here?” Alisaie scoffed. “Ridiculous. He has no idea what we’ve been through in this world to keep it safe.”

“I think he might have a point,” said Jack, shrugging. “But it doesn’t matter to me. I’m not just going to keel over and die if the Manikins suddenly decide they don't want us here. If they want this world, they’d have to prove they can fight for it.”

“Take heart, my new friends,” said Sarah. “We have emerged victorious over a powerful foe, and from what I hear many more await who would threaten both us and the Manikins. Let us not lose hope – there will be time to ponder Emet-Selch’s words later.”

“The princess is right,” said the Warrior of Light. “Though we may one day meet him again as an enemy, we still have much to learn of this world ourselves. When that time comes, let us show him our capacity for growth and understanding.”

Y’shtola trailed after her friends as they departed back to Garden. Emet-Selch had likened their party to the Ancients, those who pursued despicable ends to maintain their utopia. Yet here, their souls shared the same density. She could only wonder what that meant for them, and if even someone like Enna Kros was just like the mortals here after all. But despite everything they had learned thus far, only one question burned at the forefront of her mind.

The longer they stayed here, what would they become?


Character abilities

Previous Character Updates:

Krile

BT: Heritor of Earth

ULT: Divine Judgment (Effect: BRV overflow value is retained)

Burst theme: “Battle 1,” the game’s main battle theme

Alternate Skin: Beastmaster clothes

Her Burst is original, referencing how she inherited the power of the Earth Crystal from Galuf, but her ULT is an Oracle ability, since she already uses an Oracle ability in her kit. After use, any BRV overflow she gets from her battery abilities is retained and dumped on her next HP attack. Her additional costume is her Beastmaster outfit, because she makes it adorable.


Celes

ULT: Triumphant General

Effect: When absorbing BRV, inflict damage back

Her ULT ability is from Record Keeper. After use, any time she absorbs enemy BRV with Runic, she inflicts equivalent damage back to her enemy (does she do that already? I hope not, I can't keep up!).


Princess Sarah I (Unique - Lute) Non-elemental magic damage, auras, healing, gold buffs, regens

15: Ancient Lute

35: Hero’s Song

EX: Light

LD: Age-Old Hymn

FR: Joyous Aria (with Aria)

BT: Hope of Cornelia

ULT: Soul Voice (Effect: When allies restore HP, buff duration +1)

Burst theme: “The Lute," the melody she plays on her lute

Alternate Skins: Her Stranger of Paradise appearance, and her post-NES appearance with a white dress and tiara

Sarah's abilities are a mix of originals and some skills she has in spinoff appearances like Record Keeper and Theaterhythm. She is primarily a buffer and a healer, able to turn ally buffs golden. Her ULT effect lets her extend ally buffs by one turn every time she restores their HP.

Notes:

Next one's an Idle Chatter, so it should be a quick update! Please let me know if you enjoyed this chapter!

Chapter 35: Idle Chatter III

Notes:

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Princess Sarah with Aria: This one is a little broad, but they have similar personalities and Aria's name is a musical term. Both are close to the hero and (at least in SoP) sacrifice themselves for the party.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Idle Chatter III


Scene 1: Eyes On Me


(One warm, breezy night, Ulmia is on stage in the quad performing a song. Once she finishes, she bows and leaves the stage to her audience’s applause and stands outside of Nine Bean Coffee to catch her breath when Laguna and Kiros approach.)

LAGUNA: Ulmia… that was amazing. Where did you learn that song?

ULMIA: Oh, thank you. Rinoa asked me to perform it. She told me it was her mother’s song.

LAGUNA: Is that so?

KIROS: I know we’ve heard that song before…

( Rinoa approaches with Angelo at her side, who licks Laguna’s hand. )

RINOA: Thank you for performing that, Ulmia! It means so much to me to hear that again.

ULMIA: Of course. Your mother is a talented songwriter – those lyrics are beautiful.

LAGUNA: Rinoa… I gotta ask, is your mother’s name Julia?

RINOA: That is her name! How did you know?

LAGUNA: I, uh, saw her perform a lot back during the war. She was… really something.

RINOA: She really was. What a small world.

KIROS: You don’t know the half of it.

RINOA: I’ve always wondered who she wrote that song about. Definitely wasn’t my jerk of a father, I know that much.

LAGUNA: I’m really sorry to hear she didn’t marry someone nice. She deserved much more.

RINOA: Like a president of Esthar, maybe?

LAGUNA: What gave you that idea!?

RINOA: I’m just teasing. But I bet you’d have made a great father.

KIROS: If you knew any better, you’d say otherwise. For a few reasons.

LAGUNA: Gee, thanks, dude.

RINOA: To be fair to my dad, they really did love each other. She was… happy. We all were, way back when. Things only changed after she died.

LAGUNA: She was happy back then, was she? I’m glad to hear it. Really.


Scene 2: Reflective Ruby


(Mog [OO], Serafie, and Eiko are in a classroom together where they find Carbuncle curled up in a corner.)

MOG: Carbuncle! What are you doing sleeping in here, kupo? Do you want to take a class?

EIKO: Ohh, Carbuncle! Can I be your tutor? That would be fun. Miss Serah says I’m doing really well in my lessons.

CARBUNCLE: That will not be necessary. I just came here to take some time away from everyone else, that’s all. There are lots of classrooms to get lost in.

SERAFIE: I know the feeling. It’s so noisy.

CARBUNCLE: That is not really it. I so rarely get to go on an adventure such as this outside of the World of Illusions. Most of the time you have only come to visit me to partake of my treasures, which I enjoy sharing, but after meeting Lord Ramuh I am really coming to understand this responsibility of guiding you.

MOG: Wow! We haven’t really seen this side of you yet, kupo. All I can say is that it is a really big responsibility. And an honor, kupo! But don’t forget that you and I are partners in this.

SERAFIE: It’s not that hard. I guided Lann and Reynn all the time. Just gotta tell ‘em where all the gossip is and they shoot off to go so fast. It’s like those kids are drama hounds. They always know when to find me for the best rumors.

CARBUNCLE: Thank you, Mog. I must admit, when I first met you I did not know what to expect of a mere spirit moogle from the Rift… but it is clear to me that you care for these warriors and their safety. Thank you for the reminder – I will treasure our partnership.

MOG: You can rely on me, kupo!

EIKO: Serafie, I hope you’re not spreading rumors about everyone here…


Scene 3: Remnant of Pain


( Elena and Tseng are walking toward the library when Kadaj and Zack catch up to them. )

ZACK: Hey, Tseng! Elena!

TSENG: Zack.

ELENA: Oh! Uh, director! Don’t we have an assignment elsewhere?

TSENG: You can’t avoid him forever, Elena.

KADAJ: So it’s true. You were avoiding me.

ELENA: Well, how can I not!? You nearly killed us!

ZACK: Kadaj has changed. He’s a lot different in this world. Tell ‘em, Kadaj.

KADAJ: Brother! I can speak for myself. Tseng, Elena, please accept my apology.

ELENA: Wait, is that all you have to say?

KADAJ: Er…

ZACK: C’mon, Kadaj. You got this.

KADAJ: I know I really hurt you. And… I’m sorry. We don’t need to be enemies in this world.

ELENA: You’re sure you’re not gonna transform into Sephiroth again?

KADAJ: Yes. If he tries, I’m going to kill him. You have my word.

TSENG: In the spirit of apology… Zack, it seems I am overdue for one with you.

ZACK: Oh, Tseng, you don’t have to worry. I know you were just doing your job.

TSENG: Even so, Cissnei and I failed to retrieve you before the infantry completed their work. We had meant to help you escape unnoticed.

ELENA: Wow, it’s rare to see him like this…

ZACK: I understand. Things worked out in the end. And besides, here in this world we can be buddies now!

ELENA: Oh, I think he might be pushing it…

KADAJ: Well, I’m living proof that Zack could befriend anyone.

TSENG: Let’s try ‘work friends’ before moving onto that level.


Scene 4: Supply and Demand, Again


( Ciaran, Shirma, Layle, Aerith, and Aria are outside Garden, in the fields where the party plants their crops. )

AERITH: Hi guys! How’s the farm coming along?

CIARAN: It’s been great! We already planted wheat, carrots, potatoes, celery, pumpkins…

SHIRMA: It’s been a lot of work, but we’re having fun. We even got our hands on a cow, some sheep, and chickens! Layle’s been a huge help with his gravity powers. Even Guy and Gau have been taking care of the livestock.

LAYLE: I was dragged into this.

AERITH: I’ve been growing flowers in the quad, but it’s not as easy as it was before. Willpower alone just doesn’t cut it anymore. It feels weird to say, but it’s like the weather here is too nice. We need more rain!

CIARAN: We’ve been running into that issue, too. I don’t think this world has normal weather patterns.

SHIRMA: And we’re also worried about seasons. It’s hard to even tell what season we’re in now.

LAYLE: So far, we’re still relying on Chocolina and her shop a lot.

CIARAN: But once that’s all figured out, we’ll be able to produce! Maybe as the world continues to change and grow, we’ll also get different weather and seasons.

ARIA: In the meantime, perhaps I can help you as far as the rain is concerned. As the maiden of the Water Crystal, one of our duties was to pray for rain to nourish the crops in our home. Though, we have no such crystal here…

LAYLE: Maybe not a big crystal like the one you had, but I wonder if we can trade with the Manikins for some crystal shards. Every little bit could help.

AERITH: I’m sure we can offer some things to the Neo-Manikins in the area! That’d go far to improve our relationships with them, too, I think. Aria, I’d love to help you.

ARIA: Thank you, Aerith. I look forward to seeing the fruits of our labor. Watching this world’s growth and the growth of this farm will be such a delight.

SHIRMA: Layle, that was a great idea! I’m glad you’re getting more involved.

LAYLE: Ugh, I should’ve kept my mouth shut…


Scene 5: The Academy Director, Hope Estheim


( Hope, Snow, Serah, Locke, Raffaello, Tseng, and Iroha are taking a break from planning their next moves outside of the second floor classrooms. )

IROHA: Hope, if I am understanding correctly, you too were an instructor at an academy?

HOPE: Not quite. The Academy is a research institute that also became the new government of Cocoon after Sanctum fell. I was the director.

LOCKE: No way! You basically lead an entire government?

SNOW: More or less the only government. Hope is a pretty big deal in our world! Not bad for the kid you thought he was before, huh?

TSENG: Not so unlike President Rufus. To be honest, I wouldn’t have guessed.

HOPE: Er, it’s not really like Rufus. Besides, I worked with a committee to make all of our decisions. Our main focus was on scientific development and the creation of a new Cocoon. But it took hundreds of years to create…

RAFFAELLO: You sound like a leader that so many people can count on. Doing all that at the age you are now… I hope you made time for fun.

TSENG: The burden of leadership scarcely leaves time for those sorts of things.

SERAH: Being able to travel through time, it was amazing to see the impact Hope’s actions had on the world.

LOCKE: That’s some legacy to leave. Shame you couldn’t really see the fruits of your own labor.

HOPE: It wasn’t without its challenges, of course. But… I did get to see it. We managed to invent a time capsule that allowed me to wake up again five hundred years in the future.

SNOW: Even though it was a one way trip. 

IROHA: A one way trip five hundred years into the future! That is some sacrifice. When I journeyed into the past, I had no choice if I wanted to save my world. But to do so willingly…

HOPE: It had to be done. Besides, most of my closest friends and family from my time were gone, or they were traveling through time like Serah and Noel. And I can’t deny that I was curious about the whole thing.

SNOW: Sorry to do that to you, Hope. I know I ran off to go find Lightning, but it wasn’t my intention to leave anyone alone.

SERAH: It all worked out in the end, didn’t it? After about a thousand years of fighting… but it was all worth it.

LOCKE: Sounds like you were waiting there for them in the future, Hope.

RAFFAELLO: To guide them. To be there for your friends. Bet they were surprised to see you!

HOPE: I guess so. What’s with all this attention? Please don’t think of me any differently. Nothing’s changed about who I am, just how I look!

IROHA: We will look forward to how you contribute to Garden’s leadership. It is an honor to have you with us, Director Hope!


Scene 6: The Dancer of Rabanastre


( Rikku, Penelo, and Montblanc are watching a performance on stage in the quad. Deuce and Princess Sarah are providing the instrumentals, Lilisette is dancing, and Yuna is singing. )

PENELO: Wow, this is amazing. And it’s that dressphere that lets Yuna sing that way?

RIKKU: Well, she was always talented. But really, I think it’s the duds that give her the confidence to sing her heart out!

MONTBLANC: Don’t you like dancing, Penelo? Why don’t you go up there, kupo?

PENELO: Oh, it’s fine. Normally I’m okay with just dancing in the streets of Rabanastre for a small audience. I don’t need to go up on stage.

RIKKU: Aw, it’d be nice to see you up there tearing up the stage! You can do it!

PENELO: I don’t know…

MONTBLANC: Is it a lack of confidence, kupo? Okay, we won’t push you.

PENELO: I don’t think it’s even that. It’s more like… when I look at Yuna or Lilisette dressed up like that – I just know they’re performers when I look at them! They look amazing.

RIKKU: I can understand that! New clothes can totally give a different kind of confidence boost, too. Well, lucky for you, I have just the thing. You can use your own dressphere!

PENELO: What? Really? It’s no trouble?

RIKKU: Not at all! They’re so much fun – let me show you how they work!

MONTBLANC: Wow, Rikku’s really good at this, kupo… Break a leg, Penelo!


Character Abilities

Previous Character Updates:

Locke

ULT: Ruthless Talons

Effect: Whenever one ally is downed and the remaining party is wiped out, Phoenix revives them all

This ability comes from his Dissidia NT moveset. The effect is similar to Eiko's Phoenix ability, but it's automatic and has the requirement that one party member must already be knocked out for it to trigger (so basically, they are revived if one party member is unconscious, and the boss wipes out the remaining two with one ability). If all three party members are one shotted, then it doesn't trigger. If Locke is the only one left standing, then it does trigger.


Setzer

ULT: Cursed Card

Effect: Random damage inflicted as follow up

This ability comes from one of his Brave Exvius skills. When used, he will then use a follow up that inflicts random damage.


Dancer Penelo (Staff) Holy magic damage, debuffer, battery, healing

15: Mystic Dance

35: Mincing Minuet

EX: Forbidden Dance

LD: Holy Frolic

FR: Heartbreaker’s Scolding (with Sol)

BT: Blade Dance

ULT: Dance of Rapture (Effect: When hit by an attack, get free instant turn)

Burst theme: “Dalmasca Estersand,” theme of eponymous location

Alternate Skin: Her Revenant Wings appearance

Since Penelo gets her own skillset as a Dancer and is shown to use a different primary weapon than what she has in Opera Omnia, I decided to give her an alternate moveset. These skills come from her appearance in Revenant Wings and the Dancer job in Tactics A2, though her LD is an original variation. This version of Penelo is still a healer capable of supporting the party, but she is less focused on buffs and more focused on dealing holy damage and debuffs.

Notes:

Next character hint: They are associated with "azure."

Chapter 36: Lost Chapter: Bewitching Sea Breeze

Notes:

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Penelo with Sol: Penelo and Vaan's relationship parallels Sol's and Diana's, in that they're both childhood friends with some romantic teasing where the girl keeps the boy in line. So in this case, Sol is a stand-in for Vaan.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: Bewitching Sea Breeze


Meia ( Mobius Final Fantasy )

Voiced by: M.A.O.

Known as the Azure Witch, a heretic who was banished from Palamecia. With darkness in her past, she acts as a rival and companion to Wol as she seeks to find answers about the prophecy and Chaos. She has the ability to summon and is not above using others to obtain treasures.

Meia


THE EMPEROR


The Manikin whimpered under his feet.

It pressed itself flat against the dead tree, sprawled over its roots and under the moonlight. The Emperor used his scepter to lift its chin toward him. How pitiful these creatures were, that he could not even see the sheer terror in its eyes. He wanted to make them feel true fear. To beg. Without fear, he would never be able to truly subjugate them – the fact that these creatures had developed wills of their own was an inconvenience.

An owl hooted somewhere above them. Skeletal branches scratched at the sky, casting swordlike shadows over the ground.

“Well?” the Emperor prompted the Manikin again. “Where are your fellow Manikins? Tell me the location of that hovel you call a home. This is your last chance to confess.”

“I… I can’t,” it said. Ah, there was its fear – clinging to its voice.

“This is my territory. I cannot have you vermin crawling upon my land without permission. If you cannot serve your emperor, then you shall die.”

“Emperor? I was not aware that I had come to tread upon imperial territory.”

The speaker was no Manikin – she emerged from behind a tree, hooded and fearless, with all of her face draped in shadow except for lips that curled into a smile.

“You stand before the emperor of Palamecia,” he said. “Unhood yourself, you indolent wretch.”

“I also wasn’t aware that we even had an emperor,” the woman responded. “I know I’ve been away for some time now… but I know enough to confidently say we are not in Palamecia. Which emperor do you claim to be?”

“You are not worthy of knowing my name. I am the only emperor – the one true ruler of all dimensions.” The Emperor sneered. Manikin forgotten, he let go of his scepter and let it levitate around his body, focusing magic into a blast aimed directly at the stranger. It passed harmlessly through her, and she betrayed no reaction. An illusion, then.

“Come now,” she said. “I thought we would talk before proceeding on to a fight. Here I was hoping we could… get along.”

He had learned a long time ago that partnerships in this world would get him nowhere. Even so, he lounged back and sat upon the air, fist curled up under his chin. He appeared relaxed, but expanded his senses to try and pinpoint the woman’s actual location. “Why would I waste time talking with you?” he asked.

“Because I know where these – what did you call them? Manikins? – are living.”

Of course, in reality, he did not care much for that information. If he burned down this forest, sooner or later he would find it. “One measly village offers little value to me,” he said.

“Then perhaps I could tell you what I want,” she said, hugging herself. Her voice came out lower, almost sultry. “And you can let me know what you’d like in return.”

He scowled. “I do not make deals or alliances. If you want to survive, then you will serve me.”

Skeletons and imps emerged from the shadows as if coalescing from tar, swords and daggers pointed at the woman. She backed away from the Emperor, arms spread into a battle stance, and a giant bladed weapon that looked like a crescent moon appeared in her hands.

“Well, then,” she said, and the tone of her voice became sharper. “I see now that this was a waste of time. I should tell you, so-called Emperor, that I serve no one.”


WOL


A barren forest filled with the bones and souls of the undead sprawled out before them, their last barrier on their return trip back to Garden. A slight breeze whistled through the trees that loomed over their heads, dark shapes scurrying in the dry underbrush between them. The silver moon, swelled to its brightest, gave them enough light to second guess every shadow.

“Are you kidding me?” Echo whined. “Why do we have to go through here? We didn’t pass through this forest on the way out for our hunt!”

“Would you rather spend the whole night away from Garden?” Leon asked, pausing at the forest’s entrance. “We have no camping supplies.”

“C’mon,” Wol said. “A spooky forest is just the thing you need.”

“No it absolutely is not!” Echo protested, swinging her arms. “Why would you even say that!?”

“Sorry, Echo,” said Yuna. “We misjudged how long we would be out. Going through here will get us home faster.”

Hauyn walked up next to Echo and crossed her arms. “What is it? Are you afraid of ghosts?”

“Nooo,” Echo said with a soft moan, hiding behind Wol’s shoulder. “Don’t say that… you’ll summon them…”

“There is nothing to fear,” said Beatrix, leading the way into the forest. “We will banish anything that comes across our path.”

Their party entered the forest behind Beatrix with Echo clinging to Wol’s back the whole way. Every twig broken under their footsteps made her wince. Shadows that might have been owls or bats swooped overhead, with each movement making her yelp. Wol was starting to get annoyed with every sound she made in his ear, and was about to wave her off when a chill descended over them that was enough to make even his hair stand on end.

“So cold!” said Hauyn, rubbing her arms. “Where’d that come from so suddenly?”

“A ghost!” Echo shrieked, until Wol abruptly muffled her with his hand.

“No, I don’t think so,” said Leon, kneeling down to examine a tree’s tangled roots. “There’s frost forming on these trees. Spirits don’t really do that.”

“Look,” said Beatrix, her voice barely above a whisper as she partially hid herself behind another tree. “I see a figure drifting ahead – a blue woman. Is that…?”

“...A dead lady!” Echo shouted. “She’s going to take our souls!”

“Will you shut it already?” said Wol, rolling his eyes.

“...An eidolon,” Beatrix finished.

“That’s Shiva!” said Yuna, and Hauyn nodded along with her. “Oh, no – are we ready to face her?”

“Wait, I’m not so sure if that’s the Shiva,” Hauyn said, taking a step closer to peer at the distant figure, who was indeed bright and blue, drifting further away from them. “I think someone summoned her.”

“Then we should follow,” said Beatrix. “It could be an ally who needs us. Perhaps she even wants us to follow.”

They picked up their pace as they went off the beaten path, pursuing the recognizable form of Shiva even as the forest grew more frigid around them. Her footsteps left icy blooms in her wake, but she made no sound as they followed. Eventually, they heard the crackle and burst of magic ahead, and when Wol ran to the source of the noise it was to see a man floating near the treetops and unleashing darkness and lightning below.

“Emperor!” Leon shouted, drawing his blade.

“And now the worms have arrived,” said the Emperor, irritation flashing across his face. “No matter. I will just crush you all, then.”

Yuna held up her pistol, looking around the clearing. “Who was he attacking?”

“I don’t think it matters,” said Leon, brow furrowed. “He would make an enemy of anyone and anything.”

Shiva went on the attack first, flicking her wrist to conjure icy wind that solidified into a pillar of frost that reached for the Emperor. He floated out of the way, but Yuna’s gunshots forced him to dodge and retaliate. As he scowled and called on more magic in retribution, Valefor appeared and unfurled her wings right in front of him, blasting him back with a burst of wind.

“Nice timing, Yuna!” said Echo.

Yuna paused. “But… I didn’t summon!”

Wol caught a glimpse of silver emerge from behind a tree, which lengthened into a weapon he recognized as a blade that could only belong to one person. Meia lowered her hood, shaking out her raven-dark hair, and smiled at Wol. “About time you showed up,” she said.

He should have expected this. “Meia,” he said. “Who did you aggravate now?”

“He claims to be from Palamecia,” she said, smirking. “So I had to give him a Palamecian welcome.”

“Be on guard!” Beatrix warned, after casting a Holy spell that struck the Emperor. The dark sky churned above them, revealing a meteorite that belched from the clouds. Wol and Meia caught each other’s eyes, then leapt to the treetops to vault themselves straight at the falling satellite. Beatrix and Leon joined them, all four blades raised to strike at the Emperor’s conjured spell together. The heat intensified as it neared, but light and lightning and darkness coalesced at the ends of each of their weapons as they all swung with all of their might.

The force of the meteorite meeting all of their attacks exploded outward, sending Wol crashing back down to the ground. Shards from the broken meteorite rained down over the forest, but he fell underneath a barrier summoned by Yuna and Hauyn as small fires burned and sputtered out. Wol clung to consciousness just long enough to see Echo’s worried face above his own.


“Stupid, stupid, stupid! All of you! I can’t believe you’d do something so reckless!”

Echo’s voice, shriller than usual, cut through the fog around Wol’s head and roused him back to the world of the living. His whole body felt bruised and hot, with painful burns running up both of his arms. He pushed himself up, looking around. A few of the trees had been flattened, smoke billowing into the sky, but most of the fires seemed to have died out. Yuna, Hauyn, and even Beatrix knelt over the wounded.

“Echo’s right,” said Yuna, frowning with disapproval as she used her healing magic on Wol. “That was reckless of you.”

“It was either that or letting the meteor crush us,” Wol responded. “Where’d the Emperor go?”

“Fortunately, he vanished,” said Beatrix, leaning on her sword as she administered healing to Leon.

Leon gave a surly grunt. “He’ll be back soon enough,” he said. “What did he want?”

He directed his question to Meia, who was already on her feet with her eyes on her surroundings. “He seemed to think he was creating an empire here,” she said. “Wherever ‘here’ is. One of those things he called Manikins got in his way. They remind me a little of Blanks, come to think of it.”

“And you put yourself in danger to protect it?” Echo asked, doubtful.

Meia looked back at her. “Yes, fairy, I did. There’s a whole village of the poor things nearby. I suspect that man went to go look for it.”

“Then we should go check on them,” said Hauyn. She looked between Wol, Echo, and Meia. “So… do you know each other?”

“We do,” Wol said, offering a smirk of his own. “She’s a summoner who was branded as a heretic by the world itself. Meia is known as the Azure Witch, and all Blanks are ordered to kill her on sight.”

“You do know how to make a girl blush,” Meia said. She brushed her fingers through her hair. “Though you conveniently left out all the times we fought alongside each other.”

“A summoner and a heretic...” said Yuna. “Well, if you two are allies, then you are welcome to join us. I'd love to hear your story."

Meia nodded to her. “I think I shall. Thank you. I will lead the way into the Manikin village – they have met me once before, and should welcome us.”

Echo hung her head as her shoulders slumped. “It’s deeper into this spooky forest, isn’t it?”

“There’s nothing to worry about,” said Wol, grinning. “There’s been a ghost hiding behind you this whole time, and it hasn’t harmed you much.”

Echo’s shrieks and curses tore through the night, unsettling every creature in at least a mile radius.


Character abilities

Previous Character Updates

Sabin

ULT: Suplex

Effect: When buffs wear off or get overwritten, attack again

His ULT finally gives him the ability to suplex his foes!


Strago

ULT: Dischord

Effect: Lowers enemy stats with each ability usage

Strago gets another Blue Magic spell as his ULT. In the original game, it halves the levels of foes, which is why it reduces enemy stats here. It's not really his strongest spell in VI, but it can be useful and some of his more signature spells were already taken.


Meia (Unique - Moonblade) Water/Dark magic damage, Water enchant/imperil, Dark imperil, summon follow ups, auras, debuffs

15: Brutal Wave

35: Fiat Lux

EX: Farfall Nera

LD: Undine Jig

FR: Seafoam Spellwork (with Hauyn)

BT: Summon Sicarius

ULT: Pallida Mors (Effect: Resistance to all elemental damage)

Burst theme: “Battle Tower,” battle theme where she is first encountered

Meia's abilities all come from some of her unique jobs. She is generally focused on magic, but in Mobius she doesn't have any particular focus on Water or Dark. I gave it to her because it felt thematically appropriate, and she has ties to the sea. She gets some follow up attacks with her summons (the Sicarius), along with some offensive auras and debuffs.

Notes:

Next character hint: they're known as the "hunter of love."

Chapter 37: Lost Chapter: The Beauteous Bounty Hunter

Notes:

This character very nearly didn't make it to the roster. She was on my short list because she really doesn't qualify, but she got lucky because the next character in her Force chain also got added very recently (probably around the time of the Gaffgarion LC, same time as I added Ulmia), and I needed someone to act as the Force partner to that character. Either way, I know this character is fairly popular and requested sometimes, so I was open to adding her.

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Meia with Hauyn: Both are introduced as hooded, mysterious summoners and both are loosely connected to the sea (Hauyn is mostly through Siren, her partner).

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: The Beauteous Bounty Hunter


Lani ( Final Fantasy IX )

Voiced by: Yūko Kaida

A bounty hunter hired by the queen to retrieve Garnet and kill Vivi. Initially working alongside Amarant, he found her methods too distasteful and ditched her to capture Garnet on his own. After witnessing the destruction of the entire Alexandrian fleet firsthand, Lani is stranded on the Outer Continent where she is taken in by the moogles and learns the error of her ways.

Lani


STEINER


It had been gratifying when Steiner’s capabilities were acknowledged by the rest of the party and their leader assigned him to be Balamb Garden’s captain of the guard. Among all of these great heroes and knights, the posting was a great honor. How glad he was that they would trust him with such a responsibility! He was almost as proud as he was on the day he was appointed captain of the Pluto Knights. 

Perhaps it would be apt for him to name this new group something similar… But since guard duty was on a revolving shift schedule undertaken by most of their companions, he would not be able to foster the same sense of brotherhood as in his Pluto Knights. He weighed his options over and over again while he patrolled in front of Garden’s front gate.

His consideration of that conundrum was interrupted when Rude, Chocobo, and the cadet Jack approached him from outside the gate in a hurry. It was a beautiful morning and Steiner had been feeling optimistic about today – what could possibly have gone wrong already?

“Hey there, captain!” said Jack, giving him a sloppy salute. “We’ve got something to tell you.”

Steiner scowled. The boy needed some work on how to take his job more seriously. “Well? Out with it!”

“We noticed a suspicious character on the outskirts of Ciaran’s fields,” Rude said. Now that was someone who knew how to be a professional. It was a shame that he didn’t have the Turks working guard duty full time. “I was unable to get a good look, but it looked to be a woman with a big axe and feathered bandana. She ran when we tried to get closer.”

Chocobo raised a wing and chirped, presumably in agreement.

“It was Chocobo who first saw her!” Jack declared proudly.

“Is that so?” said Steiner, putting his hands on his hips. “Well, then! We shall go and apprehend this intruder. Let’s move out!”

“Wait, you said you saw a woman with a big axe?” Amarant approached, surly as ever, and Steiner had to make a conscious effort not to jump up and down in frustration upon seeing him. Amarant had blown off his guard duty shift just yesterday. “I’m comin’ along.”

So Amarant had the thought that this was his old companion, it seemed. Steiner, personally, doubted it – this world had no use for more of that ilk. Queen Garnet had enough enemies to deal with already.


VIVI


Vivi kicked his legs from atop the newly erected fence and watched as the farmers did their tasks for the day. Ciaran and Shirma had insisted that this was the time for the greatest work and thus required the help of as many of their warriors as they could enlist, and since they all wanted to eat they had no shortage of volunteers. Vivi and the other children were forbidden by Rosa and Edea from helping, though, so he contented himself with watching and keeping their spirits up as they worked.

Today, he waited for Chocobo so they could go out further in the fields and play. Chocobo was supposed to be busy with guard duty today but Vivi convinced him to sneak away from Steiner so they could go have fun.

When he saw Chocobo trotting down the dusty lane accompanied by Steiner, Rude, Amarant, and Jack, he thought Chocobo had been caught trying to escape. Vivi jumped down from the fence, wringing his fingers in the fear that they’d be scolded.

Vivi pulled at the brim of his hat and winced when he saw Steiner’s eyes bulge and mouth open wide in an expression that could only be described as abject horror. But, Vivi realized, it wasn’t directed at him.

“YOUR MAJESTY! WHAT ARE YOU DOING WORKING THE FIELDS LIKE THAT!?”

Vivi hadn’t noticed Garnet among the day’s farmers, pitchfork in hand and dirt all over her clothes. She jumped up and ran over to Steiner. “Steiner, really! It is fine – I volunteered for this duty!”

Her attempt to placate him went unheard, his armor rattling as he jumped up and down in a tantrum. “TO THINK THAT CIARAN WOULD MAKE YOU DO MANUAL LABOR! HE WILL PAY FOR THIS!”

“Steiner, please,” said Garnet, rubbing her temples.

“What’s the big deal?” Jack asked. “She looks like she’s doing great!”

“Thank you, Jack,” said Garnet, beaming. “I am learning quite a lot from Ciaran and Shirma. I’ve never tried my hand at farming before.”

“I would say Steiner is just concerned for your safety,” said Rude. “We spotted someone unfamiliar sneaking around out here. They could be dangerous.”

“Nah,” said Amarant, crossing his arms. “Not if it’s who I think it is. She’s no big deal.”

“I HEARD THAT!”

A woman with an unforgettably giant axe that Vivi didn’t expect to see again appeared from behind one of the mounds of dirt, shaking her fist at Amarant. Her sudden arrival made Vivi jump back in alarm, and Steiner, Jack, and Rude took battle stances.

“Lani,” said Amarant, dropping his arms to his sides. “What’re you doing here?”

“Do you see what I mean, Your Majesty?” Steiner asked, gripping his sword with both hands. “You cannot wander off too far with ruffians like her about!”

“Watch yourself, rustbucket,” Lani said, glaring. “I am no mere ruffian – I am the beautiful hunter of love! My axe and I demand respect put onto the name.”

“Does that still make you some kind of ruffian?” Jack asked, scratching his head. 

“She was a bounty hunter hired to kidnap the princess and Master Vivi,” said Steiner. “To my great regret I was not there to protect them, but she was a persistent foe.” He turned his glare on Amarant. “And she was hired alongside you!”

“Yeah, but I never did crap like take child hostages,” said Amarant, waving his arm. “You’re not gonna do that here, are you?”

Rude adjusted his sunglasses. “If you are going to be a problem, we will be forced to swiftly eject you from the premises.”

Lani stomped her feet. “Of course I’m not gonna do that! I have no idea where ‘here’ even is, anyway! No one hired me for anything.”

Garnet stepped between her and Steiner, which only made Steiner bluster more. “Please, let us make peace. If I recall, did you not come to live with the moogles in Madain Sari, after having come to see the error of your ways?”

At her words, Lani’s whole demeanor changed. She folded her hands behind her back and kicked at the ground with a pout. “I did. Seeing all that we went through… it made me think about where my life had gone, you know? And now here I am, with no idea what’s really going on.”

Chocobo gave a little wark of sympathy for her, his eyes downcast, and followed it up with an upbeat “kweh!” that made her laugh.

Vivi never found it in himself to hate her for battling them. “Why don’t you come with us, Miss Lani?”

“M-master Vivi!” Steiner sputtered.

“I don’t mind at all,” said Garnet, and Steiner sputtered so much that Vivi couldn't even discern words.

“Salamander,” Lani said to Amarant. “You were okay with letting us team up again after all that, weren’t you?”

“Yeah,” grunted Amarant. “C’mon, there’s someone you should meet back at Garden.”


“Ohhh, you’ve got moogles here, too?” Lani clasped her hands together near her face and cooed at Mog and Montblanc. Amarant, Garnet, and Vivi brought her back to Garden, where they found the moogles in the first floor lobby. “The moogles of Madain Sari saved my life. I owe you little guys everything.”

Mog whirled and rose higher into the air. “I-is that so? Well, I’m glad the moogles of your world are so nice, kupo!”

“As expected, kupo,” said Montblanc. “I’ve heard that they did raise Eiko, after all.”

“Lani here would make for a strong ally,” Garnet said to the moogles.

Vivi nodded. “Yeah! I hope we can be friends here.”

Lani blushed, but flipped her hair over her shoulder as if to hide it. “Friends, huh? Yeah, I guess I can try that out.”

He knew, somehow, that it would make her happy. After meeting her again in Madain Sari, he had gotten the impression that she was just lonely. “I’m glad to hear it!”

“Let’s go put that strength to the test,” Amarant said. “Make sure you haven’t been slacking. This place has got a training center – just over that way. And sometimes really big monsters show up.”

“Watch out, kupo!” Mog warned. “I’ve heard there’s sometimes a really big dinosaur!”

Lani grinned and hefted her axe as she ran off toward the training center with Amarant. “Wait up, Salamander! My axe is ready to rend any prey in our path!”


Character abilities:

Previous Character Updates:

Relm

ULT: Friendship Portrait

Effect: Blind effect duration extend

Relm's ULT is an original one where she paints the rest of the cast of VI. After use, her Blind debuff gets a longer duration.


Leo

ULT: Aegis Strike

Effect: Follow up damage increase

Aegis Strike is an ability he has in Record Keeper. After use, all of his follow-up damage is increased.


Lani (Unique - Axes) Non-elemental melee damage, 5 follow ups that build up each turn she targets the same foe, instant break, counter, launcher

15: Bardiche Cleave

35: Scan

EX: Hands Off!

LD: Black Magic Bounty -> Enables Fira/Thundara/Aera/Watera/Blizzara follow ups

FR: Bladed Kiss (with Meia)

BT: Hunter of Love

ULT: Elegant Swing (Effect: Scan inflicts full imperil)

Burst theme: “Madain Sari, Village of the Lost Summoners," the theme of the village where she has a big breakthrough about her life

Lani's got a few different sources for her abilities. Scan and all of her follow-up spells are from her boss battle (though she does cast Water instead of Watera in FFIX). Notably, she is one of the few enemies in the franchise that actually uses Scan on the party, so I wanted to incorporate that into her kit. "Hands Off!" and "Elegant Swing" come from her kit in Brave Exvius, but the rest of her abilities are original.

By default, she deals non-elemental damage. As a boss battle, she mainly focuses on attacking Garnet (if she's alive), so I wanted to replicate her tendency to focus on one foe by giving her a boost to attacking the same target. After using her LD, she will begin following up her attacks with Fira. If she targets the same foe again, she will then cast Fira and Thundara. If she does it again, then she will cast Fira, Thundara, and Aera -- and so on, capping with five follow ups. When she uses Scan, the following attack on that foe will instant break them (from any party member), and have boosted HP damage as well. After she uses her ULT, Scan will also inflict a full elemental Imperil on her foes, ensuring that she is not locked out of any fight with her Black Magic follow ups. She can also counter attacks and launch foes, giving her some more damage potential.

Chapter 38: Lost Chapter: Memories of a Promise Made

Notes:

So... I feel like I need to justify this character's inclusion, haha. She debuts in a side story raid series in XIV, but it is a raid series that involves mostly MSQ-related characters and tied closely with the overall MSQ plot. She wasn't originally on my list of characters to add, but when I added the next character in her Force chain, she worked VERY well as that character's partner. And then I remembered -- this character DID just recently appear, albeit briefly, in the MSQ for the very first time, so... she just barely qualifies! She marks our third character to represent the Shadowbringers expansion (after Ryne and Emet-Selch) but there will be a fourth who will not appear for quite some time.

Last Chapter's Force partnership:

Lani with Meia: They are both initially antagonistic, vain women who can be flirty and like to battle, and both wield giant bladed weapons.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: Memories of a Promise Made


Gaia ( Final Fantasy XIV )

Voiced by: Yuna Kamakura

A mysterious young woman who can wield darkness in the First, a world flooded with light. When the Scions ventured into the barren lands of the Empty to restore its balance of aether, Gaia appeared with no memory of who she was or where she came from; through battling the forces of the gargantuan Sin Eater, Eden, she comes to learn she is the reincarnation of an Ascian. Dubbed the “Oracle of Darkness,” she forms a close friendship with Ryne, her prickly personality contrasting with the Oracle of Light’s kindness.

Gaia


GAIA


Gaia knew this place.

It was an empty city, far larger than her home of Eulmore had ever claimed to be. Skyscrapers towered high above her, longing for a dark and cloudy sky. Streetlights lit the way through the gloom, dotted along pristine white streets. Doors and benches and black iron archways loomed taller and larger than any she had seen before. It was a city for giants.

This was Amaurot, capital of the ancient world. The seat of the Convocation of Fourteen, its ruling body – which she had once been part of, long ago and in a different life. Her title had been Loghrif, the Pastor. Overseer of all terrestrial life. Those memories came flooding back, but they didn’t belong to her. She had come home. She had never been here before.

Just as she started to think that she didn’t want to be alone here, she saw a figure ahead of her. Gaia picked up her pace when she recognized Ryne from behind – but rather than her orange hair, this figure seemed to be made of pale blue crystal.

“Is that… a statue?” she wondered aloud.

The crystalline figure moved and turned to face her, revealing blank eyes. Gaia froze – as much as this thing looked like her dear friend, its movements seemed unnatural and unnerving. “Oh, get over it,” the creature said; a twisted mockery of Ryne’s voice that had none of her warmth. “I’m just a Manikin.”

Gaia’s jaw slackened, but she clamped it back shut as soon as she remembered to compose herself. “A what?” Her tucked away Ancient knowledge told her nothing of this ‘Manikin.’ “What manner of creation is a Manikin?”

“I was summoned by the will of the crystal, just as you were,” said the copy of Ryne. She turned her chin up in a haughty way that the real Ryne would never do.

“And did you do anything to the real Ryne?” Gaia asked, fists clenched. She knew not what to make of those words. What crystal did she speak of? But to admit to her ignorance would be to put herself at even more of a disadvantage.

The Manikin walked closer to her and crossed her arms. “Calm yourself, I have never even met her,” she said, which loosened the tight knot in Gaia’s chest. “All I know is that we resemble other inhabitants of this world. I even lack her memories. If you know aught of this city, then do feel free to share.”

Gaia’s cheek twitched. She was reminded of the worst of the Eulmoran nobility when she spoke with this crystalline Ryne. But there was one thing, at least, that Gaia seemed to know more than the Manikin – little comfort as it was. “This is Amaurot. Supposedly, deep beneath the sea – but I clearly see the sky, dim as it is.”

“Hm. Then clearly you know as much as I do after all. Which is to say, nothing. Obviously, we are not under the sea.”

“Obviously! I am well aware this isn’t the same Amaurot I’ve been told about!”

“Well, you may accompany me as I search the area for answers,” said the Manikin, pivoting on her heel and turning her nose up. “Please be sure to keep up – I will not slow my pace on account of your impractical heels.”

Gaia simmered. She much preferred the real Ryne to this one, but she followed instead of being left with only the loneliness of the empty city and her past life’s phantom memories for company. “The real Ryne is much kinder than you,” she said. “And makes for much better company.”

“Is that so?” said the Manikin. “Then perhaps I will consider not using her name.”

“I forbid it,” said Gaia. “Choose your own name.”

“Ugh. This girl must have an infinite well of patience if she would put up with you.”

“Ha,” Gaia looked away, lips pressed into a smile. “I suppose she does.”

“This Ryne – whose form I have taken… you care for her?” she asked after a few minutes of blessed silence.

Gaia took a moment to answer, weighing how much she wanted to tell this strange crystal being. “When I had no memory of who I was, she was there. She never let me feel alone.” She looked toward the Manikin with an eyebrow raised. “I don’t suppose you can change your form, can you?”

“What, do you find yourself flustered by my beauty?” she asked, and then laughed into her hand.

Gaia laughed as well and was about to retort when a dark portal swirled into existence in front of them – for all she knew, a doorway to the Void. But rather than Voidsent, a man in black and gold stepped out of it, and it closed behind him.

“What an unexpected surprise to see you here,” the man said, regarding Gaia with a penetrating gaze. His face softened and he put a hand to his chest. “Ah, but you wouldn’t recognize me, would you? I am Emet-Selch. Ascian.”

Gaia’s eyes widened and she recoiled away from him, her hammer appearing as if from nowhere. She clutched the shaft with both hands, its weight the first comforting familiarity here, and glared at him. “Ryne and the others told me all about you! How do you live?”

“The will of the crystal, or so I’m told,” he said, whirling his hand dismissively as if to show what he thought of that. “Just as you yet live again, Loghrif. The color of your soul hasn’t changed.”

Gaia shook her head. So that was how he knew who she was. “I’m not Loghrif. My mind is my own.”

Figures – a colleague of her past life. She wanted nothing to do with him.

“Is that so?” he asked. “I could raise you again back to your former station with nary a finger lifted, if you so wished. All your powers and memories returned.”

The Ryne Manikin drew her daggers. “Bugger off, before we make you,” she said. “I believe she’s made it clear she wants nothing to do with your offer.”

“I’ve remembered enough and rejected it,” said Gaia, pleased and a little surprised by the Manikin’s defense of her. “Ryne and the Warrior of Darkness helped me cleave through the shadows in my mind. I will not throw their efforts away so easily.”

Emet-Selch’s face twisted into one of disgust. “Did they, now? Even you have thrown your lot in with them? I’d thought to find a fellow Ascian on my side, yet you buy into their drivel, too, even as you travel alongside a Manikin that you infantilize.”

“Infantilize?” said the Manikin. “She’s done no such thing in our short time together. If anything, she has been struck dumb by my intelligence.”

Gaia scoffed. “That is one way to put it.” She narrowed her eyes at Emet-Selch. “You speak nonsense to me. I’ve only just found myself here in Amaurot. Where are my friends? Have you hurt them?”

“They’re somewhere far from here, I expect,” he said. He rolled his eyes. “And no, I haven’t lifted a finger against them. Though I disagree wholeheartedly with their actions, I have decided not to oppose them. I want no part in their hypocritical struggle to maintain their own lives at the expense of this world’s burgeoning life – like that of your Manikin friend.”

Gaia’s face twisted into a scowl. How dare he show himself to her after everything he had done, both from what she had discovered in Eden and all that she had heard from Ryne, Thancred, and Urianger? “I care little about whether you mean to oppose them. You show no remorse for what you’ve done to me , and your plot to destroy the First.”

Another man appeared, then, coalescing as if from the shadows. The Manikin turned to face the man in the fedora and unruly hair, with a long jacket and flowing scarf. “I’d thought I’d sensed a confluence of darkness gathering here,” the man said with a flowery bow. “Ah, you’re Emet-Selch, aren’t you? I’d heard about the little debacle with Ramuh, but you and I haven’t had the pleasure of meeting yet.”

Emet-Selch looked as if he caught the scent of something disgusting. “And you are?”

“Ardyn, if it pleases you,” said the other man. “Young lady, you’ve mentioned a name that I recognize. It may hearten you to learn that Ryne counts among my many travel companions in this world.”

“You’ve been listening, have you?” Gaia said. Something about this man gave her a chill, like darkness at the edge of an abyss that could drag her down into its depths. She had witnessed forever, though; she had come back from it. He may have been darkness, but she was the Oracle. “Well, before I go with you, I have business to finish with Emet-Selch.”

“Allow me to aid you, then,” said Ardyn. “One ‘Oracle of Darkness’ to another. I’d like to see how I compare to a sorcerer of eld.”

Gaia’s eyes widened. She didn’t know what to make of him knowing that. Had Ryne mentioned…?

“You, Manikin,” said Emet-Selch, pointing to the copy of Ryne. “To them you will never be more than a pale imitation of true life. I would know, as I once thought the same of them. Would you still fight alongside her?”

The Manikin sunk deeper into a fighting stance. “I’ve no reason to doubt her yet. We’ve only just become acquainted.”

Gaia hefted her hammer and launched herself toward Emet-Selch, roaring out a challenge. “Enough of this! You don’t speak for me, Emet-Selch!”

Her hammer came down hard over Emet-Selch’s head, but he looked almost bored as he snapped his fingers and a barrier appeared to deflect her attack. The force of it knocked her back, but she waved a hand and conjured swirls of dark magic to surround him. She went to swipe at him again, leaping over the wave of darkness he cast over the ground back at her, but he swatted her out of midair with a backhanded swing. Ardyn moved into the opening, teleporting with a sword strike and a tornado of black energy, which Emet-Selch dispelled with a wave of his arm. The swirls of darkness that Gaia had cast then erupted, her delayed spell taking him by surprise.

An enormous, shadowy arm made of oily darkness appeared, slamming down against the ground. Emet-Selch had withstood her attack, making Gaia curse under her breath. The Manikin leapt onto the arm and used it to run toward her target. It tried to shake her off, but the movement propelled her into the air and allowed her to fall down on him from above. She stabbed down at him, but black fire erupted and struck her twice with swift movements from Emet-Selch’s arms, blasting her back.

“Ryne!” Gaia shouted out – it was automatic, slipping out before she could stop herself.

Ardyn’s dark magic swelled in the space between Gaia and Emet-Selch, his movements too fast for Gaia to track as he teleported around the street that had become their battlefield. Black energy pulsed from Emet-Selch in turn, washing over them as he tried to swat Ardyn away. Emet-Selch treated them all as if they were little more than a nuisance to him.

Gaia felt the frustration building in her chest and pushed forward, struggling against the tide that threatened to sweep her off her feet. Emet-Selch watched her come. He lifted one finger and pointed at her and Gaia saw the piercing attack coming; she swung her hammer at it just in time to block the spear. The force of the attack made the shaft of her hammer vibrate painfully, all she wanted to do was let go – but to do that would be to let the Ascian win. So she persisted, she pushed forward; straining against the lance of darkness and light focused on the head of her hammer that threatened to pierce her through, balancing it as she progressed closer and closer to Emet-Selch. Her own magic rushed up around her to strike, fracturing his attack into a prism of reflected beams that went off in multiple directions.

The Manikin had risen, stumbling toward Emet-Selch to join the attack again, when one of the errant beams struck her.

Gaia’s voice broke. “No!”

The darkness vanished as quickly as it had come, the magic fading as they all ended the battle at once. Gaia rushed to the fallen Manikin.

“You did this, Loghrif. I had no desire to fight,” Emet-Selch said. His face was unreadable. “I pity you. I do. Perhaps these Manikins will disappoint you in the end. But until we are gone, they will be mere casualties in the battles waged here by our kind. Remember that.”

He turned away from Gaia, from the aftereffect of their battle, and gave a languid shake of his wrist as he departed.

Gaia took the Manikin’s hand, staring into her empty eyes. She expected the Manikin to be cold, like a stone, but she was warm. “I’m sorry,” she said.

“You… called me Ryne,” she said. The echoing quality of her voice started to die, and it made her sound almost like she was made of flesh and blood. “I rather liked that. Thank you for not letting me... be alone."

Her hand crumbled away first, and then the light at her core faded as the rest of her crystalline body turned to dust in Gaia’s arms before she could even say anything else. Her words died in her throat before she could get them out.

“Come,” said Ardyn, stepping up to her side. “I shall bring you to the companions from your world.”


Ardyn brought her through something he called a Torsion into a bright and sunny environment that was so large and with such high glass windows and ceilings that she didn’t realize it was partially indoors at first. He called the circular white tower her new home. Balamb Garden.

Gaia saw Thancred first, talking to someone in a black jacket with a fur-lined collar. A girl in a long blue cardigan ran up to them, laughing about something Gaia couldn’t hear, and her heart leapt when she saw Ryne trailing behind her. Gaia wanted to yell for her attention, but it was as if she had the Manikin’s crystal dust in her throat, so instead she waited for Ryne to see her.

She almost turned away, almost asked Ardyn to take her elsewhere. She wondered, briefly, if she needed to learn more about the Manikins before she had the right to reunite with her friends again. To make up for letting one of them die. But Ryne noticed her before she could make up her mind, eyes widening and mouth opened in an unheard gasp, and it dispelled any doubts Gaia had.

“Gaia!” Ryne shouted with joy, running toward her with arms outspread. “I can’t believe it! You’re here!”

Gaia opened her arms on a reflex as Ryne neared, and they embraced before Gaia could even think about how foolish they must have looked to everyone else. “Yes,” she said. “I am here to stay.”


Character Abilities

Previous Character Updates:

Mog

ULT: Twilight Requiem

Effect: Additional follow up "Cave-In"

Mog's ULT is one of his unused Dances, particularly the one that he uses in caves and dark areas. After use, he gets an additional follow-up ability.


Shadow

FR: Interceptor & Darkstar (with Rufus)

BT: Last Second

ULT: Throw Ragnarok (Effect: Instant turn when inflicting breaks)

Burst theme: “The Fierce Battle,” played in difficult boss battles such as against Ultima Weapon

Shadow's Force partner is a character who is already in the game, so here's his update! I'm sure you can see the reason for this Force partnership... His Burst ability is an original, referencing how the player needs to wait until the last second when fleeing the Floating Continent to save him. His ULT has him throwing one of the best weapons in the game at his foe, and after use he gets an instant free turn after breaking foes.


Gaia (Unique - Hammers) Dark melee damage, Dark imperil, Rainbow damage, traps, Petrify, BRV to 0

15: Doomvoid Slicer

35: Spell-In-Waiting: Unholy Darkness

EX: Hell Wind

LD: Shadoweye

FR: Unexpected Brutishness (with Lani)

BT: Quietus

ULT: Terminal Relativity (Effect: Casts Memory’s End - fixed 5% dmg at foe 10% health)

Burst theme: “Promises to Keep,” the theme for the final battle in Eden’s Promise

All of Gaia's abilities come from her boss battle in the Eden raids when she is first met as the Voidwalker in Eden's Gate: Descent. I tried to replicate some of the battle mechanics from that boss fight with her kit.

Doomvoid Slicer inflicts a unique debuff called Diabolic Curse, which turns all Weakness damage inflicted on a foe into Rainbow damage. "Spell-In-Waiting" inflicts a trap debuff to replicate the delayed detonation of her spells. Her EX, Hell Wind, sets all enemy BRV to 0. Her LD is an interesting one -- she selects one party member, and if any foe attacks that ally, they suffer the Petrify status effect. Petrify is an instant break and turn deletion debuff packed into one. She also has a unique ULT effect in that she inflicts fixed 5% damage one time once the foe reaches 10% of their total health (perhaps this allows her to bypass some enemy mechanics?).

Her Burst theme does not come from the battle against the Voidwalker (which plays remixed FFVIII music). Instead, it is from the final battle of the Eden raids overall.

Notes:

I feel like this "batch" of characters (Meia, Lani, Gaia, and the next two) aren't particularly "hype-worthy," so I apologize for that, but the next character is one that I am personally pretty excited for and always really wanted to see in Opera Omnia. The hint: this character has a history as a mass murderer that they regret.

After this batch of Lost Chapters, I promise the next story chapter has more "hype-worthy" characters again!

Chapter 39: Lost Chapter: Darksteel Hurricane

Notes:

Last Chapter's Force partnerships:

Shadow with Rufus: Interceptor and Darkstar!

Gaia with Lani: Both are characterized as rather dainty looking women with big, heavy weapons and a crisis of self-identity.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: Darksteel Hurricane


Zeid ( Final Fantasy XI )

Voiced by: Satoshi Hino

A former member of the Republic of Bastok’s all-Galka brigade that fought in the Crystal War against the Shadow Lord over twenty years ago. For a time, he sought vengeance against Bastok for failing to help his brigade, of which he was the only survivor. Though he prefers working alone, he once helped Lion in her adventures and it was his blade that had slain the Shadow Lord to end the Crystal War.

Zeid


MACHINA


When Mog sensed a new light far to the north, Machina set out with a few others to go and find it. Balthier and Fran, reluctantly accepting their role as the main form of transportation when the entire Garden didn’t need to move, took them on their airship.. Though they came with a small group – which consisted of Leon, Cecil, Lyse, Lion, Prishe, Agrias, and himself – Machina felt prepared for anything to come their way, whether it was a new friend or a new foe.

What he wasn’t quite prepared for, however, was a frigid, snowy wasteland.

“We’ll leave you to it, then,” said Balthier, waving them off before shutting himself inside of the Strahl .

“Lovely, thanks,” said Lyse, hugging herself for warmth. Machina heard more than just a tinge of sarcasm in her voice.

The wide, open snowfields were mostly barren, with distant peaks and unforgiving stone cliffs. Occasional winds battered their faces with tiny ice crystals, stinging Machina’s eyes. He had to keep wiping away the tears forming out of a fear that they’d freeze to his cheeks. Ahead, dark gouges in the snow-laden ground revealed scars in the earth where some sort of magical energy seeped out, bleeding in pillars that stretched into the air and faded into the sky.

“Wait, I know this place,” said Lion, rubbing her hands together. “I almost didn’t recognize it without all the Kindred around, but I’m certain this is Xarcabard.”

“Is it something that should concern us?” Cecil asked.

“The Kindred are a beastman race that people call demonic,” said Lion. “And this region is where the Shadow Lord kept his stronghold.”

“So not good news, then,” grumbled Machina. “Fantastic.”

“Someone from our world must be here!” said Prishe. “Unless you summoned this place, Lion? You helped fight the Shadow Lord, didn’t you?”

Lion lowered her eyes. “Maybe,” she said with a sigh. “Just so the rest of you understand – the Shadow Lord led an alliance of all the Beastman tribes in a war against the five races. He was defeated twenty years ago, ending the war, but recently he had been revived. I was one of the ones investigating the circumstances leading to his return. We managed to defeat him again, but things weren’t really what they seemed. He had a cloud of rage and hatred surrounding him, and toward the end he broke free of it.”

“But you’re not certain if his mind would be his own if he were to be summoned here,” Leon surmised. “Your hesitation is understandable.”

“Mayhap he seeks solitude,” said Agrias. “If there is naught but snow and desolation here, t’would be ideal.”

“Let us take shelter from the cold,” Cecil advised. “At least for a time. Then we can resume our search.”

“I know where we can go,” Lion said, pointing ahead with a grim frown. A fortress of stone and snow loomed against the pale gray sky. “Castle Zvahl. The domain of the Shadow Lord.”


Once they passed the gates and crossed the threshold into Castle Zvahl, silence reigned.

The stone here was cold and black, like obsidian. The gloom hung thick, a cold vapor, and Machina could see why someone named the Shadow Lord would use this as his base.

As they started to walk down the dark hall, Leon held out a hand. “Hold. I hear voices.”

Machina strained to hear but they all pressed against the wall, edging closer to a gap in the black stone which led to a different chamber. Leon, in the lead, stopped to give them a chance to listen.

“It will be found in these halls, I’m sure,” said a boyish voice, heavy with derision. Machina recognized Eald’narche as the speaker at once. “The power that sleeps here. Remnants of that wretched Shadow Lord.”

“I’ll get it for you,” said a gruff voice. Machina wasn’t sure he had ever heard the speaker before.

“As if you can be trusted with it, Hume,” said Eald’narche. “Your hands will not touch it. Don’t forget your place.”

“Of course not, my lord,” said the other speaker, putting emphasis on the formal address. The tear in space of a Torsion opening up resounded from in the chamber, and then closed again shortly after. Armored greaves stepped against the stone – Eald’narche was the one who disappeared into it.

Agrias pushed herself off of the wall, drawing her sword. “I know which foe means to oppose us here – Gaffgarion!”

The dark knight from Ramza’s world. Machina had heard about him. If Agrias had judged that they didn’t need to hide from him, then so be it. Machina drew his drill rapiers and faced the doorway into the chamber alongside Agrias and the others, looking upon the old knight in rusty armor for the first time. It was an otherwise empty room, with other halls branching off deeper into the castle.

“Lady Oaks,” said Gaffgarion. If he was surprised to see them, he didn’t show it. “I’ve never known an honorable knight to drop eaves.”

“You serve the likes of Eald’narche now?” she responded. “The depths of your ignomy have no end, I see.”

“If it’s gil you’re after, I doubt someone like that guy has any,” said Machina.

“It is not gil that turns this world, but power,” Gaffgarion replied, hands flexing in his gauntlets. “Sheer power, held in our hands and manifested as will. That boy has shown me how to wield it according to the laws of this world, and I intend to survive here no matter how cruel he is.”

Lion held her dagger forward. “We won’t let you take whatever power Eald’narche has found here!”

Lion and Leon went on the attack together, striking at Gaffgarion from both sides with a blade of light and darkness, respectively. An eye made of crimson energy opened above them both, and Gaffgarion slashed downward to rend the air. Magic siphoned from their bodies to his sword, which he then unleashed in a wave of foul magic. Machina braced himself, but a massive figure in black armor appeared and cleaved the force in two with a pure black blade.

“Is this… the Shadow Lord?” Agrias asked, backing against the wall to take in both of her foes.

“No… Zeid’s here!” Prishe exclaimed, beaming. “All right! Let’s take this chump down!”

“Lion, Prishe, I expect you both to tell me what is happening,” said the hulking figure, Zeid. Based on Prishe’s reaction, Machina assumed him to be an ally. “Has the Shadow Lord returned once again?”

“No, just this fiend and his new master,” said Lion, glaring at Gaffgarion.

“A clash of dark knights,” said Leon. “You both wear your hatred like armor. Let us cross swords and see whose darkness prevails.”

“All of you against me?” said Gaffgarion, backing away with his sword raised. “That is hardly a fair contest. But if we must…” Blindingly fast, silver flashed as his sword swiped the air in front of him, casting the entire chamber in pitch black darkness. Blinded, Machina heard a few members of the party gasp. Machina sensed movement around him and crossed his blades just in time to defend himself. Light shone and it took him a moment to realize it concentrated at the tip of Cecil’s blade, banishing the darkness, which seemed to leach away from the chamber like water down a drain.

But rather than vanishing, it seemed to coalesce around Zeid’s greatsword. “My hatred is not donned as armor,” he said. “It forms my blade.”

He swung toward Gaffgarion, the energy crashing and exploding against the stone wall. The floor rumbled as dark forces burst from the impact, dislodging rubble from the ceiling. Everyone recoiled away from the damage with Cecil and Agrias shielding them, but when the dust cleared, Gaffgarion had vanished.

“Fled like the coward he is,” said Agrias.

“No… I’m not sure if he is a coward,” said Leon. “He strikes me as an opportunist. He’ll be back to face us again.”

Lion clapped her hands together and approached Zeid with a smile, but the hulking man’s expression was unreadable under his mask. “Zeid, it’s good to see you again.”

“Your world has Roegadyn, too? I never realized!” said Lyse, but she looked around Zeid and tapped her lips. “Or, well, I suppose Roegadyn don’t have tails.”

“I’m a Galka,” said Zeid. “You speak of a different world – so I take it this is not Vana’diel.”

“Yeah, we’ve got a lot to fill you in on,” said Prishe. She turned toward the others with her hands on her hips. “If you wanted a new tough guy to join our ranks, look no further. Zeid helped us out when the dark god Promathia was ready to start the apocalypse.”

“And he was crucial to helping us foil the schemes of the Zilart brothers,” said Lion. “Not to mention how he joined the fight against the revived Shadow Lord, and furthermore dealt the final blow to him the first time at the end of the Crystal War…”

“That is enough,” said Zeid, putting his blade on his back. “The general public was not to know that I was the one who struck down the Shadow Lord.”

“Well, we’re in a different world, so it’s not like that really matters here, right?” said Machina. “Why wouldn’t you want the public to know that you’re a war hero?”

“The relations between the five races aren’t so great in our world,” said Lion, frowning. “The top brass decided that it was to be a Hume who ended the war. Even though Zeid’s one of the Mythril Musketeers, part of Bastok’s elite fighting force, the credit had to go to someone else.”

“That’s awful,” said Lyse. “I’m sorry they did that to you… covering up the truth like that…”

“It is fine,” Zeid responded, shaking his head. “I prefer to protect my homeland from the shadows. It suits me… and I would not have been free to aid Lion and Prishe otherwise in protecting our world from all kinds of threats.”

“It sounds like you have saved the world several times over,” said Agrias. “We would be honored to have someone of your caliber among us.”

“I only helped.” Zeid looked between them, his face still impassive. “I tend to work alone. I don’t think I’ll be joining you.”

“Even in a new world, free from whatever other burdens plague you?” Cecil asked. “Let me ask – when was the last time you have walked in the light?”

Zeid sighed and looked up, toward the cavernous ceiling. “It has been longer than I can remember.”

“C’mon, big guy,” said Prishe, elbowing him. “Lion and I gotta fill you in on everything here. Wandering around in this big, unfamiliar world alone won’t do you any good.”

“It really is a world of second chances,” said Machina, putting a hand over his heart. “I would know. I never thought I’d walk in light again, but all my friends have accepted me.”

“And I have my family again,” said Leon. “The light is not as blinding as it seems.”

“Kam’lanaut, Eald’narche, Gaffgarion, and many other foes oppose us here,” said Lion, putting a hand on his arm as she looked up at him. “We could really use your strength.”

Zeid looked down at Lion, then at his hand. “If that is what you wish… then I will think about it. Perhaps I can be the one to offer shade in that light unrelenting.”


ZEID


He listened to Lion and Prishe’s explanations on all the things he had missed in this world and how he had been summoned here – and most of all, why it looked just like the stronghold of the Shadow Lord. As they spoke, he led them through its cursed halls, tracking down the elder Zilart brother who stalked the castle for a hint of lost power.

When they came to the throne room, Zeid paused as he took in the sight of the Shadow Lord’s infernal seat of power, the markings on the floor that looked like blood, the dark memories. The Shadow Lord had only started to remember who he really was when the Zilart machinations undid him. In his final moments, he sacrificed himself to enable Zeid, Lion, and their dear friend’s escape.

And here, Zeid also faced one of his greatest shames.

All of that could wait, though. Eald’narche waited for them on the Shadow Lord’s throne, looking even more a child in its gargantuan embrace.

“His power is gone,” Eald’narche said, head propped up on his fist. “Where is the Shadow Lord’s darkness?”

“It was never here,” said Zeid. “This throne room is where I was first summoned to this world. It was my darkness you sensed. Or perhaps it was the darkness of three dark knights coming to this castle.”

“Four,” said Cecil, stepping forward. He shared a glance with Zeid. “Though I’ve found my light, the darkness has never left me.”

Eald’narche narrowed his eyes at Zeid. “You,” he said. “Darksteel Hurricane, is it?” Zeid froze at mention of that name. How could he have known? “How dare you lowly, pathetic creatures cling to power that shouldn’t belong to you?”

“Darksteel… Hurricane?” said Lion. “What do you mean?”

Wondering if he would regret this, Zeid hefted his blade and pointed it at Eald’narche. “He means me.” If they meant to let him walk in the light in this world, this would be the true test of it. If even his greatest sin of all could be accepted… vengeance wrought in cold murder…

Lion’s stance slackened, but she closed her eyes and nodded to Zeid before readying herself again. He wasn’t sure if Prishe knew the stories of that dread monster, but Lion surely did. “It doesn’t matter to me. If you’re still trying to atone, you can do so by aiding us in this world.”

Zeid let out the barest breath of relief. He hadn’t realized that he had come to value her opinion so much. “So be it,” he said. Perhaps it was because she had been willing to sacrifice so much as well.

Eald’narche stood and floated above the throne. “It would be a waste of my time to fight you. I’d accomplish nothing.” He held up a hand and opened another Torsion. “If I must send my newest tool after you, then that will have to suffice.”

“I tire of our enemies simply running from us,” said Agrias, clenching her fists. “Is there no end to them?”

“Perhaps not,” said Cecil. “But if they shall continue to dedicate their lives in pursuit of harming this world, then we will simply keep opposing them.”

“If we can die now, that means they can, too,” said Prishe. “So they’re all gonna be more careful.”

“Regardless, I think we should leave this dreary place,” said Lion. “Come, Zeid – it is time for us to show you our new home.”

Zeid looked back one final time at the throne before turning to depart with her and the others. Perhaps he could spend some time among them, getting to learn the ways of this world and the manner of enemies they faced. “As long as there are not too many of you. I do not deal well with crowds.”

He thought Lyse made a noise that sounded like a snort, but he supposed it was just the cold that had made her sneeze.


Character Abilities

Previous Character Updates:

Cloud

ULT: Final Omnislash

Effect: Launches with each critical hit

I know he already got the Advent Children version of Omnislash for his Burst, but it wouldn't feel right not to give him another version of it for his ULT. After use, he will launch foes automatically every time he deals a critical hit.


Tifa

ULT: Overlimit Combo

Effect: Guaranteed critical with every follow up

I... can't find where I got this ability name from. I don't think I made it up. I just looked through her abilities in all of her spinoff appearances and couldn't find this one again. I do remember that it was tough to decide which ability to use, considering she already has her iconic Final Heaven. After she uses this, she gets guaranteed critical hits with every follow up she does, since a lot of her kit is focused around crit hits and follow ups.


Zeid (Greatswords) Dark melee dmg, debuff, buffer, self heal, battery, dark imperil

15: Absorb-STR

35: Abyssal Strike

EX: Sickle Moon

LD: Blood Weapon

FR: Diabolic Endeavor (with Gaffgarion)

BT: Souleater 

ULT: Torcleaver (Effect: EX deals HP damage equivalent to triple current BRV value)

Burst theme: “Tough Battle,” plays during many boss fights in the initial storyline

Zeid's skills mostly come from the Dark Knight job, particularly abilities he uses as a Trust party member. I wanted to include at least one of the Dark Knight's unique spells from this game, which is how Absorb-STR got in there, which lowers enemy attack and buffs the party's while also offering battery. Torcleaver isn't an ability he is ever shown using to my knowledge, but it is one of the highest level Greatsword weapon skills in the game. After use, his EX will always deal damage equivalent to triple his current BRV value.

Overall, he's another Dark elemental melee attacker with imperil, debuff, buffing, and self healing capabilities.

Notes:

Zeid's probably my favorite character in FFXI. I know that's not a game that a lot of people know (or care) much about, but I always hoped he'd make it into Opera Omnia. He's probably one of the biggest characters in the game besides the "leading ladies," due to his appearances in many different storylines. He's super edgy, but edgy is cool sometimes.

Next character hint: Another master mage appears... kupo.

Chapter 40: Lost Chapter: Archiving the Endless Stories

Notes:

So for this chapter, I decided to write it script-style. Partially to switch it up, partially because it's easier for me and I didn't have the energy for a full chapter this time. Maybe every so often I'll write them this way instead of just for Idle Chatters. Main story chapters won't be written in a script format though.

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Zeid with Gaffgarion: Both are Dark Knights that committed a serious crime in the past - Zeid with his mass murder and Gaffgarion for his undefined war crimes. Both also take on a mentor role for the hero.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: Archiving the Endless Stories


Dr. Mog ( Final Fantasy Record Keeper )

Voiced by: Sumire Morohoshi

The head of the Royal Archives and Tyro’s teacher. An experienced Record Keeper, Dr. Mog considers his duties as custodian of the record paintings a great honor, though he views those in the Royal Arcanium to be their rivals. His village once tried to harness the magical powers of the record paintings with disastrous results, an event which shaped the master mage he would become.

Dr. Mog


(Tyro, Trey, Serah, Amidatelion, Lani, and Gladio are traversing an island together when they come across the ruins of a village that seems as if it had been flattened by a storm. Amidatelion kneels to inspect the splintered, decaying wood of a dome-shaped structure.)

AMIDATELION: How tragic… Based on the style of architecture, I believe this was a Moogle village.

LANI: Moogles! What? Here?

SERAH: Oh, no… I hope they evacuated in time.

TREY: It is unlikely there were actual Moogles here. I’d say this place is just the memory of one such destroyed village.

GLADIO: We should still look for survivors, just in case. Hell, they could even be Moogle Manikins.

SERAH: It’s a terrible thing to come across when we took the whole of Balamb Garden out this way for a nice break.

(Tyro points ahead, where the ground slopes upward to a clifftop. At its peak, a small figure sits with their back to the party, looking out over the water.)

TYRO: Wait, I see someone.

TREY: From what I can see, their clothes are similar to yours, Tyro.

TYRO: Yes… I know who that is! (He runs toward the figure, grinning). Dr. Mog! You’re here!

GLADIO: Doctor Mog? Oh, Iris would love this.

(Dr. Mog turns at the sound of Tyro’s voice, his pom straightening in surprise when he sees them. The party meets him at the top of the cliff and he looks around at them all.)

DR. MOG: Tyro!? And… what are you doing with all of these people? None of them are supposed to be here, kupo.

TYRO: It’s okay. We aren’t in a painting, and they haven’t escaped or anything. We’ve all been summoned to a different world. It’s good to see you, Dr. Mog! Everyone, this is my teacher – the head of the Royal Archives.

SERAH: It’s nice to meet you, Dr. Mog. Tyro has told us all about you.

DR. MOG: Tyro, you should not mention those so openly, kupo…

TREY: Oh, we already know about the paintings in your world.

DR. MOG: Kupo! You know that is forbidden. You have been careless, Tyro.

TYRO: I’m sorry, they figured it out! This is a strange world – definitely nothing like any of the record paintings. But it’s forbidden to interfere with the paintings because we may influence future events that are set in stone, right? Here in this world, everyone has memories of the future. Many of them even know their fate. So I don’t think the rules are a factor here.

AMIDATELION: It’s true. This world has revived Trey, Serah, and myself.

DR. MOG: Hmm… Well, I will have to consider this some more, kupo, but I am pleased to meet you all as well. Or rather, pleased to see you all again.

LANI: Hmm… he’s got a big nose, but nothing like that Dr. Tot’s.

DR. MOG: E-excuse me, kupo?

TYRO: What are you doing out here, Dr. Mog?

DR. MOG: Ah, I was having a moment of introspection, kupo. I… never thought I would return to this village.

GLADIO: It’s a Moogle village, so…?

DR. MOG: Yes. This was my home before its destruction, kupo. A reminder to never attempt to harness the power of the records.

SERAH: Wait, you mean the paintings did this?

DR. MOG: They created a phenomenon we called a ‘memory burst,’ kupo.

AMIDATELION: I’m sorry. We won’t make you talk about this any longer.

(A figure appears coming up the path behind them, from the direction of the village. As he nears, they realize the figure in a black coat is Shadowsmith, approaching calmly.)

TYRO: It’s Shadowsmith!

LANI: Oh, that guy looks like bad news. Need my axe to deal with him?

DR. MOG: He is bad news, kupo. He’s here, too?

SHADOWSMITH: Teacher and student, reunited. And here of all places… don’t you find that strange, Dr. Mog?

AMIDATELION: It is not so surprising. Dr. Mog has traumatic memories of this place, so he unintentionally summoned it here.

SHADOWSMITH: But to come to a world so mutable to the whims of any of its inhabitants… It is chaos, with so many discordant wills at play.

SERAH: What do you want?

TREY: Yes, when speaking to others, it is pertinent to arrive at your point in a timely manner.

GLADIO: Uh, I don’t think you’re the one to lecture on that…

SHADOWSMITH: With a world as mutable as this one, ever-changing, that means it can shift to the desires of anyone with a sufficiently powerful will. And this is a ‘nexus’ world, is it not? One that lies close to many – if not all – of the other myriad worlds out there?

SERAH: What, you’re not planning to go out and conquer them all, are you?

TYRO: No… He wants to know the secrets of this world and all the others. Don’t you, Shadowsmith?

DR. MOG: Tyro…

SHADOWSMITH: Know their secrets… and change the outcomes of those records. Haven’t you always wanted to influence their events? Prevent tragedies from occurring? I believe if we learn how this world works, we can rewrite the records.

AMIDATELION: I am content. My fate is my own, and if it ends in sacrifice for a better world with the revival of my tribe, then I wouldn’t change a thing.

SHADOWSMITH: You, Tyro. I know you understand.

TYRO: I’m disappointed in you. I thought you would have known better.

SHADOWSMITH: What?

TYRO: We take pride in our role as a Record Keeper. We’re not meant to change history – but to protect it, and learn from it so that horrible things don’t happen in the future. The legacy of all the heroes who came before us is what helps us stand strong.

DR. MOG: Well said, my student. Shadowsmith, you know what happens when one messes with the records. You’re standing in the aftermath of it, kupo.

SHADOWSMITH: But don’t you at least want to know? Why is this world so easily molded by ‘will’? What started this conflict between the gods? What happened to those cycles of battle, and why was it decided that respite is needed? If this world is truly fueled by the powers generated in conflict, it seems to me that we never received that promised ‘respite’ at all. And I am still curious about the abundance of energy being generated now that the dragon god Shinryu has been vanquished.

TREY: All valid questions. But I am sure we have no interest in entertaining the likes of you with answers, do we?

LANI (Drawing her axe) : I don’t think so.

SERAH: You weren’t even here for most of that.

SHADOWSMITH (Drawing his grimoire) : If you will not seek those answers with me, then I will have to assume you are against me.

GLADIO (Drawing his sword) : You’d assume right. You’re an enemy to Tyro and Dr. Mog, so we’re gonna deal with you.

SHADOWSMITH (To Gladio) : How appropriate. I’d thought you resembled a certain brute I know.

(The battle begins. Gladio strikes first, then Shadowsmith counters with a whirl of darkness and lightning summoned from his grimoire. A trio of Manikins arrive, their gazes blank – these are not Neo-Manikins, but instead the mindless sort that are fully under Shadowsmith’s control. Amidatelion attempts to swallow Shadowsmith’s spells in conjured portals, teleporting them elsewhere, while Serah and Trey try to avoid shooting the Manikins.)

TYRO: Of course we want to learn the same things you do. But we can’t change what has already come to pass. Trust me, I’d want nothing more…

SERAH: It all turns out alright in the end, doesn’t it?

AMIDATELION: Indeed. Do not despair.

TREY: You’re not the first one here who wants to change history. And I suspect you will not be the last.

(Lani and Gladio hold the attention of the Manikins. Tyro attempts to match Shadowsmith in a battle of spellcasting.)

DR. MOG: Though our job is to uphold the status quo, kupo… Sometimes I know that isn’t always the right thing to do. So as Record Keepers, we observe and we research and try our best to stay objective, kupo. Even neutral.

(At his words, Shadowsmith stops attacking. Stillness descends over the battlefield.)

DR. MOG: So if this is truly a new world, then it is also a new record, kupo. Maybe we are all just going to end up in a new painting in the Archives one day. With that in mind… Tyro and I are participants in this story, kupo. Not just its observers.

SHADOWSMITH: What are you saying?

DR. MOG: I am saying that I will not be neutral in this, kupo. I am going to stop you from reaching into all of their worlds because I want to. I will not let something like the memory burst that destroyed my village happen again, kupo!

(Dr. Mog opens his tome and a giant magical lance appears in the air to fall down on Shadowsmith. Shadowsmith dodges and retaliates with ice and dark magic, but Dr. Mog conjures a knight’s shield to block the attack. With a wave of his rod, Dr. Mog slams the shield forward to knock Shadowsmith away. A massive ethereal sword materializes over Shadowsmith, destroying the ground with one mighty cleave. A tornado and waterspout appear and combine together before anyone could see the aftermath of the attack. A shockwave of white energy ripples out from the impact as a roar of magic tears through the air. When it clears, Shadowsmith is gone.)

TYRO: Dr. Mog…!

LANI: Whoa! What happened to that guy!?

AMIDATELION: I suspect he has fled the scene.

SERAH: That was amazing, Dr. Mog!

GLADIO: Seems like there’s some hard feelings between you two… Shadowsmith seems like a real piece of work.

DR. MOG: Well, he was a former student of mine, kupo…

TREY: And then he turned to evil?

TYRO (Sighing) : Well, it’s a bit more complicated than that. The truth is… he’s me. From the future.

SERAH: Oh… With the way you were talking about being a Record Keeper, I started to wonder…

LANI: That’s insane! He’s nothing like you.

TYRO: We met because he tried to change the past and prevent a terrible tragedy from happening. Serah, you’re experienced with time travel… Is it possible that event could happen here?

SERAH: The event that turned Shadowsmith down a different path, happening here in this world before we all go home… It’s a scary thought.

GLADIO: You don’t know when it’s supposed to happen?

TYRO: No, not really.

AMIDATELION: The more you stress about it, the worse the event will become. Be prepared, but do not expect the worst to happen. You don’t know if it will happen here or if you go back home – so why let it ruin your experience in this world?

DR. MOG: They’re right, kupo! To be honest, it will be nice not to have to worry about the Archives for a bit. Let’s just take it day by day, kupo. What do you say, Tyro?

TYRO: Taking a break from being a Record Keeper to be part of the story ourselves… well, if you say so, Dr. Mog!


Character Abilities

Previous Character Updates:

Aerith

ULT: Great Gospel

Effect: Party invincibility for 1 turn when Aerith uses EX

Somehow, in OO, Aerith never got her ultimate Limit. So here it is! After use, the entire party gets a 1 turn invincibility buff whenever she uses her EX.


Cait Sith

ULT: Mega Mystery Box

Effect: When using EX, enemy targets change

His ULT comes from one of his Rebirth Limit Breaks (the strongest one, actually). It has kind of a weird effect -- it shuffles who the enemies are targeting. They can target one different party member, all party members, themselves, another enemy - meaning it can make foes hurt themselves, hurt each other, or buff the party. How useful is that in gameplay? I don't know! I imagine it being random, haha. But I figure it's kind of fun and fitting for him.


Dr. Mog (Staff) Non-elemental magic damage, instant BRV break, buffs, attacks based on party BRV values

15: Tactician’s Tome

35: Heroic Tales

EX: Tetra Break

LD: Our Historia

FR: Tactical Starfall (with Shantotto)

BT: Tetra Catastrophe

ULT: Archivist’s Source (Effect: When instant breaking, delay enemies 1 additional turn)

Burst theme: “2nd Anniversary Medley (FFRK Ver. Arrange)”

All of his abilities come from his various Soul Break/Soul Burst abilities. In Record Keeper, he has a focus on all kinds of elemental damage, but instead of giving him such a wide spread I just decided to make him non-elemental (maybe the animations show multiple elements). He can instant BRV break foes, grant party buffs, and he has HP attacks based on party BRV values like Sherlotta. Though he can use tome weapons, I decided to give him a Staff (or rather, rods) to differentiate him from Tyro and Shadowsmith.

Notes:

So that's 5 Lost Chapters down... next one we'll get back to a main story chapter! How about this hint: let's go on a "magical quest" where we "search for fire" and a sexy demon.

That's all three characters in that hint... who do you think they are? It might give you an idea of which summon it's focused on this time around, too.

Chapter 41: A5C6, Part 1: Find the Flame

Notes:

The FFXVI spoilers have been pretty mild so far, but from here on out I will spoil some late game things!

So originally, I had Clive and Torgal combined into one character. But right when I got to writing this chapter, I made the decision to split them because Torgal could probably stand on his own as an independent character. I forgot he had a whole slew of unique abilities, and I was able to match him up with a Force partner pretty easily (and thankfully, they've already been introduced), so he snuck in as a 4th character addition for this chapter. It doesn't change anything for the chapter itself, and this way he doesn't need to get his own Lost Chapter.

(Once again, I am cursing Tactics for not having clear character art for all of the major characters...)

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Dr. Mog with Shantotto: Both are diminutive yet powerful mages and professors with a verbal tic ("kupo" and her rhyming thing).

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Act 5, Chapter 6, Part 1: Find the Flame


Clive Rosfield ( Final Fantasy XVI )

Voiced by: Yūya Uchida

The first-born son of the Archduke of Rosaria, First Shield and protector to his younger brother Joshua, the Dominant of Phoenix. When tragedy unfolds and Joshua is believed lost, their father slain, Clive is sold into slavery as a Branded soldier until he fights for vengeance and the freedom of himself and other Bearers. After confronting the truth that he has awakened as the Dominant of Ifrit, Clive sets out to free the world from the tyranny of the Mothercrystals.

Clive


Torgal ( Final Fantasy XVI )

A loyal frost wolf discovered in the Northern Territories as a pup and given to a young Joshua as a gift. Though he managed to avoid perishing in the Night of Flames, he never gave up looking for his wayward masters. Descended from the legendary Fenrir, he has the ability to wield the aether of Dominants.

Torgal


Benjamin ( Final Fantasy Mystic Quest )

Voiced by: Junichi Kanemaru

A youth who set out on a journey in accordance with a prophecy to defeat the malevolent Dark King who destroyed his village. Though the prophecy supposedly deemed Benjamin a hero, he accepted his nebulous task in stride. A brave warrior, he can be rather laid back and has more common sense than he would appear to.

Benjamin


Altima ( Final Fantasy Tactics )

Voiced by: Yumi Tōma

Known as the Angel of Blood and leader of the Lucavi, demonic beings from a realm beyond Ivalice. Orchestrating the War of the Lions for enough sacrifices in service to her resurrection, she seeks to reign in blood and despair as she once did centuries ago when she possessed the prophet Ajora Glabados. In order to manifest on the mortal plane again she needed to possess a host of pure heart, but Alma Beoulve ousted her, leading to the Lucavi’s defeat.

Altima, the High Seraph


JOSHUA


Pryna and Umbra nosed Joshua along, helping to make sure he didn’t fall behind the others. Carbuncle had given them another lead and urgency quickened their pace. Despite the hot sun beating down on his back, Joshua tried his best to catch up so he could listen in on their discussion about the Eikon. He wheezed and coughed; Pryna let him lean on her for support without being beckoned.

Sabin rotated his shoulder as they walked. “Hey, Carbuncle said Ifrit is our target this time, right? The Ifrit I know was in trouble in the Magitek Research Facility. Think he might need busting out?”

Edge shook his head. “I have the distinct memory of being chased by Ifrit. Though he’s one of Rydia’s eidolons, he’s not one to find himself in distress often.”

“This wouldn’t be the first time Ifrit came under something else’s control, at least as far as I’m concerned,” said Noctis. “Ardyn infected him with the Starscourge. With or without daemonic influence, he’s got some insane power.”

“Is he quite common in other worlds?” Quistis asked. “In ours, he is a Guardian Force that we use for promising cadets to undergo their SeeD exam. In fact, I was the one who showed Squall through his trial – I wonder if the Fire Cavern is where we’re going now.”

“The Lord of the Inferno is no easy foe in my world,” said Thancred. “God of the Amalj’aa, he who tempers followers and unbelievers alike in his flames to compel fanatical worship. Many have met their end against both Ifrit and his enslaved.”

“This is the first time we’re dealing with one of Yuna’s aeons here,” said Wakka. “So I guess Quistis is right, ya? He is in lots of our worlds – maybe we’re headed to Kilika Temple.”

Joshua frowned, contemplating what he knew of his world’s Eikons. They all made Ifrit sound like a powerful and devastating Eikon of fire, but though something about it felt familiar, he was quite certain he didn’t know the name. There was only one Eikon of fire, after all – Phoenix. “What about you, Sazh?” Joshua asked. “Do you know Ifrit?”

“Ahh, barely,” he said, as the chocobo chick flitted around his fingers before resting in his palm. “I think he’s some eidolon. Saw him in a parade once. Brynhildr’s my gal, though – the only fire eidolon I need! So I guess he’s not in all of our worlds, is he?”

“No,” said Joshua, contemplating where he thought he’d heard the name before. Perhaps someone had mentioned it before in this world. “I suspect not.”

The party followed a well-worn path through and around a series of rocky hills. Joshua pushed himself and tried not to show his weakness, but just when Noctis offered him a ride on his shoulders Sabin came running back to them.

“I found something,” he said, jogging in place. “Just around this bend is a castle – I wonder if that’s where Ifrit is?”

“If not, then maybe we can take a break,” said Quistis, to which Joshua was secretly thankful.

“Let us prepare for a fight, regardless,” Thancred said. “I shall scout ahead.”

When they rounded the last hill, Joshua braced himself on Umbra as he beheld the harsh stone walls blocking all entry to the castle beyond. Only an iron portcullis yawned open as if to welcome the chocobo-less supply carts parked outside on the road; Joshua thought he even smelled the stink of chocobo in the air, as if this place was usually heavy with traffic in and out of the castle.

“Knights and castles are always fun to find,” Sazh said. “This the kind of place Ifrit hangs out in?”

“Does anyone know this place?” Edge asked. “Don’t think it’s from my world.”

Joshua’s head spun. He knew this place well.

Bile built up in the back of his throat as memories flashed of a night he’d rather forget. The heat seared his eyelids, and he heard the gasps of men releasing their last breaths as daggers slipped between their ribs. His ears pounded with the wet gurgle of sliced throats. And the blood. So much blood…

“Phoenix Gate,” he managed to choke out, as if it was his own throat that had been slit. He stumbled backward, his vision blurring just in time to see a gray wolf lumbering toward him from behind the castle wall, and he wasn’t sure who caught him when he fell back and everything went dark.


He awoke to something warm and wet on his face and he opened his eyes when a dog whined in his ears. No, not a dog… a wolf.

It was massive, bigger than Pryna and Umbra and even Darkstar, with piercing yellow eyes and a gold bangle on its left leg. Joshua wondered briefly if he should have been afraid of the beast, but something in its eyes brimmed with knowledge and recognition. It whined again and tugged at his sleeve. It couldn’t be…

“Torgal…?” he said, and the wolf huffed and licked him again, making Joshua laugh. “I can’t believe it. You’ve grown so much.”

He realized he had been placed in one of the empty chocobo carriages, and looking past Torgal he spotted Iroha standing at a safe distance with Wakka, Pryna, and Umbra.

“Joshua, you’re awake!” said Iroha. “Is that wolf familiar to you? Once you fell, he wouldn’t let anyone come close.”

“I think so,” Joshua said, climbing down from the carriage. Now that he was awake, Torgal seemed much more tolerant of Iroha and the other dogs. He swayed again when he looked in the direction of Phoenix Gate and grasped his head.

“You okay?” Wakka asked. “The others went ahead, but we were worried. You said something about ‘Phoenix Gate’ before you passed out.”

“Yes, I… know this place,” said Joshua, his eyes downcast. “And I know Torgal, too – but he was only a pup when I last saw him.”

Torgal nuzzled him, tail wagging, and nipped at Joshua’s sleeve again as if trying to tug him along somewhere. Joshua let out a yelp as he stumbled along before he got the message and followed with Iroha and Wakka. He hesitated as Torgal trotted under the portcullis, but barked once when Joshua started to fall behind.

“You lack fond memories of this place, don’t you?” Iroha asked as they stood outside its mouth. “Does danger lurk here?”

“If that’s the case then we gotta tell the others,” said Wakka.

Joshua shook his head. “It was tradition for me to come here before the duchy went to war. And on a night when we came here… we were betrayed.” His heart pounded and he started to feel dizzy again as the night’s events played out in his mind. The flight from his chambers, his first real combat against imperial knights…

He was about to continue until he saw a man in a hooded cape emerge from the darkness with Torgal circling at his feet. When the man saw Joshua, his eyes widened as he revealed his face.

“Joshua?” He approached on unsteady steps. “Joshua! It really is you! How is this possible!?”

Joshua took a step back. Though his voice sounded like… it couldn’t be… But Torgal sat at the man’s side, his tail wagging and tongue lolling out of his mouth. “Clive?”

The man fell to a knee in front of Joshua, arms raised to grip Joshua’s shoulders as if to confirm he was solid. “It’s me… but you’re young again. And alive… how?” he asked again.

“This your brudda?” Wakka asked Joshua, punching a fist into his palm with a grin. “You found him!”

“You are surprised to see Joshua at this age,” Iroha observed. “Does that mean Joshua lacks memories?”

Joshua shook his head and backed away from Clive. He wanted to cry, but he wasn’t sure if it was out of joy or sadness. Clive and Torgal had both survived that night. But he did not. He remembered nothing after the darkness and the pain and the blood.

“Is this some vision?” Clive asked. “An illusion, trickery?”

“I assure you it is not,” said Iroha, speaking on Joshua’s behalf. His throat was too dry. “Apologies, let me introduce myself. I am Iroha, and this is Wakka. We are companions of your brother – and we have all come to a different world where many of us lack our memories of the future.”

Joshua saw fire behind his eyes. “I’m not missing my memories,” he managed to say. “I… I didn’t make it that night. I wasn’t strong enough. I failed to save our people.”

Clive didn’t rise. “No, Joshua. You didn’t fail anyone. You survived the Night of Flames. We found each other again, though it took many years.”

“This whole time, you thought you weren’t alive?” Wakka asked, eyes wide. “You never said anything!”

“N-no, I…” Joshua coughed again, his body wracked with the feel of claws scraping at his lungs. “I primed into Phoenix and I burned. There was something awful that appeared. A great infernal being… An unknown Eikon.”

Clive lowered his eyes and his voice came out deep and gravelly. “That was me. It took me everything to accept that I had lost control. That I had become the second Eikon of fire and ended your life. But I found out later that you had escaped. You must believe me.”

“You believed you had slain your own brother?” Iroha asked, stunned. “The one you were sworn to protect?”

“To this day it is still my greatest shame,” Clive said, his shoulders falling. “All I wanted was to protect you, Joshua. But my awakening came at a great cost. When I realized you yet lived, I… I did everything in my power to find you again. To set things right. And we fought together to free the world from Ultima. Don’t you remember?”

Joshua shook his head again, more vigorously this time. What was he talking about? “No, that’s not possible,” he said. “If you’re really Clive, you never would have hurt me.”

Clive looked up at Iroha and Wakka. “How do we get his older body back? Is that what we need to restore his memories?”

Iroha shook her head. “I do not know. It may be that he has blocked the memories from himself. That they were too difficult to face.”

“Maybe he’s not ready to grow up again, ya?” Wakka suggested.

Joshua frowned. “Don’t talk about me as if I am not here.”

Clive stood and regarded Joshua for a long moment, his thoughts unreadable. “Perhaps it is for the best that Joshua stay a child,” he said. “His… his future is not a kind one.”

Three figures emerged from the gate behind Clive – Meia, Tama, and Rubicante. Meia put a hand on her hip as she looked Clive up and down. “My, who’s the handsome one?” she asked.

“This is Joshua’s brother, Clive,” said Iroha. “You both came from inside the keep. Did you not cross paths?”

“I’ve seen no one but people made of what appears to be crystal,” said Clive. “Some sort of Akashic?”

“I dunno what Akashic are, but we did see the-tons of Manikins,” said Tama. “They’re extra the-creepier than usual!”

“By the Founder…” Clive said, openly gaping at Tama and then Rubicante behind her. “It speaks…”

“Have they taken the liberty of explaining that we are in another world yet?” asked Rubicante. “Things will not be like how you know.”

“We spoke briefly of it. Have you discovered aught of Ifrit?” Iroha asked Meia.

“Not a thing,” she said. “My dear Sicarius eludes us. Well, does our newest ally know anything useful?”

“Ifrit, you say?” Clive asked, grunting. Joshua wanted to learn more about his supposed future, but it seemed there were other more important things to worry about now. “Ifrit is the infernal Eikon. The being I primed into during the Night of Flames. The one that hurt Joshua.”

“He could be dormant inside Clive, as Alexander was in his brother,” said Rubicante.

“What? Alexander?” Clive asked, rounding on Joshua. “What is Alexander?”

“A summoned creature not native to your world, apparently,” Meia said. “That sounds like a story for another time. If you are the one who can summon Ifrit now, then maybe we should get on with it?”

“I doubt Ifrit would do the-something sneaky like hide inside someone,” said Tama. “He’s one of the Pleiad’s Seven, and the-biggest meathead of them all.”

“So there is another Ifrit separate from me?” Clive asked. “What a world…”

To Joshua, everyone felt distant. He only saw Ifrit – the way its claws and fists slammed into Phoenix, pounding him against the ground and tearing through his flesh with its teeth. The pain felt real. Ifrit. Clive. The second Eikon of fire. An impossibility.

“Joshua?” said Wakka. “You with us?”

“Does the-Joshua need a healer?”

“Nothing physical ails him that we can see…”

Joshua felt Clive’s arms wrap around his shoulder, bracing him. He hadn’t realized he had been swaying. “Joshua, you need some rest. I don’t know what you’ve been through here, but I won’t fail to protect you again. I swear it.”

It felt so fresh. So real. So raw. He looked at his brother’s face and the horrible scar across his cheek. What had done such a thing? What had Clive faced after Joshua had died?

“You won’t hurt me,” Joshua said. “You can’t hurt me. You’re my big brother.”


CLIVE


Joshua was alive.

But he had somehow become young again for reasons Clive could not quite understand. He looked exactly as he did before their lives fell apart, before he awakened as Ifrit and lost years of his life in service to Sanbreque. At Origin, years later and after all of their battles and efforts to destroy the Mothercrystals, Clive had feared that he lost Joshua again. He never found out the truth. Clive’s own memories stopped shortly after Ultima’s defeat.

He hadn’t dared to hope, but…

Despite everything he had been through, it strained his imagination to think he had somehow come to another world with many other warriors, and furthermore that they hunted the Eikons. He had been introduced to a few of his companions as they searched the castle together for any sign of Ifrit, but all that he had learned of these warriors from other worlds expanded and changed everything he thought he knew.

It began when Edea cast a spell that froze a monster in its tracks.

“You’re a Bearer?” he asked, after the monsters had been dispatched. “Where you’re from, they don’t brand you if you wield magic?”

She shook her head, frowning. “I am not called a Bearer, but a Sorceress. My kind face persecution for our ability to use magic naturally, but we are hunted – not branded.” Clive felt pity for her; it was rare that Bearers were outright hunted.

“Huh? What’s wrong with using magic?” said Sol.

“It siphons the land of its aether,” Clive explained. “All that remains is deadland, so barren that magic can never be used. But the people who use magic without the use of a crystal – Bearers – are not treated well… to put it lightly.”

“Many of our worlds view magic as commonplace, perhaps even unremarkable,” said Ramza. “It saddens me to hear of a world where those who wield its wonders are regarded that way. Perhaps you should speak with Terra – in her world, magic is unusual as well.”

“But for magic to kill the land itself… terrible,” said Zeid, adjusting his gauntlet. “Magic is used in creation and crafting.”

Clive’s eyes widened. The ways of other worlds astounded him already – and he felt that he barely scratched the surface of how his home differed from theirs. To live somewhere where magic was plentiful, and those who wielded it faced none of the hardships that Bearers did in his world… it sounded wonderful.

“Hey, what’s that sound?” Sol asked. Clive strained to hear it, but it sounded like the steady plink-plink of metal and stone. Sol ran ahead despite Edea’s warning to be careful, and when they went deeper into the bailey they found the chocobo stables and at least a dozen of the crystalline people they called Manikins wielding pickaxes and digging away at the ground. “What’re you guys digging for?” he asked, running up to them.

“Hail…”

“Hail…”

“Hail…”

“Wha?” said Sol, looking up at the sky. “The weather’s fine!”

“I’m not so sure they speak of the weather,” said Clive. He approached one of the Manikins, who seemed to ignore his presence. “The only Manikins I saw earlier were from a distance, and they were on the move. Who do you hail?”

It didn’t answer him. Edea folded her arms. “It is as if they suffer from mind control. Their movements are unnaturally uniform, and without pause.”

“They’re mining for something,” said Zeid, grimacing. “What for?”

“I know of no precious ores here,” said Clive.

“I don’t know, but they won’t tell me, either,” said a voice from within the stable. A youth trudged out, rubbing a hand through his hair and yawning. “And they won’t let me help.”

The sight of a flesh and blood stranger in Phoenix Gate gave Clive pause. “You seem… relaxed,” he said.

“Please excuse us,” said Ramza. “I am Ramza, this is Clive, and Edea, Zeid, and Sol. What is your name?”

“Oh, I’m Benjamin,” said the stranger. “I was just about to doze off until you guys showed up. Nice to meet you.”

“Have you seen Ifrit or anything?” Sol asked. “Big fiery monster? Maybe a little angry?”

“Doesn’t ring any bells,” said Benjamin, shrugging. “Why’re you looking for it?”

“He’s been corrupted by something evil and we’re trying to free him so we can’t die,” Sol said, matter-of-factly. “Wanna help?”

“Perhaps we should not be so open in our intentions with complete strangers…” Edea cautioned.

Benjamin shrugged again. “Okay, sure thing.”

Clive blinked and crossed his arms. “I’ve not seen someone so undeterred at the prospect of facing a flaming monster since… Oh, never mind. No one knows Charon.”

“What were you doing here before you decided to sleep?” Zeid asked.

“I’m not so sure,” Benjamin replied, looking around. “I just found myself here, didn’t know where I was, and found these creepy guys. You think they’re cursed or something?”

Zeid turned his attention back to the Manikins. “What is it that enslaved their wills, I wonder?”

“Perhaps their creator,” said Clive. He sighed. “These Manikins are not so unlike Bearers. My own mother sold me to the empire as a soldier and a slave because I was not the Dominant son she’d wanted.”

Edea put a hand over her mouth. “That’s horrible! I am so sorry your own mother treated you that way. And she herself wasn’t possessed by anyone else?”

Clive shook his head. “Not to my knowledge.”

“Please let me know if I am overstepping, but I am a mother myself. If you ever need to speak with someone, I would be honored to listen.”

Clive wasn’t sure what to say to that. Though it was forward, he couldn’t deny that he felt a little touched. “Er, thanks.”

Edea looked as if she were about to say something else when Clive spotted Iroha running toward them, her brow creased in worry. She stopped in front of Clive and bowed deeply. “Clive! I have failed in my duty to watch over your brother and for that you have my sincerest apologies. I fear he has wandered off somewhere and now I cannot find him.”

Clive’s chest clenched in worry. He did not blame Iroha, but he was thankful she had appointed herself Joshua’s protector ever since they’d met him. “I’m sure he’s all right – Joshua may not remember it, but he is strong. Let’s hurry and find him.”


BENJAMIN


Torgal kept his nose to the ground and led them into the castle, keeping up an impressive pace for a hunting hound – or so Benjamin assumed. He’d never actually met a hunting hound. But Clive and Torgal acted as if they did this every day, perfectly in sync with each other as they found themselves in a feast hall. Long tables laden with empty plates and mugs stretched all the way to a perpendicular table that overlooked the rest of it; presumably the seat of a lord or chief. It sort of reminded Benjamin of the gathering hall in his old village, but he shrugged off that thought before he could delve too deeply into that memory.

Bartz stood with him as they gave Torgal a chance to sniff around the hall. “Hey, Benjamin. What’s your world like? Maybe we can find someone you know traveling with us.”

Benjamin tapped his lip. What sort of things were there to say? “Well, I was told there was a prophecy about how I would save the world from the Dark King and his Vile Four, who were corrupting the four crystals. It turned out the prophecy wasn’t real, but I went ahead and did it anyway. Defeating those monsters let me purify the crystals, claim back Focus Tower, and restore peace.”

“You make it sound so easy!” Bartz said, eyes wide with awe.

Benjamin felt his cheeks reddening. “Ah, well, it wasn’t all that easy. I couldn’t do it alone – that’s for sure. I just knew it was the right thing to do. And, well… the unstable crystals caused an earthquake that destroyed my village, so…”

“It was vengeance that drove you forward?” Clive finished for him, glancing back toward Benjamin. “So crystals were at the center of your journey as well.”

“I don’t know if it was vengeance,” Benjamin said, lowering his eyes. “I never really thought about it too much. I guess after my home was gone, I needed something new to focus on.”

“There is no need to feel shame for desiring vengeance,” Caius advised, his deep voice rumbling as he leaned against the wall and waited for Torgal to catch Joshua’s scent again. “Especially if it keeps you from spiraling into grief. When we lose someone, we latch onto whatever we can in order to prevent ourselves from drowning in it.”

Bartz nodded, his face grim. “I lost control once when my home got swallowed into the Void. So I know the feeling of finding something like that to focus on so I could forge ahead.”

Benjamin rubbed the back of his head, grinning sheepishly. “Whoa, what’s all this heavy talk for all of a sudden? Even though all that happened… I got to go on a quest where I met new friends. And now I’m here with you guys on another adventure.”

Bartz nodded and smiled. “Gotta stay positive, right?”

“It’s admirable that you can maintain that outlook. Just don’t let it cloud your true feelings or the pain will sneak up on you one day,” said Clive. He ran a gloved hand along one of the tables and Benjamin suspected he spoke from experience. “This place wasn’t my home, but I knew it well. I never thought I would be back here, nor that I would see it as it was before the Night of Flames.”

“The night you lost control?” Caius asked.

Clive sighed. “Right.” Torgal plodded up to him and nosed Clive’s hand as if asking to be pet, and Clive obliged. “Thanks, boy. Torgal was one of the survivors – he never stopped looking for Joshua and I, even thirteen years later. So I know he will find Joshua soon.”

“I wish I had a pet like Torgal,” Benjamin said, sighing wistfully.

Clive gave him a smile. “I would hesitate to call him a mere pet. But he picked up the scent again, we should get moving. Phoenix Gate isn’t that large so he can’t have gotten far.”

Clive and Torgal took the lead through a series of cramped halls, storage chambers, a room with an unlit hearth, and past rooms that Clive said had once been guest quarters. Benjamin was glad Clive had told them this wasn’t his home – everything here felt temporary, almost cold and lonely. He assumed that only servants had ever lived here permanently, once upon a time. The others had explained to him that places like this were summoned by memories, so he briefly wondered if it was Clive or Joshua who summoned Phoenix Gate – and when it might be Benjamin’s turn to summon someplace familiar to him.

He didn’t feel like he needed to. This was a new adventure – he hoped all the places he’d see would be new rather than old.

“The rear entrance,” Clive said by way of explanation once they came to a heavy wooden door with iron studs. He pushed it open, and standing under the moonlight they saw a boy in red with his back to them, staring motionlessly at a wall. “Joshua!” Clive called out, running toward his brother.

Bartz hesitated, frowning. “What’s wrong with him?”

Benjamin approached at a slower pace with Caius. Even Clive stopped a few feet away from Joshua, as if sensing something they couldn’t.

“Joshua?” Clive said. “Can you hear me?”

Benjamin almost couldn’t hear Joshua’s response. “This… this is where Father…” the boy said, his voice shaking. “This is where it happened. I see him still, Clive. The blood. H-his head. The light leaving his eyes…”

“Oh, Joshua,” Clive said, taking a step toward his brother. But as soon as he neared, magic flared around Joshua’s body and a pair of ethereal crimson wings sprouted from his back, along with fiery tail feathers from his hips. “No! Control it!”

“This is where… I primed for the first time,” Joshua said, and his voice broke into a sob. All around them, beyond the sob and their voices, Benjamin heard the shriek of a bird as more heat burst forth from Joshua.

Clive turned back to the others, his eyes frenzied with fear and urgency, waving them away. “Flee from here! He’s going to prime!”

Caius took charge as Benjamin shielded himself, steering Benjamin back toward the castle as Torgal dashed back inside. “Hurry, do as he says! Run!”

Benjamin and Bartz did so; there was no time to question what “priming” meant, only that whatever it was terrified Clive and they needed to escape. The ground shook and fire roared, devouring the door behind them like kindling just seconds after they emerged into a veranda on the outer ring of a courtyard that led to a rampart. He didn’t think they would be able to escape the conflagration in time, but a dark portal opened in front of them and Torgal ran through first.

“A Torsion!” said Bartz. “Go, go! Thanks, Caius!”

“Do not delay!” Caius urged, as they both leapt through.

Before Benjamin could dive for it, the ground rocked underneath him and shook the castle, throwing him over the edge of the rampart and into the mud of the unfamiliar courtyard.


CLIVE


Phoenix had risen.

Joshua keened with pain as the firebird enveloped him, wings outspread as he rose into the sky. Clive didn’t know what sort of destruction he’d cause if left unchecked. But without his memories, he had no control. He was only a child.

Clive had to do it. He had to restrain Joshua somehow – and even more impossibly, do it without hurting his brother. He wouldn’t let Phoenix Gate get destroyed again. He wouldn’t let their new allies get caught in the crossfire. And he wouldn’t lose Joshua a third time.

Aether swirled around Clive, fire searing the air around him, and he clenched his fists and shouted.

“Come to me, Ifrit!”


HOPE


From a yard outside the castle enclosed on all sides by stone walls, Hope saw the night sky light up with a beacon of flame. A bird’s cry echoed shortly after, otherworldly and sorrowful.

He had been with Rydia, Garnet, and Eiko trying to determine the Manikins’ purpose; even now they mined without pause, muttering only a single word barely louder than a breath. Hope had started to suspect Eiko was getting spooked, so when the fire erupted elsewhere in the castle, she jumped up in fear.

“What’s happening!?”

“Could it be Ifrit?” Rydia asked, eyes fixed on the sky where the fire appeared. A moment later, a flaming bird ascended, wings flapping, and as it rose it let out another piercing cry.

“Isn’t that Phoenix?” said Garnet, turning to Eiko. “It sounds hurt…”

Hope could see a dull glow of flickering light just beyond the roof, plumes of smoke drifting into the sky. “I think so. And it looks like it set the castle on fire!”

An explosion shook all of Phoenix Gate and a sphere of flame rose from underneath Phoenix, brighter and hotter. It devoured part of the castle, its heat stinging Hope’s face even from where he stood. They all covered their eyes as wind rushed over them and something roared, bestial and furious. A figure rose – for a moment, Hope thought it was a behemoth wreathed in flames before he realized it was something else altogether. Fire coalesced in its hands and it hurled a fireball at Phoenix flying high in the air.

“They’re… fighting?” Rydia said, hands drawn to her mouth.

The fireball struck true. Phoenix screeched and spread its wings, unleashing feathery streams of fire that descended over the castle… and Hope and the others who stood below. All four of them combined their power together to form a shield as swiftly as they could, but the heat seared the air regardless. Phoenix swooped down on the beast, but the beast leapt up at it with claws bared and their battle commenced.

“That must be Ifrit!” said Garnet. “He looks different, but I am sure of it!”

The Manikins continued their digging, either unaware of the battle waging above them or apathetic to it. Hope was about to suggest fleeing when Yuna, Lann, Reynn, and Ashe rushed up to them.

“That Phoenix – it’s Joshua!” Yuna called out. “We just saw Caius. He was there when Joshua transformed. Clive became Ifrit to stop him.”

“We’ve got to help, too!” said Reynn, fists clenched. “Joshua just needs to be calmed down!”

Eiko swayed on her feet as another clash between Phoenix and Ifrit unleashed a shockwave that sent them reeling. “What do we do? They’re huge!”

“They could destroy this whole area…” said Hope, bracing himself. “And all the Manikins in it – they don’t deserve that. We have to help Joshua. He’s our friend.”

“But what caused him to change in the first place?” Reynn asked.

“Don’t know, but maybe Clive’s got the right idea!” said Lann. “We just gotta hit him hard and knock sense back into him!”

“We will perform a summoning,” said Ashe, drawing her blade. “It is the only way for us to reach him. We cannot use the magicite we’ve collected so far, correct? If the summons within are released, then we run the risk of them becoming corrupted again.”

“That’s perfect!” said Rydia, flashing a grin that vanished as Ifrit howled in pain. Phoenix unleashed a conflagration that tore into the ground, but Ifrit jumped so high it was as if he flew, taking their battle to the woodland beyond. “We can do this.”

Hope’s hand shot into the air as he called to his eidolon, eyes closed. His crystal shattered as holy energy swirled around him and Alexander formed from the light. “Come on, big guy!”

Rydia and Garnet joined hands. “Leviathan, we summon you!” they cried. From the deluge of water they conjured over the castle wall, two coiling serpents appeared and roared their challenge.

“Madeen, we have to help Ifrit!” Eiko called, jumping up and down. A white-furred beast with wings dropped from above, growling, before it leapt clear above the castle walls.

Yuna dismissed her guns and light enveloped her body, revealing her Summoner’s attire when it faded. “Shiva, please offer us your aid!” Ice spikes converged on a point at the other side of the yard, shattering into thousands of pieces to reveal her aeon of ice.

Lann and Reynn joined their power together to call their Mirages. A gleaming white dragon emerged first and took wing. “We figured out how this works here!” Lann exclaimed. “Uhh… I need something cool to say! Sis, quick!”

“Why do I have to do it!?”

“You may question the wisdom of fighting fire with fire, but the Gigas will overpower their flames,” said Ashe. Glyphs formed on the ground around her, and a monstrous being wreathed in hellfire climbed out and braced itself with a massive staff. “Come, Belias!”

Using Alexander as his vantage point, Hope got a better view of Phoenix Gate and the surrounding area, including the destruction already wrought by the battling Eikons. As he watched, he was glad to see that some of the others had the same idea or followed their lead – a third Leviathan appeared in the night, likely summoned by Noctis or Lunafreya, while another creature he didn’t recognize appeared behind Meia on a rampart. A streak of pink and white flew by overhead; he recognized it as Terra in her esper form a moment later.

More and more summoned beasts appeared as everyone capable of summoning joined the fray.


CLIVE


He called out to Joshua with all of his being.

Their battle raged as over a dozen Eikons, big and small, joined the attack. The sheer number of them overwhelmed Clive. Just two Eikons were enough to devastate an entire battlefield; what would the presence of all these do? This many Eikons in his world would end all life as he knew it. 

Joshua! Please! I wish you never had to witness what happened to Father.

The ground scorched around him as fire burst from his feet and he launched himself up at Phoenix. He grasped its wings with both claws, unleashing flames from his maw as he pulled them both into a flaming meteor back down to earth. Phoenix opened its beak and blew fire back at him.

He knew part of Joshua had to hear him somehow. They were connected. Arisen. We never really spoke about how I hurt you. How I nearly killed you. But I swore I would never let something like that happen again.

He closed his fist and punched as they plummeted and crashed back to the ground. Fire burst from their impact and by that point the other Eikons had arrived – water and ice and light converged on them. Clive leapt out of the way as the attacks struck Joshua, giving him room to think of what to do next. How to stop him without letting him befall the same fate that had befallen Garuda or even Titan.

I failed you, Joshua. You must accept that. Even when it mattered most. And once you got older, you even protected me.

Phoenix’s wings flared as it flew above the attacks aimed at him from the other Eikons, and from its wings another inferno gathered.

Clive roared and met the inferno head on, and it consumed him.


BENJAMIN


After getting thrown from the upper level of the castle, Benjamin fell down a tunnel dug out by the Manikins just in time for a flood of fire to devour where he had been moments before. He slid down the tunnel, sinking deeper and deeper into the earth, when he suddenly emerged in a free fall to a cavern supported by dozens and dozens of intricately decorated pillars. He barely had time to view them through the expansive darkness. Rather than fall to his death, he pulled out his Dragon Claw and grappled an extended lattice of a pillar, swinging to safety.

He tumbled as he landed on a circular platform decorated in the same design as the pillars. But what grabbed his attention most was the series of Manikins standing in silence as if waiting for something.

And beyond them, he saw a woman with two angelic wings and a second pair of wings that looked like a bat’s. She floated above the Manikins, peering down at Benjamin with cruelty in her eyes and two blades strapped to her legs.

“Blood is spilled where mortals dare to tread,” she said in a voice so cold it might have given the Dark King a run for his money. “You were foolish to come here. Your soul itself shall not escape my wrath.”


Character Abilities

Vincent

ULT: Chthonian Blaze

Effect: Transformation, extra damage

His ULT skill comes from one of his Soul Bursts in Record Keeper. After use, he will transform into the Dirge of Cerberus version of Chaos (like in his Burst) for the rest of the battle.


Yuffie

ULT: Banishment Lv. III -> Storm's Fury

Effect: Dodge next attack from enemy last targeted. After dodging, counter with Storm's Fury

Yuffie's ULT is Banishment, particularly how it appears in Rebirth. After use, she will always dodge an attack from the enemy she last targeted and counter with Storm's Fury, which is her ultimate ability from Rebirth.


Clive Rosfield (Greatswords) Fire melee damage, AoE buff, follow ups, auras, tank, turn warp

15: Burning Blade (Phoenix Shift -> Magic Burst follow up)

35: Scarlet Cyclone

EX: Wil-o’-the-Wykes

LD: Ignition

FR: Vengeance (with Zeid)

BT: First Shield of Rosaria

ULT: Hellfire (Effect: Semi-prime transformation, extra damage)

Burst theme: “Find the Flame,” which plays when Clive confronts himself

Alternate Skin: His prologue appearance, his imperial armor

Clive's Burning Blade ability comes from his standard moveset where he charges an attack with fire. Similar to Noctis, his warp allows him to turn warp afterward, and then he does a Magic Burst follow-up after using the same ability again. His 35 CP and EX both come from his Phoenix moveset. Uniquely, Scarlet Cyclone inflicts a debuff that causes all attacks landed on foes to become multi-target, making characters who focus on single-target attacks love Clive. My idea with this is that, similar to its usage in XVI, it gathers foes together allowing you to hit them all at once. His EX gives Clive a buff so that foes who attack him also take damage. Ignition and Hellfire are Ifrit skills while his Burst is an original. In general, Clive is a fire melee damager and tank with some offensive party auras. After using his ULT, he'll be semi-primed for the rest of the battle.


Torgal (Unique - Cuffs) Non-elemental melee damage, healing, regens, battery, linked attacker/healer, juggler

15: Ravage

35: Ecliptic Howl

EX: Millennial Decay

LD: Howling Moon

FR: The Great Hunt (with Montblanc)

BT: Smite of Rage

ULT: Banish (Effect: Transformation, boosted damage and healing)

Burst theme: “Fenris Kindir,” plays in the cutscene where Torgal transforms for the first time

All of Torgal's abilities are from his unique skills he gets as you improve his pedigree, with the sole exception of Ravage being the command Clive can give him. He is mainly a healer with some attacking capabilities due to being a linked attacker. Furthermore, he is also what I'll call a "linked healer," meaning he will also heal/battery the party if he is linked to a party member. He is also a juggler (someone who helps during launch phases by basically enabling the launch sequence a second time). He also gets a permanent transformation after using his ULT, giving him extra damage and healing.

Notes:

Normally, I prefer the War of the Lions translations for character names by far. However, in this case I decided to go with the "Altima" spelling rather than "Ultima." Mostly to avoid confusion with the spell and another character...

I haven't decided for sure yet, but I might do an Idle Chatter between Parts 1 and 2 of main story chapters going forward. Mostly so there aren't six updates between each story chapter.

Chapter 42: A5C6, Part 2: Ode to Fire

Notes:

Last chapter's Force partnerships:

Clive with Zeid: Both were part of a specialized military unit and both are primarily driven by vengeance pre-character development, and also fell under a demonic influence.

Torgal with Montblanc: Both are loyal furry partners to the hero, both like kupo nuts, and both are excellent hunters.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Act 5, Chapter 6, Part 2: Ode to Fire


BENJAMIN


The woman with angel and demon wings sent Manikins at him first.

On this platform in the seemingly endless expanse of darkness, Benjamin had little room to maneuver. A trio of them advanced on him with weapons bared – a bow, an axe, and one who appeared to be a ninja. The axeman rushed at him first, but Benjamin sidestepped out of the way and tripped the Manikin to send it careening over the edge. The ninja came for him next, but Benjamin parried its strikes with his sword and sliced across its torso, making it shatter into pieces. He fished in his pockets for a grenade to toss at the archer, taking out two more that came to replace their fallen brethren.

“C’mon, why are you guys doing this?” Benjamin asked, sword held up and ready. “I wanted to help you back on the surface!”

“Hail… Altima…” one mumbled, which was followed immediately after by a chorus of “Hail Altima” by all the rest of the Manikins.

“Sure, that’s not creepy,” Benjamin said, a shiver running up and down his spine. “So I take it you’re Altima, lady?”

She still hovered above them, beautiful and terrible. Aside from her wings, she appeared human on the surface, but something about her cold eyes and vicious smile made her seem like something else. “You dare to defy me, the Angel of Blood? High Seraph and Doom of Ivalice? My reign in this world will begin with your flesh strewn across the flagstones!”

Benjamin gripped the hilt of his sword with two hands and raised it high. He wasn’t sure if he would be able to fight his way through this – maybe he could talk and distract her long enough to come up with a plan. “I am so done with you bad guys and your doomy dooms of doom. Can’t you come up with better names for things?”

Altima didn’t like that, apparently. Instead of responding to his quip, she pulled out the blades sheathed in her boots and dived at him herself. He skirted out of her path, but after she passed him she whirled around and hurled a gaseous bubble at him that twinkled with inner stars. The moment it touched him, he felt a rush of sickness so potent he thought he would hurl, but his whole body froze in place.

She had stilled time itself around him. Caught mid-motion as he tried to dodge her attack, one of his feet had been suspended in the air. He couldn’t move a muscle – only his eyes were free to regard her as she drifted closer with a triumphant and terrifying grin. Now that they had stopped fighting, he heard something that sounded like explosions high above them. He wondered if the ground would come crashing down over their heads.

“I shall savor the feel of rending your skin and snapping your bones in twain as I halt the march of time for your pitiful mortal brain. Though agony will wrack your form, you will be unable to die until my proclamation allows it.”

He had never felt so helpless before, so at the mercy of another. Her blade gently touched his chin, then his chest, then stomach as if she was judging where to strike to inflict the most pain. His body betrayed no hint of fear but he knew she could see it in his eyes; she relished it.

Behind Altima, a Torsion opened up. Another woman appeared from its darkness, somehow even more scantily clad, floating just like Altima but with fleshy, monstrous appendages sprouting from her back that ended with bulbous creatures that had eyes and teeth. She flared her cape as she regarded Altima and Benjamin.

“What is this?” said the newcomer, who appeared even less human than Altima did. “We sensed an unusual power.”

Altima turned from Benjamin, blade pointed at the new arrival. “Who are you to appear to me unannounced? What is your purpose?”

The tendrils around the strange womanly figure writhed. “We are the arbiter of balance. When Light reigns, we become the Darkness that floods the world. Yet in you we sense both Light and Dark, unholy and sacred, mixed in opposition rather than in synergy. You are a paradox.”

“I am seraph and sinner,” Altima proclaimed. “Cast down to the hells with the mortal shell of a holy figure to sustain my presence among the material. But lo, for I have completed my resurrection amidst this endless battle, and now my reign begins.”

As they spoke, Benjamin felt Altima’s hold over him lessening. He was able to put his raised leg back on the ground and slowly lower his sword. He had the feeling that both of these beings were bad news – maybe it’d be better to hightail it out of here. Perhaps he could sneak out among the Manikins. While he planned it out, he heard more booming noises from up above. Was that all Joshua’s doing?

“We shall not let antithesis rule over this world,” said the arbiter. “You are a corruption. We know not why you have been chosen to inhabit this world, but we shall eliminate you.”

“How dare you oppose me, you impure darkness? I will devour you and all of the souls that give you form!” Altima screamed, livid. “And you, mortal – my pet shall gorge upon your flesh.”

Benjamin had slowly been making his way across the platform behind Altima, but with a wave of her hand she summoned a monster from a dark portal. A two-headed dragon slavered as it regarded Benjamin with hunger in all of its eyes, tossing aside Manikins as it lumbered after him.

“The Twinhead Wyvern!” Benjamin exclaimed, turning to face it. One of the reborn Vile Four. He wasn’t sure how Altima had known about it, but this was a monster he knew well. “Ha! I can take you!”

“No,” said the unnamed being. She held her arm out toward him, enshrouding him in darkness. “You shall return.”


JOSHUA


Clive had failed him. 

Joshua had always known that, but part of him didn’t accept it. Clive was his big brother – as a child looking up to him, his Shield could do no wrong. And Joshua had long forgiven him for that fateful night at Phoenix Gate. If anything, that was what drove Joshua to protect Clive in return. That was why he had taken Ultima’s essence into himself. That was why he fought, why he survived; why he couldn’t be weak anymore.

But his brother was fallible.

He considered these things as he swam back into consciousness. Memories of everything that had happened poured into his head – memories that he had blocked from himself. Perhaps part of him had wanted to go back to simpler times, back to when his brother could protect him from all of life’s horrors.

“Joshua! He’s waking up,” said a voice that he recognized as Raffaello’s.

Joshua rubbed at his eyes as he opened them. Raffaello leaned over him as Joshua awakened. Hope sat on his other side, and beyond them the flames from their battle had started to die out.

“How do you feel?” Hope asked.

“I think I’m well,” Joshua responded, pushing himself into a sitting position. It was still nighttime, and here in the woods outside of Phoenix Gate, he hoped the destruction had been kept to a minimum.

“You’re an adult now, too,” Raffaello said. “When the Phoenix flames burned away, you had this body.”


Adult Joshua

Adult Joshua Voiced by: Takeo Ōtsuka


“Is that so?” Joshua said, looking down at himself. “Well, I daresay it was not by means of a cocoon like with you.” He smiled, and Raffaello grinned back.

Clive stood with the Onion Knight, Ramza, Mustadio, and Ashe until Joshua stirred and he knelt down at Joshua’s side. “Thank the Founder,” he said. “I was worried I’d hurt you.”

“Nothing to fear, brother,” Joshua said, holding out his hand so Clive could pull him to his feet. “My apologies for losing control.”

The wind shifted and a Torsion the size of a behemoth howled open above their heads, sending them scrambling. A young knight tumbled out of it, and once Joshua got over his shock and went to go help him stand, a giant draconic monster with two heads and long necks fell out as well. The young knight had just barely avoided being crushed.

“There you are, Benjamin,” said Clive.

“Where’d this thing come from!?” the Onion Knight exclaimed, drawing his sword.

“It’s the Twinhead Hydra!” said Benjamin, stumbling to stand alongside them.

“That doesn’t answer my question!”

Clive flashed into attack first, joined by Ramza and Ashe to focus on one of the snapping heads. Joshua conjured flame in his free hand and hurled it to distract the other head while Raffaello, Hope, and the Onion Knight rounded on it together. The monster lunged for Raffaello, jaws open wide, but gunshots from Mustadio deterred it long enough for the Onion Knight and Joshua to slash at its head together.

Both heads belched flames from their maws, sweeping over the party, but Joshua summoned his own fire and shielded them all from the attack. Clive leapt over him, slicing at one of its necks and cleaving through its armor of scales. The monster roared, swiping at Clive with a heavy claw and pushing him aside as if he were no more than a ragdoll. Construct 8 stomped over to the creature, punching the first head that came down on him and releasing missiles that struck the base of both necks and exploded.

Smoke and heat washed over them, but when Raffaello’s conjured winds cleared it, Joshua spotted Benjamin under the wyvern’s torso, sword piercing its scales. He dragged his blade, releasing a spray of blood and another agonized roar from the monster, but its strength gave out as it stumbled and flailed in its death throes.

Benjamin stumbled out from underneath, gripping his sword arm and panting. Dragon blood soaked his sword and armor. “Thanks for the help,” he said.

Hope and Joshua looked over him and all the others for wounds, and once he was sure that the worst of it had been dealt with, Joshua introduced himself to Benjamin. “Well met. I’m heartened to see you weren’t harmed by my… lapse in control.”

“Huh? What happened to that kid? Clive’s little brother?” Benjamin asked.

Joshua rubbed his chin. “Well, that may be difficult to explain…”

“This is him,” said Raffaello, gesturing at Joshua. “He just got older.”

“What were you doing in that giant Torsion?” the Onion Knight asked.

“Oh, I was deep underground,” Benjamin said offhandedly. If he was fazed by Joshua’s sudden growth, he didn’t show it. “It was dark with these huge pillars everywhere, and tons of Manikins. There was this lady with angel wings who called herself some kind of bloody angel, and she said she was going to kill me with her army of Manikin slaves, but then another person appeared and that one had these strange tentacles coming off of her, and said a lot of stuff about light and darkness. The second one was the one who teleported me out of there.”

Mustadio turned to Ramza, gaping. “A bloody angel… Ramza, you don’t think that could be…?”

“Altima, the High Seraph,” Ramza finished, breathless. “Benjamin, are you certain?”

“Ah, yes, that was her name,” Benjamin replied.

“You don’t sound that concerned about it, huh?” Raffaello asked Benjamin, who only shrugged in response.

“And the other one sounds like the Cloud of Darkness!” said the Onion Knight. “But why would she help you?”

Ashe frowned and cupped her elbow into her right hand. “Ramza, would you care to tell us about this high seraph? I am familiar with an esper who calls herself the same. It was she who led the espers, servants of the gods, in open rebellion against their creators and was cast down for it.”

Ramza had turned pale, his expression grave. “Altima was leader of the Lucavi, demons who sought to walk upon the mortal world in order to sow chaos and bloodshed. They had orchestrated an entire war for the sacrifices necessary to revive their leader, who had once possessed the body of St. Ajora Glabados, an ancient figure of the Church. Our journey culminated in her revival.”

“And subsequent defeat,” Mustadio added. “To think even that monster would be summoned here. We must do something.”

Joshua exchanged a glance with Clive. “I am reminded of Ultima from our world. Even the similarity in their names is uncanny.” They would be hard-pressed to face that foe again if he ever came to this world. Joshua sincerely hoped not.

Clive sighed. “In any case, that is not a foe we should leave to her whims. That place Benjamin ventured into sounds to me like the Apodytery.”

“A sacred place where the Dominant of Phoenix is meant to make communion,” Joshua explained for the benefit of the others. “It rests beneath Phoenix Gate. I am wholeheartedly in agreement.”

“Then that’s where we’re off to next,” said the Onion Knight. “WIth two enemies like that, we need to be prepared for anything. And there’s still Ifrit unaccounted for.”


RAMZA


Ramza sensed the apprehension of his companions as they descended into the place they called the Apodytery. To him, the prospect of facing Altima again was unthinkable. He knew this world had the tendency to summon foes of all kinds, from all different worlds, but something about Altima – who was otherworldly in the first place – seemed too distant. Untouchable, unknowable. Part of him had doubted she would ever be summoned here. He had faced her before with no hesitation in order to rescue his sister. Now it was a different story.

Venturing underground into a place sacred to Clive and Joshua’s homeland reminded him of where they had gone to confront Altima: the Necrohol of Mullonde. He expected an ancient ruin built upon Phoenix Gate, but when they found doors that swirled open at a mere touch and platforms that glowed with cold light, he knew not what to make of this seemingly advanced technology.

Auron alone seemed unperturbed. “This place reminds me a little of the machina kept in secret under Bevelle,” he said. “Is this kind of technology forbidden in the world above?”

Clive shook his head. “No. Any technology like this is a remnant of an ancient civilization, long gone,” he said. “The Apodytery was built from their ruins. As for why my ancestors decided this would be a sacred place… I do not know.”

“Every kingdom has their secrets,” said Regis, scratching Torgal behind the ear as they stopped at a lift that carried them further down. “Even as king, I was not always privy to them. I assume it is the same in your world.”

“No different in a duchy, I suppose,” Clive said with a grunt.

Ramza watched the walls pass by them as they descended, dizzyingly fast but somehow smooth, as if the platform they rode glided effortlessly through the air. “As the scion of a noble house, I am no stranger to being raised among secrets and subterfuge. In my youth, however, I had always been ignorant to its prevalence. I am heartened by our allies in this world who are open in their intentions and mannerisms.”

“I have always been of the belief that my position entailed a responsibility to be kind to my subjects,” said Regis. “That was but one lesson I wished to pass onto Noctis, among the most important.”

Clive smiled at Regis when the lift came to a stop and they continued onward. “He should be honored to have a father like you. You remind me of my own father – and I wish I could still tell him that I am proud to be his son.”

“I, too, can relate to that sentiment,” said Ramza. “Though House Beoulve is gone, I must continue to remind myself that it is not due to my failures, but the failures of our society at large.”

“I am sure they know,” said Regis. “Thank you for your kind words.”

“The fall of my house came from within,” said Clive, his head hung. “It was greed that motivated my mother – and her desire to trample over any she believed beneath her.”

Ramza sighed. “That is regrettably how things are in my world, as well,” he said. “Society enables those with power to abuse it. When I had learned of my brothers’ treachery, I denounced the Beoulve name and through my travels discovered the corruption at the heart of the Church of Glabados.”

“And Altima is the source of it?” Auron asked. The hall opened up to a dark cavern with distant pillars, and Ramza realized they had emerged from one such pillar. It felt so empty and cold here, with a sterility to it that made it feel unlike any ancient ruin he had ever seen.

“The Church believed her to simply be a means to an end,” said Ramza. “They built their power upon lies and knives in shadows. Altima was the illness, yet her discovery proved her a cancer that threatened all of Ivalice.”

“Then we shall be the barber’s blade,” said Clive. “We will excise this demon before her divinity is realized.”

“I’m no stranger to a church that uses lies to control people,” said Auron. “If she has enslaved Manikins to her will already, the others in this world are most at risk.”

“Indeed,” said Ramza. “For a blessing, we need not worry about dismantling a thousand years of doctrine. She possesses the body of St. Ajora, but his supposed miracles do not concern me in a world untouched by the Church’s dogma. Her defeat alone may be enough to free them.”

When they crossed a bridge to another pillar, Ramza could hear the echo and clang of battles waging. There were shouts and cries that rang out elsewhere in the cavern, coming clearer as they rounded the path around the pillar’s side. The path led to a bridge wider than any road, and Manikins fought each other along it – a sea of crystal that paved the way to Altima flying above the next pillar.

She turned to face them and Ramza drew his sword, greeting him with malice in eyes that were so unlike and yet like Alma’s. When she spoke, her voice resounded over the clamor.

“The slayer has come. The defiler has come. Rejoice, soulless puppets – for I shall now offer up your aether in a feast to my brethren! My loyal followers shall rise again! Mined from within the earth, I call ye forth from the nether! Come to me, Lucavi!”

Altima raised a magic stone up high – from this distance, Ramza couldn’t identify which Zodiac Stone she bore. But with her revival, none of the Lucavi needed mortal hosts.

“We must stop her at once!” Ramza cried, rallying his allies forward into the fray. They had to make it through the Manikins first – her mindless sacrifices. “We do not have much time. If she succeeds, the Lucavi shall soak this land in blood!”


CLIVE


The fact that Altima had the Manikins slaying each other for her sacrifice disgusted Clive. But that she seemed amused by it made him enraged on their behalf. Unlike Bearers, they had their minds stripped away – they were unaware of what she made them do.

“With that auracite she will summon demons like her,” Agrias said, having caught up to the advance group. Auron and Regis stayed back to mitigate as much of the fighting as possible, while Clive joined Ramza, Joshua, Benjamin, Agrias, and the Onion Knight to push through the battling. “Curse that crystal for summoning this monster here. To think she could manifest without a host…”

“What happened to the Cloud of Darkness?” the Onion Knight asked. “Did Altima… defeat her?”

Smog gathered ahead of them, solidifying into the shape of a woman with a long cape. Clive and the others slid to a stop and the Onion Knight gasped as she spoke without looking at them. “No… We merely departed to gather our strength. We shall destroy this abomination.”

The Onion Knight gaped. “Wait.. you’re going to help us?”

“It is a threat to both Light and Dark,” said the Cloud of Darkness. “We will devour it in the Void.”

Whoever that was, Clive felt that they did not have enough time to be selective of their allies. He pushed through the horde of Manikins blocking their path, shoving but not truly harming them.

Ramza and Benjamin subdued a Manikin together while Joshua disarmed one that looked like Agrias and cast a shield to protect them all from a spell bombardment. Clive stopped one from killing another while the Onion Knight begrudgingly acquiesced to the offer from the Cloud of Darkness. When she flew over them and the bridge covered in Manikins, soaring straight for Altima, aether burst forth from Altima’s form.

Aether, and heat.

The air around her burned. The space above her exploded in a swirl of flames. Horns appeared from the fire, then a bestial face, and arms rippling with muscle. The creature wore a loincloth, its eyes aflame and mouth snarling with rage.

“Leave me!” it roared. “It… it comes!”

The Onion Knight stopped running toward Altima. “No way… that’s Ifrit!”

“That is no Lucavi,” Agrias said, eyes wide.

“No… nor was that auracite,” said Ramza, his voice stilted with awe or fear. “She found magicite instead.”

Ifrit’s massive claws clasped the sides of his head as he writhed and fell to the ground at Altima’s feet. Clive could not see any immediate cause for his pain, nor could he identify who Ifrit had called out to. What had come?

“What is this?” said Altima, sneering down at the Eikon. “This is not one of my Lucavi.”

Ifrit roared again and fire flared out on all sides of him, the burst of energy hurling Altima backward toward the pillar. The Cloud of Darkness chose that moment to attack as well, launching a volley of lasers at Altima before springing into action. The two of them flew away through the air, magic and darkness clashing – leaving Clive and the others to deal with Ifrit.

Joshua unsheathed his sword and glanced at Clive. “Shall we, brother?”

“Let’s do this.”

With so much fire around them, it was easy for Clive to call upon his inner flame. Together, they semi-primed first, their bodies changing as they became wreathed in heat and magic. But when Clive cleared the bridge of Manikins, Ifrit snarled with animalistic fury and pounced at him. Clive grew and his hands became claws just in time for the impact. Joshua flew above them both, then spread his wings and unleashed little meteorites of fire down below.

Clive danced around them, grasping Ifrit and hurling him into the ground toward the bulk of Joshua’s rain. Spears of fire shot up from the floor like flaming uppercuts, striking Clive in return, but he shrugged them off and hurled himself at Ifrit. Claws and fists shook the pillar, reminding Clive that they fought too close to their friends, and he disengaged from Ifrit to leap away toward a nearby pillar.

Ifrit didn’t follow. Fireballs gathered around both of his claws and he hurled one at Clive’s back, clipping his leg, while the other he hurled up at Joshua. Phoenix swerved aside to avoid it, swooping down to cut with his beak and lifting Ifrit up in his talons. Ifrit thrashed in Joshua’s grip, elbowing him and slashing at his wings, so Joshua let him go into a freefall until he grasped the side of another pillar.

Clive was already jumping between the pillars toward him. Right at the moment he slugged Ifrit right across the jaw, he felt agony split his head. Clive stumbled and nearly fell, managing to hold on with all of his strength as he struggled to climb to the platform at the top of the pillar. Through the pain, he heard Phoenix keen – something had harmed Joshua, too.

Just as he crested the top of the pillar, he felt Ifrit tugging on his leg. Flames wreathed Ifrit’s entire body, and to his immense surprise and terror it burned . Clive let out a wail, his claws unable to find a purchase in the unbreakable ancient architecture. He kicked and pulled himself up with all of his strength, managing to break free of Ifrit while using all of his strength to get to the top.

“You can transform into them…? How fascinating. Now… you are mine.”

The voice throbbed in his mind like a heartbeat, nearly drowned out by the sound of his own blood. It filled him with hatred that threatened to consume him like the fire he wielded. He didn’t realize he shouted and roared, unable to move, unable to see past the crimson rage behind his eyes. Somehow, that voice reminded him of Ultima. But Ultima’s voice had nothing behind it – no emotion, only logic. This one… this was something else entirely.

The high-pitched ring of magic from Altima and the Cloud of Darkness assaulted his ears. Their battle was entirely aerial; Altima tried in vain to slice at the Cloud of Darkness but she lived up to her name, with steel passing harmlessly through her. Beams of light and darkness materialized and converged on Altima, but her superior maneuverability and speed allowed her to dodge around them. Her own light clashed with the beams.

Altima flew away from the Cloud of Darkness, putting Clive and Ifrit between them, before she turned back to them both. She held both hands out and chanted. “From the seven doors in the deepest pits of hell to the seven towers of the heavens… Tremble! Ultima !”

Clive lost sight of Joshua in the blinding light. It devoured both the Cloud of Darkness and Ifrit. Power ripped him apart, stripping away all that he was, even the unfamiliar voice and its malice, so consuming and so absolute that he was beyond feeling any pain from it. For a moment, he truly felt that he would die.

Darkness took him in its embrace.


RAMZA


The sphere of power swelled at their neighboring pillar, so bright that Ramza had to look away. By the time its radiance died down, he couldn’t see Altima anywhere.

But Ifrit lunged at them. Not Clive, but the summon they sought to save.

Agrias hurled magicked lightning from the tip of her blade, catching Ifrit on the shoulder and throwing off his trajectory. He landed below them, climbing up the side of the pillar with grunts and snarls, as if intent on devouring them.

His final ascent came with a tower of fire. Up close, Ramza thought that Ifrit looked more ragged than before, favoring his right leg. A piece of one of his horns had broken off, and his shoulders heaved as if he were out of breath.

“Incredible… that spell didn’t finish him?” said Benjamin.

Ramza couldn’t believe he had outlasted both Clive and Joshua, who were nowhere to be seen. At least the Manikins seemed more clearheaded; the rest of their party managed to get them off of the bridge connecting two pillars together.

“I suppose not,” said Ramza, readjusting his grip on his blade. “But we must. To arms, my friends!”

The Onion Knight led the attack, skating under Ifrit’s claw swipe to slash at his forearm. Ramza swept in with swift jabs and a rush of snow to try and halt Ifrit’s conflagration. Agrias and Benjamin took advantage of the opening and attacked together, cutting across Ifrit’s torso as he roared out in pain. He spread both of his arms and threw them all back with a burst of fire, nearly sending them careening over the edge of the platform, then raised both hands up high to gather fire and energy above his head.

“He’s getting ready for a big one!” the Onion Knight warned.

Ramza brought the hilt of his blade to his face, then raised it high as well. Now, he figured, he might need to use the spell he had previously learned from Altima herself. But to unleash a spell in such close range… “From the seven doors in the deepest pits of hell…”

Agrias defended them with a glimmering, golden shield. “I will defend us!”

“...To the seven towers of the heavens…”

“Ramza!” Benjamin shouted. “Hurry!”

“Tremble!” Ramza finished. “ Ultima !”

Ifrit’s hellfire and Ramza’s Ultima clashed in an explosion of magicks. The force of it slammed into Ramza despite Agrias’s protection and he was thrown into freefall. He lost sight of the others; only the pillar’s seemingly infinite height took precedence in his vision, the top of it falling further and further away. If this was to be Ramza’s end, he supposed it would be quick – and in service to the cause of his fellows. He could wish for no better. He was only saddened by the fact that Agrias, the Onion Knight, and Benjamin would share his fate.

Darkness enshrouded his vision. His stomach flipped as if he had suddenly changed direction, falling at a different pace somewhere else. Confusion came to the forefront of his thoughts. Was this what it was like to die in this world?

“Ramza!”

He felt something solid beneath him and he opened his eyes. Joshua knelt over him, healing magic in his hands even though Joshua himself looked worse for wear. “Joshua… I was worried you were lost.”

“I could say the same for you, my friend,” Joshua said. Ramza saw Clive kneeling just beyond Joshua on the scorched platform – they were still in the Apodytery. Atop the same platform where they’d fought Ifrit, in fact. At the question in Ramza’s eyes, Joshua smiled. “We’ve a knack for surviving worse.”

Ramza sat up with a groan. The others were all there, just as scuffed and burned as Ramza but otherwise all right. Ifrit’s magicite hovered in midair above them, emitting a warm light as it fell into Clive’s outstretched hands. A voice, deep and gruff, rang out from it.

I may have taken the cowardly option by hiding in this stone. But that force… it was the only way to keep it from poisoning my mind.

Clive’s eyes widened. “Did it cause you pain?”

It did. Though I hate admitting to it.

“Whatever it was… it came to me as well,” Clive said, turning to the others. “When I had primed just now. It was excruciating – I felt as if it would tear me apart. That I…”

“...would lose myself in it,” Joshua finished, standing. “That same presence came to me as well. I heard a voice, though its words now elude me.”

“I wonder…” said the Onion Knight, scratching his chin. “Whatever is corrupting the summons reached out to you both because you had transformed. Maybe… it mistook you for another?”

“Yet it let you go once you turned back to the form of a Hume,” said Agrias. “Whatever ailment or influence, this being only has an interest in the summons.”

“And not just the main twelve in this world, kupo,” said Mog, who flew over to them. “Phoenix isn’t among them. Sorry, kupo – I was listening and came over once you made it safe here.”

Ramza looked up with a start. “Where has Altima gone?”

“She seems to have departed, kupo,” said Mog.

Black smoke gathered around them and solidified into the Cloud of Darkness, giving Mog a scare. “We chased the unholy abomination from here,” she said. “We will pursue it across the Rift if we must.”

“But why?” said the Onion Knight, looking up at her. “Why would you help us?”

Benjamin nodded. “Yeah, you were the one who just teleported us back up here, weren’t you?”

“And you saved Joshua and I from her spell,” said Clive.

“You are no longer oversaturating this world with Light,” the Cloud of Darkness replied, her gaze blank. “Thus you are no threat to us. Beings like the Lucavi are a danger to the natural order, the balance between Light and Dark.”

“Do you know aught of the being that is corrupting the summons?” Ramza asked. He supposed it was good that their efforts to keep the world in balance hadn’t been a waste. “Was it Altima’s doing?”

“We know not,” said the Cloud of Darkness. “It is a foulness that seeks to undermine the root of this world.”

“Can we count on your help again?” the Onion Knight asked. “The next time we face someone dangerous?”

The Cloud of Darkness regarded him for a moment, but Ramza couldn’t tell if she was thinking or considering his offer or not. Rather than responding, she curled her cape around herself and vanished in a swirl of shadow. Ramza supposed they couldn’t count on heartfelt words with a being like that.

“I guess that means no,” said Benjamin.

“Whatever it is corrupting the summons, I’m afraid we’re no closer to finding it,” said the Onion Knight with a sigh.

“Don’t be disheartened, kupo!” said Mog. “Every summon we save brings us closer to solving this mystery!”

“Does it?” Ramza asked, head lowered. He felt that with every summon they defeated, it just raised more questions. Brought more foes.

“I think it does,” said Clive. “When faced with uncertainty, we must press ever onward. Even if what we do is not the right path, it may uncover what we truly need.”

Torgal came from the same direction Mog had come, barking as he approached Clive. Clive bent to scratch him behind the ears.

“And we’ve come one step closer to that goal,” said Joshua, smiling. “We have now found Ifrit, and saved the Manikins besides. That counts for something.”

“Let’s head back home,” said the Onion Knight. “I know this Apodytery is from your world, but to be honest I’ve had enough of this place.”

“You and me besides,” said Clive.

“We are sure to see the high seraph again,” Agrias said to Ramza. “Next time, we shall be prepared for her maniacal endeavors.”

“Home…” said Benjamin, taking long strides as he made his way back up the path to the surface. He took on a contemplative, almost somber expression that Ramza couldn’t place. “Can’t wait to see what kind of place is home to you guys.”


Character Abilities

 

Sephiroth

ULT: Reunion: Super Nova

Effect: After using Heartless Angel, enemy attacks itself on its next turn

For Sephiroth's ULT, I had to use his iconic 3 minute ability from the original game's final boss fights. Though the Opera Omnia animation might not be as long. :P After use, his Heartless Angel ability will make an enemy hurt itself on their next turn.


Reno

ULT: Neo Turk Light

Effect: Paralyze duration increase

Reno's ULT comes from Record Keeper. After use, his Paralyze status effect will last longer.


Firion

FR: Dominion’s End (with Benjamin)

ULT: Lord of Arms (Effect: Follow-ups)

Alternate Skins: His PS1 FMV appearance

With Benjamin's addition, Firion gets his FR and ULT updates. His ULT comes from the other Dissidia games and it allows him to do new weapon volley follow-ups on enemies after each of his attacks.


Benjamin (Swords) Non-elemental melee damage, single target and AoE capabilities, auras, launch

15: Skyward Slash

35: Forward Attack

EX: Mega Grenade

LD: Mystic Meteor Sword

FR: Shining X-Attack (with Ciaran)

BT: Excalibur of Banishing Dark

ULT: Shield of Destiny (Effect: Launches always pull party turns after Benjamin)

Burst theme: “Battle 1,” the standard battle theme

Alternate Skin: His European artwork

Benjamin's abilities all mostly have original names based on his abilities in Mystic Quest. "Skyward Slash" references how he holds his sword up high in the box art and also launches foes, while "Forward Attack" is an ability that references how battles in this game have the camera directly behind the party. "Mega Grenade" is one of his grenade options, but also his special ability from his Theaterhythm appearance. The rest are technically original -- his LD is a mash-up of "Mystic Quest," the Meteor spell (which Benjamin has access to), and a sword attack. For his Burst, Excalibur is the best sword he can equip.

In general, Benjamin is a damager who can deal adequate single target and AoE damage, launching, and some beefy offensive party auras.


Altima (Unique - Blades) Holy melee dmg, holy imperil, follow ups, auras, debuffs, HP Poison

15: Nanoflare

35: Almagest

EX: Profane Ultima

LD: Grand Cross

FR: Compelled Worship (with Feolthanos)

BT: Divine Providence: Return

ULT: All-Ultima (Effect: Transformation, extra damage)

Burst theme: “Ultima, the Perfect Body,” the final boss theme which plays in the second half of the fight against Altima

Her first two abilities are actually used by her Ultima Demon monsters that she typically fights alongside, and using them gives her follow-ups from demons she summons. Her EX is my spin on the Ultima spell, while "Grand Cross" and "Return" are two powerful abilities she uses in her boss battle. Since "Return" is a pretty boring ability name by itself, I included the name of the command in the Burst. Her ULT comes from the ability she can use after she transforms into Arch Ultima -- it is called either "All-Ultima" or "Divine Ultima," but I chose the All-Ultima translation. After she uses it, she transforms into her skeletal Arch Ultima form for the rest of the battle.

She is a holy elemental melee attacker who uses unique double blades instead of regular swords. She's also got a holy imperil, she focuses on follow ups and auras, and also has debuff auras to lower enemy offensive stats. Though Grand Cross hits her foes with tons of status effects in the original game, this time she only inflicts HP Poison with it.

Notes:

Regarding Ultima's incantation, I came up with a variation of the chant from the original PSX version of the game, taking inspiration from the incantation in XIV.

No Idle Chatter this time, we're going to jump right into the next Lost Chapter. Next character hint: a girl who journeys in search of her sibling.

Chapter 43: Lost Chapter: Bastion of Hope

Notes:

Last chapter's Force partnerships:

Firion with Benjamin: Two young heroes who have expertise in many different weapon types on a journey to defeat an evil monarch.

Benjamin with Ciaran: They are both easygoing, levelheaded heroes with a bit of a "blank slate" personality, especially in their original games.

Altima with Feolthanos: Both are ancient, winged antagonists who rebelled against the gods and wish to harvest the souls of humanity.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: Bastion of Hope


Sophie ( Mobius Final Fantasy )

Voiced by: Marika Kouno

A girl living in a remote village in the aftermath of the Dark Flood, the event in which everyone in Palamecia lost their memories. When the Rune crystal bestows upon her memories of a battle she once fought alongside her supposed brother, she goes out on a journey in search of answers. Plucky and determined, she becomes a symbol of hope for the Blanks in their endless battles against Chaos, as destiny itself seems to warp around her.

Sophie


WOL


Wol pointedly ignored Echo’s wry giggle when they arrived in a barren wasteland and saw the familiar tower in the distance.

“Remember when you said you were too cool and composed to summon locations from our world?” Echo asked, zooming around Wol’s head. “Remember, remember? I think you’re getting a little homesick. C’mon, you can admit it.”

He had to resist the urge to swat her away. “It wasn’t me.”

“So this is the land you call Palamecia?” said Cid Raines, his cape falling over his shoulder as he stopped to survey the landscape. Dark, jagged stone stretched out for miles all around them, like a warzone under heavy bombardment. Back in Palamecia, that was essentially what it was – Chaos and his fiends wandered across the land, spreading devastation in their wake.

“Pretty, isn’t it?” said Wol, unable to keep the droll tone from his voice. He looked back at Terra and Gaia to ensure they didn’t fall too far behind. “Careful, I’d rather not wait around here. If we see a giant monstrous obelisk, we’ll turn right around.”

“An obelisk? Something tells me you aren’t joking,” said Gaia, rolling her eyes as she caught up. She crossed her arms. “I must say, your world may be drearier than mine.”

Terra frowned at her back. “Gaia, please remember to be polite about others’ worlds.”

“Nah, she’s right,” said Wol. “Palamecia’s seen its fair share of destruction. But this place was the epicenter of it.”

“And that tower?” Raines asked, pointing ahead. Far away, the outline of a tower marred the horizon. Rather, it was more like the shell of a tower that hadn’t finished being built yet, with a dome-shaped upper level open to the elements. From a distance the whole tower looked like it had frayed edges, like an old quilt.

“We called that the Tower of Hope,” said Echo, flying in front of them to explain. “Though a certain someone renamed it the ‘Returners’ Citadel.’ I’m telling you, Wol called this here.”

“I don’t think so,” Wol replied. “How do we know it wasn’t you?”

“I’m just a little fairy, I’m not powerful enough for something like this.”

“The Returners’ Citadel, you said?” said Terra.

Wol heard footsteps and turned with his hand on his sword handle to regard the arrival, but relaxed when he saw Shelke and Seven, who had scouted ahead. Wol shared his doubts about two people unfamiliar with the region going to scout rather than him and Echo, but Raines convinced him that Wol needed to be easily accessible in case anything unexpected happened. “That was quick,” Wol told them. “What’d you find?”

“Several Manikins,” Shelke reported. “All taking shelter together. They seemed to rally around a human girl who guided them.”

“Manikins, following a Hume?” Gaia asked. “Respect for us among their kind is scarce. I’m inclined to suspect enthrallment of the mind again.”

Wol wasn’t so sure. If this region was modeled after Palamecia, then odds pointed to it being someone from his world – and if that was the case, then he felt confident it was either Sarah or Sophie. Both had a tendency toward leadership in unfamiliar places and times. “I’m not homesick,” Wol said to Echo. “We haven’t been in this world long. I can prove I didn’t summon Palamecia here.”

“What? I didn’t say anything this time!” Echo protested.

Seven peered at Wol. “Do you think this stranger is someone you know?”

“Can’t say for sure ‘til I see her,” Wol said, shrugging. “Let’s go.”

As they walked, Terra put a hand to her chest and frowned thoughtfully. “Cid, Seven, Shelke – does this place seem familiar to you, in some way?”

“I was thinking that, but couldn’t put my finger on it,” said Seven. “But how could it be? We’ve never been to Wol and Echo’s world.”

Raines stroked his chin. “Do you remember something, Terra?”

“It could just be coincidence… but this area reminds me a little of where Materia and Spiritus kept their towers,” Terra said.

“Mog did say certain worlds are like a ‘nexus’ that are influenced by other worlds more prominently,” said Shelke. “Whether that’s our World of Respite, or Palamecia… who can say?”

Terra shrugged and smiled. “To be honest, it makes me miss those two.”

“Even Spiritus?” Seven said, chuckling. “I never thought I’d hear someone say that.”

Their two gods. Wol hadn’t met them yet, and he wasn’t sure he particularly wanted to. He kept his mouth shut.

“It could be the Returners’ Citadel making you all nostalgic,” Echo said. “But I don’t know who those gods are or what their towers look like.”

Wol heard movement in the gravel and unsheathed his sword just in time for half a dozen Manikins to surround them. One Manikin that resembled Cloud held out his weapon.

“Halt! Who are you to intrude upon our territory? You aren’t monsters of Chaos, are you?” he asked.

“Please don’t be alarmed,” Raines said calmly, holding his hands up in surrender. “We aren’t here to cause any trouble.”

Gaia gave Shelke and Seven a sidelong glance. “No warning from our scouts?”

“They’re better than I gave them credit for,” Seven admitted.

“Our captain shall be the judge of that,” said the Cloud Manikin, ignorant to or ignoring the whispered exchange. “Let us disarm you and we’ll take you to her.”

Wol shared a glance with Terra and Raines, who nodded. He had no doubt that they could take these Neo-Manikins in a fight if they had to, but hopefully it wouldn’t come to that. “Lead on,” he said.

The Manikins led them down the trail and past a signpost that pointed the direction to the “Returners’ Citadel,” but they veered away from it down a different path. It ended at a campsite hidden with high rock walls all around, with only two exits – easily defendable from monsters or worse things. 

When Wol recognized Sophie with her back to them, conversing with a trio of Manikins, he turned to Echo with a smirk. “Do you still think I summoned this place?”

“Hmph! You could’ve, and it just sucked Sophie in.”

Sophie turned at the sound of their voices and her eyes widened. “It’s you two! Wow, I was wondering when I’d see you.” She spotted the Manikins standing guard over them and waved her hands. “Oh, you guys can let them go! Sorry, sorry!”

“You got it, Captain Sophie,” said the Cloud Manikin. “C’mon, you all heard her! Back away from the strangers.”

Another Manikin, this one resembling Jecht, ran up to Sophie and saluted. “Captain! These are your friends, right? The ones you’ve been looking for? We’re sorry for thinking they were monsters.”

Sophie smiled sheepishly. “Oh, don’t worry about it. If I’m being honest, only two of them are my friends – but if they’re friends with Wol, then that’s good enough for me. D’you guys mind leaving us a bit so we can talk?”

“Not at all, Captain,” said the Cloud Manikin. All of the Manikins saluted to Sophie before following the Cloud Manikin away from the campsite. Wol watched them go with an eyebrow raised.

“They really listen to you, huh?” Wol asked. He turned to the others while gesturing to Sophie. “Everyone, this is Sophie.”

“Nice to meet you all!” Sophie stretched her arms behind her back and swayed. “Oh, it’s nothing, really. I’ve been helping these Manikins train up to fight against the monsters in the area. They’re all quick learners.”

“I think that’s wonderful,” said Terra. “They all really seem to look up to you.”

Echo flew up to Sophie and whirled around her head. “Not unlike the Blanks, huh? Back in our world, Sophie led a bunch of Blanks in battle against the forces of Chaos!”

Sophie laughed her off. “Oh, it’s nothing so grand as that – Wol and Sarah did way better with them than I could have. But hey, speaking of this ‘other world’ business… it’s true, isn’t it? I was summoned here to fight and help bring balance? From what I could understand, those two gods of yours are trapped in crystal.”

“So you learned all that already?” Seven asked. “How? Did the Manikins tell you?”

Sophie shook her head. “No, actually. When I woke up here, I received a vision from a great crystal.”

Everyone in the party except for Sophie glanced at each other with varying levels of surprise. Wol hadn’t been here long enough to tell for sure, but from what little he knew, that was unusual.

“The crystal itself?” Terra asked, eyes wide. “The third crystal pillar… If Materia and Spiritus make two, and Selh’teus is the fourth…”

“We’ve heard its voice before,” Shelke pointed out. “In moments of great duress. It has its own will. But to reach out to one of us individually…”

“I wonder if it is gaining in power,” Raines suggested.

“Oh, I, uh… didn’t think it was that strange,” Sophie said, scratching the side of her nose. “It wasn’t the first time something like that has happened to me. The Rune once gave me visions of my lost memory and a mission, but I had doubts about how true all of it was this time.”

Raines put a hand on his hip. “Ah, your Rune reminds me of a Focus. Crystals are fond of their cryptic hints, after all.”

“I’m glad you second-guessed it this time,” Wol said. “If that crystal reaches out to you again, we’ll try to figure out what its goal is.”

“I don’t think it’s anything nefarious,” Terra said. “If it’s the same crystal, all it has ever wanted was to help us maintain this world.”

“And now that fight is mine too, huh?” Sophie said. “Well… if it’s all right with all of you, I’d be happy to come along.”

“Won’t the Manikins miss you?” Seven asked.

Sophie looked back at where the Neo-Manikins had gone. Wol thought he saw a fond smile flash across her face. “They’ll be fine without me. I knew I’d have to leave eventually. They’re strong enough now, I think.”

Wol wondered how much she may have wanted to stay with them. “Last time, when you looked after the Blanks, you stayed with them instead of following after your original goal of trying to find your brother. But now you’re doing the opposite.”

“I guess so, huh?” she said. “But that time, the Rune gave me a false memory of a brother I never had. A whole name and a life that weren’t mine. This time’s different. If you say that crystal was genuine, then I can’t turn away from my duty.”

“Memories of a whole different life…” Gaia mused. She pursed her lips. “Even a false name. I think I might like to know your story, Sophie.”

“Well, I’d be happy to tell it,” said Sophie. “What I remember, anyway. But until then…”

The Manikins came rushing back, Cloud and Jecht in the lead. “Captain!” the Cloud Manikin called out. “The killer mantis is back! The time to attack is now!”

Sophie closed her eyes and took a deep breath, but she didn’t draw her club. “Perfect timing. You guys don’t need my help anymore.”

“What’re you saying?” said the Jecht Manikin.

Sophie’s eyes opened and she grinned. “I’m saying that I’m sorry, but it’s time for me to go. After all that fighting we’ve done together… I know you’re all strong enough now to protect your home without me leading the way.”

The Cloud Manikin almost dropped his sword. “What? You’re telling us this now? But, Captain!”

“You’ve faced tons of enemies without my help!” Sophie insisted. “You can do this – you can be their captain now."

“Me?” said the Cloud Manikin, looking back at his partner. “But I… I don’t…”

“Gah! You heard her!” said the Jecht Manikin, punching him in the shoulder. “Let’s get goin’, there’s no time to waste!”

The Cloud Manikin clenched his fist. “Uh… Right! Let’s go!”

“I believe in you!” Sophie called after them as they ran off. After they were gone, she turned back to Wol and the others. “You guys don’t mind if I just check on them from a distance, do you? That killer mantis gave us a lot of trouble the last time it showed up.”

Raines smiled. “It’s natural for a leader to be worried for their men. But in this world, if they have the will to succeed, then they’ll prevail.”

“They took heart from your faith in them,” said Terra. “If they knew you went to go watch their fight, they’d doubt themselves. I’m sure they were prepared for the possibility of you leaving them one day. And I’m certain they will face whatever destiny is in store for them head on.”

Echo beamed. “It wouldn’t be the first time destiny bent around Sophie, you know. If a crystal would reach out to anyone, it’d be her.”

Gaia crossed her arms. “Is that so?”

“So it wouldn’t be so far-fetched for her to just show up here if she didn’t summon this place,” Echo said, shrugging. “Sophie’s just that powerful.”

Sophie tilted her head. “Am I missing something? Echo’s not normally one to pump us up so much.”

Wol scoffed. “Yeah, she’s laying it on thick because she’s convinced I’m homesick enough to summon this place to this world. I don’t know why she’s so fixated on it.”

“Oh… Well, in that case, I’m pretty sure it was me,” Sophie said. “The crystal showed me that the world changed to fit these fields in it after I showed up.”

Echo’s shoulders slumped and she let out a groan. 

Shelke walked up to her and held out a hand. “I believe you owe me five hundred gil.”

Wol blinked, then rolled his eyes at Echo. “All along, this was just a bet?” And here he was thinking she was trying to be concerned for him. Not that it meant any more to him than this bet – he was certainly in no hurry to make his way back to Palamecia.

Shelke gave him the barest hint of a smile. “I didn’t think you were the homesick or sentimental type.”

“Echo, if you miss Palamecia, you can just say so,” Wol said to the fairy, shaking his head. “You didn’t have to go through all of this.”

“Hmph! As if I’d miss anything about that place,” said Echo, fluttering away with an upturned nose. “Just wanted to make sure you weren’t worrying about how things were going back home too much to focus on everything here.” She crossed her arms and grimaced. “Fine, fine! I’ll pay up once we head back. Sheesh.”

Sophie scratched the back of her head. “Well… sorry to disappoint, Echo! I’m excited to be here to fight alongside you all!”


Character Abilities

 

Jessie

ULT: Unbroken Dreams

Effect: When delaying, increase stats

This one's an original ability, just like how all of her other ability names debuted with Opera Omnia since it was her first time being playable in the franchise. I would say this ULT animation references her time as an actress. After use, every time she delays a foe, her stats increase.


Rufus

ULT: Up In Smoke

Effect: When force Breaking, also unbreaks

Rufus's ULT comes from his boss battle in Rebirth. He has a force Break mechanic, but after he uses his ULT he will now also "unbreak" foes, similar to Vayne. This easily allows the next ally turns to break the enemy again.


Sophie (Greatsword - Clubs) Non-elemental melee dmg, launcher, debuff, instant break debuff, auras

15: Turbodrive

35: Full Swing

EX: Legcracker

LD: Freewheeling Monk

FR: Unnamed Slam (with Gaia)

BT: Massacring Minuet

ULT: Knockout (Effect: Enemy turns get delayed after launches)

Burst theme: “Sophie the Freelancer,” her battle theme

Like Wol and Meia, Sophie's abilities all come from her unique jobs - with the exception of her LD, which is an original meant to represent how she takes Monk-style jobs.

She wields weapons in the Greatsword category but her unique weapons are all clubs. She's a non-elemental melee damage dealer, a launcher, a debuffer, and an aura bot. She can also inflict a debuff on foes that makes the next attack they take instant break them. After she uses her ULT, enemy turns get delayed after a launch sequence (meaning if another ally sets up a launch by delaying a turn, she'll delay them again).

Notes:

Sophie wasn't going to make it into the roster originally until I decided I really wanted to be serious about including every playable character. It was mostly because I stopped playing Mobius before the "Warrior of Despair" storyline (where she debuted) came out, and so I knew little about her. Now that the game is gone, I went back and watched the whole storyline on YouTube and I actually liked it! Sophie herself was a pretty interesting character so I felt I had to include her afterward, and since Mobius only has 5 playable characters total I didn't think it would be too much work to add more.

But once I got to learn Sophie's story, I noticed so many similarities to Gaia's. In Gaia's Lost Chapter, I talked about how it was her Force partner who made me want to add Gaia to the roster -- so it's thanks to Sophie that Gaia made it in!

Next character hint: A #girldad and a guardian who's been acting pretty strange lately, all things considered.

Chapter 44: Lost Chapter: A King's Regrets

Notes:

Justification for this character: He's more prominent in the story than Kelger and Xezat, who both made it in. Like them, he also appears in spirit to help the party against Exdeath at the end of the game, so I felt bad leaving him out. Though we never see him fighting and thus he doesn't technically qualify for my requirements, I felt that Lenna and Faris deserved to reunite with him.

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Sophie with Gaia: Both wield heavy, blunt weapons and have a character arc that deals with amnesia. Both of them forgot their names and everything about their lives, but at the end of their stories when they are given the option to learn their real names, both decide against it and continue to live as their new identity.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: A King’s Regrets


Alexander Highwind Tycoon ( Final Fantasy V )

Voiced by: Masami Iwasaki

The king of Tycoon and father to Lenna and Sarisa, the latter of which he believed to be lost at sea. Guardian of the wind crystal, he ventures out into the world to investigate the cause of a change in the wind until he falls under Exdeath’s control. Closely connected to his wind drake, Hiryu.


(Faris arrives to a dry, sandy area covered in ancient, crumbling ruins. Dorgann, Jecht, and Kain accompany her. When she comes to the center square of what used to be a town, perhaps, she stops and hesitates.)

JECHT: Faris, you had the right idea to check out these ruins! We’re gonna find some plunder for sure.

DORGANN: Hold, Jecht. Faris, is something the matter?

KAIN: You know these ruins, don’t you.

FARIS: Oh, I know ‘em all right. Ain’t pleased to drop anchor here, and if ye ask me Lenna should steer clear.

JECHT: Why’s that?

FARIS: This be the Gohn ruins. One o’ the last places we saw our father.

DORGANN: Apologies for overstepping, but would that not be a good thing? Lenna spoke highly of the king of Tycoon. He could be here.

FARIS: Aye, he was a good man. But here, he hornswoggled us and trapped us in the ruins below. That lily-livered Exdeath took control o’ his mind.

KAIN: So you worry that if we do see him again, he’ll still be under Exdeath’s control.

(Faris said nothing in response. Instead, she walked further into the ruins.)

JECHT: Damn that Exdeath. Poisoning a reunion between a father and his kids and he ain’t even here. Well, we don’t know for sure if your old man’s the one summoned this time, right?

DORGANN: That is true. Are there others from our world you’ve encountered here before, Faris? I am not overtly familiar with Gohn myself. Was never fond of the desert crossing in my travels.

FARIS: No one.

KAIN: Lenna is sure to catch up to us soon. She took Hiryu out for a flight, but she didn’t go far.

FARIS: Let’s find him before she gets here.

(A shadow passes by overhead, accompanied by the cry of a wind drake. The shadow circles and lands nearby, and Lenna dismounts.)

FARIS: Bugger me, that was fast.

LENNA: Faris, do you recognize this place? If it truly is Gohn, then maybe Father…!

FARIS: (Sighing) Aye. ‘Tis what I worried.

LENNA: Worried? But why?

(Faris turns away and stalks off, leaving Lenna looking hurt. Dorgann’s face softens with sympathy.)

DORGANN: Faris told us of your encounter with your father here. She’s worried he’d be under Exdeath’s control again.

LENNA: But if he is, we’ll free him! It won’t be like last time. When… when we lost him. And now, she would finally get to spend some time with him.

KAIN: She’s sure to have complicated feelings on the matter. You were separated as children, were you not?

(Hiryu lets out a sudden roar and flares his wings. Despite Lenna’s attempt to hold him, he gets a running start and flies off in the direction Faris went.)

LENNA: Hiryu! What’s gotten into you?

DORGANN: We should hurry and follow!

(Hiryu leads them to a broken, sandy stairway that descends toward a pit. Here, they find Faris standing and staring in silence at a man with his back to them all, kneeling in front of the pit with his head lowered. He has wing-like ornaments on his helm and a long blue robe and sharp blue and gold pauldrons. He turns to them when Hiryu lands on the stone steps heavy enough to crack it.)

LENNA: Father!

TYCOON (His eyes aren’t visible under his visor, but his mouth struggles to form words): Could it be? No… 

LENNA: Father, it’s me. And Faris is here, too.

TYCOON: This has to be another of Exdeath’s torturous visions. I thought… I thought he killed me.

LENNA: It isn’t an illusion! Oh, Faris – say something.

FARIS: Father, she has the right of it. You see us true – your two daughters, Lenna and… Sarisa.

(Tycoon stands on shaky legs, uncertain. Lenna runs down the slope toward him, shaking out of Faris’s grip. When Lenna nears, Tycoon grabs her and makes to throw her in the pit beneath the ruins.)

FARIS: Lenna!!

(Before Tycoon pulls her around and lets go, Lenna twists out of his grip and flips him around, pinning him to the ground with his arms bent behind his back.)

LENNA: Sorry, Father! Now, Hiryu!

(Hiryu comes lumbering down the slope as Tycoon struggles to break free, but Lenna’s grip is strong. Faris, Dorgann, Jecht, and Kain follow after Hiryu, but the wind drake beats them. Once Hiryu stands in front of Lenna and the flailing Tycoon, Hiryu belts out a mighty roar, drawn out and with enough force that Lenna braces herself to avoid falling into the pit. When the roar finally dies down, Lenna raises her head.)

FARIS: Lenna, are ye mad!?

DORGANN: So he was still under Exdeath’s control… but did that break it?

JECHT: If that was her intent, it was reckless. I like it!

TYCOON (Slowly, as if groggy) : Lenna…? Hiryu?

LENNA (Getting up and off of him) : Father. Can you stand? How are you feeling?

FARIS: Careful, Lenna! Ye can’t say if he’s free of it!

LENNA: He’s been under Exdeath’s control for so long… Krile freed him the first time, so I have to believe he can fight it now. If I don't, I would be forced to doubt father forever. And I refuse to do that.

TYCOON (As he is being nuzzled by Hiryu, he sits up, and he and Lenna embrace) : My head hasn’t felt so clear in a long, long time. Sarisa, even you are here… How can I be so blessed?

KAIN: You’ve been through quite the ordeal. There’s a lot to explain, but maybe it can wait for now. Lenna, how’d you know he was still under control, and the way to free him?

LENNA: I was hopeful he wasn’t, but prepared for the possibility. And Father’s always had a deep connection to wind drakes. If anyone could shake him out of it, it would be Hiryu.

FARIS: Lenna… Ye make me own spine look weak in comparison.

LENNA: Don’t say that, you know it isn’t true. You were just trying to protect me.

TYCOON: My two daughters… It gladdens me to see you’ve taken my final words to heart. You've made each other strong.

DORGANN: King Alexander Highwind Tycoon… it will be an honor to fight alongside you in this world. We knew each other in spirit, but us old warriors must stick together.

KAIN: A Highwind, eh?

TYCOON (As he stands, his bearing seems to change. With his shoulders back and his head held high, he looks more like a king again) : There’s fighting to be done, is there? The honor would be mine. Exdeath still needs defeating, I assume. I cannot say I understand why I live again, nor why Exdeath also lives again, but my blade stands ready.

FARIS: To think, I can fight alongside Father…

TYCOON: Sarisa, I cannot understate how grateful I am for the chance to spend time with you here. Especially now that my mind is my own again.

FARIS: Ye can call me Faris here. I’d prefer it, in truth.

TYCOON: I understand.

JECHT: Look away too long, and your kids’ll grow up faster than you can blink. I spent ten years of my son’s life as a monster. It was somethin’ else to see how that crybaby grew up after all that time.

TYCOON: I felt like a monster, to harm my daughters so. Exdeath shall pay.

LENNA: Father was one of the first to sense there was something wrong with the world, and the crystals. He insisted on going out to investigate alone.

DORGANN (Laughing) : The apple doesn’t fall far from the tree, I see.

TYCOON: I hadn’t meant for Lenna to pick up on my reckless habits…

FARIS: I’ll have to keep ye both in line, then. Ye won’t see me thinkin’ twice about orderin’ ye to swab the decks if ye don’t listen.

KAIN: Who would have thought the pirate would be the responsible one in this family?

TYCOON: I’ll hold you to it, Faris. King’s orders.

FARIS (Smirking) : Hm. Ye’ll not see me flyin’ any kingdom’s colors. Besides, Lenna’s queen now.

LENNA: That is not entirely true. You and I rule Tycoon together… as long as you refrain from absconding with your crew.

DORGANN (To Kain and Jecht) : They tease each other, but you can tell it means a lot to them.

KAIN: Indeed. They have the freedom here, and the second chance.

(Hiryu croons, and together they all depart from Gohn.)


Character Abilities

Red XIII

ULT: Vengeance: Howling Moon

Effect: Will not take damage if his turn immediately precedes enemy targeting him

Red's Ultimate comes from his moveset in Rebirth, particularly his Vengeance Mode mechanic. Since he's focused around blocking, his effect is that he will essentially "block" attacks if his turn is right before the enemy that targets him.


Elena

ULT: Ultimate Elena Knuckle

Effect: Confuse duration extend

"Elena Knuckle" is an ability she uses in her Rebirth boss battle. I spruced it up a bit. After use, the Confuse status effect that she inflicts on foes will last more turns.


Alexander Highwind Tycoon (Swords) Wind ranged damage, offensive auras, instant break, EX recharger, Regens, HP Drain

15: Highwind Thrust

35: Hiryu’s Roar

EX: King’s Lance

LD: Hiryu’s Blessing

FR: Father’s Protection (with Regis)

BT: Guardian of the Wind Crystal

ULT: White Wind (Effect: Heals party; EX can be used twice in a row, instantly)

Burst theme: “Spreading Grand Wings,” plays whenever riding a wind drake

Since we never got to see him fight and he doesn't have any canon abilities, I had to take a lot of creative liberties and make assumptions here. First off, based on his appearance, his name, and association with wind drakes, he is almost certainly meant to be a Dragoon, so I used that as my basis. His character art has him wielding a sword(-like weapon) rather than a spear, though -- despite that, he does ranged damage rather than melee, like most of the other spear wielders. Pretty much all of his ability names are original and I envision Hiryu appearing to attack for some of his animations (directly, not like the wards/sigils Lenna gets). "King's Lance," his EX, comes from the "Lance" ability of the Dragoon job, and allows him to drain enemy HP. Hiryu's Roar instant breaks foes, while his LD lets him charge ally EX abilities and gives him offensive party auras. Since he's the protector of the wind crystal, he's a wind elemental attacker (just like both Bartz and Dorgann, but I hope his kit is different enough from them). He does have a Blue Magic spell as his ULT, but that's more because it is thematic than anything else. After use, he will always be able to use his EX twice in a row as an instant turn.

Notes:

This was a bit of a shorter chapter and to be frank one I kind of wanted to get out of the way, so I knocked it out quickly.

Next character hint: A rather convent-ional character who can make friends with just about anybody, who finds many blessings in life.

Chapter 45: Lost Chapter: Faith's Blessings

Notes:

So with this chapter we've hit another milestone -- this is our 50th new character since I've started this fanfic! Wow!! So far, I think I'm still juggling them as well as I could with a cast this big...

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Tycoon with Regis: Both are kings and fathers to a protagonist, protectors of a crystal, and sacrifice themselves for the sake of their children.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: Faith’s Blessings


Alma Beoulve ( Final Fantasy Tactics )

Voiced by: Misaki Kuno

The youngest child and only daughter of Barbaneth Beoulve to a commoner mother, making her half-sister to Dycedarg and Zalbaag but full sister to Ramza. Confined for much of her life in Orbonne Monastery, she has little exposure to the outside world beyond the walls of the nobility and the Church. With a kind heart and a level head, Alma possesses an unyielding belief in the goodness of people, no matter their class or wealth.

Alma


ALMA


Agrias slammed the heavy oak door shut just in time for the hordes of undead to crowd the entrance.

“Hurry, the pews!” Alma said, dragging the closest one to barricade the door. Ulmia took the other end and helped her lift it, while Agrias and Aphmau lifted another to stack on top. Sarah shoved a gold candlestick through the handle and door frame.

“What of any windows?” Aria asked. “Or a back entrance?”

Alma wasn’t sure what to say. Orbonne Monastery was a holy place; undead could not walk upon its hallowed grounds, so they never had reason to defend from an undead horde. Men, on the other hand… “The windows are too high, and water runs beneath them,” Alma responded, recalling details of the place she knew as well as her own home. The windows did not concern her. “There is a rear entrance beyond the refectory and kitchens, and we can seal the chapel if we must.”

Fleshy bodies thumped against the other side of the door, then fell away. Magicks rattled the outside of the monastery, toppling a few of the relics and iconography on display in the chapel. The crackle of flame and electricity beyond the doors indicated that something had caught fire, perhaps the grass and distant trees. All it told Alma was that the doors wouldn’t hold forever.

“Their sorcerers have caught up to us,” said Sarah, her posture as taut as her lute strings. “What is our next plan?”

Aphmau kneeled down to check on her pair of puppets. “Oh, I hate zombies and fomors! Draugars are even worse. I wonder if there is a lamia or someone out there controlling them.”

“We’ve faced worse!” said one of the puppets, which surprised Alma when it first spoke to her outside the monastery. She had already become accustomed to how mouthy they could be; she found them delightful, at least in the short time they spoke before they came under attack.

“We are fortunate this monastery ended up being close to us,” said Ulmia. “But I fear we may get trapped in here – our only recourse may be to fight.”

Aria clasped her hands together, as if in prayer. “Most of us specialize in healing and support. I fear we would need to leave most of the close quarters combat to Agrias. There are simply too many foes out there.”

Alma’s eyes fixed on Agrias. Everything they had shared with her before the undead horde had come upon them beggared belief, but this was yet more proof they were not in Ivalice anymore. Alma had been wandering in the woods alone, trying to find her way, when she came upon Agrias and the others on the road. They had said there was a scouting party ahead, but the presence of so many zombies did not bode well for the advance group. Ramza, apparently, had been among that scouting party.

As if sensing her thoughts, Agrias put a fist over her chest as if in salute. “I swear to you, my lady, that I will escort you safely to Ramza. He would not perish against foes such as these.”

“Ovelia is your lady, not I,” said Alma, smiling in what she hoped looked comforting. “Forces like theirs cannot normally tread upon these holy grounds. I assume it is because the gods’ blessings cannot reach us in this world, if I have the right of it?” Though even the true monastery was no sanctum against demonic forces, as she knew from firsthand experience.

“You do,” said Agrias, nodding. “Though this place resembles the Orbonne Monastery we know, it is a mere imitation. And worry not – in the absence of Ramza, you are now my charge, and I shall let no harm befall you.”

Alma appreciated the gesture, but Agrias missed the point. She would not be coddled and protected here, as she was at home – if they spoke true, this was a world of warriors, and Alma had been summoned to it like any other. That had to count for something. “I pray the gods still bestow their boon upon me though we are so far away. As your sword cuts down our foes, my faith will shield us.”

“You speak of blessings of the gods,” said a voice toward the back of the chapel, appearing from behind the pulpit. He was a man swathed in flowing garb of black and white, with tousled hair and an unfamiliar sort of hat on his head. “What makes you so sure they’ve not forsaken you?”

Aphmau pointed an accusatory finger at the man. “Ardyn! Have you been here the whole time?”

Alma gripped her crook as she felt the tension rise in the room. “Is this man friend or foe?” she asked. More magicks battered the outside of the chapel door; she feared it would not hold for much longer.

“He lives among us at our Garden,” said Agrias, her brow furrowed. “Yet he raises a hand to help and hinder both, whenever and however his whims strike him.”

“Now, now, don’t be like that,” said Ardyn, wagging a finger at her. “I’ve aided and abetted more than I’ve obstructed and offended, at least in recent times.” He fixed his gaze on Alma; she felt his judgment cut through to her bones, as if he were a confessor and she a sinner. “Do you have an answer to my question, newcomer?”

Aria pressed her back against the stacked pews as an unearthly chorus of low moans came from the other side. “Is now really the time for that?”

Ardyn did not take his eyes from Alma. “It is.”

“If you profess to help us, draw your sword,” said Sarah, but Ardyn didn’t move.

Alma had to resist pulling her shawl tighter around her shoulders. “Faith is belief in what you cannot see. I need no proof of the gods’ existence to observe their blessings. Their miracles.”

Ardyn shook his head. “I did not ask you if they existed – what I want to know is how sure you are that they would not abandon you in your hour of need?” He scoffed. “I’ve met gods face to face, fought them and enslaved them. I know – intimately – how fickle they are. Have your companions failed to tell you that we’ve even met your false saint, just the other day? If the passage of days can be measured in this world, anyway.”

Alma looked to Agrias for confirmation, who shook her head, expression grim. “We’ve only just found Alma,” said Agrias through grit teeth. “We had other, more immediate concerns that required our attention over the presence of the resurrected seraph – such as the walking corpses outside the door.”

If Ardyn meant to make her tremble, it had the opposite effect. Her resolve had been tempered in blood and steel, and withstood the bloodthirst of angels. “My belief lies not with the Church, but with the gods themselves,” Alma said. They had gone through too much, exposed too much of the Church’s secrets, for her to put stock in them anymore. “Saint Ajora Glabados was a puppet of the Lucavi. The war and strife that gripped the realm was their doing. But the joys, the persistence of our people to keep on living in spite of that war – that is where I see the gods’ work. That is where I put my faith.”

“The banality of a beautiful lie,” said Ardyn. He spun and spread his arms, looking up at the chapel ceiling. “Perhaps your opinion will change when you witness the ineptitude of the gods in this world. You would build no shrines to them akin to this one.”

“A cathedral or a chapel is not the only way to show appreciation to a god,” said Ulmia. “I’ve heard much of Materia and Spiritus since I’ve been here – and though I have not yet met them myself, I know they’ve become earnest in their desire to protect and nurture this world for us.”

“What is your purpose here?” Sarah asked. Now, Alma could smell burning – and the roasting of rotten flesh with it. Sarah held a handkerchief over her nose. “Do you wish only to make Alma doubt her beliefs?”

“I simply wish to understand the source of those beliefs,” Ardyn said, his shoulders slack. “What have those gods done to deserve such steadfast belief in them? Or have they given you a lifeline in times of trauma, shown you a precious light in the depths of your deepest despair? That, at least, would make sense – delusions are often born of desperation.”

“Nothing of the sort,” said Alma, shaking her head. “It is simply how I was raised and taught. I see that the ways of Ivalice are strange to you, but despite our struggles they are precious to me. It is faith that empowers the holy magicks I bear, faith that allows me to offer weal to those suffering woes.” Crumbling stone outside told her that the assault had only worsened; that the monastery’s facade had been damaged. With the weight of her crook reassuring her, she turned away from Ardyn toward the door. “If you need proof of my faith, rather than evidence of the gods themselves, let my magicks show you.”

Agrias unsheathed her sword. “Do you mean to fight?”

“I do,” said Alma. “Ardyn, though your aid would be welcome, we will fight without you if we must. I am a Cleric and I know my gods stand with me.” She glanced at her new friends and smiled. “Magicks used in support of our allies can be used to harm the dead. Have faith – if not in the gods, then in yourselves – and I know we will make it through this.”

“The effectiveness of healing spells on undead is known to me,” said Sarah. “I just worry for Agrias being the one to draw all of their attention.”

“Then we’ll watch her back!” said Aphmau, bladed weapons covering her knuckles. Her puppets twirled at her side, the white one snapping its shears.

Ulmia strummed her harp. “I will weave a requiem to banish all those that I can.”

“Then my water magic shall burst down this door and commence the attack,” said Aria. “Are we ready?”

Ardyn continued to stand at the back of the chapel. If he wanted to watch, then let him, she decided. “Stand fast, my new friends,” Alma said. The door quavered, straining against the frame. Though her heart pounded, it was not with fear – but with a sort of exhilaration. “Ready!”

Magicks swirled around Aria and gathered into a globe of water that she launched at the door, splintering it into uncountable pieces. Though the attack blasted several of them away, a mess of decaying flesh scrambled in through the doorway, snarling and growling. Agrias swept in with her sword flashing, cutting down any who tried to get through the door. Alma knew she would not be able to hold her position forever, even with the others keeping her healed – and if they made it through, they would be surrounded. The monastery would be their tomb.

Alma cast an aegis to empower Agrias, then holy magick to strike the first zombie that forced its way through. Ulmia’s songs kept them from rising again while Aphmau stood at Agrias’s back and punched any skull she could reach. Aria summoned a barrier across the doorway to give Agrias some breathing room. Sarah’s lute kept their strength and morale high, her music louder than the undead wails.

A fireball slammed against Aria’s barrier, shattering it. Agrias held her sword in a defensive stance. “Their mages are using the rest of the horde as their shield!” she yelled out.

Alma had to swing her crook at one that came too close to her. Still, Ardyn did nothing – she wasn’t sure if he was still here or not. “Then we must push past this blockade and bring this fight outside,” said Alma. Confined as they were in the chapel, she couldn’t use her strongest spell. 

Agrias looked back at her briefly, as if just long enough to confirm Alma’s resolve, then nodded. “Very well,” she said. She released divine light in an arc from her sword, cutting a swath through their enemies that allowed her to press forward. Aphmau and her puppets followed closely behind her, and then Alma, stepping swiftly but carefully over the fallen corpses. She would not falter. She had seen horrors worse than this.

The mages stood at the other end of the bridge, wreathed in flowing black funeral shrouds that looked like shadow itself under the cover of the night. They raised their gnarled staves up high, preparing another assault of their dark magicks.

Alma thought of her battle with the high seraph, waged both within and without. And she began chanting the magicks of the renegade angel, reshaped into the pure energy it was before Altima’s fall from grace. “Shed vainglorious ambitions, embrace the reality of – ”

A zombie with a wicked sickle lunged at her, but she wasn’t prepared to defend herself. A sword appeared, spearing it through its chest, and then Ardyn flashed into existence right in front of her. He smirked and tipped his hat.

“ – suffering with solace!” she finished. “Ultima!”

The sphere of pure white, the spell in its sanctified form, burst forth beyond the bridge, catching all of the mages from behind. The light seared and obliterated them and the bulk of the horde that still stood ready at the edge of the woods, leaving the bridge untouched. Now that the barrage of enemy spells stopped, it freed the rest of them to continue pushing back against the wave. Even Ardyn helped now.

When the zombies at the edge of the woods rallied and rushed to the bridge, Alma spotted fighters emerge from the trees, striking at them from behind. Panting from the exertion of her spell, she smiled nonetheless when she saw Ramza at the head of the force, presumably the missing scouting party. With their help, the rest of the zombies were shortly routed and cut down, or else a scattered few fled into the woods. Alma nearly dropped her crook in relief, but her chest swelled with pride. She had done it – she had stood up and fought, just like her brother would have.

“To think Orbonne Monastery would be here now, as well!” she heard Ramza exclaim. She lowered her staff and waited patiently for him to notice her. “Agrias, everyone – are you hurt? Was that an Ultima spell?”

“How could I be hurt, with support like this?” Agrias said, gesturing to Alma and the others. “Ardyn notwithstanding. But as for the spell’s source, see for yourself.”

“Well, that’s rude,” said Ardyn, scowling. “I may not have healed, but I helped!”

Though Alma didn’t recognize Ramza’s companions, she curtsied to them nonetheless. And then Ramza noticed her. “Would that I could capture that look on your face, dear brother,” she said sweetly, enjoying the way he gaped.

“Alma! At last, you’ve come,” he said, rushing forward and embracing her. She returned it, letting out a breath of relief that had been tangled in her lungs until this moment. “I’ve been waiting to introduce you to everyone.”

“Truly?” Alma asked, pulling back enough to try and read his expression. “You’ve anticipated my summoning as a champion of these gods, to fight on their behalf? Even after all those times you sought to shelter me from the harshness of battle?”

“If he thought to hide you away, then he was a fool,” said Ardyn. “Though I question the wisdom of the gods at the best of times, choosing Alma was not one of their mistakes.”

Alma turned to Ardyn and smiled at him. “Thank you,” she said. She wasn’t quite sure if it was something she’d said that impressed him, or just her magicks. “For that, and for your aid.” He only waved her away and scoffed.

“There is no doubt that I was a fool in my attempts to keep you in a sanctuary I could not guarantee,” said Ramza. “But will is everything in this world – and yours is the will that banished Altima, after all.”

Alma grinned. At last, she would fight alongside her brother directly, not behind him as a frail object to be protected. “Then let us continue our adventure beyond Ivalice, together!”


Character Abilities

 

Zack

ULT: Costly Punch

Effect: Rainbow damage, but chance of missing. With each miss, recharge EX

This might be a weird one, but hear me out. It's a really powerful attack and critical to some strategies in Crisis Core, plus it's one of his more memorable abilities, so I gave it to him (most of his DMW Limits are taken already, especially the more powerful ones). After use, he can deal rainbow damage with all of his attacks, but he has a chance of missing (I don't know how much). But every time he misses, he recharges his EX. So despite some turns where he might not inflict damage, I hope it balances out...


Cissnei

ULT: Shuriken Crisis

Effect: Rainbow follow ups

Alternate Skin: Her Rebirth appearance

Her ULT name is an original, like how Opera Omnia came up with all her ability names themselves. It's a reference to her appearances in both Before Crisis and Crisis Core. After use, all of her follow-up attacks deal rainbow damage, solidifying her even more as a peak off-turn damage dealer.


 

Alma Beoulve (Staff) Holy magic damage, buffs, auras, Gold Esuna, damage debuffs, battery, Healing Staff BRV attack upgrade, Reraise

15: Blessed Mote

35: Aegis (changes BRV attack to Healing Staff)

EX: Chant

LD: Deathspell

FR: Purifying Wish (with Aphmau)

BT: Cleric’s Light

ULT: Sanctified Ultima (Effect: Auras become permanent)

Burst theme: “A Chapel,” a random encounter theme

Alright, now for Alma. In game, her special Cleric class only has four abilities - Aegis, Dispelna, Chant, and Ultima. Since Ovelia shares this class (sans Ultima), I had to get a little creative. "Blessed Mote" is an original, and references the "Mote" items that deal elemental damage when thrown at enemies in XII (hey, it's still Ivalice). I picture it as a Chemist ability, perhaps. :P It is her base damage attack. Aegis grants an aura for Alma that gives the party Regen, Defense up buffs, a turn rate up buff, and also changes her standard BRV attack to "Healing Staff," which heals her allies (referencing the weapon she comes with; when striking units, it heals them).

Her EX, Chant, is a party heal and Reraise that gives her an HP++ attack, like Ramza, which I imagine would be her main form of damage along with Blessed Mote (at least in past eras of gameplay). Spoiler alert -- I'm giving Dispelna to Ovelia, so Alma gets the PSX translation of the spell for her LD, which was "Deathspell 2," but I dropped the 2. This allows Alma to Esuna even gold-framed debuffs, it deals damage, and turns her Healing Staff BRV attack into a free turn. Her Burst is an original, and her ULT is her unique version of the Ultima spell - which turns her auras into permanent buffs.

Notes:

I realized at one point that I wrote about how Alma was punching skulls, rather than Aphmau, and thankfully caught it during editing. It made me realize I had a ton of A names in this chapter. Alma, Agrias, Aria, Ardyn, Aphmau... So, sorry if that got confusing at points!

Regarding Alma's chant for Ultima: "Shed vainglorious ambitions, embrace the reality of suffering with solace!" This is my WotL-ified version of the PSX chant for the spell, which was "Brush off vanity and show reality!" which is different from the chant that Altima herself used for the spell. Though Ramza used Altima's version, I decided Alma gets her own because she is essentially casting her own version of it.

Next character hint: An amnesiac girl with a deeply hidden dark side.

Chapter 46: Lost Chapter: Earth Crystal's Hope

Notes:

Confession time: This is the first representative we've come across from a game that I haven't played and don't intend to. I tried for a bit, but didn't get very far because I found this and War of the Visions too predatory. I've done some research on the story and characters so I'm not totally unfamiliar with it, but if there are any character inconsistencies or something like that, then that's why. I will say that the Brave Exvius games are also the only games where I won't be including every playable character -- I'm limiting both games to just three each (and if you're at all familiar with them, you can probably guess who). There are just way too many characters in both games and I don't even know where to start! Especially since just about everyone is playable.

Anyway, all that said, this chapter ended up being fairly plot important.

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Alma with Aphmau: Both are young and sheltered noblewomen/royalty, and a younger sister. An Opera Omnia cutscene even directly compared the two when Ramza and Aphmau interacted with each other, so this is a bit of a reference to that.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: Earth Crystal’s Hope


Fina ( Final Fantasy Brave Exvius )

Voiced by: Akane Fujita

A mysterious girl encased in the Earth Crystal with no memory of who she is, beyond her name. Childish and innocent, she forms a deep bond with her companions Rain and Lasswell as she journeys with them to protect the crystals of Lapis from the Sworn Six of Paladia. As they battle their foes to save the crystals, Fina learns of her origins – particularly, her dark past as the “Demon of Hess.”

Fina


LEONORA


It was while she was out on patrol with Krile, Benjamin, Sophie, Arc, and even Selh’teus that the world changed again.

The earth quaked, shifting beneath their feet. The landscape rolled like the churning of waves in a storm, aggressive and chaotic. It happened so suddenly that none of them were prepared for it; unable to brace herself on anything, Leonora stumbled and fell. She had never heard of this world changing so abruptly, and not while any of them were traveling through it.

Selh’teus waved his hands and a platform of light hovered over the ground, large enough for all of them. Sophie helped Leonora stand and climb to safety just in time for a gouge to open in the earth beneath her feet, like it had been clawed by a massive creature.

No one spoke as they watched the world around them reshape itself in awed silence. Forests grew. Shrubs sprouted and spread, covering the land in verdant greenery. Even mountains rose far away, making Leonora wonder if this was always how it happened or if this was new.

When it finally stopped, it was Benjamin who found his words first. “That sure was something,” he said.

“That’s putting it lightly!” said Krile, as Selh’teus lowered their platform gently to the ground. “I wonder why that happened? Who could have summoned this place?”

“This is beyond just a surface level change,” said Selh’teus, gazing over the horizon to the north. “A great power has come to this world. Now I understand how my arrival drew attention.”

“You can sense it?” Arc asked. “What sort of power is it?”

“I feel it, too,” Krile said, rubbing her temples. “Selh’teus, are you saying it’s another crystal?”

Leonora couldn’t read his expression. She herself wasn’t sure how she felt about another crystal making a sudden appearance – would it be another pillar to support the world? Another source of power for their foes to exploit?

“I am unsure,” Selh’teus responded. “I believe we should hurry to the source of this disruption before our foes find it.”

They ventured down the new path laid out before them, winding into a valley with groves of trees sprawled out on its bottom. Smaller trees and vegetation climbed up the side of the valley, some almost literally – like treants crossed with spiders, draping tangles of vines rather than webs. Wildflowers in many colors dotted the landscape in patches, like a painter careless with his art. Leonora breathed in deep as they passed, the floral scents reminding her of Troia, her home; marigolds and yarrow, fireweed and coneflower, goldenrods and bluebells. Despite their urgency, she wished to stop and linger.

“I’ve never seen so much color in one place,” said Sophie, gasping in awe. “This valley is beautiful.”

“This outburst of verdant life lends credence to the theory that this is a crystal’s doing,” said Selh’teus, who looked far less impressed.

“Would that be so terrible?” Leonora found herself asking. “If it were to change the world into something wonderful, like this… And even if it does become a target for some unsavory types, is it not better for the world to have more pillars to support it?” Troia had eight Epopts, after all – eight leaders who shared the burden of leadership together. If something happened to one of them, the other seven still stood.

“It could be just one more pillar we must protect,” said Arc, hugging his tome close. “But… perhaps it is meant to be. My world has four crystals, and their natural state is for all to be in perfect balance with each other. Four in the World of Light, and another four in the World of Darkness.”

“Mine has four crystals, too!” said Benjamin. “Well, only four.”

Leonora tapped her cheek. “I suppose mine has four as well. But the Underworld has an additional four.”

“My world and Bartz’s world have four each, too,” said Krile. “But… this wouldn’t be the fourth crystal here. There’s Materia, Spiritus, Selh’teus, and the Will that is also maintaining this world.” Leonora almost stumbled with the pace that they kept. That was right – the Will, a presence that the Warrior of Light sometimes spoke of. If another crystal had truly appeared, the Warrior should have been here. But she supposed they were too far from Balamb Garden to go back and fetch the others.

“The one that spoke to me,” said Sophie, crossing her hands over her chest. “So now this world could have five crystals?”

“And is that ‘Will’ crystal the source of our power?” Arc asked. “The will that let us change the world, at least until recently…”

“It is a reasonable hypothesis,” said Selh’teus. He floated to a stop, his wings glistening in the sunbeams that reached the valley floor. In front of them stood an ancient structure of white marble that had dulled as if from years of dilapidation, moss and vines coiling around the weather-worn pillars flanking the open entrance. It looked as if it had withstood hundreds, if not thousands, of years – even though it had only just arrived.

And now that they were here, Leonora felt power emanating from it. She knew this power.

“An Earth Crystal,” she said, and she jumped in surprise when Krile spoke the same words.

Neither Leonora nor Krile hesitated in approaching the shrine. It had only one chamber, and once she saw the crystal levitating inside, she was struck by its sublime beauty. Its multifaceted surface glistened with light that broke in through a hole in the roof, casting hues of moss and leaves and grass. But there were browns, too – warm brown, soft, like tree bark, fresh soil, and the locks of someone she loved. No matter what anyone said, she knew this crystal’s arrival could never be a bad thing.

The crystal revolved, and when they approached, it shed sparkles of light that coalesced together before Leonora’s eyes and revealed a girl with honey-golden hair, eyes closed and floating gently to the ground.

Sophie ran into the crystal chamber, sliding to a stop behind Leonora and Krile. “Did that girl just come out of the crystal!?”

The girl’s eyes opened once her feet touched the floor, and as soon as she stood it seemed as if the crystal’s magic released her. She stumbled for a moment, blinking blearily at them. “Ah…?”

Krile ran up to her side, all traces of hesitation gone. “Are you okay?” she asked. Leonora couldn’t help but admire her instinct to help; Leonora could still barely get over her shock. Perhaps Krile would make a wonderful sage one day, if she chose.

“Am I… still in Lapis?” the girl asked. “Or is this Paladia? No… it doesn’t feel like either…”

“Is that the name of your world?” Benjamin asked. “Well… sorry to say, but you’re in neither of those places. What’s your name?”

She accepted Krile’s help. She stumbled for a moment, clearly disoriented. Leonora wasn’t sure if she had heard Benjamin’s question. “Is… is Rain here?” she asked. Then she looked up at the crystal casting its light. “Oh! The crystal!”

“Did it trap you inside it?” Sophie asked.

Leonora shook her head. “The crystal would not do such a thing!”

“I am not so sure of that,” said Selh’teus. “The manner of her summoning is unusual. I am inclined to believe that it is the crystal that was summoned to this world, and this girl simply came along with it.”

“I was sealed in this crystal,” said the girl, holding her hand up to the crystal. “If it is still here… if I can still see it… then that means…”

“You were sealed?” Leonora asked, eyes wide. She had never heard of something like that. “But why?”

Krile pumped her fists. “If you’re in trouble, we can help you! We know a few things about crystals. And we love making new friends!”

The girl looked back at Krile, eyes wide. “Friends…?”

Behind them, outside the crystal shrine, Leonora heard the jangle of metal as an armored figure approached them. She nearly fumbled over her robes when she spotted Garland, the knight. “A fifth crystal, here and now?” he said, forgoing a greeting. “It must be taken from this place before it is used for nefarious ends.”

“How can we be sure you wouldn’t use it for your ends?” Krile asked, brow furrowed. “We haven’t forgotten how you kidnapped Sarah back when we faced Ramuh!”

“So he’s a bad guy, huh?” said Benjamin, drawing his sword.

“His intent back then was to help us, was it not?” Leonora asked, frowning. But she wasn’t sure if anyone heard her.

She couldn’t see Garland’s face beneath his helm, but he paused for a moment. “How absurd! It seems the Earth Crystal’s power has been split in twain.”

“Indeed,” said Selh’teus, his face blank. “I have noticed the same. This girl did not just emerge from the crystal – it appears that she is the crystal. Or she at least shares some of its power.”

Arc looked back at Selh’teus. “What? You mean she is just like you?”

“She needs to be taken from here,” said Garland. “I will spirit her away and seal this shrine into a Torsion before others arrive to misuse its power.”

The girl recoiled. “No!”

Krile stood protectively in front of her. “No! You aren’t taking her anywhere!”

Sophie took out her club and tapped it twice against the ground before settling into a battle stance. “What Krile said! If she doesn’t want to go with you, then we’ll protect her!”

“But… you don’t know anything about me,” said the girl. “Why would you want to protect me?”

“That’s easy,” said Krile, smiling. “It’s because you seem scared. And when I mentioned the possibility of us being friends, your eyes lit up with hope. That told me all I needed to know! So we won’t let Garland take you away.”

“Then if it cannot be sealed, it must be destroyed,” Garland said, drawing his massive sword. “This world already has four pillars – one of which is an unknown variable. A fifth could wreak untold havoc if it were to fall into the wrong hands.”

The girl closed her eyes and took a deep breath. “My name is Fina,” she said. “If I am standing here, then it is my other half who was sealed inside of this crystal, and who is still within it. And I will not let you destroy her!” She summoned a massive, winged bow to her hands in a flash of light.

Leonora turned to face Garland. “Then we will stand with you, Fina!”

“Wait!” said Arc. “Why do we have to fight? Garland, didn’t you say that you could seal this crystal away in a Torsion? Why not do that, and let Fina stay with us? A fifth crystal doesn’t have to be a bad thing.”

“He may not be wrong,” said Selh’teus. “For untold ages, Vana’diel had five Mothercrystals until I became the sixth. It was a necessary addition to protect all of existence from oblivion. Perhaps the Earth Crystal was summoned in preparation for such an eventuality.”

“Hmph,” said Garland. “Or perhaps it was summoned for something as insignificant as all of these flowers.”

Leonora tilted her head. “Would that be such a bad thing? Fina’s crystal has brought some extra beauty to our world!”

“C’mon, I don’t think you can have too many pillars,” said Benjamin. “That just means the world has extra support.”

Garland straightened and dismissed his sword. “Very well. If that is what you insist, then I shall seal this shrine away so that the crystal’s power cannot be abused. But be warned,” he said to Fina. “You are now a resident of this world, and you must prepare to battle to maintain it. If you fall, you would endanger the very structure of this world.”

Fina gripped her bow. “I still don’t really understand…”

“We’ll explain everything to you!” said Krile. “We promise!”

Garland turned away from them. “Begone from here. Before I change my mind, or a villain like that Kefka shows his horrid face.”


Fina stood with her shoulders back after they brought her back to Garden. Though she stood under the scrutinizing gaze of Astos, she didn’t back down. Leonora couldn’t help but admire her.

They met the Warrior of Light, the Onion Knight, and Astos in the command bridge at the top of Garden, and both Leonora and Krile refused to leave Fina’s side – not that anyone asked them to.

“The personification of the Earth Crystal…” said Astos, crossing his arms. “I thought I sensed something strange.”

“Thankfully we were near enough to her arrival point to find her before anyone else did,” said Selh’teus.

“I became the crystal when I was sealed long ago,” said Fina. “As one of the Great Sages of Hess. You’re sure Garland can keep it safe? I’d be able to sense if something happened to her in there… the other me.”

The Warrior of Light gave her a reassuring smile. “Despite his appearance, I would trust no one else to ensure the safety of that crystal. Garland has the power of the gods of this world, as I do. He has a vested interest in keeping this world safe.”

“Sounds to me like you’re the first person from your world to come here,” said the Onion Knight. “Welcome to the fight. I heard you were asking about people named Rain and Lasswell… we’re sorry to say, but we don’t think they have arrived yet.”

Fina closed her eyes and put a hand over her heart. “That’s okay,” she said, opening her eyes and smiling. “Until then… I will be strong enough on my own to protect this world alongside you!”

Krile grinned. “That’s the spirit!”

“We’re happy to be your friends, Fina,” said Leonora. “You won’t be alone until they come here – I know it!”

Fina let out a laugh, the first Leonora had heard since they’d met her. “This isn’t the first time I’ve been to another world. But it will be nice to make even more new friends!”


Character Abilities

Angeal

ULT: Unleashed Wrath

Effect: Transformation, extra damage

Angeal's ULT is an ability he uses while transformed as Angeal Penance during his boss fight. After using this ability, he will then transform into Angeal Penance.


Weiss

ULT: Immaculate End

Effect: Increased follow up damage

This ability name comes from his boss battle appearance in Remake. After use, all of his follow-up attacks will deal extra damage.


Fina (Bows) Holy and Earth magic damage, healing, auras, defensive buffs, battery

15: Bright Shower

35: Superior Healing

EX: Arch Blast

LD: Innocent Glow

FR: Aura of Foulness and Hope (with Sophie)

BT: Eternal Light

ULT: Judgment Cross (Effect: Overhealing becomes accumulated damage)

Burst theme: “Celestial Battle,” which plays against espers and key battles, such as against the Sworn Six of Paladia

Alternate Skin: Lotus Mage outfit from Season 2, Blue Mage outfit from Season 3

Her ability names all come from her Limits and abilities available to her numerous variants. Since she's a white mage and associated with the Earth Crystal, she deals both holy and earth magic damage, and she is a powerful healer and support unit. After using her ULT, any overhealing she does gets accumulated in an overhead value which she then expends as HP damage. Not a whole lot to say about her, to be honest -- she's a pretty straightforward unit! She gets a lot of new abilities and fighting styles in her various additions over the years, but I wanted to keep it simple with her base form.

Notes:

One more Lost Chapter to go until we get to Chapter 7! Next character hint: a scientist whose one wish is to restore their people.

Chapter 47: Lost Chapter: The Fall of Pride

Notes:

Justification: This character is the main antagonist of Crystal Chronicles: Echoes of Time. Normally, this character has an accent, but I prefer not to write accents phonetically.

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Fina with Sophie: Both are (or become) an embodiment of hope. Fina has a hidden dark side, and other characters try to manufacture one inside of Sophie.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: The Fall of Pride


Larkeicus ( Final Fantasy Crystal Chronicles: Echoes of Time )

Voiced by: Osamu Saka (previously Rokurō Naya)

An archaeologist from the town library who is really an immortal Clavat from an advanced society that fell to ruin over two thousand years ago. A respected scientist, he provided his society with their crystal technology, leading them to prosperity. After the disappearing crystals led to the destruction of his people, Larkeicus devised a plan through the ages to reverse the damage and force Sherlotta to use her crystal generation ability.

Larkeicus


NOEL


This region was definitely one of the stranger ones he’d come across in his travels.

Before them stretched two mountain passes branching off toward two fundamentally different peaks. On their left, stone of red ocher led to a peak belching black smoke. Lava fell in a steady stream of glowing ribbons down its slope. On their right, snow and ice covered the frigid peak in white and blue, with gentle snowflakes flurrying overhead. Their heights alone looked dizzying – he could not imagine climbing up one and then the other in short succession.

“How curious,” said Amidatelion, seemingly unfazed. “This land is capable of wondrous things, is it not?”

“Like hell it is!” exclaimed Barret. “This kinda thing has gotta be impossible!”

“Well, here it is in front of us,” said Noel, shaking his head. “No use complaining about it. So which way do we think is the right way?”

“Mog couldn’t be more specific about where he sensed that light, huh?” said Barret, his shoulders slumping. “Who in their right minds would hang around on top of these mountains!?”

Sice put a hand on her hip. “You didn’t have to come.”

“Let’s split into two groups,” Sherlotta suggested, stepping forward and then turning around to face them all. “Amidatelion, Barret, Sice, you come with me to the fire mountain. Noel, Zell, and Dr. Mog – you three go up the ice mountain.”

“Alright,” said Barret, nodding and putting on his sunglasses. “Alright, sure. I can do this. Ain’t no mountain too tough for me to handle!”

Noel tugged at his short sleeves. None of them were really dressed for cold weather. “If you say so, Sherlotta…”


Once he got into the swing of things, the climb up the ice mountain wasn’t so bad. Ice flan, ahriman, and wolves blocked their way, but between the three of them they managed to force their way through any monsters in their path. But even Noel couldn’t figure out how Zell managed to continue jogging in place every time they stopped to catch their breaths; Noel had almost slipped on the ice several times himself during their ascent.

When they arrived at an overlook, Dr. Mog stopped and looked at the view toward the fire mountain. He, at least, had his fur to keep him warm. “Fascinating, kupo. I wonder what the impact on local weather is with these two mountains here?”

“Is weather consistent anywhere in this world?” Zell asked, scratching his head.

“I’m just wondering who summoned these two mountains here, if anyone,” Noel said. His eyes wandered further up the snowy path, squinting through the flurry of snowflakes, when he spotted multiple ice flan dragging themselves toward a cluster of other monsters. Looking more closely, he realized they all surrounded a human figure. “Hey, I see someone over there!”

Dr. Mog followed his line of sight. “They’re in trouble, kupo!”

Noel and Zell rushed toward the monsters together, trudging through the shin-deep snow as fast as they could. Wind magic wreathed Noel’s blade as he sliced through the closest flan, which jiggled and shrugged off his attack. It retaliated with a conjured blizzard, but Noel braced himself and weathered it as Zell burst through the circle of them surrounding the stranger. His fists flew, drumming their gelatinous foes with kicks and fire magic. The stranger – an old man, Noel realized – pressed his hand against the snow and a stream of darkness burst from the ground, toppling several of the monsters.

Noel wove between three flan to strike an ahriman right in its eye just as it prepared a magic attack of its own, and Dr. Mog waved his staff to finish off the three flan he’d passed with quick castings of fire spells. Noel thrust his hand forward and summoned wind to whirl around the ahriman, their last foe, finishing it off with cutting gales. It let out a pitiful, throaty cackle as it fell.

“Are you okay?” Noel asked the old man. Though well dressed, his clothing wasn’t suited for a snowy mountain either, and a porkpie hat covered his bald head.

“I am just fine, thank you,” the man replied. “Your assistance was timely. Might you three be adventurers?”

“Sorta,” said Noel, sheathing his weapons. “I’m Noel, that’s Zell, and that’s Dr. Mog. We sensed that someone was up on this mountain, so we came to find you.”

“Is that so?” he responded. He didn’t quite look surprised that they had come looking for him, but his gaze passed over all three of them in turn as if trying to decide what to make of them. “My name is Larkeicus. I am an archaeologist, and I have come here to search for a relic somewhere on this mountain. Would you aid me in finding it?”

Noel exchanged a glance with Zell and Dr. Mog. Had he realized he was in another world yet?

“Have you, er, been here long?” Zell asked. "Hmm... the way you talk reminds me of Dr. Odine!"

"I have not been here particularly long, no, but I have become accustomed to the cold," said Larkeicus. He nodded and adjusted his glasses. "I do not know this Dr. Odine, but I will take that as a compliment - I assume they are a scholar of great intelligence."

“And do you recognize this mountain, kupo?” said Dr. Mog.

“Of course I do,” Larkeicus replied, his tone curt. “I am aware that it has been displaced, but if I find this relic I may be able to reverse it. Come along, now.”

“We may as well help him for now, kupo,” said Dr. Mog, his paws disappearing into his sleeves as Larkeicus walked ahead. “He doesn’t seem too concerned by his predicament. I’ve met archaeologists before, kupo, and they don’t seem as self-important as he is…”


SHERLOTTA


They were all careful to keep far away from the rivers of lava flowing down the mountainside and the lakes of magma boiling in open vents. The sulfurous stench stung at their noses and the heat seared the air, making Sherlotta’s eyes feel dry, but they pressed onward.

“Do we know from which world this mountain hails?” Amidatelion asked. They seemed to glide up the slope, as if unaffected by the temperature and air quality. Not that unusual for a Yuke, but it made Sherlotta feel a little bitter, given their current situation.

“Not mine,” said Sice. “But I can’t really tell, isn’t it just any old volcano?”

Sherlotta’s eyes followed a distant bomb drifting by, unaware of their presence. “I had the same thought. There’s a place called Fire Mountain that exists in my world, as well as an Ice Mountain, but they’re not this close together. I won’t be able to tell if it’s from my world until we get to the top.”

“Aw man, you’re saying we gotta climb all the way up?” Sice asked, scowling. “There better be some big nasties up there to make it worth it.”

Barret scoffed at her. “Now who’s complaining? Don’t forget, we’re looking for a person – not some big nasties.” He glanced back toward Sherlotta. “What’s at the top?”

“A relic,” Sherlotta replied. “When activated along with its twin on Ice Mountain, it can open the way to a tower into the sky.”

“Judging by your tone and expression, I take it this is not a good thing,” Amidatelion observed. “Well, let us hope our quarry does not have any nefarious purposes, or that it really isn’t your mountain after all.”

Sherlotta didn’t answer, letting the queasy feeling stew in her gut as they ascended the mountain. When they finally reached its summit thanks to Amidatelion’s powers, it confirmed her fears: this was indeed the Fire Mountain from her world. The relic had already been activated. And hunched shadow golems with half-moon blades in their hands and eerie white masks for faces leapt up and down when they saw the party, lunging into an attack.

“Amidatelion!” Sherlotta called out, as Barret opened fire on their sudden assailants. “Teleport us over to the Ice Mountain, as fast as you can!”


NOEL


Their trek up to the mountain summit was arduous, but the time passed quickly when they explained to Larkeicus the circumstances of his arrival into the World of Respite. His questions were many, almost ravenous in his desire for knowledge, and upon speaking to him more Noel realized he was not as bossy as he first seemed; Larkeicus was nothing but polite and inquisitive.

“I wonder if there is an elemental crystal at the top of either of these mountains, kupo?” said Dr. Mog. Floating blocks of stone allowed them to climb without any mountaineering gear, as if they had been magicked exactly for this purpose. “That would explain this unusual weather phenomena.”

“Oh, that would be wonderful,” said Larkeicus, holding his hat as a sudden gust of wind swept over them. “My research deals with crystals and crystal technology, you know.”

“Crystal technology, kupo?” said Dr. Mog, his pom twitching. “Please, tell me more…”

Larkeicus smiled. “Another academic, I see! Well, if harnessed correctly, crystals can power anything you set your mind to…” He crested one final slope, revealing an open, flat summit with a frozen lake and a round, golden apparatus looming above it, like a hoop or a gate. “...including mortal lives.”

Zell rubbed his nose. “Huh? What do you mean?”

Noel frowned. “I’m not sure crystals should be used for that sort of thing…”

“Pah, you both think small,” said Larkeicus, waving at them dismissively. He led the way toward the apparatus that Noel assumed to be the relic he sought. “Sadly, I see no crystal here. No matter, there was no such thing at the summit of Fire Mountain, either.”

“You were on the Fire Mountain?” Zell asked.

When he didn’t answer, and instead examined the relic, Dr. Mog approached and peered closely at it. “What does this relic do, anyway, kupo?”

“It opens the way to a gate,” Larkeicus replied. “To salvation.”

Something felt wrong to Noel. Larkeicus’s demeanor seemed to change as he knelt in front of the relic and tinkered with it. In moments, it rumbled to life. The hoop shifted and aligned with something Noel couldn’t discern, as if it was being aimed toward the sky.

“I think you should tell us what’s going on, old man,” Noel said, gripping his weapon.

Larkeicus glanced back toward them out of the corner of his eye, as if completely unconcerned with the fact he had his back to them. “I have no more use for you people,” he said. Dark circles opened up along the ground with purple lightning crackling in their depths. Shadowy hands twisted out of the snow, dragging out hunched, monstrous bodies wreathed in darkness and inscribed with glowing runes. Nearly a dozen of the creatures appeared, writhing and awaiting orders. “Kill them.”

The golems burst into motion, swinging blades at the ends of their lanky arms. Zell ducked underneath their strikes, pummeling one with swift jabs before knocking it away with a roundhouse kick, while Noel cleaved through the one behind him. Thunder magic snaked up and down the runes on their arms, but Noel retaliated with a spell of his own before they could fire them off, and Dr. Mog unleashed his own barrage of ice and lightning that toppled three and stunned one.

That gave Noel and Zell some breathing room, at least until they noticed the golems glowing with red light.

“Get back!” a voice shouted, and when the golems flashed with white light Noel shielded his eyes just in time for them to explode. He didn’t feel any heat or pain, however – but the light behind his eyelids persisted. Warily, he opened his eyes and spotted Sherlotta in front of them with a spectral shield. “Made it just in time! Thanks to Amidatelion’s powers.”

“I’ll say, kupo!” said Dr. Mog.

Amidatelion opened two portals between themself and a golem, reaching their hand through and yanking it forward by the mask just in time for Sice to cleanly cut through it with her scythe. “The threat has not yet been abated,” they said. “Do not let your guard down just yet.”

“Watch out, these guys explode after you hit ‘em a few times,” said Sice, spinning to take down another one.

“Yeah, we’d gathered that,” said Noel, while Barret gunned down some of the golems closest to Larkeicus.

“Larkeicus!” Sherlotta called, her voice laced with hatred. “I should have known you’d show your face eventually!”

“Ah, how pleasant it is to see you again, Sherlotta,” said Larkeicus, greeting her like an old friend. “You’ve taken in more strays, haven’t you?”

Sherlotta clenched her fists. “What’re you up to? You should know by now that everything you worked for was pointless. Why do you even want to open the way to the tower? You know where it leads. It’s just empty sky, especially in this world!”

“You and that pesky child ended my immortal life,” he said, giving her a scathing glare. “This world has given me another chance – a path to immortality and eternity. And with it, I will reverse what happened to my people. And failing that, I shall rebuild them again.”

“Yes, you do have another chance,” Sherlotta said. “A chance to be different! A chance to share greatness with this world! Haven’t you learned that you can’t change the past? That everything you’ve done only doomed your people?”

Larkeicus summoned more golems. “Don’t pretend to know anything about me, and do not insult my intellect!” A Torsion opened behind him and he turned to step into it just as the gate shone with pure, white light. Across the valley toward the other mountain, Noel spotted another equally bright light at its summit. “You cannot beat me. I have lived two thousand years, and I will live for thousands more!”

Before he stepped into the Torsion, Amidatelion opened another portal right next to him, reaching through it to blast him with magic. Before they could finish their spell, darkness coiled up Larkeicus’s left arm and solidified into a shadow claw, which grabbed Amidatelion and squeezed them, wrenching them out of the portal. He threw them against the ground hard enough for their armor to clatter and collapse into pieces before disappearing into the Torsion without a backwards glance toward Sherlotta.

“Amidatelion!” Noel shouted, spearing a golem. A beam of light fired out of the relic, aimed toward empty sky, meeting an identical beam from the Fire Mountain. Where they met, the air shimmered and revealed a floating tower, high in the sky, like a mirage that had coalesced into reality.

Sice, Zell, and Barret finished off the last of the golems as Sherlotta rushed to Amidatelion’s side. Their armor quivered and came back together, allowing Amidatelion to push themself up again, though they moved sluggishly. “I… I should be fine,” they said, voice weak and shaky. “More importantly… what has he done?”

Sherlotta, on her knees, looked up toward the tower. “I’m sorry, I don’t understand what he’s after in this world,” she said, clenching her fists. “But we should get the others. Whatever it is, it can’t mean anything good for us.”


Character Abilities

Kadaj

ULT: Crimson Impale

Effect: Bahamut SIN follow ups/launch supports

Kadaj's ULT ability name actually comes from the Whisper boss at the end of FFVII Remake that is meant to be a reference to him (along with the humanoid Whispers that are references to Loz and Yazoo). After use, Kadaj summons Bahamut SIN, from the movie, for follow-up attacks that also deal "launch support" damage, meaning he will deal extra damage every time someone participates in a launch.


Irvine

ULT: Counter Rockets

Effect: Irvine’s EX bestows Triple on the party for one turn

As I mentioned in Edea's moveset, the ULT abilities of the FFVIII cast (sans Squall, Laguna, and Ultimecia, since they have skills from Dissidia) come from a Guardian Force associated with them. Irvine gets Cerberus, since it's found in Galbadia Garden. After use, every time Irvine uses his EX ability he will give a "Triple" buff to his party, allowing them to repeat their next ability use three times for 1 turn.


Larkeicus (Unique - Shadow Claw) Dark magic damage, dark imperil, follow ups, traps, Shadow Golem shields

15: Shadow Golem

35: Dark Orb

EX: Spells of Yesteryear

LD: Golem Burst

FR: Cursed Wave (with Emet-Selch)

BT: Alignment of Ice and Fire

ULT: Neo Larkeicus (Effect: Transformation, extra damage)

Burst theme: “Last Battle,” the final boss theme of the game, played against Larkeicus

Larkeicus doesn't really have any named abilities, so I had to name them all except for his ULT. His central mechanic is that he summons Shadow Golems, giving him a follow-up attack that builds up the more golems he has summoned. Furthermore, they are capable of shielding him, meaning he cannot be broken as long as they are around, but every attack aimed at him will destroy one. Whenever they're destroyed, they'll also blow up and damage the enemy. His LD is capable of destroying all of his golems at once, dealing more damage the more golems he has summoned.

In general, he is a Dark elemental attacker with Dark imperil and traps. For his ULT, he transforms into Neo Larkeicus, the final boss of the game, and is able to deal extra damage with each attack.

Notes:

A cliffhanger! Bet you didn't expect that before the next story chapter, huh?

For the next chapter, we'll meet a cat who's used to towers already, a would-be liberator perpetuating a spiral, and a spoiled princess who can be a bit bratty.

Chapter 48: A5C7, Part 1: To Challenge Death

Notes:

Sorry for the bit of a wait on this one, I had a lot of difficulty writing it and sort of went into a panic mode about just how long this fic will end up being (lol). But the good news is, we are just over halfway through Act 5! That's a pretty big milestone. I think I've mentioned before, but I do have the fic mostly planned out with an anticipated conclusion at Act 7, and I don't know if I'll get that far but I do at least want to complete Act 5. We'll see, I'll do a check in once I complete Act 5 and see if people are still interested to read this lil fic of mine. Act 6 is shaping up to be a little longer than Act 5, but Act 7 will be the shortest by far.

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Larkeicus with Emet-Selch: Both of them are geniuses from an ancient time with the same exact goal of wanting to restore their people.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Act 5, Chapter 7, Part 1: To Challenge Death


Yunalesca ( Final Fantasy X )

Voiced by: Yoko Koyanagi

The first high summoner who defeated Sin a thousand years ago. An Unsent, she now resides in the ruins of Zanarkand to meet summoners upon completion of their pilgrimage, perpetuating the cycle of Sin and the Final Aeon. She once journeyed alongside her husband and guardian, Zaon.

Yunalesca artwork


Aire ( Final Fantasy: The 4 Heroes of Light )

Voiced by: Kanae Ito

A princess from the kingdom of Horne who was inexplicably chosen by the Crystal to become a Warrior of Light. Initially self-centered, sheltered, and greedy for treasure, the losses she experiences over the course of her journey make her reconsider her ways. Her bright and cheery attitude drives her to raise spirits in any situation and help anyone who needs it.

Aire artwork


G’raha Tia ( Final Fantasy XIV )

Voiced by: Yūma Uchida

A Miqo’te Scion of the Seventh Dawn and a scholar focused on Allagan history. His connection to the Crystal Tower extended his life, gave him tremendous magical power, and embroiled him in a centuries-long plot to save two worlds. Despite his own accomplishments and time as the Crystal Exarch, leader of the last bastion against the encroaching Flood of Light, he sees his own impact on history as small compared to his great hero.

G'raha render


LARKEICUS


He would never tire of the convenience of traveling through Torsions.

When he emerged into the light, he marveled at the splendor of the tower’s apex – and how it seemed identical to the one he remembered in his home world. Even though his tower took two thousand years to build, this world had replicated it perfectly. He felt as if he walked upon the sky, revived and with a renewed purpose.

He turned to his travel companion, who emerged from the Torsion with him. “Are you impressed, Lady Yunalesca?” he asked.

The woman from another world looked around the top of the tower and the world below. Since both were relatively new arrivals to the world, they had decided to share their knowledge with each other for the time being; Larkeicus had been fascinated by the ways of other worlds, the implications of what innovations could be brought to his own. Yunalesca had listened to his story, entranced more with the capability of this world to revive the dead. Despite her odd manner of dress, Larkeicus had to acknowledge they both had the desire to bring salvation back to their own worlds. As long as her idea of salvation didn’t interfere with his own, he could find value in their partnership.

“I am impressed by your desire to be a symbol of hope for your people, even a world apart,” she said. She strode toward the center of the tower, her movements careful, every step measured. Something about her reminded him of the otherworldliness of a Yuke. “This is where you once siphoned power from a crystal?”

“In my world, yes.”

“In some ways, I am reminded of the fayth,” she said, once again speaking of things he didn’t understand. “Wondrous things can manifest upon drawing power from a stone.”

Larkeicus gazed back at the distant Fire Mountain and Ice Mountain, far below them. Perhaps Sherlotta and the other fools would try and follow them, but by then they would be too late. “Right now, I am more intrigued by the beings you called aeons. I summoned this tower here to find it, and find it I shall.”

“Do not despair,” she said, turning back to regard him with her unnerving yellow eyes. “Everlasting life will once again be in your grasp, and with that time afforded to you, you shall prevail in saving your home.”


YANG


They stood before an archway to nowhere.

Sherlotta called it, simply, “The Gate,” and according to her it led the way to the tower that appeared in the sky. But as they approached the Gate in the middle of an empty field, Yang could discern no way up into the tower where Larkeicus had gone.

Sarah, princess of Burtgang, examined the monolith of an arch. “Excuse me for my ignorance,” she said. “But how might this Gate lead the way to the tower?”

Sherlotta held out her palms and her golden staff appeared propped on them. “I’ve never told you all about this staff, have I?”

Yang rubbed his mustache between his fingers. “I’ve seen you hurl it at our foes on occasion, when you forgo the use of magic.” He had never really considered it an effective weapon for throwing, but Edge was sometimes fond of doing the same with all sorts of weaponry.

Sherlotta scratched her cheek, her eyes darting away from him sheepishly. “Eheh. Well, normally it is haunted by an evil spirit, but the staff itself is a key to this gate – and it opens the way to the tower.”

They watched as she placed the staff into a stone plinth, standing upright, and when Sherlotta braced herself against it with both hands a burst of energy shot out of it in a beam. When the light reached the archway, it swirled and coalesced into a stairway made of magic.

“Impressive,” said Yang, as the iridescent stairs stretched seemingly all the way to the base of the tower. “But will this be able to hold all of us?”

“It’s sturdier than it looks,” Sherlotta said.

“Llyud and I coulda just flown up there, y’know,” said Serafie. “We’ve got wings.”

Papalymo scowled at her. “And did you spare no thought for the rest of us?”

“Oh yeah.”

Sherlotta led the way to the tower, stepping upon the translucent stairs first. Yang followed, testing his weight briefly before ascending. It was somewhat dizzying to step upon a surface he could see through, but he had done worse. He worried for the others’ sense of balance without handrails, but at least they had Llyud to catch anyone if they fell.

Carbuncle shot past him, nearly getting tangled up in Yang’s feet and making him curse. “I sense the presence of another summon ahead,” Carbuncle said, stopping in front of Sherlotta and facing the tower. “A font of life and nature itself – there is no doubt that this time we shall be facing Sylph.”

“Sylph?” Sarah asked, frowning. “But Sylph is perhaps the most beautiful and gentle of them, an eidolon used for healing magic.”

Carbuncle’s tails twitched. “I’ll try not to take offense to that. Even if that is so, they have been corrupted.”

“Oh, I love all the other Sylph Mirages,” said Serafie, fluttering along next to them. “They’ve usually got all the best gossip. Me and the gals meet up for cards every so often.”

“Perhaps we need not worry about this foe’s strength,” said Llyud. “Sylph is a low-ranking Yarhi in the Ring of Pacts, and thus relatively common.”

Yang fixed his gaze ahead as they climbed the stairs. “Though individually weak, sylphs can be quite fierce in greater numbers. And they are kind. When I suffered from my injuries, it was the sylphs who found me and nursed me back to health. They grew to be rather protective, as well.”

“I know the sylphs not as a Primal, but as a tribe,” said Papalymo. “Dwelling in the depths of the Black Shroud, they worship Ramuh and are annoyingly fond of trickery and deceit. Perhaps if this Sylph lacks strength, we should consider bracing ourselves for its mischief.”

“This just makes me wonder…” Sherlotta said. “Is it Sylph Larkeicus is after, or something else within the tower? Our world doesn’t have summons like yours do.”

“I would wager Sylph is nothing but a means to an end,” said Llyud.

“Is it one, or many?” Yang asked. “I’ve always known them to be part of a group.”

“There are many sylphs,” said Carbuncle. “But one Sylph is the progenitor of them all. And that is the one which has been safeguarding your lives in this world, and the one that is under threat.”

Furthermore, Yang thought, they were still no closer to finding the source of this corruption. As he climbed the stairway hewn from light, he wondered what answers awaited them at the end of it.


AIRE


Aire wished she knew where she was.

Nothing about this strange place was recognizable. Contraptions and structures that seemed to be made of both stone and machinery moved of their own volition, with green lights in the floors and walls that seemed mechanical in nature. Floating blocks and switches she pressed seemed to be urging her upward, giving the impression that it was a sort of tower. She just wished she had her friends with her – she could deal with some monsters, but there were many around the tower that threatened to overwhelm her.

She had awoken here with just one friend, Lilibelle the fairy – but they had gotten separated when Lilibelle flew off suddenly. “That’s so unlike her,” Aire said to herself, stepping on a pad that pressed down like a switch. Blocks arranged themselves into steps for her to walk up, but she had no idea where they led. “Why would Lilibelle leave me here like this!?”

That fairy was prone to getting into trouble whenever she was on her own, so Aire resolved to find her. Then she could worry about Yunita, Brandt, and Jusqua.

Lost in her thoughts, she wasn’t prepared for crashing into someone after she turned a corner, and both she and the other person fell to the ground.

“Ow!” Aire exclaimed, rubbing her head. She winced as she touched it – a bruise was sure to form. She raised her eyes to look at the other person, who climbed to his feet. “I didn’t expect…”

“You have my sincerest apologies!” he said, holding out a hand to help her stand. “Are you hurt?”

Aire gaped at the boy as she pulled herself to her feet. “Y-you have cat ears! And a tail! I’ve never met a boy with ears like that before! Are they real?”

His red eyes widened. “Er, ‘boy’? I can assure you, I…” His voice trailed off as she walked around him to get a closer look at his tail, which flicked. “Are you, perhaps, unfamiliar with miqo’te? Or mystel?”

Aire had to restrain herself from touching his tail. “Were you cursed by the elves of Arbor?”

His tail coiled around him as if sensing her restraint was about to waver. “I do not recognize those elves. I was born with these features, and if you are truly unfamiliar then I must assume you are from an altogether different world. Do I have the right way of it?”

The strange question made her remember her manners and she straightened, clearing her throat. This was not the behavior of a princess. “A different world? Well, I’ve traveled around a lot, and I don’t recognize this place at all. That isn’t the most outlandish suggestion, I suppose…”

He put a hand to his chest. “Then perhaps we may aid each other until we discover more of our current predicament? I am G’raha Tia, at your service.”

“My name is Aire,” she responded with a smile. “I’m looking for my friend, Lilibelle. Have you seen anyone else around here? She’s a fairy, so you’d only see her if she wanted you to, I suppose…” Worry flashed through her mind for a moment when she considered the possibility that Lilibelle didn’t want to be found, but she wouldn’t do that. Would she?

G’raha wrinkled his brow. “A fairy, you say? Here, of all places? I regret to say I have not.”

Aire told him more about Lilibelle and how she found herself here; it turned out he knew nothing of this tower or where it came from, either. She spoke of places like Horne and Guera, to see if he recognized them, and he mentioned cities and empires that seemed so foreign to her, with all kinds of people, making both of them conclude that they really did come from different worlds after all. He asked lots of questions. It turned out he had a friend among the fae, too – someone named Feo Ul, but they hadn’t shown up here with him.

The sounds of magic and cries of pain rang out somewhere above them. Without a word exchanged between them, both Aire and G’raha rushed toward the sound without hesitation. Upon ascending a flight of stairs, they find a wide open platform with tower-like structures around its edge, some of which glowed with the same green light Aire saw elsewhere in the tower. She saw two people standing over a third – a fairy, she realized with wide eyes. But this fairy was human-sized. With vibrant hair and clothes and beautiful wings draped around them like a gown, they glowed with an inner magic. And they had been wounded, cradling their arm close.

The two people closed in. One was an old man in a porkpie hat and the other was a woman with long silver hair and little in the way of clothing. Aire wasted no time – that fairy needed help, and she would never forget her debt to the fairies.

“Hey! Leave them alone!” she called out, drawing her staff. She was pleased to see that G’raha joined her without question.

The old man looked back at her with a glare. “Leave us, girl. This does not concern you.”

“I think not,” said G’raha. “Might I ask what this fairy has done to deserve such treatment?”

“This is no mere fairy,” said the old man. For the first time, Aire noticed shadowy creatures lurking around the other pillars, shuffling to surround the fairy. “I wish no harm on them. I am simply here to perform an experiment.”

G’raha’s staff slackened in his hand. “Would you mind explaining what sort of experiment? I would be willing to hear you out.”

Aire clenched her jaw, looked at G’raha, and let out a breath. She supposed they might not have to jump to the worst conclusion.

“You would fail to understand,” said the old man, making a quick gesture at the fairy. Three of the shadow creatures lurched forward and grabbed the fairy, pinning them in place.

“I daresay my capabilities would surprise you,” said G’raha, tensing again. “I must ask you again – what has this fairy done?”

“Nothing.” The woman spoke for the first time, standing eerily still. “This creature is just an aeon, though one I fail to recognize – an aeon bound to a fayth that I intend to find.”

G’raha glanced back at Aire briefly enough to make her think it was just to check if she recognized those terms. She shook her head. “I don’t care what that means,” Aire said. “Let them go!”

The fairy struggled, letting out a wordless, keening cry. Magical wind swept over them all, and with a flare of their wings they pushed away two of the shadow creatures. The woman gestured and two snake-like monsters emerged from the ground and wrapped around the fairy, sinking their fangs into the fairy’s legs. The old man thrust his hand forward and darkness screeched, flaring up underneath the fairy, and then he followed it up with a lightning spell. The fairy choked out an echoing sob, trying in vain to summon healing magic.

“I may be unfamiliar with the ways of other worlds, but you leave me no choice,” G’raha said, holding his staff and his free hand up high. Magic swirled above him and a massive ball of fire erupted between the old man and the lady, causing them both to scramble out of the way. The hulking shadow monsters that lingered around the edge of the platform closed in, but Aire threw her best light magic spells at them.

“You meddle despite knowing nothing,” said the old man, his voice scathing. He opened a book in one hand and shadows coiled up the length of his arm, eyes glowing a deep scarlet. More shadow golems sprung up from the floor, strange markings on their arms and masks. “I gave you a chance to leave. Now you will live only long enough to regret not taking the offer.”

“Break!” G’raha called, casting a spell that halted several golems in their tracks, even some in midair. One golem escaped the effects of the spell, but wrapped its arms around itself once it neared G’raha rather than striking him. Before either of them could react, it exploded.

The force of the blast nearly hurled G’raha off of the platform and into the depths of the tower below, but he managed to hang on, his clothes charred. Aire was about to go help him when she felt a sharp, stabbing pain lance right through her head, as if piercing her mind with broken glass. Brain rattled, her senses dulled as she saw the vague silvery form of the woman appear in front of her, hair rippling as she held out a hand toward Aire. An unseen force struck her in the torso, making her double over.

The pain helped to clear her head, however. On her knees, Aire managed to throw her hand forward and blast the woman with leaf magic. It gave her space to rise back to her feet, but when she went to go help G’raha, her jaw dropped.

More golems had appeared, and now strange serpent-like basilisks had joined the fray. G’raha and the old man traded spells with each other, but G’raha was forced to remain on the move to avoid the exploding golems. Aire climbed one of the stone blocks to give her some space from the golems and serpents, but she realized they had very quickly become overwhelmed.

And the fairy had vanished.

“Aire!” G’raha called out to her. A burst of dark magic bloomed in the center of the platform, battering both the old man and the woman. “You must flee from here. I will hold them off while you escape!”

Aire stomped her foot. “What!? How do you expect me to just run away?”

“You must!” he said. The old man turned his attention on Aire, making his way toward her, but G’raha cast a golden line between him and the man that seemed to yank the man back toward him. “Please. Seek out the Scions of the Seventh Dawn. If they are in this world, tell them my name and you will be under their protection.” He waved his staff and icy winds blew, allowing him to circle around closer to Aire while warding away their opponents. “The fairy is already gone – you can find them and keep them safe.”

“What about you?”

“Do not worry for me,” he said, once he came closer. “If you should be so fortunate as to find my dear friend, the Warrior of Light…” He shook his head. “No, that would be asking for too much. Find your friend. Rescue the fairy. You can trust the Scions.”

Aire’s lip quivered. She didn’t want to lose a friend so soon after meeting them. Not again… But she still owed so much to Lilibelle, and her desire to help the fairy won over her wish to stay and fight. “Promise me you’ll get out of here, too!”

“I will do my best,” he said, focused on the casting of another spell. Basilisks slithered over to them, but he dispatched them with fire spells. “Now go! I have not yet made use of my trump card.”

Aire nodded. That would have to be good enough. Wondering if she’d made a mistake, she held her staff up high and transformed into a cat in the blink of an eye, scampering between the lunges and grabs of the golems to run away from the battle. She thought, briefly, that she saw a figure in blue robes waiting behind a lit up structure, but she fled too fast to look closely.


YUNA


From the moment they stepped foot into the tower, something felt wrong.

Serafie and Echo both became strangely lethargic, stumbling over their words, and when a monster nearly devoured Echo and she barely reacted, Yuna holstered her guns and held out her hands for the little fairy to rest upon.

“Echo, Serafie, is something about this tower bothering you?” she asked.

When neither of them said anything and only stared blankly ahead, Yuna turned to Wol. “I’m not sure why she’s like this,” he admitted. “But I’ll take her to the back line before she gets hurt.”

“Serafie, too,” Alisaie said, crouching down to examine the Mirage as she drifted closer to the floor. “She can be rather apathetic at the best of times, but I’ve never seen her like this.”

“My world doesn’t have fairies,” said Sherlotta. “So I don’t know if this tower does something weird to them.”

Both fairies jolted back to alertness at the same time, startling Yuna, and flew straight up and out of their reach. As one, they darted away for no discernable reason, headed toward the same direction. 

“Whoa!” Tidus exclaimed, as Wol, Y’shtola, and Sherlotta narrowed their eyes at the fleeing fairies. “What’s that about?”

“Not the first time a fairy compelled me to run off inexplicably,” said Gaia, as they all moved to follow. She stopped almost as suddenly as they started. “Wait…”

“Neither are equipped to handle the dangers of this tower,” said Y’shtola. “We cannot afford to delay.”

Yuna stopped to see what had grabbed Gaia’s attention, eyes widening when she spotted a white cat running toward them. “What’s that doing here?”

“One strange thing after another…” said Wol. “Could be a monster.”

Tidus scoffed. “That little thing? Please.”

The cat mewled at them, and when Gaia knelt down to pet it, it abruptly transformed into a human girl with curly blonde hair. Gaia stumbled backward. “Wicked white!” she exclaimed.

Sherlotta crossed her arms. “And events grow stranger still.”

“Those fairies!” said the girl who was a cat, jumping up and down and pointing in the direction that Serafie and Echo had gone, clearly worked up. “Were they with you? Were they your friends? Did you meet a fairy named Lilibelle?”

Yuna held out her hands in a placating gesture, unsure what to make of the new arrival. “Please, one question at a time. They were our friends, Serafie and Echo.”

“How’d a cat turn into a girl!?” Tidus asked. “Are we just gonna ignore that part?”

Sherlotta sighed at him. “Clearly there are more important things right now. Turning into a cat isn’t that unusual.”

Alisaie stepped forward. “What’s your name? We haven’t met anyone named Lilibelle.”

The girl’s shoulders dropped, and she bit her lip and looked back in the direction from which she came. “I’m Aire. Well… I’m glad to see other people. My friend Lilibelle flew off just like your fairy friends did. I was going through this tower with someone called G’raha when we came under attack from these two powerful people. Can you help me rescue him?”

Alisaie stomped her foot and clenched her fists. “Did you say G’raha? Lead the way!”

“Let us not be so hasty,” said Y’shtola. “We know next to naught of our situation, and the fairies may still be in peril. If a third fairy suffered from whatever ailment befell Serafie and Echo, then I am inclined to think this is no coincidence.”

“Yeah,” said Wol, nodding. “This has something to do with Sylph, doesn’t it?” The thought hadn’t occurred to Yuna, and judging by the brief silence that fell over them all, Yuna assumed the same for the others.

“Well, then we could split up,” Alisaie insisted. “One of our fellow Scions is in trouble.”

“We cannot be certain it is the same G’raha, but your point still stands,” said Y’shtola.

“Scions?” Aire asked. “G’raha mentioned some Scions of Seven Yawns. And he was a cat person, like you!” She pointed at Y’shtola and Sherlotta.

Yuna had to hold back a giggle, despite herself. “I think that proves it is your friend,” she said to Alisaie and Y’shtola.

“It’s not quite the same,” said Sherlotta, grimacing. “But can you tell us about the two people who attacked you? Was one of them an old man with shadow creatures?”

“Yes, he was mean!” Aire exclaimed. “He was attacking this big fairy before we found him and that lady, and he said he wanted to do an experiment on them.”

“A big fairy?” Sherlotta asked, tapping her foot. “Did you find Sylph? And who could be working alongside Larkeicus, I wonder?”

“It was Lady Yunalesca, in the flesh.”

As always, the voice sent chills up and down Yuna’s spine. Her guns were in her hands before she even turned to face Seymour, who had approached them from the same direction as Aire. But did he say…?

“What do you want?” Tidus asked, scowling.

“Didn’t you hear me?” Seymour asked, calmly regarding them as all but Aire drew their weapons. “I said your foe was working alongside the high summoner. She, of all people, has been summoned to this world.”

Tidus clenched his free hand. “As if! When are you gonna get tired of your lies and tricks?”

More and more questions filled Yuna’s head, along with a queasy feeling in her stomach, but something told her that Seymour was telling the truth. She couldn’t see a purpose for his deception this time; if he wanted to harm them, he would work with Yunalesca or trick them into an ambush.

Gaia glanced back at Yuna and Tidus. “Someone we should be worrying about?”

Yuna’s breaths felt shallow. The concept of confronting the woman – the fiend – who tried to force her to make an impossible choice, who perpetuated a thousand years of lies, made her sick to her stomach. Denying her faith and clinging to the hope of a better future in the face of all odds was perhaps the most important crossroad of her life; a decision to not only claim her own fate but to bring salvation to all of Spira. “She was the first summoner who ever defeated Sin, a thousand years ago. All that time, she waited at the end of each summoner’s pilgrimage, offering them the Final Aeon – who then became Sin in its place. We fought and we defeated her, ending the cycle forever.”

Tidus lowered his sword and his fists shook. “What would she do here? Yevon’s lies went on for so long because of her.”

“She mentioned something about an ‘aeon,’” Aire said. “I didn’t know what that meant, but she seemed to think that giant fairy was one of them.”

“She seeks the fayth of this world’s aeons,” Seymour said, still perfectly composed. “Though as we all know, she will be sorely disappointed, as fayth do not exist in this world.”

“Care to explain what a fayth is?” Alisaie asked.

“It is more or less a stone containing the soul of an aeon,” Yuna explained. “Summoners pray to them and they allow us to summon. But I don’t understand – what would she want with the fayth of an aeon that doesn’t exist in Spira?”

“I do not know,” said Seymour. He even frowned; she had never seen him look so unsettled. It was jarring to her. “But it is a mystery that I, too, would like to see the bottom of.”

“Are you crazy?” Tidus blurted out. “What makes you think we’d let you help us?”

“I have my own quarrel with Lady Yunalesca,” Seymour said coolly. “You forget, I was a summoner once myself, and I made the pilgrimage all the way to Zanarkand.” He turned to Yuna. “I once proposed the idea of emulating Lady Yunalesca and her husband, Lord Zaon, in bringing hope to Spira. Now I wish to oppose whatever it is she plans.”

“This is up to you two,” Sherlotta said to Yuna and Tidus. “I don’t think I could ever trust this guy, but I don’t think I need to remind you we don’t have much time.”

Yuna’s gaze did not falter as she looked into Seymour’s eyes. She didn’t know what she was looking for in them. Resolve, perhaps? It was his mother that she thought of; the woman who gave up everything for him. “Fine,” she said. She agreed with Sherlotta that she would never trust him, but they had worked alongside their enemies on many occasions thus far; if they could have a common goal this time, she was willing to put their history behind them for now. “But only this time.”

Tidus let out a hitched breath. “If you’re okay with it, then I’ll tolerate it,” he said. “But I won’t let him out of our sight.”

As Aire led Sherlotta, Wol, Y’shtola, Alisaie, and Gaia to where she had left their friend, Yuna grasped Tidus’s hand and made sure Seymour walked ahead of them.


AIRE


All things considered, it didn’t take long for Aire to feel welcome among this new group. She had worried a little bit, since none of them seemed to know her friends, but everyone seemed pretty nice, and for that she was grateful.

“I’m so jealous of you and Wol,” Krile said as they searched the tower. “It would be amazing to have a fairy as such a close friend!”

“I got very lucky,” Aire admitted. “I met Lilibelle and saved her from a pirate who kept her imprisoned in a vase, and even though that made her indebted to me according to fairy law, I owe her way more.”

“Aire look sad,” said Guy. Her eyes widened; she didn’t realize the big man was so perceptive.

She lowered her head. “Well, Lilibelle ended up giving her life to save me. But lots of things happened, and we were able to go back in time and prevent that from happening.”

“Not often you get the chance to fix your past mistakes like that,” Wol said, both hands on the back of his head as they walked. “Fairies seem different in your world, huh? In mine, most of them can’t be trusted. They’re fond of guiding Blanks like me, and they often get distracted by treasure and tend to lead Blanks to their deaths. Dunno if that says more about the fairies or the Blanks, though.”

Aire scratched her cheek. “Obsessed with treasure, huh? No, in my world, fairies are pretty trustworthy – but that sounds kind of like how I used to be. I didn’t know anything back then.”

“Oh? How so?” Krile asked.

It felt a little embarrassing to admit, but she pushed through it. She wanted them to understand how important Lilibelle was to her. “I was a princess who didn’t know anything about how the world worked,” she said. “I wasn’t very nice. I was bossy. I was used to a pretty cushy lifestyle, you know? But when Lilibelle gave her life for me, it made me realize how self-centered I’d always been.”

“A royal upbringing can sometimes have that effect on people,” said Ashe. “It took me some time to learn that myself.”

“Echo changed, too,” Wol said. “After a while, she started to look out for me for real.”

“We find friends of Aire and Wol,” Guy assured them. “Do not worry.”

“Eh, I’m not worried,” Wol said, but the way he walked ahead of them told Aire otherwise. “She’s been through worse.”

“There’s one more thing I want to know, Aire!” said Krile, grinning excitedly. “How do you transform into a cat? That seems wonderful!”

Aire grinned back. “It’s thanks to my Transformation Staff! We got it from the elves of Arbor – it can transform anyone into an animal, it’s a lot of fun!”

Ashe kept a wide berth when Aire proffered her staff. “That is a strange and fearsome power if it were to fall into the wrong hands.”

Guy, on the other hand, looked at it with longing. “Aire turn Guy to beaver?”


SHERLOTTA


When Aire led them back to where she had fought Larkeicus and Yunalesca alongside G’raha, they found nothing but blackened scorch marks on the ground and traces of ambient magic.

“Confound it,” said Alphinaud, looking around for their friend. “Where could they have gone?”

“The only way left is up,” said Lulu.

Sherlotta looked over the rest of their companions. She had a feeling they were already close to the top of the tower, so she expected them to battle Larkeicus soon – the man who held her captive for two thousand years, siphoning her power to create crystals. Though a large part of their group dispersed throughout the tower to find any hint of the lost fairies, Aire, Alphinaud, Alisaie, Lulu, Fina, and Enna Kros accompanied her to battle Larkeicus. With this group, they would be able to keep their distance from his explosive golems.

It was either him or Yunalesca. She supposed both of them could be up there, but Carbuncle had sensed Sylph’s presence elsewhere in the tower; either one of them could have followed Sylph, but Sherlotta knew all the way to the tip of her tail that Larkeicus would be the one she’d find.

One final lift brought them to the open sky – the very top of the tower.

The wind roared through the open crest of the tower, howling through the parapets that rose like fangs. A crystal shard, pale blue, shone at the center of the roof. It was nearly as large as one of the World of Respite’s crystal pillars, but broken – or incomplete. Below it, a statue of a man with a tail stood with its arms outstretched toward it. The statue seemed partially made from both the same crystal and granite. It took her a moment to realize it was not a statue, but a man who seemed as if he had been petrified partway through a transformation into crystal.

“G’raha!” Alisaie cried out. Her voice turned to venom. “What did you do to him!?”

Larkeicus emerged from behind the petrified G’raha, shadows churning on the floor around his feet. “Imagine my surprise when the energy from our battle began to crystallize into what you see before you,” he said, and even from here Sherlotta could see how his eyes lit up with greed. “But as we overpowered this mage, turning him to stone – even his own flesh began to transform into crystal. I’d never seen anything like it. Not even from you, Sherlotta.”

His eyes fixed on her in a way that made her feel sick. Two thousand years. “You petrified him?” Sherlotta asked, her voice low and cold. “All so you could get your hands on that new crystal?”

Aire stepped past Sherlotta, staff raised. “Where is Sylph? Where are Lilibelle and the others?”

Larkeicus looked at Aire with something almost like revulsion, like she was not worth talking to. “Pah, Sylph is nothing now that I have this crystal.”

“G’raha is not a tool for you to use!” Alisaie bellowed, rushing forward with her blade ready. Sherlotta was glad Alisaie went on the attack; she had been about to do the same. Golems dropped from above and emerged from the ground, but Alisaie wove around them and stabbed at Larkeicus with her rapier. Darkness enshrouded his arm and he blocked her attack, striking back with a charged punch that launched Alisaie over his shoulder.

“Alisaie!” Alphinaud shouted, bursts of magic from his grimoire throwing golems out of his way. More golems leapt up at him, but Fina shot arrows of light from her bow and dispersed them before they could converge on Alphinaud and explode.

Sherlotta left the golems at their rear to Lulu and Enna Kros as she rushed through the fray to help Alisaie attack Larkeicus. Some part of her knew she was letting her emotions get the better of her, but he had already ruined so much of her life back home – she wouldn’t let him do the same here. He saw her coming and gestured with his normal hand, conjuring a black orb that crashed down over her head; a gravity spell. Sherlotta flung herself out of the way with all the grace of a cat just as Alisaie unleashed a flare around Larkeicus. The magic devoured him and Sherlotta shielded her eyes.

When the spell faded, Larkeicus stood with his arms crossed over his face, his clothes singed and smoking. He lowered his arms, revealing new skin stretched over his face and eyes that glowed a vibrant scarlet. Sherlotta summoned crystal magic of her own to attack as soon as she saw that visage again; even all this time later she still saw that haunting face sometimes when she closed her eyes. Golems tried to throttle her but Alphinaud, Aire, and Fina cleared the way for her. She wasn’t sure if she could stand up to Larkeicus on her own – not without her dear child – but she wouldn’t stand by this time.

“You won’t steal immortality from me again,” Larkeicus said, his voice ringing with power. More shadows crept up his other arm, his legs, and his torso just like the claw that already enshrouded his hand, and it made Sherlotta realize she wouldn’t win in a clash of strength. “I will not fail my people a second time!”

“Keep him occupied!” she told Alisaie and the others.

“Your people!?” Alisaie cried, her voice vibrating with anger. “What about our people? The ones who are here now? You remind me of…!”

“Be quiet, child!” Larkeicus spat, cutting her off with a slam of his demonic palm against the floor. Darkness exploded forth from the impact, but Sherlotta shielded them both with as much energy as she could muster. When Aire empowered Sherlotta with a spell that made her feel light, her fingers thrumming with magic, Sherlotta turned her attention to the crystal shard floating above G’raha. An incomplete pillar – a mockery of the crystal that had imprisoned Sherlotta for centuries.

Larkeicus drew on its strength. So Sherlotta did the same, draining as much of it away from Larkeicus as she could. Though he held power over her for so long, she knew how energy flowed between the crystals better than he ever could. He needed Sherlotta just as much as he needed the crystal itself. Cracks started to web through its prismatic surface.

As she knew he would, Larkeicus turned away from Lulu and Enna Kros in a rage as soon as he sensed Sherlotta’s meddling. “No! I will not be undone! I will succeed this time in restoring history to its rightful place!”

Sherlotta grasped the magic weaving around the crystal like a loose thread, unraveling it. The crystal shattered, glittering shards suspended in the air as if gravity had released its hold, but for a moment Sherlotta thought things moved in slow motion. Larkeicus recoiled as if struck, his face aghast, but his expression turned into one of pure hatred that he directed at Sherlotta. The transformation that clung to his skin like disease fell away, turning him back to normal.

“I don’t know how you got such a big crystal from one battle,” Sherlotta said, refusing to stand down. “You may have used me as your living battery for two thousand years, but you won’t do the same to anyone here.”

Larkeicus seethed. “It is no matter. In our world, you were the only source of crystals. Here, they are plentiful. I will succeed in reviving my people – mark my words. I will fix the errors of my past.”

“I know how you feel,” Aire said suddenly, her head hanging low. “I’ve made tons of mistakes in my past as well. Wanting to turn back time is natural.”

“What has been done cannot be undone,” said Lulu, staring at Larkeicus with pity. “Even children understand that.”

Aire shook her head. “I was really lucky. I was given a chance that no one else got. But changing history at the expense of someone else is not the way to do it. You have to want to save everyone.”

“Spare me your empty platitudes,” Larkeicus said, chest heaving as he appeared to struggle to stand. “I expect we will see each other again in this world, Sherlotta – it has given me a new lease on life, and I will not squander this attempt to succeed in my plans.”

He vanished into a Torsion, leaving Sherlotta feeling empty rather than triumphant like they did when they first defeated him. He would only be back.

Alphinaud grit his teeth. “He fled before telling us what happened to G’raha, Sylph, and Yunalesca.”

“Not to mention Echo, Serafie, and Aire’s friend Lilibelle,” Fina said, frowning.

“Maybe Yuna and the others have found Yunalesca by now,” Lulu said. She peered closely at G’raha’s form. “He appears to have been petrified and crystallized. I wonder… which came first? If he is a spellcaster, did he petrify himself to halt the spread of crystal over his body?”

“Or the other way around,” said Alphinaud.

“Is G’raha another crystal pillar?” Fina asked, lips pursed and brow knit with worry.

“I don’t think so,” said Enna Kros, shaking her head. “It seems more like he’s drawing on the power of one of the crystal pillars. Can’t say which one, except that it isn’t Fina or Selh'teus.”

“His life was bound to the Crystal Tower for a hundred years, in our world,” Alphinaud explained. “It even began to crystallize parts of his body. But he had been freed of it… How could this have happened?”

“We’ll just bring him to our healers,” Alisaie said, though Sherlotta could tell that even she looked unsure. “Even though he needed his younger body the last time this happened.”

Enna Kros stood up straight, looking around. “Wait, I sense something.”

Wind and magic coalesced above G’raha, and flower petals heralded the arrival of the being that Sherlotta recognized as Sylph. They descended gently toward G’raha, eyes closed as they embraced and caressed him.

Fina clasped her hands together. “Oh! Has Sylph come to restore G’raha?”

Sylph enveloped him, softly glowing, and for a moment Sherlotta thought he would be okay – until Sylph’s limbs tightened, their eyes becoming harsh, and a Torsion opened up right on top of them.

“No!” Alphinaud yelled out, as Sherlotta and most of the others gasped.

Before any of them could do anything to stop Sylph, they vanished into the Torsion.

“Damn it all!” Alisaie exclaimed. “Where did they take him!?”

“He’ll be okay,” Alphinaud said. “We’ll be able to find him by finding Sylph – and Carbuncle can lead us to them.”

“We’d forgotten that the espers have been corrupted, it seems,” said Enna Kros, crossing her arms. “Though Sylph had been accosted by Larkeicus and Yunalesca, they are no exception.”

“I can’t fathom what Sylph would want with him,” said Alisaie, scowling. “But let’s hurry, either way.”

Sherlotta couldn’t guess where that Torsion would lead. But wherever Sylph went, she felt that this time Larkeicus wouldn’t follow. He would be licking his wounds. Waiting for the next time their guard was down. And she’d be ready for him.


Character Abilities

 

Selphie

ULT: Runaway Train

Effect: Regens trigger on all turns, not just ally turns

As mentioned, the FFVIII cast gets a GF matched up to them for their ULTs. For Selphie, I decided to give her Doomtrain -- though it isn't a supportive GF to fit her Opera Omnia moveset, character-wise IMO it just fits her the most. She loves trains and explosions and has a bit of a morbid mind. After use, her HP/BRV regens will trigger on all turns, not just ally turns.


Quistis

ULT: Diamond Dust

Effect: Enemies take longer to recover from BRV Break

Quistis got matched with Shiva. It was between Leviathan or Shiva for me, but in the end I went with Shiva because it is among the first GFs that can be acquired, and there is a unique interaction with Shiva when she is summoned against Ifrit in the Fire Cavern preliminary exam, which features Quistis as the instructor.


Aire (Staff) Non-elemental magic damage, healing, buffing, supporting, Dispensary buff, damage based on Max BRV

15: Healthcare

35: Cat’s Meow

EX: Go Team Go!

LD: Money Talks

FR: Fae Chatter (with Wol & Echo)

BT: Lux Banishga

ULT: Unsealed Lightning (Effect: EX grants party free turns)

Burst theme: “Dark Lord Chaos,” plays in the final battle when the boss is close to death

Alternate Skins: Salve-Maker, White Mage Crowns

This game uses a job system, called "Crowns," and thus there are no "canon" abilities for the cast, nor are there really spinoff appearances to draw from, so I had to take my own liberties with assigning the Crowns to each character. Though Aire has the highest Intelligence of the four, making her ideal for a caster, personality-wise I think she fits this spread. Her first ability, Healthcare, is a Salve-Maker ability that heals the party and offers the "Dispensary" buff, which lets party members retain BRV after their HP attacks. "Cat's Meow," her second ability, is an original ability name that isn't tied to a Crown but one of the most notable mechanics in this game is that anyone in the party can transform into an animal, and I think that's fun, so I wanted to incorporate her cat transformation into her moveset - it's an attack and supportive buff ability. Her EX, Go Team Go!, is a Party Host ability which deals damage and gives powerful party offensive buffs like HP Damage Up.

Her LD, Money Talks, is a Merchant ability that takes the Max BRV values of all party members and enemies to deal HP damage, so it is fixed but can be buffed (and is also stronger if she has more foes...). Her Burst is a combination of two spells: Lux and Banishga. Lux is one of the ultimate spells of the game (the best party buff), and Banishga is one of the strongest damaging holy spells, so for her Burst she casts both. Her ULT comes from the final boss of the game, Chaos, who has four elemental abilities to reference the original Four Fiends from FFI, so she takes his "Lightning" ability.

Though Lilibelle was summoned into this world alongside Aire, Lilibelle isn't a playable character but she does show up in the animations of some of Aire's abilities.

Notes:

Justification for Yunalesca: I was originally not a fan of her being added, but the more I thought about it, the more it fit for me. In FFX, it is hard to pin down who the main antagonist is. The Dissidia games decided on Jecht as the "antagonist" rep. Some could argue Sin itself (who doesn't work as a character representative, lol), or Yu Yevon (ditto). While prominent in the story, Seymour is more of a narrative foil and a vehicle to get the plot moving, and by the end of the story the narrative sort of treats him as an afterthought. Many view the main antagonist as an institution, the Church, or the "cycle of death" itself. For the latter, I decided that Yunalesca fits best to represent the villainy of the Church and the "cycle of death," and though she isn't the final boss and doesn't even have a lot of screentime, her boss battle is pretty climactic and a major turning point of the story. Plus it's a memorable fight with some cool movesets to incorporate. So between Jecht, Seymour, and Yunalesca, I think all the "antagonist" bases are covered for FFX.

Justification for Aire: One of the primary playable characters of 4 Heroes of Light.

Justification for G'raha: One of the Scions, who can be considered among the main characters for XIV. Since he is a Scion, he doesn't take up one of the Shadowbringers "character slots" I outlined some time back.

Next up: Idle Chatter IV

Chapter 49: Idle Chatter IV

Notes:

If I'm going to have an Idle Chatter from now on, I'm going to put them between parts 1 and 2 of main story chapters. Mostly to reduce the amount of updates between each story chapter.

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Aire with Wol & Echo: Both are heroes who form a close partnership with a fairy. I'd imagine both Lilibelle and Echo would feature prominently in the animation.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Idle Chatter IV


Scene 1: A Dog Eat Dog World


(Yuffie and Rinoa are out in the field outside of Balamb Garden. It is a beautiful, sunny day and they are all playing with Angelo.)

YUFFIE: Ahh, Angelo is just so cute! I love that we have so many dogs with us now!

RINOA: I never thought Angelo would get to make so many new friends, too. It’s been a lot of fun.

YUFFIE: Hey, I’ve got an idea. In my world, some people like to display their dogs and make them compete against each other. What if we did it here… find out which one’s the top dog?

RINOA (hugging Angelo) : Well, I already know Angelo’s the best, but sure! I’ve seen that kind of thing in Pet Pals magazine before!

(Rufus approaches with Darkstar at his side.)

RUFUS: Excuse me, did you claim that your dog Angelo is the most well-behaved? D has had the best obedience training that money can buy, and is genetically modified specifically to follow orders and accomplish athletic feats beyond any normal dog.

YUFFIE: Ooh, Rinoa – them’s fightin’ words.

RINOA: I’ll say! Alright, Rufus. It’s a challenge. Let’s gather all the dogs we can!

(Some time later, Yuffie, Aire, and Relm have gathered the dogs and their owners, sitting behind a table and acting as the three judges. Rinoa stands ready with Angelo, Rufus with Darkstar, Shadow with Interceptor, Lunafreya with Pryna, Noctis with Umbra, Clive with Torgal, and Red XIII stands by himself.)

RED XIII: How did I get dragged into this? I’m no dog!

YUFFIE: Nonsense! You’re my horse in this race!

RED XIII: I’m no horse, either…

SHADOW: Does that mean there is a prize? If not, then I am just wasting my time. Interceptor can excel at any job.

NOCTIS: Pryna and Umbra are literally messengers of the gods. This will be no contest.

CLIVE: Torgal is no mere dog, either – he’s a frost wolf.

YUFFIE: If they look like a dog and bark like a dog, it’s close enough!

RELM: This contest is heating up already! Okay, contest number one – Aire, who do you think is the cutest dog?

RINOA: Oh, Angelo’s got this one in the bag.

AIRE: Um… Well, I’m more of a cat person, but I’ll have to say… Pryna! She has such beautiful white fur!

LUNAFREYA: It gladdens me to hear that you think so. I have always taken pride in grooming both Pryna and Umbra.

CLIVE: That actually hurt more than I thought it would…

RELM: Well, my vote goes to Interceptor!

SHADOW: Hm. We’ve never strived for ‘cute,’ but if you insist.

YUFFIE: Well I’ve gotta say Nanaki – none of the other ones can talk!

RED XIII: Okay, if the judges say so! Maybe I am the cutest.

NOCTIS: You’re surprisingly into this already…

RELM: Next contest – who’s the fastest? It’s race time!

RUFUS: At last, D will prove he is the unquestionably superior canine.

LUNAFREYA: Pryna and Umbra are both capable of crossing great distances in a short time, but I am eager to see the results of this race.

AIRE: What if we spiced things up a little? I don’t want anyone to feel left out, so this could be fun. Transformation Staff!

RINOA: Wait…!

(With a wave of her staff, Aire transforms them all. Rinoa turns into an owl, Yuffie a fox, Relm a parrot, Shadow a hawk, Clive a hellhound, Rufus a white snake, Lunafreya a swan, and Noctis a black dog. Chaos ensues and the animals run wild, with the dogs chasing their former owners.)

RED XIII: Does this mean I win?


Scene 2: Gunblades


(Squall, Seifer, and Lightning are talking together in the Training Center when Thancred approaches.)

THANCRED: Well met. Have you run out of monsters to fight, or is there trouble afoot?

LIGHTNING: No trouble, and definitely no lack of monsters. We’re just talking weaponry.

THANCRED: Oh? Might I guess the subject of discussion? I notice you three are our preeminent gunblade wielders.

SEIFER: Yeah. I’ve never gotten a good look at Lightning’s before, and it’s not like ours.

LIGHTNING: Mine switches between a gun setting and a sword setting, but from what I understand, Squall and Seifer’s work differently.

SQUALL: Ours don’t actually shoot bullets. Instead, when I pull the trigger, it sends vibrations down the blade to inflict more damage on foes.

SEIFER: Yeah, it’s all about timing. Not many people can use ‘em.

THANCRED: Fascinating. In my world, we call those who wield them Gunbreakers – I’d say the gunblades used are more like Squall’s or Seifer’s, but aetherically charged cartridges are capable of shooting bullets.

LIGHTNING: I remember Ryne gave you a gunblade a while back. Do you use one, too?

THANCRED: I do. I learned the tricks of the trade to better protect my allies – perhaps it is time to take up the art again.

SQUALL: Looking forward to training with you.

SEIFER: I wanna see what you got.

THANCRED: If talking of gunblades even manages to make you two get along, you must take it seriously. I shall take you up on that offer – once I find Rikku and suss out her dresspheres.

LIGHTNING: Keep me out of it. I heard about where these two got their scars.


Scene 3: An Unseen Watcher


(Lilisette is walking near the dorms while a shadowy figure watches her from beyond the path. When she turns, sensing something, it is gone. Later, she is walking down the second floor hallway when she feels a presence behind her again, but when she turns to look, there is nothing there. Later still, she is shopping at Chocolina’s with Alma and Hauyn when she catches a glimpse of a black dress that swiftly vanishes.)

CHOCOLINA: Is something choco-boco-bothering you, Lilisette? I hope it’s nothing that my unbeatable prices can’t fix!

LILISETTE: No, it’s nothing, really. I’ve just had the feeling that someone’s been watching me all day. And I think I know who it is.

ALMA: Should we alert anyone?

LILISETTE: I don’t think so. It’s probably just Lady Lilith.

HAUYN: Huh!? Isn’t that a huge concern?

LILISETTE: Not really. She wouldn’t hurt me – she knows I have to go back to her world eventually, like we agreed. I’m thinking she’s just… checking in to make sure I’m still trying to do that.

CHOCOLINA: I bet you she’s just bored!

HAUYN: You think so? I wonder if she’s feeling lonely.

LILISETTE: Lonely? Her? Not a chance. She doesn’t have friends anymore – only minions.

(A Torsion opens up in front of them and Lilith herself steps out, looking down at them haughtily.)

LILITH: Ah, here you are. What are you doing wasting time?

HAUYN: Wait, you think you can just show up here?

ALMA: You must be Lady Lilith. Might I inquire as to why you stalk Lilisette as you have been?

LILITH: Petulant girl. I have done no such thing. I have come to ensure she continues to walk the path laid out before her.

CHOCOLINA: No, I think I saw you watching her, if you ask me! And you only showed up because Lilisette said you have no friends. There’s nothing wrong with that!

LILITH: How dare you?

LILISETTE: Lilith, listen – there’s only so much I can do in this world right now. I know it hurts, but until we find a way to go home, our world will have to handle things on its own.

LILITH: Must you be so condescending? Here you are dallying about, yet you know nothing and have done nothing to search for a way home.

HAUYN: And how do you know that?

LILITH: Ugh. I know all that there is to know. The next time we see each other, I will not be so forgiving.

(Lilith vanishes. Lilisette, Hauyn, Alma, and Chocolina all look at each other.)

LILISETTE: Alright… maybe she is just lonely.


Scene 4: Romantic Dreams


(Gau runs through the first floor circuit with Seifer in hot pursuit. Iris, coming from the infirmary, lets them pass.)

SEIFER: This is an official Disciplinary Committee notice! What makes you think you can blow off your chores?

GAU: Gau want fight monsters! Gau go training!

SEIFER: This is the third time you weaseled out of cleaning, punk. You’re getting a demerit.

GAU: What demerit? Gau eat?

IRIS: Hey, Seifer – there’s no need to be so harsh. I know we’ve all got to do our part in upkeep of our home, but you’ve been on everyone’s case lately.

SEIFER: Don’t think I forgot how you skipped laundry duty, Iris!

IRIS: Urgh… I never thought someone like you would take a job like discipline so seriously. Selphie wasn’t kidding.

(Gabranth approaches from the training center.)

GABRANTH: I suspect the taste of power has poisoned his mind. If this persists unchecked, then Seifer will have a Judge’s reckoning.

GAU: Armor! Gau want training. 

SEIFER: Was that a threat?

(Angeal and Caius are drawn to the commotion.)

ANGEAL: What’s going on here?

SEIFER: Gau’s not doin’ his chores and Gabranth here thinks he can interfere with a Disciplinary Committee ruling.

GABRANTH: I was a Judge Magister. I know something of rulings.

IRIS: I think this is just getting a little out of hand…

CAIUS: I am not so certain the Onion Knight would approve the use of force for something as insignificant as chores. Seifer, tasks like this require a lighter hand. Gau, this Garden is our home now – we must all do our part if we are to stay here.

SEIFER: What d’you know?

CAIUS: I’ve long aided in the leading of various communities. Many have been lost to time, but I have seen many more rise and fall due to the overenthusiasm of rulekeepers.

GAU: Gau want stay…

ANGEAL: Seifer, can I talk to you?

SEIFER (Turning away from Angeal) : If you’ve got something worthwhile to say.

(Gau, Iris, Gabranth, and Caius depart, leaving Seifer and Angeal alone.)

ANGEAL: SOLDIERs and SeeDs aren’t so different, are they? Both live harsh lives, fighting day by day on behalf of others.

SEIFER: Your point?

ANGEAL: One thing I’ve always told recruits is that in order to fight, you must have dreams and honor. What kinds of dreams do you have?

SEIFER: Dreams? Heh… I had a big, romantic dream to be a Sorceress Knight. Not like that worked out for me, though.

ANGEAL: That’s admirable. But sometimes dreams don’t work out. When that happens, you’ve got to find a new one.

SEIFER: Yeah, like that’s easy.

ANGEAL: It certainly isn’t. And it’s even harder to achieve them. But if you put in the work – vowing to live with honor all the way – then you could become a knight you’d be proud of. I doubt your dream is to discipline the people who should be your friends.

SEIFER: The only friends I need are my posse! (He pauses.) Honor, huh? Guess I need to work on that, too.

ANGEAL: Try talking to Zack. That puppy has a way of rubbing off on you.


Scene 5: Kupo For Kupo Nuts!


(Mog [OO], Mog [VI], Montblanc, and Dr. Mog are in the quad outside of Nine Bean Coffee. All seem flustered and worked up about something. Reynn is standing outside in her barista’s apron trying to calm them down.)

MOG (OO): What happened!? They can’t all be gone, kupo!

DR. MOG: Kupo! You didn’t accidentally brew them into coffee, did you, Reynn?

REYNN: No way! First of all, that’d be gross. Second, I wouldn’t mistake kupo nuts for coffee beans!

MONTBLANC: Gross, kupo!? If you think they’re gross, then no wonder you’d misplace them, kupo!

MOG (VI): Kupo!

MOG (OO): Kupo!

DR. MOG: Kupo!

REYNN: Calm down, will ya!? We’ll just get Chocolina to restock us. Or we’ll send a party out to gather some more.

MOG (VI): What if someone stole them, kupo?

MOG (OO): But who, kupo? Us four are the only Moogles. No one else would want to eat kupo nuts, kupo!

MOG (VI): I bet it was that pickpocket Lone Wolf, kupo…

DR. MOG: You mean Kelger!? To think he’d do such a thing, kupo!

REYNN: Hang on! Before accusing anyone of anything, let’s try to make sure they were stolen first! Maybe someone just misplaced them.

MONTBLANC: Was it Lann, kupo?

REYNN: He would do that, but he’s off today.

(Clive approaches with Torgal at his heels. When he stops in front of Nine Bean Coffee, curious about the Moogle gathering, Torgal sits down and his tongue lolls out of his mouth happily, then paws at the door, waiting to be let into the coffee shop with a whine.)

CLIVE: What’s going on here?

REYNN: Oh, Clive! Back again?

CLIVE: I am. I’ve discovered a liking for coffee, it seems.

MOG (VI): Do you know what happened to the kupo nuts, kupo?

CLIVE: Kupo nuts? Well…

REYNN: Wow, Torgal really likes Nine Bean Coffee, doesn’t he?

CLIVE: I believe I may have solved your case. Kupo nuts happen to be Torgal’s favorite.

MOG (OO): Kupo!

MONTBLANC: Kupo!

DR. MOG: Kupo!

MOG (VI): We’ve found our culprit, kupo!

CLIVE: Apologies. We’ll be sure to go out and replenish your store. Though next time, I’d advise watching your nuts closely, lest Torgal sniff them out.


Character Abilities

Rinoa

ULT: Eternal Breath

Effect: Equipped summons deal more damage

Rinoa's ULT comes from the Eden Guardian Force. I figured it was fitting to match the party's Sorceress with the most powerful GF. The other option was Carbuncle, but Eden doesn't feature in any other character abilities, and the ability name is unique. After use, the party's equipped summon will deal a lot more damage.


Fujin

ULT: Tornado Zone

Effect: Fujin can juggle launched foes

Who else would Fujin get matched with other than the wind-elemental Pandaemona? Furthermore, Pandaemona is obtained when Drawing from Fujin. After use, she gets the ability to Juggle foes (which means she can extend a launch sequence, as a reminder).


Rogue Thancred

FR: Sacred Rounds (with Alma)

BT: Phantom Kamaitachi

ULT: Armor Crush (Effect: Reduce enemy defense to 0, after using EX then all of his buffs are extended)

Burst theme: “Torn from the Heavens,” battle theme for certain events, as well as S-Rank Elite Mark FATEs

Alternate Skin: His Heavensward Rogue appearance

And here's Thancred's update, since his Force partner is in now. He was kind of tough - I wanted to avoid giving him outright Ninja skills, because canonically he isn't one, but all of the high level Ninja skills were... well, Ninja skills. Armor Crush isn't really "Ultimate" ability material, but it is an important part of any Ninja's rotation (at least pre-Dawntrail) and it has a pretty decent effect. As for his Force ability, it might make more sense with this next part.


Gunbreaker Thancred (Greatswords) Non-elemental melee damage, tank, Last Stand, defensive buffs, HP Regen, high AoE damage

15: Brutal Shell

35: Heart of Corundum

EX: Continuation Combo

LD: Blasting Zone -> Enables Superbollide buff

FR: Sacred Rounds (with Alma)

BT: Leap of Faith: Shining Blade

ULT: Gunmetal Soul (Effect: When Last Stand is triggered, instant BRV+HP attack)

Burst theme: “Insatiable,” the boss theme of Shadowbringers dungeons

Gunbreaker Thancred

And here's Gunbreaker Thancred, finally! This is one of the other alternate character options I wanted the most, next to Gunner Yuna. All of his abilities are Gunbreaker abilities, predictably, but his Burst is a special duty action that Thancred uses at the end of his battle against Ranj'it. His ULT is the Gunbreaker Level 3 Limit Break, and after use he will automatically attack foes if dropped down to 1 HP. Since it's a tank class, he becomes a tank character with a strong focus on multi-target damage and high damage in general. He has defensive buffs, a Regen, and a Last Stand. After using his LD, he will gain the Superbollide overhead buff, which makes him temporarily immune to damage for 1 turn when his Last Stand is triggered.

Notes:

In about a week and a half I'll be traveling for nearly two weeks. I'm going to try my best to get the next chapter out before I go!

Chapter 50: A5C7, Part 2: Ode to Life

Notes:

I saw the Distant Worlds concert last night and it was amazing!! Such a great experience, and so cool to see Masayoshi Soken, Koji Fox, and Amanda Acken live on stage. Sadly Ben Starr wasn't at my show, though. :(

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Thancred with Alma: Alma here is a stand-in for Ryne, being a young damsel who spends her time needing to be protected, but she has light/holy powers. For the animation, I imagine Alma enchants Thancred's cartridges like Ryne does (don't ask me why it's the same ability for his Rogue variant...).

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Act 5, Chapter 7, Part 2: Ode to Life


SHUYIN


When he saw a shining metropolis appear on the horizon, he had no choice but to make his way to its spires. He almost didn’t believe his eyes until he walked upon its streets, but against all odds, he had arrived in Zanarkand.

It lacked the people, children and blitzers and club-goers that walked the streets at all hours of the night. It lacked the smells – street foods and garbage both. The only sound he could hear was the decorative waterfalls that cascaded down from some of the towering skyscrapers. But no matter where he went in this empty city, this facsimile of his home, he knew he wouldn’t find Lenne.

But he did see a familiar figure. His eyes widened when he saw a hero of war in the flesh, standing at the edge of an overpass and overlooking the city she had fought so hard to protect. He never had the fortune of meeting her in person, but her image had been emblazoned across all of Zanarkand, bringing hope to its citizens in the midst of their war with Bevelle. Despite himself, he felt a stirring of it in his chest. Lenne had looked up to her.

“Lady Yunalesca,” he said, saluting. “It is an honor to meet you here.”

She turned to him, her stance apprehensive. “Who are you?”

“My name is Shuyin. I’m a guardian who fought under your banner, with the summoner regiments. How long have you been in this world?”

“Another from the Zanarkand of old…” she said. “I have not been here long. There is still much I need to learn about the ways of this world.”

“Let me enlighten you,” he said.

She opened her arms. “I would welcome your aid. I had allied with another, but that man was a fool who wished to contain the power of aeons that weren’t his to wield. This Sylph – this aeon of another world – is helping to perpetuate the lives of this world’s warriors, forcing them into an endless cycle of battle.”

“What would you do?”

“We shall seek Sylph together,” she said. “Only by laying that aeon low will we bring hope to the people. We will bring them death. We will bring them freedom from this endless war… as my father once did for Zanarkand.”

“I will help you,” Shuyin said, kneeling to her. “They’ve been fighting for so long. Longer than I’ve been here. It has to end.”


BRASKA


When Carbuncle guided them through a Torsion after Sylph and the petrified G’raha, Braska lost his breath when he took in the sight of the sprawling city before them.

Zanarkand was exactly as Jecht had described, but seeing it was beyond anything he had ever imagined. “The city that never sleeps,” he said, eyes wide. The height of the buildings was dizzying, far greater than anything he had ever seen in Bevelle.

“Sure is something, isn’t it?” said Tidus. He wore a distant smile as he looked over his home, and Braska could only imagine what went through his head. “Looks like I was able to bring you here after all, Yuna.”

Yuna’s hand slid into his. “You have, and it is everything I have ever imagined. Thank you.”

“I cannot imagine being raised in a city as large as this,” said Tycoon.

“Life here was like nothing else on Spira,” said Auron, though he didn’t sound impressed. Braska had nearly forgotten; as part of his promise to Jecht, Auron had lived here for ten years looking after Tidus.

“Well, it’s nothing we’ve never really seen before, right?” said Rikku. “Seymour showed us a sphere of Zanarkand back when we visited his icky manor.”

Wakka rubbed the back of his head. At the mention of Seymour, it was as if the entire mood changed. “I’m still not really warmed to the idea of working with Seymour,” he said. “Feels like he’s gonna stab us in the back at any time, y’know?”

“After all the times we fought him, why would he want to help us now?” Snow asked. “What is it about this Yunalesca lady?”

“Yunalesca was the first high summoner who ever defeated Sin, and brought the first Calm,” Yuna explained. “So she is a respected and important figure in the Church of Yevon, and has been for the past thousand years.”

“So respected that Yuna was named after her,” Braska said. “Knowing what I do now, I wish my daughter had been named for someone more admirable, but…”

Yuna put her hands over her heart. “It’s okay. I choose to believe that at one point, she was a person who had the best interest of all Spirans at heart. Even when we faced her at the end of my pilgrimage, she believed she had no choice – she was afraid of us ending a thousand years of tradition and hope for the Final Aeon. She took pity on us.”

Tidus crossed his arms. “Yeah, pity. She tried to kill us for losing faith in Yevon. For losing hope. Doesn’t sound like a saint to me.”

Yuna shook her head. “I’m not defending her or justifying what she has done.”

“She was the symbol of all the lies maintained by the Church,” Auron said, his voice gruffer than usual. Braska frowned; he would never forgive himself for letting his dearest friend go through such pain at Yunalesca’s hands. “Without that web of lies holding up the pillars of this world, she’s powerless here in comparison.”

“Back then, I thought that period of hope, however brief – a Calm, free of Sin – was worth my life,” Braska said. “I thought of Spira and especially Yuna’s safety. Even though I left her behind.”

“It is only natural to want to save your child from life’s dangers,” Tycoon said. “Even if that means losing your future to pave the way for theirs.”

“Seymour goes on about hope and despair, too,” said Rikku. “ He thinks he can save Spira by killing everyone in it, because Unsent don’t feel pain. But that’s all a load of chocobo dung. I don’t wanna die and risk becoming a fiend!”

“So one wants to bring hope, and the other despair?” Snow asked, scratching his head. “And we’re siding with the despair guy?”

“They both try to bring hope in their own way,” Wakka said. “But Yunalesca’s is a false hope!”

“Right!” said Yuna. “And Seymour’s is misguided. His life was one filled with pain.”

“I remember hearing of the boy, Maester Jyscal’s son, cast out because of his half-Guado heritage,” Braska said. “Quietly banished and kept out of the public eye.”

“He wanted to get respect by becoming a summoner and going on a pilgrimage of his own,” Wakka explained. “And he was just a child! His only guardian was his own mother, ya?”

“She was,” Yuna said, nodding. “And as he said… he made it all the way to Zanarkand. He met Yunalesca. But he didn’t achieve the Final Aeon and he didn’t defeat Sin. Something changed his mind.”

“The boy who once sought to save the world later grew into a man who wanted to end it all,” Tycoon mused. “That is a drastic change to make.”

“It was losing his mom,” Tidus said. “The only person at his side his whole life. After he learned she would become his Final Aeon, that must’ve been what broke him!”

“But she still became an aeon, didn’t she?” Rikku asked. “That big, scary Anima!”

Snow put his hands on his hips. “So he wants revenge against the one who took his mother? Well… I guess that explains it.”

They fell silent at that, which was only broken when Auron led the way down the road. “He isn’t the only one who has a bone to pick with Yunalesca. She tried to end my story, too.”


Y’SHTOLA


The network of roadways connecting different parts of the city to each other seemed like a labyrinth to Y’shtola; the size and scale of Zanarkand was beyond anything she had ever witnessed on her star. She failed to see the reason for why the roads had been suspended so high in the air, overlooking the rest of the city. Roads worked perfectly fine on the ground, she thought. She made a valiant effort to hide her gawking but her other companions had no such reservations; Alisaie, like her, had never seen a city so sprawling yet she was more obvious about it. Apparently, neither had Aire or even Cecil. Tama, Wol, and Meia, however, looked as unconcerned as always, but she was pretty certain she saw Wol and Meia keep their eyes fixed on the street as if to keep themselves grounded.

“It is hard to believe Tidus was born and raised in a place like this,” said Cecil, gazing around in wonderment. “And harder still to imagine anyone could become so well known in a city this size.”

“Guess they took blitzball seriously here,” said Wol.

“I can hardly imagine how it might look filled with people,” Alisaie said, running to the side of the overpass to look over the edge. “This city could be a wonderful place for Manikins to live.”

“They will move in soon enough, I’m sure,” said Y’shtola. “Once we’ve determined it is safe for them. First, we must cleanse Sylph of their corruption.”

“On that note, I spy with my eye a fairy wing,” said Meia, picking up her pace. “Let’s go.”

The road twisted and curved around a building with a waterfall, ending abruptly when the street had been split in twain. Y’shtola saw no indication of what could have damaged the overpass so thoroughly, yet near the edge where it cut off she saw a figure with three fluttering fairies around it.

Or rather – a statue. G’raha Tia, petrified and crystallized.

“Lilibelle!” Aire exclaimed, rushing forward the rest of the way.

Echo, Serafie, and the fairy that Y’shtola assumed to be Lilibelle danced in a circle around G’raha’s head, their gazes blank as if in a daze. Aire tried running up to them, but Serafie broke from the circle and waved her watering can, slapping her with a gust of wind.

“Ow!” Aire exclaimed.

Tama bristled as she rushed up to Aire’s side. “Serafie! What do you the-think you’re doing!?”

“It seems Sylph has enslaved their minds,” said Cecil, brow furrowed. “Or we can only assume it is Sylph, at least – we’ve heard nothing of Zemus since he possessed Edea. If it is indeed Sylph, we know they can be protective of those under their care. It was quite difficult for us to save Yang when the sylphs found him.”

“Is it a fight they want?” Alisaie asked, drawing her rapier. “I wouldn’t mind knocking them back to their senses.”

Wol sighed. “If they insist, I’ll gladly oblige. Echo isn’t much of a fighter, so this should be easy.”

Meia pressed two fingers to her lips, smiling. “How little you seem to hesitate at the prospect.”

Y’shtola and Meia shared a glance, then stepped back together. Y’shtola found that she rather liked Meia. “We shall sit this one out,” Y’shtola said. She preferred not waste her time fighting against three of their allies when Alisaie, Cecil, Wol, Tama, and Aire were more than enough to handle them.

Tama shook her tail, paws clenched into fists. “Ooh, I’ll gladly give Serafie the what-for! It’s been a long time the-coming!”

Alisaie opened with a double casted Jolt and Verthunder, striking Serafie and stunning her long enough for Tama to fly up and whack her with her tail. Cecil held Echo’s attention, who fired spells that looked like harmless glitter, until Wol crept up behind her and flicked her in the back of her head, knocking her out. Aire, meanwhile, simply walked up to Lilibelle, plucked her out of the air, put her in a glass jar, and shook her around a little. The whole thing ended in less than a minute.

“I hope none of you strained yourselves,” said Meia, as she and Y’shtola walked up to examine G’raha.

“Ohh… my achy head,” said Serafie, picking herself up off of the street. She fluttered in midair, her wingbeats erratic, making it seem as if she were dizzy. “What happened?”

“You let yourself get the-controlled by Sylph!” said Tama. “Dumb Serafie!”

Serafie rubbed her head, but she seemed about as unconcerned as always. “Oh, really? It felt like there were a dozen Murkrifts on my head.”

“Back with us?” Wol asked Echo, crouching down as she stirred.

“I have a feeling you did something,” Echo mumbled, glaring at him.

Aire hesitantly opened her glass jar and the fairy inside flew out, the bell hanging around her torso jingling. “Lilibelle! Are you okay?”

“Everything was so chaotic,” Lilibelle said, her voice high and musical. “Sylph’s mind is a tumultuous prison. Thank you for rescuing me, Aire!”

“So it was Sylph who took control, as we assumed,” Cecil said.

Y’shtola tapped her cheek in thought. “I am perturbed by the thought of something that can control one of this world’s summons and use them to control the minds of others in turn,” she said. Controlling another by proxy was a fearsome power.

“Wait, you can see me?” Lilibelle asked, gaping at Cecil and Y’shtola.

“Only those who have saved a fairy can see one,” Aire pointed out. “And we’ve all saved you!”

“That’s not how the rules work for me,” Echo said, pouting.

“Shucks, you guys are lucky. I’d love to be invisible to anyone I wanted,” said Serafie.

“We’d all the-benefit from that,” Tama said, giving Serafie a snide glance. In return, Serafie sprinkled water on her from her watering can.

Y’shtola turned her attention to G’raha. The stone petrification started at his legs and the tips of his fingers, but blue crystal took over on his arms and face. His torso had become a mix of both, melding together in layers of blue and gray. His face had been set in an expression of grim determination.

“How could this have happened to him?” Alisaie asked. “He can’t be in his old body as the Crystal Exarch here, can he?”

Y’shtola traced a finger along his arm. “I cannot be certain. He sustained this condition from his battle with Larkeicus and Yunalesca, and without knowing what either of them are capable of, we would be hard-pressed to say what transpired.”

Lilibelle’s bell tinkled as she hovered over to G’raha. “I can heal him,” she said. “It is the least I can do.”

Aire’s eyes widened. “What? But… but if you do that, you’d lose your life in return! I don’t want to lose you again!”

Lilibelle tilted her head. “‘Again’? What do you mean? We Arbor folk never forget a debt.”

Tears brimmed in Aire’s eyes. “You… you gave your life to revive me once before. But we went back in time so that wouldn’t happen. Now… now I have you back! You’re one of my best friends, Lilibelle!”

Alisaie shook her head. “I refuse to let you give up your life,” she said. “We’ll find another way, Lilibelle.”

Y’shtola nodded. “I am in full agreement. Petrification is rarely permanent, and we’ve discovered a solution for G’raha’s crystallization before.”

“What if you shared the load with three fairies?” Echo suggested.

“That’s surprisingly selfless of you,” Wol said, to which she blew a raspberry.

“I believe that may work,” said Lilibelle, smiling. She grasped both Echo and Serafie by the hand - or in Echo's case, her sleeve. “Though we are all different fairies, we can join our power as one.”

“Oh, uh, okay,” said Serafie, as all three became wreathed in a soft, green light. “Um… Fairy power go, I guess.”


AIRE


Shortly after the stone and crystal faded from his skin and the fairies departed to rest, G’raha opened his eyes.

“G’raha! You’re okay,” Alisaie said, leaning over his prone body.

“Give him space,” Alphinaud reprimanded her. “I’ll be ready to heal him more if he needs.”

G’raha sat up and rubbed his head, taking a moment to look around at them and his surroundings. “There’s no further need for healing, I assure you,” he said with a groan. “My friends. I must admit, I did not expect to recover from that battle.”

“What is it with you and your compulsive desire to sacrifice yourself?” Alisaie asked, rapping him on the head. “We didn’t have a new body to shove your mind into this time, so you’re lucky the fairies were able to revive you.”

Aire grabbed both of his hands. “You didn’t have to go so far to try and protect me. But… thank you, regardless,” she said. “I found the Scions, like you said. And Lilibelle was one of the ones who healed you!”

G’raha smiled up at her and pushed himself to stand. “In that case, Lilibelle has my deepest gratitude.” He looked over the rest of their gathered companions, red eyes passing from Desch, to Rikku, and then widening when he saw Ryne. “Ryne! To think even you are here. Full glad am I to see you again.”

“And I you, Crystal Exarch,” she said, folding her hands together. “Thank you for joining us here!”

“Crystal Exarch?” Desch asked. “Is that because you make a habit of turning into crystal?”

G’raha’s ears flattened as he rubbed the back of his neck. “Not quite,” he said. “It is a lofty title given to me by the people of the Crystarium, a settlement around the Crystal Tower that I took to leading. I would much prefer to go by G’raha Tia now, if you would be so kind.”

“But you turned to crystal before when your life was bound to the Crystal Tower,” Alphinaud pointed out. “How did it happen this time?”

“I’ve got to hear more about this Crystal Tower business,” said Desch, putting a hand on his hip. “I didn’t know your world had one, too.”

“Over the course of my time in the Crystarium, my body turned to crystal the more I drew on the tower’s boundless reserves of aether,” G’raha explained. “Shortly after I came to this world, I encountered a crystal. It spoke to me and bid me to borrow its power – the power of ‘Will,’ it said.”

“Whoa!” said Rikku, as several others in the party gasped. Aire wasn’t sure what was so important about this crystal in particular. “That’s the will of the crystal that called a bunch of us to this world, isn’t it?”

Alphinaud rubbed his chin. “It seems so. It is not often it shows itself to one of us, and rarer still for it to speak. In recent days, it is only Sophie who heard its voice, if memory serves.”

“I may have overexerted myself,” G’raha admitted. “Or perhaps exceeded the allotment of power it supplied me. But it was somewhat intentional on my part – I sought to halt the petrification inflicted upon me by my foe. Does anyone know what transpired after our battle?”

He looked at Aire in particular, who answered. “We found the old man, Larkeicus, and defeated him.”

“The other one was someone I know – Yunalesca,” said Rikku. “A real nasty one. She must’ve been the one to turn you to stone. Loves talking about despair.”

“Despair, is it?” G’raha asked. “Not so unlike Meteion, I suppose. Ill tidings, indeed – I hope such a person is incapable of bringing about something like the Final Days again.”

Alisaie and Alphinaud looked at each other and shrugged. “Meteion?” Alisaie asked. “Someone we’ve yet to meet? And that’s the second time someone has mentioned the return of the Final Days… I was a little concerned when Emet-Selch first spoke of it, but he said nothing of anyone called Meteion.”

G’raha’s ears stood up. “Have I once more traveled through time?” he asked. He looked significantly more apprehensive now. “Is our dear friend here?”

“Many of us lack memories when we are summoned to this world,” said Ryne. “So I don’t think you’ve traveled through time.”

“Our Warrior of Light is not here,” said Alphinaud. “But we do fight alongside another bearing the title.”

“I see,” G’raha said, cupping his chin. “If we had the requisite materials for a memory transfer, then…”

“They’ll recover their memories when they’re ready for it,” Desch said, waving him off. “That’s the way of things here. In all honesty, I’m curious to hear more about that Crystal Tower of yours!”

“Oh?” said G’raha. “Perhaps you are a scholar as well, then. It is an ancient relic of Allag and I am its guardian. Thanks to a peculiar quality in my blood, I am able to draw on its power better than most, allowing me to manipulate vast quantities of aether and extend my life – and I even spent several centuries sealed inside of it…”

“Here he goes…” Alisaie said, groaning.

“Sealed inside?” Desch asked, walking along down the overpass with him. G’raha was entirely fixated on his discussion with Desch rather than his otherworldly surroundings. “That sounds not so unlike me with the Tower of Owen…”

“Boys and their towers,” Rikku said, shrugging. “C’mon, we’ve still got loads of Zanarkand to explore, and a Sylph to find!”


AURON


There was only one place it could end with someone like Yunalesca – Zanarkand Dome, home of the blitzball stadium. Here, though, it was still in its glory days. Statues of blitzball players, larger than life, framed the entrance to the stadium to welcome them inside; more often than not, Auron had seen this reception area crowded with eager fans. Now, though, it was empty.

“Takes me back,” said Jecht.

“It does,” Auron agreed. He imagined it must have felt strange for Jecht to walk in the Zanarkand of old with him and Braska.

“Course, I never entered the stadium from this entrance,” Jecht said. “I got special privileges.”

“Did you sneak in?” Vivi asked. “I had to do that for the theater show in Alexandria when I found out my ticket was a fake. Maybe it would be a good idea this time…”

“I was one of the athletes, kiddo,” Jecht told him. “There was a special door just for me!”

“So was I, but I wasn’t too good for this entrance,” Tidus said. “Got some extra fan time!”

“I’d be down for some sneaky sneaky,” Rikku said, grinning. “Not like there are security guards to worry about. Plus, we’d get the jump on Yunalesca!”

“Maybe we’d still get the jump on her if you didn’t announce your intentions so loudly,” Paine said, rolling her eyes.

Yuna, Rikku, Paine, and Tidus walked through the blue light barrier first, but when Kimahri followed, he bumped into it as if it were a solid wall. He growled.

Seymour traced a nail along the blue barrier. “A lock of some sort?”

“A way to keep the fans from coming in through the blitz entrance,” Tidus said, narrowing his eyes.

“Then they must know we are here,” said Braska. “Perhaps we will end up taking Vivi’s suggestion after all.”

“I don’t like the idea of splitting up,” said Yuna. Auron liked it even less, especially considering Seymour.

Tidus, apparently, was of the same mind. “This is your doing, isn’t it?” he said, glaring at the former maester.

Seymour looked unfazed by the accusation. “I know nothing of this technology.”

Kimahri’s posture tightened, clutching his spear in his hand as he faced Seymour. Everyone else looked tense; in all likelihood, Auron considered it to be a trap.

In the end, it was Paine who defended him. “Listen, I don’t have the same history with Seymour as most of you, but this doesn’t mean anything. Could just be a coincidence.”

Vivi pointed past Yuna, Rikku, Paine, and Tidus with a sudden shout. “Wait, look behind you!”

Tidus turned just in time to lift his sword and block a strike delivered by Shuyin, the clamor of their swords echoing. “You!” Tidus exclaimed.

Yuna aimed her guns at him. “Shuyin! What are you doing here?”

“We’re getting rid of you,” he responded with a snarl. “All of you. Starting with the one who wears my face.”

“He has allied with Yunalesca,” Seymour said, turning away from the battle on the other side of the barrier. “This is nothing but a distraction. I suspect she closes in on Sylph as we speak – if Shuyin proposes eliminating us all, the only way to do so would be to eliminate this world’s aeons.”

Braska nodded as Tidus, Shuyin, Paine, and Rikku began to trade blows, with Yuna providing support. Auron itched to join in and help them, but he knew they could handle Shuyin. “I am inclined to believe the same,” Braska said. “But where is she?”

“Carbuncle sensed Sylph inside,” Vivi said. “If Yunalesca wants to hurt them, then we have to find a way through!”

“I can open a Torsion,” Seymour proposed. “I would guide us through it more efficiently than any of you. But to do so, it would require your trust.”

Auron grunted. “Convenient.”

“Aw, what the hell?” Jecht said, slinging his sword over his shoulder. “Open it up, I ain’t afraid.”

Seymour glanced toward Yuna briefly, then did so – and Jecht was the first to rush through, as always. Kimahri followed next, then Seymour himself, with Auron, Braska, and Vivi taking up the rear.

It released them in a dark hall filled with pyreflies floating lazily by, a haunting chorus of the dead. Auron did not recognize this place; it certainly wasn’t the inside of Zanarkand Dome. He turned to Seymour, blade readied. “Where did you take us?”

“This was not my intent,” Seymour admitted, looking around. “It seems we have arrived in the Via Infinito, a secret long held deep in the Bevelle Underground.”

“I’ve never heard of such a place,” said Braska. “Look, an inverted symbol of Yevon on the walls. What a chilling place.”

“So much for guiding us more efficiently,” Jecht said. Auron’s guard did not lower; he still suspected a trap.

“Oh! I see Sylph!” Vivi said, pointing down one of the intersecting hallways. “They were running from something! This is inside the stadium after all. Thank you, Mister Seymour.”

Seymour sneered, but Vivi ran ahead and didn’t notice it.

As they ran toward the hall that Sylph disappeared down, they spotted Yunalesca in pursuit. She noticed them at the same time as they saw her, and she stopped.

“The guardian failed to stop you, I see,” she said, her expression as placid as Auron had always seen it. Seeing her here awakened a rage in Auron he hadn’t known since he first realized the fruitlessness of the Final Summoning; she was back, a reminder of all the ways he had ever failed. He ran forward, sword raised and ready to strike, uncaring of anything she had to say, but she raised her hand and conjured a barrier just in time for fire and lightning to strike.

Seymour had struck first. “You will feel my pain.”

“Pain?” she said. “But that is what I am here to stop. You are all trapped in this cycle of battle, unable to die. But now I am here. I offer you hope of freedom. I offer you solace.”

“It sickens me to hear those words from your mouth,” Seymour responded. He waved his staff and cast more spells at her, a barrage of fire and water. Behind her barrier, Yunalesca gathered pyreflies to herself and Auron knew what was going to happen moments before it did.

Her hair took root in the ground. Congealing into something else, it lifted her higher into the air, a monstrous appendage curling behind her. Alongside Auron, Kimahri growled.

“I remember you,” she said to Seymour as she ascended. “The summoner who rejected his destiny, the gift of the Final Aeon I bestowed upon you. It was your mother, was it not?”

Seymour’s voice shook. “Don’t you dare speak of her!”

“Pitiful creature,” Yunalesca said, as the cloud of pyreflies intensified. “I shall release you from your suffering.”


G’RAHA


He stood in front of the Torsion that Seymour had led the others through, delving deeper into Zanarkand Dome. But he did not enter, nor did he join the fight waged by Tidus and Yuna on the other side of the barrier. Instead, he recalled the words of the crystal – the one known only to the inhabitants of this world as the ‘Great Will.’

‘O soul from beyond the Rift,’ it had said. ‘Hear my will. This world is changing beyond even my expectations. You are one who understands the meaning of a memory transfer. One who understands the implications.’

“I do,” G’raha had said. He owed everything he was to a memory transfer, after all. The union of his past and future selves; the erasure of both to create a new future.

‘Then take this power. Uncover the secrets of this world.’

Even now, G’raha did not understand the full meaning of its words. Nor did he know enough about this world to determine what it was. But he had used a fragment of that power to fight back against Larkeicus and Yunalesca; he conjured a crystal made from the Great Will’s essence to obfuscate and divert them from Sylph, who held the power of life for all this world’s warriors. And now, as he stood in front of this Torsion, he knew that Sylph needed him again.

Or rather, Sylph needed a true champion. The greatest hero G’raha had ever known.

“Let expanse contract and eon become instant,” he declared, planting his staff in the ground. Through this Torsion, a twist in space and time, he would reach . “Champions from beyond the Rift… Heed my call!” Glyphs shone in circles along the floor with G’raha and the Torsion at its center, casting pillars of light and power.

Serafie, Echo, and Lilibelle fluttered in a circle behind him, letting out gasps of wonder.

G’raha’s heart leapt when he saw a light form in one of the circles. He knew without a doubt whose soul it belonged to. The Great Will summoned warriors here, and now G’raha would do the same.

The Torsion swelled and intensified, its swirling energy growing erratic as the ground shook. Tendrils of energy spat from the Torsion’s depths, but G’raha held his staff high and strained to maintain it. He would do this. He would summon the Warrior of Light.

Thancred stood just on the outside of the shining glyph, hand grasping his gunblade. “G’raha… I hope you know what you’re doing!”

The Torsion buckled and expanded again, cloaking the entrance to Zanarkand Dome in darkness. It swallowed G’raha, the fairies, Thancred, and the combatants on the other side of the barrier within it. Inside, he saw Auron, Seymour, and several of the others in an unfamiliar hall, facing a horrible monster – a giant, fearsome head with a lolling, forked tongue and a wreath of serpents for hair. The fiend screeched, breaking G’raha’s concentration just long enough for him to lose control of the Torsion.

Kimahri was struck down. Braska and Vivi followed moments later. Time was running out.

Paine and Shuyin continued to clash, but Shuyin danced out of the way of Tidus and Rikku, stepping back to give himself space. “What’s going on!? Is this the Farplane?”

Yuna gasped. “The Via Infinito!”

“Oh, I’ll never forget that face,” Rikku said, hugging herself as she glanced at the fiend. “That still gives me nightmares!”

Thancred went to support Auron and the others, but the coils of serpents dug into the ground, shooting up at their feet to bite at them. Darkness swirled; their environment wavered as if struggling to maintain itself in the Torsion. If G’raha wasn’t careful, rather than summoning anyone from the Rift, they would all be cast out into it.

“Whatever you’re doing, it’s drawing Sylph to us!” Echo shouted, trying to hold onto the other fairies as if bracing through a storm. “I can sense them nearing!”

“They’re in so much pain,” said Lilibelle. “Sylph needs our help!”

Seymour raised both hands to gather energy, casting a spell strong enough to shake the entire chamber. Disheveled from his battle, his face contorted with anger. “You took her from me!” he shouted at the fiend, all composure gone. “Everything she did, she did so I would gain the respect of all Spirans! But I never… I never wanted to lose her for it!”

The monster that G’raha realized was Yunalesca opened both of its horrid eyes wide, the serpents straightening as it cast a spell in return. Rings of blue fire appeared around Seymour, Auron, Jecht, and Thancred, each summoning a cloaked wraith with a sickle. At the same time, light and flowers manifested; a herald of Sylph. Their wings spread wide, winds battering the party, Yunalesca, and Shuyin all. This new distraction let G’raha renew his focus on the Rift summoning spell, calling to the light of his dear friend once again.

All three fairies flew to Sylph as one, forming a triangle around them. Magic swirled within as Echo, Serafie, and Lilibelle called upon forces G’raha couldn’t understand, Lilibelle's bell chiming along to the music of her voice. The wind cast by Sylph lessened and then died, but Sylph’s light strengthened, making Yunalesca and her fiend recoil, the wraiths banished before their sickles could strike.

When the light faded, Sylph’s face no longer looked malicious, with their teeth bared and eyes blank slates. Their features softened as Sylph was lowered gently to the ground between the three fairies. G’raha made one last push, shouting as he drew on more reserves of aether. The light he saw in his glyph – the soul – flashed bright and coalesced into a blade, slicing across the monstrous face and cleaving it in two. It let out one final shriek, dissolving into rainbow lights as it writhed and vanished, leaving a defeated Yunalesca in its place.

Thancred nearly dropped his gunblade. “Wait, was that…?”

G’raha fell to his knees, just barely managing to hold himself upright with his staff. “Thank you, my friend,” he said to the light just as it vanished. Though he failed to summon them in full, that would have to be enough for now.

“With the last of my strength, I renew thee,” said Sylph, their voice resonating in G’raha’s mind. Gentle emerald light washed over them all, nourishing G’raha and focusing on the fallen Kimahri, Braska, and Vivi. He didn’t realize when it happened, but they were somehow back in front of Zanarkand Dome again.

Shuyin appeared at Yunalesca’s side, slinging her arm over his shoulder and glaring at them all. “She was just trying to break your shackles,” he said. “Aren’t you all tired of fighting?”

“We’ll fight as long as we need to,” Auron said.

“And do whatever we have to to save it from people like you,” said Tidus. “There’s so much life in this world, and more appearing every day.”

“Yes,” said Vivi, pushing himself to his feet. “Manikins… animals… other protectors, like us. Death isn’t an easy way out. We’d just be abandoning this world and everyone who needs us.”

“Fools…” Yunalesca said, her head downcast. “You broke a thousand years of tradition by defeating me the first time. Now you prevent me from saving you from the misery of this war. My father understood what needed to be done and the people of Zanarkand stood with him, giving their lives to let their hopes spring eternal in the form of dreams.”

“But we defeated Sin without the Final Summoning,” said Yuna. “We brought the Eternal Calm.”

“And that Dream Zanarkand needed to end,” Jecht said. “Those fayth needed to rest. They couldn’t dream forever.”

“Nor will you,” said Yunalesca. “Why prolong your suffering?”

Seymour raised his staff again. “Enough of you. While I stand, I will ensure you face oblivion.” Black and red energy suffused his staff, gathering and pulsing around Yunalesca and Shuyin. Before the spell was complete, Sylph flew to their side and flowers appeared around Yunalesca and Shuyin, making them vanish. Instead, Sylph took the attack as it seared their skin and wings, screaming in agony. Seymour cut off his spell with a harsh swipe of his hand just as Rikku, Yuna, and Vivi shouted in panic.

“No!” Rikku yelled. “What’d you do!?”

Sylph’s light flickered as they hugged their wings around themself, breaths rasping with pain. “They are as much a part of this world as you are,” they said. “And thus fall under my protection.” Their form faded, leaving behind a magicite that Vivi picked up and held close to his chest.

“Thank you for saving them,” Vivi said. “Even they don’t deserve to die. We’ll protect you now, Sylph.”

Everything ended abruptly enough that G’raha felt as if the wind left his sails. His summoning had failed. Or perhaps he had summoned someone else, like he did when he summoned the Scions to the First in error.

“Sylph enabled her to flee.”

All eyes whirled on Seymour, who stood and stared at the space where Yunalesca had been. “My mother… she was dying anyway," he continued. "She thought to fight alongside me, but the thought of her being the one to end my life…”

Yuna took a hesitant step toward him. “Seymour…”

He looked at her as if shaken from his reverie, his gaze darkening, and he vanished.

G’raha heard footsteps approaching at a hurried pace in the silence that followed, turning to see Aire, an armored knight with silver hair, and a flying Moogle.

“You’re all safe!” Aire exclaimed, pumping a fist in the air as she reached them. “Oh, I’m so glad!”

“You’ve faced dangerous foes today,” said the knight. “And now you’ve found Sylph. Take heart, my friends – we are that much closer to accomplishing our goals.”

G’raha found the knight to be familiar, like a hero of legend. He knew without being told that this was a Warrior of Light. Perhaps, even without the light of their erstwhile hero, this world would find its salvation. And they would find it their own way.

“I don’t know what happened, kupo,” said the Moogle. “But all of a sudden, I started sensing all of these lights appearing! Tons of new allies have appeared and we have to find them, kupo!”

G’raha finally allowed the tension to leave his body. He watched Aire cradle Lilibelle close to her and hug Rikku. Vivi showed the others Sylph’s magicite, while Tidus and Yuna looked back at the stadium in silence as they clasped each other’s hands. Thancred clapped a hand on G’raha’s shoulder, and G’raha smiled up at him. “I have a gift for you, my friend,” G’raha said. “You and the others. If there are yet more memories you lack, I can transfer them to you.”

He still had much to learn about the way of things here. But he would bring his all to bear, with powers new and old.


SEYMOUR


He hated that they had seen his outburst. Hated the look in Yuna’s eyes when she regarded him after the battle, the sympathy and pity mixed together. He was a fool to offer his services to her, to think he would fight alongside them.

Yunalesca sought to slay them all to end their suffering. Seymour hated how that was once his goal in Spira, too. Death was not the sweet release in this world that it was in Spira. It was the end. However she had gotten it into her head that it would free them from this cycle of battle, she was wrong. He knew that with all certainty.

And yet… why did that anger him so much?


Character Abilities

 

Laguna

ULT: Ultimate Ragnarok Cannon

Effect: If Laguna’s turn immediately precedes foe, foe cannot break party

Alternate Skin: Galbadian soldier armor

And here's Laguna's ULT update! He doesn't get a GF matchup because he still has abilities from the Dissidia games to use. After this ability is used, no one in the party can be broken if Laguna's turn immediately precedes the enemy's turn. He also gets his Galbadian soldier armor as a costume, which I'm surprised isn't a costume he has already!


Zell

FR: Final Purgatory (with Tifa)

BT: Combat King

ULT: Hell Fire Slam (Effect: Follow ups deal more damage)

Burst theme: “The Legendary Beast,” battle theme against Griever

Zell technically could have gotten his ULT update earlier than this, considering who his Force partner is. The Force ability name is a play on "Final Heaven," which several of the series' Monks use. His Burst comes from the name of the magazine where he learns his abilities, since all of his best Duels are used in his Opera Omnia moveset already. For his ULT, I matched him up with Ifrit, since Ifrit boosts physical attacks and I think it's fitting for Zell. After use, his follow-ups will deal more damage.


Yunalesca (Unique - Bracelet) Non elemental magic damage, Dispel, Zombie, AoE instant break, healer

15: Dispelling Slap

35: Hellbiter

EX: Mind Blast

LD: Curaga

FR: Unholy (with Altima)

BT: Mega-Death

ULT: Heaven’s Cataract (Effect: Inflicting Break also deletes enemy turns)

Burst theme: “Challenge,” which plays during some tough boss battles, particularly Yunalesca’s

Yunalesca's abilities mostly come from her boss fight, though her 15CP ability is her standard physical attack that is unnamed. Since that physical attack dispels buffs, she gets to Dispel enemy buffs here too. As a memorable part of her boss fight, she inflicts the Zombie status on the party, and thus she can do it here too! When using Hellbiter, she inflicts Zombie on foes, which turns their BRV gains into HP and BRV damage instead (though this does not apply to BRV damage they inflict, they still gain BRV normally that way). Her EX, Mind Blast, instant breaks all foes. In FFX, she was fond of decimating the zombified party with her Curaga spell, which here heals her allies AND inflicts Weakness damage on foes with the Zombie status. Her Burst is the party-wiping Mega-Death ability (and no, enemies aren't immune if they have Zombie), while her ULT comes from her appearance in FFX-2 as the boss Chac deep in the Via Infinito. After using her ULT, every time she breaks an enemy she will delete their turn.


G’raha Tia (Staff) Non-elemental magic damage, Petrify, follow ups, magic imperil, turn rate up

15: Break

35: Ley Lines (enables Flare follow-up)

EX: Xenoglossy

LD: Allagan Eye

FR: Arcane Forces (with Selh’teus)

BT: Across the Rift

ULT: Paradox (Effect: Foes with Break stay at 0 BRV for their first turn after recovering)

Burst theme: “Where All Roads Lead,” theme of the Heroes’ Gauntlet dungeon

Alternate Skin: His appearance as the Crystal Exarch

Though G'raha is capable of being a Black Mage, Paladin, White Mage, and even Archer in XIV, here he focuses on Black Mage as he does in most cutscenes. His 15CP is his signature spell, Break. This inflicts Petrify on his foe, which is an instant BRV break, HP damage up debuff, and turn deletion all packed into one debuff slot. His 35CP is the Black Mage ability Ley Lines, which is a buff that enables his "Flare" followup (normally, this speeds up spell usage, which I translated as a follow-up ability here). His EX is the Xenoglossy damaging ability. His LD, "Allagan Eye," is unique to G'raha, and imperils enemies to magic attacks, while his Burst is G'raha's spell to summon warriors from across the Rift (probably represented as spectral warriors). Paradox, his ULT, is another Black Mage spell, and after use he will force foes to remain at 0 BRV for their first turn after recovering from a BRV break.

Notes:

As I mentioned before, I won't be able to update for a couple weeks when I go away. I'll try to squeeze out another Lost Chapter or two before I go, but no promises! I knocked this chapter out faster than I thought I would, but it did kind of get away from me a little.

Next hint: A woman who lives deep in the ground.

Chapter 51: Lost Chapter: Carnage in Crimson

Notes:

I managed to squeeze this chapter out just in time!

Last chapter's Force partnerships:

Zell with Tifa: Both are the primary brawlers of their parties with a "Final Heaven" attack. It's mostly because this is generally a highly wanted Force pairing. :P

Yunalesca with Altima: Both are demonic/undead women who are at the center of a religion that sprung up around them.

G'raha with Selh'teus: Both are powerful mages with artificially extended lives thanks to their connection to a powerful crystal, and both wield powers that enable them to cross the boundary of dimensions somehow.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: Carnage in Crimson


Rosso ( Dirge of Cerberus –Final Fantasy VII– )

Voiced by: Atsuko Tanaka

A sadistic member of the Tsviets known as Rosso the Crimson. The rigorous training of Deepground soldiers shattered her psyche and now she lives only to slay her victims. She has narcissistic tendencies, but underneath her violent heart she yearns to see the outside world.

Rosso


(Rosso is walking through an industrial area, perhaps a storage facility. Large metal tanks are connected by a series of catwalks, with hooks and chains descending from the shadowy ceiling. Dark windows reveal a murky sky outside, heavy with rain.)

ROSSO: Something is strange here. This is not Midgar.

(Kam’lanaut emerges from behind one of the pillars, regarding her with a condescending sneer.)

KAM’LANAUT: Yet another new arrival… when will these rats learn their place?

ROSSO: The only rat I smell here is you. About time you’ve shown yourself rather than hide in the shadows.

KAM’LANAUT: Ah, so you’ve known I was here all along? Perhaps I should have given you more credit.

ROSSO (Drawing her blade) : Enough talk. Let me see what you are capable of, darling. It has been too long since I’ve bathed in the blood of my enemies.

KAM’LANAUT: Arrogant, aren’t you? Bold words for one so ignorant to the way of things here.

(Kam’lanaut draws his sword, but a Torsion swirls into existence and the Emperor floats out of it, drifting lazily above them.)

THE EMPEROR: Rather than barbaric fighting, why don’t you welcome the lady to this world, Kam’lanaut?

ROSSO: A lady, now? What a sweet mouth. I’d much prefer to slice you both to the marrow.

KAM’LANAUT: I don’t recall asking for your opinion.

THE EMPEROR: Tell us your name, newcomer, and perhaps I will arm you with knowledge of this world.

ROSSO: I am Rosso the Crimson, one of the Tsviets. It is true I know little of the world beyond Midgar, but both of you look outlandish, even by my tastes.

THE EMPEROR: Midgar? Then I know who also hails from your world. You are far, far from home.

ROSSO: Oh? What a development. Though you are still holding your cards close, no? I may be forced to carve them out of you.

KAM’LANAUT: I had thought you might be one of Materia’s ilk, but now I wonder…

ROSSO: Materia?

THE EMPEROR: You speak of such violence. I would have you serve me, Rosso. Join me and you will achieve greatness in this new world.

KAM’LANAUT: You suffer from delusion if you believe she would join you, Emperor.

ROSSO: I tire of this back and forth. Will we fight or not? I serve only the Tsviets. The one who stands above all others.

(Rosso opens up the battle, unveiling her double-bladed sword. She holds it from the middle, aiming at the Emperor with bullets fired from its gun portion. He teleports a short distance to avoid it, and Kam’lanaut slices in with his sword. Rosso parries and flips away, shooting as she goes, and lightning rains down from above over them both. She steps into one of the Emperor’s traps, which explodes, blasting her back just in time to block an attack from Kam’lanaut.)

ROSSO: Ugh! Soon you shall see why they call me ‘Bloodburst Rosso.’

(Rosso swings her blade, shooting arcs of energy from it that home in on the Emperor in the air. Another arc volleys toward Kam’lanaut, who speeds out of the way, then glides to counterattack against Rosso, blade gleaming. She parries and they trade blows until another blast of magic from the Emperor makes them both falter, but Kam’lanaut recovers first and takes advantage of her momentary lapse. Just as he is about to strike, a new flash of white appears and a clang of swords interrupts their battle. Weiss has arrived.)

WEISS: What a shameful display for a Tsviet.

ROSSO: Weiss! You’ve come!?

THE EMPEROR: Ah, the worm who calls himself ‘emperor.’ That is who you’d rather serve?

ROSSO (reinvigorated, she draws her blade again) : Indeed. I, like all of Deepground, shall do whatever he asks of us. Hail Weiss!


(Vincent, Shelke, Yuffie, Lani, and Aranea scout the facility elsewhere, walking down a hallway with flickering lights and rusted metal. Yuffie stops and looks around.)

YUFFIE: Hey, guys. This seem like a mako reactor or something to you?

SHELKE: I don’t see any mako. So I would disagree.

YUFFIE: Well, I mean… More like it’s got elements of one?

ARANEA: Don’t know about any reactors, but with that storm outside this place’ll lose power any moment. We should be quick.

LANI: What’s the big deal? I’m not afraid of the dark.

ARANEA: It’s where things lurk.

YUFFIE: Why do you have to say it like that? (She furrows her brow as Vincent presses himself against a wall, holding a hand up for them to stay silent.) Vincent?

VINCENT: I hear a battle. Doesn’t seem to be any of ours.

SHELKE: Then we will proceed with caution.

(The party proceeds at a slower pace, but the sounds of battle grow louder. When they approach a door, an armored figure comes crashing out of it, slamming into the opposing wall: Kam’lanaut.)

LANI: Whoa!

KAM’LANAUT: Struck like this by lesser beings…!

(The party draws their weapons as Kam’lanaut stands. He sneers at them in return.)

KAM’LANAUT: None of you are worth my time. I wish you luck in dealing with those two savage beasts. (He vanishes in a flash of light.)

YUFFIE: What the? What savage beasts?

ARANEA: Beasts to make even someone like him flee.

SHELKE: It’s him.

(Once they step into the doorway, they see Weiss and Rosso with their backs to the door, standing over a kneeling Emperor, who is keeled over and panting. Rosso turns to look at the doorway, eyes widening and smirk growing when she spots Vincent and Shelke.)

ROSSO: Ah, do my eyes deceive? Vincent Valentine, how good to see you again.

VINCENT: Is it? Don’t you remember dying rather than face your defeat?

SHELKE (drawing her light blades) : Rosso the Crimson. So now that makes three of us here…

WEISS: Two. I’d never consider you among our number anymore, weakling.

(With both Rosso and Weiss distracted, the Emperor stands and backs away, scepter raised as if to continue the battle.)

THE EMPEROR: Impudent worms! How dare you strike me! I won’t let you live to see the light of day.

ROSSO: Daylight? We of Deepground have little need for that.

THE EMPEROR: You talk big, but without your leader you were weak.

ROSSO: You outnumbered me like a coward. But now that we have the advantage, I will mutilate you. Disembowel you. Slice, gouge, garrote, massacre you. And I will enjoy every minute.

LANI: What is with this lady?

WEISS: Don’t get too worked up, Rosso. He is right. You did need my aid to stand against them. And that is a disappointment.

ROSSO: Weiss…?

WEISS: You failed, just like you failed against Vincent and the WRO. If you think you can stand with me in this world in Nero’s place during his absence, then you have no choice but to keep up. Or else I will slaughter you myself.

ROSSO: I will. I must!

(Weiss holds up his gunblade and shoots one of the windows, shattering it just as lightning lights up the night sky outside. He barely spares a glance at Vincent and the others, flashing toward the open window and disappearing into the night. Rosso follows, face set into a scowl, and when she reaches the scaffolding outside the window, she stops and looks back at Shelke. The scowl drops from her face for the briefest of moments.)

ROSSO: It rains here, even in this world. To think I can feel it on my skin, just like our own sky…

(She leaps off of the scaffolding, disappearing into the night. The Emperor simply turns away from Vincent and the others, disappearing into a Torsion.)

YUFFIE: What was all that about?

ARANEA: Old friend of yours?

SHELKE: I would never refer to the Tsviets as friends. Every day of my life with them was one of difficulty and pain. Rosso was the most sadistic of them.

ARANEA: I didn’t mean to make light of it.

LANI: Takin’ pleasure in killing like that… that’s not right. Even in my line of work, I never let myself get like that.

VINCENT: We’ll have to be on our guard. Those two together aren’t good news.

SHELKE: It was only a matter of time. (She looks toward the broken window.) Rosso… will this world help even you feel free?


Character Abilities

Ultimecia

ULT: Time Compression

Effect: Free turns do not use BRV

This is the name of her EX Burst in the original Dissidia games and also her main goal. After use, she retains all of the BRV she expends for HP attacks on her free turns. Side note, it was completely coincidental for her to get her ULT update in the same chapter as Rosso's debut - both are voiced by Atsuko Tanaka and I didn't realize it lined up perfectly to Ultimecia's ability reveal.


Kiros Seagill

ULT: Chef’s Knife

Effect: HP Cost with every ability, but attacks twice

Kiros is never aligned to any particular GF, so I had to pick one I thought was fitting. After use, he loses HP with every ability he uses, but he attacks twice - making him a high risk, high reward character with high damage potential. Maybe it can be toggled off as he gets to low HP, though. He has a couple of HP draining abilities but otherwise he can't heal himself.


Rosso (Unique - Gun Blade) Non elemental melee, follow ups, critical damage

15: 5-Strike Combo

35: Blade Slash Combo

EX: Sickle Shockwave

LD: Crimson Impact

FR: Manic Heart (with Queen)

BT: Bloodburst Rosso

ULT: Eviscerate (Effect: Sends enemies into negative BRV after breaking)

Burst theme: “Fight Tune: Crimson Impact,” Rosso’s boss theme

Rosso's abilities aren't really named so I used the wiki's names for them for some of her abilities. She uses most of these, with the exception of her LD and ULT, in her boss battle. "Crimson Impact" is the name of her boss theme, so she gets that as an ability - I imagine it uses the animation of an attack she does when she faces Cloud in an FMV, where she kind of looks like a red meteor. After using her ULT, she sends enemies into negative BRV after she breaks them. This is similar to Jack Garland's mechanic but she doesn't focus around it as much as he does. As a whole she does follow-ups and specializes in critical damage.

Notes:

Alright, so this is the last chapter for a couple of weeks. Once I'm back from my trip I am planning to dive right into Dawntrail!

With that, I'll leave you with the next character hint: A mage who suffers from a cursed transformation.

Chapter 52: Lost Chapter: Great Guardian, Small Stature

Notes:

Okay, I'm home, Dawntrail has been completed, so now I can get back to it! Sorry for the wait!

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Rosso with Queen: Both are swordswomen with a sadistic side that comes out most when they are in battle.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: Great Guardian, Small Stature


Torte ( Final Fantasy: The 4 Heroes of Light )

Voiced by: Tomoko Kaneda

A court mage of the elven city of Arbor who has been cursed by the queen to take the form of a mouse. Though this did not hamper his desire to become a great Sage, he traveled into Arbor’s Great Tree Roots to unseal the legendary white magic, Lux, and accidentally freed the demon Belphegor in the process. Despite being much smaller, he doesn’t seem to mind his new form.

Torte


PALOM


Palom craned his neck to try and see the top of the tree, which appeared to scratch the heavens.

As much as he tried, he could not see its top.

He glanced toward his companions, frowning with his hands on his hips. Freya’s legs tensed as if she itched to leap into its boughs. Reks looked at it with his jaw slackened, while both Minwu and Doga brushed their hands along the trunk as if sensing something otherworldly about it. It was the same kind of thing he imagined Tellah might do – he hoped when he grew old and became a Sage he wouldn’t do strange things like that.

Aire, however, had her eyes fixed on the ground, and she kept opening her mouth and closing it as if nervous.

“Anyone recognize a big tree like this from their world?” Palom asked finally.

“My world has the Iifa Tree, but it is nothing like this one. Besides, we have already encountered that tree in this world before,” said Freya.

Palom remembered. Now that he thought about it, the Iifa Tree, where they first met Freya, was probably bigger than this one.

“It makes me think of Arbor!” Aire blurted. They all turned to her. “Er, well, Arbor is a town, and the Great Tree has homes in it, but otherwise it looks the same. Which isn’t good news at all!”

“Why is that?” Reks asked, putting a hand on the hilt of his sword at her words. “Are we in danger?”

“The elves and fairies who live there are fond of cursing people who trespass on their lands,” Aire said, fingers curled to her lips. “Oh, if only Lilibelle came along with us today!”

Doga hummed, a deep rumble. “A curse? I have some experience in curses. What sort is it?”

“They turn people into shrubs! Or petrify them!”

Minwu crossed his arms, eyes narrowing. “And do you know how to break that curse?”

Aire perked up, then sagged with relief and a sheepish chuckle. “Oh, right. I have the Transform Staff. It can turn us into an animal, and then a person again.”

Palom rolled his eyes, but Reks smiled. “It seems we have nothing to worry about, then,” Reks said.

“Ahem,” Aire said, coughing into her fist. “Maybe we should split up to investigate.”

Palom sighed. “Yeah, but if I get turned to stone again, Luca and Leonora won’t let me hear the end of it.”


As he searched around one end of the giant tree’s trunk with Freya, Palom huffed as he nearly tripped over the tangle of tree roots at its base. “What exactly are we looking for again?” he asked Freya.

Freya, predictably, navigated her path with ease. “Some Neo-Manikins spoke of a monster plaguing this area, making it unsafe for them. We are searching for signs of it.”

“Oh, right.”

“Hm, now that I think of it, perhaps I was too hasty in comparing this to the Iifa Tree,” Freya said, looking up toward the highest branches. “If Aire is right and it is the tree from a town she knows, I am reminded of Cleyra instead. It was also carved from a tree’s trunk.”

Palom sniffed. Sunlight dappled through the branches overhead and birds chirped in a chorus of song deeper in the forest, and loamy, floral scents filled his nose. “Well, I don’t see any towns around here.”

Freya tensed and pointed at something ahead. “What is that, among the roots?”

Palom followed her gaze, squinting at the shape of a blue cloth that appeared to be tangled up in something. His eyes widened when he realized it was someone wearing it – a cloak. But he had never seen someone so little.

The stranger lifted their head, and Palom realized they were a mouse.

“The monster we’re looking for?” Palom guessed. He waved his hands at it. “Shoo! Get out of here.”

“I’m no monster!” the mouse retaliated, voice as high-pitched as Palom expected. “There is no monster here, I assure you.”

“That sounds a little suspicious,” Freya said, staring down her snout at him. “Though judging by your size, if you are indeed the ‘monster’ we are looking for, I suspect mischief rather than any real danger.”

The mouse perked up, his own snout twitching. “Wait, you can understand me? Oh, what a blessing! I had begun to think I would be trapped in this form forever, unable to speak to any but fellow animals.” He paused and then held the back of his paw up to his head. “You think me capable of mischief? Oh, woe is me! Dear madame, is it possible you were cursed into a form akin to mine?”

Palom scratched his ear. “Ahh, cool it. I don’t think Freya meant anything by that, right?”

“Apologies,” Freya said. “I hadn’t meant to offend you. As Palom said, my name is Freya, and I am a dragon knight of Burmecia – I suffer no curse.”

The mouse bowed. “Pleasure to make your acquaintances. I am Torte, mouse maestro of magic. I must admit ignorance to your knightly order. We Dragonier of Invidia have never dealt with a country by that name!”

“Dragonier?” Palom asked. Did that mean this mouse was a dragon? Now that he looked more closely, Torte was far larger than a normal mouse, though still smaller than Palom himself was when he was a child.

Before Torte could answer, a roar rang out through the forest and a shadow flew by overhead. Palom, Freya, and Torte all pressed themselves against the tree, eyes fixed skyward.

“I think we have discovered our monster,” said Freya, readying her spear.

“Wait!” said Torte. “That is no monster – that is Arbaroc, a dear friend of mine and guardian of Arbor! He has been possessed before, and I fear it has happened again. You must help me quell his rampage.”

“I think we can handle knocking him to his senses,” said Palom, grinning.

He heard footsteps behind them and turned to see Aire rushing in their direction, arms waving with Reks behind her. Doga and Minwu approached from the other side of the tree; it seemed they had all taken notice of Arbaroc.

“Hey! I recognized that roar!” Aire shouted as she approached. “That was Arbaroc, from my world!”

“Aire!?” said Torte. “What a splendid surprise it is to see you again!”

Aire slid to a stop as soon as she laid her eyes on him. “Eek! A mouse!” she shrieked, but then calmed herself at once. “Oh, Torte, it’s you! Wait, how can I understand you outside of my cat form?”

“A mouse who is friends with a cat?” Reks mused. “Not the sort of thing you see every day.”

“I’m not sure how you can all hear my voice, in truth,” Torte said. “I was just getting to know my new companions when we heard Arbaroc. Are these friends of yours, Aire?”

“They are!” Aire said, beaming. “Well, regardless, I’m glad we found you.”

“Perhaps it is Torte’s will to be heard and understood by his companions, no matter their form,” Doga said. “It is well within this world’s capabilities to grant such a wish.”

“I see, I see!” said Torte. He flared his cape and unveiled a wooden staff. “Well, let me introduce myself properly. I am Torte, Sage extraordinaire.”

Palom blinked. “Did you say ‘Sage’? How common are they in other worlds?”

Torte’s dark eyes fixed on Palom, his ears pressed back. “I’ll try not to take offense to that statement, good sir. I long journeyed in pursuit of powerful magicks, and only became stuck in the form you see before you when I sought to unseal the legendary white magic, Lux.”

Minwu dusted off his robes. “Is that so?” He cleared his throat. “I would love to discuss this further, but we should look into slaying that fiend.”

Torte shook his head frantically. “Please, you must let no harm befall Arbaroc! His will is not his own – I cannot let him be slain again. We must find another way this time.”

“Again?” Aire asked, gaping at Torte. “What do you mean? I didn’t think you’d be able to remember that timeline!”

Torte tapped a paw against his mouth. “It’s strange, isn’t it? But once I woke up today, I found that I could recall my first meeting with you and the other Heroes of Light, Aire.”

“Apologies for interrupting, but I think now is not the time to discuss that,” Reks said, drawing his sword. “Arbaroc is coming back this way!”

A massive bird swooped down toward them, like an eagle with pure white feathers. Its beak speared toward them, obsidian talons flashing. They all ducked low just in time to avoid being slashed or gouged, and Palom understood at once why the Manikins lived in fear of this fiend. After missing them, it flew back up high, its mighty wingbeats kicking up gusts of wind in its wake. He wasn’t sure how they’d defeat it without killing it.

“Could it be one of the demon servants of Chaos again?” Aire asked, glancing at Torte as she held her hands over her head.

“Demons, you say?” said Freya. “If it was one of these demons that possessed Arbaroc, then perhaps…?”

The bird screeched, circled around, and dove back down at them again. After they pressed themselves against the tree to avoid it, Torte let out a gasp. “Wait, I must get a closer look at it! That may not be Arbaroc at all!”

“That’ll be hard when it keeps flying up so high!” Palom said through grit teeth.

“I can use myself as bait,” Reks suggested. “I will run away from this tree to grab its attention, but I would need someone to watch my back.”

“We shall support you with magic,” said Doga. “But how can we keep it from retreating to the skies?”

“I will handle that,” said Freya, hefting her spear over her shoulder. “Ready?”

Reks nodded, and when he ran from the tree’s shelter, the bird descended once again. Palom and Doga hurled ice magic in its direction, diverting it from making Reks its meal, and before it could rise again, Freya leapt up to one of the neighboring treetops and pivoted toward the monster, landing on its back and jumping off of it again with enough force to kick it back downward. It fumbled, wings flapping to try and right itself, and in the moment that it briefly touched the ground Torte let out an exclamation of relief.

“I was right! That fiend is not Arbaroc! It lacks his markings!”

Torte held his staff up high and pelted the monster with a barrage of ice magic and a swirl of leaves. When the bird screeched in pain, he followed up his spells with another round of the same, finishing it off with gusto as it crashed to the ground. Palom blinked – perhaps there was more power in that tiny package than he gave Torte credit for.

“Well done, my friends,” Reks said, approaching once the monster went still. “Now the Manikins can return to this forest in peace.”

“That was amazing, Torte!” said Aire, clapping her hands together.

“Indeed,” said Freya, returning to the ground. “I think I speak for all of us when I say we are glad to have your help, Torte.”

“I was relieved to see it was not my friend,” Torte said. “When we fought him before, he spoke words of anguish.” To Aire, he said, “Maybe I remember this time because I was determined not to fail in such a way again.”

“I would hear more of these ‘demon servants of Chaos’ and what they are capable of,” said Minwu. “Are there similarities to the plight of the summons of this world?”

“In some cases, yes,” Aire said, her face uncharacteristically grim. “They took to hiding in the shadows to spread, well, chaos throughout the land. Many of them possessed or turned people, animals, and monsters dark and evil. Do you think they might be behind this?”

“It is a possibility,” Doga admitted. “I suppose we must add yet more suspects to the list of possible culprits.”

“If you face foes suffering from possession, let me aid you,” Torte said, flaring his cape. “It is the least I can do to help my dear friend Aire.”

Reks smiled. “We’d be happy to have you! Let us go and introduce you to everyone back at Garden.”

“And perhaps we can find a way to break your curse in the meantime,” said Minwu, walking off with them.

“Is that so?” said Torte, as he started telling Minwu, Doga, Reks, and Freya about his experiences with one of the demons.

Aire hung at the back with Palom, shaking her head and smiling. “He might complain about it sometimes, but he really does like being a mouse. Doesn’t this world summon us in the forms we most want to take?”


Character Abilities

Zidane

ULT: Reverse Gaia

Effect: Transformation, extra damage

Now onto the FFIX cast. Zidane gets Reverse Gaia, which is an ability he has in the Dissidia games since most of his strong and impressive Dyne abilities are already used. After use, he maintains his Trance form for the remainder of the battle.


Garnet

ULT: Trance Summon

Effect: Follow ups deal more damage

Since Garnet already gets what is likely her coolest summon, I decided to let her just go Trance form with this skill and channel attacks from many of her eidolons, similar to Yuna in her Burst attack.


Torte (Staff) Non-elemental magic damage, doublecast, healing, BRV retain, BRV compile, follow-ups

15: Diligence -> Enables Blizzara followup

35: Betterment

EX: Leafaga

LD: Spell Again: Drain

FR: Arcane Advisors (with Dr. Mog)

BT: Good and Evil

ULT: Ball of Fire (Effect: Diligence & Betterment buffs spread to party)

Burst theme: “Battle with Monsters,” the normal battle theme

Alternate Skin: His human form

Unlike the main four heroes, guests like Torte are limited to a single Crown, so it made his abilities easy - he mostly uses the Sage skillset. "Diligence" in the original game makes black magic cheaper to cast, so here he does damage and gives himself the "Diligence" buff, which lets him retain a percentage of BRV used in his attacks. It also gives him a Blizzara follow up attack, which is one of the spells he comes with when he joins the party. "Betterment," in the original game, makes white magic cheaper to cast, but here it heals the party, batteries BRV, and gives Torte a "BRV compile" buff, which lets him store extra BRV to use for his next HP attack. So, similar to Sages, he is an attacker and healer and has both BRV retention and BRV compilation self-buffs.

His EX, Leafaga, is from the non-elemental "Leaf" line of spells in this game, which is unique to 4 Heroes of Light so I wanted to incorporate it into someone's kit. "Spell Again" lets a Sage cast their spells until they run out of AP, so Drain is cast twice (healing the party) and this gives Torte a buff that lets him doublecast his Blizzara follow-up. "Good and Evil" is the highest level Sage ability. "Ball of Fire," his ULT, is not an ability native to Sage or something that Torte ever uses - it is the signature ability of the demon Belphegor, who is associated with Torte's storyline. After use, Torte's "Diligence" and "Betterment" buffs become party-wide.

Notes:

Justification for Torte: Just look at him!! How could I not? But the real reason, I suppose, is that he is a temporarily playable party member. I wanted to avoid having two characters from the same game revealed so close to each other, but Torte's "Force chain" needed to move along (at least, before I rearranged some Force partners). I actually had to squeeze in Aire before him so I could get one of the main characters in before a side character.

Next character hint: A tyrant who loves reading.

Chapter 53: Lost Chapter: The Dreamer's Decree

Notes:

This character technically doesn't fit my requirements, but I'll talk a bit more about that at the end. He's one of the exceptions to the norm.

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Torte with Dr. Mog: Both are small, rodent-like creatures known for their mastery of magic.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: The Dreamer’s Decree


Mewt Randell ( Final Fantasy Tactics Advance )

Voiced by: Asami Sanada

A young boy from St. Ivalice who suffered loss from a young age and is a frequent victim of bullying. When he discovers a magic grimoire, it transports him and his friends to another world where he becomes prince, with his mother and father at his side to enforce his will. Though he fights tooth and nail to preserve the world in which he became a tyrant, Mewt eventually learns the value of confronting his problems instead of hiding away in his idyllic dream world.

Mewt Randell


CEODORE


The wind roared through the valley, kicking up dust and rustling the pines dotting it like bristly teeth. Ceodore didn’t know why, but the view gave him the impression of mighty jaws, and that descending into the valley might lead to them getting swallowed. Spires of stone jutted out from the land, contributing to the comparison. It was strangely quiet here, like whatever world it was based on had this place as the site of many terrible battles.

He traveled with Ritz, Montblanc, Arc, Trey, and Arciela today to find the source of the next light that Mog had detected. But Ceodore wasn’t sure what kind of person they’d find at the end of this trail, especially after seeing a place like this.

“Does anyone recognize this valley?” Ceodore asked finally. They had all fallen silent, as if they too had sensed what Ceodore had.

“I would call this environment a ‘gorge’ rather than a ‘valley.’ The land at the bottom is narrow, and the sides steep,” said Trey. “Mountainous regions like this tend to have gorges more often than valleys, but both are formed by rivers.”

Ceodore cringed. “Sorry.”

Arciela glanced at him, her gaze flat. “That’s not really what was asked…”

“But it does confirm to me that I know this place,” said Ritz, stopping at the precipice of a steep drop. “You do too, don’t you, Montblanc?”

“I do, kupo. This is Siena Gorge.” His voice was low, his ears flattening as he glanced toward Ritz.

“Not a place with happy memories?” Arc asked, frowning.

“This is where I faced our friend Marche for the final time,” Ritz admitted, biting her lip. “My last stand. My attempt to stop him and Montblanc from marching upon the Ambervale to destroy the last world thread and turn the world back to normal.”

“Many wars have been waged here throughout history, kupo,” said Montblanc. “And our battle was one for the books.”

Ceodore leaned against one of the stone spires. “You never really told us why you two clashed, and who this Marche is,” he said. “Do you think he could be here?”

Ritz sighed. “He could be. Marche wanted us all to go home – me, him, his brother Doned, and our other friend Mewt – because we were using the dream world of Ivalice to hide from our problems. In Ivalice, we all became people to be respected. We were strong. Mewt was even feared. He was the one who found a magic book to transport us to Ivalice in the first place, and he became its prince.”

“It is understandable to want an idealized world,” said Trey. “So I can see why you fought for it, even if it meant turning against your friend Marche.”

“But Prince Mewt and his mother issued many harsh edicts, kupo,” said Montblanc, his wings fluttering. “Even if I didn’t join Marche to help turn the world back to normal, clans like mine would have risen up against the queen anyway. Eventually, kupo.”

Ceodore grimaced. “Sounds like that prince didn’t have the best interests of his people at heart. Maybe it was for the best that he was not a ruler.”

Ritz hung her head. “Yeah,” she said. “The queen ended up being a monster. She wasn’t Mewt’s real mother at all. So it was mostly her making all the laws to restrict the clans and keep Marche and the others from stopping her – the real Mewt wasn’t like that.”

Arc looked around. “But if this is where you fought Marche, maybe he’s here now? Can’t you two make amends like you have with Montblanc?”

“I don’t know,” said Ritz. “I hope we can. After we went back home to St. Ivalice, we became friends again, but now that we’re in a cool fantasy world for the second time…”

“It sounds like there are still some unresolved feelings,” Arciela said, her face softening with sympathy. “Well, whenever you see him again, you need to talk it out. And you’ll have us to support you.”

“Thanks,” Ritz said, giving her a small smile. Her eyes looked past Arciela, then widened as she saw something further down in the gorge. “Oh! Someone’s down there.”

Trey shielded his eyes from the sun as he followed her gaze. “Does your friend Marche have horns, by chance?”

“Horns, kupo?” Montblanc repeated. “Certainly not!”

Ceodore started climbing down with the others, carefully keeping note of his footing along the uneven, rocky ground. “It looks like two of them… wait, is that Shadowsmith?”

“And that’s Mewt with him!” Ritz exclaimed, picking up her pace. “What is he doing with that guy?”

Once they started climbing down further, it seemed that Mewt and Shadowsmith saw them in return; both stopped their climb, regarding Ceodore and the others with wariness. Mewt stood somewhat behind Shadowsmith, his hair indeed coiled up and styled akin to horns. The finery he wore did indicate his princely origins, with a lacey yellow tunic and orange cape. Only the greaves on his feet made him appear to be travel-ready, but the most striking facet of his appearance was the eye symbol tattoo on his forehead.

Ceodore and the others stopped at a level equal to Shadowsmith and Mewt, keeping their distance. Only Trey held higher ground; which Ceodore preferred, if their meeting turned into a battle.

Ritz took the lead. “Mewt! You’re here!” she called out to him. “I’m… really glad to see you again.”

Mewt blinked, peering at her in surprise. “Ritz? And… is that Montblanc? Does that mean Marche is here?”

“We haven’t found Marche yet, kupo,” said Montblanc, shaking his head. “But that guy you’re with is bad news!”

Mewt frowned and said nothing, instead looking up at Shadowsmith.

“Do you see, Prince Mewt?” Shadowsmith said, locking his gaze on Ceodore and the others. “Just as I told you. Ritz does not want me traveling with you.”

“But… you helped me, Shadowsmith,” Mewt said. “When I didn’t have Babus or my mother, you were here.”

Arciela waved an arm aggressively. “What lies have you been feeding him? Mewt, this guy plots and schemes. You can’t trust anything he says.”

Shadowsmith pushed his spectacles up the bridge of his nose. “I plot and scheme to do what, exactly? All I have shared with you is that I wish to understand this world’s secrets, and change the outcomes of terrible events to make them end better for everyone involved. And you claim that makes me a villain?”

“He’s using his knowledge of those record paintings against Mewt,” Arc whispered to Ceodore and the others. Ceodore knew, despite himself, that Shadowsmith had a point; everything he had said to them about his intentions in this world sounded harmless when mentioned like that. But Tyro had told them all that he was capable of. “Shadowsmith knows all about us, and it’s to his advantage!”

“Mewt, I never turned against you in Ivalice,” Ritz said, putting a hand over her chest. “I wanted to be in that world as much as you did. And now that we’re here in the World of Respite, everything’s different now. It’s all real!”

“Your Highness, it’s your choice,” Shadowsmith said. “I’ve done nothing thus far to restrict your choice in this matter. I understand that you have reservations about Ritz – especially since she travels with your former foe – but I am the one who can help you bend this world in ways even your mother could not.”

“The Gran Grimoire wasn’t in Ambervale, where I last saw it,” Mewt said. “So how can you do that?”

“We simply need to find it, assuming it truly is in this world,” said Shadowsmith. “And I can assure you, that group would not let you hold so much power – they’ve already shown you that they do not trust you to make the world of your desires.”

“Didn’t you understand Marche’s view, in the end?” Ritz asked. Ceodore heard her voice break only slightly; it made him wonder if Ritz herself ever understood their other friend’s point of view. “You’re the one who made the decision to bring us home to St. Ivalice. You ended the dream. You knew your ‘desires’ weren’t right for everyone else, and that you were trying to force the world to live the way you wanted it to.”

“It’s just like you said, Ritz,” said Mewt. He stepped around Shadowsmith, standing in front of him. “This isn’t a dream world. Once Shadowsmith and I find the Gran Grimoire, we’ll use it to make this world even better – and this time Marche won’t make us go home. Everyone here is real. And if we’re all living in a real world, isn't it right for me to try and make the world better?"

“What kind of argument is that?” Trey asked. “Everyone has their ideas about what makes the world better. It's not up to one person to decide."

Shadowsmith shook his head. "It is if they own the Gran Grimoire. It can transcend the boundary between space and time - and in a world where the boundaries are thin, that is an unprecedented power."

“Mewt, come with us, kupo,” said Montblanc. “I don’t like whatever Shadowsmith is planning! He wants the Gran Grimoire for his own ends, kupo!”

“This world isn’t meant to be bent to one person’s will alone,” Ceodore said. This wasn’t good – everyone, including himself, was getting worked up. Ritz was worried more about her friend Marche being an enemy, but he didn’t know if she expected Mewt. “It is a world for all of us, not just for you!”

“Shadowsmith has told me a lot about this world,” said Mewt, shaking his head. “It can bring back those we’ve lost. Really bring them back. He can show me how I can see my mother again, the real her, not that copy Ivalice made.”

“So you’ve accepted that was fake,” Ritz said. “But you can’t see what Shadowsmith is doing? He wants to use you!”

“I already told you, he’s been helping me,” Mewt said. He sighed. “You don’t understand me… I won’t do anything to hurt you. Not this time. I promise.”

Ritz clenched her fists. “Mewt…”

“I think we are done here,” said Shadowsmith. “You may not want to hurt them, Prince Mewt, but they look ready to fight you.”

“That isn’t true!” Arciela protested. Ceodore was about to add his own defense, but his words died in his throat. His hand did go to the hilt of his sword, after all, and Trey did still hold the high ground.

“I’m sorry, Ritz,” Mewt said. “Really. But this won’t be like last time. We don’t have to be opposed to each other.”

Shadowsmith opened up a Torsion behind them, but Ritz didn’t make any move to stop them from going through it.

“That’s what I’ve been trying to say…” she said. “You really have changed, haven’t you? Before, you would just hide behind the queen. But you’ve gotten stronger, Mewt.”


Deuce was waiting for them at the front gate when they returned to Balamb Garden, holding a book in her lap as she sat on a bench outside to read it. “Oh, there you are!” she said, standing up and smiling to welcome them back. “I was looking for Trey, but I heard you all went out to find a new light. Did we make any new friends?”

Ceodore looked away. They had barely said anything the whole journey back. Ritz especially seemed shaken by the encounter at Siena Gorge. Arciela had even tried asking her and Montblanc about the Gran Grimoire, whatever that was, but Ritz didn’t have much to say about it – it sounded like a concern that needed to be shared with the others, at any rate.

Ceodore thought he might have gotten along well with another prince around his age. He had a feeling Arc would have liked Mewt, too.

Trey cleared his throat. “Well, er, by a certain definition…”

“No,” Ritz said, pushing past the gate. “We didn’t.”


Character Abilities

Vivi

ULT: Black Waltz

Effect: Vivi absorbs darkness damage

Vivi already gets his strongest spell, and he already goes Trance, so I had to get creative here and go with an original ability. For his ULT, I imagine it is a powerful spell that might summon some aspect of each Black Waltz. After use, he absorbs darkness BRV damage - meaning Vivi no longer hurts himself when he uses Doomsday (although he still hurts his party members).


Eiko

ULT: Millennial Decay

Effect: Healed HP and BRV are accumulated as HP Dmg on Eiko’s next turn

Eiko's Ultimate makes use of the Fenrir summon, particularly the ability he uses when she has the Maiden's Prayer equipped. With this, she now uses three of her four eidolons (Phoenix, Fenrir, and Madeen, with Carbuncle the only one unrepresented in her kit, though she also sort of has Titan I guess). After use, she accumulates all HP and BRV that she heals for herself or other party members and expends it as damage on her next turn.


Mewt Randell (Staff) Non-elemental magic damage, AoE focused, BRV gain, damage without breaking, bypass immunity

15: Prominence

35: Tempest

EX: Stardust

LD: Wild Tornado

FR: Acceptance (with Fina)

BT: Final Dream

ULT: Star Cross (Effect: When alternating abilities, gain a damage bonus)

Burst theme: “Overcoming the Wall,” played in the first phases of the final fight against Remedi

Alternate Skin: His St. Ivalice appearance

Okay, so Mewt is never shown in combat in the game. There is dummied content that indicates he has a unique "Prince" job, but we don't know anything about what types of abilities it has. His character artwork depicts him using a staff, so I went with that - Mewt would almost definitely be a mage anyway, since he's also the only character in St. Ivalice who has any points in his magic stat, if you check his stat screen during the snowball fight.

So with that, I decided to make him an Illusionist. It's extremely fitting, in my opinion - it's a Hume job, a mage, no other named characters use it, and it deals primarily with the casting of illusions, fitting for the character who constructs a dream world. All of his ability names are Illusionist spells with the exception of his Burst, which is an original ability name (which is basically "Final Fantasy", since he's one of - if not the - only characters in the entire franchise who directly mentions Final Fantasy as a game series, since this game is really meta).

Illusionists in FFTA are able to hit every enemy on the field with their spells, regardless of location, though the trade-off is that they don't particularly do a lot of damage. Mewt similarly attacks all foes with all of his attacks. To try and emulate the idea that his spells are "illusions" and not real, Mewt has low Attack power and some of his spells do not even make foes suffer BRV Break; his HP damage comes from self BRV gains. He is also capable of bypassing damage immunity, for foes that have it. In FFTA these spells do elemental damage but I just made Mewt a non-elemental attacker. After using his ULT, he gains a damage bonus as long as he switches abilities rather than spamming the same one over and over again.

Notes:

Justification for Mewt: As I said at the beginning, Mewt technically doesn't fit my requirements for eligibility in Opera Omnia because in his own game he is a noncombatant. However, his artwork depicts him wielding a staff (which is honestly enough for me, lol), and he is so important to the story of FFTA that I feel it justifies his inclusion. One central aspect of Mewt's character is that he has several other characters doing the fighting for him (which is ultimately why I think the devs scrapped his "Prince" job), namely Babus, his father Cid, Llednar, and his mother Remedi, which I think is meant to show his childish and immature side. However, this story takes place after all that, so I like to think his character development leads to him taking up his staff and joining the fight directly for himself this time. Plus, I like him, lol.

Next character hint: This character once had two eyes where they definitely do not belong.

Chapter 54: Lost Chapter: Where the Wyrms Fly

Notes:

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Mewt with Fina: Both had half of their selves taken from them, a physical embodiment of their originals' "darker" sides.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: Where the Wyrms Fly


Estinien Varlineau ( Final Fantasy XIV )

Voiced by: Kenji Hamada

The former Azure Dragoon of Ishgard who, with the epithet “Wyrmblood,” slaughtered countless dragons in service to the one thousand year war before fighting to end it upon learning the truth of its beginning. Empowered by the eye of Nidhogg, one of the seven great wyrms, he nearly lost control of the elder dragon’s all-encompassing hatred until he was saved by the wills of his friends and allies. Now lending his lance to the Scions of the Seventh Dawn, he is more at peace than he ever was, and has discovered a liking for Far Eastern cuisine.

Estinien


ALPHINAUD


“So you’re certain you can restore our memories?”

The question Alphinaud posed to G’raha Tia hung in the air as they walked with the others through the forest of massive trees. Sunlight peered through the branches as they neared the forest’s edge and the destination that G’raha had in mind for Alphinaud.

“I cannot profess to doing this with any certainty,” G’raha replied, pushing aside a tree branch. “Yet my encounter with the crystal leads me to believe this is now within my power, so I will do what I can.”

“Every other time someone restored their lost memories, it was because we had discovered them over the course of our journey,” said Kain. “Trying to force it when the recipients aren’t ready may lead to… consequences.”

Ravus frowned. “But is it not a gift from the crystal? I fail to see how rediscovering their memories by G’raha’s hand could be so terrible.”

“Dunno what all the fuss is about,” Cid Highwind said, grimacing as he stepped in a puddle of mud. “If G’raha can get our memories back, then let’s stop complainin’ and just get on with it.”

Nine jumped out of the way when Cid shook the mud off his boot. “Hey, watch it, old man!”

Alphinaud spotted chocobos dashing through the trees, but he didn’t focus overmuch on his surroundings as he pondered any potential impacts of recovering his memories. He remembered defeating Emet-Selch as well as G’raha formally joining the Scions, but if Emet-Selch was to be believed they had requested his help at some point in the future. Did he avoid his death, as Ascians were wont to do, or did he get revived somehow? And what fate awaited their world in the midst of the so-called Final Days?

He was so lost in thought that he didn’t realize when they left the shelter of the forest and arrived at a wasteland battered by long-faded scorch marks, as if it had been assailed by meteors long ago. Alphinaud almost bumped into Nine when he spotted an ancient, crumbling statue of a man and a dragon joined together in harmony and recognition dawned on him.

“We’ve arrived in Dravania!” Alphinaud said. He knew these forelands well – home of dragonkind, and long before their war with the nation of Ishgard, they lived here peacefully. That meant they had just emerged from the Chocobo Forest.

“Indeed,” said G’raha, grinning. “Full glad am I to be able to retrace the steps of your journey to end the Dragonsong War – but coming here affords us a practical outcome as well. It is my hope that revisiting your past will enable me to restore your memories of your future.”

“I did wonder why you requested us not to tell Alphinaud our destination,” Kain said. “I am all for preserving a surprise, but is this place significant only to you?” He directed his question toward Alphinaud.

Alphinaud nodded. “Among our current traveling party, yes. I traversed these lands with three dear friends of ours.” He cradled the familiar pang of sadness as he thought of Ysayle, the woman who gave her life for the war’s end. But he had fond memories of the Warrior of Light and Estinien. Memories he longed to recover.

“What do we gotta do?” Cid asked. “So far, this ain’t so different from when we would look around for lost memory fragments.”

G’raha lifted his staff. “Well, here is where I am unsure, but…”

“Whoa!” Nine interrupted, pointing to the west. “Check out that huge monster! Looks like someone took it down already.”

Alphinaud followed his gaze and spotted a hulking mass of muscle and fur, resting in a heap that did indicate it had indeed been slain. He ran toward it with the others. With its black fur and heavy claws, it appeared to be ursine, but no creature he could immediately identify.

“The person who did this is likely to still be near,” Ravus said, kneeling to examine it. “It’s warm.”

“No way of knowing yet if they are friend or foe,” Kain warned. “Be on your guard.”

They found more slain beasts as they wandered. Alphinaud spotted Anyx Trine in the distance, one of the dragon strongholds, when Nine crossed his arms after examining the carcass of a scaled monster.

“A spear did this, yo,” he said. “I started to think so after the last few we saw, but all the wounds are the same.”

“They appear to be strong, too, to dispatch foes such as these,” said Ravus.

G’raha flattened his ears as he curled a finger toward his lips, lost in thought. “I wonder…”

Alphinaud would wager that G’raha thought the same as him. Did he dare let his hopes rise in anticipation for Estinien’s arrival? He wondered if it was due to G’raha’s action to summon warriors from across the Rift that more fighters like Estinien had appeared, as Mog suspected.

High above them, a beast screeched. For a startling moment Alphinaud thought it to be a dragon swooping down on them, but it was some other winged scalekin with an elongated head and leathery wings. Kain was the first to react, hefting his lance and rising high into the air with a powerful leap, spearing it from above before the creature could divebomb them. Cid and Nine promptly followed suit when two more joined, but even from the ground Alphinaud could see that numerous more followed.

“Confound it,” he said through grit teeth. “It seems we have wandered unknowingly into their territory.”

One swept down toward the carcass of one of the fallen beasts they had found, tearing away parts of its flesh with razor sharp teeth.

“Or perhaps they are scavengers and we are in their feeding grounds,” Ravus noted. With a flourish of his blade, he dispatched the next one that had made it through the Dragoons’ aerial assault.

Over the nearby peaks, a monster larger than all the others appeared, roaring out a challenge greater than all of its underlings’. Its wingspan alone seemed thrice that of the others, a true apex predator, and several of the smaller beasts scattered as it swooped down into the fray. Alphinaud held a hand over his spellbook, preparing a spell as his Carbuncle wove around his feet; he wouldn’t hesitate to meet this foe head on if he must. But Kain barred his way with his lance, his back to Alphinaud as he faced the approaching monster himself. Alphinaud’s eyes widened at Kain’s sudden protective action, but before he could do anything else a beam of energy speared through the monster from above.

Its piercing cry echoed out over the landscape as an explosion of purple, crimson, and black aether enveloped it. It tried to flap its wings feebly in an attempt to right itself, but it came crashing down to the ground with enough force to shake the earth. Once the smoke and aether cleared, Alphinaud spotted another spearman standing over the monster’s corpse and his eyes widened before he grinned in delight.

“Estinien!” he shouted. He had to restrain himself from jumping up and down; instead, he looked to the heavens to ensure that all the rest of the monsters had fled.

Estinien glanced back at the monster briefly before returning his lance to his back and walking up to them, in that casual way he did whenever he dispatched a powerful foe. “Alphinaud, G’raha,” he said by way of greeting, a smile just beginning on his face. “I should have expected nothing less than you two getting caught up in my hunt.”

Cid let out a string of expletives. “You call that a hunt!? That kind’ve aerial bombardment made me think of Junon’s Mako Cannon!”

“It was indeed impressive,” said Kain, dismissing his own lance. “I take it the trail of carnage we’ve been following is your doing?”

Estinien nodded and crossed his arms. “I intended to draw the big one out of hiding. There’s a settlement of strange crystal people nearby who have been living in fear of it. Does anyone care to explain to me where we are? It’s reminiscent of Dravania, but…”

Alphinaud stepped up to Estinien’s side. “Let me introduce you all. Everyone, this is Ser Estinien – former Azure Dragoon of Ishgard and stout ally to the Scions.”

Estinien put a hand on his hip and regarded Alphinaud with a raised eyebrow. “I thought we’d been over the use of such formal titles, Little Lord Alphinaud . And ‘stout ally to the Scions’? I take it our public disbandment is no longer in effect?”

Alphinaud felt his face redden as he gaped. “Disbandment?” Just another memory he was lacking, it seemed – and he did not fail to notice how Estinien had specified ‘ our .’

G’raha cleared his throat. “If you’ll allow me… Estinien, Alphinaud and our other companions here have gaps in their memories. We’ve all been drawn into a new world…”

As he explained, Estinien’s expression scarcely changed. “Then don’t wait on my account – what needs to be done to restore his memories?”

Cid snapped his fingers. “That’s what I’ve been asking!”

“Who cares about all that, yo?” Nine interjected with a swipe of his hand. “I wanna learn how to jump like you did!”

“I suspect there will be plenty of time for that later,” Ravus advised. “Do not forget, we came here for a specific purpose.”

“It’s a spell that needs casting,” said G’raha. “Though I would suggest moving elsewhere before the carrion attracts more beasts.”


KAIN


They took shelter in the ruins of what appeared to be a castle turret once upon a time, its grey stonework mottled by battle scars and moss seeping from the cracks. Kain waited with the others as G’raha performed his spell, conjuring the twinkle of white lights that represented their memories and settling them within Alphinaud. The boy shut his eyes as he recalled his lost memories for the second time.

“Ah…” he said, when it was finished, rubbing his forehead. “It seems I did, indeed, miss much of our adventures. My apologies, Estinien.”

Estinien shook his head. “No need to apologize. So that’s it, then?” he asked.

“It is not so unlike when I drew on the power of the Crystal Tower,” G’raha explained. “Alphinaud needed only to think of his history here. I should be able to do the same for the others, provided we find another place important to them.”

“There is always the possibility that your own memories of the future are lacking, G’raha,” Alphinaud pointed out. “I dearly hope that isn’t the case, but it is something we should consider.”

“If that is all, then, I’ll be going now,” Estinien announced, turning to depart. “Stay well – and don’t hesitate to reach out if you need me.”

“Whoa, what? Why?” Nine asked. “You gotta show us more of your moves!”

“I must echo the question,” Alphinaud said with a furrowed brow. “We’ve only just found you – why must you leave so soon?”

“We’re in a new world, are we not?” Estinien said. “And so far I’ve seen scarce little of it. I’m inclined to see where the wind takes me.”

“Ever the wanderer,” Alphinaud said, shaking his head. “But this is a journey we are all taking together. There’s much of this world we’ve yet to see, true, but it is a world that is everchanging.”

“Yeah, c’mon,” said Cid. “Don’t wanna see the kiddos get sad.”

Alphinaud’s face reddened again. “Cid! I’ll have you know that Estinien can do what he likes, but his company would be most welcome. Were our Krile and Tataru here, we would no doubt be able to find him again if we needed to, but without them I fear tracking him down would be an impossible feat.”

“Don’t mention those two,” said Estinien, looking over his shoulder. “They’ve hunters’ noses, keen to show up at any moment. But I don’t think you have cause to worry – you know how I tend to show up where and when I am needed.”

Alphinaud’s shoulders slumped. “Well, if you insist…”

Kain folded his arms as the others made to return to Balamb Garden. Estinien caught his eye as the others departed from the turret, and both of them hung back.

“Is something on your mind?” Estinien asked.

“The boy clearly looks up to you,” Kain said, looking toward the hole in the crumbling wall where Alphinaud had departed. “I had worried for the restoration of his memories. For a time, we were hesitant to let others know of the missing gaps, out of fear they wouldn’t be ready for it. But Alphinaud proved more resilient than I had anticipated.”

“He’s stronger than he looks,” Estinien said, with a vague smirk of approval.

“Are you a mentor to him?”

“I wouldn’t go that far, no.”

Kain grunted. “How are you so sure that he doesn’t need your guidance?”

Estinien shrugged. “I’m not. But Alphinaud is no mewling babe – he’s a warrior in his own right. I am no mentor to him, aye, but he and the Scions have saved my life more times than I can count. I seek not to protect him from our troubles, but to fight them as brothers-in-arms.”

“Is that so?” Kain asked, looking away. Perhaps he himself needed to give Ceodore more credit, after all. “Well, Ser Estinien, I must profess to being curious about where your wanderings will take you.”

Estinien looked him up and down. “You’ve reminded me of my vow to be the Scions’ spear – to face whatever enemies they have, even should I struggle to understand our situation. I trust in them, and now I must continue to uphold that trust. Perhaps I will come along with your merry band after all.”

Kain smirked. “Nine will be delighted.”

Estinien led the way out of the turret, waving a hand at Kain. “Besides, I need to know what the Dragoons of other worlds are capable of.”


Character Abilities

Quina

ULT: Pumpkin Head

Effect: Lost HP is accumulated as HP Dmg on Quina’s next turn

I gave Quina one of their memorable and unique Blue Magic, not necessarily their most powerful. In IX, it deals damage calculated from the difference between Quina's current and max HP. In Opera Omnia, it just does damage - but afterwards, the effect lets Quina compile any HP they lose turn over turn and then deal it back to their enemy on their next turn.


Amarant

ULT: Trance Curse

Effect: Enemies receive Imperil for all elements

Curse is one of Amarant's Flairs, and when he goes into his Trance form the effects spread to all enemies. Originally, it gives enemies 1 new elemental weakness - here, Amarant goes into his Trance form (though just for this ability use, like many of the other Trance transformations), and gives a permanent imperil debuff to all enemies for all elements. Not a forced weakness, just imperil.


Estinien Varlineau (Spears) Non-elemental ranged dmg, instant break, debuffs, follow ups, spiker

15: Horrid Roar

35: Drachenlance

EX: Geirskogul

LD: Ala Morn

FR: Dragon Lore (with Tycoon)

BT: Stardiver & Wyrmwind Thrust

ULT: Dragonshadow Dive (Effect: Launch damage increased)

Burst theme: “Revenge of the Horde,” final boss theme against Nidhogg at the climax of Heavensward , and when Estinien confronts Meteion in Endwalker

Alternate Skin: His casual wear, his original A Realm Reborn look

Estinien's abilities are a mix of player-available Dragoon skills and some of his own unique abilities he gets as a temporarily playable character. Dragonshadow Dive is his own personal Limit Break.

Like most of the other Dragoons, he specializes in ranged damage. He is capable of instant breaking foes, giving them harsh stat debuffs, he has follow-up attacks, and he is a "spiker" (meaning he attacks at the end of a launch sequence to spike them back down to the ground, dealing splash damage to all other foes). After using his ULT, his overall launch damage is increased, making him favor launch-focused parties.

Notes:

Justification for Estinien: He is one of the main characters, since he is a Scion of the Seventh Dawn.

Next character hint: Someone trying to get a hold of metaphorical reins.

Chapter 55: Lost Chapter: The Science of Stones

Notes:

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Estinien with Tycoon: Both are Dragoons that have a close relationship with one or more dragons - Estinien with Vrtra and Tycoon with Hiryu. Both also suffered from a form of mind control.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: The Science of Stones


Cidolfus Demen Bunansa ( Final Fantasy XII )

Voiced by: Akio Ōtsuka (replacing Chikao Ohtsuka)

A genius scientist of the Archadian Empire who is the mastermind behind nethicite. For years, those around him assumed him to be mad, speaking to himself as he strode the halls of Draklor Laboratories. In reality, he has allied himself with an invisible Occuria in service to a greater goal than imperial conquest. He has long been estranged from his son, Balthier.

Dr. Cid


CELES


It was strange for Celes to see Gabranth shuffle nervously under her gaze, head bowed and gauntleted hand clutching his arm.

But this was a Manikin, and despite how much she knew they could differ from the original, any version of Gabranth that acted positively demure felt incredibly foreign to her.

“The lights just started the other day, ma’am,” he said, voice echoing slightly behind his helm. Now that the thought occurred to her, she wondered if this Manikin had a face or if the crystal blended seamlessly to the armor. “The villagers watched the Pharos all through the night. It didn’t pause until just this morning.”

“Thank you for letting us know,” Celes said. “And for coming to us in the first place. We will be sure to investigate it for you.”

“We… are counting on you,” the Gabranth Manikin said, voice hesitant. He turned away from Celes and the others and hurried back to his village gate. Despite his nerves in approaching them, Celes was glad that these Neo-Manikins were at least willing to reach out for help. It was a start.

Raines was already staring back up at the Pharos, lost in thought, by the time she walked the short distance back to him and the others. “If the light they saw has flickered, we may need to adjust our working theory that it is a new crystal,” he said, after she relayed what the Gabranth Manikin had told her.

Celes let herself admire the roaring falls that Balthier and Ashe called the Ridorana Cataract from their world. The Pharos perched on its edge, nearly dangling over the misty abyss below. The height of the Pharos itself was dizzying, but the cataracts themselves brought to mind the Baren Falls of her world, curving in a wide embrace around the tower. Luca and Red XIII joined her in watching the falls with unabashed awe.

“Is it so unusual for a lighthouse to emit light?” Red XIII asked, tail wagging. “Though I’m not opposed to checking on it anyway.”

“Crystals are not wont to flicker in their radiance,” said Balthier, staring toward the Pharos with an expression Celes couldn’t read. This was not their first time visiting the Pharos together; Celes vividly remembered encountering Ardyn and their machinations back in the World of Darkness, before the crystal was shattered. But it seemed even that world’s locations could follow them to the new World of Respite. “Least of all the one at this particular tower’s apex.”

“The Sun-Cryst,” Ashe clarified. “The stone from which gods gamble the fates of man. This is no mere lighthouse.”

And no mere crystal, Celes suspected. Still, if Fina’s arrival heralded a fifth world pillar for them to contend with, they could not dismiss the possibility of another.

“No jagd grounds us in this world – at least not yet,” said Balthier. “This time, we’ll take the Strahl to the top.”


Balthier’s airship ferried them to the uppermost levels of the Pharos. Fran stayed behind on the Strahl , ready to pick them up again when they were ready to depart. If Celes had thought the view was dizzying before, now it was almost overwhelming. Against her better judgment, she paused for a moment near the edge, and the memory of a certain cliffside in her world washed everything else away. Her breaths became shallow, her legs weak – 

“Celes, are you okay?” Luca asked, jolting her from the memory.

The Solitary Island was long behind her. Celes turned away from it. “I’m fine,” she said, putting on a smile for Luca. The dwarf’s dolls peered up at Celes from behind Luca’s legs, unblinking. The others had already gone ahead, into the Pharos. “Let’s go.”

Like the last time they had come here, Celes marveled at the ancient stonework. It felt akin to a place of worship, cavernous and empty. She didn’t remember Ashe or Balthier mentioning the Sun-Cryst last time, but back then they had much more to contend with.

Empty, except for the man at the far side of the chamber, sitting with his back to them and tinkering with something she couldn’t see. Crystal shards the size of magicite, bereft of their light, littered the floor around him.

“Cid!” Ashe stepped forward with aggression in her stance, voice laced with venom. “I’ve oft wondered when you would appear. What machinations do you weave now?”

Raines glanced toward Ashe and Balthier with a furrowed brow. “Another Cid? I suspect some unpleasant history here…”

“Head scientist of Draklor Laboratories, and mastermind behind the empire,” said Balthier, glaring in Cid’s direction. “‘Twas his weaponry and technology that facilitated its expansion.”

Another Cid. One who used his genius for evil ends, like the one she called her grandfather. But her grandfather had realized the error of his ways. She didn’t know if it was because the events at Solitary Island were at the top of her mind, but melancholy gripped her heart when she looked upon this man.

Dr. Cid looked over his shoulder at them, face splitting into a grin when he noticed them for the first time. He stood, giving Celes a view of the finery that coated him from head to toe. His white gloves looked untouched by dirt and grime, so unlike the hands of her grandfather. Middle-aged and well-groomed, clothed in lace and gold, he looked more a member of the nobility than a scientist. Perhaps he was both.

“Now, now, Ffamran – you can do better than that,” said Dr. Cid, flourishing his words with a bow. “I am Doctor Cidolfus Demen Bunansa, at your service. Genius extraordinaire who developed manufacted nethicite – he who tore the reins of history from the gods and returned them to the hands of man. Or perhaps that was you, Ashelia B’nargin Dalmasca?”

“Ffamran? Is he talking about you, Balthier?” Red XIII asked.

“What’s nethicite?” Luca asked.

“Stones that contain enormous power,” Ashe explained. “Tools used by the Occuria – gods – to manipulate the fates of man.”

“You neglected to mention your delusions of godhood, Cid,” Balthier said. “All of which amounted to nothing in the end. You lost.”

Dr. Cid’s hands curled under his chin as he smiled. “Did I, now? Did Princess Dalmasca’s lust for power drown out all others, in the end?”

“Queen,” Ashe spat out her correction. “After we struck you down, we destroyed the Sun-Cryst and ended the ambitions of both Vayne and your precious Venat.”

“Is that so?” he said, looking no less amused. “Well, it achieved the same result, did it not? The end of the Occuria’s dominion over Ivalice, that is – naught more than dust and dreams now, I hope.”

“Don’t equate our goals,” Ashe said. “We ended the war. You sought to prolong it.”

Red XIII growled. “I don’t like this guy. Reminds me of a certain other mad scientist.”

“I’m not a fan, either,” said Luca, hammer resting over her shoulder. “He gives Cids a bad name!”

Dr. Cid waved them off and sat back down, pulling his piece of machinery back into his lap. It appeared to be some sort of Magitek. He looked completely unbothered by all the weapons drawn in his direction.

“What are you doing?” Celes asked, as the others all glanced at each other. “Is it not a fight you seek?”

Dr. Cid didn’t even glance at her as he answered, holding up the Magitek and examining it from multiple angles. “Why would I? Unless I am wildly mistaken – a rare occurrence, mind you – we find ourselves in an entirely different world. As Ashelia B’nargin Dalmasca was keen to inform me, mine own ambitions are now as formless as the Occuria’s. I’ve no cause to squabble.” He picked up one of the dead crystals, peered closely at it, and tossed it over his shoulder. “In this world, I’ve discovered how to create things merely by wishing them into existence. Even you can surely see the benefits of such a gift – infinite energy and power, all in the palm of our hands. If only I can get the blasted nethicite I summon to retain their magicks.”

“So it was you at the source of the lights that the Manikins saw,” Raines noted. “Your attempts to create this ‘nethicite.’ The power of ‘will’ has become more limited in recent days – I’d expect no crystals larger than the ones in your hands.”

“Certainly not something on the scale of another Sun-Cryst,” Balthier added.

“Energy crystals are generated through battle,” Luca informed him. Ashe glared at her for revealing that information, but Luca shrugged. “What? He’d find out sooner or later.”

“Oh?” said Dr. Cid, raising an eyebrow in Luca’s direction. “Then perhaps it would behoove me to squabble with you after all.”

Celes tensed as the others raised their weapons again. But Dr. Cid did not rise and he made no move to attack, simply returning to his Magitek.

“Enough of this,” said Balthier, scoffing and turning away. “Let us leave him to his schemes. Even were he to join with Vayne again, I fail to see how he’d be a threat to us.”

“You could take me with you.”

Balthier froze, but whirled back to him with narrowed eyes. “Madness truly has overtaken you if you’d think we’d deign to allow it.”

Dr. Cid shrugged. “The words tumbled forth from your own lips: I’m no threat to you. And rather than fighting you and losing, as I surely would, why not join forces? I’d fain to have a chance to examine these crystals born of battle up close.”

Ashe scowled. “What reason have we to trust you?”

“I seek only knowledge of this world and how it works,” Dr. Cid said. Even without the Magitek in his grip, Celes noticed that he often spoke with his hands. “And surely you can trust that I dare not betray knowledge itself!”

Balthier ignored him. “Let us take our leave, shall we?” Though his words were light, his shoulders looked tense. Celes considered Balthier to be unflappable; she had never seen him look as unnerved as he did now.

Dr. Cid’s expression straightened. “You would turn your back on your own father?”

Celes, Luca, Raines, and Red XIII gaped at Balthier as he closed his eyes. “As you turned your back on me, all those years ago?” Balthier responded.

“Godhood eluded me,” said Dr. Cid. “Mayhaps I am reminded of mortal attachments, at last. Death makes one acutely aware of the blood flowing in one’s veins, after all.”

“Save us your pitiable attempt to convince you’ve had a change of heart,” Ashe said.

“Indeed,” said Balthier, glancing back at him. Now, Celes noticed their physical resemblance – Dr. Cid looked to be an older version of Balthier. “Raw appeals to emotion have never suited you.”

Dr. Cid barked out a laugh. “Oh, very well – I should have known you’d see right through that. ‘Twould be folly for you to accept such a viper into your ranks.”

“Family is more than blood,” said Celes, shaking her head. “I cannot admit to knowing anything of your history together, but Balthier owes you nothing.”

“Why, young lady – I never meant to imply otherwise,” said Dr. Cid. “My son made his distaste for my ambitions known long ago. I’d hazard it would be best for all of us if you simply forgot I ever made such a suggestion to join forces. Sky piracy may not suit me after all.”

Balthier sighed and turned away again. “If it would make your rambling cease, then I’ll allow it.”

Ashe’s head snapped to him with wide eyes. “You are sure? I could never trust him, but in this I defer to you, Balthier.”

Balthier waved his hand dismissively. “We’ve allowed the likes of Vayne among us before. I’d be a hypocrite to deny him. I’ll not let my personal affairs impede us.”

“Some things are inexcusable,” said Raines. “But if Lightning and the others were able to give me a chance, then perhaps it would do him some good, as well.”

“Splendid!” said Dr. Cid, clapping his hands together. “Now, who can I expect to impart all of your accumulated knowledge of this world thus far? I must admit, I am particularly intrigued by the talking animal at your side.”

“If you try any experiments on me, I’ll rip out your throat,” Red XIII said.

“Ugh,” Luca said, as everyone began to turn away. “For all his supposed genius, this guy can’t read a room, huh? Show some gratitude!”

Outside, Celes nearly felt her knees buckle when the chasm below yawned before her. Fran had anchored the Strahl to the Pharos, but she fixed her eyes away from the cataracts as she prepared to step on board the airship.

“Fear of heights?” Dr. Cid asked her, his tone light and conversational. Celes tensed. She wanted him to see her moment of weakness least of all.

“It doesn’t concern you,” she said, fists clenched. The others had already climbed aboard, leaving only her and Dr. Cid to cross that gulf between the edge of the lighthouse and the airship.

“My apologies,” he said, adjusting his spectacles. “Though I must ask – do you see another when you look upon me? I can’t help but notice the pain in your eyes.”

Celes frowned. “If I did, it would be an insult to his memory.”

At that, he chuckled. “Indeed.” He bowed to her, gesturing toward the airship where the others waited. “By your leave.”

She firmly fixed the image of her grandfather Cid in her mind and turned her back on the doctor. Even though they called him an ally, she wanted nothing to do with him if she could help it.


Character Abilities

Beatrix

ULT: Holy Shock

Effect: Battery now leaves BRV Shield

Her ULT is a combination of two abilities - Holy and Shock. After use, every time she batteries the party, she also leaves them a BRV shield.


Kuja

ULT: Discarnate Chorus

Effect: Transformation, extra damage

His ULT comes from the other Dissidia games. After use, he gains his Trance form for the rest of the battle and does extra damage all around.


Dr. Cidolfus Demen Bunansa (Guns) Water ranged damage, follow ups, damage nullify, battery, debuffs

15: Gatling Gun

35: S-85 Cyclotrone

EX: Darkening Cloud

LD: Rook Barrier

FR: Past and Future (with Larkeicus)

BT: Briny Cannonade

ULT: Tsunami (Effect: When nullifying damage, foes take damage)

Burst theme: “The Esper,” plays whenever the party summons an Esper

Cid mainly uses his attacks from his boss fight in the Pharos at Ridorana more than his fight at Draklor Laboratories. He uses guns, and is a very defensive fighter with damage nullification capabilities after using his LD, where he summons his Rook machines. Half of his moveset comes from Famfrit, since Dr. Cid is the only character outside of the party shown to summon an Esper. After summoning with his EX, Burst, or ULT, Famfrit follows up his attacks with attacks of his own. He deals primarily Water ranged damage, which is a rare (if not unique) combination. After using his ULT, which is Famfrit's best attack, foes will take damage every time Cid nullifies damage.

His boss fight uses a different boss theme, but that was already taken by someone else. Instead, he uses "The Esper" as his Burst theme, since he summons Famfrit.

Notes:

Justification for Dr. Cid: He is a major antagonist of XII and a central part of the conflict and lore, with two separate (and memorable) boss fights.

Next up: Act 5, Chapter 8! Watch out, folks - weather forecast indicates there may be a tornado where things get hairy. Hopefully, someone who is both an outlaw and arbiter may be able to help, as they may have experience with this sort of thing. But another who is quite attached to an orphan may show up, as well.

Chapter 56: A5C8, Part 1: Dust to Dust

Notes:

A note on the name for this summon. Originally, in FFVIII, it is called "Pandemona," which is likely due to character name limits. Opera Omnia itself (and some other spinoffs, I believe) call it by what is presumably its intended name, "Pandaemonium." I chose to go with the original Pandemona version of its name, mostly because Pandaemonium is a name that pops up throughout the series in reference to a specific location.

Regarding Barbariccia's picture, I really wanted a transparent image but I couldn't get it -- it's difficult with the Amano art sometimes!

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Dr. Cid with Larkeicus: Both are genius scientists that are or once were part of an empire, and both fixated on the generation of magic crystals to fuel their ambitions. Both also believe they have good intentions for the sake of society.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Act 5, Chapter 8, Part 1: Dust to Dust


Barbariccia ( Final Fantasy IV )

Voiced by: Yūko Kaida

The Archfiend of Wind, servant to Golbez along with Rubicante and the other Archfiends. Haughty and imperious, she hates traitors and has absolute loyalty to Golbez, imprisoning Rosa with proud cruelty. Barbariccia has a special fondness for her hair.

Barbariccia


Cidolfus Telamon ( Final Fantasy XVI )

Voiced by: Hiroshi Shirokuma

A man known as the ‘Outlaw’ who awakened as the Dominant of Ramuh when he arrived at the shores of Valisthea. Once Lord Commander of the Royal Waloeder Army, he defected and has since fought to end the persecution of Bearers and exploitation of Dominants. A man of science and sarcasm, he believes that Bearers and Dominants deserve to die on their own terms, and has forged a network of contacts across the realm to help achieve this freedom.

Cidolfus Telamon


Galenth Dysley ( Final Fantasy XIII )

Voiced by: Masaru Shinozuka

Primarch of Cocoon, a leader who is dedicated to eradicating the threat of the l’Cie and incursions from Pulse. Though posing as an old man, he is really the fal’Cie Barthandelus, an ancient and godlike lifeform who seeks to revive the fal’Cie Orphan and bring destruction to Cocoon. With his unusual abilities he misleads the party to accomplish his goals.

Dysley concept art


VANILLE


The desolation was exactly as she remembered.

So was the feeling of melancholy that flooded her as she looked over her home village of Oerba. The wasteland appeared to stretch to eternity, the derelict village proper a dot on the horizon. Cloaked in white and silence, it would have seemed a peaceful monument to a long-dead and once vibrant village if not for the pair of tornadoes just beyond the warehouses at the edge of town, blotting the sky. One was smaller and brighter; Vanille might have even called it a vibrant green color, but it was dwarfed by one that was dark and foreboding.

Fang walked by her and lightly slapped Vanille on the back. “Well, at least we can give ‘em the grand tour, eh?” she said.

Vanille frowned and furrowed her brow in worry. “If our home is still standing after those tornadoes rip through it, maybe.”

“But they’re not moving that much, are they?” Hauyn asked, shielding her eyes from the sun as she peered in the direction of town. “It’s hard to tell from this far, but they seem to be revolving around each other.”

Vanille gasped as she looked closer at the wind storm. The sky itself had turned dark as if the larger tornado had funneled away the daylight, but the smaller one seemed to be dancing circles around it. She didn’t know what to make of it – she had never seen such a thing.

Squall and Fujin glanced at each other with the barest hint of a grimace on both of their faces, communicating with unspoken words. Meia, on the other hand, knelt down and cupped some of the crystal sand, releasing it in a stream through her fingers. “Is this sand?” she asked. “From a distance, I’d thought we’d come across a snowfield.”

Vanille shook her head. “It’s made from crystal. It wasn’t always here,” she said, hugging herself. Having twice been turned to crystal herself, it made her feel like they walked upon the corpses of millions of l’Cie. Perhaps, in this world, it was Manikins. She hated the thought. “Oerba was once a beautiful village covered in flowers.”

Fang slung her spear over her shoulder. She seemed perfectly at ease, as always. “Seems counterproductive – not to mention dangerous – but should we go closer to the two tornadoes? Hold onto your hats, I s'pose.”

“Yes,” said Squall. “Carbuncle said there’s a Guardian Force here. And now that we can see those, it’s obvious who it is.”

“PANDEMONA,” Fujin said sharply. “WIND.”

“Well, what’s it capable of? Can’t say I know much about this one,” Fang said. “And I feel like I should, considering it might flatten my hometown.” Vanille wasn’t familiar with any fal’Cie or the like with the name Pandemona either; she had only seen it in the World of Illusions.

“It’s fast,” Squall said, shrugging. “Capable of sucking the air out of the environment.”

“STRANGE,” Fujin added. “MONSTER.”

“Is that a little softness in your voice I detect?” Meia asked with a teasing smile. “You share a fondness for it, don’t you?”

“SQUALL STOLE,” she said, her single eye focused in a glare on Squall. He looked away in response, clearing his throat.

“I don’t think it’s in my world either,” said Hauyn. “I’m not familiar with any Mirages who share its name. The embodiment of wind…”

“It may not be common in other worlds, but as a Sicarius it is familiar to me,” said Meia. “I’ll echo Fujin’s sentiment – it is a strange one, indeed.”

Vanille folded her fingers in front of her chest in her gesture of prayer. She cast her feelings out as if to veil Oerba in a ward of protection. “Can we battle against a tornado?”

“We’ve faced much worse,” said Meia. “Chin up – we won’t let your home come to harm.”

Hauyn grasped Vanille’s hand and squeezed it. “Yes! Don’t worry, we’ll save both Pandemona and Oerba!”

Vanille gave her a halfhearted smile in thanks and looked back toward Oerba. The smaller tornado flashed, lightning swirling in its depths, and something flared from the top of the funnel. It was as greenish yellow as the tornado itself – which seemed to drain of its color at the same time. It almost moved like fire, waving madly in the wind that surely battered it, or maybe…?

“...HAIR?” said Fujin.


SARAH I


Despite the tornadoes in the distance, the winds rolling across the barren wasteland outside of Oerba seemed deceptively calm. A chill swept up Sarah’s spine as she recalled how the winds died in her world; here, she hoped, there would be no Fiend of Wind sapping power from the crystals. But in this world, anything could happen. She knew, regardless, that the gale could pick up at any moment, ripping away all in its path.

She would not be caught up in it.

She idly pet Torgal as her party stood at a safe distance from Oerba, planning how they would make their attack on the larger tornado that was likely to be Pandemona. “If Pandemona is within the larger one, what might be in the lesser tornado?” she asked.

“I can think of any number of fearsome creatures at its center,” Clive said, sharing a glance with his brother Joshua. “In our world, no Dominant claims Pandemona – instead, we know Garuda as the Eikon of Wind.”

Papalymo raised his hand. “I’m familiar with Garuda as well – Primal of the Ixal, a bird-like race. Vicious one, that. Were it Garuda within that tornado, we’d likely hear her peals of laughter from all the way here.”

“In Vana’diel, Garuda of wind answers a summoner’s call,” said Shantotto, crossing her arms. “To face her requires no lack of gall.”

Sarah clutched the neck of her lute and decided to voice her earlier thought. “The possibility that it could be Tiamat has occurred to me as well. By all accounts, it is a fearsome monster.”

Rosa, the last of their party, sighed and looked toward Oerba as her dress fluttered in the breeze. “If it is true that Vanille and the others saw hair, then I know who it might be. It is indeed a monster within – one we call the Archfiend of Wind.”

“If the fiends of your world are as fair as her, should I dread meeting the people?”

A deep, rumbling voice spoke from just behind one of the crystal dunes. Joshua unsheathed his sword, Papalymo his staff, and Rosa her bow, but Sarah spotted Clive freeze in place. The man walked around the crystal dune, massaged his palm, and removed the cigarette from his mouth, flicking the end of it. He was handsome, with two swords sheathed on his left hip and a swagger to his step. His shoulders looked relaxed, but something about the careful way he moved made Sarah think he could be dangerous if he chose.

“Cid!” Clive exclaimed, eyes wide as he approached the man. “By the Founder, you’re here!”

The man named Cid grinned. “Aye, I’m here – save that doe-eyed look on your mug for someone who deserves it, eh?”

“Sorry, I just…” Clive let out a breath and lowered his head before looking back to Cid. “It’s been five years,” he said simply.

Cid rubbed the back of his neck. “Has it, now?” He said nothing for a moment, as if to digest it, then he shrugged and looked to the rest of them. “Are you going to introduce me? Looking at these folks, maybe I shouldn’t dread meeting them after all.”

Shantotto laughed. “So you croon, but I wonder if you spoke too soon.”

“This is Cid,” Clive said, gesturing to his companion. “Savior of Bearers whose mantle I hoped to carry. And that is Shantotto, Rosa, Papalymo, Sarah, and… my brother, Joshua.”

Joshua gave him a short bow. “It is an honor to finally meet you, Cid. Clive has told me much of you.”

Cid ground his cigarette beneath his boot. “That so? You’re older than I expected.”

Joshua smiled. “And I daresay you’re younger. I’d come to expect a wizened beard on the Dominant of Ramuh.”

Cid barked out a laugh. “I’m sure you’ll see it one day. Well, if I remember right, you were there when I died.”

They all fell silent at that, the distant howl of wind the only sound rolling over the fields of dust.

“Oh, come off it,” said Cid, breaking the silence. “Didn’t mean to darken the warm and fuzzy reunion. I’m alive now, aren’t I? And you two’ve found each other again. I’m happy for you.”

“Thank you, Cid,” said Clive. “I was beginning to wonder how I would have to break it to you, but I’m relieved to see you have your memories.”

“The Dominant of Ramuh…” said Papalymo, rubbing his chin. “We could certainly use your aid in defeating Pandemona.”

“Indeed,” said Rosa. “I do not mean to interrupt your reunion, but we must know – you have seen the woman at the center of that tornado?”

“That I did, and spoke with her,” Cid responded. “Soft as Fafnir’s spiky arse, that one. Lass wanted only the freedom of the sky, and for some reason she got it into her head that I’d get in the way of that. Had a trio of lackeys with her, too.” He glanced toward Clive again as he knelt down and scratched Torgal behind the ears. “Reminded me of Benedikta. She’d have liked her.”

Sarah didn’t know who Benedikta was, or indeed even Fafnir. But there was a weight to his shoulders when he said her name. Clive only set his jaw.

“Then it can only be Barbariccia,” said Rosa, shaking her head. “A fearsome foe… but a servant to Golbez. If she were to meet him and Rubicante, she would surely stand down. She has servants of her own – the three Magus Sisters.”

“With a proud name like that, I’ll see for myself what they’ll pull from their hat. It would give me glee to pursue a bout with sisters three,” said Shantotto, her smirk positively devious.

“Well, in any case, I am heartened to meet an ally valued so much by Clive,” said Sarah. “Your information is sure to help us. If we may be so lucky, perhaps even this Barbariccia can become an ally, too.”

Cid winked at Clive. “Spoke highly of me, have you? I’m flattered, but don’t let Clive fool you – I’m just an outlaw. If what you say is true, and you can get this ‘Barbariccia’ on our side, then… to put it lightly, I’d be impressed, based on who I met earlier.”

Papalymo raised his staff again. “We’ll have to put this conversation on hold, I fear – there are monsters afoot, and though I am not overly familiar with this sort, we have fought the Cie’th from Lightning’s world before. They are all over Oerba, and they have come.”

Sarah followed his gaze to spot a misshapen, vaguely humanoid creature lugging its heavy arms as it lurched toward them with a low moaning growl.

“Care to lead the way, brother?” Joshua asked, readying his blade.

Lightning crackled around Cid’s fist as he unsheathed one of his blades. “Allow me – this bag of bones needs to adjust to fighting again.”

As Sarah watched them run ahead to dispatch the monster, a flash of silver caught Sarah’s eye. At the top of one of the white dunes, she spotted an owl watching them. Before she could get a close enough look at it – for a moment, she thought it to be mechanical – it flew away. Wondering if her eyes played tricks on her, she pushed it from her thoughts as she joined the fray.


CLIVE


The wind picked up as they approached the village, coiling inward toward the tornadoes at the opposite side. Dust and debris were sucked in toward it, obscuring their vision in glittering white crystal sand. Clive held his arms up in vain to shield his face, but it did little to prevent the barrage of crystal dust and wind. He hurried to the side of a derelict building in an attempt to find shelter.

“Hurry, into this warehouse!” Layle exclaimed, using his powers to force open the metal door. It groaned open with a screech of rust, and Clive hurried Rem, Cid Telamon, Regis, Sazh, Dr. Cid, and Layle inside before Clive took up the rear and pulled the door shut. All of them doubled over, panting. “Not only does all that dust cloud our eyes, the air feels like it’s getting thinner and thinner.”

Clive could only agree – he wondered feebly how much harder it would be to breathe as they neared the tornadoes. “We can take shelter here for now.”

“Is Oerba always like this, Sazh?” Rem asked, brushing the dust out of her hair.

“Nah, not at all,” Sazh replied, shaking his head. “Normally, it’s quiet. Almost too quiet. I’d even say haunting, especially with all the Cie’th moaning all over the place. I bet you it’s tearing Vanille up inside…”

Regis gripped the head of his cane with both hands. “Then we as her allies must support her – and Fang. I suspect it is getting to Fang more than she lets on. It is no small thing for your homeland to be endangered.”

“It’s already a ruin,” said Layle, waving a hand toward the warehouse wall in a gesture to the world outside. “How much worse can it get?”

Dr. Cid examined his guns, disinterested in their conversation. “Sazh, I am far more intrigued by these creatures you call ‘Cie’th.’ Tell me more about their nature.”

Sazh gave him a look of distaste. “Cie’th are l’Cie, like me, who have failed the Focus given to them by a fal’Cie, powerful beings that used to run all life in Cocoon.”

“Where you used to live, I assume,” Dr. Cid said. “And a Focus is a sort of mission?”

“More than that,” said Rem, holding a hand over her heart with her head bowed. “It’s… like a compulsion. Something part of you, something you must do on behalf of the crystal who gave you its power. And you may never learn what it is – but if you succeed in your Focus, you turn to crystal.”

“Turning to a mindless beast or turning to stone,” said Telamon, scoffing. “Wonderful options, both. Sounds about as bad as a Bearer’s curse – but at least you l’Cie had a choice in the matter, grim as it was.”

Layle’s eyes widened. “Bearers are cursed in your world? You never mentioned that, Clive.”

Clive sighed. “The curse of using aether. It afflicts both Bearers and Dominants – the more you use it, the more it hastens your flesh turning to stone.” He saw Telamon’s hand twitch and it reminded him of how badly Cid’s own curse had progressed. “Cid, do you…?”

Cid chuckled and massaged his wrist. “Have the curse in this world? No, actually. But I keep touching it out of habit. Never thought I’d be free of that fate, but also never thought I’d be traipsing about in another world with fairies and cat-eared blokes.”

“My world’s crystal drained the life force from me as well,” said Regis. “But that is my fate and my duty as a king. The price I pay to protect my people.”

“Fascinating,” said Dr. Cid, adjusting his glasses. “To think the crystals and gods of your worlds have such similarities. Is it the power these fal’Cie wield that urges them to make playthings of mortals? Oh, how I might like to meet one!”

“Not a chance,” said Sazh, glaring at him. “You don’t know what you’re asking for. Those fal’Cie were bad news – there’s a reason they’re all gone from our world now.”

“So l’Cie and Bearers in your worlds are persecuted and suffer those terrible fates,” said Layle, rubbing his chin. “Now I’m starting to think that Bearers in my world don’t have it so bad after all.”

“We’re not here to discuss who suffers the worst,” said Clive. “If it is something that has trailed you your whole life, it does not mean anything if you suffered less than we did. Besides, after Cid was gone, I did all I could to carry on his legacy of giving Bearers freedom. The legacy of freeing all Valisthea from the Mothercrystals’ tyranny. I even took his name to carry on that mantle.”

“Did you now?” Telamon asked, eyebrow raised in amusement. “Miss me that much?” He chuckled when Clive looked away and rolled his eyes. “All I wanted was a world where Bearers could die on their own terms. If it took destroying the crystals’ wondrous bounty, then so be it.”

Clive shook his head. “There was one thing I did differently. I sought not to let Bearers die on their own terms, but to live on their own terms. And in the end, we overthrew the tyranny of our creator. We showed Valisthea a new future.”

Despite the cost. Those heavy costs. He still knew not how much he paid.

Telamon crossed his arms and grinned. “That so? Idealistic bastard. I like it.”

“Another divine rebellion,” said Dr. Cid. “This time without the use of nethicite. What wondrous things await in other worlds?”

“That is not something for you to wonder, limited as we are to this world,” Regis told him. He tapped his cane against the floor. “Has everyone recovered? I would continue onward.”


CECIL


The more they progressed through Oerba, the shallower Cecil’s breathing became.

His chest struggled to heave in breaths as the wind whipped his hair. He gave Rosa his arm as they supported each other. Even the legions of Cie’th stopped bothering them as they neared the pair of tornadoes, the one sure to contain Barbariccia much smaller than the one that held Pandemona. Even now, Cecil couldn’t discern what they were doing. Barbariccia’s occasionally neared Pandemona, circling around it – he couldn’t tell if she was protecting it or searching for weak points.

In a relatively open section of town that Cecil assumed to be akin to a village square once upon a time, fallen trees blocked their way. They twisted into each other, their branches encrusted with crystal and forming a barrier that looked as if it had been here for centuries. Cecil glanced toward his brother Golbez, who stopped in front of it.

“Rubicante, if you would,” Golbez said, gesturing to the trees.

“Such an obstacle is nothing to the might of my flames,” Rubicante said. He enshrouded himself in his cloak. “Yet… at this moment, I must admit that the thinness of the air will make it difficult for my flames to thrive.”

“Why don’t we take a moment to rest, then?” Yuna suggested, holding Carbuncle in her arms. “Lightning, do you know another way?”

Lightning pointed toward a building beyond the barrier. “There’s a schoolhouse over there. On its roof, another fallen tree will let us cross to a bridge where we can get closer to Pandemona.”

Rosa leaned against the crystallized trees to catch her breath, a little away from the others. “Are you well, my moonlight?” she asked Cecil.

His heart warmed at the way she spoke to him, as always. “Physically, I am unhurt. I just worry for the return of that old foe,” he said, nodding toward the tornadoes. Barbariccia and many more that still remained unaccounted for. But for now he would speak of only the most pertinent one. “She once hurt you, my sunbeam.”

“That was a long time ago,” she replied, a gentle touch cupping his chin. Nowadays, quiet moments like this were rare; even in the midst of an oncoming battle, he would treasure it. As much as her touch provided him comfort, the fierce look in her eyes granted him strength. “Besides, if Barbariccia were to attack despite the orders of Golbez, we are even stronger now than we once were.”

He smiled, but it wasn’t just Barbariccia, he wanted to say. There was yet another out there, greater and more terrible, with malice unending. One who would not hesitate to harm Ceodore. His mouth opened to give voice to his concerns, but movement atop the toppled tree barrier caught his eye and he narrowly avoided the glint of a silver scythe that would have beheaded him if he noticed it a second later.

“Ahahahaha!” another voice rang out, alongside the stout scythe wielder. This new arrival was smaller, wielding twin daggers in her hands. “You have stumbled into our domain. Now, prepare for your doom!”

“I’m Sandy!” said a third arrival, the tallest, wielding a spear.

“I’m Cindy!” said the stout one, leaping down to the ground.

“And I’m Mindy!” said the smallest one.

“We’re the Magus Sisters!” they proclaimed together. Cecil made note of how the three had formed a triangle around their party, surrounding them.

Lightning scoffed, unsheathing her blade. “And I’m over this already.”

On the other hand, Yuna’s eyes widened. “The Magus Sisters! I know you!”

“They’re not quite the same as you think,” said Carbuncle, wriggling out of her arms. “These three are from the World of Illusions, so they can appear throughout your worlds in many forms. Or they’re three normal humans. Honestly, I am not quite sure myself.”

“Stand down,” Golbez commanded them. “You three serve Barbariccia, do you not? The Archfiend of Wind serves me.”

“Not a chance,” said Sandy, wagging her finger at him. “We obey only Barbariccia.”

“Such insolence!” said Rubicante. “You are mere minions. You will bow to Lord Golbez.”

“We don’t care that she obeys you!” said Cindy. “You’re here to hurt her, and we won’t let you!”

“What gave you that idea?” said Cecil, but Cindy rushed toward him with her scythe ready to slice.

His reaction speed felt agonizingly slow as he just barely managed to deflect her with his sword. Gulping in a breath, he cast Blink on himself, afterimages flickering in an attempt to distract from her deadly swings. Holy magic descended on Cindy from above, but a reflective barrier bounced it back toward Rosa, who managed to shield herself just in time. Cecil swiped at his foe just as she tried to make a swing toward Rosa, separating her further from her sisters.

“Have you fallen under the same spell as the other aeons?” Yuna asked, facing off against Mindy alongside Lightning. Carbuncle hid behind her feet. “You look a little different, but I know you three as powerful friends.”

“I have no idea what you’re talking about,” Mindy shot back, weaving between Lightning’s swings. “Whatever you are here to do, we’ll stop you!”

“We have no desire to cause Barbariccia any pain,” Rubicante said, his cloak absorbing a fire spell that was reflected off of Sandy. He dove in with kicks and punches, dodging under her spear. Golbez’s shadow dragon snapped in, constraining Sandy, but she wriggled out of the attack as if she were part snake herself. “She is an ally of mine. While we may not have always seen eye to eye, we are both earnest in our desire to support Lord Golbez.”

“The same Lord Golbez who seeks her demise?” Sandy retorted. “Barbariccia told us herself. She knows of your betrayal.”

Golbez stalled in his attack, panting underneath the weight of his armor. “What?”

“Golbez would do no such thing!” said Cecil, backing off from Cindy. “We have no cause to fight.”

“Something’s not adding up,” said Lightning, succeeding in striking Mindy with the hilt of her blade, sending her in a daze.

Sandy started to cast defensive spells on both of her sisters while Cindy healed Mindy. Mindy disengaged from Lightning to summon ice and lightning to her hands. Rather than casting it on Lightning or Yuna, she fired the spells toward both of her sisters, both of which reflected off of them and struck erratically at Rubicante and Cecil. Cecil saw it coming, but he was too slow to dodge, pain lancing up and down his body as the shock tore through his armor.

“Cecil!” Rosa called. “Everyone, watch out!”

“They’re combining their attacks,” said Yuna, providing cover fire for Rosa as Cindy moved toward her. “Delta Attack!”

“How’d you know?” Mindy asked, glaring at her. “If you’re gonna call my attacks for me, get it right! Delta Force !”

Cecil fell to his knee, bracing himself as he waited for the surge of electricity to pass through him; his bones felt like they were on fire. He held his blade up high through the pain as he willed a defensive spell around all of his allies. A glowing white line connected all three sisters in a perfect triangle surrounding the party. When he looked back at his friends, his eyes widened when he saw that Yuna had changed back into her Summoner’s dress.

With a wave of her staff, three flowers bloomed around her, and three women who appeared similar to insects emerged from them. One was tall and slender with bladed arms, like a mantis; another was stout with patterns on her back like a ladybug; and the third was small with buzzing wings and a stinger, like a wasp.

“Do as you will,” Yuna commanded them, and Cecil realized they were her aeons. Both sets of Magus Sisters launched into battle, though the set Cecil was familiar with reacted with confusion and alarm. Yuna’s aeons were silent as they distracted the three sisters, saving the party from their combined attack.

“Look!” Golbez said, pulling Cecil’s attention away from the Magus Sisters. The smaller tornado that presumably contained Barbariccia faltered, sputtering out, and a green light launched through the air toward them like a shooting star. Wind swirled around the schoolhouse, bursting forth as the light crashed onto its roof and dimmed. “That must be Barbariccia. Let’s move!”

“I am determined to get to the bottom of this,” Rubicante said, flourishing his cloak as he followed after Golbez. “Her behavior is strange.”

Cecil glanced toward Rosa, Yuna, and Lightning, but the latter’s gaze was locked on the opposite direction, her eyes wide as she stared at a metallic tower. “No…” Lightning said, her voice strained with disbelief.

“What is it?” Rosa asked.

Lightning pointed. A bird rested on top of the tower, eerily still as it watched them with its dark eyes. Cecil realized it was mechanical, its silvery sheen not a quality of its feathers, but of its artificial luster. “That’s no owl,” she said. Her voice deepened with a seething fury Cecil hadn’t seen the likes of since they had faced Bhunivelze. “I know you’re here, Barthandelus.”


VANILLE


So the fal’Cie Barthandelus had finally come.

Vanille almost couldn’t believe it when Lightning told her. Galenth Dysley, Primarch of Cocoon. Sworn enemy of humanity and l’Cie. He who sought to sacrifice all of the people he ruled over in service to opening Etro’s Gate to the unseen realm.

After they left the Magus Sisters to do battle with Yuna’s aeons, Vanille joined Lightning to the rooftop of the old schoolhouse where the green light from the tornado had crashed. She tried not to look too much at Nabaat, who responded only with denial at Lightning’s announcement.

“How can you be so sure he is here?” Nabaat asked, running alongside Lightning and Vanille. Even after all this time, Vanille still couldn’t get used to the idea of fighting alongside the woman who caused her and Sazh such torment. Things were different here, but some feelings were hard to shake.

“I saw his owl,” Lightning said back through sharp breaths. “You know, the one that always flew around him?”

“His familiar, Menrva,” Nabaat replied, nearly stumbling. She leaned against the wall outside of the schoolhouse, taking in deep breaths. “That’s impossible.”

“Is it?” said Kain, following close behind them with Golbez and Cid Telamon. “This world has summoned a god like Enna Kros and a demon like Altima. It is not so unlikely to summon a fal’Cie too.”

“That isn’t what I mean,” Nabaat said, eyes narrowed at him.

“We should keep going,” Vanille said, unsure of how to handle Nabaat right now. Golbez nodded to her in what she could only assume was appreciation. She didn’t want to talk about Dysley. Even hearing the name of his fal’Cie form – Barthandelus – gave her chills.

The rooftop of the schoolhouse had once been a garden, so long ago. Now it was covered in the same crystal dust as everything else. But in the center of the building, a woman had keeled over, just barely holding herself up on her hands and knees, her long green hair falling in a cascade all around her. It obscured most of her body, but from what Vanille could see of it, she was scantily clad – and had no visible wounds. She struggled to gasp in deep breaths, even more than the rest of them.

“Barbariccia,” said Golbez, approaching her first. “Are you hurt?”

“Get away from me!” she exclaimed in a voice almost like a screech, scrambling away from him. Fury blazed in her eyes – fury, and hurt. “Lord Golbez, the things you said… how despicable of you, of all people, to betray me as you have…”

“Betray you?” he said, incredulous. He removed his helm, white hair falling free, and he knelt before her. “I would do no such thing. The loyalty of you and the other Archfiends has provided me much comfort in my darkest times.”

Barbariccia recoiled away from him. “What is this trickery? Begone from here, monster!”

“It is no trickery, Barbariccia,” said Kain. “Your master has not betrayed you.”

Her eyes fixed on Kain and narrowed in hatred. “You!”

Cid used his magic to light a cigarette, but the wind from Barbariccia’s anger snuffed it out, to which he rolled his eyes. “Why don’t we discuss what happened with those tornadoes over yonder? Not often you see nearly naked women flying from them. A second time is more than I ever expected.”

Barbariccia swiped a hand at him and a burst of wind followed her outburst. “Silence!”

Vanille brushed her bangs out of her eyes, but the tornado they presumed to be the doing of Pandemona intensified and brushed both her hair and crystal dust back into her face. She didn’t know what to make of Cid’s comment, but looking toward the tornado she was reminded of the last time they were here. “Lightning,” Vanille said, turning toward her friend. “I think I know what’s going on!”

Lightning glanced toward Vanille and nodded. “I think so too. There is trickery, but it started long before we got here.”

“How so?” Kain asked.

“Dysley,” said Vanille. “He took the form of Serah right here in Oerba once in an attempt to mislead us. The Magus Sisters said that Barbariccia was convinced Golbez turned against her, right? What if he pretended he was Golbez?”

“Lies!” said Barbariccia. “What have you done to my Sisters!?”

“So we’ve a shapeshifter on our hands, eh?” said Cid. Surprising Vanille, he knelt down to Barbariccia as well. “Listen. Your Magus Sisters aren’t hurt. I can’t claim to know a lick of your past, but Golbez doesn’t deserve your ire. Don’t lash out at him or anyone who cares for you – but if you need someone to rage at, a punching bag to take all your frustrations of this cold world, then you can lash out at me instead.”

Barbariccia stared at him as if seeing him for the first time. “You again. Who… are you?”

Nabaat crossed her arms, but even she seemed unsettled by his words. “What nonsense is he spouting?”

“Wretched humans,” said a voice from above, and Vanille’s head shot up to spot the robed figure floating in midair. An old man, priestly in his appearance, but with a coldness in his eyes that Vanille remembered all too well. “Pitiful l’Cie. Here you battle endlessly. Here you battle without aim, without Focus.”

“Barthandelus!” Lightning roared his name, blade readied. “Get down here and fight us. What have you done to Barbariccia?”

“Your Eminence!” said Nabaat, her composure shattered. “I… I… To see you like this… How? What magic is levitating you like that?”

“I don’t care to know,” said Kain, leaping high into the air. His lance came down on Dysley, but it passed right through him. “An illusion,” he said upon landing. “What do you want?”

“All are beneath the fal’Cie,” Dysley continued. “You may have escaped your fates once, but a weapon of unparalleled power has fallen into my hands. This creature of wind will not foil my plans.”

“What weapon do you speak of?” said Golbez, gesturing toward the tornado. “What is Pandemona trying to do?”

“Pandemona?” Barbariccia questioned, pushing herself up on shaky feet. “That eidolon within the tornado? No… this man speaks of me.”

“I don’t understand,” said Vanille, shaking her head. She tried to take in a deep breath, but it was getting harder and harder.

“I have newfound freedom,” said Dysley, the palm without a staff in his hand facing skyward. “No longer am I bound by my duties as a fal’Cie to protect the people of Cocoon. I can destroy as I see fit. And with this weapon… I shall open the way to the unseen realm.”

Lightning swiped a hand out at him. “What are you planning!?”

He vanished before answering, delivering one final, victorious smirk at Lightning and Vanille.

Her head felt light. “What does he think Barbariccia can do?” she asked. She looked over all of her companions; only Nabaat still had her eyes fixed on where Dysley was a moment ago.

Barbariccia kept her distance from them, but she did not seem inclined to flee from them or attack any longer. “I sought to get inside it,” she said, gesturing toward the tornado.

“In the tornado?” Golbez asked.

“Look,” she said, and they all turned toward Pandemona. “I wished not to let such a terrible weapon be unleashed upon the world again, even despite the evils I have committed in the past.” The tornado’s power lessened, and within it Vanille caught a glimpse of a shadow. “But I could not penetrate its defenses. Not alone.” She saw something metallic inside, and she wasn’t sure if it was fear or the lack of air pressing in on her lungs. It seemed taller than a skyscraper. “I know not how, but it is here. The Giant of Babil.”


Character Abilities

 

Tidus

ULT: Caladbolg Shot

Effect: Deal more damage, EX charges faster at full HP

The ULTs for some of the FFX cast were hard to come up with, since many of them already have their strongest attacks or Overdrives in their kit. For Tidus, his EX Burst in the original Dissidia games is "Caladbolg Equipped!" or something, which is kind of an odd name for an ultimate attack if you ask me, so I kept only part of it and made it part of a unique animation blitz move or something. Caladbolg is his Celestial Weapon. After use, he does more damage overall and his EX will charge faster if he is at full HP.


Summoner Yuna

ULT: Delta Attack

Effect: Increased follow up damage

I swear on my life that I decided her ULT ability long, long before I even planned this chapter or thought of the Magus Sisters showing up, or even that Yuna would summon them. It wasn't until after I was ready to post this chapter that I went back to my notes to see that Tidus and Yuna were next up for the ULT updates, which was coincidental enough, and then saw that she used the Magus Sisters' Overdrive as the ULT I decided on months and months ago. Wild!! Anyway, after she uses it, she gets increased follow-up damage from her Valefor attacks.

Her ULT from her Gunner dressphere was already revealed back in its debut.


Cidolfus Telamon (Swords) Lightning melee damage, turn warp, Paralyze trap, spiker, Lightning imperil

15: Pile Drive

35: Thunderstorm

EX: Blind Justice

LD: Smoking Sparks

FR: Fulgurian Apprentice (with Zangetsu)

BT: Judgment Bolt

ULT: Arbiter of Levin (Effect: Semi-prime, extra damage)

Burst theme: “To Sail Forbidden Seas,” tough boss theme, mostly for first phase Eikons

Most of Cid's abilities come from Clive's Ramuh moveset, since neither Cid nor Ramuh are ever boss battles (no other Eikon/Dominant can claim this, even Jill gets a boss fight early in the game). His only original abilities are his LD, which is meant to reference his heavy smoking habit, as well as his ULT.

Predictably, he is a melee Lightning elemental attacker. To incorporate his speed, he's a turn warper, and he has a trap that can inflict Paralyze. Furthermore, he is a spiker, so he can end launch sequences with extra splash damage to other foes, and to go with his Lightning element he can also imperil foes. Like Clive and Joshua, after using his ULT he will semi-prime and deal more damage. Rather than "Hide, Hideaway" as his Burst theme, which is pretty much Cid's character theme, I decided to give him this one since he doesn't have his own boss theme and this one is used in all of the Eikon fights (plus it's one of my favorite themes of the game).


Barbariccia (Unique - Claws) Wind/Lightning magic damage, Wind imperil, Petrify, launcher, melee/magic immunity

15: Stone Touch

35: Lightning

EX: Tornado Form

LD: Empress of Winds

FR: Savage Storm (with Rosso)

BT: Maelstrom

ULT: Cyclone Shield (Effect: Petrify duration extend)

Burst theme: “Battle with the Four Fiends,” the Pixel Remaster version

Most of Barbariccia's abilities come from her boss fight(s), though her LD and technically her ULT are originals. Though she deals Wind and Lightning magic damage, she focuses more on Wind with a matching imperil. She focuses more on inflicting Petrify to shut down enemies rather than pure damage, which (similar to G'raha) is an instant break and turn delete packed into one debuff. After using her EX, she gets a buff where she becomes immune to all melee and magic BRV damage - similar to her boss fight where you need Kain's Jump to damage her, she can still be damaged by ranged attacks. After using her ULT, the duration of her Petrify status effect gets extended.

Notes:

Justification for Barbariccia: She is a major boss of the game. Furthermore, Rubicante made it in, so as a fellow Archfiend it felt only right to get more of the set, and she is playable in games like Record Keeper as well.

Justification for Cid Telamon: One of the major characters of the game, a Dominant, and one of Clive's party members.

Justification for Dysley: He is the main villain of the original FFXIII.

Next up is an Idle Chatter! Any requests?

Chapter 57: Idle Chatter V

Notes:

Last chapter's Force partnerships:

Cid Telamon with Zangetsu: Both are characters whose powers focus around lightning, and older and wiser than their hero companion.

Barbariccia with Rosso: Both are bloodthirsty female villains and underlings to another antagonist.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Idle Chatter V


Scene 1: Ramuh and Garuda (requested by CrossingTheFourthWall)


( Cid Telamon, Arc, Elena, Steiner, Fran, Thancred, and Xezat walk around one of the outer balconies on the upper levels of Balamb Garden, taking in the sights as Garden flies. )

CID: To think a massive tower like this can fly through the sky. Madness, it is. And airships are common in your worlds?

STEINER: Madness, he says! I agree, but you look delighted.

ARC: I’ve seen airships before, but never a flying school like this!

CID: No one mentioned this was a school yet. Dozens of Kanver scholars just broke down and wept.

ELENA: You’ve really never seen an airship before? Wow, your world must really be backw – er…

XEZAT: Now, now. Let us not judge other worlds based on their technological achievements. Clive and Joshua were amazed, as well.

CID: We had ‘em, once upon a time. Grand, sprawling cities and airships and contraptions built by a civilization we call the Fallen. Reduced now to some ruins and a cautionary tale about the pride of man.

FRAN: And you cared little for the prudence preached in those stories, I suspect.

CID: You’d suspect correctly. I’ve always thought by studying those, it would help even the playing field between Bearers and everyone else. That the people would stop hating us. So I made sure my daughter Mid got an education – and she bloomed into a damn genius, I can tell you that.

THANCRED: That reminds me of the Garlond Ironworks’ motto, “Freedom through technology.” Headed by a man named Cid, coincidentally. And that Fallen civilization has much in common with the ancient Allagan Empire.

CID: That so? Benna would’ve liked that motto. Though she never cared much for the Fallen, we’d talk about the possibilities to the early hours of the morn.

XEZAT: Benna?

CID ( he waves a hand and leans on the edge of the balcony, lighting a cigarette ): Ah, Benedikta. Garuda’s Dominant.

ELENA ( under her breath ): Oh, this is an uncomfortable topic for him. ( Louder ) Oh! Garuda, huh? I know them as a really annoying type of monster in my world. They were all over that Da-chao mountain in Wutai. I hated those things! And that mountain!

FRAN ( amused ): Indeed. Garuda is no esper known to me, but an avian monster that guarded the Tomb of Raithwall.

ARC: It’s the same in my world. Garuda is no summoning spell, but a fearsome monster. One who had slain the king of a neighboring country, and nearly the prince as well – a dear friend of mine. He was also a bird-like creature.

THANCRED: Seems it’s rare for Garuda to hold a position in various pantheons, as it is in our worlds, Cid.

STEINER: It’s a pesky bird monster in my world too. And I’ll have to ask you to cease your smoking in front of children, sir! You must cut back – it is not good for your health!

XEZAT: I’ll echo that sentiment. You’ve got a new lease on life, lad – don’t squander it and harm the children, too.

CID: Ha, been a long while since someone called me “lad.” Right, then – this is no hideaway of mine, so I don’t make the rules. ( He puts out the cigarette ). By the by, you’re all rubbish with tactful changes in conversation topics. But I’ve always been one to say it like it is, so I can’t blame you.

ELENA: Not my fault you made it awkward!


Scene 2: The Power of the Rift (requested by sonicfan2765)


( G’raha, Shantotto, Enna Kros, and Y’shtola are poring over tomes in the Garden library together when the Warrior of Light, Wol, and Sophie approach. )

WARRIOR OF LIGHT: How goes the research?

Y’SHTOLA: It was perhaps too hopeful of us that this library would conjure the exact books we need.

ENNA KROS: The power of will can’t alter reality to the same extent anymore. It’s as we’ve known for some time now – the world is changing.

SHANTOTTO: No matter which tomes I lift, none contain knowledge of the Rift. 

SOPHIE: What’re you looking for, again?

G’RAHA: We seek information on the Interdimensional Rift. In my world, I have experience with cross-Rift travel, but first I would verify that our terms speak of the same Rift. For example, I’ve heard tell of the “Void” being a dimension of nothingness between realms, but Y’shtola and I know the Void as a world flooded by Darkness, where Voidsent dwell.

ENNA KROS: It varies. Most of the time, though, I would say that the “Interdimensional Rift” is the space between worlds. The nothingness that keeps our various worlds apart from each other. For the sake of clarity, we should stop calling that the “Void.”

SOPHIE: Divine wisdom strikes again!

WARRIOR OF LIGHT: The “Void” is Exdeath’s favored term, after all.

SHANTOTTO: And to continue using his word? If you ask me, that’s just absurd.

WOL: Why the sudden interest in all this Rift business?

Y’SHTOLA: One of the crystal pillars of this world granted G’raha the power to summon warriors from across the Rift, as he once did in our world. Furthermore, it also granted him the ability to restore our memories. I would know more of this crystal – this personification of the very “Will” that drives this world and all the power we wield.

G’RAHA: We believe they are connected.

SOPHIE: It’s a little unfair that the crystal spoke to both of us, but only you got special powers!

G’RAHA: Ah, my apologies…

WOL: Don’t apologize. It’s probably just ‘cause Sophie’s arrival in this world was loud enough that the crystal couldn’t help but pay attention to her. She has that effect on fate itself.

SOPHIE: Hey! You make it sound like a bad thing!

G’RAHA ( staring at both the Warrior of Light and Wol ): I must say, despite you both bearing the title of a “Warrior of Light,” you could not be more different. Even so, I have borne witness to your heroics, and know that it is a fitting appellation for you both. Though I miss mine own Warrior of Light friend dearly, I look forward to further adventures with you both.

Y’SHTOLA: Your Warrior of Light? Oh, how swiftly you move on.

G’RAHA ( blushing and standing ): Y’shtola! If you would be so kind as to refrain from such comments! I simply meant only to offer a distinction between this Warrior of Light and the one from our world! Complicating matters further is how this Warrior of Light looks uncannily like a Primal of the ancient hero Elidibus summoned at the Crystal Tower, and…!

WOL: Hang on, I gotta say, I’m not a fan of being called a “Warrior of Light.” It was a title kind of forced on me by Palamecia itself.

WARRIOR OF LIGHT: There is a Primal that I resemble? How strange…

SHANTOTTO: As amusing as it is to see G’raha besmirched, I must get back to what I have researched.

SELPHIE ( arriving on the scene ): You guys are doing research? Why’d you pull out all those books? You know you can use that computer right behind you, right?

G’RAHA: These contain data? I had not thought they were similar to tomestones…

SELPHIE: I have no idea what that is, but let me show you the Internet! It’s so cool, you can play games, or make a blog…

Y’SHTOLA: Pray tell, what is a “blog”?

SOPHIE: I had no idea what these things were this whole time. Thanks, Selphie!

ENNA KROS ( turning away to depart ): Ah, so the power of the Rift pales in comparison to the power of the Internet, I see…


Scene 3: Life in Oerba


( Vanille, Fang, Noel, Firion, and Ciaran are on the outskirts of Oerba. Pandemona’s tornado still looms in the distance, but they have just dispatched some Cie’th. )

FIRION: Don’t worry, you two. We’ll clear these monsters out of your home.

FANG: Eh, it is what it is. Oerba hasn’t been home in centuries. To be honest, I barely remember what it was like here anymore.

VANILLE: It’s okay. Even in our world, Oerba has been overrun with Cie’th and other monsters ever since the War of Transgression.

NOEL: The Academy made it a “protected zone,” apparently. But… like most of the world, it got swallowed up by all of the Chaos.

CIARAN: That’s terrible. So even this got swept away… Why don’t you tell us about what you can remember? I’d like to hear about it. Preserve Oerba’s memory in some way.

VANILLE: Well… it was once covered in flowers. It was beautiful, full of color – not buried under all of this crystal dust like it is now. And we all lived close to each other, so you never had to go far to see your friends and family.

NOEL: So you lived communally? Even in my time, lots of villages on Pulse were similar. Amazing how little things changed even across the centuries.

FANG: One of the fal’Cie was our village protector. Or so we thought. But if you ask me, we didn’t need it – Vanille and I did plenty of the protecting ourselves!

VANILLE: That’s right!

NOEL: You were a hunter back in those days too, weren’t you?

FANG: She was one of the best.

FIRION: It’s a shame none of the flowers are here anymore. I’d have liked to honor the friends and family you lost.

VANILLE: There is one friend I’d like to see again. Last time we were here together, Hope managed to fix him up for me.

CIARAN: Come again? Hope did what?

FANG: She’s talking about Bhakti, a robot.

CIARAN: Let’s go find him! More friends are always welcome.

FIRION: Agreed! I’ll help do whatever it takes to find Bhakti and fix him again, if needed.

VANILLE: Aw, thanks, all!


Scene 4: Misplaced Fayth (requested by Mecho101)


( As the party traverses Oerba toward Pandemona and the Giant of Babil, Yuna hesitantly approaches the Magus Sisters with Rikku and Paine at her side. The Magus Sisters are no longer fighting Yuna’s aeons. )

YUNA: Excuse me… are you hurt? I can provide healing.

MINDY: We’ll heal ourselves! Go away!

SANDY: Offering to heal the very foes you fought?

CINDY: What kind of joke is this?

RIKKU: It’s not a joke! Yunie just wants to check up on you!

YUNA: I’m sorry. Now that the misunderstanding was cleared up with Barbariccia, I was wondering if we could talk.

SANDY: What reason do you have to apologize? Our master was tricked, and thus we were fooled in turn.

CINDY: If anything, it is we who should apologize.

MINDY: What!? Cindy!

SANDY: All I wish to know is… why do you show concern for us?

PAINE: Because that’s who Yuna is.

YUNA: Well… In my world, I was a summoner. In this world, I still have the ability to summon, but my aeons are not like they were back on Spira. Though they have the same appearances, it’s as if they are a shell of themselves. To be honest, I miss them.

CINDY: They lack souls.

RIKKU: Huh? What do you mean?

CINDY: Those eidolons you summoned to face us are what you call aeons, correct? They are merely a reflection of the version that lives in the World of Illusions.

PAINE: Don’t you live in the World of Illusions?

MINDY: Don’t tell them! Hmph!

YUNA: I think I understand.

SANDY: Those were the Magus Sisters of your world? How interesting.

MINDY: Interesting? What!? I was a gross bug!

YUNA: But you sprouted from beautiful flowers.

RIKKU: Yunie kind of does that too, you know? She’s got a special dressphere where she comes out of a hyacinth flower. It’s super pretty!

PAINE: Maybe Yuna can be the fourth Magus Sister?

YUNA: Oh, no, you two!

MINDY: Are you kidding? We’ll only ever be three. Besides, don’t you have a sisterhood of your own?

YUNA ( linking her arms with Rikku and Paine and grinning ): I suppose I do!

CINDY: I look forward to the day when we can all clash, head to head.

( From a distance, Barbariccia watches them. She crosses her arms, but fails to hide her smile .)

BARBARICCIA: Those three are capable of befriending others? Who would have guessed?


Scene 5: Keep the Doctor Away?


( Vaan and Jecht approach the center lift in Balamb Garden, but they find Gabranth, Cid Haze, and King in front of it. Cid is tinkering with the elevator’s control panel. )

JECHT: What’s going on? Is it out of order?

GABRANTH: Indeed. I would recommend seeking the stairs if you need the upper levels.

VAAN: We were headed for the basement, actually. Jecht and I wanted to stop by the armory before we head out on a hunt.

KING: That’s exactly where the problem is.

GABRANTH: Dr. Cid is below. We fear he has commandeered the armory and is planning to utilize all of our weaponry against us.

VAAN: No way! Does anyone else know about this? We have to stop him!

JECHT: Balthier’s old man? You all knew he could get up to no good, right?

HAZE: Perhaps he should not have unrestricted access… But don’t get ahead of yourselves. There is no proof of any wrongdoing yet.

GABRANTH: You are ignorant to all the evils that man is capable of. Unfettered by madness or morals, his innovations allowed war to spread throughout Ivalice. Though I helped to perpetuate it as a Judge Magister of the Empire, his unrepentant hand is as much to blame as the emperor himself.

HAZE: Though he might have done all that in the past, this is a world of new beginnings. Let’s give him the benefit of the doubt. As a fellow Cid, I owe him that!

KING: He is not the only Cid I know who is capable of that kind of thing. Imperial Marshal Cid Aulstyne was the head of the Militesi Empire who sought conquest of all Orience. So I’m not sure we should excuse him just for his name.

VAAN: I haven’t wanted him around from the beginning. But if Balthier’s all right with it…

JECHT: Doesn’t mean Balthier’s forgiven the old man for everything he’s done. If Dr. Cid’s up to no good, we should stop him. But I could talk to him first.

VAAN: Good luck. That guy only likes listening to himself.

( The elevator dings. They hear movement on the other side of the door, and when it opens, Dr. Cid strides out. He barely glances at them all as he walks by with his rook under his arm. )

GABRANTH: Halt! Explain yourself.

DR. CID: What is there to explain, hound? I sought our armaments and tools to repair my rook, and while I was there your lift malfunctioned. You should thank me for repairing your lift at the same time.

HAZE: So I was having trouble with it because we were both trying to fix it at once…

VAAN: How do we know you haven’t stolen anything?

DR. CID: So speaketh the sky pirate.

( Dr. Cid walks off. The others watch him go. )

JECHT: He is a piece of work, isn’t he?

KING: I don’t think I could ever like someone like that. Why’d he call you that, Gabranth?

GABRANTH: It is no matter. I advise checking our inventory at once.

VAAN: Good idea! I don’t wanna know what that snake has gotten his hands on.


Scene 6: Ordeals of a Dragoon


( Kain is standing on an upper balcony of Balamb Garden as it flies through the sky, looking out toward the horizon. Cecil, Rosa, Ceodore, Estinien, Zeid, and Aranea approach. Kain turns to regard them. )

KAIN: What are you all doing here?

CEODORE: We’ve been worried about you, Kain. All this time that we’ve been in this world, and you still don’t act like yourself.

KAIN: What?

CECIL: What Ceodore means is… You are still so focused on what you did seventeen years ago, even though in our world we thought you had put it behind you.

ROSA: We’re a family, Kain. You can talk to us.

KAIN: Should this be discussed with… all present company? ( He glances toward Estinien, Zeid, and Aranea .)

ESTINIEN: I’ve gleaned some of your story. I know what it is like to be driven by another’s hatred. Thought I might offer some advice. And with me here, you can’t leap away.

ZEID: I, too, hold darkness within my heart. Wrath. It is plain to see on your face, at times.

ARANEA: I’m just here for the show. And like Estinien, to wrangle you if you try to run away.

KAIN: Noted. But I shall not flee.

CEODORE: Back home, you found the light within you, didn’t you? Do we need to go back to Mt. Ordeals so you can fight your inner darkness again?

KAIN: The thought has occurred to me. Though we found Mt. Ordeals in this world once before for Cecil to reobtain his light, I am unsure of how we may find it again.

ZEID: You could always learn to wield your darkness effectively, like a weapon. There is nothing wrong with that path, either.

CECIL: You have already overcome your inner darkness, Kain. I believe wholeheartedly that you do not need to find it again. And since you have your memories, you just need to embrace that light.

ESTINIEN: Seventeen years, was it? Sounds like a burden you’re used to bearing.

KAIN: It is. But sometimes… I am not so sure how I managed to bear it all that time. Some days, the pain still feels fresh.

ROSA: Then rely on us to help soothe it.

ZEID: Old wounds act up again sometimes. If you wish to embrace your light again, it is no easy thing to turn your back on your darkness.

CECIL: Your light is still in you. I am certain of it.

KAIN: If that is true… I know not what happened to my armor and lance as a Holy Dragoon.

ARANEA: Try this. ( She tosses something at him, and Kain catches it. ) Rikku told me a bit about how they work.

KAIN: A sphere?

CEODORE: A dressphere! Great idea. Maybe if you dress the part, it’ll help you remember what it’s like to shine your light.

ARANEA: Fake it ‘til you make it, as they say.

KAIN: That is ridiculous. But if it works… This was your plan all along, Aranea, wasn’t it?


Character Abilities

Auron

ULT: Full Break

Effect: Lowers enemy stats with each ability used

Auron's ULT is the Skill he gets at the end of his sphere grid in the Remaster version, which is all "Break" attacks in one. After use, he will lower enemy stats permanently every time he uses an ability.


Braska

ULT: Thor’s Hammer

Effect: When using EX, BRV is retained

Braska gets this game's other unique aeon, since I think it suits him. This is Ixion's Overdrive. I believe he has it in some other crossover appearances, like Record Keeper. After use, he retains his BRV values whenever he uses his EX ability.


Holy Dragoon Kain (Spears) Holy ranged damage, party Blink, juggler, offensive buffs, Regens

15: Blink Jump

35: Saint Dive

EX: Sky Grinder

LD: Effect Form

FR: Cross Jump (with Aranea)

BT: Trinity Crusade

ULT: Dragoon’s Pride (Effect: Juggle again)

Burst theme: “Battle for Life,” which plays in the final phase of the Creator final boss fight in The After Years

And now for another dressphere! He already has this costume in game. As a Holy Dragoon, Kain is capable of using some white magic, just like a Paladin. So I gave him some HP/BRV Regen, and his first ability gives him the Blink spell (along with a Jump he does at the same time). Blink functions pretty much just like Rydia's version of it. The remainder of his abilities, with the exception of his ULT, are all Band abilities he gets in The After Years. His Force partner stays the same as in his base form.

He is a Holy ranged attacker (a rare combination), with the aforementioned Blink buff, HP/BRV regens and offensive buffs that make him a quasi-support character, and a juggler - which means he can extend launch sequences.

Notes:

Hope you all enjoyed these! Let me know what you think!

Chapter 58: A5C8, Part 2: Ode to Wind

Notes:

This chapter ended up being really long! I didn't expect that to happen, but it might have gotten away from me a little.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Act 5, Chapter 8, Part 2: Ode to Wind


LEONORA


Leonora had been too young to remember much of the Giant of Babil when it appeared in her world.

She could scarcely believe its size, from the little of it she could see through the tornado. The Lunarians were an impressive people indeed if they could build a walking piece of technology that appeared taller than even Balamb Garden. But still it did not move much. She could not tell if Pandemona’s tornado was meant to obscure it or perhaps even hold it in place.

But she could see the effect it had on her companions. Edge had become a bit surly, a far cry from his usual easygoing self. Even Zangetsu seemed uneasy; though he was not involved in the struggle seventeen years ago, he certainly remembered the fear that many across their world felt. Hope stood with Golbez as they watched it together, looking out for signs of activity. The latter had put his helm back on, so she struggled to tell how he was feeling.

Barbariccia had declined further healing so Leonora left her, instead deciding to focus on the one who perhaps seemed most shaken by the ordeal, but for different reasons: Jihl Nabaat.

Leonora knelt down at the other woman’s side, who sat against the schoolhouse and stared blankly into space. She knew exactly what was on Nabaat’s mind and her heart ached.

“You didn’t fail him,” Leonora told her. “The Primarch is a cold, cruel man. No matter what you did, he would not have been happy with you.”

For a moment, it looked as if Nabaat didn’t even hear her. But eventually, she said, “He didn’t even look at me. I was nothing to him. After all those years I served him. If he was truly cold and cruel all along, everything I did in his name was monstrous.”

Leonora frowned. “But now you know better. You know that it is okay to fail, to stumble and fall, as long as you get back up again.”

Nabaat finally looked at her. “Do I, or is that what you have decided for me?”

“N-not at all! I am sorry for putting words in your mouth!”

To her immense surprise, Nabaat actually smiled. “It may have taken every ounce of my effort to resist, and it may have felt akin to you dragging me by the hair, but I did acknowledge you were correct. Remember?”

Leonora let out a breath, thin as it was with Pandemona’s tornado siphoning the very air. “Right,” she said. For a time, Nabaat had served the Emperor, and Leonora helped her realize that she had been led astray – which was part of why she fought alongside them today.

“His Eminence – Dysley – is a fal’Cie. I know that now. I have seen the truth with my own eyes. I was a pawn to be used and discarded, just as I did to innumerable others below me.” Nabaat looked away from Leonora, down at her lap. “All to claw my way to the top of Sanctum’s hierarchy. It meant nothing in the end, with Sanctum and Cocoon both being long gone.”

Leonora shook her head. “Nothing we ever do amounts to nothing,” she said, but stumbled over her words. “Well, if that makes sense. What I mean is, everything we do is meaningful. And now, here, in this world – you can give your life new meaning in a way you never have before.”

“Pretty words,” said Barbariccia, interjecting in their conversation. “What meaning does the embodiment of wind have in a world where the winds are taken from my control?”

“It is sentimental and foolish,” Nabaat said, before Leonora could respond. She glanced at Leonora through the corner of her eye. “Yet this girl has a way of getting under your skin regardless. Perhaps you, too, should listen one day.”

Leonora’s jaw slackened, but then she smiled.

“Apologies for interrupting,” said Golbez, walking over to them. “But we must discuss what Dysley plans to do with the Giant of Babil.”

“He wants to destroy humanity,” Hope said. “For him, there’s no other option to get to the Unseen Realm and be reunited with the gods. As a fal’Cie, he was unable to directly harm humanity himself, which is why he needed l’Cie like us to act on his behalf. But the rules are different here."

Edge crossed his arms. “Wipe out all humanity, huh? Well, with the Giant of Babil, he might be able to do it. Just like Zemus tried to do.”

Leonora felt a chill fall over her at the mention of that name. She would never forget the brief time she felt his malice, his pure evil, so strong that it made her ill. She never wanted to meet him properly – but Edea had already been possessed. Zemus was out there, somewhere.

Nabaat stood and brushed the dust off her clothes. “Pandemona prevented Barbariccia from getting to the Giant, correct? Is it reasonable to assume Pandemona is protecting it?”

“If that’s the case, then it’s entirely possible Dysley’s the one who has been controlling the eidolons from the start,” Hope said, his face grim. “Or he’s working with someone who is.”

The weight of that statement settled in. But Leonora felt hopeful, like in the climb just before reaching a mountain peak. Maybe their mystery could finally be solved.

Zangetsu shook his head. “I am not so sure. A weapon of that size, what defense can wind truly give? Though I suppose in a tempest like that, a kite would be torn to shreds…”

Barbariccia ran a hand through her hair, flicking her long locks over her shoulder. “You are ignorant to the power of wind. I can coil myself in a perfect defense.”

“Almost perfect,” Edge corrected her. “You were helpless against attacks inflicted from above, as Kain can attest to.”

“Hmph,” Barbariccia said, crossing her arms.

“My question is, if it’s so dangerous, why hasn’t it attacked yet?” Hope asked. “Is Dysley waiting for something? Or maybe he doesn’t have it under his control yet after all.”

“Mayhaps his focus is on that,” Zangetsu suggested. “Which is why he did not attack us when he appeared.”

Leonora tilted her head. “Why don’t we attack and exploit the same weakness that Barbariccia has? All we need to do is go into the tornado from above.”

“Excuse me!” Barbariccia said, affronted. “I would rather not make that public knowledge!”

“Garden cannot fly high enough,” said Nabaat. She held her baton between her fingers, her strategic mind at play. Leonora was glad to see her back to her usual self. “And the only airship we have, Balthier’s, is too small. I believe we need to launch our attack on Pandemona itself before we have any hope of entering the Giant of Babil.”

“I am in agreement,” said Golbez. “We cannot allow this weapon to be used to evil ends. First we will defeat Pandemona – and then we will infiltrate the Giant itself and destroy it from the inside.”


CID TELAMON


On the outskirts of Oerba going toward the Giant of Babil, the winds intensified. Cie’th tumbled as the gales battered them, the crystal dust making it akin to a sandstorm. Cid found himself recalling Garuda’s egis, servants born of her aether, from when he and Clive sought to quell her rampage. He pushed those thoughts away – now was not the time to dwell on the what-could-have-beens regarding Benedikta.

“It will be too dangerous to make this crossing out in the open, with gusts like these,” Kain said. “It is easy to say we can defeat Pandemona first before infiltrating the Giant – but that will not mean anything if we fail to even reach it.”

“Well, I don’t see shelter anywhere!” said Neon, shielding her face. “These winds are too strong. Let’s go back into the village and plan our attack.”

Cid squinted through the dusty haze and spotted a piece of the collapsed bridge that extended out from Oerba, and pointed. Heading back into the village would be a waste of time that they didn’t have, if this Giant was as dangerous as the others claimed. “That way,” he said. “Hurry, now.”

Neon, the smallest of their current group, almost looked as if she would be ripped off of her feet, but Barbariccia diverted the winds around her as they made their way toward the meager shelter that Cid spotted. Kain and Estinien reached the rubble of the bridge first, but Cid and Rubicante were right behind them. The bridge was much bigger than Cid expected it to be, and though the rubble would become more dangerous the closer they got to the tornado, it would serve as adequate shelter for now.

“What I wouldn’t give for Sophia to be here,” Neon said, ducking behind the crumbled stonework. “She became the Fiend of Wind – something like this would be easy for her to handle.”

“As if I can’t handle it,” said Barbariccia, scowling. “I am the Arch fiend of Wind, after all. It would be child’s play for me to approach Pandemona, but your feeble bodies will be torn apart by his winds.”

“Now that you mention it, I’ve been wondering what an Archfiend is,” said Cid, crossing his arms. “You look human to me – green hair notwithstanding.” Though he couldn’t say the same of Rubicante.

“We are embodiments of nature,” Rubicante explained. “Essences of the crystals, given form by the Lunarian Zemus and twisted to suit his schemes as generals of his army of monsters.”

“Fortunate for us, then, that you are free from his control,” said Estinien. “I have experience with fiends named Rubicante and Barbariccia as well – though I know them as Voidsent lords. I am sure once Y’shtola gets her memories back, she will not hesitate to interrogate the both of you and Golbez regarding the similarities.”

“You have my thanks for the warning,” said Rubicante.

Cid turned back to the open field, peering across the wind-blasted dunes. “Pity, I don’t see any opportunity for one of my shortcuts,” he said. “I’m inclined to say we brute force our way toward Pandemona, and deal with the consequences as we go.”

“I can handle myself just fine,” said Neon, glaring at Barbariccia. “My body isn’t as feeble as it looks. I say we do it.”

Cid held up a hand. “Hold. Someone’s coming.”

“Ah, those are Barbariccia’s minions!” said Rubicante. “Do they seek another battle?”

Barbariccia flipped her hair over her shoulder. “Of course not. I will handle them.”

All three Magus Sisters shuffled toward the crumbled bridge, their heads bowed against the wind. Cindy had to hold onto Mindy as they went – the smallest of the sisters looked as if she were about to blow away at any moment. As such, Sandy reached their meager shelter first, bowing deeply to Barbariccia.

“My lady! We have returned to your side, shamed by our display in battle!”

Cindy tugged Mindy along and practically threw her behind the shelter. “We have failed you.”

Mindy crossed her arms and huffed. “We were gonna win, but a bunch of those monsters distracted us.”

Cid expected Barbariccia to dole out a harsh punishment to them. To regard them with her usual haughty expression and a lesson in pain, perhaps. But for the first time he had seen, her expression softened. “It is well that you have returned to me unharmed,” she said.

“Your forgiveness knows no bounds,” said Cindy, pressing her palms together in thanks.

Cid’s fingers twitched, hungry for a smoke. “Are there any Archfiends of Earth out there?” he asked. No way in hell he’d ask the aid of Kupka, if that brute was here. “We could dig our way through.”

“Not yet among our company,” said Rubicante. “But there is merit in using a defensive maneuver to avoid those winds.”

“Ice, perhaps?” suggested Estinien.

“Combined with the usage of Torsions,” said Kain. “One can bring us right to the tornado, and we can gather as many mages as we can to shore up our defenses.”

“No jumping for you, Dragoon ,” said Barbariccia, with a scathing tone. Any softness she had regarding her minions was lost. Cid sensed some history there.

“Let us redeem ourselves,” said Sandy. “Allow the Magus Sisters to aid in your defense.”

“A little wind is nothing!” Mindy boasted, but an errant gust nearly blew her off her feet.

Neon punched a fist into her palm, grinning. “All right, then. We have a plan. Time to take out Pandemona.”

Sparks crackled between Cid’s fingers. Maybe a thunderstorm was in the forecast, too.


RYDIA


Within the Torsion, cloaked in silence and darkness, the party split into groups and attacked the tornado from multiple angles, spreading out to ensure it was completely surrounded. Rydia waited for the Torsion to open up again and spit her out right into the midst of battle. Raines was the one who opened it for them again, blasting them with the roar of violent winds and white dust, and Snow led the charge with Fang right on his heels. Rydia, Palom, Edea, and Raines himself followed.

No sooner than she had hit the ground, she hid underneath the quick shelter that Palom and Edea conjured from ice; an igloo just big enough to hold all of them. Dust pelted them regardless, blinding and dangerous, but Rydia barely had time to question the wisdom of attacking a tornado – she had a job to do.

Pandemona stole their breath away. She didn’t hesitate. Her summoning began, motes of magic circling her as she called to Titan. Despite their lack of air, despite the howling vacuum drowning nearly all other noise, Snow called out a summoning of his own.

“They’re no Magus trio, but a duo! C’mon, Shiva!” he bellowed. “Stiria, Nyx!”

A pair of women that appeared to wield wheels as their weapons materialized from the ice, swirling and spinning as they constructed defenses from the rime. Titan appeared alongside them, wordlessly going on the offensive to disrupt the tornado with a smash of his fists against the ground, digging deep to give them more shelter as well. They had to work quickly; Rydia’s breaths turned to gasps as she struggled to gulp in air, and she knew without looking that the others faced the same issue.

She saw a shape in the wind and dust. Something fast, darting across the ground. Rydia gestured and directed Titan to attack, but the being she spotted was too fast. It emerged from the tornado as if completely unaffected by the raging wind, and Rydia knew at once that this had to be Pandemona.

It stood on furry feet with webbed claws, but that was where its resemblance to any sort of animal ended. Roughly humanoid, it lacked a face or even eyes as far as she could tell, with lavender skin and fleshy holes across its shoulder that sucked in air. Squall was right – such an eidolon was completely foreign to her. Its tail looked partially coiled around its waist, but when it spotted them the tail opened up as if like a massive pocket, inhaling as if to suck them all inside.

Edea and Palom joined their power together to form an icy wall between them and Pandemona, as if avatars of Shiva herself. Stiria and Nyx whirled around the barrier and their wheels converged on Pandemona, staggering the eidolon and deflating its tail. Fang and Raines took the opportunity to get their own attacks in, but it recovered swiftly and flattened Fang with a swing of its tail just in time for Snow to appear and defend Raines from another attack.

Though Pandemona wasn’t one of her eidolons, it still made Rydia’s heart ache to fight it. She already had to suffer fighting through her own eidolons once before, back when the Maenads possessed them. She swore she would never let it happen again… yet here they were, and they had not yet discovered what made things go so wrong.

Stardust fell from the sky as Palom went on the attack and wove his own spells. Titan and Edea focused on trying to immobilize Pandemona, but instead of sucking in it decided to blow out, hurling Rydia, Edea, and Palom off of their feet. Before she could be lost in the dust storm just beyond their shelter of ice, Fang appeared at her side and braced Rydia just as Snow and Raines did the same for Edea and Palom. Titan and the Shiva sisters kept Pandemona occupied, but with a group this small, Rydia did not know how long they would have.

“We can only hope the others are free to dispel the winds, since we’ve got it occupied,” Fang said to her, as if reading her thoughts. “Don’t give up!”

The ice shelter shattered as a tempest battered it from above. They flattened themselves against the ground in a feeble attempt to not get blown away, but the ground she clung to was dust through her fingers. She couldn’t breathe, her head became light.

Then Titan was there, cradling Rydia and Fang in his right arm as his left hand slammed against the ground, throwing Pandemona off balance. Snow now rode a two-wheeled vehicle that seemed as if it had appeared from nowhere, ice trailing in its wake – and she realized it had the same wheels and coloration as the Shiva sisters. Palom reconstructed their defenses while Edea fought alongside Snow to keep Pandemona occupied. Everyone kept fighting with everything they had, so Rydia would not falter any longer.

High above her, a massive hand of black iron appeared from within the vortex – the Giant reaching beyond its barrier. But the winds did not seem to part for it willingly, slashing and swallowing the mechanical arm back into its depths. Even higher, she saw what might have been its head, a piercing light shining where its eyes could have been, and a laser of titanic proportions fired from the tornado and struck toward Oerba, searing the sky and shaking the ground upon impact. The tornado intensified, but seemed to focus inward on the Giant of Babil, striking it in the head to knock it back behind the barrier.

The laser had deafened her, ringing Rydia’s ears and drowning out all other noise. She almost collapsed just from the sheer magnitude of it, the lightheadedness clawing through her and the sheer power of the laser rattling her brain.

But one question took form in her mind, grounding her. Rydia clung to the question, letting it clear her head – was Pandemona not defending the Giant of Babil after all, but containing it?

“I’m not sure how much longer we can last!” Raines shouted in the aftermath of the Giant’s attack, when the winds died down just enough for Rydia to hear her own breathing.

But they couldn’t turn back now, she wanted to say back.

“We’ve got to force our way inside!” Fang exclaimed.

She couldn’t see how. Not only was it still protected by the tornado, but she knew the Giant to be shielded as well. “Fusoya can disable the shield,” Rydia said, and then repeated herself louder so the others could hear her. Edea dropped a barrier over them, bringing blessed silence for a moment.

“But he’s with another group!” Palom shouted back.

“Then we shall hold Pandemona’s attention so they can get inside,” said Edea.

“Don’t hold back,” said Fang.

Parts of Raines’ body seemed to crystallize as he grew wings and hurled magic at Pandemona, continuing the assault alongside Snow. Fang threw herself back into the fray, using her spear to catch Pandemona’s claws while Snow’s ice crept up its legs. Raines slammed into it from above, his own monstrous form restraining Pandemona’s, strained voice echoing with the transformation. Titan grabbed it by the tail as more ice weighed it down. The tornado weakened, the winds slowing, and Rydia focused all of her power through her eidolon.

The Giant of Babil, in all its terrifying majesty, became fully visible. A bastion of Lunarian technology, it almost reminded her of Construct 8 in its basic shape, but knew its capacity for destruction far eclipsed the automaton’s.

It moved again. Her breaths came easier but she thought her heart might stop when it lifted its arms and clenched its hands into fists, as if ready to launch an attack. She saw some of the others spread around it now, and they all focused their attack.

A glimmering shield appeared over the entirety of the Giant, and then shattered.

It paused in its attack, as if surprised by that development, but then lightning struck the ground in front of it. It flashed multiple times, and then an old, bearded man with a staff appeared – Ramuh, floating in the air, almost a speck compared to the Giant.

He raised his staff skyward just as Pandemona broke free of its icy prison. The winds picked up again, but storm clouds gathered above the Giant as more bursts of lightning hammered its metal feet. Rydia shielded her eyes, but just before she turned away she spotted several of their number rushing toward the blast site. They would have to find a way inside, but if the tornado whipped back up…

Titan slammed Pandemona down to the ground, but then vanished as Rydia summoned Asura next. Her blades flashed and conjured a barrier just in time for Pandemona to retaliate with a burst of wind expelled from its body, shielding all of the fighters from its counter. Raines and Snow renewed their attack, reinvigorated by Asura’s healing, while Palom and Edea continued their barrage. Pandemona struck Snow hard enough to knock him off of his vehicle, then pulled Palom toward it and then blasted him outward to crash into Fang. A tornado smaller than the one that encircled the Giant swept up Raines in its gales and hurled him toward Rydia, and when she knelt at his side, the larger tornado picked up again.

“I don’t know if it was enough…” Rydia said, helping Raines stand.

“It had to be,” he said. “Trust in our companions. They must have infiltrated it in time – we will continue the battle out here. I would have liked to face Dysley myself, the fal’Cie who made me into this , but I know they will stop him in my stead.”

When the other parties saw that they fought Pandemona, Rydia spotted them coming to join the battle. Her heart leapt – reinforcements were coming. She would trust in the strength of the others.


CLIVE


Clive swore he would never leave Cid behind again.

He had watched as Cid primed into Ramuh, casting down spears of lightning to gouge a hole in the Giant’s feet. Clive was among those who rushed into the opening Cid and Fusoya had created before Pandemona’s winds kicked up again, and once inside he turned to await Cid as Ramuh descended to join him. Clive held out his hands as the eikon fell away to reveal the man again just in time for the vortex to form. He caught Cid and pulled him inside, falling against the metallic floor just as the sky roared.

“Landing could’ve been softer,” Cid said, rubbing his shoulder as he stood and helped Clive up. “But overall that was a bloody good display, eh?”

Clive grunted as he rose. He was going to have plenty of bruises on the morrow. “I’ll be sure to be a better cushion next time,” he said. “Let’s go – the others have gone ahead.”

Lights pulsed through the esoteric symbols etched in the walls and floors. Mechanical monstrosities prowled the halls, clockwork automatons that reminded Clive of Fallen sentries; indeed, the Giant’s insides made him think of that ancient civilization’s architecture as well, from what little he had seen so far. If it was anything like the Fallen, he would have to prepare for anything.

“Fusoya and Cecil mentioned a control core, somewhere near its heart,” said Cid. “But that doesn’t mean we can’t start dismantling before we get there. Let’s find the weak points. Joints, power sources, that sort of thing.”

“Right,” said Clive, as they started moving. Cid kept scanning ahead for foes, and they walked mostly in silence, so Clive thought now might be the best time to speak of the things that had been on his mind since reuniting with Cid. “Just so you know… the hideaway is still safe. Mid is safe. We ran into trouble over the years, but we relocated, and it’s still home for many.”

“Warms my heart to hear it,” Cid said, and though he seemed to concentrate on their surroundings, Clive thought his focus might be elsewhere. He was going to drop the conversation, but Cid spoke again. “You mentioned the Mothercrystals are gone. What of Barnabas?”

“Slain by my hand,” Clive responded. Odin’s Dominant, the king of Waloed. “Ultima was behind it all – the monster that killed you. We learned much of his ambitions to annihilate Valisthea, and stopped him, too.”

“Well done,” said Cid, looking at Clive now with a smile. “Ultima… So that was the demon darkening Waloed’s halls.” He looked somber for a moment, and Clive thought he would ask more of those battles and all the outlandish and unbelievable things he had learned about the nature of their world, but Cid shook his head. “How’s Jill?”

Caught off guard, Clive stumbled over his words. “Er, she’s well. Gav, too. And Charon, Otto, Tarja.”

“All those years of you bearing my name, and you’re still as eloquent as the day I met you,” Cid said, chuckling. “You certainly didn’t woo her with your words.”

Clive almost sputtered. “How did you know? Did Joshua…?”

“He didn’t get a chance to tell me anything.” Cid ducked behind a metal orb that seemed to pulse with something electric, as monsters passed by. “Great Greagor’s teats, I assumed you’d have acted on those feelings sometime in those five years without me.”

Clive rubbed the back of his neck. “It was… near enough,” he admitted. He was about to suggest hurrying to find the others when he spotted a mechanical owl and drew his sword as soon as he recalled Lightning’s warning about it. The moment his steel rang, Dysley appeared, arms spread as if in welcome.

“You vermin crawl into my Giant, infecting it with the putrid touch of humanity,” the old man said with a sneer. “How eagerly you court your own deaths.”

“It’s my understanding that this isn’t your Giant at all,” said Cid, readying his own blade.

“It matters not,” Dysley replied. “A power such as this can only be wielded by the fal’Cie, as your hands are too weak and foolhardy to make use of it. In your endless fear and hatred, humanity would fail to see its true potential.”

Clive narrowed his eyes. “You have us at your mercy, don’t you? Why don’t you attack and show us that power you boast?” He’d killed a god before, he didn’t fear Dysley. “Or is it that you cannot lift a hand against us as you are now?”

“Ah, splendid observation, Clive,” said Cid. “I’d wager he’s a mere illusion like last time. His real body’s up in that core, trying to maintain his control over this Giant.”

The pure revulsion that Dysley regarded them with was jarring in comparison to the unfeeling, detached expression Clive used to see on Ultima. “It matters not. Once this construct falls fully under my control, I will wipe you all from the face of this new world. Try not to lose your own mind before then, a second time.” That last part he said directly at Clive. “I assume your human allies would not be able to withstand the force of your uncontrolled conflagration while trapped in here.”

Clive’s eyes widened and his grip on his sword slackened. “Was it you?” he asked. “You took control of my mind?” But if it was Dysley, then that meant he was the one who possessed all of the eikons as well. Something didn’t add up. Regardless, Dysley knew of his battle with the High Seraph and this world’s Ifrit, which meant he had been in this world longer than any of them expected. “No… I remember the voice that pierced my head. It was not you.”

“Perhaps not,” Dysley responded, waving his staff almost lazily. “I have no need of human pawns.”

Clive shook his head again, sure that Dysley was not the one. “No, you’ve just been spying on us for some time, haven’t you?”

Dysley tapped his staff against the ground and his owl familiar flew away. “I await your arrival in the core,” he said, before vanishing.

“It’s hard to say how long he has been watching us,” Clive said to Cid, sheathing his sword. “But it means he has the upper hand. Let’s catch up to the others.”

“You go,” said Cid, heading in another direction. “I’ll clean up around here – cover our escape, which is sure to be a race against time as it collapses around us.”

Clive nodded. “Right. Be safe.”


LIGHTNING


Fusoya led the way to the control core after guiding them through a series of lifts and stairs. The Giant rumbled all around them, sending monsters to oust Lightning and the others like antibodies with viruses. Clive caught up with them, explaining that Cid was covering their escape, and he and Joshua fell into step with each other as if they had always fought at each other’s sides. She would have much preferred having her own sister at her side rather than Nabaat, but the former PSICOM agent insisted on coming to confront Dysley. Lightning half expected her to turn around and serve him.

Cecil made up the last member of their party that had infiltrated the Giant. “Perhaps we will encounter the CPU at the core again,” he said. “Though what I anticipate most is a trap.”

“Dysley will no doubt be ready for us,” said Joshua. “We must be prepared for anything.”

“He doesn’t think we are worth setting a trap for,” Lightning replied. “Back in our world, his death was part of his plan for us to destroy Cocoon. So he never feared us, even when we defeated him.”

“His arrogance will be his undoing,” said Fusoya. “We can use that against him.”

A final lift carried them to a wide open chamber at the heart of the Giant of Babil – the control core. Here, pipes and circuits led to other parts of the Giant, like veins and arteries, with a central shaft in the middle of the room that descended elsewhere. Dysley stood on the opposite side of the room, the long nails of his left hand stretched over what Lightning assumed to be a control node while his other hand still bore his staff.

“So you have come willingly to your deaths,” Dysley said, opening his eyes. “And with so few of your allies besides. Typical human foolishness.”

“It only took six of us to kill you last time,” Lightning said, readying her blade. “And we’ll do it again.”

Dysley peered at her with a raised eyebrow. “Is that so? Well, I suppose I should be glad of one thing Pandemona has accomplished – it kept you all away long enough for me to wrest control of this Giant.”

A mechanical whirring sound echoed from elsewhere in the Giant, shaking the entirety of the structure, and they all looked around. “Damn it all, were we too late?” Clive asked.

Joshua frowned. “Did you need to steal control of this Giant away from another?”

Dysley scoffed. “No. But that wretched Pandemona tried to snatch it from me.”

“I knew you would struggle,” said Fusoya, stroking his beard. “This Giant was built by Lunarians and meant to be piloted by us. I am impressed you managed to work out the controls.”

Cecil’s jaw slackened. “So Pandemona truly was trying to restrain the Giant!”

Dysley’s hand curled into a fist and he wore a triumphant grin. “Now that I have full control, Pandemona is no longer a concern. With this, I will wipe humanity from the face of this world, and with your deaths open Etro’s Gate.”

“You truly hate humanity so?” Fusoya asked, his brows knit in something like concern. “If you truly believe yourself so advanced in comparison, would you not nurture them? Help them grow?”

“We fal’Cie spent centuries raising them for the same purpose as sheep to a slaughterhouse,” Dysley replied. “They are tools to be used and discarded, stepping stones for us to fulfill our purpose of reuniting with our Maker in the Unseen Realm.”

Lightning couldn’t help but smile. “You’ll find it empty. I find you pitiful, Barthandelus,” she said. “Even in this world, free from your Focus, all you want to do is fulfill what your god told you to do. I bet it’s because you know you’d be aimless otherwise.”

He glared hatefully at her. “You know nothing,” he said. “Once I reach the Unseen Realm, I will be made a new god of this world, replacing those weaklings you call your crystal pillars.” Dysley paused for a moment as if realizing what she had said. “What do you mean, I would find the Unseen Realm empty?”

“I was Etro’s chosen,” Lightning declared. “And Bhunivelze Himself was slain by my hand. And then in this world, all of us killed Him a second time.”

Dysley’s eyes widened. “What!?” He raised his staff, magic crackling around him. “You lie!”

Lightning and the others prepared themselves to fight, but as soon as they moved to attack, an invisible weight fell over them all. Translucent blue orbs covered their bodies, bringing them to their knees – except for Nabaat, who walked ahead calmly with her baton softly patting her palm.

“Nabaat!” Cecil exclaimed, straining against the force pressing down on them. “What have you done?”

“PSICOM Standard Issue Grav-Mines,” Nabaat replied, glancing back at her with a smirk. Lightning knew them well. “Your Eminence, I have brought this riffraff to you on a silver platter.” She adjusted her glasses and fixed her eyes on Clive and Joshua. “And you, Dominants – if either of you think of priming, the explosives rigged to Joshua’s Grav-Mine will activate and kill him immediately.”

Clive looked toward Joshua with wide eyes, but then he glared back at Jihl. “But why?”

“I saw this coming but gave you the benefit of the doubt, you snake,” Lightning said through grit teeth. This was her fault for letting Nabaat come along to face her old superior. Just when she was starting to think Nabaat might have seen the error of her ways… “You haven’t changed at all, have you?”

“I seek to serve you once again, Your Eminence,” Nabaat said to Dysley as she approached. “Please, allow me to stand at your side.”

He simply watched her approach as one would an insect. “You… Yes, I remember you. A tool once used may once again serve a purpose. No, you presume too much if you think you could stand at my side. You will remain at my feet.”

Nabaat stood perfectly still. She closed her eyes once, and then opened them again before speaking. “Yes, Your Eminence. You honor me.”

Dysley turned back to Lightning and the others, and she tensed – they would not be able to defend themselves now, and he knew it. “Well, I suppose they will be easier to dispose of now,” he said, raising his staff up high again. “To think one would claim to have defeated Almighty Bhunivelze Himself… absurd.”

Just as he focused on casting his spell, his mechanical owl swooped by overhead at the same time as Nabaat struck Dysley’s back with something in her hand. Purple and black energy swirled around him and he grunted in pain as it coalesced into a solid orb. Nabaat leapt away from him, hurling another contraption at his feet. The orb surrounding Dysley shrunk, painfully constraining him.

“A Sanctum guard Containment Field,” Nabaat said, clicking a switch in her hand. The weight holding down Lightning and the others lifted, giving them freedom of movement again. “And the same explosives I lied about being placed upon Joshua. I dearly hope, Your Eminence , that this suffices for my resignation.”

Just as Dysley broke free of the Containment Field, a localized explosion that Lightning knew from experience was designed to be safe for use in civilian zones detonated at Dysley’s feet. He roared just as Menrva screeched, but right when Lightning and Cecil threw themselves at Dysley to take advantage of Nabaat’s opening, a Torsion opened up behind him. Darkness – stifling and heavier than the Grav-Mines – flooded out from the Torsion, forcing Nabaat to step back in alarm. Lightning and Cecil attempted to shield the party but the darkness that swept over them made her chest tighten in a dread that she hadn’t felt for a long time.

It was pure malice.

A humanoid being in an all-consuming black cloak appeared from the Torsion as if like a wraith wreathed in smog. Most shockingly of all, he had blue skin stretched over his gaunt face and bald head, spreading out his arms to make his cloak seem like demonic wings. He closed in on Dysley, assaulting him with black magic.

“Zemus!” Fusoya cried, identifying the new arrival. “He has shown himself!”

“No!” Dysley growled, his voice hoarse from the attacks Nabaat had inflicted on him. “The Giant is mine !”

“Begone from here, humans,” Zemus said, his voice deep and echoing. “You have shown what little worth you have by distracting this interloper. With my treasure, the proof of Lunarian superiority, I shall eliminate you all.”

“He’s casting something!” Cecil warned, light shining at the end of his blade. Lightning prepared to strike alongside him, but she spotted Clive and Joshua, who seemed frozen.

“I know this voice,” Joshua said, eyes wide. “He spoke to me before!”

Clive’s grip tightened on his blade. “It was him!” he said. “Zemus was the one who tried to possess us. The one controlling the eikons!”

Lightning barely had time to digest Clive’s words. Zemus raised his arms higher and a dark orb that almost resembled a Torsion materialized in the center of the chamber, above the control nodes. A piece of magicite fell from the Torsion that Zemus had used to enter. Before Lightning could do anything other than snatch up the magicite, the black hole swallowed them all.


JOSHUA


Joshua found himself in Oerba. The Giant was gone.

Silence had fallen over the village with the Giant of Babil vanished and Pandemona sealed inside of its magicite. No one had been able to determine what Zemus had done or how, but in expelling them from the Giant he had taken it for himself. The Lunarian had summoned a Torsion – or something like it – that swallowed them all, even Dysley, like he had severed the space between planes. As soon as it spit them out near Oerba, Dysley had escaped.

They reunited with the others and explained all that had happened.

Golbez took the news the worst.

“When we battled Altima and Ifrit, he tried to take control of Clive and I,” Joshua told them. The voice had spoken of Clive and Joshua as if they were like the other eikons. “I am certain the voice is the same.”

“At last… we know it is Zemus who is behind the possession of the eidolons,” Golbez said, his back to Joshua and the others. He stared off into the direction the Giant once stood, but now it was an empty white void of crystal dust. “But the Giant of Babil is lost.”

Carbuncle jumped up on Terra’s shoulder, his tails quivering. “But I do not understand how he could have the power to enslave those from the World of Illusions! They should all be much stronger than the ones you know back home – the ones in this world are the original entities, those from which all other versions spring forth.”

Barbariccia crossed her arms, scowling. “Mind control is how Zemus operates.”

Golbez’s shoulders fell. “And it is not the first time the eidolons have been enslaved in our world. Perhaps he learned something from the Maenads?”

“But now we know it’s him,” said the Onion Knight, fist clenched. “That is one mystery solved, right? And we have achieved Pandemona’s magicite. He only has a few left to throw at us.”

“Four left, by my count,” said Sazh, holding up his fingers. “Odin, Bahamut, Shiva, and the Brothers. Er, well, five – if you count both Brothers.”

“If Zemus is really as horrible as you say, I worry for the remaining espers,” said Terra, one hand brushing through Carbuncle’s fur. “To live with such hatred clouding their minds…”

The Onion Knight gave her a soft smile. “Up until now, we’ve mostly been fighting to free them because our own lives have been in danger. They were keeping us from dying in this world, after all. As far as I’m concerned, only one thing has changed. We’ll still fight to save them, but it’s not just for our sake. It’s for theirs, too.”

Sazh grinned and clenched his fist. “That’s surprisingly motivational of you! I’m liking it!”

“Perhaps Luneth is rubbing off on our leader,” said Joshua, chuckling into his fist, to which the Onion Knight scratched his cheek. “At least his sense of optimism.”

Carbuncle pounced off of Terra’s shoulder and his long ears pressed back as he looked at the Onion Knight. Joshua could have even sworn his tails wagged. “I appreciate that sentiment. Thank you.”

“Well, we’ve discovered five new allies,” the Onion Knight continued, shrugging. “I think that’s plenty to be optimistic about.”

“Do you speak of the Magus Sisters?” Barbariccia asked. She shook her head, her long hair waving as if brushed by a light breeze. “They wished to travel this world for themselves and see it as we do. Besides, I am only here for Master Golbez.”

“Well, we have another techno-wizard on our side in Cid, so that’s something to be glad for,” Sazh said, shrugging. He glanced toward Nabaat, who stood somewhat behind them, her arms folded as she stared at the ground as if lost in thought. The hesitation was writ plain on Sazh’s face. “As for you… I heard what you did up there in that Giant. Risky move, but it paid off.”

Nabaat looked up at him, her gaze calculating something that Joshua could not discern. “It helped that the outrage of my betrayal was genuine,” she said. “Which factored into my plans, of course.”

“I’m not saying I trust you yet, but you did good,” Sazh said over his shoulder at her as he walked off.

That was as promising of a reconciliation as any of them could have hoped. From what Joshua knew of Nabaat, she still had a long way to go – and from the expression on her face, he could tell she knew it, too.

Terra clasped her hands together, staring up into the clear sky. “Just four espers remaining… We will save them. I know we can, together.”


Character Abilities

Seymour

ULT: Mortiphasm Ultima

Effect: When accompanying party members use the same element, allows Ultima follow up

Seymour's ULT comes from his final boss battle, Seymour Omnis, which has a mechanic where he casts Ultima as long as the Mortiphasms' elements align with each other. In this, it is reflected by his allies - if they both wield the same element (any element), he will gain yet another follow-up ability: Ultima, which casts every turn after he uses his ULT from there on out.


Paine

ULT:  Full Throttle Assoil

Effect: Rainbow damage against enemies with Paine’s debuffs

Paine's ULT comes from her ultimate dressphere, Full Throttle - which is already represented in her other abilities. Assoil is one of its strongest abilities. After use, she will always deal rainbow damage provided her enemies are suffering at least one of her debuffs.


Galenth Dysley (Staff) Non-elemental magic damage, buffs, debuffs, Dispel, Esuna, follow-ups, Curse

15: Mystic Aura

35: Cursega

EX: Thanatosian Laughter

LD: Destrudo

FR: Doctrine of Subordination (with Seymour)

BT: Apoptosis

ULT: Dies Irae (Effect: Transformation during Burst phase, which is extended by 3 turns)

Burst theme: “Fighting Fate,” the boss theme against Barthandelus

All of Dysley's abilities come from his various boss fights throughout the game. He is primarily a stat buffer and debuffer and non-elemental magic damage dealer who inflicts the unique "Curse" status - which enables him to attack automatically on the enemy's turn, delaying them after they take their turn. This stacks with other forms of delay. He also has a buff Dispel and debuff cleanse, and for a couple of his abilities he takes his Barthandelus form to unleash his attack.

After using his ULT, he will retain his transformation through his Burst phase, and also extend it by 3 turns - benefiting him as long as he uses his ULT before his Burst. So you can imagine he has a really hefty Burst phase. This ability actually comes from the first battle with Orphan after Barthandelus merges with him.

Notes:

Next character: A wanderer through the dark.

Chapter 59: Lost Chapter: The Vagrant's Mission

Notes:

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Dysley with Seymour: Both are religious and government leaders who manipulate their people and the player party through lies, with the full intention of wiping out humanity.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: The Vagrant's Mission


Ashley Riot ( Vagrant Story )

Voiced by: Tomokazu Seki

A top-tier Riskbreaker, agents of the Valendia Knights of the Peace who are responsible for taking down criminal organizations and other threats to the stability of society. Used to working alone and in secret, Ashley is assigned to infiltrate the cursed city of Leá Monde and investigate the Müllenkamp cult that has taken residence there. A dutiful man with a questionable past, Ashley seeks answers – both personal and professional – within the city as it awakens his latent powers over the Dark. He once had a wife and son.

Ashley Riot


SHELKE


Shelke did not expect to find such a promising lead on Zemus’s whereabouts so soon.

They had detected a dark power nearby Balamb Garden – ruins that descended deep into the earth. Though Fusoya and Golbez had thought it unlikely that Zemus made such a decrepit place his lair, they still thought it might be worth investigating. The darkness here felt deep, almost alien, so they reasoned it meant Zemus had at least passed through.

Without an inkling to the locations of the other summoned beasts, Shelke figured tracking Zemus himself might give them the best idea of his next move. As this was meant to be just a scouting mission, Shelke came with the aid of Shadow to help with reconnaissance, Alma to deal with any dark forces they might encounter, and General Leo and Basch to defend them if things went wrong.

The entrance to the ruin was quite literally a hole in the ground. A shadowed doorway that descended into the dark.

“What an odd place for a wine cellar,” Alma said, lingering in the doorway after they went through.

Basch made the first move to go deeper inside, lighting a lantern. “Mayhaps Zemus has an eye for good vintage.” Alma giggled at his answer, perhaps with nerves, but Shadow glared – his wordless way of telling them to be silent – and she stifled it. Basch held up the lantern along the rows and rows of wine racks and casks, many lined with dust and cobwebs. “Hm. I do recognize this bottle – it is a Valens. A rarity, to be sure.”

“That was one of my father’s favorites,” Alma said, peeking over his shoulder. “Could this place be from Ivalice?”

“If so, then there is no connection to Zemus,” said Leo. “But perhaps we should investigate deeper before we can say for sure.”

As they advanced further through the ruin, a coldness that had little to do with the temperature crept up Shelke’s spine. It was not often that shadows made her leery; she was the Transparent, she hid among them. She was hesitant to admit it, but something about this place felt evil to her, like it had soaked into the very foundations of the cellar. Even Basch’s lantern did little to stifle the feeling.

The cramped hall ended with a crumbling set of stone steps that ascended again. Shelke hid her relief as they climbed it and emerged into a ruin that straddled what appeared to be the edge of a forest, but Shelke could not see the sky. Looking up, she saw neither darkness nor a thick canopy of trees – it was akin to an endless void. Perhaps they were still underground?

“What is this?” Shadow asked. Even he seemed somewhat shaken.

“It feels almost as if we have wandered into another world,” said Leo. He stood perfectly still, except for his hand lingering near the hilt of his sword. “I don’t like the feel of this place.”

Basch looked down the only trail forward, which led deeper into the forest. He stifled the lantern since they had no need of it here. “I am reminded of the Feywood,” he said. “It, too, had an otherworldly quality to it.”

Tiny motes of light drifted through the air and Shelke found her eyes drawn to them. “These lights seem to be leading somewhere,” she said. “Maybe we should follow?”

“I wonder if they are guides to lead us out of the darkness,” said Alma, fingers drawn up to her mouth.

“You would do well to go in the opposite direction,” a voice said from behind them. Shelke and the others turned to the speaker immediately; she and Basch even drew their blades. “The snowflies always lead to places steeped in the Dark.”

The man had also bared steel, scrutinizing them with narrow eyes and a wary posture. He wore armor on his arms and feet, but a shirt that bared his shoulders. Something about the way he spoke of darkness put Shelke on edge.

“Who are you?” Shelke asked. “And what is this place?”

“This is no place for children,” the man said, ignoring her question. He looked toward Shadow, Leo, and Basch. “What dark deeds do you intend?”

“There has been a misunderstanding,” said Leo. “We come to this place as allies to each other, here to investigate an evil presence we have previously encountered.”

“Despite how I look, I’m not a child,” Shelke said, scowling.

“I, too, can handle myself,” said Alma. “Please – tell us what you can of this place. It is plain to me that you are familiar with this forest and this ruin.”

The stranger winced and held a hand to his temple, loosening his grip on his sword. To Shelke’s surprise, Alma did the same.

Shadow was at her side first. “She’s in pain. What did he do?”

Alma stumbled but waved him off. “I’m… I’m okay,” she said, rubbing her face with her gloves. “Riot… Ashley Riot. That’s your name, isn’t it?” she asked the man. “I believe I have just gazed through a window into your memories.”

The man, Ashley, furrowed his brow at her. “Indeed you have. The Dark of this place has already tainted you, if we have just matched the rhythm of our souls. I will not repeat myself again – leave this place.”

“Is there aught you can tell us of this darkness?” Basch asked. He sheathed his sword. “If you have not heard of a sorcerer named Zemus, then we will leave you in peace.”

Ashley shook his head. “I speak not of common darkness. It is the Dark that suffuses Leá Monde, this ruin upon which you tread. The dead walk among us. Demons dance.”

“We’ve faced worse,” said Shadow, crossing his arms.

Ashley glanced at Alma again. “I know. You have seen wondrous, terrible, and baffling things.”

Alma stepped closer to him and rather than raising his sword defensively, he lowered it. “Riskbreaker,” she said. “That is what you are. A… Valendia Knight of the Peace? One who is searching for something. Perhaps we can help, speaking as a fellow Ivalician – though perhaps a different Ivalice than you know.”

“So you saw information concerning the VKP,” he said. He turned away from her, revealing his bare back. “In normal cases, I would have to cut you down where you stand.”

“To threaten an unarmed maid is no knightly behavior,” said Leo.

Shelke frowned. “Doesn’t seem like any kind of knight I’d expect. Sounds like he’s more of a government agent keeping sensitive info secret.”

“You remind me of an Inquisitor,” Ashley said to Shelke. “They recruit young, but I suspect not as young as you.”

She shook her head and scoffed. “I told you, I’m older than I look.”

Ashley walked past them all and strode toward the trail that led deeper into the forest. “A demon I glimpsed in your memories makes its nest further in the Snowfly Forest,” he said. “Riskbreakers work alone… yet I would know more of the things you have seen. Leá Monde was supposed to have been destroyed, yet here we are – I suspect you are connected.”

“We will tell you what we know,” said Basch, as Ashley walked into the haze.

“Stay close,” he said. “We follow the snowflies. Wander at your peril.”


ASHLEY


He knew not what to make of things when he had awoken in Leá Monde, the cursed city that should have been buried. But here he was, his Blood Sin tattoo gone and all his control over the Dark with it. Ashley thought, briefly, that it may have all been a dream.

He did not understand the things he saw in Alma’s mind. The demon that a girl like her had fought and defeated, the horrors she faced with the bravery of any in the Dangerous Criminal Task Force – all were foreign to him, even after what he had seen in Leá Monde. Ashley also did not know what to think of the girl who claimed to be older than she appeared, with eyes that had seen such pain; who despite that made him think of Callo Merlose, his one-time partner. Death followed the men they traveled with, and part of why Ashley consented to them following him was so he could try to make sense of it all.

The Ancient Kildean incantations carved on the walls back in the wine cellar seemed as if they had faded. Many of the snowflies seemed to have disappeared in turn, which only meant less of the Dark. Leá Monde was supposed to be a wellspring of it, yet it appeared to have run dry. It was only when Alma and the others began to tell him of this new world that things began to piece together in his mind, but it also raised many more questions.

“If Altima is truly here, then either the Cloud of Darkness bored of the chase or Altima managed to shake her,” Basch said. “If Zemus was ever present, he is sure to be long gone now.”

“Sir Riot, can you tell us any more of this Dark power?” Leo asked.

“Those who become tainted by it are taken from the natural cycle of life itself,” Ashley said, glancing at Alma. He pitied her. “Undying, never allowed into the afterlife. Just being here tends to awaken the power in any who tread upon this ground, so it may be too late for all of you. You gain strange abilities – spellwork, psychic powers, or summoning, perhaps.”

“I was able to wield magicks long before coming here,” said Alma, keeping her head high. “My faith will shield me from the worst of this taint, I believe. Besides, in this world, we were protected from death anyway until Zemus corrupted the espers.”

“Your faith…” Ashley said, trailing off. Sydney Losstarot had once told him that Ashley had ‘child-like faith’ himself. Perhaps that was why their souls shared a rhythm.

“This place is only a copy of the dead city you know,” Shadow said. “We may all be shielded from the worst of it.”

The trail led them to a clearing. It was empty now, but this was where Ashley had previously seen the being that they called the High Seraph – a demon, despite her appellation.

“Did we miss her?” Shelke asked, looking around.

“You are too late!” A voice, haughty and eldritch, rang out through the clearing. Darkness swirled in front of them and a beam of light struck through it, angelic wings unfurling to reveal the demon Ashley had spied from a distance. Up close, she was both beautiful and frightening. “‘Tis both a fearsome and ancient power sprung forth from this wellspring. The Dark is mine, for Lucavi are born from it.”

“To see her here, in the flesh…” said Alma, holding her crook. She did not seem like to back down. “‘Twas in a necrohol akin to this one that she awakened in our world, so it is only appropriate for her to make this her lair.”

Altima looked upon her and smiled. “Ah, the Host of Virgo, flesh of my flesh.” She said it almost like an endearment, with hunger in her eyes. “‘Tis I, High Seraph victorious, gorged upon the Dark to ensure the birth of my fellow Lucavi upon mortal ground once again. Now I take my leave of you, for there is no worth in expending this power upon feeble lives.”

With one final sneer at them all, she vanished.

“Leá Monde has suffered a drought of the Dark since long before she arrived,” Ashley said. “The Seraph enjoyed no feast, but the meager remnants of the Dark lingering in shadows. The city at its most vile was something to be feared, but now it needs no guardian to contain its powers.”

Shelke frowned. “If I’m following correctly… the Dark is not as strong here as it was in your world, so either it is fading because it was a copy to begin with, or someone else was already here to siphon it?”

“If the latter, that is still a concern,” said Leo, folding his arms. “I wonder… could this be part of how Zemus gained such power as to enslave even the espers of the World of Illusions?”

Ashley knew nothing of this Zemus, but the name was enough to make them all look grim. “If ‘tis indeed the Dark that is the source of your troubles, allow me to join you. Though mine own power over the Dark has waned, my duty is to stabilize it in places where it infects reality deepest.”

Shadow, who had already turned to depart, looked over his shoulder at Ashley. “You said earlier that Riskbreakers work alone.”

Ashley’s grip tightened on the hilt of his sword before he sheathed it. “I am a Riskbreaker no longer. These days, I am naught but a vagrant.”

Alma smiled at him. “Then we shall be happy to have you among us. Come, let us leave this place behind us. We have much to tell the others – not all of it good, but news of a new ally is always welcome.”


Character Abilities

Shuyin

ULT: Nemo Ante Mortem Beatus

Effect: HP Poison effect doubled, Blindness duration extend

Shuyin was "released" before I started doing Ultimates, so here's his. This is another ability used by Vegnagun in the final battles, one of its strongest. Shuyin's HP Poison status potency is doubled (going from 1% to 2% damage per turn, but if it is upped from that base percentage from other means that goes into effect too) and Blind lasts longer on enemies.


Shantotto

ULT: Colossal Shantotto

Effect: No Max BRV Cap

For Shantotto's ULT, she briefly goes into her gigantic form! After use, she just completely ignores the Max BRV cap. She's got to dump all that BRV sometime... right?


Ashley Riot (Swords) Non-elemental melee damage, critical damage, deals more critical hits with each hit (RISK status overhead), debuffs, BRV Poison

15: Rending Gale

35: Riskbreak

EX: Phantom Pain

LD: Advent Sign -> Enables Papillon Reel BRV attack replacement, enables Sanctus Flare HP attack replacement

FR: Open Wound (with Clive)

BT: Retribution

ULT: The Vagrant (Effect: Enemy stats decrease with every ability used)

Burst theme: “A Man Consumed,” battle theme for the second battle against Guildenstern, the final battle

Alternate Skin: His appearance as the Vagrant at the end of the story

Ashley's abilities all come from his Break Arts, which are this game's version of Limit Breaks/weapon abilities. Though he canonically uses magic I decided to focus on his physical attacks for his kit. Rending Gale is a sword ability, Riskbreak comes from his staves, Phantom Pain is actually a Chain Ability unrelated to the currently equipped weapon, Advent Sign is a greatsword ability, Retribution is a fist ability, and finally his ULT is an original.

Similar to how he plays in his own game, he is focused on building up his damage as he goes and dealing critical hits, even at the cost of his own HP. After he uses his EX, it activates his "RISK" overhead, which enables him to deal more critical hits with each hit as he accumulates Phantom points for additional HP damage with an HP cost. His LD turns his standard BRV attack into the top sword Break Art, Papillon Reel, and his standard HP attack into the top crossbow Break Art Sanctus Flare. The player can choose to release all RISK and stop using criticals if the cost becomes too much by using his Riskbreak ability. He can also deal BRV Poison and generally lower enemy stats. After using his ULT, enemy stats decrease with every ability used.

Notes:

Justification for Ashley (and Vagrant Story): There is some debate about Vagrant Story's canonical placement in Ivalice and the Ivalice Alliance in general (and whether or not it is a FF spinoff or an unrelated Square title), but I think the references are more than just that. And I have mentioned before that I plan to include games that are "loosely related" to FF anyway, as long as they are not the start of their own separate series. So if Kingdom Hearts was only 1 game, then I might have included someone like Sora, or FF Legends might have gotten representation if it didn't branch off into the SaGa series, and the same for FF Adventure that turned into the World of Mana series and only had the FF name for marketing purposes, really. Even Bravely Default might have gotten in if it was only one game, but then we got Bravely Second and then Bravely Default 2, so these are all "disqualified."

Not Vagrant Story, though - so that's why we have Ashley. Though I won't include many characters from this game. Ashley is the main character.

Next character hint: This character expected you to be more handsome, truthfully, and was a little disappointed when they finally saw you.

Chapter 60: Lost Chapter: The Enchanter's Eye

Notes:

Unfortunately I had to use the Pictlogica artwork of this character because there's no other official artwork that portrays her as anything resembling her sprite, sadly. This character might be a questionable inclusion for some but I have my reasons, which I outline in my end of chapter notes.

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Ashley with Clive: Both are highly trained and deadly warriors with a questionable past and memories where they believe they killed their close family. Both are chosen to be the recipients of a great and unusual power.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: The Enchanter’s Eye


Matoya ( Final Fantasy )

Voiced by: Hisako Kyoda

A blind old witch who lives in a cave with her enchanted broom familiars. She uses a crystal eye to see, which was stolen by the dark elf Astos until it was recovered by the Warriors of Light. Occasionally foul-tempered, she is nonetheless a woman of her word, and offers her aid when she is able.

Matoya Pictlogica


WARRIOR OF LIGHT


The rosy gold of dawn made way for bright blue skies as they strode together through the woods, apple trees and oaks lining their path. Princess Sarah strung her fingers along her lute, her music rolling through the hills. For the Warrior of Light, enjoying a relaxing moment like this was a rare treat.

Even if the princess bore no memory of him. She never would, since the time they met would never come to be.

He didn’t mind, truly. It meant far more to him that their world was safe, its light returned. This morning, she had asked for him to accompany her as she ventured outside of Balamb Garden and he accepted without a second thought, but for the purposes of safety he requested Y’shtola, Benjamin, Astos, and Torte to come along as well.

Though for reasons he could not divine, the others trailed behind the Warrior of Light and the princess. It didn’t matter, he supposed – but together, they all made for a fine retinue for Sarah.

“Is the music to your liking, sir knight?” she asked him during a lull in her song. For most of their walk, she had not spoken until now.

“It’s beautiful,” he said, smiling at her. When she said nothing else, he began to wonder. “Did you have a purpose in coming out this way?”

“Are you not enjoying our leisurely walk?” She didn’t look up at him when she asked her question.

Afraid he had offended her, he fumbled over his next words. “Ah… Of course I am, my lady. I just supposed… you had a reason for departing the Garden.”

She looked up at him with a smile. “Is wanting to get to know a knight of Cornelia not reason enough? Aside from Garland, there are no others among our present company from our world. I thought it would do you some good to get away from your other duties for a time.”

“You would… get to know me?” he asked, eyes wandering over the grassy hills, rays of sunlight turning them gold. “What is it you’d like to know?”

Sarah strummed her lute again. “What brings you joy, what you do beyond your duties to all of us here… I would know the man behind the sword and beneath the armor.”

“Beyond my duties…” he said, mulling over her words. It was not something he had ever given much thought to, in truth. He was driven only to uphold the light of peace, fighting to keep this world and his allies safe. “The memories of all that we have accomplished give me joy – as does watching everyone forge friendships and bonds both as we face our battles together and in moments of downtime at Garden.”

Though the thought brought a smile to his face, it did not seem to be the answer Sarah had hoped for, judging by her downcast eyes. “I see,” she said. “All such noble and selfless joys. Then I ask this, perhaps: what of your childhood?”

That question, above all, startled the Warrior of Light. “My childhood? Well…” He wasn’t sure how to explain the circumstances of his creation – his utter lack of a childhood.

Behind them, a higher-pitched voice interjected in their conversation before he could answer. “Forgive me for interrupting, but we saw a stranger over yonder,” said Torte, his nose twitching. “We thought it best to let the both of you know at once. Benjamin ran off toward them, you see…”

“Then we had better follow before he finds trouble,” said Sarah, glancing at the Warrior of Light and nodding. “It seems our walk has become more eventful than anticipated.”

The Warrior led the way into the direction that Torte had indicated, meeting up with Y’shtola and Astos under the shade of a massive oak. There, he found them watching with expressions he could only call dumbfounded – not a common occurrence on either of their faces. Further down the hill, at the base of the tree, he spotted Benjamin getting a tongue lashing from an irate old woman in a red robe and matching pointed hat.

“To think today’s youths would let a defenseless old woman trip and fall!” she croaked at him. “I am blind, you know! The polite thing to do is offer the elderly your arm to lean on.”

Benjamin held up both hands in a gesture of surrender. “I know, I’m sorry! I didn’t realize you were blind, and I barely saw the tree roots myself!”

“You’re lucky I didn’t break my hip!”

“We didn’t even know you were here until just a few seconds ago!”

“Won’t someone help the poor boy?” Torte asked, as they all stood and watched.

The Warrior of Light recognized her with a start. “Matoya, could that be you?”

“Eh?” The witch Matoya perked up, angling an ear toward the Warrior of Light. “Methinks I know that voice.”

“Matoya, you say?” said Y’shtola, eyes wide. “Twelve forfend… I should have known from her nettlesome harping.”

The Warrior of Light joined Matoya and Benjamin at the tree’s roots, offering the witch his arm. Of all the people to be summoned to this world, he would not have expected to see her. “Matoya, have you lost your crystal eye?”

Her face twisted, but she accepted his arm. “You know my name, eh? I don’t know your voice after all. Who are you?” she asked bluntly.

“A knight of Cornelia here to offer you aid,” the Warrior of Light replied, to which Benjamin let out a sigh of relief.

“Hmph! Very well,” she said. “I suspect that dastardly dark elf Astos stole my crystal eye again. Without it, I cannot see, you know.”

Benjamin scratched his head and pointed at Astos. “Astos? But he’s – ”

“Allow us to help you find it again,” Astos said, gliding down to Matoya’s other side. “Do you know where it was last?”

“I was in my cave, brewing a potion with the help of my familiars,” she said, as the Warrior of Light and Astos led her along. “Then lo and behold, I find myself here! Was I kidnapped by goblins? Or is it the fault of that pretender king Astos as well?”

“Is Astos commonly the cause of your troubles, madam?” Torte questioned, tottering along in her wake.

“He stole my eye last time with the intent of conquering the elves of Elfheim,” she informed him. Even through the Warrior of Light’s gauntlet, he felt her grip with surprising strength.

Benjamin frowned at Astos’s back. “To think he would be so vile!”

“I’ve heard tales of the witch to the north of Cornelia,” said Sarah. “You are adored by the smallfolk for your potions and remedies. I am honored to finally meet you, Master Matoya. I am Princess Sarah.”

“I’ll get a good look at you when I get my eye back!” said Matoya.

“An irascible old witch who lives in a cave with familiars…” said Y’shtola, tapping her cheek. “How uncanny. We have seen similarities between worlds on numerous occasions, but I studied under a nearly identical witch of the same name in my adolescence. She had always been a fierce, bull-headed taskmaster. Heavens forbid we ever have the misfortune of meeting them both in the same room together.”

Matoya stopped and huffed. “Who’s that with the yowling back there, calling me old ?”

“Of all the things to take offense to in that statement,” said Benjamin. “Maybe Matoya just needs some coffee?”

“I suppose I should take the liberty of explaining what has happened,” said Astos. “You have been summoned by the will of the crystal to a different world to fight for its safety, along with many other warriors from many different worlds.”

“So I have been kidnapped! It’s just one of the crystals instead of Astos, eh?”

The Warrior of Light couldn’t help but smile. “Perhaps it would do you some good to be out of your cave for a while. Once we find your eye, we can bring you to where we live, and we can ensure you are furnished with all of your comforts.”

Matoya let out a low hum. “Hmm… I suppose. The two of you on each side of me do sound like nice young men, after all.”

“I am pleased that you think so, Master Matoya,” said Astos.

“You can truly see through this crystal?” Sarah asked. “What a wondrous item – though I can only ponder how this Astos would topple our neighbors with it. And why he might choose to.”

Astos shared a glance with her. “We can only assume that version of Astos went down a much different path, and became twisted and monstrous in his loneliness and rage.”

“It’s a powerful relic,” Matoya explained to Sarah. “One that I was lucky to obtain. Though my own eyes have failed me in my age, the crystal allows me to scry even the world beyond my cave. Fallen into the wrong hands, it could lead to disaster.”

“My mentor possessed a relic she referred to as her crystal eye as well,” said Y’shtola. “Though she was quite capable of seeing with her own eyes – and I assure you, that woman missed nothing – she was able to track movements of aether with it.”

“Aha!” Torte exclaimed, scurrying past their feet and through the taller grass. “I just spotted a glint of light over here! I think this is the crystal orb we are looking for.”

“Oh, splendid!” said Matoya. “You must have the keen eyes of a hawk, young man.”

Torte came back with the faintly glowing blue orb held over his head, which pressed down on his ears. “Oh, no, madam – please refrain from mentioning hawks around me!”

The Warrior of Light took the crystal orb from Torte and handed it back to Matoya, pleased that they had managed to find it without too much fuss. She seemed in a much better mood from the moment it came back into her possession, closing her gray eyes as she peered through the crystal. Though he had never known the witch to leave her cave, and he was unsure of how she would do in battle, another champion from his world was an unexpected joy. Though she, too, would never remember him, he hoped it would bring happiness to Sarah.

“Now I feel I must be honest about my identity,” said Astos. He bowed deeply to Matoya. “Please forgive me, I had not meant to obscure anything, but I wished not to alarm you. My name is Astos, the dark elf – self-styled king once upon a time. Though I am not the same Astos that has caused you harm, I understand if you bear me ill will.”

Matoya’s bony fingers clutched the orb and she raised an eyebrow. “Is that so? Hmph… Well, you are far more handsome than I expected you to be.”

The Warrior of Light’s jaw dropped. Even Astos looked caught off guard and he coughed into his hand.

Sarah politely hid her giggle. “It gladdens me to see that there is no bad blood here.”

“Salivating Sahagin!” Matoya exclaimed, nearly dropping her Crystal Eye. “A talking mouse? I whack critters like you with my broom when you wander into my cave.”

Torte held his paws over his ears and quivered. “I kindly ask you not to do the same with me!”

“Well, perhaps I spoke too soon,” Sarah said, wincing. “Torte is a treasured ally of ours – please refrain from harming him.”

“Gee, Matoya – he’s not like other mice,” said Benjamin. “Can’t you see his little cape?”

Y’shtola sighed. “That was a tactless choice of words, Benjamin.”

Then Matoya smacked him on the head with her broom. “Of course I can! How helpless do you think I am, little lad!? Let me show you what this old lady is capable of!” She whacked him again, and again, as Benjamin turned tail and fled, protesting all the way.

“Remind me not to get on her bad side,” said Torte. “What a frightening woman.”

Sarah clasped her hands in worry. “Perhaps we should help him. Please accompany me, my knight,” she said, gripping her dress in her hands as she followed after Benjamin and Matoya.

The Warrior of Light didn’t hesitate. He would accompany her wherever she wished to go.


Character Abilities

Arciela

ULT: Dynastic Gravitas

Effect: Arciela compiles any BRV she batteries

Arciela's ULT is a special ability she uses as a Trust party member. After use, she will compile any BRV she batteries to the party in an overhead value to then expend it on her next HP attack.


Iroha

ULT: Meikyo Shisui

Effect: When her turn is after an ally’s, attack twice

Iroha's ULT is a special 1-hour Samurai ability and one that she seeks to learn. It allows the user to use multiple weapon skills in a row. After use, Iroha will execute her ability twice as long as her turn is immediately after another party member.


Matoya (Staff - Brooms) Non-elemental magic damage, auras, Esuna, launch support, turn all buffs/debuffs gold

15: Enchantment

35: Witch’s Brew

EX: Crystal Eye

LD: Clean Sweep

FR: A New Familiar (with Torte)

BT: Pat Neercs rof Tsrub

ULT: The Book of Matoya (Effect: Perfect accuracy for party)

Burst theme: “Matoya’s Cave," the theme of the eponymous location

Matoya's ability names are a mix of skills she gets in Record Keeper as a playable character and original abilities. She uses staff weapons, but they all take the appearance of brooms. She is mainly a non-elemental damage dealer with some offensive party auras, debuff cleansing, and launch support (meaning she attacks from the ground between each attack in a launch sequence). Her LD can cleanse all debuffs. Her EX turns all active buffs/debuffs golden, meaning they can't be cleansed by enemies. Her Burst, of course, references the tendency of her broom familiars to speak backwards. After using her ULT, the party cannot miss with any attacks for the rest of the battle.

Notes:

Justification for Matoya: She technically doesn't fit my qualifications for character inclusion, but I included her for a few reasons. Since I already added Sarah, I wasn't too concerned with keeping the balance between the WoL and Garland. In some crossover games, Matoya is chosen as another FFI representative because she is one of the more notable characters from the game, and in one of the manga adaptations she even becomes a warrior of light. My own personal bias comes into play as well because I like witchy characters and the FF series has a serious shortage in playable old ladies. With all the playable grandpas we have, we need some grandmas to balance it out!

Next character hint: A human experiment living on borrowed time.

Chapter 61: Lost Chapter: The Burden of a Broken Materia

Notes:

Bet you were all thinking we'd get Genesis, huh? Nope, this is the *other* human experiment living on borrowed time from the VII Compilation! :P

This is the first character appearing from a game that released only in Japan, and for mobile phones to boot, so I've never played it. Thankfully there are pretty decent plot summaries online and cutscene compilation videos. Considering there are ten player Turks from this game (including Cissnei), I don't have plans to include them, but I was very tempted. Still... if there's anyone out there who really wants them...

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Matoya with Torte: Both are spellcasters that are aided by the party, and pay it back by helping on their quest. For this Force animation, Torte takes the place of one of Matoya's familiars.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: The Burden of a Broken Materia


Elfe ( Before Crisis Final Fantasy VII– )

Voiced by: Kaori Shimizu

One of the leaders of Avalanche, a swordswoman with enough skill to rival even Sephiroth. Subjected to experiments in her youth that she only remembers in pieces, she is dedicated to fighting Shinra for answers. Though withdrawn, she is a leader that others look up to.

Elfe


(Tseng, Cissnei, Jessie, Ashley, Gaia, and Prompto venture through a cave together. Crystal formations sprout from the ground, the walls, and the ceiling, casting a soft glow. The natural light source attracts beasts and insects. Most are docile, but they have to fight their way through some.)

PROMPTO: Amazing! Where have all these crystals come from?

CISSNEI: It is just as others have reported. They’re likely generated from a byproduct of our battling. That energy has crystallized.

JESSIE: Hey, kind of reminds you of materia, doesn’t it?

GAIA: That was the name of the goddess who became a crystal pillar, was it not?

JESSIE: Oh, no, sorry – in our world, materia are stones essentially made of crystallized Lifestream that some people use to cast magic. Most of the time it’s man-made nowadays, but sometimes you can find it naturally occurring like this. This would be a Planetologist’s dream!

CISSNEI: It does sort of look like a materia spring, now that you mention it.

TSENG: Could you all focus on the task at hand? We are here to complete an assignment.

CISSNEI: Yes, sir!

PROMPTO ( As Tseng, Cissnei, and Ashley walk ahead ): Not like we can’t enjoy the views at the same time. And I thought Cissnei didn’t work for the Turks anymore?

JESSIE ( Giggling ): I guess some habits die hard.

ASHLEY: If it is through battle that these crystals prosper, would that not make this the site of a gruesome war?

TSENG: That is what we are here to investigate.

PROMPTO: What, has someone been fighting down in this cave non-stop?

GAIA: This bodes ill. Any number of our foes would be elated to have this battle energy in their grasp.

ASHLEY: Indeed. Conflict soaks this cave like blood – a pall so thick, ‘tis akin to a burial chamber. ( Ashley grunts and holds a hand to his head. )

( Ashley sees through another’s eyes. Elsewhere, a warrior with long, silver hair and a katana clashes against his own blade. Exhaustion and pain slow his reaction time. When his opponent’s eyes lock on his own, Ashley feels seen, and it jolts him from his trance. )

JESSIE: What’s wrong!? You can’t say something creepy like that and then go into a daze!

ASHLEY: The battle yet wages in this cave. I had a vision of clashing with a warrior through another’s eyes. We must find them – before one is struck down.

( The party quickens their pace through the cave. As they descend into its depths, it thickens with monsters. They fight through it, gunshots from Jessie, Tseng, and Prompto echoing through the cave. In a wide open chamber lit in cold blue light, they find Sephiroth with his sword ready to strike, facing an enemy with their back to the party. The stranger appears to be on their last legs, holding themselves up on one knee with their katana resting partially against the ground. )

PROMPTO: Whoa! It’s Sephiroth!

TSENG: Wait… I know his opponent.

CISSNEI: Could it be…?

( Sephiroth glances up at the party with vague amusement in his gaze, and his opponent takes advantage of the distraction by renewing their attack. With movements that betray no sign of weakness or exhaustion, their tattered cape flutters as they slice through the air along with their blade. Metallic clangs ring out as their swords collide, but something on the stranger’s hand flashes bright and unleashes a burst of energy that pushes Sephiroth away from them. Though Sephiroth recovers, his opponent falls to their knees, their last burst of energy spent. )

CISSNEI: It really is her! That’s Elfe.

PROMPTO: We’ve gotta help!

( Prompto and Jessie unload a hail of bullets on Sephiroth, who defends himself with a shroud of black magic. Ashley and Gaia charge in to face him in close quarters. )

ELFE: Stand back… That’s not the Sephiroth I remember.

GAIA: Don’t be daft – you struggle to even stand.

SEPHIROTH: To think this failed experiment even has memories of me. But perhaps she and I are fated to duel.

JESSIE: What does someone like you have to do with her?

SEPHIROTH: Both of us are connected to the Planet. Touched by it in a way only a rare few can claim.

CISSNEI: She’s not one of your playthings.

ELFE ( weakly ): What…? The Turks are here?

SEPHIROTH: Not one of mine. Shinra turned her into one.

GAIA: I think it would behoove you to explain what he is on about, Tseng and Cissnei – no time for dallying, mind you.

TSENG: Elfe was an escaped experiment, thought to be the long-dead daughter of the Turks’ old director. Another victim of Shinra’s dark past.

JESSIE: Ugh, y’know, sometimes I’m really not sure why we put up with you guys. But why do I know that name…?

SEPHIROTH: She and I are both capable of destroying the Planet. I can use her… draw that power out. We can do it together.

PROMPTO: What!? Is she bad news, too? Man, what’d we get in the middle of?

ELFE: Don’t speak for me. I’m no pawn of anyone from Shinra!

SEPHIROTH: Prove it to me. Show me the strength of your will.

( Sephiroth soars right through the defenses of Gaia and Ashley, swinging his sword directly at Elfe. She manages to defend herself just in time, parrying and sliding her own blade across his. Elfe whirls out of the way of his next attack, then somersaults backward to dodge the one after, but just as she brings her blade up to block another, Ashley appears in front of her. With their blades held against each other, both Sephiroth and Ashley charge up magic in their free hands. Gaia’s delayed spell weighs Sephiroth down, causing his attack to crash against the far wall, and Ashley scores a hit. )

ELFE: So Shinra is here to help me again…

JESSIE: Don’t lump me in with Shinra – I’m from AVALANCHE!

ELFE: What!?

CISSNEI: Can we discuss this later?

( Sephiroth, unshaken, goes back on the offensive. Before he gets into close quarters again, Prompto tries aiming a few shots at him. Gaia appears in his path with her hammer, and the force of Sephiroth’s swing knocks her back into the wall. Cissnei’s shuriken rain down on him from above just as Ashley swipes in with his own attack, but a burst of energy blasts them both away. Elfe reaches Sephiroth before he renews his attack against her, and in a flurry of slashes neither of them can land a hit on the other – until Sephiroth’s blade strikes the back of Elfe’s hand. )

JESSIE: Oh, no!

( Magic swirls around Elfe, flashing in and out of existence. Uncontrolled, it flares outward, striking Sephiroth just as she falls to her knees again. He defends himself with a single black wing, but the moment it lowers, Tseng is at his back, pistol aimed right behind his head. )

SEPHIROTH ( smirking ): Shall I impale you again?

TSENG: Not a chance.

( He shoots. Sephiroth teleports a short distance away. Floating above the ground, Sephiroth looks as if he hasn’t broken a sweat. He addresses Elfe. )

SEPHIROTH: You have been chosen. One day you will realize what a gift it is.

( His shoulders shake with laughter. As his black wing envelopes him again, he vanishes in a swirl of feathers. Elfe collapses. )

JESSIE: I’ve got a med kit on me!

CISSNEI: I can help!

ELFE: You’re Shuriken. I never thought I’d see you again.

CISSNEI: I go by Cissnei now. Hang in there, Elfe – we’ll patch you up.

ELFE: And the Turk who shot me… to save my life. And Papa’s.

TSENG: He is a man to whom I owed much. Now rest.


( Elfe rests in a bed in the infirmary. She appears to be sleeping, but Cissnei, Jessie, and Prompto sit at her bedside. )

JESSIE: I spoke with Barret. I remember where I heard her name now – she was the leader of one of the main cells of AVALANCHE. Tons of people followed her.

CISSNEI: Yeah. A little while back, we Turks crossed paths with them. There was a crisis, and our former director resigned once he found out his daughter was alive and part of AVALANCHE. One of their scientists tried to destroy the whole world.

PROMPTO: So AVALANCHE had a messed up scientist too, huh? Guess Shinra doesn’t have the monopoly on unethical experiments in your world.

JESSIE: What was that about Tseng shooting her?

( The infirmary door slides open with a gentle hiss and Tseng enters along with Rufus, Reno, and Rude. )

RUFUS: I suppose I can answer that.

PROMPTO: You were listening!?

TSENG: Shinra wanted Elfe and her father dead.

RENO: Even Rude and I had no idea she was still alive.

RUFUS: Long story short, I owed them a favor. We pulled some strings to spirit them away. Never did I expect her of all people to be here, battling against Sephiroth himself. And for several days straight, judging by the state of her now.

TSENG: She still possesses the Zirconiade materia.

JESSIE: The what?

ELFE: The ultimate summon materia, Zirconiade – meant to destroy the Planet. Grafted directly onto my skin by the Shinra scientist Hojo. I wasn’t meant to live long with it.

CISSNEI: Ah, you’re awake.

PROMPTO: So that’s what Sephiroth meant…

ELFE: What do you mean to do with me now? I take it my Papa isn’t here.

RUDE: We don’t think he is.

RUFUS: Do whatever you want. Though we’re here, the company has no reach in this world. I don’t know how much you remember, but it’s long gone anyway.

ELFE: Whatever I want?

CISSNEI: Several Turks, myself included, defected in order to protect you. We wouldn’t do anything to hurt you if you decided to stay with us.

JESSIE: So you weren’t all terrible, huh. Well, Elfe, since you’re part of AVALANCHE, we’d be happy to have you. It’d make sense if these Shinra guys still made you a bit uncomfortable. I mean, they’re the reason I didn’t make it in my world. They crushed my home in Midgar, along with two of my closest friends.

RENO: Whoa, seriously? No one told me you were there when the plate crashed! Damnit…

RUDE: We knew you had lost your life, but… not at that moment.

TSENG: All three of us bear that burden together.

JESSIE: I haven’t forgiven them yet, Elfe. I don’t think I ever will. But you’re living proof that they’re capable of good. And for me, that makes it easier to fight alongside them, you know?

ELFE: I’m not sure I understand. But your friendship is welcome, Jessie. Since Shinra is no longer around, AVALANCHE needs a new cause.

PROMPTO: Oh, I’m sure you’ll find plenty of things to fight for here.

RENO: Like taking down Sephiroth, for one. It’s not much compared to what we’ve done, but we’ll help.

TSENG: That aligns with our directive.

RUDE: Not the first time we’ve formally allied with AVALANCHE.

RUFUS: I’ll pretend I didn’t hear it.

ELFE ( staring at the back of her hand ): Zirconiade… Even though you’re back, I won’t let you absorb my life force any longer. This power is mine to command. And I will conquer my foes with or without your strength.


Character Abilities

 

Selh’teus

ULT: Twilight Breaker

Effect: Dispel upon inflicting Break

I believe his ULT is an original ability, meant to reference how he helps to defeat the God of Twilight, Promathia. After use, any time he breaks a foe, he will cancel their (non-gold) buffs.


Kam’lanaut

ULT: Empyrean Scrivening

Effect: EX usage absorbs current elemental enchantment; if not attacked in 2 turns, gain a magical copy that has its own stats and copies attacks. Glacification changes to element of his choice: Terrafication, Liquification, Ignition, Vaporization, Electrification

This is also an original ability name (though it is a twist on his existing ability Esoteric Scrivening). After he uses it, his 35 CP ability (which is Glacification by default) will change to any element of his choice - and the ability name will change to Terrafication for Earth, Liquification for Water, Ignition for Fire, Vaporization for Wind, and Electrification for Lightning. This way he has coverage for every element now except for Holy/Dark. These are all abilities he uses during his boss battle. Furthermore, his EX will gain the ability to absorb his current elemental enchantment. If he does not get attacked during this time, he gains a magical copy that has its own stats (like Enna Kros's Omega God) and copies his attacks. This is all meant to replicate how he fights as a boss battle. Pretty nice buff for him, huh?


Elfe (Swords) Non-elemental melee, negated BRV reductions, battery, gravity damage, instant break

15: Spinning Flurry

35: Thorn Slash

EX: Ruthless Angel 

LD: Avalanche Slicer

FR: Shadow Swipe (with Ashley)

BT: Hidden Experiment

ULT: Intercession (Effect: Cannot be broken by physical attacks)

Burst theme: “Theme of Elfe [Devil],” her character theme that plays after the final boss

Bosses have no named abilities in Before Crisis, so I had to name all of her skills. I don't think I came up with her ULT, though - I might have seen a video at some point where Zirconiade uses that skill name in the final boss fight, but I can't find it again. Her EX, Ruthless Angel, is meant to be a reference to Sephiroth's Heartless Angel.

She is a non-elemental melee attacker capable of negating BRV reductions that enemies try to put on the party. She's also a battery who can inflict percentage-based gravity damage as well as instant break with some of her skills. After she uses her ULT, she becomes completely immune to being broken by physical attacks (but magic attacks can still harm her, and of course she still takes HP damage).

Notes:

Justification for Elfe: She is a prominent (non-playable) character in Before Crisis, probably the most notable new character in the game, and the primary antagonist early on.

Next character hint: A loyal friend who starts a family.

Chapter 62: Lost Chapter: By Beak and Talon

Notes:

This character may be another surprise addition, but I feel like they deserve it.

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Elfe with Ashley: Both are deadly fighters who had their memories tampered with by another, manipulated into bearing and accepting a great and terrible power.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: By Beak and Talon


Boko ( Final Fantasy V )

Voiced by: Kana Hanazawa

Loyal friend and partner to Bartz who travels together with him around the world. Though they become separated for a time, Boko falls in love with another chocobo, Koko, and starts a family with her. Whenever Bartz is anything less than heroic, Boko is ready with beak and claw to remind him of the morally right thing to do.

Boko


CHOCOBO


As much as he tried, Chocobo’s shorter legs just couldn’t keep up.

He made a valiant effort, though. They started on a dirt path that wound through the outskirts of a forest, but it wasn’t long before the beaten path became overgrown with high grasses and brambles that his companions with longer legs bounded through without a care. Chocobo almost didn’t notice how their surroundings changed until he caught up to Torgal and Chichiri.

The verdant green hills and mossy forest turned into a barren, darkened land with twisted, dead trees that rotted the very landscape. Torgal plodded ahead, slowing to look around at his surroundings, then bent low to touch his nose to the ground. Breathless with exertion, Chocobo wished he paid more attention to which way they had gone; he suspected that neither Torgal nor Chichiri knew either, too caught up in the euphoria of running with the wind.

Chichiri let out a low, hesitant chirp as Torgal circled around the base of one of the rotting trees, taking in the scents of the area as only wolves could. He had no doubt that Torgal could lead them home, but now that they were here Chocobo felt certain of something wrong with this place. And he knew that he couldn’t leave without investigating it first. He would never forgive himself if something that could be a danger to his friends escaped his notice.

Torgal gave a low whine as Chocobo marched deeper into the dead forest. Chocobo chirped back in an attempt to be encouraging, but Torgal jerked his head toward Chichiri. The other chocobo had crouched somewhat, her feathers puffed up. Chocobo flapped his wings and sang a calming tune before turning back toward the forest. He knew that if he remained brave, she would, too. Chichiri was no fighter, but Chocobo resolved to protect her.

The bones of some long dead creature littered the ground at the base of a dead tree, lichen clinging to it like a scar. Torgal stopped briefly to sniff it before continuing, alternating between the lead and the rear as if to herd them along. Chocobo didn’t mind; he knew it made Chichiri feel safer. He couldn’t blame her for her fear – the ground looked sapped of all color, as if they walked upon ash, cold beneath his feet. It all felt unnatural.

Torgal’s ears pressed back as he growled. Chichiri grew agitated. Ahead of them, Chocobo heard another creature snarl and yelp, and another chocobo warked. Without pausing to consider his own safety, Chocobo dashed ahead – someone was in trouble, and it was his duty to save them.

He found the other chocobo backed up against the remains of a human ruin, surrounded by a pair of bandercoeurls and a lamia mage. The lamia hissed as she commanded the beasts to close in on the chocobo, her staff raised and hood flared. One of the bandercoeurls noticed Chocobo first as he charged into the clearing, turning toward him with a warning growl. Chocobo only narrowed his eyes and didn’t back down, especially when Torgal appeared behind him with a growl of his own.

They all faced each other down for a moment, and then everything happened at once.

The unfamiliar chocobo aimed a taloned kick at the bandercoeurl that was distracted by Chocobo, only for its packmate to take advantage of the opening and leap at him. Torgal was on its back before it could, tearing into its purple mane. The lamia aimed a spell at Torgal, but Chocobo launched at her with his beak, piercing her scaly hide. She slithered away from him, hissing with anger, and a fireball erupted from her staff. Chocobo jumped out of the way just as Torgal howled, healing magic in his song to bolster Chocobo and the stranger, who had been wounded.

One bandercoeurl, its maw dripping with drool, looked to Chocobo with its eyes glowing. Whiskers on the sides of its face charged up with magic, crackling to life with arcane energies that he knew to be bad news. Chocobo raised a wing and responded with a spell of his own, summoning a barrier to disperse the blaster attack, just as the stranger chocobo fell on the bandercoeurl from above. It kicked at the beast’s head multiple times, striking before it could retaliate with its claws. Chocobo fell on it with his beak and his own claws, forcing the beast to disperse into the aether just in time for the lamia to rejoin the fray.

Lightning struck Chocobo, and though it stunned him for a moment he muscled through it, wincing as he charged at the lamia again. This time he led with a fierce kick, knocking her staff from her hands. Torgal appeared, spinning and striking with a kick of his own, then followed up with the other chocobo’s attack to knock the lamia into the air. Before she could land, Chocobo jumped up and slammed her back down to the ground, defeating her with a sharp cry.

When Chocobo, the other chocobo, and Torgal turned to face the remaining bandercoeurl, it whimpered and ran away with its tail between its legs.

Their new friend let out a weak chirp as Chichiri emerged from hiding, warking in concern. Now that the immediate danger had passed, Chocobo took a moment to look over the other chocobo. He wore a saddle, well-cared for and well-ridden, with wonderfully brushed feathers that had been mussed up from whatever troubles had afflicted him. He was taller than Chocobo, with longer legs like Chichiri. Most notably of all, however, was that he smelled distinctly of one of Chocobo’s human friends – Bartz.

“Kweh!” said Chocobo.

“Kweh!” the other chocobo said back.

Boko was his name. A fine name for a chocobo, Chocobo thought.

Chocobo, Chichiri, and Boko warbled and shook their tail feathers at each other joyfully, a dance of new friendship. Despite the dangers of their surroundings, Boko seemed to be in good spirits. He jumped up, warbled some more, and led the way deeper into the forest with unexpected urgency. Chichiri cooed but didn’t hesitate in following when Chocobo and Torgal sprang into action as well.

The stench of monsters intensified the deeper they went. Cyclopes and minotaurs lugged heavy stone from a quarry while lamia overseers patrolled the site. Chocobo realized they were building something, perhaps a human castle, at the edge of a cliffside. Goblins scampered between the larger monsters, staying out of the way of the guard bandercoeurls. Their strong noses were likely trying to sniff out any sign of human intruders – three chocobos and a wolf would be able to blend in easily, as long as they stayed out of sight.

Then they saw him. A hulking, armored figure stood over the monsters, appearing in a flash of light to check on the status of whatever he was building. Evil poured off of him in waves, and Chocobo knew at once that it was the warlock, Exdeath. Boko let out a sharp cry and looked ready to charge him on sight, but Chocobo held out his wing and Torgal gently nipped at his tail feathers to silence him. Rushing in now would end in disaster – even Chocobo knew that.

Chichiri nudged Chocobo with her beak. She didn’t quail in the face of the monsters all around them; instead, she crouched as if ready to take them on herself, all of her earlier fear gone. Though she wasn’t a fighter like the rest of them, Chocobo knew she was the fastest runner. The others knew what she planned to do. Boko tried shaking his head at her, but Chichiri was a war steed. She could do this.

She emerged from their hiding spot into the middle of Exdeath’s camp, warking loudly to get the attention of the monsters. Many of the goblins cackled, perhaps spotting what they thought to be an easy meal, and readied their wicked knives. Even a cyclops blinked stupidly at Chichiri, and when she turned around and ran in the other direction, most of the goblins, a couple bandercoeurls, and even that one cyclops followed after her. Chocobo was stunned – he didn’t expect so many to vacate the camp, but most of the cyclopes, the minotaurs, and the lamiae remained behind. She would outrun them and get to safety, he knew. He would have to have faith in her.

To them, a lone chocobo was no concern. Chocobo, as the smallest, snuck out next, hiding behind piles of crates and barrels of building material. He crept up behind a lamia and took her down with a single strong kick. A bandercoeurl, unluckily, heard the noise and came to investigate and spotted Chocobo with a low growl. Chocobo trilled in surprise but recovered quickly, headbutting it in the jaw. Elsewhere, Torgal pounced on a minotaur’s back and kicked off of it, pushing it into some of the wooden scaffolding and sending it tumbling along with the goblins and lamiae atop it.

All chaos broke loose. Boko ran into the melee, weaving around two of the cyclopes who swung their clubs. Both missed him completely; one even spun around and accidentally struck the stone tower in construction. A minotaur turned to the cyclops in anger, roaring out a challenge and charging it with its horns. Exdeath boomed, finally taking notice of the intruders, but the cacophony of lamia spells and bandercoeurl barking drowned him out as they tried in vain to strike Boko and Torgal.

Three bandercoeurls pounced on Torgal, causing the frost wolf to yelp in pain. Boko appeared at his side before Chocobo could, stomping on whichever parts of the bandercoeurls he could manage. With Boko’s help, Torgal shook them off and howled. Chocobo reached their sides, offering them both a healing spell and turning to face their foes without any fear. Though the monsters closed in, surrounding them, and Exdeath stood at the base of his new castle, Chocobo, Boko, and Torgal didn’t back down.

Exdeath still viewed them as beneath him, not even worth joining the battle himself. They would do their best to prove him wrong.

Chocobo nudged Boko, calling on the most powerful spell in his repertoire. But he knew it wouldn’t be enough on its own. Boko had to help, and he knew the other chocobo could do it. It was in their blood, a secret of every chocobo’s lineage. Boko warbled as he focused on the casting, but followed Chocobo’s lead. Torgal snapped at any monsters who came too close while they prepared their spell, the magic building up all around them.

“Kweh!” both chocobos cried together, as a double Choco Meteor dropped from the heavens.

Both crashed into the castle walls, bypassing the ramparts that hadn’t been finished yet. The earth shook upon their impact, fire and destruction devouring everything not made of stone. Even the stone foundations of the castle crumbled, tumbling off of the edge of the cliff and into the abyss beyond. Exdeath floated above the remains of his castle, roaring in fury, as all the remaining monsters scattered in fear.

Chocobo, Boko, and Torgal ran. Though he did not fear Exdeath, he wasn’t sure if they could take him with only three.

The only problem: Boko and Torgal were both still faster than him. Chocobo wasn’t sure if he would be able to outrun Exdeath, especially as he rained his fearsome black magic down on them in retaliation. Chocobo had to jump over the rubble and obstacles in his way while the others stepped over them, his shorter legs struggling to keep up. But he refused to give up – he would not let Exdeath catch him after all they had just managed to accomplish.

Boko looked back at Chocobo and warked in surprise, then circled back. Just as Chocobo was about to urge him onward, telling him not to wait up for him, Boko leaned down and closed his beak around Chocobo’s collar, yanking him up and throwing him onto Boko’s saddle. Chocobo flailed in alarm – he had never ridden another chocobo before! He had no idea what to do, and didn’t have human hands to grab onto the reins. He screwed his eyes shut and focused everything on trying not to fall from Boko’s back, clinging onto the reins with his beak.

Another wark greeted them as they sprinted through the forest as Chichiri joined up with them again, trilling victoriously. With Exdeath and the monster camp already far behind them, they followed the scents back to their companions.


Balamb Garden was still waiting for them when they arrived. Shirma, Clive, and Ace stood outside of the gates, perhaps ready to start a search for their missing friends, but Chocobo walked up to them with his wing held high. He was delighted to see Bartz with them, too – no doubt worried for the chocobos despite not knowing the surprise that awaited him. As soon as Boko spotted him, he squawked in happiness and sprinted the rest of the way to Garden’s gates.

Bartz’s eyes lit up with joy when he spotted his partner, cheering as he ran to meet Boko halfway. Bartz clung to Boko’s neck, ruffling his feathers as Boko nuzzled his hair. As Chocobo reunited with Shirma, Chichiri with Ace, and Torgal with Clive, the humans spoke of how they must have gotten lost, playing in the wilds somewhere to be covered in as much dirt and grime as they were. Bartz introduced them all to Boko, and their happiness was enough to bring a tear to Chocobo’s eye. He felt satisfied that they kept the danger away from Balamb Garden, keeping his important people safe another day.

Only when they entered the Garden proper and passed by Chocolina at her shop did she give them a knowing smile and a handful of gysahl greens.


Character Abilities

Lion

FR: Land Ahoy! (with Faris)

BT: Evisceration

ULT: Pyrrhic Kleos (Effect: Enemy gets broken after attacking Lion)

Burst theme: “Fighters of the Crystal,” boss theme of the Crystal Warriors

I don't think I posted Lion's Force, Burst, or Ultimate yet, so here they are. Both her Burst and ULT are among the highest level Dagger weapon skills. After use, any time an enemy attacks Lion they get immediately broken (including All attacks).


Lilisette

BT: Dancer’s Fury

ULT: Ternary Flourish (Effect: Executes EX skill 3 times)

Burst theme: “Clash of Standards,” outdoor battle theme for Wings of the Goddess

Her Burst is a weapon skill that she uses as a Trust party member. Ternary Flourish comes from a Dancer's "Flourishes III" set of abilities, and after use she will execute her EX skill three times.


Boko (Unique - Claws) Non-elemental melee damage, healer, linked attacker, multiple HP dumps, Dodge

15: Chocobo Peck

35: Feather Heal

EX: Double Smash

LD: Chocomax -> Grants "Stretch Legs"

FR: Stampede (with Chocobo)

BT: Trusty Steed

ULT: Boko and Koko (Effect: Extra BRV+HP attack with each ability)

Burst theme: “Boko’s Theme”

Boko's skills are a mix of some originals and abilities that the Boko and Chocobo Mirages use in World of Final Fantasy (like Double Smash). Chocomax, however, comes from the Mecha Chocobo Mirage, which I just did for fun and some variety. Feather Heal is an original and meant to be a healing ability, and after using his LD it also gains the ability to grant the "Stretch Legs" buff to allies, which enables party members to dodge one attack. His Burst involves Bartz in the animation, while his ULT has Koko appear (...who otherwise isn't around in this fic).

Boko is a non-elemental melee attacker and healer, focusing on linked attacks and several BRV+HP dumps. After using his ULT, he gains additional BRV+HP dumps with every ability, similar to Prishe's buffs.

Notes:

Justification for Boko: He's the most notable chocobo of the whole franchise, how could I not? It feels wrong to have Bartz without his iconic partner. Though he's not playable in FFV, or ever shown in battle, World of Final Fantasy does make him into a playable Mirage. Plus it's fun to give Chocobo (and Chichiri) another chocobo friend.

I thought this chapter was going to take me a lot longer to write because of the lack of dialogue, but I had more fun with it than I expected.

Just a note on the VA for Boko: Kana Hanazawa voices him in World of FF! So I guess she can reprise that role here. I am going to try to knock out the next chapter pretty quickly too so we can jump into the next story chapter.

Next character hint (let's try something new): This character will have Arc (FFIII) as their Force partner.

Chapter 63: Lost Chapter: A Spell for Courage

Notes:

Last chapter's Force partnerships:

Lion with Faris: This one should be obvious, but they're both pirate lasses!

Boko with Chocobo: Another obvious one. They're both the two chocobo party members, kweh!

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: A Spell for Courage


Kytes ( Final Fantasy XII: Revenant Wings )

Voiced by: Tomoko Ishimura

One of Vaan’s friends from Rabanastre and a fellow orphan. Compared to his friends, Kytes is more cautious and anxious, but still dreams to soar the skies on an adventure. Though a novice mage, he shows great promise and courage.

Kytes


( Vaan, Penelo, Llyud, Luneth, Relm, and Fina traverse an open plain under a hot sun, the dusty ground and sparse grass at least making it easier for them to track their prey. Even so, Relm and Fina drag their feet. )

RELM: Ugh, this is miserable! Where is that stupid horse-thing?

VAAN: C’mon, it isn’t that bad. This is just like going on a hunt for a clan mark.

FINA: Easy for you to say. Don’t you live in a desert?

PENELO: This isn’t anything like Dalmasca. You can both do this, I know it! Just think of how we’re helping the Neo-Manikins by taking out this monster.

LUNETH: So you did this kind of thing all the time, huh? Guess there’s lots of tough monsters where you live!

VAAN: Oh, yeah! Not only could they be hard to take down, but they’re usually hard to find, too. They might only come out at a certain time, or after we killed a bunch of small fry, or maybe for this one we have to wait for the sunlight to hit something just right…

PENELO: Vaan loved tracking them down. 

LLYUD: Tomaj ran the hunt board even before boarding the Galbana , correct? I miss our companions.

VAAN: He worked with the clan, yeah. Well, maybe I didn’t miss that part too much. Definitely not him!

RELM ( pointing ahead ): Am I seeing a mirage, or is that a well?

FINA: Oh… I see it, too! This is the end, isn’t it…

PENELO: You’re not hallucinating. There’s really a well here – a big one.

( Relm dashes toward the well, turning the crank hurriedly to scoop up water from its depths. Its mouth was wide enough for any of them to fit, with water and darkness at the bottom to obscure how deep it went. )

VAAN: Careful, or you’ll fall in!

RELM ( turning toward him with her hands on her hips ): How clumsy do you think I am!?

( A spectral tendril emerges from the shadows in the well, wrapping around Relm while her back is turned. She lets out a yelp as it swiftly drags her into the well with a splash. )

LUNETH: Relm! What was that thing!?

LLYUD: There’s no time to waste.

( Llyud leads the way by leaping into the well after her, and the others follow at once. Though water pools at the bottom, they notice that tunnels lead out in several directions, opening up into an enormous waterway. Relm is a short distance away, waterlogged and irritated. )

RELM: Where’d that thing go!? I’ve got to paint its portrait!

FINA: Relm! Are you okay? Did you see what grabbed you?

RELM: Ugh, no. It better not be that nasty Ultros. This dank, gross eyesore is exactly the kind of place he’d hang out in.

PENELO: Wait, we know where this is!

VAAN: Yeah. This is the Garamsythe Waterway!

LUNETH: Relm and Fina should like this better, since it’s not so hot and miserable.

RELM: Now I’m just wet and miserable!

LLYUD: I am not familiar with this place. I assume it is on the ground, near your home?

PENELO: It runs underneath Rabanastre. This waterway is how water gets to the whole city. Vaan spent a lot of time here as a kid, you know. This is where he became known among all the orphans as ‘Vaan Ratsbane,’ the vanquisher of rats.

LUNETH: Er, impressive?

VAAN: Ha-ha, I’ve come a long way. Don’t forget it!

( The party hears creatures hissing, along with the slapping of wet, webbed feet on stone. A high-pitched yell immediately follows, and behind one of the sluice gates down the passage they spot a boy being chased by a trio of sahagin. The boy has a robe and staff, marking him as a mage. )

PENELO: Wait a minute, is that – ?

VAAN: Kytes!

LLYUD: We have to help him!

( They rush toward the gate, but can’t find a way to open it. Llyud flies over it, so he is able to reach Kytes and the sahagin first, landing on one of the creatures from above to disarm them. )

KYTES: Llyud! Wow, you’re here!

SAHAGIN: Tresssspasssser!

( Llyud’s intervention brings the chase to a standstill, with his spear locked against one of the sahagin’s. Kytes flaps his arms. )

KYTES: I don’t want to fight! I didn’t mean to intrude, but I found myself here and normally I know the way through the waterways, but now I’m lost!

LLYUD: It may not be as you remember.

( The rest of the party manages to open the sluice gate, surrounding the sahagin. Now outnumbered, the sahagin draw back, hissing again. )

SAHAGIN: Begone from here! Thisss is our home!

VAAN: I’ve never known sahagin to live down here, what gives?

KYTES: Vaan! Penelo! I’m so glad to see you!

PENELO: Us too, Kytes! But let’s figure out what’s going on.

SAHAGIN: A fearsssome monsster arrived – the Ghassstmane, both ssspirit and landwalker. We were ejected from our hatching groundsss. Thisss landwalker ssstumbled upon our new territory!

KYTES: I’m sorry! Like I said, I didn’t mean to!

LUNETH: Ghastmane? That’s the monster we’re looking for! Hey, we can deal with it for you!

FINA: Where is the Ghastmane now?

SAHAGIN: Deeper inssside. If you defeat it, we will excuse thisss intrusion.

( The sahagin depart. Penelo runs over and immediately hugs Kytes, to his protests, but he eventually returns it with a smile. )

PENELO: Sorry we weren’t here to find you sooner! You must’ve been scared!

KYTES: Of course I was scared, but I knew I could take them if I had to. I just didn’t want to hurt them. Like they said, I was the intruder.

RELM: Scared of small fry like that?

KYTES: You can’t be brave without being scared first. It took me a while to learn that. I’m not sure I’ll ever stop being scared, but that doesn’t mean I’ll always be running.

LLYUD: You’ve come a long way.

LUNETH: You remind me of Arc. I’m sure the two of you will get along great!

PENELO: Everyone, Kytes is an old friend of ours. We grew up in Rabanastre together. And now we’re in the same sky pirate crew.

FINA: Amazing! Someone as young as you, a sky pirate!

VAAN: C’mon, we’ve got this monster to hunt down. Kytes, we’ll fill you in on the way.

KYTES: Ghastmane, huh? Sounds like Firemane – a fire spirit that used to lurk down here until Vaan took it out! Now that was a terrifying monster.

FINA: Hard to believe kids would hang out down here for fun.

VAAN: Fun, training – it’s all the same. We orphans had to make do!

( They search through the cavernous waterways for what feels like hours. Though they encounter many tortured spirits, they find no more sahagin. But they find no sign of Ghastmane, either. )

LUNETH: This thing sure is elusive. Any ideas for how to find it, Mr. Ratsbane?

VAAN: Some hunt marks need to be drawn out. Once, we went looking for a wraith down here. That one was drawn to children.

KYTES: The sahagin did say they were chased from their spawning grounds!

LLYUD: Wasn’t it something ghostly that dragged Relm down here? Perhaps Ghastmane tends to hunt children as well.

VAAN: Kytes, Relm – you two should go off on your own. Maybe that will draw it out of hiding.

RELM: What!? Why us?

KYTES: Well, we are the youngest…

PENELO: Are you certain this is a good idea, Vaan?

VAAN: I’m sure of it!

RELM: Ugh. If this goes wrong in any way, I’m definitely painting you!

( Some time later, Kytes and Relm are wandering through the sewers alone. Relm is wearing a permanent scowl and Kytes keeps looking around in every direction, clutching his staff in a white-knuckled grip. )

RELM: The nerve of Vaan! Using me as bait!

KYTES: You’ve been traveling with him for a while now, right? Don’t you trust him?

RELM: I guess. Maybe you trust him too much!

KYTES: Vaan is one of my best friends. He wouldn’t steer us wrong. I can prove it to you!

RELM: Yeah, how?

KYTES: Because Ghastmane is right behind you!

( Relm screams. The ghost horse neighs and jumps up on its hind legs, shadowy tendrils flailing. Spectral lights hover around Relm, but Kytes casts a fire spell that blasts the spirit away from her. Shining arrows of light pierce through the darkness and strike Ghastmane, courtesy of Fina. Llyud flies in, standing between Ghastmane and Relm, while Vaan charges onto the scene with Luneth and Penelo. )

VAAN: Surround it! Don’t let it get away!

( Shadows expand from beneath Ghastmane’s hooves and grasp at Vaan, but Penelo and Fina shine with holy magic to disperse it. Luneth swipes ineffectively with his axes, but jumps in front of Llyud and takes a blow for him. Relm and Kytes position themselves behind Ghastmane, paintbrush and staff ready. )

RELM: I’m sick of this thing! It’s time to paint its portrait!

( She paints the space in front of her, colors melting together to conjure a copy of Ghastmane. Its neigh echoes through the waterways while the real Ghastmane answers. Both of their shadows sweep over the other, but just when the painted Ghastmane seems like it is about to get overwhelmed, Kytes banishes the shadow with a blaze of fire. The spirit writhes in pain until it finally disperses into orbs of white light. )

PENELO: We did it. Well done, everyone.

KYTES: Phew! For a second there, I thought it was gonna get Relm.

RELM: I wasn’t scared!

LUNETH: Suuure. I heard that scream.

RELM: You’re testing me, Luneth.

FINA: Kytes was quick with his spellcasting though, so Relm didn’t come to harm. Great job!

LLYUD: Seems like you two work well together. Not so unlike a certain other headstrong girl I know…

KYTES: Filo! Hopefully she can come to this world soon, too!

VAAN: C’mon, we should head back. We need to give the news to the Neo-Manikins that Ghastmane is gone.

KYTES: And collect our reward?

VAAN: That goes without saying!

KYTES: It’s a little unbelievable to be in a different world, but it sounds amazing, too. I can’t wait to see all the different kinds of treasure we can get, alongside my sky pirate crew!


Character Abilities

 

Eald’narche

FR: Deep Loathing (with Weiss)

ULT: Ark Angel Summon (Effect: New follow up)

Eald'narche doesn't have a Force partner yet, so here it is. For his ULT, he summons the five Ark Angels for a big combo attack, and after use he gets a new follow-up where one of them attacks with him.


Vaan

ULT: Dreadnought

Effect: BRV stays at current value after using EX, LD

Vaan's ULT comes from his moveset in the other Dissidia games (I believe this one is from NT in particular). After use, his BRV will stay at its current value after he uses his EX or LD. This has potential for a lot of damage on the second EX cast, since if I remember correctly he uses it twice in a row.


Kytes (Staff) Fire/Ice/Earth magic damage, HP/BRV Poison, Fire/Ice/Earth imperil, Force charger

15: Firaga

35: Blizzaga

EX: Quakega

LD: Bioga -> Changes standard BRV attack to “Charge”

FR: Overcoming Fear (with Arc)

BT: Nature’s Wrath

ULT: Walker’s Tornado (Effect: Whirlwind followup after each attack)

Burst theme: “Training in the Sewers,” which plays in the Garamsythe Waterway, where he is first encountered in XII

Kytes has access to all of these spells and abilities as a playable party member. Firaga, Blizzaga, Quakega, and Bioga are some of his main damage spells, which means he covers the Fire, Ice, and Earth elements, with matching imperils. Bioga inflicts both BRV and HP Poison. After he uses Bioga, his standard BRV attack changes to "Charge," another one of his abilities that empowers his next spell, and in this it would also battery him and let him act as a Force charger for the party. His Burst is Nature's Wrath, which is his Quickening - in Revenant Wings it does damage of a random element, but in this it would probably cycle through all of his available spells.

For his ULT, and indeed for the ULTs of most of the XII (and Revenant Wings) cast, I matched them all up with an esper that is either thematically appropriate or one that the games match them up with already. For Kytes, he got Chaos, Walker of the Wheel. Not only does he unlock his Quickening after the party defeats Chaos, but he is also involved with the Chaos sidequest in XII. Furthermore, Chaos specializes in casting spells of multiple elements, so it was an easy match. After use, Kytes gets a new follow-up, Whirlwind, after each attack, which comes from Chaos.

Notes:

Justification for Kytes: He is one of the main characters and a playable party member in Revenant Wings, in a major upgrade from his minor character status in XII.

Next chapter hint: The next story chapter is a tale of brothers and "others" - perhaps even "twins" - involving a moogle, a doll, and a clone.

Chapter 64: A5C9, Part 1: Brotherhood

Notes:

So this is the first chapter we have focusing entirely on spinoff games, and especially one that isn't even particularly well known. I hope you can all enjoy this chapter nonetheless!

Last chapter's Force partnerships:

Eald'narche with Weiss: Both are the elder sibling in a villainous brother pair, and the more prominent antagonist with hidden goals of their own.

Kytes with Arc: Both are young mages who are initially shy and withdrawn, and afraid of the things they encounter on their adventures until they draw courage from within themselves.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Act 5, Chapter 9, Part 1: Brotherhood


Hurdy ( Final Fantasy Tactics A2)

Voiced by: Akeno Watanabe

The youngest of the six Moogle siblings who went on a journey to nurture his passion for music. When he comes across Luso and Clan Gully, he tags along to write songs of their adventures and gets caught up in helping them save Ivalice from an interdimensional threat. Cheerful and with a big heart, Hurdy perseveres through hardship to follow his dreams.

Hurdy


Llednar Twem ( Final Fantasy Tactics Advance)

Voiced by: Hikaru Midorikawa

Guardian and personal attendant of Prince Mewt, who was created to be an idealized version of Mewt that embodies his negative emotions. Charged by the queen to destroy the palace’s enemies, Llednar pursues Marche with a single-minded determination, even in defiance of the Judgemaster’s laws. He is arrogant and condescending due to the queen’s reality warping “Fortune” law that makes him invincible.

Llednar Twem


Wrieg ( Final Fantasy Dimensions 2)

Voiced by: Tomokazu Sugita

An accomplished and dependable adventurer who has traveled the world under the employ of C.I.D. Inc., a weapons manufacturer. When a meteor crashes on Navos Island, he inspects it alongside Morrow, who aspires to be an adventurer like Wrieg. Though experienced, even Wrieg is unprepared for the sights and revelations in store when they journey through time to prevent the foretold Day of Reckoning, and he often has to act as Morrow’s restraint.

Wrieg


LUSO


It was Selphie’s idea to throw a party after Ciaran and Shirma’s farm had its first harvest.

They needed a reason to celebrate, she insisted. After all the fighting lately, and their struggles to protect the summons, they deserved a night to kick back and relax – and feast and play music and dance. Krile and Sophie spread the word, and in no time at all the plans reached the ears of everyone in Balamb Garden, so they spent a few days preparing under the watchful eyes of Selphie and the princesses with experience throwing events like this. Luso threw himself into it with gusto.

They parked Garden in an open field at the edge of a forest and set up long picnic tables and sprawling tents. Chocolina procured lanterns that they strung up on tall wooden poles with the help of the three fairies and Llyud. Zell dug through Garden’s storage and found fireworks that Edea had to prevent him from setting off immediately. Guy, Sabin, Jecht, and Mustadio went into the forest to chop down trees to craft into a makeshift stage for the musicians and performers. Practically everyone helped drag chairs, plates, drinks, cutlery, and more from the cafeteria to set it all up for their big night. Someone even managed to get the spotlights and string lights from the quad, while Relm and a bunch of the other kids made all sorts of decorations – painted artwork, paper flowers, pinwheels, streamers, and more.

It was all a whirlwind, but everything came together on their big night.

Ignis and Quina had an army to cook for, so they spent most of their day in the kitchens preparing as much as they could. Yuri, Eiko, and Aria all volunteered their services to help prepare and distribute the food while Tifa set up her bar. Gladio fired up the grill and multiple cookfires blazed under the watchful eyes of Wakka, Firion, Tycoon, Zangetsu, and Elfe. Lann and Reynn even rolled out all their sweets from Nine Bean Coffee, though Enna Kros had to push them to do it. 

Luso wasn’t sure he had ever seen so much food in one place before. Noel, Vanille, Trey, and Gau brought in the results of their hunts: a bounty of boar, ochu, and zu. Luso’s mouth watered over the lemon, zucchini, and garlic zu, the ochu potato and chive soup, and all the ways they chopped up and served the boar – grilled, roasted, glazed with honey and carrots, served with spiced pumpkin, and in thinly sliced bacon strips. Sauteed squash, tomatoes and cheese, and a selection of apples, peaches, and strawberries gathered from the forest rounded out their sides, filling their tables and their bellies with good cheer and everyone’s company.

Princess Sarah started the night’s festivities with a jaunty tune on her lute that he wasn’t used to hearing from her, and the dancing began at once. Penelo and Lilisette were first, as usual, but Bartz, Mog, Aerith, Yuna, Rikku, and more jumped to their feet. Edward, Deuce, and Ulmia added their instruments to the performance and soon Luso had joined Bartz in dancing on top of a cleared off table, their audience clapping to the tune. Luso didn’t care what everyone thought of him, nor if his dancing was even good – he was just having so much fun.

Raucous cheers rang out when the fireworks finally went off and a few of the brawlers started a sparring ring. Luso wandered away from the dancing to take a look at the combatants, considering joining for himself, grinning as he watched all of his new friends partake in their own ways. He spotted Vaan and Palom trying to secretly pour some of Auron’s sake, only stopping when Vincent caught them. Many of the old men – Regis, the Dawn Warriors, Strago, Fusoya, and Cid Haze – sat away from most of the ruckus and told each other stories. Some, like Tseng, Basch, and Golbez, stood at the periphery of the festivities and kept an eye out for errant monsters.

Luso was starting to think of how nice it would be for some of his friends to be here, when he nearly ran into a moogle.

For a moment, he thought it was Montblanc, and muttered an apology until he recognized the blue coat and the fiddle he hugged close, and with a start, he blurted out the moogle’s name. “Hurdy!”

“Luso!” Hurdy replied, leaping straight up into Luso’s arms and hugging him. Luso squeezed him back, grinning in delight. “I heard all this music and came to see what the hubbub was about, kupo, but I didn’t recognize anyone! I sure am glad to see you, kupo!”

Luso spun with him and held Hurdy up in the air before letting him down. Several of the others wandered over, curious about the new arrival. “Everyone, meet Hurdy!” Luso exclaimed with his hands on his hips. “The best bard in Jylland, and a member of Clan Gully!”

“It’s a pleasure to meet you, Hurdy!” Ciaran said, taking a well-deserved break on one of the benches. “Feel free to join, and eat whatever you’d like!”

Tyro waved to him. “Come and try the peach cobbler, it’s delicious!”

“Woohoo!” Eiko cheered, brandishing her flute. “Now we have another reason to celebrate – we have a new friend!”

Cid Highwind, Laguna, Kiros, and Lani raised their glasses in a toast, and the crowd parted for Montblanc who gaped at Hurdy in surprise. Carbuncle trailed behind him, presumably also to see what the commotion was.

“Thank you all!” Hurdy bashfully hid his face under all of the attention, waving them off, but then he noticed Montblanc as well. “Kupo! Montblanc, is that you!?”

“It is, kupo!” Montblanc replied, hopping over to Hurdy. “I like the new look! I never thought I’d see you here, kupo.”

“Kupo?” Hurdy responded, tilting his head. “Typical of big brothers not to remember my new hairdo!”

Luso beamed. “Aw, don’t overthink it! A reunion between brothers is just another reason to celebrate, right?” A thought had just occurred to him and his grin faltered – wasn’t Montblanc from the dream version of Ivalice? He wondered if that meant they weren’t brothers at all. Just when he was about to voice his thoughts, Eiko grabbed Hurdy by the hand.

“I’d love to hear what you can do, Hurdy!” she said. “What instruments do you play?”

Hurdy glanced back at Montblanc, who urged him on. “Oh, um… Flutes, fiddles, bells, and lutes – you name it, kupo!” he said. “I’d love to play with you!”

“Go have fun, kupo,” Montblanc said. Luso didn’t want to spoil the moment now, so he figured they’d get a chance to talk another time. “We’ll catch up later!”

“Yet more music,” Carbuncle said with a sigh. “Not that I dislike it, but at this rate everyone will be playing all through the night. I think I could use some peace and quiet.” He ran off toward the border of the forest, his faintly glowing fur prominent in the darkness.

After Carbuncle left and Hurdy joined the other musicians on the stage to great applause, Montblanc crossed his arms. “Is it possible he’s not from my world, kupo – or the dream Ivalice, rather?”

Tyro joined Montblanc and Luso, furrowing his brow. “Hmm… I guess it is. It is quite unusual that he seems to know both you and Luso.”

“And that there is a Hurdy who is both my brother and a member of Clan Gully, kupo,” Montblanc said. “We’ll have to ask him what he remembers, kupo.”

Luso shrugged. “Well, Hurdy’s Hurdy, right? I wanna catch the sparring ring while they’re still accepting entrants, so I’ll see you guys later!” he said. He turned and ran off, out of the lantern light and closer to the forest’s edge, where another circle of bright lights formed the sparring ring. Just as he was about to make his way there, another flash to his right, just among the trees, caught his eye. “Huh? I think Carbuncle went off in that direction.”

Something felt off, suddenly. Luso tilted his head and then made his way over to that area. The light flashed again, and now he was sure he had spotted a magick barrier. Luso picked up his pace. “Carbuncle?”

The light reflected off of someone’s spectacles in the forest – someone he didn’t notice at first because of their black coat. Luso drew his sword when he recognized Shadowsmith, who held Carbuncle in a glittering, magickal cage. “Begone from here, you knave!” Carbuncle ordered Shadowsmith, writhing within his prison.

“Shadowsmith!” Luso shouted out, hoping to get someone else’s attention. “What’re you doing here? Let him go!”

“Figures someone like you would show up to spoil the party.” Luso looked over his shoulder, spotting the speaker, Hauyn – one of the ones who had taken it upon herself to patrol the area. She held her knife ready, thrusting a hand in the air to summon Siren - a signal that something had gone wrong.

“I have no inclination to let this summoned creature go, but I will depart from here,” Shadowsmith said. “Just as Carbuncle wishes.”

Luso lunged forward. “Ambushing Carbuncle while he’s alone? You chicken!” He swung for Shadowsmith, but sliced only air as he dodged out of the way and retaliated with ice and darkness. Siren wove a barrier of wind to protect Luso just in time, but it gave Shadowsmith enough space to duck away into the Torsion he conjured. “No!” Luso yelled out, diving for it.

The Torsion vanished again, taking both Shadowsmith and Carbuncle with it, just in time for several of the others to run up to them. Tyro was among the first to reach Luso and Hauyn. “Wait, was that Shadowsmith!?”

“It was,” Hauyn said, her head lowered. “And he kidnapped Carbuncle right out from under us.”


RITZ


Someone put a stop to the music and the fireworks when word spread that Carbuncle had been taken.

A chill descended over their night of revelry as they gathered around the largest bonfire and planned their next move – tracking down Shadowsmith and rescuing Carbuncle from whatever he had planned. Ritz crossed her arms and folded her legs at her ankles as she stood, sifting through the possibilities in her head, reaching past the panic and the uncertainty. She always prided herself on being able to rationally think her way through a situation. Tense chatter bubbled up in concerned whispers all around her.

The Warrior of Light stepped forward first and silence fell over the assembled crowd. “Without Carbuncle, we are lost on our journey to find and help the summons of the World of Illusions,” he said. “But even more importantly, we are bereft of a friend who has journeyed alongside us – we must rescue him before he comes to danger.”

“Tyro, Dr. Mog, is there anything you can tell us of Shadowsmith’s motivations?” the Onion Knight asked, standing on the opposite side of the bonfire from the Warrior of Light. “If he kidnapped Carbuncle… then we can only assume he means to foil us from finding the summons, or he wishes to find the remaining ones himself.”

Tyro hung his head. “I’m not sure… He has always used lies and deceit to accomplish his goals, so a kidnapping is not beneath him, but…”

“Terra and I already took stock of the magicite currently in our possession, kupo,” said Dr. Mog. “And just so you know, kupo, Alexander, Chocobo, Leviathan, Diabolos, Ramuh, Ifrit, Sylph, and Pandemona are all accounted for.”

“So from that we can assume he doesn’t wish harm on any of the summons, right?” asked Aerith. “So maybe… Carbuncle isn’t in danger?”

Tifa nodded. “Yeah! If he wanted to hurt them, or us, he’d have stolen those magicite and handed them right over to Zemus. But he didn’t, so he’s got to be following his own goals.”

“Whatever they may be,” Tyro said, brow furrowing as he pressed his fingers to his lips in thought. “Mog, are you able to track him?”

Mog, their original guide, let out a sigh. “I can’t, kupo. Normally I can track dimensional coordinates no problem, but Shadowsmith has hidden them from me. And I can’t see where Carbuncle himself is either, kupo.”

Ritz had been staring into the fire, ideas churning, when a thought occurred to her. “The last time we saw Shadowsmith, he was with Mewt. Can you track him?”

Mog brightened. “Mewt, kupo? I’m certain I can!”

“That Mewt, kupo… He better not be part of this too,” Montblanc said, scowling.

Montblanc and Hurdy stood together. Though he was supposedly Montblanc’s brother, she knew nothing about Hurdy, and he showed no recognition to the prince’s name. She briefly remembered meeting the airship technician brother of Montblanc’s – Nono, she remembered vaguely – but Montblanc had never mentioned Hurdy to her.

“What a lack of respect for the name of His Highness,” a voice called out from the back of the crowd. Everyone shuffled to make way for the bearer of the haughty voice, who brazenly walked to the center of their gathering with a hand draped lazily over the scabbard at his belt. The firelight almost made his red and white surcoat blaze gold, and the white ribbons trailing from his hat fluttered as he moved. Ritz felt as if a stone had dropped into her stomach.

“Kupo! Llednar, what’re you doing here!?” Montblanc exclaimed before she could. He brandished his staff just as Ritz unsheathed her rapier, and the tension grew thicker as the others regarded the enemy in their midst.

“Has Mewt sicced you on us?” Ritz asked, pointing the tip of her blade at him. So much for Mewt’s promise not to harm them. “Everyone, be on your guard – this guy is bad news.”

“I’m here to cut down the prince’s enemies,” Llednar said, shrugging. He didn’t even bother to draw his own blade. “So if you’re after him, I will have to stop you.”

“Stand down,” said the Warrior of Light, his gaze unforgiving. “If you are an enemy to Ritz and Montblanc, you are an enemy to us all. What hope do you have of defeating us, as surrounded as you are? We do not have to resort to violence.”

Llednar only smirked. Despite the heat of the fire, Ritz felt cold.

“I don’t like that look on his face, kupo,” said Hurdy, edging closer to his brother. He had discarded his fiddle and now hugged a theorbo close. “How do you know this guy, brother?”

Montblanc’s ears pricked. “He’s the personal guard of Prince Mewt, created by the queen to be the blade of her tyranny, kupo.”

Hurdy tilted his head. “Queen Ashelia, kupo? Why would she do such a thing?”

Ashe stepped forward, blade ready. “I suspect he speaks of a different queen.”

Ritz had never crossed blades with Llednar herself, but she knew how fearsome he could be from his reputation. “If Marche could beat him, then so can I!” she declared, rushing forward. Llednar’s face twisted into what she could only assume was rage, and he unsheathed his sword just in time to clash with hers.

“Don’t speak of that trash to me!” Llednar snarled, all composure gone. Ritz leapt back just as he swung with surprising strength, and she retaliated with a shadow strike at the tip of her rapier. She stabbed at his shadow cast by the bonfire, but when she attempted to stitch it to the ground, he stepped away, whirling with his blade swung in a full circle. Ritz just barely managed to block, but the force behind his blow threw her backward.

His attack struck three more around him who had closed in to find an opening. But even as Zidane, Locke, and Celes fell away, Cloud and Zack took their places. Both struck toward Llednar at the same time from opposite sides and Llednar made no move to block or avoid it. Someone shouted, but both of their heavy blades struck – and as if Llednar was made of solid metal, they recoiled off of him.

“What the – ?” Zack asked, and Llednar took advantage of his stunned reaction to swipe in another wide circle, slicing both Zack and Cloud and kicking them away.

Fire exploded around Llednar, courtesy of Lulu, but when it cleared he stood as if ruffled only by a slight breeze. He smirked in her direction, walking toward her calmly even as Cinque, Yuri, and Yang stood in his way. Llednar raised his free hand and a cloud of dark magicks fell on them, choking the air they breathed, and then burst outward to hurl them into the crowd.

“Impossible, kupo!” said Montblanc. “He still has the queen’s Fortune law protecting him!”

“What does that mean?” the Onion Knight asked, as others tried to subdue Llednar with ice, grappling, or even just rope. “Is he immune to anything we try to do to him!?”

“He is,” Ritz said, clutching her rapier tight. Llednar was dangerous enough, but with the queen’s law protecting him he was invincible. She didn’t even know how he could have it in this world. “Marche managed to defeat him, though.”

“He won’t do it again,” Llednar said to her, his voice dangerously low as he fixated on her. “Where is he? Let me prove my unstoppable power.”

“He’s not here. You’ll have to make do with me,” she challenged, trying her best to draw him away from the others. He stepped toward her, slowly and meaningfully, and now she scrambled to come up with a new plan. While the others went to help those that Llednar had already struck down, she had to keep his attention off of them. Maybe she would be able to lead him away from here altogether.

Montblanc stood at her side, a gesture she didn’t expect to find so comforting, and hurled ice and poison and lightning, but Llednar shrugged off all of his spells. Even time magic proved ineffective.

Before Llednar could reach them, Amidatelion appeared in a whirl of mist. Llednar barely paid them any mind, but a portal opened under his feet and swallowed him, making him vanish in a blink.

“I’ve transported him as far away from here as I could,” Amidatelion said, armor clinking as they gently dropped to the ground. Ritz let her shoulders relax, but she kept her eyes out; it was possible he could ignore the effects of a forced teleportation too, for all she knew. “Yet we should still take our leave of this place before he returns.”


HURDY


The festivities came to an abrupt end after Llednar’s attack as Hurdy’s new companions all worked together to pack up everything with startling efficiency. As they transported everything behind the gates of the immense structure he assumed to be a palace – Balamb Garden, they called it – Luso explained the circumstances of this world to him, and all that they fought for.

Hurdy listened with awe. “I can sense the makings of the greatest ballad I’ve ever penned, kupo!” he exclaimed, jumping up and down. “Well, greatest after our battle against Neukhia,” he amended. “Kupo!”

Montblanc seemed a little more somber than Hurdy expected him to be. He wondered if it was due to losing their friend Carbuncle to that dastardly Shadowsmith, but Montblanc had always been impressed by his story of banishing that interdimensional monster. “So, kupo, you know Luso, do you?” he asked.

Hurdy put his hands on his hips. “What’s that supposed to mean, kupo? Of course I do! Luso’s one of my best friends, kupo!”

Luso grimaced. “Uh, well… Hurdy, things may not really be as they seem.”

Montblanc looked past Hurdy, as if afraid to look into his eyes. “Yes, kupo… I don’t think you’re my brother.”

Hurdy’s stomach dropped. “What? Are you pulling my pom, kupo?”

“You look like him a little, and you sound like him, kupo… But we have totally different experiences. We’re from completely different worlds, kupo.”

Hurdy shook his head. “What’s gotten into you, kupo? This is a really mean jest.” He scoffed. “Is this like how you used to joke when we were young that I was adopted and my real parents were morbols, kupo? It wasn’t funny then and it isn’t funny now!”

Montblanc’s pom drooped. “No, kupo, this isn’t a joke. I’m from a dream version of Ivalice. I don’t know why, kupo, but the dream Ivalice and your Ivalice seem to have a lot in common… but many differences, too.”

An old man in a cowl and long, red robe approached, ending his levitation spell over the table he carried back to Garden. “Pardon me for interrupting, but I couldn’t help but overhear you. Montblanc, do you remember how I discussed that dreams oft have a basis in reality? Perhaps your Ivalice used young Hurdy’s here as a template upon its creation.”

“A template, huh?” Luso asked, scratching his head. “I don’t think I get it.”

Montblanc scratched his chin, but Hurdy found himself even more confused. “So you’re saying I could be based off of the Montblanc from Hurdy and Luso’s world, kupo?” Montblanc asked. “Interesting… Thank you for explaining that, Doga.”

“I only postulate,” Doga said. “We cannot claim that is the case with any certainty.”

A girl – Rikku, if Hurdy remembered correctly – poked into their conversation. “Dream Ivalice, huh? That kinda reminds me – maybe you should chat with Tidus. He’s from Dream Zanarkand, which was based on the real Zanarkand. I think. And Shuyin does look a lot like him, so maybe it’s the same situation?”

Hurdy’s eyes started to burn. This was all starting to get to be too much for him, and he struggled to understand what they were saying. “Montblanc isn’t a dream, kupo! He’s my big brother!” His knees quivered, and rather than letting them see him burst into tears, he turned and ran away. 

“Hurdy, wait!” Luso shouted.

Rikku flailed her arms. “Oh, no, did I say something wrong?”

He couldn’t understand why they’d say such hurtful things about Montblanc, and why Montblanc would tell him that. None of it made any sense. Worst of all, Hurdy knew it made Montblanc sad to say those things – he could see it from whisker to paw, yet he made such claims regardless with a brave face. Something was wrong, or there were too many things at play that he couldn’t understand. Part of him even wondered if Luso was real, but he refused to entertain that thought.

He wiped his eyes as he ran past all the people. How could they all make light of such a thing?


MONTBLANC


Montblanc forced himself to push his worries about his brother – no, Hurdy – from his mind so they could focus on finding Carbuncle. Penelo went to go find him, and apparently they knew each other from Luso’s Clan Gully, so they were catching up. Besides, for all Montblanc knew, perhaps the brother he remembered didn’t exist at all. Did dreams even have siblings? He had Nono in that dream world, sure, but…

Sol pumped a first in the air and jeered, interrupting Montblanc’s thoughts. “Heey! You guys ready to beat up Mewt and take Carbuncle back!?”

Aire wagged a finger at him. “We’re not here to beat up anyone, you goof! Not unless we have to.”

Montblanc sighed as he waited inside of the Torsion for it to open again and let them out where Mog indicated Mewt should be. They could have brought the whole Garden, but they decided to keep it hidden in case Llednar showed up again. That wasn’t someone Montblanc had any desire to see again. It was just another reason for him to wish Marche was here.

Marche would know what to do. Marche would get through to Mewt.

The bright, morning sun shone through the darkness inside the Torsion as Mog opened it up for their party to emerge. He had to shield his eyes as they stepped out and the sun reflected off of a resplendent palace of white marble tiles and gold, behind a moat with glistening blue water and palm trees dotted along the wall’s base. Armored Manikins stood guard at a bridge leading to the palace gates, but dozens of other Manikins camped out in front of that bridge, living in tents and ramshackle lean-tos in the sand around the palace.

Montblanc knew what he was looking at. “This is Bervenia Royal Palace, kupo,” he said. “Seat of the royal family. I should’ve known Mewt would be here, kupo.” He half expected to see the Judgemaster or perhaps even Mewt’s Nu Mou attendant, but neither of them appeared.

Setzer put a hand on his hip as he regarded the scene. “What is it those Manikins are doing here, I wonder? Could they all be without a home?”

“Why don’t we ask around?” Cor suggested. “I doubt we’ll get into the palace without force with walls and guards like that.”

They split into two groups and dispersed into the crowd, letting the chatter and bustle of the camp surround them. Montblanc had seen camps like these back home – those who suffered at Queen Remedi’s hands, living in poverty and even starvation due to the corruption that infiltrated nearly every city in Ivalice. Many had to join clans to survive, but some of those clans turned to banditry that only exacerbated the problem. The biggest difference between this and those camps he remembered was that this one had no stench of unwashed bodies or the desperation of rotten food – he supposed Manikins didn’t need to bathe or eat – and that despite their circumstance, there was no general aura of misery and hopelessness.

Child Manikins ran and played, but they were careful not to leave the boundaries of the camp. Some crowded around crystal clusters, nourished by their light. Many glanced up at Montblanc and Sol as they passed. He saw curiosity rather than hostility in their gazes.

Sol, ever the chatterbox, started questioning them first. “Hey, so, uh… what’re you all doing here?”

A Faris Neo-Manikin answered. “Many of us have lost our homes,” she said as she sat and mended a torn corner of her tent. “We are here to petition the prince for new ones.”

“He’s given us plenty of crystals to eat!” said a Manikin of Layle.

“The prince, kupo?” Montblanc asked, his pom perked up. “This is Prince Mewt you’re talking about, right, kupo?”

A Manikin of Xande, of all people, wandered over – and he had to refrain from guarding himself. “Yes,” he said. “Prince Mewt is very kind, kupo.”

“Okay, it’s really weird to hear Xande say ‘kupo’ like that,” Sol said, scratching his head.

“Agreed, kupo,” said Montblanc. It felt wrong on any non-moogle’s lips, much less Xande’s, but he had other things to worry about.

“Sorry, I heard you say it, so I thought it was normal,” the Xande Manikin replied. “We’re still learning the ways of the world, after all. But let me introduce you and those other Lightbearers to the leader of this camp. He’s been here the longest, so he can explain.”

“Er, thank you, kupo,” said Montblanc, as the Manikin led them on a winding path through the camp. “You called us Lightbearers, kupo? But I thought you Neo-Manikins bore both light and darkness yourselves.”

“It’s said that yours is the original light,” the Xande Manikin responded. “And it is your battling that gives rise to the crystals throughout this land, and combined with our darkness, they become aspected to the elements. We use those ice, water, fire, and earth crystals – and so on – in our day to day lives.”

Sol’s eyes widened. “Wow! I had no idea that’s where those types of crystals came from!”

“Not everyone is happy to have to rely on you folks battling to nourish us, so we can live and build things,” the Manikin admitted. “Those types call you ‘Fleshbearers’ instead, though I’m not sure that is an accurate name, since I’d say some of you are ‘Furbearers’ or ‘Ironbearers’ instead.”

“I’ve got flesh under this fur, kupo,” Montblanc said. “And some just wear armor! Though I suppose it doesn’t work for Amidatelion, kupo… I’m not sure what they have under their armor.”

“Is that so?” the Manikin said. “Well, in any case, it is not meant to be a positive name.”

Montblanc was going to respond, but his eyes caught a Manikin of himself sitting huddled together with another Moogle Manikin – Hurdy. The Hurdy Manikin looked as if he had been hurt by something; part of his arm had been chipped, and his inner shine intensified near it as if the light that made up his form threatened to spill out. The Montblanc Manikin fussed over him, using a crystal to repair his crystalline body. Montblanc blinked, suddenly pulled back to memories in their youth of how he used to bandage his little brother’s scuffed knees.

Those memories were real, he knew. Even if their world might not have existed until Marche and Mewt and the others came to Ivalice, he knew without a doubt that he had those memories. And he didn’t realize until now how much he had clung to them.

Could Manikins be brothers? In this world where they were born from the crystals, where they had none of the same ties that their real counterparts did, these versions of Montblanc and Hurdy had managed to find each other.

The Xande Manikin introduced them to a Manikin that Montblanc didn’t recognize, who wore a short-sleeved jacket, gloves and spectacles. Setzer, Cor, and Aire had arrived at this Manikin’s tent at the same time, and based on their expressions, none of them recognized him either.

“Who’s that guy?” Sol asked.

“Such a boorish lad,” Setzer said, rubbing his temple as he shook his head. “We were pointed in this direction because this Manikin is the leader of this camp. Have some class, Sol.”

“Yes, we’re guests here, Sol!” Aire reprimanded him. “Don’t forget to show some tact.”

“Yeesh, I was just asking,” Sol said, putting both hands up in a gesture of surrender.

“It’s fine,” said the unfamiliar Manikin, placating them both. “Yes, it’s true I’m the leader here, but it’s not for any special reason. We Manikins don’t have royalty or nobility like you do.”

Cor stepped forward to speak before any of the others could. “Can you tell us the situation here?”

“We’ve been expelled from our homes in the mountains by a pair of beasts,” the Manikin replied, as Xande’s Manikin took a place at his side. “Fearsome monsters that none of our number have been able to defeat. We think they might be from the World of Illusions, but it’s difficult to say for sure. Prince Mewt has been trying to help us, but he and the Neo-Manikins who serve him can’t vanquish those foes alone.”

Montblanc crossed his arms. “Mewt’s sure a far cry from the prince he used to be, kupo,” he said. “I guess he really has changed.”

“A pair of beasts from the World of Illusions…” said Cor. “Could be more of the Astrals we’re after – the Brothers this time.”

“Do you know of anyone called Shadowsmith that could be with the prince?” Setzer asked. “We seek that man, and last we knew they were together.”

“There’s another Lightbearer often seen at his side,” the Manikin said. “Though none of us know his name. He wears black.”

“Sounds like our man,” said Cor. “So that means we need to get into the palace.”

Aire raised her hand. “One last question – whose Manikin are you? I have no idea who you are!”

“Talk about tactless,” Sol muttered.

The Manikin turned back to the flap of his tent just as a man emerged from it with knee-high boots and partially slicked back blond hair, and Montblanc realized upon seeing his spectacles that he was the man this Manikin leader was based off of.

“Do you mean to ask if he’s me?” the man said. “You can call me Wrieg. I can’t say I know who you people are, either, but maybe you can explain why this Manikin looks like me.”

“I’ve tried to tell you,” Wrieg’s Manikin said. “All of us take our appearances from you Lightbearers.”

Wrieg crossed his arms. “I refuse to accept you’re all just some mass-produced crystal clones. Something else is going on here, and I want to get to the bottom of it. I haven’t been able to meet with that prince yet, so maybe you can help.”

Montblanc shook his head. “There’s more to it than that, kupo. I don’t know if you’ve realized it yet, but you’re in a different world!”

“Not another time, eh?” Wrieg asked. He frowned. “How am I supposed to just believe you at face value?”

“Do you recognize any of these other Manikins?” Setzer asked. “Maybe we can figure out whose world you come from, and they can be bothered to explain.”

“Before you do, Wrieg here has offered to help us slay those beasts,” said Wrieg’s Manikin. “Right, Wrieg?”

Wrieg took a spear from the side of the tent and planted the butt of it against the ground. “I did promise. And I don’t recognize any of these other Manikins, so I guess answers will have to wait.”


RITZ


Ritz wondered if it was a bad idea to pursue the two beasts plaguing the Manikins when they should have been trying to get into the palace. But Bervenia was strongly fortified even in Ivalice, and she didn’t want to fight the Manikins if it could be helped. Besides, she wasn’t sure if her own personal feelings regarding Mewt were getting in the way of her goals, since it was just as probable that they’d find Shadowsmith and Carbuncle if they sought the beasts they suspected to be the Brothers.

She didn’t know what to make of Wrieg yet as they prepared to set out from the Manikin camp. But she supposed anyone with a reasonable head on their shoulders would act at least a little guarded upon being told they were in a different world with complete strangers. Ritz herself only jumped at it because she had experience with that sort of thing, after all.

Quistis tried to make some light conversation with both Wrieg and Hurdy, but the latter seemed too downcast to respond much to it.

“Where are you from, Wrieg? Maybe it could be familiar to some of us,” Quistis said.

“I was born in a nation called Westa, but I spend most of my time traveling,” Wrieg answered. “But even after all that I’ve seen, this Bervenia Palace doesn’t seem familiar at all.”

“Westa, you say?” said the Wrieg Manikin, who volunteered to accompany them and help identify the monsters. “If that is something from your memory, I would appreciate you telling me more. I'd like to know some things about the man who looks like me."

Wrieg looked hesitant to answer, and Ritz couldn’t tell if it was due to the memories or the Manikin. “Well…”

Just as they were about to depart from the Manikin camp and into the desert, a commotion near the palace caught their attention. The palace gates opened, and when many of the Manikins crowded around the bridge, the guards hurried to make way for someone among them. Cheers rang out as the Manikins implored whoever it was among them.

“That’s Mewt!” Ritz exclaimed, spotting the single Hume in the sea of Manikins. “He’s come out of the palace!”

Ashley, in the lead, turned back with his eyes narrowed. “A suspicious turn. Why now?”

Ritz made her way back through the camp, but to her immense surprise, Mewt rushed toward her in even more of a hurry. As soon as he stopped in front of her, he keeled over to catch his breath. “Mewt!” Ritz said, concern for her friend overriding her previous suspicion. “What’s wrong?”

“I’m glad I caught you in time!” Mewt said, panting. “I came as soon as I heard you were here. I could really use your help.”

“First he sets Llednar on us, and now he wants to ask us for help?” Quistis asked, her whip held taut between her hands.

“Llednar?” Mewt asked, eyes wide. “I didn’t do that! I didn’t even know he was here.”

Ritz believed him. She wanted to have faith in that promise that he meant them no harm. “If you want to ask us to go after those monsters to protect these Manikins, we’re already setting out to do that,” she said.

“Well, yes,” he said, straightening again. “That was part of it. But the main thing I wanted to ask… Please, you must help me find the Gran Grimoire.”

Ashley nearly lunged forward. “What did you say?”

The very book he used to change the world. For whatever reason, Ashley seemed to recognize it. Ritz knew Shadowsmith was helping him get his hands on it again, but the last time they saw Mewt, they were at odds over his goals. Why would he ask them for help now? Just as she was about to voice her thoughts, the ground shook and a roar swept across the desert behind them. The Manikins scrambled, many of them rising in shouts of panic.

“I know that roar!”

“It’s here! It came for us!”

“It followed us all this way…”

Mewt turned back to the Manikins. “Please, everyone stay calm!”

The Wrieg Manikin grasped Wrieg’s arm. “You must do something!”

Wrieg shook free of his grip, hefting his spear. “All right – looks like we’ve got one of those beasts on our hands sooner than expected. Everyone, be on your guard!”

A minotaur burst from the sand, hulking and enormous, with two deadly horns, armor, and a giant axe it brandished with both hands. It roared again, charging toward them as if in a berserk rage.

“That’s Sacred,” Quistis said, snapping her whip. “A Guardian Force – one of the Brothers!”


Character Abilities

Ashe

ULT: Painflare

Effect: Follow up damage increase

Like I mentioned with Kytes, most of the cast of XII gets matched up with an esper for their ULT ability. For many of them, I gave them the esper that they're matched up with in Revenant Wings (defeating an esper in battle gives each character their Quickening), but in that game Ashe is matched up with Famfrit. I didn't do that here for two reasons - one, Dr. Cid already has Famfrit for his abilities, and two, Belias is way more appropriate to be matched with Ashe from a story perspective, so that's who she has here. After use, all of her follow-up damage is increased.


Penelo

ULT: Eschaton

Effect: When cleansing debuffs, recharge own EX

This is the ULT update for the original Penelo, not Dancer Penelo. Similar to Ashe, defeating an esper unlocks her Quickening. In Penelo's case, she gets Ultima. After use, every time she cleanses a party member's debuffs (including her own), her EX recharges to full.


Hurdy (Unique - Instruments) Non-elemental magic damage, support, battery, heal, Esuna, damage reduction, HP/BRV Regen

15: Requiem

35: 100% Wool

EX: Nameless Song

LD: Angelsong -> Changes HP attack to "Magickal Refrain"

FR: In Concert (with Deuce)

BT: Soul Etude

ULT: Summon Famfrit (Effect: EX usage gives party Reraise)

Burst theme: “Knowledge of Adventure,” battle theme

Alternate Skin: His FFXII appearance as a teleporter moogle

Most of Hurdy's abilities come from Bard skills, which is Hurdy's unique playable class in A2. Requiem typically does damage to the undead and prevents them from reviving, but here it just does damage. 100% Wool is the only non-Bard ability here (other than his ULT), which comes from the Animist job instead, since I wanted to give him some variety. Animist is still pretty appropriate for him, since it is a supportive class that also uses instruments. I thought of giving him Frog Song instead of 100% Wool, because it's another song, but then I'd have to focus him around the Toad status and I didn't want to do that for Hurdy. :P

100% Wool reduces BRV and HP damage dealt to the party, while Nameless Song is a heal and stat increase. Angelsong is party Regen, and upon use his HP attack changes to Magickal Refrain one time, which batteries the party and compels his party members to use their last action.

Though coincidentally the cast of XII's ULTs also have them using esper abilities, Hurdy gets to summon Famfrit for his ULT because Famfrit is the Totema of the Moogles. After use, his EX will also grant the party the Reraise status.

Notes:

Sorry this one took a bit to come out, it ended up being a long one!

Justification for Hurdy: He is one of the main playable characters of Tactics A2.

Justification for Llednar: He is one of the antagonists of Tactics Advance, and a recurring boss battle.

Justification for Wrieg: He is one of the main playable characters of Dimensions 2.

Chapter 65: Idle Chatter VI

Notes:

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Hurdy with Deuce: Both are kindhearted musicians and little can keep them down.

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Idle Chatter VI


Scene 1: The Sage of Storms (requested by AngstStoryReader)


(Terra and Garnet are eating their lunch in the quad together, sitting under the warm sun, when the clouds suddenly darken overhead. A storm is coming.)

GARNET: Oh, how terrible! Just when I thought I would get some fresh air.

TERRA: The weather sure is difficult to predict in this world.

GARNET ( while gathering up their food and heading for shelter ): It’s almost as if Ramuh himself summoned this storm, is it not?

(Terra joins her underneath an overhang just as the clouds break and rain pours. They sit and watch the storm as others who had also been enjoying the nice weather scramble for shelter of their own.)

TERRA: I suppose it is. Though his storms are fierce, the Ramuh of my world is also wise – and very kind. I may even find a storm like this comforting now, as if it is a reminder of his wisdom and care.

GARNET: To be honest, I would appreciate the boon of his wisdom again. There is much and more at stake, even now, and I’ve wondered at how we may reach into his magicite and ask for advice.

TERRA: How about the next best thing? Maybe we could ask Cid, Ramuh’s Dominant. He is someone that Clive respects greatly, so he is sure to have wisdom to share.

GARNET: That is a wonderful idea!

(They track down Cid, who is sitting in a second floor lounge area, shuffling through a deck of Triple Triad cards.)

TERRA: Hello, Cid. I hope we are not interrupting your relaxation – we’d like to ask you something.

CID: I’ve never been known to relax a day in my life, so I’m not about to start now.

GARNET: We were wondering… Could you share some of Ramuh’s wisdom with us? Both Terra and I have fond memories of that eidolon helping us out of some of our darkest moments, so we thought you might have words to share regarding our struggle with Zemus.

(Cid takes in a deep breath, then peers down at his cards. Both Terra and Garnet prepare for words inundated with great meaning.)

CID: If you find yourself alone under a city with Bahamut, Eikon of Light – bugger off in the other direction. Elsewise you’ll end up blinded for days.

TERRA: Er… That’s not really the sort of thing we were asking about.

GARNET: Well, I suppose since we haven’t faced Bahamut yet it could be relevant…

CID: Ah, and don’t leave a tab open at the pleasure house for too long. Isabelle gets antsy, see.

GARNET: Um…

CID: By chance, do either of you know how I might go about getting this stunner on one of these cards? (He gestures to his face, but Terra and Garnet sigh, glance at each other, shrug, and walk away). What? It’s a fair question. Everyone else’s got one.

TERRA: Perhaps it only takes effect when he transforms?


Scene 2: Puppetmaster and Dollmaster


(In the training center, Aphmau and Luca are fighting monsters with the puppets Ovjang and Mnejing and the dolls Calca and Brina. Calca and Mnejing dispatch a monstrous pitcher plant at the same time, and both Aphmau and Luca cheer.)

LUCA: Ovjang and Mnejing are so strong!

APHMAU: So are Calca and Brina! This is really fun!

LUCA: I’ve been meaning to ask you, how do you make them work? They both seem surprisingly autonomous.

APHMAU: Most Puppetmasters use an animator to remotely control their automatons, but my mother built them with a special artifact to enhance them. Now they more or less act on their own.

OVJANG: And we have been Aphmau’s best friends ever since!

MNEJING: Though I was originally intended for her brother, Razfahd.

LUCA: Amazing! I would have loved to meet your mother – she sounds like a talented tinkerer!

APHMAU: She really was. What about Calca and Brina?

LUCA: They were originally just my dolls when I was a kid, but once I became an apprentice to Cid I learned how to make them into robots. Most of the time, they help me with airship maintenance. They can’t talk like Ovjang and Mnejing, though – that would be amazing!

APHMAU: But they merge together into one giant doll, right? That is certainly impressive!

LUCA: Thanks! I got the idea from Golbez, actually. When I was a kid, he possessed them with his magic and used them to attack Cecil and the others. He even got them to talk, too.

MNEJING: I didn’t know Golbez liked to play with dolls.

LUCA: Hey, Aphmau. Do you want to try commanding Calca and Brina? It’d be fun to switch things up!

APHMAU: Ooh, great idea! And you can try commanding Ovjang and Mnejing. It’s difficult to fight with more than one automaton at the time, but I’m sure you can do it. I’ll give you this animator I used to use to help me learn.

(They swap their dolls and puppets and give each other tips. Calca and Brina do a jerky dance around Aphmau, while Ovjang mostly listens to Luca but Mnejing gets irritable. When Luca commands Ovjang to attack a wolverine-like beast, she misses, and fires a spell off into the trees. The ground shakes and the monster runs off, and a heavy, repetitive thudding noise comes closer. Luca and Aphmau prepare themselves, and Construct 8 emerges into the clearing.)

CONSTRUCT 8: ENEMY ASSAULT DETECTED. RETALIATION IMMINENT.

OVJANG: Oh dear.

LUCA: Wait, no, it was an accident!

(Mustadio blunders into the clearing, arms waving. Calca and Brina stand protectively in front of Luca, Aphmau, and the puppets.)

MUSTADIO: Wait, Construct 8 – stand down! Those are our allies, remember?

CONSTRUCT 8: COMMAND CONFIRMED. STANDING BY.

APHMAU: Wow, that was a close one. But Calca and Brina were ready to defend you. Even if they can’t speak, I think they’re more autonomous than you give them credit for.

OVJANG: Agreed! They had the desire to protect you in their hearts.

LUCA: You think so? If you think they have hearts, Ovjang, then it must be true!

APHMAU: Maybe we can have a go at controlling Construct 8 next?

MUSTADIO: You’re welcome to try! The big guy likes to do his own thing, as you can see.


Scene 3: Tenebraean Grudge


(Ravus is walking down the hall of Balamb Garden when he notices Regis walking toward him. Ravus abruptly stops and turns away, but Regis notices him at the same time.)

REGIS: Wait, please. Ever since I have come to this world, we have not had the opportunity to speak.

RAVUS (sighing) : 'Twas by design.

REGIS: I suspected as much. It is my understanding that you blame me for the fall of Tenebrae.

RAVUS: You’ve heard that from Lunafreya, I assume. For years I bore a grudge toward you for the loss of my home to the empire, and my sister always insisted you were not at fault.

REGIS: And Lunafreya would be wrong.

RAVUS (turning toward him in surprise) : What?

REGIS: There was more I could have done to save your home. Your mother. You. At the time, I could only flee – thinking only of protecting my son, Lunafreya, and my country.

RAVUS: Nonsense. I had long thought that you were weak, and that you were a coward… But in truth, it was my own weakness that compelled me to run under the eaves of the true culprit, the empire. The drive to attain vengeance against you and ascend to the status of True King for myself was all that drove me forward all those cold years. I have accepted my own folly, so you no longer have anything to fear from me.

REGIS: You were lost, and I regret that I could not have done more to help you. You, too, were only a child at the time. You have my deepest apologies, Ravus. I miss your mother, too. She had always been a dear friend.

(Ravus tenses, but lets out a breath and says nothing.)

REGIS: If you no longer blamed me for the loss, why is it that you have been avoiding me?

RAVUS: Yet another symptom of my own weakness. I… I wished to speak with you, to offer amends for the raid of Insomnia during the peace treaty… yet I was held back by my own cowardice.

REGIS: Then let us make amends to each other. But that would first require us to be on speaking terms.

RAVUS: Then going forward, we shall. I suspect Noctis and Lunafreya would be pleased.


Scene 4: Fina’s Friends


(Fina enters the infirmary where Porom and Aire are looking after Cloud and Zack. Both swordsmen appear to have been wounded.)

FINA: I heard there was an accident! Is there anything I can do to help?

POROM: Everything’s okay! Cloud and Zack just got a little too overzealous in their training match.

ZACK (scratching his head with a sheepish grin) : What can I say? It’s still awesome to me that Cloud is as strong as he is – it’s impossible to hold back!

CLOUD: Hmph. It’s been a long while since I was that inexperienced grunt you knew.

ZACK: Ahh, I’ll get the upper hand next time for sure.

AIRE: Well, you two should learn to hold back once in a while! I only have so many salves for you!

FINA: Are you two each other’s rivals, if you’re so determined to one-up each other?

ZACK: Rivals? Nah, we’re just buddies.

CLOUD: Uh, yeah, I guess so.

FINA (laughing) : I guess there’s not much of a difference, is there? You know, you two remind me of two people very dear to me. Rain and Lasswell always want to outdo each other. But they also care for each other a lot.

POROM: You miss them, don’t you?

FINA: I do. I’m not used to being without my friends. (She clenches her fists joyfully.) But until they get here, I’ll keep pushing myself to do my best! And that means I’ll make even more friends!

AIRE: Or maybe a rival of your own?

ZACK: Ha! Aire, are you volunteering?

AIRE: No way!

POROM: Don’t forget, Fina – you’re not without friends here.

CLOUD: Yeah. It doesn’t matter that you’re the only one from your world so far.

FINA: Thanks, guys! I appreciate it!


Scene 5: Untold History


(Wol, Meia, and Sophie are sitting together in the cafeteria eating a pasta dish with grilled vegetables, curious about the food they are eating. Ignis walks over to check on them.)

SOPHIE: This is so good! It’s so unfair that Palamecia doesn’t have food like this!

IGNIS: I’m glad you like it. It’s a cultural dish of Altissia, a city in my world.

MEIA: That is a foreign concept to us. Our world, Palamecia, has little in the way of tradition – much less cities.

WOL: Especially since no one has their memories. It’s a world where people are spit out and only achieve worth through fighting.

IGNIS: That sounds like a harsher version of this world.

SOPHIE: Yeah, in some ways it is, I guess. Blanks like Wol get a prophecy thrust on them and have no choice but to carry it out or be forgotten. Monsters are always attacking.

WOL: At least Vox is gone from Palamecia... and here. No one’s heard any disembodied voices trying to tell ‘em what to do, right?

IGNIS: Certainly not. What an odd trait of your world. I suppose traditional cuisines are something the rest of us take for granted. In my view, culture begins with regional dishes.

MEIA: We’re familiar with eating mostly to survive. Palamecia is scarce in settlements, and nothing more than villages. It’s rather difficult to establish any sort of ‘tradition’ when no one knows our world’s history to begin with.

IGNIS: Then perhaps you can bring some back with you when you return.

WOL: Not a bad idea. But at this rate even the Neo-Manikins have more of a history than we do.

IGNIS: I suppose it makes sense that it took you three no time at all to acclimate. There was no sense of culture shock here.

SOPHIE: Cultures can hurt!?

IGNIS: Er, I believe you misunderstood…

MEIA: Perhaps we will get a sense of how traditions develop from the Neo-Manikins. It may do us good to observe and learn from them.

WOL: Count me out. Sounds like too much work. I'm fine with just cutting down our enemies for now.

SOPHIE: A Palamecian through and through! Maybe we're a culture of fighters!


Scene 6: Garland’s Woe


(In a barren waste, Jack Garland cleaves into a dragon’s neck and red crystals burst forth from the wound. The red crystals spread across the dragon’s maw as it snaps for Jack, but it is soon immobilized by the mineral. Jack smashes the crystal, pulverizing the dragon into nothing, just as Astos walks up to him.)

ASTOS: Still here endlessly slaying monsters, are you?

JACK: Until there’s nothing left to kill.

ASTOS (wryly): Is there a reason you are pursuing infinite slaughter now? Or will you eventually return to Balamb Garden with the rest of your comrades?

JACK: Going there is a waste of time.

ASTOS: Even I’ve been spending some time there. And Neon is coming to adore it herself. I’ve enjoyed traveling with just the three of us, but you do have a room of your own there, you know. 

JACK (sighing) : It just doesn’t feel right. Not yet.

ASTOS: Not until the rest of your comrades arrive, I presume?

JACK: Our comrades. But that’s not all.

ASTOS: It’s because Sarah is there, isn’t it? You can barely stand to be in her presence.

JACK: It’s not that.

ASTOS: Then prove me wrong.

JACK: What’re you so intent on getting me there for!?

(Astos shrugs. He opens a Torsion and disappears into it, but it stays open – an invitation. Jack sighs again and enters. He emerges in a section of Garden covered in green, between the training center and the infirmary. It is being used for growing flowers and some herbs and plants that aren’t on Ciaran and Shirma’s farm. Princess Sarah of Cornelia is there, having a conversation with Princess Sarah of Burtgang that Jack is too far away to hear. Neither of them see Jack or Astos.)

JACK (after lingering a moment) : Don’t know why I came.

ASTOS: You may like it here if you give yourself a chance.

JACK: She’s happy here, isn’t she?

ASTOS: Ask her yourself.

JACK: I’ve got too much sadness, anger, hatred, and regret for that. No need to darken her doorstep with it.

ASTOS: Here I was thinking it was guilt over how you used to kidnap her.

JACK: Ha. That’s part of it. I’m still pissed at the other Garland for showing up and kidnapping her the moment she arrived in this world. He really is like me.

ASTOS: In some ways, yes. But the Onion Knight looks up to you, not him. Even the Warrior of Light respects you now.

JACK (scoffing) : Alright. I’ll check out my room, at least. But I’m not staying.

ASTOS: I’ll show you where to find it. I am sure one of these days you will cross swords and find an outlet for all that darkness.

JACK: Sure, and what about you?

ASTOS: Oh, I’ve already found ways to ease it.


Character Abilities

 

Balthier

ULT: Soul Purge

Effect: The higher an enemy's defense, the higher his damage

Balthier's ULT has him summon Shemhazai, the Whisperer. This is her special attack. In Revenant Wings, defeating Shemhazai unlocks Balthier's Quickening. After use, any BRV damage Balthier inflicts gets a multiplier based on the enemy defense status.


Reks

ULT: Flash Arc

Effect: Counterattack damage increase

Reks was matched with Addramelech, the Wroth for his ULT. This is because Vaan got Addramelech in Revenant Wings for unlocking his Quickening, but Vaan doesn't use an esper for his ULT here. So I figured Addramelech could be given to his brother instead, which is fitting because both use the lightning element and Addramelech is found in Dalmasca (the Zertinan Caverns, to be precise). After use, all of Reks's counterattack damage is increased.

Chapter 66: A5C9, Part 2: Ode to Earth

Notes:

Another really long one! But I'm glad I got through it. Honestly, I don't think this one is my best work, but I was really worried about losing steam sometime between this chapter, the Pandemona chapter, and the Sylph chapter. Or that lots of readers would lose interest in that span. But I'm glad we're all still here!

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Act 5, Chapter 9, Part 2: Ode to Earth


DR. MOG


Sacred, one half of the guardians of Earth, charged straight at them with nostrils flaring, kicking up a cloud of dust under his hooves. Dr. Mog waved his staff and summoned a titanium shield between the party with the settlement of Manikins behind them and the oncoming bull. Sacred crashed into it with his shoulders and Dr. Mog strained under the force of his attack as he focused all of his willpower on trying to maintain it.

Gladio wielded his own massive shield in defense of the encampment, appearing right behind Dr. Mog’s shield just as it shattered. Dr. Mog let out a gasp as his defense fell, but he had stopped Sacred’s momentum just enough for Gladio to stand up to him. The axe swung down as if to behead Gladio but he blocked it with his shield and his own answering shout, and just as he conjured his blade to retaliate, Sacred ducked down in an attempt to gore him with his horns.

Gladio flattened himself, but that put him at risk of getting trampled. Faris darted into the fray next, slicing at Sacred’s legs to prevent him from charging them again, and Cid Telamon appeared in a whirl of lightning to attack him from above. Sacred waved his free arm at Cid and the ground spiked up around him to throw Faris and Gladio away, but he shied away when Irvine’s bullets tore into his armor.

“We must lure him away from this encampment!” Y’shtola shouted, holding her staff up high to summon ice and wind.

Wrieg jumped over the jagged defense of stone encircling Sacred. “I’m on it!” he said, just as his Manikin followed at his heels. Dr. Mog fought to keep Sacred distracted along with Irvine and Y’shtola as Wrieg and the Manikin closed in – he knew that if Sacred built up momentum to charge again, they wouldn’t stop him this time before he crashed into the Manikin camp.

Sacred used his own upturned earth as a stepping stone to jump up high, crashing back down like a meteor that sent Gladio, Cid, and Faris scrambling. Irvine fired a well-timed shot right at Sacred’s head while he was still in midair, making him yelp in pain and fumble his landing. He stomped as if in a tantrum, yelling incomprehensible words, but his harsh breathing settled and he focused on them again, hefting his axe.

“I knew it,” said Irvine, reloading his gun. “Just like in my world, he regenerates when his feet are on the ground. Good thing I stocked up on Float spells before coming!”

“WAHH!” Sacred yelled. “DON’T DO THAT. I’LL STOP, I’LL STOP!”

Irvine stumbled and almost dropped his shotgun. “What?”

Wrieg lowered his spear. “He’s capable of reason?”

“How do we know this isn’t a ploy from Zemus?” Gladio asked, not ready to stand down. “Why else would he be attacking the Manikins?”

“IT’S NOT A TRICK,” said Sacred, his voice booming. “I WAS JUST HEADING TOWARD BRO AND SAW YOU GUYS HERE AND YOU ALL LOOKED LIKE YOU WANTED TO FIGHT ME.”

Dr. Mog frowned. “But you’ve been hurting the Manikins, kupo!”

“THAT WASN’T ME!”

“But our attacker looked identical to you,” said the Wrieg Manikin. “Just… quite a bit smaller, actually. And we thought there were two.”

Sacred crouched down, mouth hanging open in what Dr. Mog could only assume was an expression of surprise or joy. “THAT WAS MY BIG BRO! YOU’VE SEEN HIM? WE FOUGHT EACH OTHER EARLIER… AND MAYBE SOME PUNY PEOPLE GOT CAUGHT IN THE CROSSFIRE…”

Irvine dismissed his gun. “A case of mistaken identity and bad rumors, it seems. Minotaur is the name of the older brother, though he is smaller.”

“And the younger is free of Zemus’s influence?” Cid asked. “Convenient, but I’m not about to kick a gift minotaur in the mouth.”

“ZEMUS HAS NO USE FOR ME,” said Sacred. Dr. Mog wanted to cover his ears – he didn’t lower his voice at all. “BIG BRO IS THE GUARDIAN, NOT ME. HE SHOULDN’T BE FAR FROM HERE, THOUGH.”

Faris laughed. “Finally, the wind is at our backs!” she said. “Ye can navigate us to him, then?”

Sacred shook his fist. “OH, YEAH. HE’S FURTHER INTO THE DESERT. YOU’RE LOOKING FOR HIM, TOO?”

“Indeed,” said Dr. Mog, adjusting his spectacles. “We are fighting to free him and the others from their mental enslavement, kupo!”

“REALLY? YOU GUYS CAN HELP!?” Sacred asked, jumping for joy. The earth shook with each impact, forcing them all to stumble and struggle to stay on their feet.

“Perhaps you can refrain from doing… that?” Y’shtola said, her ears pressed flat. “If you’d please give the encampment a wide berth for now – the sight of you may cause the Manikins undue fear, considering your brother’s aggression.”

“WHAT? OH, YEAH, THAT’S FAIR,” Sacred said. He jerked a thumb back toward the desert. “I’LL WAIT OVER THERE. LET ME KNOW WHEN YOU’RE READY TO GO, AND I’LL BRING YOU TO HIM!”

Rydia ran up to them from the camp, smiling at Wrieg’s Manikin who immediately perked up and questioned her. “Are my people well?” he asked.

“Everyone’s fine,” Rydia answered, staring at Sacred’s retreating back. “We managed to evacuate the ones closest to the action, and Mewt brought many under the protection of the palace walls. But it seems there’s no need to fight anymore?”

“I’m glad to hear it,” the Manikin replied. “Sacred is no enemy, we’ve discovered.”

As Sacred walked off, Gladio shook his head. “That one’s quite a bit different from Titan, huh? Bit strange that this world chose the Brothers as our guardians from the World of Illusions.”

“Aye, they be an odd choice,” said Faris. “We’ve met brawny, bull-headed beasties like him and his brother, but Titan be the one who’s bound to summoners.”

“I am unfamiliar with these Brothers, myself,” said Y’shtola. “Though I do know Titan. He is the patron god of the kobolds, known as the Lord of Crags. His fury is feared all across the isle of Vylbrand.”

“Neither Sacred nor Minotaur are eidolons in my world, either,” Rydia said, shrugging. “Just Titan – who has defended me since I was a young girl.”

“The Dominant of Titan is a reckless brute,” said Cid. “I’d fain to imagine anyone who could be Dominants to Eikons like the Brothers, but I’d not trust Titan as far as I can throw ‘im. Clive and I have plenty reason to bear a grudge against that monster.”

“I don’t have great memories of Titan, either,” Gladio said. “Though he did save humanity by catching a meteor and holding it up for years and years – we call it the Disc of Cauthess. As big as he is, I’ve got no desire to face him again in this world… so I’ll take the Brothers any day.”

“I know Titan as the guardian of Eidola, home of the eidolons,” said Wrieg. “He was a bit aggressive at first, but he warmed up to us humans soon enough. He and I have even partnered up on occasion. But I can’t say I have any idea who the Brothers are – I don’t even recognize their signet.”

“I’ve… heard of the Brothers, kupo, from the records,” Dr. Mog said. He was still hesitant to speak so openly of the record paintings in front of them all, but he figured there was no harm in mentioning the Brothers. “Most of the time they show up, the records make reference to Irvine’s world. Titan is much more commonly the representative of the element of earth.”

“Alright, I get it,” Irvine said, shrugging. “The Brothers are mostly unique to my world, it seems – we don’t have Titan, though. Kind of strange how that happens, isn’t it?”

“We need a plan,” said Y’shtola. “Having Sacred as an ally affords us a unique advantage. Let us reconvene with the others and discuss this development, and then take him up on his offer to lead us to his brother’s location.”


RITZ


Before they left to chase after Minotaur and Shadowsmith to rescue the kidnapped Carbuncle, Ritz wanted to know what they were getting into. And, particularly, why Mewt wanted their help to find the Gran Grimoire all of a sudden.

They stood in the palace courtyard behind the walls where many of the Manikins outside had been moved for protection. Ritz’s eyes followed Wrieg’s Manikin for a time as he made sure his people were settled. New tents and overhangs were erected throughout the courtyard. She idly wondered if Manikins felt heat; several rested beneath the palm trees and near the fountains.

Mewt had the appearance of a kid who got caught copying someone’s homework when Ritz cornered him for answers. They found a shaded spot for themselves against the wall, and she had to admit she felt a little bad for him to be faced with herself, Gabranth, and even Gilgamesh – though the latter became far less intimidating once you got to know him.

“So what’s the deal with you asking us for help now, kiddo?” Gilgamesh asked, pointing directly at Mewt as he posed his question. “I thought you and Shadowsmith were all buddy-buddy!”

Mewt hung his head. For the first time, she noticed that he didn’t have his teddy bear with him – it seemed ever-present back before their adventure in Ivalice. “You were right all along, Ritz,” he said. “Shadowsmith didn’t want to help me. The Gran Grimoire has the power to bend reality itself, and he said that since this world is malleable enough as it is, he tried to convince me that it had to be kept out of the hands of people in your party. He believed it could be used to control all of the guardian summons of this world.”

Ritz furrowed her brow. “Control them? If it can shape this whole world, why would he want it just to control the summons?”

“Especially if they’re already under the control of Zemus,” Eight said, adjusting his gloves.

“He tried to make me believe he was doing it to help free them,” Mewt said. “But once I started to doubt, he left me behind.”

Luso sat cross-legged on the ground, leaning against the wall. “Wow… didn’t take long for him to just drop you.”

Mewt screwed his eyes shut, then took a deep breath and looked Ritz in the eye. “And he wanted me to tell you all that. All so I would join you and you’d help me find the grimoire, but when it was time to face him, I was supposed to betray you. But I meant what I said, Ritz – I didn’t want to do anything to hurt you, because you’re my friend. And I don’t trust what he wants to do with the grimoire.”

Ritz’s eyes widened, but it was Gabranth who spoke first. “What reason have we to trust your word?” he asked. “Could this not be part of his ploy as well?”

“I don’t blame you if you don’t believe me,” Mewt responded. “But either way, Shadowsmith wants the grimoire. And we have to stop him.”

Ritz frowned as she looked around at her companions. Luso looked thoughtful, and Gilgamesh wore a pained grimace that made him look a little like he had a stomach issue. She could read nothing of Gabranth’s feelings underneath his helm, but Eight glanced at Ritz as if waiting for her to render judgment on Mewt. “I trust Mewt,” she said finally. “Not only because we have to, but because of everything we’ve gone through together. He’s stronger now – we both are.”

“Hear, hear!” Gilgamesh exclaimed, pumping a fist into the air. “Nothing like a declaration of trust between comrades! I don’t like having to wonder who’s gonna backstab us – I say we take the fight right to Shadowsmith!”

Mewt let out a breath and smiled, grateful, but movement on the other side of the courtyard, near the palace gate, caught Ritz’s attention. Wrieg’s Manikin rushed up to the gate’s sliding peephole and took it upon himself to shout orders to the other Manikins.

“Send Manikins out there, hurry!” he said. “An enemy is approaching!”

“Is it Minotaur?” Eight asked, jogging right over as Luso jumped to his feet and followed.

“No – it’s one of you Lightbearers!” Wrieg’s Manikin replied. “He’s already casting spells on everyone around him!”

Wrieg himself approached, spear readied. “Back away from the gate, quickly! He’s charging right for it!”

Explosive magicks tore through the gate, throwing it wide open. Wrieg’s Manikin managed to dive out of the way of the swinging door just in time for it to smash against the wall. Ritz and the others readied their weapons, and to her immense surprise Mewt pulled out his staff as well. She rushed to throw healing spells at the closest Manikins she could see that had been blasted back by the opening attack, but when she saw that it was Llednar striding calmly through the destroyed gate she had to hold herself back from going on the offensive again outright.

“Ah, so you’ve managed to weasel your way to His Highness’s side,” Llednar said, pointing his sword toward Ritz. “I won’t let you escape me this time.”

“Oho, a challenger approaches!” said Gilgamesh, waving his sword. “The so-called invincible swordsman – ha! I shall be the judge of that!”

That was it – a judge! “It’s the Fortune law that makes him unstoppable,” Ritz said, and she looked to Gabranth. “You’re a Judgemaster, right? Can you nullify it?”

“The laws of your Ivalice are foreign to me,” Gabranth replied, his dual swords readied. “I fear I can do little to break his impenetrable defenses.”

Eight bounced from one foot to the other. “Can we disarm him, then?”

“Wait, you don’t have to fight!” Mewt said, coming between them all. “Llednar, by order of your prince – stand down!”

Llednar looked to Mewt, gaping. “Your Highness? But these are the villains who threaten your reign. It is by the queen’s will that I must protect you.”

“I command it,” Mewt said, firmer this time. “You are an extension of me, and I do not want to fight these people.”

Llednar’s jaw clenched, but he lowered his sword. The Manikins cautiously backed away, but he did nothing to stop them. “If that is your will,” he said. “That… That Marche – he isn’t here, is he?”

“I keep hearing about this Marche guy,” said Luso, punching a fist into his palm. “What, are you scared of him?”

“I don’t fear anything,” Llednar responded, glaring at Luso. “All I want is to kill him, once and for all.”

“I won’t allow it,” said Mewt. “He isn’t here, but if he ever does come, you will not harm Marche or any of my friends.”

Llednar paused, his grip tightening on his blade, but then he sheathed it. “Yes, Your Highness. You guys are lucky.”

“Whoo-wee!” said Gilgamesh, balancing on one foot. “What a tense scene! That’s someone I’d like to duel some day, though!”

Ritz hesitated in sheathing her rapier, feeling as if Llednar would leap into attack at any moment. But she supposed as long as Mewt was around he would stay his blade. “Marche defeated him once,” she said, answering Luso’s question. “He’s our friend. But even he needed an anti-law to dispel Llednar’s Fortune.”

“He needed trickery to win,” Llednar said, his tone scathing.

“Sounds more like he leveled the playing field to me,” said Eight, cracking his knuckles. “Anyway, what was that about this guy being an extension of you, Mewt?”

Ritz and Mewt caught each other’s eyes. Llednar’s magicked flames still burned, an acrid stench that permeated the courtyard. She’d leave that up to Mewt to explain.

“He was created by the queen to protect me,” Mewt admitted, rubbing his arm. Ritz noted how Mewt didn’t say she was his mother. “Formed from all my darkest desires… but also everything I wanted to be. Strong, confident, unstoppable… But also relentless and cruel.”

“If I’m so disgusting, why don’t you destroy me?” Llednar said. He asked the question without any malice, only curiosity. “You should be able.”

“You’re part of me,” Mewt said. “Why would I destroy that? You were summoned here even though you were already defeated in the dream Ivalice. That… that has to mean something, right?”

“Wow, so he’s sorta like a clone!” said Luso.

“A clone, huh?” Wrieg asked, speaking so softly that Ritz thought she might have been the only one to hear him.

“If this creation lacks remorse for his actions, ‘twould behoove us to be rid of him,” said Gabranth. “Perhaps not by means as harsh as execution, but banishment – we are not yet at ease with Prince Mewt, much less his viper.”

Ritz frowned. “I told you, I trust Mewt.”

“And Llednar will do as I say,” Mewt said. “You have my word. I think he deserves a chance to prove himself in this world.”

“Hm,” Gabranth grunted, finally sheathing his swords. “Your compassion and naivety bring to mind another young prince I know.”

Wrieg started walking away, but Eight noticed and called out to him. “Wrieg? Something wrong?”

“Manikins… are kinda like clones, aren’t they?” he said over his shoulder. “I guess we’re even more alike than we appear…”

“Wait, wait?” said Luso. “Is he saying what I think he’s saying…?”

“Don’t compare me to frail copies like these,” Llednar said, blanching.

Gilgamesh called out to Wrieg, but without another word, he jumped to the top of the palace wall as any Dragoon would – and disappeared over it.


PROMPTO


Prompto was one of the ones who ventured beyond the palace walls to look for Wrieg, figuring they couldn’t afford to let someone go off on their own with the rampaging Minotaur around and someone like Shadowsmith who had already kidnapped Carbuncle. Luckily, he didn’t have to search long – he found Wrieg leaning against a palm tree growing next to an oasis, just beyond the Manikin encampment to the south.

“Hey there!” Prompto said, throwing his hand up in a wave. “So you didn’t go far after all.”

“Sorry,” Wrieg said, looking out toward the desert. “I’m usually more cool-headed than this.”

“What’s on your mind?” Prompto asked, rubbing the back of his head. “After what you said, people are starting to get ideas… And if you’re implying what I think you’re implying, then I just wanna say you’re not as alone as you think you are.”

Wrieg peered at him with an eyebrow raised. “Huh? That guy Luso is spreading it around, isn’t he? He reminds me a lot of someone I know.”

Prompto let out a breath. It wasn’t something he usually cared to admit, but… “I was created in a lab. A clone of an imperial scientist. Using Magitek and daemon tech, at that. So, like, I don’t think we’re that unheard of in other worlds, y’know? I’ve had a lot of years to get used to the idea.”

Wrieg stared at him. He blinked. And, surprising Prompto, he chuckled. “Is that so? You say it so flippantly…”

“Listen, man! I was telling you to make you feel better!” he said, feeling heat rise in his face. “If I got it all wrong, just let me know. None of us really know anything about you yet – you’ve been kinda secretive.”

“No, you’re correct,” Wrieg said. “I am a clone, too. Created by an enormously powerful mage who was lost in time, who found himself in the far future of my ruined world. I was raised in an altogether different time period, completely unaware of my origins. Over time, I think I came to accept that, too. It’s just… being here in a different world is strange. Meeting a Manikin that looks like me is strange. I had no idea what to think at first. A clone of a clone? What kind of nonsense is that?”

“I wouldn’t call Manikins clones of us,” Prompto said. “They’re growing into their own people. Just like we are.”

“Even just hearing the way everyone was talking about Llednar… Like he’s a problem who can’t think for himself. The whole thing just set me on edge,” Wrieg said.

Prompto heard footsteps behind them and turned to see Fina, Lightning, Kain, Clive, and Kadaj all approaching.

“Is everything okay?” Fina asked, standing in the lead. “We are about to go and see Sacred, but we heard what happened.”

Kadaj scoffed. “Fretting about your other selves, are you? I heard you talking about the Manikins and Llednar as we were walking over. What nonsense – Llednar’s no Manikin.”

“He is something else,” Clive said. “A shadow of Mewt, from the sound of it. I, too, confronted an infernal shadow, but it was within the confines of my own mind. It beggars belief to meet such a thing in the flesh.”

Kain glanced back toward the palace walls. “My own pride and envy took physical form as well – a darkness that acted on its own. Mewt’s circumstances are far from unique, it seems. When I first met a Manikin of myself, I was reminded of him. It was uncanny, and it did not sit right with me.”

“It does make me wonder how someone like Llednar might differ from a Manikin, though,” Lightning said, putting a hand on her hip. “If he’s anything like Lumina, he’d be trouble – she took form from the chaos, a part of myself that I locked away years ago. She didn’t look like me, but she took the appearance of Serah instead. I can’t imagine any Manikin acting the way she did.”

Prompto wasn’t sure where they were all going with this. “I dunno, guys,” he said. “The old Manikins we met only took our appearances and fought like we did. Then Dark Manikins spoke and had thoughts similar to ours. But with Neo-Manikins, even though they look like us, they’re unique. Maybe I’m more similar to a Neo-Manikin than I thought, since I was also copied from someone, but came into my own person.”

Fina clasped her hands together. “Really? That’s wonderful, Prompto – I completely agree. I don’t think it’s a bad thing to be anything like a Neo-Manikin. We shouldn’t think of them as inferior to us, because they’re not. They’re just new.”

“Right,” said Lightning. “They’re growing.”

“Easy for all of you to say all that,” Wrieg said to Clive, Kain, and Lighting with his arms crossed. “You’re not the copies. You’re the originals that the copies came from.”

Kadaj scowled at him. “Do not make such assumptions. As much as I dislike it, I was made from remnants of Sephiroth’s will. You’d say differently once you got to meet him.”

Fina put a hand over her heart. “And I began as another personality of the Sage of Hess. My dark self. We eventually both obtained our own bodies, and now it is her who sustains the Earth Crystal, even in this world.”

Wrieg’s arms dropped to his sides. “Ah… My apologies for assuming, then.”

“And I wouldn’t say Prompto, Kadaj, or Fina are anything like Manikins,” said Clive. “Not inferior or superior. Just different. As we all are.”

“And maybe Llednar is like us,” Lightning said. “Who’s to say? If Mewt wants to give him the chance to prove himself, then maybe we’ll find out.”

“Made from Mewt’s darkness,” said Kain. “But even someone like him can bear the Light.”

Prompto grinned at Wrieg. Their words gave him a new perspective on the matter, and he wondered if it did the same for Wrieg. “Y’see? If you ask me, Manikins are pretty great.”

Wrieg pushed his glasses further up his nose, looking away from Prompto. “I suppose you’re right. Maybe I’ll try and look forward to getting to know more of them. But before that, we’ve got to gather information on that guy Shadowsmith and find out what he’s up to.”


TYRO


The dry desert heat beat down on Tyro, who had removed the outer layer of his heavy robes, but it did little to soothe him. He just wasn’t cut out for heat like this, and he wished he could crawl into a cool hole like many of the desert critters they came across. The lizard monsters, thankfully, gave them a wide berth.

On the way to Sacred, Tyro thought now would be the best time to question Mewt about the Gran Grimoire. The idea of such a powerful book in Shadowsmith’s hands unnerved him. “Mewt, how does Shadowsmith plan to acquire the Gran Grimoire? We don’t know where it is either, so I’m not sure where we come into his plan.”

“I don’t know,” Mewt said. “And I don’t think I want to find out. Once I see you off with Sacred, I think I’m going to go back to Bervenia. I’d rather not see Shadowsmith again.”

“What’s all the fuss?” Luso asked. “Ya can’t let him think he’s got power over you! Hiding from him will tell him that he does.”

Hurdy jumped up and down. “Luso, you don’t know what Mewt’s been through with him, kupo. If he doesn’t want to face Shadowsmith, he doesn’t have to.”

“Either way, it is clear that he wanted Mewt as his ally for a reason, kupo,” said Montblanc. After he spoke, Hurdy fell silent. As far as Tyro knew, they still weren’t speaking to each other, but he was certain that he caught Montblanc keeping an eye on Hurdy surreptitiously. “Mewt’s the one who found the Gran Grimoire in the first place, which is what brought him and the others to dream Ivalice and constructed that whole world, right?”

“I found one in my school library, too,” said Luso. “Once I wrote my name in it, it transported me to Ivalice – but not the dream Ivalice. Once I filled it up with stories of my adventures, it sent me home.”

“And there was more than one, kupo!” Hurdy threw in. “Illua had one of her own. She intended to use it for evil.”

Ashley trailed behind them, mostly silent, but now he spoke up. “That is proof they are not unique artifacts, then. I know of a Gran Grimoire sealed away within Leá Monde – though the St. Iocus priesthood believed it to be the dead city itself. It may be the source of the Dark, the machinery of life itself… and if it is indeed in this world, that may explain the dearth of the Dark that I sensed in the recreation of Leá Monde where we met.”

“You mean the grimoire may have been taken from there, kupo?” Montblanc asked. “That is worrisome indeed…”

“I first thought the wellspring ran dry because it was not the true city,” Ashley said. “But if it is true that the Gran Grimoire is in the possession of another already, then the concern is greater than any of us could have imagined.”

“As Hurdy said, more than one exists,” said Mewt. “We don’t need to worry about that yet. It could be any of our grimoires, or a different one altogether. I didn’t even need to write in mine like Luso did – simply reading from it sent me to Ivalice.”

“Mewt’s right,” Tyro said. The record library had mystical tomes of all kinds, but he knew nothing of any Gran Grimoires. Though he supposed Shadowsmith might have had greater access to such things, being such a high ranking member of the Arcanium… “We don’t know which one is in this world, if any – and how Shadowsmith would possibly get his hands on it. Let’s not worry yet. We need to find him first. Our first priority is rescuing Carbuncle!”


HURDY


Hurdy knew the place where Sacred led them. Suffused in Mist, it was not a site of many happy memories – the Ruins of Delgantua, a fortress where Illua once sought to perform rituals with her grimoire and Luso’s. His fur stood on end as they entered the ruins, carved with strange symbols and with rivulets of water that streamed through its floors and crumbling walls.

They found Shadowsmith in the remains of a chamber, the largest they came across – the Hall of Kings with its ruined throne. He stood on its other end, examining the symbols on the wall with a seemingly unconscious Carbuncle in a glittering cage that floated at his side.

Tyro opened his tome. “Here you are, Shadowsmith! Give Carbuncle back to us!”

Shadowsmith turned to glance at them. If he was surprised by their arrival, he didn’t show it. “No. I wondered how you might find me – though I didn’t expect you to enlist the aid of the brutish brother.”

“If only it were that easy,” Wrieg said. “I guess it’s a fight he wants.”

“MY BIG BRO IS HERE, ISN’T HE?” Sacred boomed. “TELL ME WHERE YOU HAVE HIM!”

“I don’t have him anywhere,” said Shadowsmith, replying calmly. “I seek him as well. Using Carbuncle, I have tracked his location to this ruin.”

“What do you want with Sacred’s brother, kupo?” Hurdy asked.

“Not to mention the Gran Grimoire!” Montblanc added in. “Do you plan to use it to enslave both Brothers, kupo?”

Shadowsmith scoffed. “Hardly. Haven’t you all wondered how Zemus may have attained such power as to control as many of the summons as he has?”

Wrieg’s Manikin gestured with the tip of his spear, aiming it at Shadowsmith. “I think it would benefit you to get to the point .”

The actual Wrieg rubbed his temples. “Ugh, did he really just say that? I’ve never used stupid puns like that…”

Shadowsmith regarded the Manikin with cool indifference. “I fail to see the benefit of you bringing a Manikin along to a confrontation you could safely assume would evolve into a battle. Perhaps I may have thought better of you all than to see its life as forfeit.”

“I accompanied these Lightbearers because I chose to,” said Wrieg’s Manikin. “Minotaur is a threat to my people and I wish to see them safe from it with my own hands. I don’t care that the light and darkness in me is weaker than theirs – I cannot just stand by and wait for them to fight our battles for us.”

Wrieg’s jaw slackened as he regarded his Manikin, but then he shook his head and smirked. “You know, that kind of heroic, foolish determination reminds me of my friend Morrow. I’ll have to tell you about him when this is all over.”

Hurdy couldn’t tell if Manikins could smile back, but he was pretty sure he heard it in the Manikin’s voice. “I’d like that, Wrieg.”

Shadowsmith rolled his eyes. “Truly heartwarming,” he said, without a hint of inflection. “The point is – I wish to study Minotaur and determine in what manner Zemus has exerted his control over the summons. His potent psychic abilities are not enough on their own to dominate the minds of beings like them, or to disrupt their powers to safeguard our lives which was ordained to them upon Shinryu’s defeat.”

Tyro furrowed his brow. “And what’s your working theory?”

“He must already possess the reality-warping power of the Gran Grimoire, or something like it,” Shadowsmith answered. “I also believe he has his hands on a remnant of Shinryu’s essence – perhaps even the divine dragon’s corpse itself.”

“Kupo!?” Montblanc exclaimed. “I wasn’t around for the fight against Shinryu, but that sounds like bad news. It would explain a lot.”

They didn’t have much time to digest that information, as the ruins began to rumble. Stone pillars quivered and dust mixed with Mist as it became unsettled. Part of the floor swelled between the party and Shadowsmith as a bull-man nearly identical to Sacred burst from the ground, except he was half the height of even the human Shadowsmith.

“BIG BRO! YOU’RE HERE!” said Sacred, floor quaking as he rushed up to his brother. With immense strength belying his much smaller body, Minotaur wound back and struck Sacred with his axe, sending him flying into the opposite wall. With a wordless, bestial roar, he stomped his feet and challenged them.

“I suppose he lacks any lingering affection for his brother,” said Wrieg.

“Then we’ll have to knock some sense back into him!” said the Manikin.

Wrieg and his Manikin went on the attack first, striking and falling back before Minotaur could do to them as he did to Sacred. Hurdy began playing his theorbo in an attempt to revitalize Sacred while Montblanc and Tyro began their spellwork to blast Minotaur away from their companions. Montblanc’s ice converged on Minotaur’s axe, sealing it in place before he could swing at the Manikin, just as a spectral greatsword courtesy of Tyro fell on him from above.

“You’re not gonna bother to help, are you?” Tyro asked Shadowsmith, who calmly regarded them with his hands folded behind his back. “This is all just some big experiment to you, isn’t it?”

Minotaur broke free of the ice, charging at Montblanc who just barely dove out of the way in time. Jagged stones erupted where his hooves hit the floor, forcing Tyro and Hurdy to scatter, but Wrieg leapt over it and impaled Minotaur with his spear. He howled in pain but shook Wrieg off, knocking him into his Manikin and sending them both tumbling. The wound didn’t even bleed as he stood still for a moment, recovering in seconds.

“It’s just like Irvine said, kupo!” said Hurdy. “As long as he’s on the ground, he’ll heal himself!”

Sacred launched back into the fray, roaring as his horns clashed against his brother’s. Despite his size, Minotaur stood up to him without breaking. As they struggled, the ground quaked again. More dust fell and some pillars tumbled; Hurdy began to worry for the structural integrity of the ruin, as unsettled as it was.

“Watch out!” Montblanc yelled suddenly, launching himself at Hurdy. His world spun as Montblanc tackled him out of the way of being crushed by rocks falling from the ceiling. Hurdy scrambled back to his feet in time to spot Montblanc underneath some of the rubble – unconscious or worse.

“Montblanc!” Hurdy cried out, his throat tight with fear. “Why would you do that, kupo!?” Montblanc was the one who insisted they weren’t actually brothers. That he was just a dream. But as Hurdy tried to tug Montblanc free, he could only see the brother who defended him when they were young, the brother who looked after all of their siblings – and like any of them, a brother he couldn’t bear to lose.

Float!

The voice came from the entrance to the Hall of Kings. Holding Montblanc in his arms, Hurdy turned to look at the source of the spell, spotting Selphie with her nunchaku raised high. Mewt and Llednar stood with her, both with their weapons readied. Minotaur’s feet lifted up from the ground and he flailed as he struggled to find purchase.

“Sorry we’re late!” Selphie said, tossing curative spells to Hurdy and Montblanc. “Got a little lost in these ruins. And look who decided to join us!”

Snow swept through the entire chamber, a sudden blizzard that coated the ground but with no hint of cold. Minotaur roared as the snow and ice battered him and Hurdy realized the blizzard was merely a phantasm conjured by Mewt. Llednar appeared next to Minotaur in a flash, his blade slicing through the illusion and piercing Minotaur’s defenses. The snow and ice vanished in a blink as Minotaur swung his axe and struck Llednar without harming him.

“ZEMUS! LET MY BIG BRO GO!” Sacred bellowed, drawing back his axe for one final swing. The force of his attack launched Minotaur through the air, but light burst forth from his impact against the wall, enshrouding him in energy. A piece of magicite formed and Minotaur faded away as his essence was drawn into it, and the same light surrounded Sacred as he joined his brother and vanished as well.

thank you for freeing me ,” a soft voice said from the magicite, as it lowered into Wrieg’s outstretched hands. Hurdy could only assume that it belonged to Minotaur. “ that zemus could do such a thing… it can only be due to stolen power .”

“As I thought,” said Shadowsmith, holding up a hand. The barrier around Carbuncle disappeared, releasing him on the spot. He fell to the ground, motionless. “There are still unanswered questions, but I have learned much today.”

“We all did,” said Tyro. “Why don’t you join us? It seems like we want the same thing.”

“You are as naive as ever,” Shadowsmith responded to him. “If there is ever a time that you and I have the same goal, you would cease to be you or I would cease to be me.”

Tyro lowered his head. “That’s not true… I won’t become like you, but if you let go of your goals it doesn’t mean you wouldn’t exist anymore…”

“Try to say that again once you know what your future holds,” Shadowsmith said. “Then you’d realize the folly of it. My goals are what made me who I am.” He turned to Mewt. “And you… I had thought you’d seen the value of our partnership, but you’ve chosen to side with them? Very well.”

“I have,” Mewt said, setting his jaw. “I won’t make the same mistake of turning against my friends again.”

Shadowsmith vanished in a flash of light. Hurdy’s ears perked up when he heard a weak groan and felt Montblanc stir, roused by Selphie’s healing.

“You’re okay, kupo…” Montblanc said to Hurdy, groggily blinking up at him. “I’m glad.”

Tears of relief welled up in Hurdy’s eyes. “Of course I am, kupo!” he said, hugging his brother tight. “Don’t ever do something like that again!”


MEWT


“If it’s okay, I’d like to come with you after all,” Mewt said with his head bowed, once they were back at Bervenia. “I should’ve come to help you fight Shadowsmith in the first place, but I was afraid he’d make you all think I was going to betray you…”

“Nonsense,” said Ritz. “I already told you – I trust you. And as long as it’s okay with everyone else, I’d love to have you with us.”

Wrieg’s Manikin stopped his conversation with the other Manikins, approaching Mewt and the others. “But what about all of us?” he asked Mewt. “We’re all living in Bervenia now under your protection. Some even see you as our actual prince now.”

Mewt shook his head. “I’m no prince anymore,” he said. “Besides, I think they’re in better hands anyway. Yours.”

The Manikin bunched up his shoulders. “What? You want me to look after them?”

Wrieg lightly punched him in the arm. “Why not? Despite being as reckless as Morrow, I think you’ve got my sensible head on your shoulders. You’ll be fine.”

Mewt smiled and left them to it as he turned to the others. Hurdy fussed over Montblanc as he made his recovery, but something Montblanc said caught his attention.

“Even if I’m not real, I figured you’re still my brother, kupo,” Montblanc said. “And I’ll never let anything hurt you!”

“What makes you think you aren’t real?” Mewt asked. “Just because you’re from the dream version of Ivalice? Maybe this world made dream into reality.”

“Right, kupo,” said Hurdy. “Besides, we have all the same siblings, don’t we? Nono, Sorbet, Horne, Gurdy… And they wouldn’t want to hear you saying you’re not real, kupo!”

“I suppose you’re right, kupo,” Montblanc said with a smile. “Even if not all of our memories match, that doesn’t matter to me.”

Llednar stood a little away from the others, scowling in their general direction. Mewt took a deep breath before approaching with Ritz at his side. Montblanc, Hurdy, and Wrieg weren’t the only ones with self-reflecting to do. “Thanks for coming along to help,” Mewt told Llednar.

“There is no need for thanks,” Llednar replied. “I do only what you order me to do. What I was created to do.”

“I know you’re made from me,” Mewt said. “But that doesn’t mean you’re just an extension of me.” He wondered if some day he could come to think of Llednar as a brother as well. “Ritz, is it okay if Llednar comes with us, too? I think he can learn from us.”

Ritz shrugged. “I don’t make the decisions around here, but I don’t think anyone would really have a problem with it. If you really think we could be a good influence on him…”

Cecil walked up to them with Carbuncle at his heels, who also appeared unharmed by his capture. “Though I disagree with his methods, it is thanks to Shadowsmith that we know a little more of Zemus,” Cecil said, his face grim. “We may be able to use that knowledge in our battles ahead. Tyro needed some time to himself, but once he is ready, we can return to Garden.”

Carbuncle bared his teeth. “The nerve of that man to lay his hands on me! But I suppose we now have another magicite. Once we have them all, we can restore your protection.”

“Zemus… if he has gone after all of the eidolons, that means he has not wavered in his desires to see humanity eliminated,” Cecil said, clenching his fists. “That must be why he is doing all of this. He seeks only Lunarian supremacy – and to achieve that, he needs all of us dead. But he will not vanquish a single one of us. No matter what, I won’t let him.”

Mewt knew they still had many battles ahead. But this time, he would not hide behind the queen, Llednar, or even Marche. This time, he would right the wrongs he committed and fight with his own strength.


Character Abilities

Vayne

ULT: Writ of Conquest

Effect: Breaks delay enemy 1 additional turn

His ULT ability comes from his moveset in Dissidia NT. After use, his breaks will always delay enemies 1 additional turn, meaning his break/unbreak shenanigans make him even more dangerous.


Gabranth

ULT: Hatred

Effect: AoE damage also delays all enemies

Gabranth also uses an ability from the Dissidia games. After he uses it, he'll delay all enemies every time he deals multi-target damage.


Wrieg (Spears) Earth ranged damage, BRV break and unbreak, earth enchant/imperil, auras

15: Stonega Blow

35: Rapid Stone

EX: Kaiser Breath

LD: Time Magic Duo

FR: Teaching Restraint (with Nine)

BT: Dragon Force Blaster

ULT: Seismische: Orpiment Perpetuity (Effect: Breaks delay enemies 1 additional turn)

Burst theme: “Struggling Through Time and Space,” major boss theme 2

Alternate Skin: Original game release appearance

Characters learn abilities in Dimensions 2 by equipping "Signets," which are powers of various eidolons very similar to FFVI's magicite system. Wrieg gets a lot of earth elemental attacks and mostly uses spears, so I made him an earth elemental attacker who deals ranged damage, like most spear users. He's one of the rare earth specialists with an enchant and imperil, but he can also BRV Break and unbreak (similar to Vayne, actually... they even have the same ULT effect, lol).

All of the above abilities are Signets unique to him. For his LD, it is a spell he gets where he uses an ability he learns from Chronos, who is the twin sister of the person he was cloned from. His Burst is a combination of two Signets - "Dragon Force" and "Force Blaster." His ULT comes from Seismiche, one of the elemental gods who stands even above the eidolons, and she gives the "Orpiment Perpetuity" ability, which is one of his strongest Signets.


Llednar Twem (Swords) Non-elemental melee damage, invincibility, HP Poison, instant break

15: Life Render

35: Furycircle

EX: Unbreakable Edict: Fortune

LD: Omega

FR: Sadistic Flair (with Nabaat)

BT: Abyss

ULT: Biskmatar Raid Combo (Effect: Invincibility duration increase)

Burst theme: “Unavoidable Destiny,” plays in the final fight against Llednar

Llednar's skills mostly come from the abilities available to his unique job, "Biskmatar." Life Render and Furycircle come from his Flair skillset. He doesn't actually use his EX as a boss, but he has it here as an ability that grants him complete immunity to both BRV and HP damage, BRV reductions, AND status effects, making it a pretty hefty buff. It only lasts a couple of turns, though, and his EX is on a slow recharge. Omega and Abyss are both spells he knows, unique to him and Queen Remedi. His ULT is an original, meant to reference the "Job Raid Combos" available to player jobs. After use, he gets a 1 turn increase to his Invincibility buff permanently.

In general, he's a non-elemental melee attacker who deals high damage, he can inflict an HP Poison debuff, and he can instant BRV break foes.

Notes:

Okay, with that mammoth of a chapter out of the way, onto the next Lost Chapter! Hint: this character has another reason to celebrate on Christmas Eve.

Chapter 67: Lost Chapter: She Who Seeks the Truth

Notes:

Regarding the character artwork this time... I once again curse the FFT team for not releasing high quality, official artwork of each character. Meliadoul's was only shown once, on a tablet, during a video interview or something... so the image (which was pretty plain concept art to begin with) is in terrible quality. I used my extremely rudimentary photo editing skills to try and clean it up a bit... or at least distract from the terrible quality. It was either this or her Pictlogica artwork, and I'd rather use the art from her own game if possible. Just don't look too closely at it. :P

Last chapter's Force partnerships:

Wrieg with Nine: Both are spearmen, but one is brash and outgoing and the other is more reserved and sensible.

Llednar with Jihl Nabaat: Both are sadistic underlings to the main villain, and ultimately a tool and a puppet in the end.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: She Who Seeks the Truth


Meliadoul Tengille ( Final Fantasy Tactics)

Voiced by: Nanako Mori

A member of the Knights Templar and daughter of its leader, Folmarv, who initially seeks vengeance on Ramza after he is accused of murdering her brother. Once she learns the truth that her own father was the culprit, she accompanies Ramza in his quest to slay the Lucavi threatening Ivalice. Pure-hearted and just with an unyielding will, Meliadoul resists the influence of the Zodiac Stones and pursues her foes without mercy.

Meliadoul


MELIADOUL


Despite the heat, Meliadoul did not lower her hood or remove her outer robe as she walked across the parched earth.

Some distant part of her still heard her father’s words ringing in her ears.

“You are a sworn knight of Glabados, beholden to naught but the Church. Your sword is its hammer, your armor its shield.”

“Your cloak, woven from the raiments of priesthood and priory. Upon your head, a hood – symbol of the shared will of Glabados.”

“By your hand be heresy’s purgation done.”

How odd that she still put stock in his words, that she still saw his face as he bequeathed her the blade and duty of a templar, grim and ceremonial. A great honor, she believed back then; as a girl she hung onto his every word, his every order, no matter how cold or harsh. Now, her memories had been tainted by a hatred that filled the void where her love had once been, its bite twisted from the change as if akin to a werebeast. Once, she loved her father more than she loved herself. Even now, even after he had murdered his son and given himself over to demonic forces, part of her still loved his memory. Perhaps it was only that she simply yearned for those days with her little brother.

She shook thoughts of family from her mind. Meliadoul was utterly lost, and it would not do to dwell on the past now. If she did not focus, this desert would claim her.

Meliadoul climbed an outcropping of stone to get a better vantage point of the region. Dry and scorched by the sun’s heat, she was unsure if she was in the Zeklaus Desert or even Beddha Sandwaste; she recognized no features or landmarks. She was not sure how she had even come here – she remembered little beyond her flight from Ivalice after parting ways with Ramza and Alma.

To the north, she spotted a woman with a long, thin blade akin to those wielded by eastern warriors – just as she cut down an unarmed person that shattered to pieces, scattering as dust on the wind.

“What devilry is this!?” Meliadoul exclaimed, leaping from the stone and rushing to their location with her sword drawn. She noticed two others with the killer, both girls. One was roughly of an age with Meliadoul, perhaps a little younger and wielding a knife; the other, with golden hair, was merely a child. All three had their backs to Meliadoul, walking away from her, so she shouted after them. The child walked between them, small and recoiling with fear. “Halt! Step away from the child, butchers, or taste my steel. I bore witness to your violent act!”

The girl with the knife whirled around, eyes wide with shock. “Eh!? What’d we do?”

The one with the longer blade regarded Meliadoul with an intensity in her eyes, and Meliadoul knew at once that she was likely the more dangerous one. “Reynn, take Chelinka and go,” she said, spreading into a stance. “I’ll handle this one.”

“Alone? We don’t know how strong she is yet. I’m not just gonna leave you behind, Elfe!” said the one presumably named Reynn. “What the honk could she want with Chelinka?”

Meliadoul took action before Reynn could flee with the child – or worse. With a swipe of her sword, she conjured an ethereal sickle beneath Reynn’s feet that struck the knife right out of her hands, crushing it. The girl yelped, falling backward in shock.

“Run!” Meliadoul urged the child, Chelinka. She had a feeling Elfe would not let her pass as easily.

“My weapon!” Reynn exclaimed. “That was fast!”

Chelinka reached a hand out toward Meliadoul, but drew back once Elfe’s blade clashed with Meliadoul’s. “Wait – ” the child tried to say, cut off by the sound of ringing steel.

She knew at once that she had underestimated Elfe. Unencumbered by armor, her slashes came fast, a constant rain of blows to test Meliadoul’s defenses. But Meliadoul’s root was strong and she did not give ground. Just when she gathered her strength in an attempt to crush Elfe’s armor, leaving her defenseless, Chelinka came alarmingly close.

“Please, stop fighting!” she called out. “I think this is all a big misunderstanding!”

Meliadoul’s eyes widened. “You are not in danger? Mayhaps I have been too hasty… You appeared to be frightened.”

“That Manikin attacked me. I was only a little shaken,” Chelinka said.

Elfe stepped back, but she did not sheathe her blade. She regarded Meliadoul with a guarded expression. “You fight well.”

“As do you,” Meliadoul returned. She wouldn’t sheathe her sword yet, either. “Please enlighten me as to your true purpose, and why I saw you so nonchalantly slay that person.”

“These are my friends,” Chelinka explained, introducing them. “We came out into the desert in search of a Neo-Manikin from Bervenia Palace who got lost. She was searching for other Manikins she heard of being out here, but we found them first – and they are not the friendly sort.”

“Yeah,” said Reynn. “We didn’t want to kill it, but that Manikin was one of the mindless ones that attacks indiscriminately. We didn’t have a choice…”

“Which leaves us concerned for the fate of our lost Neo-Manikin,” Elfe added. “She may be in danger.”

“I know not what these Manikins or Neo-Manikins are,” Meliadoul admitted. She finally sheathed her sword, judging them to be speaking true. “But if there is someone in need, I feel compelled to help. Then perhaps you could point me in the direction of Bervenia – though I know it not as a palace, but a city.”

Reynn rubbed her forehead. “Ah, well, Manikins… That’s kind of a long story…”


RAMZA


When it took longer than expected for Reynn and the others to return to Bervenia, Ramza set out with Agrias and Wakka to look for them. They had returned to Bervenia Palace to propose a trading relationship with the Wrieg Manikin and the others, which had gone well, but when dusk began to fall they started to worry.

They avoided the sights of aggressive Manikins as they traversed the desert, but the sand and hard stone made it difficult to follow any tracks. Just when Ramza was about to suggest calling the others for a wider search, he spotted five figures on the horizon, silhouettes against a burnished sky.

“What a relief,” Wakka said. “Looks like they found the Manikin, too – and two of ‘em!”

“I would not be so certain that they are both Manikins,” said Agrias, as they neared. She gasped when Ramza recognized the green hooded cloak at the same time. “Could that be…?”

“Ramza, Agrias,” said Meliadoul, her eyes lit up with joy. “So it is you. I had thought their tale of visiting another world to be merely a fanciful lie at first, but tell me – do they speak true?”

Ramza smiled. “They do. ‘Tis a wondrous world we’ve come to inhabit, and I would trust our new companions with my life. I hope that you can one day say the same.”

Meliadoul put a hand over her heart and smiled. “To doubt you once was a grave error, and I have since vowed to never do so again. Since meeting Elfe, Reynn, and Chelinka, they have told me much of this world.”

“It is an honor to fight alongside you again, Meliadoul,” said Agrias, clasping arms with her. “I look forward to the others witnessing your feats of swordplay.”

“Oh, we already got a pretty good look at it,” said Reynn, massaging her wrist. “Meliadoul broke my knife!”

“I will see it replaced,” Meliadoul promised. “As soon as we see this Manikin home.”

“Yeah, I’ll have to tell the others about the mean Manikins here,” said the Manikin of Paine, swiping a hand through her crystalline hair. “Something we’ll have to keep an eye on in the future.”

Ramza nodded to the Manikin, then glanced between Meliadoul and the others as they turned to walk back. “Ah, does that mean you fought?”

“Indeed,” said Meliadoul. “And Elfe’s skill is most impressive.”

Wakka scratched his head. “Eh? What’d you fight for?”

“It was all a big misunderstanding,” said Chelinka. “Meliadoul saw us defeat a Manikin and thought it was someone else.”

“To my regret, it was not the first time I had been misled by mine own failure to understand before acting,” Meliadoul said, her head lowered to hide her face in shadow. “Perhaps it is too rash of me.”

“Act first, ask questions later,” said Elfe. “Sometimes that can save your life.”

“Right!” said Chelinka, grinning. “My brother Yuri would say the same. There was no harm done.”

Meliadoul shook her head. “When I first met Ramza, I believed him to be a heretic that had murdered my brother, simply because that is what I had been told. So I hunted him out of vengeance, upon orders of my father – the true villain.”

Wakka’s jaw dropped. “Whoa, whoa! Your old man did that!?”

“Aye. And as members of the Knights Templar, I had little reason to doubt my father’s word at the time,” Meliadoul said, sighing. “What a fool I was.”

“But you have since taken up your sword for the righteous cause,” Agrias said, clenching her fist. “You helped us end his madness and free Ivalice from the tyranny of the Lucavi before they could even begin their reign of terror.”

Elfe’s pace slowed. “Your own father… How terrible. If my papa ever…” She trailed off as the others stopped and turned to her. “I’m sorry. I should not have said anything.”

“No, it truly beggars belief,” Meliadoul said. “That ugly truth itself was a fearsome foe. That my father was no man of the Church at all, but a pawn of demonkind. If the High Seraph is truly here, I shall make her pay for her transgressions once again.”

“As the former director of the Turks, my father has done his share of deeds I am not proud of,” Elfe admitted. “I stand by him now, but I know there are lines he would never cross. You are strong to confront the truth of your father's actions."

“And you are fortunate indeed to have someone you love so,” said Meliadoul, giving her a soft smile.

“I’ve never heard Elfe talk so much!” Chelinka exclaimed. “Does this mean she’s made a new friend?”

Elfe blushed in embarrassment. “If… if you say so.”

Wakka clenched his fist, grinning at Meliadoul in encouragement. “Your brother would be proud of you, ya?” he said. “For questioning and finding the truth!”

“I have no doubt that Isilude rests well,” Ramza said. “By your deeds have you set things right.”

“My apologies for lamenting overmuch,” Meliadoul said. “The past is past – you must think me a querulous maid. I know not why my father and brother have been at the forefront of my mind lately.”

Reynn clasped her hands together. “My brother is an idiot sometimes. Er, most of the time. But if something ever happened to him… especially if it was at the hands of someone I cared about, I don’t think I’d have done anything differently. Thank you for telling us your story, Meliadoul.”

“I agree,” said Chelinka. “You’re among friends, so we’re here to listen any time you need!”

“‘Tis easy to fall back on familiar doubts in times of uncertainty,” Agrias said. “And to find yourself in a foreign world is among one of the most uncertain happenings of all.”

“Now that the air is clear and our Manikin friend is safe, let us return,” said Ramza. It was only a matter of time until more fearsome monsters came out as night fell. He knew Mustadio and Alma would be looking forward to seeing Meliadoul again, as well. “There are many others you have yet to meet!”

“You have my thanks,” Meliadoul said, smiling. “And the unyielding blade of the last of the Knights Templar, forevermore – no longer a hunter of heretics, but a vanquisher of true evils.”


Character Abilities

 

Llyud

BT: Roxxor

ULT: Gaia’s Wrath (Effect: Vanishga for 2 turns after EX usage)

Burst theme: “Fury of the Entites,” a boss theme composed for the Zodiac Age

Llyud never got his Burst ability in game, so here it is. His Quickening is unlocked by defeating Hashmal (again, weird coincidence here, considering Meliadoul's father was possessed by that same Lucavi!), so he got some of Hashmal's abilities for his Burst and ULT. After use, he casts the Vanishga spell whenever he uses his EX, which makes the party untargetable for two turns. Vanishga is an ability Llyud gets in Revenant Wings.


Feolthanos

ULT: Divine Megaflare

Effect: EX inflicts 2 turn HP Attack Disable

Feolthanos uses Megaflare in his boss battle thanks to summoning a unique Bahamut esper. I just put a little "Divine" flair on it. After use, he disables foes from using HP attacks (which is different from HP Silence) for two turns, limiting them to BRV attacks only.


Meliadoul Tengille (Greatsword) Non-elemental melee damage, defense to zero, HP Dmg up, Addle, restore ability uses, self debuff cleanse, trap dispeller

15: Crush Armor

35: Crush Helm

EX: Unyielding Blade

LD: Pure Heart

FR: Unbreakable Will (with Elfe)

BT: Full Crush

ULT: Divine Break (Effect: All imperils become forced weakness)

Burst theme: “Apoplexy,” battle theme which plays in the fight against Meliadoul

Now, I love Meliadoul, but the ability names of her special Divine Knight class are boring as hell. So for that reason, I only used two here - Crush Armor and Crush Helm. "Unyielding Blade," her EX, is the name of her skill command. "Pure Heart," her LD, is an original that is meant to reference how she is not susceptible to the Zodiac Stones. Her Burst is another original that is meant to give the idea that she's using all of her Crush abilities at once. And her ULT is an original that references the name of her Divine Knight class.

She is a non-elemental melee damage dealer who uses greatswords instead of one handed swords, to differentiate her a little from the other sword-heavy fighters in the Tactics cast. Since her special abilities all break enemy weapons and armor, she is also a debuffer - Crush Armor in particular reduces enemy defense to zero. Crush Helm inflicts Addle on foes, which prevents them from using HP attacks. She can also increase party HP damage, and her "Pure Heart" LD is similar to Shelke's Countertek in that it "refreshes" her - but hers is different in that it restores all of her ability uses, cleanses her of all debuffs, and dispels enemy traps (yes, enemies can set traps now too). After using her ULT, all imperil debuffs inflicted by other party members become forced weaknesses instead, making them more effective.

Notes:

Justification for Meliadoul: She is a playable character recruited through the main storyline.

Next character hint: It's the fourth time I've added this character, and after years of waiting I think we're ready now.

Chapter 68: Lost Chapter: Hey, Cid!

Notes:

And here we go with one of the most well known and archetypical Cids! I actually knocked this chapter out in one sitting, surprisingly.

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Meliadoul with Elfe: Both are stoic and expert swordswomen, manipulated by one of the primary antagonists and kept in the dark about their true intentions. Both also are driven in part by their relationships with their fathers.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: Hey, Cid!


Cid Pollendina ( Final Fantasy IV)

Voiced by: Binbin Takaoka

Head engineer of the Red Wings airship fleet of Baron Kingdom. Cid is one of the first people to realize the king has been acting strange and thus fights alongside Cecil and the others to oust the impostor. Stout-hearted, he loves Cecil and Rosa like his own children, and would do anything to protect them from harm.

Cid Pollendina


ROSA


Ceodore almost had to literally push them out of the gates when it was time for Rosa and Cecil to join the others on their mission. Rosa found herself bemused by his behavior, unsure of why he was so insistent they survey the new seaside region they’d discovered. Part of her was a little hurt, too – she had invited him along, but he didn’t seem to want to spend time with his parents.

“I am certain he wants to prove that he can keep Balamb Garden safe in our absence,” Cecil said, in an attempt to comfort her.

“Nah, doubt it’s anythin’ like that. Typical teenager stuff, if you ask me – he just wants time with his friends,” Cid Highwind said as he walked alongside them. 

They headed toward the solitary building in the distance, right along the shore. To Rosa, it looked perfectly normal, with four sides and a dome-shaped roof. The most unusual things about it were its abnormally large doors, bigger than even the gates to Baron Castle, and the fact that it was otherwise nothing other than a perfectly normal building that had suddenly appeared.

Cid Haze had joined them as well, huffing and puffing as he smoked his pipe. “What I’d like to know is what kiddos like Luca and Rikku are doing with us old fogeys rather than staying behind with Ceodore and the others.”

“Hey! I’m way older than Ceodore,” Luca said, tipping the brim of her visor. “It’s Rikku you should be asking! She’s the one who wanted me to come.”

Rikku sputtered. “Excuse me! What’s that supposed to mean? You think I should be staying behind just ‘cuz I’m younger than you?”

“Weren’t you just hanging out with them this morning?” Luca retorted.

Highwind waved a hand in dismissal as he walked ahead. “Eh, can it, you two – else I’m gonna turn this mission ‘round and we’ll all go back home. Damn, why do we have to walk, anyway? I know Balthier won’t let anyone else touch his precious little airship – which is rich, since he got a turn on the Falcon when we had it – but why didn’t Noct and his gang let us take their car!?”

Rosa laughed into her hand. She supposed they were right about Ceodore; she was just glad he had made so many friends in this world. “I believe Noctis and Regis took it out earlier and haven’t yet returned. Perhaps we need another airship for shorter excursions like this,” she said. “Balamb Garden cannot take us everywhere at once.”

“Indeed,” said Cecil. “Considering how high our numbers are now, it’s as if we could have our own fleet of them.”

“Don’t get the Cids and Luca too excited,” said Rikku, grinning. “But if you ask me, the Celsius is the coolest airship around!”

“Hey, now!” Highwind interjected. “You ain’t seen the Highwind yet! Or even better, the Shera !”

When Luca and Haze both joined the argument, Rosa shared a smile with her husband and left them to their squabbling the whole rest of the way. They stopped only when they finally reached the building, sea salt filling their noses as waves broke against the rocky shore. A Manikin of Edea stood outside its doors, doubled over in exertion.

Rosa hurried up to her side. “Excuse me – do you need help?”

“I am just out here taking a break,” she said, straightening. “That man inside is working us to the bone.”

“A man?” Cecil asked. “Please tell us, what is this place?”

“Hmm…” Luca said, sniffing. “I smell oil.”

“It’s a workshop,” said the Manikin. “The man inside found some Manikins like me, and before we knew it, we were recruited into helping him work. I don’t mind – I am learning much of your ways, but I don’t think he seems to realize how many hours he works each day.”

Haze extinguished his pipe. “Mind letting us in? I’d like to see what kind of work is being done here, myself.”

“Be my guest,” the Manikin replied. “But be warned: he may try to pull you into helping him even if you’ve never touched an airship before!”

“Well now I gotta see this,” Highwind said.

Cecil pushed the doors open and Rosa gasped at what she saw.

The polished wooden hull of an airship took up much of the space, which she now realized to be a hangar of sorts. Its sails were folded, the propellers inactive, but she recognized the airship at once – the Enterprise . Now she smelled the oil that Luca had mentioned outside; it immediately brought her back to a childhood spent among oily engine parts, broken propellers, pistons, generators, and more tools than she could name. Indeed, many of the same littered the floor around this workshop.

To her surprise, Ceodore waved at them from the gangplank. “Hi, Mom and Dad! Surprise!”

“Ceodore, what is this about?” Rosa asked, eyes wide. “Did you find this here?”

“I found more than just the airship,” Ceodore said, as Ursula and Luneth emerged from behind him. He gestured to one final person who walked out of the airship and Rosa covered her mouth in shock. “Look who it is!”

Cid Pollendina walked down the gangplank, waving at them and beaming. His ragged beard was as brown as she knew it years ago, but he still wore his ever-present helmet and goggles. “Hey there! You made it just in time! The Enterprise is finished!”

“Cid!” Rosa exclaimed, joyous tears burning in her eyes. She ran up to him with Cecil at her side, and she bent down to hug him. “Oh, I am so glad to see you here among us!”

“Master Cid!” Luca exclaimed, gaping. Rikku had her hands on her hips, smirking, and Luca rounded on her. “You knew about this, didn’t you?”

“Sure did!” Rikku said proudly. “When we were out this morning, we found Cid here, and Ceodore wanted to surprise you all!”

“Another Cid, eh?” Haze asked. “Even you helped plan this, Luneth?”

Luneth nodded and grinned. “Once I met this Cid, I knew you had to meet him, too!”

Rosa separated from Cid. She had forgotten how bristly his beard could be, and she missed it dearly. “Welcome to this world, Cid,” she said.

“Betcha didn’t expect me to look so young again, huh?” Pollendina asked, looking down at himself. “Not a spot of grey on me anymore! I was surprised, too!”

“I am glad to see you well,” Cecil said, giving Cid his own hug. “We have been waiting for you to join us.”

A team of Manikins helped put some finishing touches on the airship, running around on its deck. Rosa had no idea how he had recruited so many – she saw the Warrior of Light, Minwu, Bartz, Celes, Eiko, Balthier, and more among them.

Highwind whistled appreciatively. “Ain’t that a beaut of a ship,” he said. “Color me impressed. We should build our own hangar near our base for ships like this – and leave plenty of room for more airships to be built!”

“That’s a great idea!” said Haze. “It’ll be handy to have several in case we need to travel to more than one place at a time.”

“Well, count me in!” Pollendina said, raising his wrench up high. “But I have to say, I’m surprised my very own apprentice didn’t already get that going!”

“We’ve been busy!” said Luca. “But now you can bet that I’ll be sure to focus on airship maintenance for both this and the Strahl ! Heck, maybe even Noct’s car, too. It’ll be nice to have a workshop that’s not in that dingy basement in the Garden.”

Pollendina’s grin never left his face. “Ahh, I suppose I’ll let these Manikins off the hook now. Thanks for all your help! If you want, we can employ you in our up-and-coming workshop!”

The Edea Manikin followed them inside and clenched her fist. “Are you kidding? Thank you for the opportunity! But we’ll show you everything we’ve learned by keeping this workshop going on our own! We’ll be a rival of yours in no time!”

Ursula laughed. “Wow, it’s strange to see someone who looks like Edea all fired up! Who knew being strong-armed into this would make them so into it?”

“This reminds me of the time when Cid was recovering from his wounds and enlisted those nursing him to help work on our new airship,” Rosa said, shaking her head as she looked at him, but affection warmed her smile. “Sometimes, he just can’t take ‘no’ for an answer.”

Pollendina shrugged. “If you hit a wall, just go at it from another angle – and BOOM ! You can blast it out of the way.”

“Y’know, I heard a lot about the Cids from other worlds,” Highwind said, picking up a piece of junk that Rosa had no hope of identifying. “But meetin’ more of ya like this… I gotta say, you lived up to it.”

“It’s a name to be proud of, don’t you say?” Haze said. “I wonder how many others we’ll meet?”

Rikku let out an uneasy chuckle. “Well, hopefully not my old man! He’s a whiny old curmudgeon.”

“I guess it’s like having a bunch of Uncle Cids, isn’t it?” Ceodore said. “I can’t wait to see what kinds of things they build!”

Pollendina rustled Ceodore’s hair. “Now, let’s get goin’ to that place you call a Garden! I’ve never been kicked out of my own workshop before, but y’know what? I don’t think I really mind this time.” He laughed, a deep and booming bellow from his chest. “Especially ‘cause my new workshop will grind yours into the dust!”

“We’ll see about that!” the Edea Manikin retorted, as the others up on deck cheered. “We’ll build the fastest, toughest airship around!”

Rosa pressed a hand to her cheek. “Oh dear… Well, Ceodore, thank you for this wonderful surprise – now I know why you were so eager to have us leave Garden earlier. And thank you to Ursula, Luneth, and Rikku for helping, too.”

“Of course, Aunt Rosa!” Ursula replied. “Now… why don’t we take this new Enterprise for a spin?”

“Have care not to jump overboard this time, Cid,” Cecil told him sternly. “Though you are younger than you were, you can still hurt yourself.”

“Bah! You’re still hinting that I’m an old man, aren’t you?” Pollendina replied. “I’m telling you, I feel as young as ever!”

They all moved to board the airship together, opening the hangar’s doors wide for its maiden voyage. The engines rumbled to life as the propellers spun, and the Manikins pulled up the gangway. They all disembarked together, with the Edea Manikin in the lead as they all waved their farewells to Cid and the others. The airship started to rise, and all three Cids barked orders to the others, taking to their duties as if they all rode the Enterprise daily, but only Pollendina stood at the wheel.

“Now, any good workshop needs a name, doesn’t it?” Haze asked, once they cleared the hangar. The airship started to rise, with both Luca and Rikku working together to unfurl the sails.

Highwind looked over the side, crowing as they rose. “Can only be ‘Cids’ Workshop,’ right?”

“Hey!” Luca protested. “Why not ‘The Cids and Luca’s Workshop’!?”

“And Rikku’s!” Rikku chimed in.

“Well, one of you’s still an apprentice!” Pollendina yelled back. “Surpass the master and one day you’ll get your own!”

Rosa stood in the middle of the deck, beaming as they took to the skies. She didn’t realize how much fuller she felt with all of her family here, at last.


Character Abilities

 

Lightning

ULT: Omega Zantetsuken

Effect: Lightning cannot be launched

Onto the next game! Lightning's ULT comes from her EX Burst in Dissidia 012 - a combo of "Omega Weapon Equipped" and "Zantetsuken." After use, enemies will be unable to launch her to deal heavy damage. Yup, enemies can launch us now, too!


Snow

ULT: Diamond Dust

Effect: BRV Freeze after using EX

Snow's comes from the Gestalt Drive of the Shiva sisters, her ultimate attack. After use, he will inflict BRV Freeze on enemies whenever he uses his EX.


Cid Pollendina (Unique - Axes/Hammers) Non-elemental melee, critical damage debuffs, critical party buffs, rainbow damage, follow ups, battery

15: Analyze

35: Bomb Fragment Upgrade

EX: Risk Strike

LD: Airship Upgrade -> HP attack turns into "X Chaser"

FR: Enterprise Barrage (with Cid Haze)

BT: Red Wings Brigade

ULT: Rocket Launcher (Effect: Rainbow damage)

Burst theme: “Hey, Cid!” Cid’s character theme

Alternate Skins: His After Years appearance

Analyze is Cid's unique ability in IV that lets him essentially cast Libra on all foes. Here, it gives enemies a debuff that makes them take critical damage. "Upgrade" is another ability he has in the 3D release that lets him increase the power of attack items - in this case, he uses a Bomb Fragment for multi-target damage. Risk Strike is a new ability he gets in the sequel, which allows him to deal critical damage or none at all - here, it just does critical damage and buffs the party's critical damage. His LD is another "Upgrade" skill, but it is a reference to a dummied out ability he had in the first game called "Airship" that presumably was an airship barrage. After use, his HP attack changes into "X Chaser," which is a Band ability combination he has with Rosa, which batteries the party. His Burst is an original ability name, but his ULT is a Band ability that he gets in the sequel. After use, he will always deal rainbow BRV damage to enemies.

Notes:

Justification for Cid: He is a temporarily playable party member in FFIV (as well as permanent in the GBA version), and permanently playable in the sequel.

Next character hint: A devotee of Shiva with a gift for song.

Chapter 69: Lost Chapter: Emotions Revealed in Song

Notes:

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Cid Pollendina with Cid Haze: I think this one goes without saying. But for these Cids in particular, they are both classic Cids and nearly every other Cid in the series takes something from one of these two.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: Emotions Revealed in Song


Jornee ( Final Fantasy Dimensions 2)

Voiced by: Manaka Iwami

An elf princess from the Middle Ages who is eager to escape her sheltered life and overprotective father. After Morrow and the others rescue her from the clutches of the Deathlord, she joins them on their journey through time and fights to mend the broken relationships between elves, humans, and dwarfs. Through countless battles, she maintains her gentle heart and boundless kindness.

Jornee


(Wrieg, Lilisette, Hurdy, Ulmia, and Serah are accompanying Matoya through a thick, overgrown forest with mossy trees and stones as the old witch gathers herbs.)

LILISETTE: How did we get dragged into this…?

HURDY: My poor paws are so itchy, kupo…

MATOYA: I hear you both complaining back there! Fine, fine – if you are both so miserable, you can leave… leave an old, blind woman to wander by herself in these unfamiliar woods.

SERAH: It’s fine! We can go for a little longer. Right, everyone?

LILISETTE: Sure… I guess.

ULMIA: I don’t mind. This forest has a lovely atmosphere. Something about it feels ancient and mystical.

WRIEG: That’s one way to describe it. It feels like something’s watching us.

HURDY: Why did you have to say that, kupo… Now I’m on edge.

WRIEG: Good. We should stay on our guard.

MATOYA: Bah, nothing will bother us. Just respect the woods, and any spirits here will let us pass.

(A voice carries through the trees – some distant song. It sounds faint.)

SERAH: Um… well, that is a little haunting.

ULMIA: I think it is beautiful. We should go search for its source.

WRIEG: Hm… I think that sounds familiar!

LILISETTE: So is it some monster trying to lure us to our grisly deaths?

MATOYA: Stop speaking of such horrid things.

WRIEG: No, that’s not a monster… follow me!

(Wrieg leads them through the underbrush at a brisk pace following the source of the song. Matoya trails behind, muttering at them the whole way to slow down. They come to a sunny glade alongside a pond, and at its edge sits a woman with a feathered, wide-brimmed cap, her hands joined together as she sings.)

HURDY: Oh, that’s not anything creepy at all. Her song really is beautiful, kupo!

WRIEG: Jornee!

(Jornee stops singing and looks at them in surprise. Now, the party can see her pointed elf ears.)

JORNEE: There you are! I was beginning to become so very melancholy. I have been lost here and alone, but I am gladdened to see you again, Wrieg!

WRIEG: I was wondering if anyone from our world would show up here.

JORNEE: Our world? Whatever do you mean? Are we perhaps in Eidola?

WRIEG: Somewhere further than that, beyond the Rift we know.

SERAH: Maybe we should explain. We’ve all been summoned to this world, Jornee, from all different places. We were chosen by the will of the crystal to fight on its behalf and defend this world from danger.

JORNEE: Another world altogether. How wondrous! It truly is splendid to meet you all.

LILISETTE: Wow, no hesitation at all.

JORNEE: Why would I hesitate? I yearn for the chance to expand my horizons. We have already traveled through time, but now I can say I have been to another world!

SERAH: You traveled through time? Wrieg, you never told us that!

WRIEG: Er, well, I had no reason to.

JORNEE: Wrieg has a habit of keeping things quiet around strangers.

HURDY: Kupo! You still think of us as strangers, Wrieg?

WRIEG: Er… Well, it hasn’t been that long since I’ve come here. Honestly, it is Jornee who probably shares too much – even when it isn’t always safe to do so.

JORNEE: Well excuse me for being more personable!

ULMIA: It is wonderful to meet you, Jornee. Perhaps we can sing together one day.

JORNEE: Oh! Apologies, I have only just noticed your ears. There are elves in other worlds, as well? I would love to sing with you!

LILISETTE: Ulmia and I are Elvaan. Well, I’m half-Elvaan – my mother was a Hume.

JORNEE: Ah! I take it that is another name for human? What a wonderful thing for an elf and a human to find love in another world… It certainly gives me hope for the relations between races in my world. Elfheim is still closed off from the outside world, but if we manage to restore my people enough…

WRIEG: I suppose Lilisette is not so unlike our friend Parai. He is half-dwarf.

MATOYA: Elfheim, eh? I know of elves who live in a place of the same name. They’re a stuffy, reclusive lot.

JORNEE: Indeed, they are the same in my world – at least in the time period from which I hail. By Wrieg’s time, they would call it the ‘Middle Ages.’ Now that I think of it, you remind me of a witch named Unei who lived in the woods near Elfheim. She herself was quite reclusive.

LILISETTE: Matoya lives in a cave, apparently… so pot, meet kettle.

MATOYA: Eh? What did you say!?

LILISETTE: Nothing, nothing.

SERAH: You mentioned restoring your people, Jornee. Did something happen?

(Jornee lowers her gaze, her smile faltering.)

JORNEE: Might we travel to a more welcoming environment?

SERAH: Yes, of course! I’m sorry for asking. I didn’t mean to bring up unpleasant memories.

JORNEE: Worry not. It is quite a long tale…

(They begin to head back to Balamb Garden after finding Matoya’s herbs. On the way, they fill Jornee in on more details about the World of Respite, but then they find their way blocked by Feolthanos; from the treetops, the aegyl studies a small group of Manikins, but his wings flare when the party comes into the clearing by chance, and he flies away.)

ARDYN MANIKIN: Lightbearers? Here?

LILISETTE: That was Feolthanos! What was he doing here? Was he watching you?

JORNEE: I hope it was not with nefarious intentions.

ARDYN MANIKIN: We didn’t know he was there. Please do not involve us in your conflict. (The Manikins depart.)

WRIEG: Something’s suspicious here. Those Manikins don’t seem happy about us being around.

SERAH: Knowing what I know of Feolthanos, I can’t imagine what he was doing. We should ask Llyud and the others what they think.

JORNEE: A winged man… What is it he seeks?

ULMIA: I’m not certain, but I think godhood. From what I understand, he’s already immortal.

JORNEE: A lofty desire if there ever was one. And to think he unlocked the secrets of forbidden magic to achieve that much already…

LILISETTE: Lots of people have achieved immortality in their own ways in different worlds. We even have some traveling with us.

JORNEE: Is that so? Does that not remind you of someone, Wrieg?

WRIEG: Of course, when you put it that way. But those other immortals have their reasons, and they’re not all like him.

(They continue onward to another clearing, where Feolthanos stands motionless with his folded black wings facing them.)

HURDY: There he is again, kupo! What does he want?

(Everyone except for Feolthanos draws their weapons.)

FEOLTHANOS: Manikins are beginning to develop anima.

SERAH: That’s what you call their souls, right? There’s no way we’ll let you steal it from them like you did to the other aegyl!

JORNEE: He stole the souls of his own people? How monstrous!

FEOLTHANOS (turning to them) : I was the reason for the prosperity of the aegyl. I was the father of the entire Feol Viera race before their destruction. But these Manikins… They can feel. They developed anima from nothing.

HURDY: Of course they can feel, kupo! They’re alive!

JORNEE: You fathered a whole race!? And now they are gone? I feel an ache in my heart for you.

FEOLTHANOS: Do not waste your sympathy on me. ‘Twas by mine own reckoning, and they were naught but playthings.

JORNEE: How despicable!

WRIEG: What, just because you made them, you think that gives you the right to steal their souls?

FEOLTHANOS: Now I only wonder. Perhaps the seed of anima has quickened within me again.

ULMIA: Does it move you to regret what you have done?

FEOLTHANOS: No. I ponder only the reason for my anima returning – I have no care for lesser beings, and no use for the anima of Manikins.

MATOYA: As expected of someone like you. But even so-called gods need a reminder of their humility.

JORNEE: To feel nothing and speak so insouciantly of what you have done… How can you bear no love for your own people?

FEOLTHANOS: Perhaps I did, once. I no longer remember.

LILISETTE: Well, you should leave these Manikins alone and stop watching them like some creep!

FEOLTHANOS: The weak anima of those facsimiles is nothing to me – I would much prefer yours.

(He draws his sword and attacks. Wrieg blocks him with his spear and Lilisette dances in with her daggers to attack his undefended side. When Feolthanos pulls away to take to the air, Serah launches a volley of arrows at him. He divebombs toward her, but Wrieg jumps up high to strike before he can hit Serah.)

HURDY: Kupo! Let’s sing a song to empower our friends!

ULMIA: I would love a duet!

(While they sing and play, Matoya hurls a potion at Wrieg and her broom familiar sweeps at the ground in front of Feolthanos, a whirl of magic kicked up by its bristles.)

MATOYA: I don’t need this racket!

JORNEE (raising her staff up high) : Oh! This is such a beautiful song – I feel invigorated in a way like never before!

(Jornee unleashes a barrage of magic on Feolthanos, water and ice swirling to converge on him. He tries to fly through the air to avoid it, but lightning zaps him from above and wind and fire both ground him.)

SERAH: Amazing!

WRIEG: That’s the famed elven magic for you.

JORNEE: I cannot claim all the credit – it is thanks to Hurdy and Ulmia that I was able to strike with such fervor.

(Feolthanos stands. He raises his sword as if he means to attack again, but with them all standing ready, he apparently decides to back down.)

FEOLTHANOS: You dare to stand against the Eternal now, but one day your anima shall be mine. And in this world my followers will rise again to stand above all others, at my side.

(Feolthanos departs. The party sheathes their weapons.)

JORNEE: So in his own twisted way, he does have some lingering affection for his people. It seems to me he wishes to revive them?

MATOYA: Bah, I care little for his ceaseless ranting. Let us be off from here – my feet hurt.

WRIEG: I can’t help but agree with Matoya. I think we’re done here.

JORNEE: I wonder… can this world restore his people? In that desire, I suppose I can relate.

SERAH: This world can give us a lot of things. But the revival of a whole race… I’m not so sure, Jornee. I’m sorry.

JORNEE: I suppose you are right. The vitality of the elves is tied to the life force of our world. Here in this world, I speculate that they would not be the same at all.

WRIEG: But we’ve worked to restore our world, forging a path to peace in every time period. There’s hope for the elves.

JORNEE: You are correct, Wrieg – perhaps I am merely impatient to see the fruit of our efforts! But now that I am here, this world may enlighten me to the ways of others, so such a bleak future would not await our world again. I am delighted to get to know all of you and your ways!


Character Abilities

 

Hope

ULT: Lofty Challenge

Effect: All buffs on Hope become gold

Hope's ULT name comes from an Alexander ability, which is his personal Eidolon. Alexander's best ability is already used in another skill name, so I had to use this one. After use, all buffs currently affecting Hope become golden - which means they cannot be dispelled or removed by any means.


Cid Raines

ULT: Metamorphose

Effect: Transformation, extra damage

This ability comes from his boss battle when he transforms. It does a hefty amount of damage, but after use, he keeps his transformation and does extra damage. It is a little more monstrous-looking than his purchasable costume.


Jornee (Staff) Water magic damage, multi-hitting BRV dumps, debuffs, buffs, Water imperil/enchant

15: Waterga

35: Blood Pain

EX: Tetra-Magic

LD: Benevolent Glow

FR: Cycle of Seasons (with Kytes)

BT: Abyss Maelstrom

ULT: Spirale: Azure Glacier (Effect: EX extends all party buffs)

Burst theme: “Blocking Threat,” the standard boss theme of the game

Alternate Skin: Her formal dress in her 3 star Signet artwork

Jornee's abilities all come from her equippable Signets, which teach her various spells. Jornee's primary element is Water, so I made her a Water mage with a matching enchant and imperil. Her ULT comes from the Primal of Water, Spirale. After use, she will extend the duration of all party buffs every time she casts her EX.

In general, her attacks are hard-hitting and dump BRV multiple times, allowing her to pile on the damage. She also has a couple of party stat buffs and enemy debuffs in her kit.

Notes:

Justification for Jornee: She is one of the main playable characters of Dimensions 2.

Next character hint: This character is both the first, and the last of their kind.

Chapter 70: Lost Chapter: A Solitary Roar

Notes:

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Jornee with Kytes: Both are kind and warm-hearted mages who wish to see the world outside of where they were raised and push to go on an adventure.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: A Solitary Roar


Ricard Highwind ( Final Fantasy II)

Voiced by: Jin Yamanoi

The last Dragoon of Deist after their famed knights are defeated in a series of raids and trickery. Trapped within the Leviathan’s gullet, he is initially unaware that the Dragoons and wyverns have been wiped out until he comes to terms with it by helping to hatch the last wyvern egg. Pledging himself to the cause, he accompanies the party into the Emperor’s Cyclone.

Ricard Highwind Amano artwork


MARIA


A chill that had nothing to do with the cold crept up Maria’s spine.

Nestled deep in a forest, a castle with dark spires loomed high above, wreathed in fog. A muddy path wound around jagged stones to the front gate, rusted and rotting, its facade crumbling. Flags waved atop the walls, but most looked so tattered and ruined that it was impossible to identify the castle as coming from any of their worlds.

“This is the sort of place that makes me think we’d run into foul spirits,” Maria said, rubbing her arms. She wasn’t sure if it was a good idea to enter such a place, but Mog had detected a Torsion of unusual size somewhere inside, and asked them to go and find it. They had no choice but to continue unless they wished to let monsters summoned from within it run rampant.

“Perhaps if we do not speak of such things, there will be nothing to worry about,” said King Tycoon. “But we must show more haste; night will descend soon, and I would rather put this place behind us before then.”

Minwu, leading the way, looked back at Maria with a smile that reached his eyes. “Worry not, Maria – even if spirits do decide to harry us, our light will banish them.”

Maria smiled back. She supposed, as the advisor of the princess leading the rebellion, Minwu always knew just the right thing to say.

Barbariccia let out a sigh that sounded a little like a gust of wind. “The air here is still. Such a tepid, loathsome place does not suit me – I can scarcely believe you all bothered me enough to accompany you.”

“No one did anything of the sort,” Freya muttered.

Kimahri, rounding out the last member of their party, brought up the rear and said nothing.

Tycoon and Kimahri pushed open the gate, which squealed on rusty hinges as it rose. Inside the bailey, it smelled of rot – rainwater or condensed mist pooled into puddles, dripping from the stone above. Some monsters like centipedes and rock golems and bombs wandered, but nowhere near as many as Maria expected to see with such a large Torsion nearby.

A thought occurred to Maria as they walked in silence, and she surprised herself by speaking it aloud. “This castle reminds me of Deist.”

“Deist?” Tycoon asked. “A location in your world?”

“Ah, yes, sorry,” Maria said. “I hadn’t meant to speak my thoughts. Deist was the home of the Dragoons.”

“Was?” Freya asked. “I suspect by the state of this place, it is no longer.”

Minwu answered for her. “It was a casualty of the war against Palamecia. The famed Dragoons of Deist rode to battle upon the backs of wyverns, making a fearsome foe to the Emperor and a valuable ally to the Rebellion in Fynn. But in his cowardice, the Emperor poisoned the wyverns’ water supply, crippling their forces and allowing him to defeat the Dragoons.”

“How monstrous,” said Tycoon, clenching his fists. “To think he would resort to such a tactic… War is terrible enough as it is, so to carry out such a crime is unthinkable.”

“Indeed,” said Freya, looking out toward the high walls. “In some ways, this place reminds me of Burmecia as well. My home, a kingdom under perpetual rain. It, too, was destroyed by an invading enemy.”

“I’m sorry,” said Maria, knowing well the pain of losing a home. But she also knew that such simple words could do nothing to dull that kind of pain. “We had a friend from Deist, Ricard – I believe he would be overjoyed to meet a Dragoon like yourself.”

“I never liked Dragoons,” Barbariccia said, but Maria and the others ignored her.

“The last Dragoon, Ricard…” said Minwu. “Yet even he lost his life in battle against the Emperor. I count myself fortunate to have had the opportunity to fight alongside him, even in a place beyond…”

Something crashed deeper inside the castle, a booming sound that interrupted Minwu before he could finish. Kimahri’s paws padded against the ground as he hurried toward the source of the noise without waiting to be prompted, spear ready. He pushed open the doors to the keep, revealing crumbling pillars and decaying runners inside.

“Did that come from the throne room!?” Tycoon asked.

Mist obscured the last of the fading sunlight, casting them in a pall of grey, shadows lengthening. The ground shook, loosening dust and stones from the ceiling as they went inside.

“The Torsion must be growing,” said Barbariccia, scowling. “If we do not hurry, this entire castle is like to fall upon us – Cagnazzo may be fond of such tricks, but I am not!”

Kimahri burst through the last door, opening the way to the throne room where a massive Torsion looked as if it was trying to devour everything. The ceiling had long since crumbled, exposing the center of the castle to the open sky. Floating above it, waving his staff as if like a conductor’s baton, the Emperor of Palamecia seemed to be stoking the Torsion’s energy.

“It’s him!” Maria yelled out, falling to one knee as she pulled back her bowstring to loose an arrow at him. It bounced off of a magical barrier and the Emperor sneered down at them.

“Ugh, the worms have arrived,” he said. “You are ahead of schedule. I have not yet summoned my stronghold – but you shall not interrupt me now, not when I am almost finished!”

He waved his staff, summoning monsters from within the Torsion. Two Dullahans emerged, their armor clinking as they raised their enormous blades. Kimahri and Freya attacked first, barely giving them a chance to swipe at the party.

“His stronghold!” Maria exclaimed, a pit of dread in her stomach. “Could he mean…?”

“The Cyclone!” said Minwu. “He means to summon the Cyclone to unleash terror upon the world again!”

Barbariccia rose, the winds swirling around her. “He means to summon a cyclone? I’ll show him a cyclone!”

She swept around the Dullahans, rising higher on a tornado as she unleashed jetstreams of wind upon the Emperor directly. He dodged it, but Tycoon whistled and Hiryu the wind drake appeared with a roar, swooping down and slashing the Emperor with his claws.

The Emperor lowered to the ground, holding his side with his free hand. “You beast!” he snarled. “How dare you!?” He waved his scepter, unleashing a line of lightning that crashed down toward Hiryu and everyone in its path. Freya and Kimahri leapt out of the way, but it struck Barbariccia. It seemed to whirl around in her miniature tornado, and her fingers emerged from it to point at the Emperor and return the blast. He covered himself in a barrier just in time, but a cloud of dust surrounded him.

Maria unleashed a flurry of black magic on the Dullahans to give herself some room, fighting them alongside Minwu, but when the dust cleared, she spotted a figure in dark armor with his spear pressed against the Emperor’s scepter.

Maria gasped, almost unable to believe her eyes. “Ricard!”

“I heard the dragon’s cry,” Ricard said, straining against the Emperor. “I can’t say I know where I am, but I won’t rest until this foe is defeated.”

He jumped back from the Emperor to avoid a blast of fire magic and the Emperor straightened. “Another worm has crawled from the muck,” he said. “Begone with you!”

Tycoon, Freya, and Kimahri joined Ricard, four spears pointed at the Emperor. On the other side of the throne room, Minwu blasted the Dullahans with magic while Barbariccia fried them with lightning and Maria unleashed her strongest Flare. Hiryu crashed into them with another roar, forcing the Dullahans to collapse against the ground, where the magic sustaining them released its hold.

“We must stop the Torsion,” said Minwu. “Its powers grow ever more erratic!”

Freya and Kimahri attacked the Emperor from above while Ricard and Tycoon stabbed at the Emperor in unison.

“We will not allow your schemes to devastate the world again!” said Ricard. “Though I draw breath again, I would gladly give my all once more to ensure you see your end.”

Maria had been in the World of Respite long enough to know that upon defeating monsters from Torsions, it settled the Torsions’ tumultuous energies long enough for the party to focus their Light and close them. Nodding to Minwu, they both held their hands out to the Torsion and focused on seeing it shut. As if in its death throes, the Torsion flailed and released one final burst at the wall before Maria and Minwu forced it closed.

“Meddlesome maggots!” the Emperor spat. “Fine – this is no concern to me! I will simply do this once more where you cannot hope to interfere.”

Before he could vanish, Hiryu rammed into the Emperor, shoving him into his own portal before he could float through it. It closed right behind him, and Hiryu growled at the empty space where it disappeared.

“Well done, Hiryu,” Tycoon said, patting the wind drake on the side of his head. “I daresay that the Emperor will think twice before facing you again!”

“I thought at first that this was a wyvern,” said Ricard, looking up at Hiryu. “But regardless, it was an honor to fight alongside this beautiful creature. It warms me more than I can say to see other Dragoons again.”

“Ah, I am sorry to say I have not been blessed by the crystals and ordained a Dragoon,” said Tycoon. “I merely battle with a spear and my dear friend Hiryu at my side.”

“Ricard!” Maria called out again, approaching him with a smile. “It’s so good to see you again! I’m so thankful this world brought you back to us.”

“Ah, Maria, likewise,” Ricard replied. “Though I wish it were under better circumstances. I’d wished that you, at least, would never be brought here for many years…”

She tilted her head, confused by his words. “What do you mean?”

“Ah,” said Minwu. “I know where the confusion lies. Ricard, this may be difficult to believe – but you live once again, and we have all been summoned to another world. These allies come from other worlds as well.”

Ricard planted the butt of his spear against the ground. “Is that so? It seems unbelievable, but having seen Heaven with my own eyes…”

“Cease your prattling,” Barbariccia interrupted them. “That Torsion unsettled the foundations of this castle too much. We must flee from here at once -- unless you wish to be crushed, of course.”

“Certainly not,” said Freya. “I can jump through the open ceiling, but as for the rest of you…”

“Let’s get the hell outta here,” said Ricard. “We can make it for sure!”

“There is no need to worry,” said Minwu, white magic circling around him. “Teleport!”


Minwu’s spell released them outside the castle just in time for one of the towers to fall upon the keep, bringing part of the wall with it. From the safety of outside, Maria watched a cloud of dust rise up, but other parts of the castle remained standing. Even so, she was glad to be free of it.

By now, night had fallen, and it was time to begin their journey back to Balamb Garden.

“We have a long way to go,” said Maria. “But on the way, Ricard, we can catch you up on all that has happened. Firion, Guy, and the others will be delighted to see you again.”

“Though I am no Dragoon, you will certainly meet others who can claim to be,” Tycoon said. “Like our friend Freya here.”

The only part of Ricard’s face that was visible – his mouth and jaw – showed his frown. “I respectfully disagree,” he said. “I’d say that you are indeed a Dragoon, since you fight like one. And you have the friendship of Hiryu besides. That's more than enough for me.”

“I would say the same,” said Freya. “And you display the ideals of a Dragoon as well. I would be honored to count you among our ranks.”

“Kimahri never thought to be Dragoon,” said Kimahri, crossing his arms. “Kimahri is Ronso warrior. Ricard carry will of Dragoons with him wherever he goes, as Kimahri did when he believed Ronso all gone.”

Ricard crossed his arms as well, perhaps absorbing Kimahri’s words as Maria did. She never knew that Kimahri could be so insightful, nor that the Ronso had suffered such similar losses.

“Thank you, Kimahri,” said Ricard. “You’re right, I’m not alone – especially not now. Whether or not you’re fellow Dragoons, I look forward to fighting together with all of you.”

“Great,” said Barbariccia, rolling her eyes. “More of them flying around in my sky is just what we needed.”

Ricard pointed at her. “What’s that about your sky?”

Maria laughed into her hand. Ricard had a way of being direct like that, but she was just glad for the opportunity to repay him for everything he had done.


Character Abilities

Jihl Nabaat

ULT: Antimatter Manipulation Principle

Effect: Disable also inflicts Delay

Her ULT references the AMP technology that PSICOM soldiers use to replicate magic. After use, whenever she Disables foes she will also inflict Delay.


Serah

ULT: Bolverk

Effect: Wound prevents enemies from healing

Serah's ULT comes from Valfodr, Keeper of the Coliseum and strongest monster ally she can recruit. This is one of his strongest abilities. After use, her Wound ability will prevent enemies from healing themselves or their allies.


Ricard Highwind (Spears) Non-elemental ranged damage, auras, follow ups, HP drain

15: Dragonlance

35: Wyvern Roar

EX: The Last Dragoon

LD: Blaze of Deist -> Enables “Blaze VII” follow-up

FR: Dragonblood (with Estinien)

BT: First and Last

ULT: Dragonback Dive (Effect: Extra launch damage)

Burst theme: “Ancient Castle,” which plays in several dungeons, such as Castle Deist

Since Ricard has no named abilities, I had to get creative and give him unique ones. Like most spear-users in the game, he deals ranged damage. He also has potent party offensive auras, a follow up, and like many members of the FFII cast, an HP Drain to reference the iconic Blood Sword.

His LD, "Blaze of Deist," comes from the "Wyvern" key item, which uniquely can be used in battle - unlike all other key items in the franchise. It summons the wyvern to cast "Blaze VII," so it can also be thought of as the first summoning spell in the series! After use, Ricard will get the wyvern to cast Blaze VII as a follow-up attack. His Burst is meant to reference how he is the first Dragoon of the franchise but also the last in the setting. After using his ULT, he will deal extra launch damage.

Notes:

Justification for Ricard: He is a temporary party member of FFII, just like Leila and Minwu.

Next character hint: This character's name brings to mind the moon, archery, and the hunt.

Chapter 71: Lost Chapter: Night's Warm Embrace

Notes:

Ugh, I am going to keep my notes short this time because my session expired just as I hit "post" and I lost all my work outside of the chapter itself...

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Ricard with Estinien: Both are Dragoons, obviously, but notable for being two of the very few Dragoons throughout the franchise who actually ride a dragon.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: Night's Warm Embrace


Diana ( Final Fantasy Dimensions)

Voiced by: Kaede Hondo

A bright, empathetic girl from Lux who is commonly praised by the elders for her level head, which she uses to keep her childhood friend Sol out of trouble. The younger sister of Aigis, she looks forward to greeting her brother whenever he returns from his adventures abroad. Diana is one of the few people who can naturally hear the voice of the Crystals, and it is this power that leads to her becoming a Warrior of Darkness, and later an Oracle of her hometown.

Diana


REM


Rem thought they had found themselves back in the Dimensions’ Labyrinth, that horrible tangle of Torsions and darkness where they fought the planesgorger larva to save Mog. They had come so far since that struggle near the beginning of their adventure, when the Blackened Will threatened to tear the fabric of this world apart, but Rem still thought of the darkness inside Torsions with trepidation. They went in one Torsion and out another, lost in a maze and a seemingly endless chase.

It was meant to be a simple expedition – a monster extermination. But something about this particular monster was unusual; it feasted not on other monsters, but energy. And it traversed Torsions as if it knew the rift between worlds better than any of them. She was glad to be with the Onion Knight, Lyse, Princess Sarah of Burtgang, Sol, and Fina, at least.

When they arrived in the endless expanse of dark, swirling energy again, the monster nowhere to be seen, Lyse let out a groan. “How is this possible? I thought only we were able to open Torsions!”

The Onion Knight took a glance around the inside of the Torsion and frowned. “I think this monster is just utilizing Torsions that already existed to travel great distances. As Mog has told us many times before, only Lightbearers like us can open them. Not even Manikins are capable of it.”

Sarah pursed her lips. “And if monsters are capable of evolving along with this world?”

“I’d rather not think of that possibility.”

Rem clasped her hands together as if in prayer. “Right. As Enna Kros would say, this world has its rules. Monsters developing ‘Light’ of their own just seems too far-fetched. If anything, isn’t it possible that one of our enemies is opening Torsions for it? Perhaps leading it somewhere?”

“I wonder if it’s Zemus, with that Giant of Babil?” Lyse suggested. “We still don’t know where he took it.”

Fina doubled over. “It’s like we’re on a wild goose chase! If he’s just trying to tire us out, he’s succeeding.”

Rem considered the idea that whoever was behind this was trying to do just that, when she spotted a girl with pale blue hair emerging from the darkness ahead. She looked around with fearful eyes, clutching a bow with a white-knuckled grip. Just as Rem was about to mention her to the others, Sol called out.

“Diana! What’re you doing here?”

Sarah took a step back in surprise. “Diana?”

The girl with the pale blue hair heard them and when she spotted Sol and Sarah, her mouth opened in surprise, and then she smiled, running over to them with tears brimming at the corners of her eyes. “Oh, Sol! What’s going on?” She stopped in front of him, and Rem detected the briefest hint of hesitation before she turned to Sarah and smiled at her, too. “And Sarah! I’m so glad to see you both.”

“I’m glad to see you, too!” Sol said, grinning. “We’re inside of a Torsion!”

Diana’s smile faltered. “Are you going to explain what that is, or…?”

“It’s a lot to explain, but I shall try my best,” said Sarah. “We’re in another world, you see, and though this may look like the Nil, it’s more like…”

“Whoa!” Sol interrupted her with a sudden shout, pointing ahead. A light shone through the darkness – an opening back out into the world. Inside it, Rem saw a pale gray behemoth-like creature – the monster they sought. “There’s that monster! I’m going after it!”

“Wait, maybe we shouldn’t be so reckless!” the Onion Knight shouted after him, but Sol already took off at a sprint.

“You guys look after Diana!” Sol called back over his shoulder as he went through the Torsion.

Sarah was right on his heels without a word or inkling of hesitation, diving through the Torsion after him just in time for it to close behind them both. Rem and the others barely even had time to react.

Diana clenched her fists. “Sol! This is just like him to do something foolish!” Her head fell. “And he left me here…”

Rem frowned, but stepped up to Diana’s side with the best encouraging smile she could muster. “Don’t worry, we’ll find him. We’ve all been traveling together for some time now. My name’s Rem – it’s nice to meet you.”

Diana, to her credit, put on a brave face. “It’s nice to meet you, too. Is it true what Sarah said? That we’re in another world?”

“Yes, though this darkness may more accurately be described as the space between worlds,” the Onion Knight explained. “How’d you find yourself here?”

Diana folded her hands together and looked down at them. “I’m… I’m not certain. I only remember being in a field, and then hearing the voice of a Crystal. I followed it through one of those dark energy portals and found myself here.”

Fina put a hand over her chest in surprise. “Wow! You heard one of the Crystals? Which one?”

“More importantly, what did it say?” the Onion Knight asked with a furrowed brow.

“Well, I didn't quite hear words, per se,” Diana clarified. “I am able to hear the voice of the Crystal in my world, and I know when it is in danger. Something here is threatening it, and I wanted to find it.”

Fina frowned in worry. “It’s in trouble? Oh, no…”

Rem saw Diana’s eyes pass toward the space where Sol and Sarah disappeared and she decided to speak up. “I know you’re worried about Sol and Sarah, but I’m sure you know they can handle themselves. We’ve actually been tracking the monster they chased after because it has been feeding on stores of lesser crystals. Now it leads me to wonder if it’s after one of the crystal pillars of this world – and if so, then that monster may lead them right to the same place that we’re going.”

“Right!” said Lyse, pumping a fist into the air. “What’re we waiting for, then? We should get going!”

“Can you follow the Crystal’s voice, Diana?” the Onion Knight asked. “The Warrior of Light or Garland should know where they are, but neither of them are here for us to rely on right now.”

“The Warrior of Light?” Diana asked. “Ah, I apologize. I believe so – this place just may be a little difficult to navigate.”

“We can show you how to open Torsions,” Rem said. If Diana really could hear the voice of a crystal pillar, then that would help tremendously. “I have to wonder… How can you hear the Crystal’s voice? From what I know, the crystal pillars have only spoken directly to Sophie and G’raha Tia, but they seem to be a special case. And the Warrior of Light and Garland, I suppose – but they’re special, too.”

“Don’t forget Fina and Selh’teus,” Lyse said, nudging Fina with a grin. “Though that’s because they’re more or less crystal pillars themselves.”

Fina smiled. “Right,” she said. “Well, the other part of me is, anyway.”

“I’ve always been able to,” Diana said. “I’m an Oracle, you see. We tend to the Crystal of Lux, my home, and keep it safe – and it keeps Lux safe in return. But when it truly came under threat, it ended up splitting the world into a World of Light and a World of Darkness. I hope the same sort of thing isn’t about to happen again. This world around us that looks like Nil makes me uncomfortable…”

“Worlds of Light and Darkness…” said the Onion Knight. “What an incredible power! And did the Crystal turn you into a Warrior of Light like Sol and Sarah?”

Diana shook her head, offering a smile that looked proud, but a little distant. “No, it didn’t. It made me a Warrior of Darkness. I was separated from Sol for quite some time after that, and that’s when he met Sarah.”

Rem detected some history there. She wondered if it was truly worry or something else that plagued Diana’s thoughts. “A Warrior of Darkness? I’ve never heard of such a thing.”

“Y’shtola and the others told me all about meeting the Warriors of Darkness from a world flooded with Light, and then that’s what our friend came to be called,” Lyse said, as Diana led them through the Torsion. “Well, let’s hope the crystal pillar won’t sunder this world like that!”

“Agreed,” said the Onion Knight. “Wow… A Warrior of Darkness. I never thought I’d meet one again.”

“Have you known Sol long?” Rem asked.

“Since we were children. Even though he may be far away at times, I can’t help but worry for him,” said Diana. She furrowed her brow in sudden anger. “That Sol! Just as he reunites with me, he has to run away like that with barely a backward glance! I swear, he never thinks his actions through.”

The Onion Knight jumped back in surprise from her outburst. “Well, he’s with Sarah, so I’m sure he’s safe!”

Diana’s face fell. “Right… Sarah…”

Rem, Fina, and Lyse all looked at the Onion Knight with flattened brows. “You really fail to understand a maiden’s heart, huh?” said Fina.

The Onion Knight balked. “Huh? What did I do?”


Diana led them to a new open space, a void of Light that contrasted with the void of Darkness inside of the Torsion. They walked upon gray stone tile, and ahead the radiance of the Crystal bathed them in its light. Once they entered this space, the Onion Knight led the way.

“This is Materia’s crystal…” he said. “Right where we left it.”

Rem felt a profound sense of sadness come over her as she looked at the Crystal. After all they had been through, she missed Materia – the goddess who initially summoned them here and guided them. Though she took their memories, Rem knew she had nothing but good intentions to begin with, and sacrificed herself in order to keep this world safe for her warriors. Rem couldn’t fault her for that. Seeing her crystal here, again, brought those feelings back in a rush.

“This is the one,” Diana said, approaching the Crystal with awe. “She was calling out for help – she sensed danger.”

“We’re here now, Materia,” said Lyse. She looked around the other side of the Crystal, pointing ahead. “There’s a Torsion here, too – someone must have opened the way here!”

“But if they could do that, why wouldn’t they attack the Crystal directly?” Fina asked.

Diana let out a sudden gasp. “It was her! I understand now.”

“It was Materia herself who did that!?” the Onion Knight exclaimed.

Rem heard a roar from inside of the other Torsion and drew her daggers. “Let’s discuss it later! Looks like that monster is back!”

She saw its claws first, massive and obsidian, covered in slate gray fur. Its face followed, similar to a behemoth’s, with a snarling maw full of teeth. Its horns curled forward, seemingly made of crystal themselves – iridescent and gleaming under the pearly light of the sky. Spikes jutted out from its spine as it emerged on four legs, its thick tail swaying as it slathered over the sight of the Crystal. Fina and Diana were the first to fire their bows, distracting it from its feast, while the Onion Knight swept in and sliced at its front legs.

It roared again, swiping its claws at the Onion Knight in retaliation, but Lyse flew in with a kick at its jaw that threw it off. It snarled, snapping at her, and Rem joined her daggers at the hilt and hurled them like a boomerang. It bounced off of its crystal horns, but when she went to go retrieve her daggers she spotted Sol and Sarah emerge from the Torsion behind it.

“There you are!” Rem said.

“Ya wouldn’t believe the chase this thing led us on!” said Sol, sword drawn. “But we’re here now!”

“Have care!” said Sarah, summoning a glowing barrier just in time to block its tail from slamming into them.

Diana fired another volley of arrows at the crystal eater, lodging them in its back. “Ooh, Sol! You’re going to wish this monster got you by the time I’m done with you!”

Sol gaped. “What’d I do!?” He dodged the swipe of one of the monster’s claws, then jumped up toward its back, stabbing right between its shoulders. Sarah slashed at its hind legs and the Onion Knight battered it with a series of meteorites, making it howl with pain. Its horns glowed and light siphoned away from the Crystal, healing its wounds.

“Oh, no!” Fina exclaimed, firing more arrows of light. “We need to keep it away from Materia!”

Its tail swung into Sarah, sending her flying toward the Crystal. Diana cried out in alarm and rushed to her side, cradling Sarah in her lap as she immediately went to work with healing magic. She was much closer to Sarah than Rem, but as she was about to heal Sarah from a distance, the monster loomed over her with a deep growl.

Rem braced herself for it to strike, but a pulse of magic from the Crystal made the monster flinch, and another seemed to press down on it, humming at a frequency that made the monster howl in pain. Rem gasped as the monster shrank away from the Crystal, whimpering, and before she could do anything else, a concentrated burst of light shone forth and enveloped the crystal eater in its entirety. Rem shielded her eyes, and when the glow finally died down, the monster was gone.

“Whoa…” Fina said, eyes wide. “Did Materia do that!?”

“She did,” said Diana, helping Sarah to stand. “She finished off that monster for us.”

“Totally cool!” said Sol. “Now that’s what I call a Crystal’s protection.”

“I agree, but I’m not sure I understand,” said Lyse. “Wasn’t Materia in danger? If she could deal with that monster all along, why did she cry out for help?”

“Because that monster wasn’t what was endangering her,” said the Onion Knight. He turned to Diana. “Right, Diana?”

Diana nodded, her face grim. “Right,” she affirmed. “Light… Darkness… Life… Will… and most recently, Earth. The five crystal pillars currently supporting this world, allowing it to grow, are in danger from the gathering malice. If it’s not stopped, this world will rot from the inside out. She said… she said that this world could one day be as real and full of life as all of our own, but only if we stop that malice.”

“Zemus, I assume,” said Sarah, brow furrowed. “Not only do his machinations threaten the guardian summons, but the very fabric of this world itself… We already knew we had to stop him, but this certainly raises the stakes.”

“The pillar of Light is Materia, the Darkness is Spiritus, Life is Selh’teus, Earth is Fina’s other self… and Will is that unknown voice that called out to G’raha and Sophie,” Rem said. “I suppose that means other crystal pillars will form one day, too. All of the elements required for a world to thrive.”

“Aw, well what does that all change?” Sol asked. “Sarah’s right! We were already gonna stop him anyway, so what’s the difference?”

“Making light of the danger, as always,” Diana said with a sigh. “Materia felt the need to tell us herself. She was the one who opened the Torsions for this monster, and she put herself in danger by leading it here, but she had faith we would arrive in time to stop it. I’m glad we were able to get here in time – I’m not sure what would have happened if we failed.”

“Even now, she still believes in us,” said the Onion Knight, looking up at the Crystal. “Thank you, Materia! We won’t let you down.”

“All right!” said Sol. “That was fun, but let’s head back now.”

“That’s it?” said Diana, putting her hands on her hips as she reprimanded Sol. “You’re not even going to say anything else?”

Rem had to hide her laugh. Diana seemed sweet most of the time, but she supposed Sol had a way of pushing her buttons like only a childhood friend could.

“Like what?” Sol asked. “You know I’m glad to see you again, Diana! Duh!”

Sarah laughed into her hand. “I’m sure you know by now that he’ll never change, Diana,” she said, to Sol’s consternation.

Diana sighed, but gave Sol a fond smile as he walked off, heading toward the Torsion. “Yes, I suppose you’re right… That’s who he is, after all. Thank you for looking after him so far!”


Character Abilities

Noel

ULT: Gagnrath

Effect: Free ability uses retain BRV

His ULT comes from Valfodr, one of the strongest monster recruits, like Serah's. After use, his free ability uses have him retain all his BRV instead of dumping it.


Yda

ULT: Meteodrive

Effect: Dodge attacks when at Max BRV

Yda's ULT comes from the Monk PvP Limit Break, since the normal Monk LB, "Final Heaven," is already referenced in her Burst. Also, I like the idea of high level Monk abilities staying with Lyse, since she abandons the Yda persona fairly early in the game.


Lyse

ULT: Destroyer’s Phantom Rush

Effect: Always deal critical damage

I already gave her a Force and Burst attack in Elena's debut chapter, so here's her ULT. Lyse's ULT comes from the strongest Masterful Blitz. It's a recurring ability name in the franchise, but to differentiate it from Sabin and Eight's use of the same ability, I also referenced Rhalgr, the Destroyer - patron god of Ala Mhigo and Monks.


Diana (Bows) Non-elemental ranged damage, healing, offensive auras, free turns, linked attacker

15: Quick Shot

35: Gale Crescent

EX: Misty Charge

LD: Alchemy: Megalixir & Divine Shot

FR: Moon’s Solace (with Ulmia)

BT: Spreadshot: Vitals

ULT: Return to Darkness (Effect: Becomes invisible when broken until next turn)

Burst theme: “Though You May Be Far Away,” a theme that plays during emotional moments

I decided to have Diana represent the Ranger job because I believe it fits her best, mostly because her name is a reference to the Roman goddess of the hunt and the moon (the Greek equivalent is Artemis). It is a job exclusive to the Dark Warriors, and the other members of her team have jobs that represent them better IMO. Even though the only official artwork depicting her in a job portrays her as a Summoner, I decided to ignore that.

All but her second ability come from the Ranger job; the exception is a Monk skill (a basic job available to both Light and Dark Warriors) purely for the moon imagery. She is a non-elemental ranged attacker with healing and offensive auras to reference how she starts off with some basic healing magic even before jobs are unlocked. However, as a Dark Warrior, she does not have access to any advanced healing jobs, so it isn't her main focus. She also gets free turns with "Quick Shot" and is a linked attacker. Her ULT, like Sol and Sarah, represents one of the Four Generals of the Empire, recurring bosses - in her case, it references Asmodai of the Earth, who is prominent in the Ranger's tale of the story. After use, she becomes invisible whenever she is broken until her next turn, which means she is untargetable to foes.

Notes:

Justification for Diana: One of the main playable characters, a Warrior of Darkness.

Next chapter is another main story chapter. We'll meet two characters from snowy lands who sacrificed themselves to defeat an Empire, and a third who is known for a particular duel whose name means "nothing."

Chapter 72: A5C10, Part 1: The Three Emperors

Notes:

Chapter 10!! Here we go.

I didn't intend on having the Emperor reappear again so soon, since he just showed up in Ricard's LC, but when I wrote that I forgot I planned for him to show up here. Oops! Oh well.

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Diana with Ulmia: Both are childhood friends to the hero and much more responsible in comparison, and often tend to be soft spoken except with that hero.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Act 5, Chapter 10, Part 1: The Three Emperors


Blank ( Final Fantasy IX)

Voiced by: Kiyotaka Furushima

A member of Tantalus and close friend to Zidane growing up, even if they were occasional rivals. He turned to stone in the group’s flight from the Evil Forest, but in his last moments gave Zidane the means to succeed on his quest and was cured later. He has a special talent for mixing potions.

Blank concept art


Ysayle Dangoulain ( Final Fantasy XIV)

Voiced by: Maaya Uchida

Known as “Lady Iceheart,” a leader of the Dravanian heretics who fought to end the war with Ishgard. Due to her gift of the Echo, she is capable of summoning Primals within her own body and believed herself to be the reincarnation of Saint Shiva, a woman who similarly fought for peace between dragon and man. Her faith became tested and challenged throughout her journey, ultimately culminating in the reveal of thousand year secrets and a sacrifice for the war’s end.

Ysayle render


Josef ( Final Fantasy II)

Voiced by: Tessho Genda

A former soldier of Palamecia who fled to Salamand after deserting the army. After Firion and the others free the men of Salamand from slavery and rescue his beloved daughter Nelly, he joins them in their journey to fight back against the empire. He is wise and well-informed, and is something of an explorer.

Josef


EMET-SELCH


The even drumbeat of Emet-Selch’s boots against the metal flooring was the only sound in the corridor aside from the rumble of the gargantuan airship’s engines. He walked with purpose, but not urgency, as he reached the end of the corridor and the metallic door slid open automatically at his arrival to the bridge.

A high-backed throne faced away from the entrance, overlooking the glass windows that displayed the world below and the impish workers keeping the airship in the sky. Emet-Selch could not see the figure lounging on the throne aside from a slender hand that held a scepter and parts of his garish clothing. The monsters noticed him in moments, jumping up and down and growling or raising a noisome alarum of half-spoken words.

The occupant of the throne spoke without getting up to see him. “Bring the intruder to face me,” he said.

One of the bewinged imps inched closer and made a grab for Emet-Selch’s sleeve, but he pulled his arm away with a scowl. “I kindly ask you not to lay one of your filthy hands on me,” he said. “I’m more than capable of walking – I came here of my own free will, after all.”

The creatures backed away and Emet-Selch walked around to the front of the throne to meet the Emperor of Palamecia face-to-face for the first time.

“Tell me what you think you are doing here,” the Emperor ordered, his chin leaning on his free hand.

“I simply wish to know where you’ve acquired such a fearsome airship,” Emet-Selch said, hoping flattery would be enough to win a proper audience. He’d met countless emperors and kings, after all, and each had their price. “I’ve come to learn that such things are in rather short supply in this world.”

“You teleported here and intruded upon my domain in the sky to ask only that ?” the Emperor asked, examining his nails. “It is an airship known as the Dreadnought from my world – and I have found it here, as is my right. If the Cyclone refuses to show itself, then this is the next best thing.”

“With such a grandiose warship, I assume you want only one thing,” said Emet-Selch. “Conquest, of course – over monsters and Manikins and our friends lurking on the ground.”

The Emperor’s hands drummed against his throne, looking past Emet-Selch as if in boredom. “Obviously. Is there a purpose to your prattle, or do you intend to wag your tongue in your last moments of life? What is it you seek?”

Emet-Selch smirked. “ Not an alliance or anything of the sort, I assure you. I come only with a peace offering in the hopes that you keep your menacing artillery bombardments away from where I have settled myself.”

“No inch of this world will be free of my dominion,” the Emperor said. He waved his hand. “But I will hear what you have to offer, nonetheless.”

Emet-Selch snapped his fingers, opening a Torsion at his side and just slightly above his head. A figure fell out of it, shackles binding his wrists and ankles and a thick belt around his head to conceal his eyes. He landed painfully. “An ally of your foes – one who thought he could steal from me. I’ve captured him as a gift for you. He calls himself ‘Blank,’ which I take to mean you can call him whatever you like.”

The Emperor looked at Blank, who kept his head bowed, but every muscle in his body looked tense, like he was ready to flee at any moment. “Hmph,” the Emperor said by way of appraisal.

“Let me sweeten the deal: have you a liking for theater?” Emet-Selch asked, gesturing to Blank. “Earlier, he told me of his gift for acting. I’ve always had a fondness for the arts myself.”

“I’ve no want for a jester,” the Emperor responded. “But there is a need for dexterous hands upon this airship that these brutish monsters lack. Very well. You will kneel to me.”

Blank said nothing and didn’t move, but the Emperor pressed down with his scepter on the chains binding his arms, forcing Blank to his knees. Blank’s jaw clenched.

“I will take my leave now,” Emet-Selch said, bowing. “Go forth. Conquer. Rule.”

He vanished, leaving Blank at the Emperor’s mercy.


FIRION


Firion was tending to his weapons on Garden’s balcony when he saw the black airship appear on the horizon.

He froze for just a moment as recognition jolted through him, along with disbelief, but then he sprung into action.

“Sound the alarms!” he yelled out as he ran through the hall. He paid little notice to those he passed, intent on the elevator to the command bridge. “The Dreadnought is here!”

He ran into Guy on the way, who wore a surly scowl at Firion’s words. “Emperor? We fight!”

The moment they stepped into the elevator, an explosion shook Balamb Garden. The ground continued to shake, indicating to Firion that the Emperor fired a bombardment of missiles at them. He and Guy braced themselves against the inside of the elevator just as a blaring alarm went off and Dr. Cid approached from the hall.

“Don’t you two know not to board a lift during an emergency?” he asked, his voice full of derision. “Come – we make for the stairwell.”

The alarm paused and Squall’s voice rang out across the Garden. “ Attention, everyone! We’re under attack from an unknown assailant. Stay away from windows and balconies – we are preparing to take off and begin evasive maneuvers .”

“We know who it is!” Firion yelled back, knowing Squall couldn’t hear him. With the level of destruction he knew the Dreadnought was capable of, he doubted the far less mobile Garden could outspeed it. He followed Dr. Cid and Guy as they made their way to the stairs and Squall’s instructions continued.

Deploy the airships! We need volunteers to assault the enemy in the air and give Garden time to escape. Make for the hangar if you’re able!

They needed fighters. And if there was one thing they could all do, it was that.

Rather than going up, Firion pivoted and made the decision to go down. “I’m going to our airships!” Firion called up to Guy. “They’re smaller, but they have a better chance of outmaneuvering the Dreadnought !”

“Guy go with you!” Guy said, as Firion knew he would.

“Hmm… This does present an unexpected opportunity to board the Strahl and see that tremendous black airship up close,” Dr. Cid mused, apparently unbothered by the danger. “Very well!”

Firion didn’t expect him of all people to want to join the mission to essentially keep the Dreadnought distracted, but there was no time to question it. As they descended, he felt Garden rumble and shift as it switched to its mobile configuration. He saw Ciaran scramble to secure the barn and the livestock as best as he could before Garden took off in flight. They ran into several of the others just outside the front gate on the way to the makeshift hangar, where the Enterprise and the Strahl waited for them. The former’s propellers were already spinning, its engine roaring.

As Dr. Cid made way for the Strahl , Balthier’s voice buzzed out from within its cockpit. “I never said you could board, Doctor.”

“Oh, fie on you!” Dr. Cid retorted, as Balthier’s airship raised off of the ground and took to the skies. “Typical of a sky pirate!”

Vivi followed Steiner up the gangplank to the Enterprise and waved Dr. Cid over. “Come on, I’m sure Mr. Pollendina doesn’t mind you boarding his airship!”

Firion and Guy took his lead just as another missile bombardment blazed through the empty fields outside. It was only a matter of time until the Dreadnought came close enough to strike without missing. Moments after Dr. Cid made it on board, the Enterprise followed after Balthier at high speed, wind nearly tearing Firion’s bandana off of his head the moment he stepped out on deck.

Though the Emperor’s ship dwarfed both of theirs, they were more maneuverable. Cid Pollendina, at the wheel, shouted back to Firion and all the others on the deck with him. “Hold onto something, folks! Things are about to get real dicey!”

“What are those dark shapes flying toward us!?” Steiner asked, pointing ahead.

Firion narrowed his eyes, drawing his bow. “Flying monsters! Courtesy of the Emperor.”

“That’s who’s attacking us? I’ll help you!” said Vivi, gathering fire in both of his hands. The winged demons met them head on, human-sized and muscular with black claws. Firion and Vivi managed to strike several of them at a range, but in no time at all they made it to the deck. Guy and Steiner took defensive positions around Pollendina while Dr. Cid fired at their foes with both of his guns.

“Simply marvelous!” Dr. Cid exclaimed. “Even as we outmaneuver the larger airship, it proves more adaptive in midair than I could have imagined despite its size. Its offensive potential is comparable to that of the Sky Fortress Bahamut , yet it seems to lack a defensive paling…”

“Yeah, yeah!” Pollendina shot back. “All that said, it’s got nothin’ on my old girl!”

“I kindly ask you not to compliment our enemies as they threaten to overwhelm us!” said Steiner. Firion worried for Balthier and the others aboard his ship, but he spotted the Strahl evade around a cloud of the monsters and fly in a different direction, drawing the ire of the Dreadnought’s missiles. Their distraction was working – Balamb Garden would be able to escape and they’d regroup again afterward.

Firion struck down one of the monsters and made his way to the next one closing in on Vivi when he felt the temperature suddenly drop. The sound of magic glistening like shards of glass released a gentle chime in the air between all three airships, and a woman floated in the center of them. She flew around in a circle, ice trailing in her wake, blue cloth flapping in the wind and her crown of ice reflecting the sunlight.

“Is that an eidolon?” Steiner asked, gaping.

Pollendina soared the ship in a circle around her, glancing her way off the starboard side. “I recognize that one! But is she friend or foe?”

“Shiva!” Vivi called out. “That has to be her! What is she doing?”

Firion braced himself, unsure of if she would attack them or the monsters closing in on her – apparently deciding she was the next threat. Shiva danced in midair, conjuring lances of ice in a circle around her that launched outward and impaled the monsters that pursued her. The temperature turned frigid, frost clouding in Firion’s breath, and the monsters left the deck of the Enterprise to chase after Shiva instead. But more ice burst forth from Shiva like a flower with the eidolon at its center, and snow began to fall.

Though Firion didn’t recognize Shiva from his world, even with her pale blue skin he thought she looked a little unusual compared to how he knew her from the World of Illusions. He didn’t have time to dwell on that thought, however – Pollendina shouted out in alarm.

“We’re losing altitude! She hit us!”

“Did she freeze the engines?” Dr. Cid asked. “Curse this antiquated ship – something as meaningless as a rapid change in temperature can disrupt its regulation?”

“Stop yer yappin’ and get down to the engine room if you think yer such a genius!” Pollendina growled at him, struggling to steer.

“Balthier fall down too!” said Guy.

Firion’s stomach dropped as their ship lurched and descended at a steeper rate. He clutched the gunwhale, eyes following Shiva as she unleashed a rain of frost on the Emperor’s warship as well, striking its main engines and piercing its hull just as easily as she did the others. Missiles ricocheted off of her ice shields and she soared away from all of the ships, her handiwork done as she grounded them all.

Below, Firion saw an expansive snowfield and cave-filled mountainside come closer and closer.


GARNET


Miraculously, Cid Pollendina managed to land the Enterprise with minimal damage other than jostling its occupants as it crashed and slid across the snowfield.

Garnet held onto Zidane as they fell out of the sky, the engines groaning under the strain as Pollendina fought to keep them level, bellowing orders to anyone who could hear him. Garnet stayed below deck, wondering if she could summon to save them – and wrestling with thoughts about Shiva and her attack against them. She felt the cold even inside the airship, but that was the last thing on her mind when she felt them plummeting and crashing against the ground.

“Is anyone hurt?” Yang asked, one of the first to rise once the airship finally came to a stop.

They heard a string of curses from up above and Barret came down into the cabin. “What a landing! Cid’s alright, but angry ‘bout the fall. He’s gonna get us fixed up.”

“I’m okay,” Garnet said, nodding to Zidane in thanks as she released his hand and rose to stand upright. “Did anyone see what fate befell the Strahl ?”

Firion looked grim. “They went down, too. But hopefully Balamb Garden got away safely.”

“The Dreadnought seems to have been impacted as well,” said Ricard, struggling to open the way to the exit. “Think we got stuck in the snow? I was hoping we could take the fight to the Emperor now that he’s grounded.”

Zidane’s tail waved back and forth. “Yeah, what’re we waiting for? We gotta deal with the Emperor – but first, we should find Balthier and the others.”

Barret, Yang, Firion, Ricard, and Zidane all worked together to force open the door, which had indeed been blocked by the snow. Leaving Cid to the repairs – under the watchful eye of all the others who joined the Enterprise crew – they stepped out into the snow, which reached almost to Garnet’s knees. She hugged herself, unprepared for the sudden cold weather. Steiner had to be convinced to let her go out into the snow on her own, but the sky was bright and clear, and she reasoned that the sun would keep her warm.

They all knew the source of it, so no one bothered to question where the frost had come from.

“To think the ground would be covered in such deep snow in such a short time,” said Yang, who seemed unbothered by the cold despite his light clothing. “We are still near the Balamb region, but there had been no inkling of such a drastic change in the weather.”

“Dagger, will you be okay?” Zidane asked her. “Think you can talk Shiva to her senses?”

“I will try my best,” she responded. Frost clouded in her breath and the cold penetrated her clothing even more, forcing her to shiver – along with all of the others, even Yang. Snowflakes fell from the sky – gentle at first, and then with fierce winds and hail. “Has Shiva returned?”

“She’s flying above us!” Ricard called out. The hailstones intensified, growing larger, until it felt like they were being pelted by stones. In the open field, there was little in the way of shelter now that they had moved away from the airship, with the exception of a cave just ahead; like it trailed just a little too far behind the mountains that surrounded the rest of the region.

Barret returned the hail of ice with a hail of bullets. “Can’t ya jump up and hit her!?”

“What kind of madman can jump up that high?”

Barret paused and turned to Ricard with his eyes wide. “You’re a Dragoon, damnit! Ain’t you?”

Ricard spun his spear in rapid circles over his head, shattering the ice that fell on them. “Yes, and what’s your point?”

“Forget all that, let’s make our way to that cave instead!” said Zidane, pulling Garnet by the hand. The hail lengthened into ice shards, and without a way to defend themselves, the others apparently saw the wisdom in Zidane’s suggestion and followed along. Garnet thought of summoning Ifrit to melt her ice, but something didn’t feel right about Shiva in a way she couldn’t explain. She decided she’d rather take shelter for now and take the time to plan their next move. If Shiva was here, that meant she was ignoring Balthier’s ship – for good or for ill. And though the missile bombardment from the Emperor had stopped, if Shiva left him alone then it would only be a matter of time until he took to the air again too.

At the mouth of the cave, she saw a bald man with a thick mustache and a poncho waving them in, flapping his arms urgently to get their attention. Garnet held her hands above her head as she trudged through the thick snow as fast as she could without falling. She did not bother to stop and question if he could be trusted – he had shelter, and from what she could tell, even a fire at the mouth of his cave.

“Not much further now!” the stranger yelled as they neared. “Watch your footing!”

“Josef!” Firion exclaimed, grunting as he pushed on ahead with his buckler shielding him from the barrage. “Is that really you!?”

“‘Course it is, Firion! Come on, you’ll be safe here!” the man, Josef, replied. “Mind if I give you a hand, lass?”

“Please do!” Garnet replied. She felt as if her legs were about to give out, and if he was a friend of Firion’s, she knew she could trust him.

Josef leapt toward her, dodging around the shards of ice that rained down from above and stepping across the snow almost as if he were lighter than air, only sinking into it when he stopped at Garnet’s side. Lifting her into his arms, he returned to the cave with just as much ease as he did before he bore her weight. Zidane, Firion, Yang, and Ricard followed soon after, with Barret trailing behind them. He hurled himself into the cave last, rolling across the ground and crashing into an icy stalagmite.

Josef released Garnet and she offered her utmost thanks as everyone caught their breaths. Within the shelter of the cave, Shiva had apparently decided to leave them alone – her icy rain stopped falling, but snow continued to flurry. Garnet immediately took a seat near the fire, warming her hands together along with Zidane.

“It’s good to see you, Josef!” Firion said. “Everyone, Josef here is a great hero from Salamand who helped us to find the Goddess’ Bell!”

“I only did what anyone would do in the face of the empire,” said Josef, brushing the snow off of his poncho. “Warm yourselves up, everyone – it wouldn’t do to fall ill just when that horrible Dreadnought is back.”

“You’re the same as always, huh?” Ricard asked. “Bet you’re confused to see me here…”

Josef crossed his arms. “We’re alive again, aren’t we? Glad to see you’re doing better, Ricard, but I never expected to find myself living and breathing.”

As always when meeting someone who lost their life in their own worlds, Garnet’s heart ached for the man. But an inkling of recognition stirred in her memory. “The Goddess Bell… Josef…” she said, turning to Zidane. “Zidane, does that sound familiar to you?”

Zidane scratched his head. “Uh… should it?”

“It’s the story of a hero and his daughter,” she replied. “Ramuh told it to us in one of my lowest, darkest moments. It gave me the hope to continue on in our journey – I’ll never forget it. It taught me that even heroes are human and make mistakes.”

“Hang on a sec,” said Barret. “You know about Josef already?”

“How strange,” said Josef. “I do have a daughter named Nelly. Who is this ‘Ramuh’ you speak of?”

“Ramuh is one of the summons, like Shiva outside,” Firion explained. “How mysterious that he would know of Josef’s sacrifice… Perhaps you are a legend in the World of Illusions, Josef?”

“Don’t speak of me as if I’m a legend when I’m standing right in front of you!” Josef protested. 

“Seems to me like you are the kind of man to make an impression,” said Yang, clenching his fist and grinning. “It is truly an honor to meet you!”

“All that aside, what should we do now?” Zidane asked, looking around the snow cavern. Ice coated its walls and ceiling, like crystal. Beyond the firelight, it descended into darkness. Part of it reminded Garnet of the cave where they had encountered the Black Waltz. “Cid Pollendina’s still repairing our airship, so we can’t use that. Can we use this cavern to cross the field without Shiva attacking us?”

“It doesn’t go that deep,” said Josef. “But I do have my snow craft with me – it’s perfect for letting us cross quickly! We will be able to avoid that ice maiden, I assure you.”

“Then we can’t delay,” said Ricard, getting back to his feet. “Our comrades are in danger out there, and we have to stop the Emperor to boot.”

“I vow to give my all to fight the Emperor now that I draw breath once again!” Josef declared, punching a fist into his palm. “We can try to fit as many people onto the craft as possible – and then we shall bring the fight to our enemies!”


BLANK


The Emperor’s rage was titanic, but Blank had no better opportunity to do what he came here to do.

He had found himself in this world the previous day. The first living soul – aside from those crystal people that he learned were called “Manikins” – that he came across was Emet-Selch. Blank didn’t trust the man and his opulent robes, his way of speaking, or his mannerisms that oozed with nobility and condescension, but he knew of Zidane.

“I’ll forgive your attempted thievery and bring you to your little friend, but only if you do something for me first.”

“And what’s that?” Blank had asked.

“There’s an airship that has made its way to this world. One that I find concerning – a weapon that I want gone. I’ve sought an audience with this so-called Emperor, and he would only accept an interloper on his ship if it is in the form of a gift.”

“What do I get out of this?”

“It is an annoyance that is sure to cause trouble for your comrades, is it not?”

So here he was, sent to the Dreadnought’s engine room under the watchful eye of the Emperor’s monsters to get the airship back in the air before the full weight of his magical fury came down on Blank. But if it was already grounded, that made it easier for Blank – he was no airship engineer, and what little he was able to glean from Cinna was just enough for him to know what not to do unless he wanted to experience a horrible, fiery death.

Blank’s expertise was in potions and chemicals and how they reacted under pressure.

This would be a cinch.


ESTINIEN


In the end, it was decided that a portion of their party would cross the snowfield on foot while the snow craft took as many as it could carry to find where the Strahl had crashed.

Estinien was among those who traveled on foot to the Dreadnought’s crash site. Josef, surprisingly, came to accompany them, insisting that Firion knew how to drive the vehicle without him.

Bartz rode atop Boko, who also carried Alphinaud and Ryne – the shortest among their current company, and the two who had the most difficulty traversing the deep snow. “Aren’t you guys freezing?” Bartz asked Estinien, Clive, and Josef, who walked alongside Boko on foot.

“I’m a man of Salamand,” Josef replied, his voice thick with pride. “It’s a land of snow nearly all through the year. This is nothing new to me.”

“Ishgard is much the same,” Estinien said. Ever since the Calamity permanently altered its weather, at any rate. “The cold has never been a bother.” His greater concern right now was Shiva – he would not allow this possessed Primal to sully the name of Saint Shiva, who strove for peace between man and dragon long ago in his world. If Ysayle were here, she would do the same.

Lady Iceheart, she of iron conviction and warmth belying her name. She had once been Estinien’s bitter enemy, but through fire and shattered faith they came to understand each other. He put a hand over his chestplate, the armor that bore her name in honor of Iceheart. Aye, he would do what was necessary to free this Shiva from Zemus’s enslavement.

“Well, I am cold,” Clive said simply, with a grunt.

“Color me surprised,” Alphinaud said. “I would have thought your ability to channel Ifrit might keep you warm, Clive.”

Sandwiched between Bartz and Alphinaud, Ryne looked a little miserable, but she put on a brave face. “I wish we knew it would be like winter when we left Garden,” she said. “I would have dressed warmer.”

Estinien looked up at the girl who was like a Scion in all but name. “If we are to face Shiva again, it will only get worse.”

Ryne nodded and took a deep breath. “I know. I am ready for her.”

Almost as if Ryne had summoned Shiva herself, Estinien felt the temperature drop sharply, frost crystallizing in the air. Blocks of ice dropped from the sky, converging on a point in front of them, which shattered to reveal the Lady of Frost herself, rimy sword in hand. Frigid wind passed over them; her challenge and harbinger of the onslaught to come.

“Lady Shiva!” Alphinaud called, dismounting from Boko. “Is there any chance we could reason with you? We need not fight.”

In answer, she raised her free hand up high, summoning lances of ice that materialized from nothing and launched toward them.

“I take it that means no,” Estinien said, leaping out of the way. He scarcely had the chance to fight Primals like her without risk of being tempered – and Shiva herself was never one he had the pleasure of facing. When her sword touched his lance, frost spread across the shaft of his weapon and he had to pull away before his gauntlets froze to it. Snow rose up in a rush and shoved him back just in time for Josef to jump in and take his place with a flurry of punches, his fists covered in claws.

Josef held her attention while Ryne darted in faster than Estinien expected, slicing at the Primal from behind. Without even a sound of pain, Shiva whirled away from Ryne and Josef and her sword transformed into a bow, a rain of ice arrows falling down on them. Clive flashed into the way of the attack, his cloak spreading fire in his wake, licking at the ice and melting it before it could strike. His sword blazing, he rushed toward Shiva with a shout just as Bartz mimicked his action from Boko’s back.

Both flaming swords struck Shiva and Boko jumped up, kicking at her with both taloned feet. Shiva recoiled away from them, but still made no sound – almost as if she were a ghost – and pressed one palm against the ground. Ice flowed over them, threatening to freeze them all in place, exacerbated by her flight in a circle around them all as if containing them in the center of her wintry aura. Estinien’s legs felt heavy, but he and Clive managed to break free of the ice just as Shiva dropped down on Bartz’s head in a fierce kick.

Both Estinien and Clive struck before she snapped her fingers.

In a burst of dragonfire and hellfire, the ice shattered and melted, throwing Shiva to the ground. Estinien knew she had been weakened when she held up a desperate hand and summoned snow to converge into a living, hulking guardian, but now that Ryne and Josef had been freed they destroyed it with light and fists. Boko unleashed an angry wark as his brand of chocobo magic flowed over them, healing the wounds of those who had been frozen.

Bartz moved to deal the finishing blow, but Shiva closed her eyes and light enveloped her. “Whoa!” he said, drawing back. “What’s happening to her? Is she done already?”

“We should count ourselves fortunate to have defeated her so swiftly,” said Alphinaud, his grimoire snapping shut. “With her magicite obtained, that is yet another Primal liberated from Zemus.”

But a magicite shard did not coalesce from the light – instead, once it faded, the light revealed to them an unconscious Elezen woman. One in blue, with pale skin and icy white hair. A woman that Estinien knew well. “By the Fury…” he said.

“Ysayle!” Alphinaud exclaimed, kneeling at her side. Healing magic coated his hands as he held them over her. “To think the Shiva we fought was really her all along!”

“A friend of yours?” Clive asked. Estinien thought he caught an expression of longing in Clive’s eyes, but it quickly passed. “To transform into the Eikon Shiva like that… Is she a Dominant?”

Ryne put a hand over her heart. “I think, perhaps, it is similar – but she simply summoned Shiva using her own body rather than conjuring her separately. I once did the same to help restore ice aether to my world. Ysayle… I’d learned about her and all she had done, but I never thought I’d get to meet her.”

“Is she badly wounded?” Josef asked. “We should find a way for her to get warm before we think about any formal introductions.”

Nodding to Alphinaud, Estinien scooped up Ysayle into his arms. “This mad woman sacrificed herself for us – and for peace – once already,” he said, draping her across Boko’s saddle. “I can’t claim to know why she attacked us and the airships, but she is a dear friend to Alphinaud and I.”

“Right,” Alphinaud said, and Estinien knew his emotions must have been as wild as Estinien’s own right now. He had never referred to Ysayle as a dear friend while she was alive – now he hoped he would get the chance to rectify that. “Let’s get her someplace warm and I will do all within my power to heal her. She does not appear significantly wounded – perhaps it is only a surfeit of aether which ails her now.”

Clive glanced toward Ysayle, motionless on the saddle. “Or perhaps an affliction of the mind, if Zemus is the cause of this as he was with Joshua and I. And if we yet lack Shiva’s magicite, doesn’t it stand to reason there could be another Shiva out there?”

Estinien told himself that was indeed the reason she had attacked them – and not that she had simply forgotten their adventures together through Dravania. With that chilling thought hanging in the air, he accompanied Alphinaud to find somewhere safe for her.


ZIDANE


WIth Shiva’s – or rather, Ysayle’s – defeat, the skies cleared again, sunlight warming their bones.

And that gave them a clear shot to the Dreadnought .

Leon, as the one most familiar with the airship’s inner workings, led the way through its tight corridors. It was dark, with black metal plating that made its innards feel as cold as outside, machinery chugging in a solid rhythm like an industrial orchestra. Any monsters that got past Leon in the close quarters were summarily dispatched by Angeal and Amarant, leaving Zidane and Vincent in the rear.

“We’ll have to pass across the deck to reach the bridge, where I am certain the Emperor awaits,” Leon said.

“Man, this ship’s enormous,” Zidane said, whistling appreciatively. “Hard to believe a hunk of metal this big can lift off.”

“You’ve seen Terran ships, dumbass,” Amarant said. “They’re bigger than this.”

Zidane put up his dukes and stuck out his tongue at him. “Did you get a good look at this one, or was your hair in the way?”

“Come on, now’s not the time for bickering,” Angeal said, flexing his knuckles.

They emerged out onto the deck just as the rumble of the engines intensified. More monsters were ready for them outside, but a blur of red darted toward Amarant, knocking him back against a pile of crates.

Amarant managed to defend himself from the worst of the attack and glared at his attacker – Rosso the Crimson, of the Tsviets. “The hell you want?” he asked, shaking out his wrists.

Rosso smirked at them all as she brandished her double-ended blade. “We couldn’t be left out of all the fun – right, Vincent Valentine?” she asked, just as Weiss dropped down at her side with his own blades readied.

“I doubt you’re just here for a social call,” said Vincent.

Weiss wore his own bloodthirsty smirk that he directed at Angeal. “Hello, brother.”

“Just what we needed,” Angeal grunted in response. “More enemies to deal with.” 

Zidane couldn’t help but agree – these two would just get in the way of them dealing with the Emperor. “Yeah, we’ve only got space for one red-themed bozo on this ship,” he said to Rosso, flipping his daggers.

“Shut yer trap!” Amarant interjected.

Leon took a stance. “Are you in league with the Emperor!?”

“Oh, please,” said Rosso, glaring at Zidane but otherwise ignoring him. “Weiss is the only true emperor here. Such a glorious weapon deserves to be in his hands – the destruction he rains down on the world will be magnificent.”

The Dreadnought buckled as the engines roared, throwing all the occupants of the deck off balance. Just as it started to rise, Zidane heard a screech of metal as the airship’s plating blew off from the sides both above and below them, flames bursting from its insides as the engines combusted. The deck rocked again as the gargantuan airship fell back down to the ground, nearly throwing Zidane off of his feet.

“What’s happened now?” said Leon, bracing himself.

As if in answer, Zidane spotted a figure leap down from above, swinging on a cable toward Weiss with a sword in hand. Their blades clashed just in time for Weiss to defend himself and the figure landed on the deck – someone Zidane never would have expected to see.

“Blank!” he exclaimed, eyes wide from seeing his oldest friend. “Where’d you come from!?”

“I’ve just been messing around on this airship,” Blank replied, his sword propped up on his shoulder with his back to Zidane. But Zidane knew he wore his typical smug smirk. “Ship this big, all the engines are connected to each other – meaning a few well-placed explosives can do a lot of damage.”

“You won’t live to regret this,” said Weiss, as Rosso stood ready at his side. “I will shred you so that your blood stains this ship for destroying what was supposed to be mine.”

Blank rolled his shoulders. “Rule one of Tantalus: Always get what you set your eyes on,” he said. “Right, Zidane? But the oft forgotten rule two is: If someone else gets their hands on it first, make sure they can’t keep it.”

Zidane grinned, straightening and approaching his brother’s side. “Don’t forget rule three: If someone threatens Tantalus, give ‘em a beating they won’t forget!”


Character Abilities

Ryne

ULT: Skyfall

Effect: Enemies targeting Ryne are inflicted with Blind for 1 turn

Ryne's ULT comes from the Eden trial where she is faced in her Eden Shiva transformation. After use, any time an enemy targets Ryne specifically they are inflicted with Blind for one turn (similar to a mechanic from that fight where players need to look away from her).


Noctis

ULT: Ultima Sword

Effect: Increase launch damage

Now onto FFXV! Noct's ULT comes from his "Ultima Blade" weapon, his strongest upgrade, but this takes the form of an attack -- perhaps making use of the Ultima spell. After use, he gets a permanent increase to launch damage.


Josef (Fists) Ice melee damage, Ice imperil, counters, tank, party Last Stand, Force charger

15: Fists of Fury

35: Undaunted Hero

EX: Snow Crash

LD: Frost Flash

FR: Fist of the Father (with Yang)

BT: Noble Sacrifice

ULT: Dragon of Salamand (Effect: Anti-Launch)

Burst theme: “Escape!” which plays during stressful moments, such as escaping from the Dreadnought

Josef's ability names mostly come from his Soul Bursts in Record Keeper, with the exception of his ULT (which is an original, meant to evoke his ultimate weapon, the Dragon Claws). Gameplay-wise, he's actually pretty similar to Snow in that he's a hand to hand ice elemental attacker and a tank, but Josef focuses a little more on counters, Last Stands, and being a Force charger. After using his ULT, the party cannot be launched by foes.


Blank (Swords) Non-elemental melee, debuffer, backstab imperil, delay, healing, revival, Annoy

15: Annoy

35: What’s That!?

EX: Alchemy Toss

LD: Sacrifice

FR: Potioneering (with Rikku)

BT: Lucky Seven

ULT: Storm Impulse (Effect: Blank’s Backstabs also inflict Launch)

Burst theme: “Vamo’allo Flamenco,” plays during the sword fight against Blank in the play

Blank's a fun one. In FFIX, he only has two functions in battle -- "Attack" and "Steal." Since that's not much to work with, I gave him a bunch of abilities that Zidane has in his "Skill" command, which are otherwise unused in Opera Omnia since Zidane uses his "Dyne" skills. His EX is an original, meant to reference his skill in making potions, while his ULT actually comes from an ability Zidane has in Dissidia NT.

Annoy does damage and inflicts the "Annoy" status on foes, which makes any single-target damage deal splash damage to other foes. "What's That!?" inflicts a debuff that delays the target and forcibly changes their intended target away from Blank; this allows Blank to deal imperil damage to enemies who aren't targeting him (similar to characters like Lion). His LD, rather than killing him as it does in the original game, simply reduces Blank's HP to 1 but revives and fully heals the party -- and the amount that is healed is returned to foes as damage. After using his ULT, any time Blank backstabs a foe he will also launch them.

Notes:

Justification for Blank: He is a temporary party member in FFIX.

Justification for Ysayle: She is one of the primary characters of the Heavensward expansion.

Justification for Josef: He is a temporary party member in FFII, and one of the party members in the Soul of Rebirth scenario.

Chapter 73: Idle Chatter VII

Notes:

I do know a couple of you had Idle Chatter ideas! If they didn't show up yet, I thought of a good time to include them later on, so don't worry!

Last chapter's Force partnerships:

Josef with Yang: Both are fistfighters, fathers, and self-sacrificial soldiers.

Blank with Rikku: Both have a talent for alchemy and mixing potions, and are thieves who live on an airship.

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Idle Chatter VII


Scene 1: Highwinds in the Sky


(In the fields outside of Balamb Garden, Ricard is going through motions with his lance, training with almost ritualistic devotion. Kain, Tycoon, Cid Highwind, and Aranea approach.)

KAIN: We have a training center for this sort of thing, you know.

RICARD: Ah, I didn’t know I had an audience. I just felt like I needed some open space.

CID: Nothin’ like feelin’ the wind at your back! Don’t blame ya for coming out here.

TYCOON: Apologies. We hadn’t meant to intrude. Something was brought to our attention, however…

RICARD: Is there trouble?

ARANEA: Not at all. But the four of us all realized we have a name in common, and then Firion told us you did, too.

TYCOON: Alexander Highwind Tycoon, at your service!

KAIN: Rather strange for us all to be Highwinds, is it not? And we’re all Dragoons – if not in name, then in practice.

RICARD: Are you perhaps suggesting a hidden relation?

ARANEA: Me, related to all of you? I don’t think so.

TYCOON: No, it is merely a coincidence, though a surprising one! But it would be impossible for us to share a lineage, being from different worlds.

CID: Now that you mention it, Kain and Ricard do look a bit alike…

RICARD: I do know a young lad named Kain. But I am content with calling you all my brothers and sister-in-arms. I had thought the order of Dragoons died with me, but knowing there are more in other worlds gives me peace. And the fact that several are also Highwinds is an added bonus.

KAIN: I would be honored to call you the same.

ARANEA: Maybe I’ll get you a spear like mine so you can join us in the air. Nothing compares to the feeling of soaring unsupported by anything.

CID: Man, there are a buncha Cids in other worlds, and now Highwinds too. Startin’ to think I need a more unique name…


Scene 2: A Dateless World


(Mustadio is wringing his hands in the hallway to the dorms. Sherlotta, Aire, and Mewt notice him as they pass by.)

AIRE: Is something bothering you, Mustadio? You seem anxious.

MUSTADIO: Ah, well, I’ve just been wondering… Oh, never mind – it isn’t important.

MEWT: I’m willing to listen if there is something you need.

SHERLOTTA: Yeah, c’mon! Spit it out!

MUSTADIO: Alright… Well, I’ve just been thinking about how we don’t really track the passage of days. How many months have we been here? Years? With a lack of seasons, it is difficult to determine how much time has passed. And if anyone’s birthdays have come up.

AIRE: Ooh, birthdays! I love a good birthday party. But yeah, now that you mention it… how old am I getting!?

SHERLOTTA: Er, I don’t think you need to worry, Aire. When you get to my age, that sort of thing just fades to the back of your mind. I don’t even remember how old I am.

MEWT: I think you might be a special case…

AIRE: Is there anyone in particular whose birthday you’re thinking about?

MUSTADIO: If you must know… it’s Agrias. How am I supposed to know how far away her birthday is?

SHERLOTTA: You don’t need to wait for her birthday if you wanna get her a gift!

MEWT: Right. A birthday spent with friends, blowing out candles over a cake… That’s always nice.

MUSTADIO: Hang on, I never said I was fully intent on doing anything for it! It likely hasn’t even crossed her mind.

AIRE: We can start tracking dates now – I see no better opportunity for it. Today can be her birthday! I can show you how to throw a truly royal birthday celebration!

SHERLOTTA: It is important to celebrate those who are important to you. I’m sure it would mean a lot to Agrias to celebrate her birthday.

(Seven and Yuffie, passing by, overhear them and join the conversation in excitement.)

YUFFIE: No way! It’s Agrias’s birthday? I never got her a gift!

SEVEN: I had no idea… What are you getting her, Mustadio?

MUSTADIO (flustered) : I haven’t decided on anything yet!

SHERLOTTA: Did you get her anything on her last birthday?

MUSTADIO: Yes, actually… some lip rouge, at the suggestion of her friends and subordinates.

MEWT: Maybe this year you can get her a sword.

MUSTADIO: I’m not sure… I know she can appreciate a sword of fine make, but perhaps she would prefer something that doesn’t have to do with fighting for once.

YUFFIE: How ‘bout some vouchers for a spa day in Costa del Sol?

SEVEN: We don’t have that here, Yuffie. Maybe you can see what kinds of trinkets Chocolina is selling?

AIRE: Ooh, how about a big, beautiful ballgown? Encrusted with jewels and crystals… It just sounds so pretty!

MUSTADIO: How big do you think my budget is!? That’s not really suited to her, anyway.

SHERLOTTA: I think this requires some workshopping…

(Later, word spread and the whole thing grew much larger than Mustadio anticipated and he found himself hiding in the quad and waiting with all of the others as they planned to jump out at Agrias in surprise, decorations ready. Many of the others had taken it upon themselves to find gifts for her, and Mustadio himself clutched a new perfume between his hands. He ended up just going along with it, too flustered to protest, when Aire arrived with Agrias in tow and they all jumped out, cheering.)

EVERYONE: Surprise! Happy birthday!

(Agrias leaps back and draws her sword in shock, but lowers it when she sees all the decorations and her allies.)

AGRIAS: Wh-what is the meaning of this? Today is not my birthday! But… I thank you for the sentiment.


Scene 3: An Avalanche Begins With a Snowflake


(At the front gates, Barret runs into Elfe as she is returning from a mission.)

BARRET: Hey, Elfe! Got a sec to talk?

ELFE: I do. You are Barret Wallace, aren’t you?

BARRET: Yeah. Haven’t had a chance to introduce myself yet.

ELFE: There is no need – I know you already, and it seems you know me. Or, at least, I had heard of you before coming here.

BARRET: ‘Bout that… Were you part of HQ?

ELFE: No. My cell was separate.

(Tifa, Edgar, and Leila walk over. They had been about to head out, but stop upon seeing Barret and Elfe.)

EDGAR: Seems like a serious conversation… everything alright?

BARRET: Yeah, we’re both just talkin’ about how we’re both from AVALANCHE.

LEILA: Ye were both part o’ the same rebel crew? How ‘bout that.

TIFA: Well… not quite. The cell that Barret and I were in were shunned by HQ for our ‘extreme measures’ to destroy the mako reactors.

ELFE: My cell operated independently of HQ as well – we brought the fight to Shinra directly… until I learned we were being funded by Rufus Shinra himself, at least.

TIFA: Rufus once funded AVALANCHE!?

EDGAR: Rufus did that, eh? He didn’t go undercover as a member, did he? I don’t see that as his style.

ELFE: No, it was his way of obstructing his father – nothing more. But now that Shinra is gone, what has AVALANCHE been doing?

BARRET: Helpin’ the world recover, that’s what! Before comin’ here, I’d been traveling and looking for new sources of energy instead of using mako. Keeps me away from my Marlene, but I haven’t finished making the world safe for her yet, y’know?

LEILA: That be your little lass?

ELFE (stepping toward Barret with sudden urgency, making him pull back in surprise) : Your daughter? Why would you willingly be separated from her?

BARRET: I don’t wanna be! But a dangerous life on the road’s no good for a little girl like her. Besides, Tifa and Cloud are lookin’ after her jus’ fine… Well, before they were here, anyway.

TIFA: Yes, Marlene’s safe and happy – and she knows her dad’s going to come back for her.

ELFE: Hm… If it will get you home to her faster, then perhaps I will help you find new sources of energy when we return to our world.

BARRET: What!? You really would?

ELFE: Sure. We’re both part of AVALANCHE, aren’t we? It’s what we do.

EDGAR: What an unexpected partnership! If only the Returners could help you, too.

BARRET: Appreciate that, Elfe. Guess AVALANCHE isn’t done yet!


Scene 4: New Stables


(Outside in the fields where the party grows their crops, Bartz, Ace, Machina, and Ciaran finish putting up the chocobo stables. Chocobo, Boko, and Chichiri happily chirp and run around them.)

BARTZ: There! Now Boko doesn’t need to squeeze into my room.

ACE: You’ve been hiding Boko in your dorm room this whole time!? I can’t imagine how such a small space would smell…

BARTZ: Huh? We haven’t been hiding!

MACHINA: I think Chocobo’s been perfectly happy in his own room so far, but I’m sure he’d enjoy being in a nice stable like this one alongside his buddies.

CHOCOBO: Kweh!

CIARAN: Now we just need a ranch hand. Looking after our crops is already a lot of work, so it’d be nice if we had people to focus just on the chocobos.

MACHINA: If my brother Izana was here… he’d love to take on that job.

CHICHIRI: Kweh…

ACE: We can all take turns, can’t we? We’ve got tons of chocobo aficionados in the group. Don’t worry, Ciaran – we wouldn’t put this all on you.

BARTZ: Now we just need feed, some brushes, saddles. And, uh… Other stuff.

MACHINA: You never really worried about most of that just traveling around with Boko, did you?

CIARAN: Don’t worry, Bartz. I’ve already added chocobo greens into the crop rotation – we’ve got gysahl, mimett, sylkis, pahsana, tantal, curiel… And if we get more chocobos, I’m sure Prompto and Iris would be happy to start racing them.

ACE: Wow, Ciaran! You really know your chocobo greens, huh? Did you have a chocobo of your own?

CIARAN: Nope. My world doesn’t have chocobos. I just studied up!

BARTZ: A world without chocobos!?

MACHINA: I don’t believe it.

BOKO: Kweh!?

CIARAN: It’s true. We have papaopamuses instead, and they pull our caravans.

ACE: I… never realized Ciaran’s world was so bereft of light…


Scene 5: Infirmary Regulars


(Joshua and Rem both find themselves in the infirmary, waiting to be seen by Rosa. They are sitting mostly in silence punctuated by occasional coughing fits.)

REM: Oh, no – is that blood? Do you need a handkerchief?

JOSHUA: I assure you, I’m well. This is nothing new to me.

REM: I hope you don’t mind me asking… is that a childhood illness?

JOSHUA: Indeed. Is it the same with you? I have always had a rather frail constitution, to my dismay.

REM: It is.

JOSHUA: My condolences. Though I am sure you have no desire to hear that, if your experiences are anything like mine. It is tiring to have people fuss over you so much, is it not?

REM: Oh, yes! Everyone’s always so worried about me, as if I’m going to keel over at any second. That is the part that makes me feel weak more than anything. (She clenches her fists.)

JOSHUA: I can relate. Clive means well, but he was the one who all but forced me to come here today. And in our world, Jote is always pushing me to take my medicines.

REM: I know they do it because they care, but I don’t like feeling helpless.

(They both cough again.)

JOSHUA: It really is incredible. This world is capable of reviving the dead, yet it can’t heal us of these infernal illnesses?

REM (laughing through her cough) : Would you believe me if I said I once knew someone who told me if I believed hard enough, I would get better? The worst part is, in this world, thanks to willpower – that may actually work!

JOSHUA (laughing with her) : Then perhaps we do not wish for it hard enough! I have also heard people profess the same to me in their ignorance. Honestly, that may drive me to continue suffering out of spite!

REM: Then we could show them!

(The examination room door opens and Rosa walks out with her previous patient, Benjamin. Both look at Rem and Joshua, perplexed by their fit of laughter interspersed with violent coughing.)

BENJAMIN: Is there a new sickness around that makes you go mad?

ROSA: Why don’t you hurry out of here, Benjamin… Just in case.


Character Abilities

 

Gladio

ULT: Earthshatter Edge

Effect: Increased counter damage

This is an ability available to Gladio in his ability tree (actually, it's a combo between "Earthshatter" and "Razor Edge"). After use, all of his counter damage gets permanently increased.


Ignis

ULT: Libra Elementia & Total Clarity

Effect: Party members who natively use elementals strike twice

Both Libra Elementia and Total Clarity are abilities available to Ignis. Libra Elementia is a powerful Scan that uses magic flasks, while Total Clarity allows Ignis to use Stormbind, Flamebind, or Icebind depending on which element he has on his daggers at the time. After use, any party members who have a native element use without needing to be enchanted will attack twice.

Chapter 74: A5C10, Part 2: Ode to Ice

Notes:

(See the end of the chapter for notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Act 5, Chapter 10, Part 2: Ode to Ice


ZIDANE


Weiss did not take well to the Dreadnought’s crash.

For someone who didn’t own the ship in the first place, his fury confused Zidane. Weiss focused it all on Blank – Blank! – his two blades whirling, but Zidane kept him occupied as well. Both Tantalus thieves danced in circles around Weiss, falling into old habits, keeping their enemy between them. A duel that made Zidane yearn for the days spent with his old crew.

The deck lurched as the airship settled into the snowfield, their battlefield on an incline. On the other side of the deck, Garnet fought alongside Vincent and Thancred against Rosso. When Angeal, Amarant, and Leon moved to join the fight, lightning struck from above and separated them from the rest of the battling. Zidane and Blank stepped away from Weiss in tandem, their heads drawn to the sky.

The Emperor had arrived.

“How dare you worms infest my ship!?” he snarled, his normally arrogant face twisted in anger. “Whether you intended to use it or destroy it – all of you will pay for what you have done.”

“I don’t get it,” Zidane said, keeping an eye on Weiss and ready to spring back into action at any moment. “What’s so important about having a ship, anyway? Not having one never stopped you guys from causing trouble.”

It was Blank, surprisingly, who answered. “They’re trying to consolidate power,” he said. “Aren’t you? At least, that’s what I was able to glean from listening around.”

“Just the pursuit of power again,” said Leon, shaking his head. “Nothing has changed.”

“Everything has changed, you fool,” said Weiss. “Forces gather in greater numbers than ever before. With the clash of all these discordant wills, it’s inevitable that war is on the horizon.”

Thancred, gaze focused on Rosso, propped his gunblade up on his shoulder. “War? With whom?”

“With you,” Rosso answered, her eyes roving hungrily over Thancred. “With us. With Zemus. Thus far, the conflict has been smaller in scale, but that play for power – that toying with our mortality – has made enemies of us all. Blood will be answered in blood. It shall be a rondo of carnage, and Weiss does not intend to be among the losers.”

The Emperor descended. “None of you will live to see that conflict by the time I am finished with you.”

Zidane was about to respond when he felt a sharp dagger of his breath in his throat – like the air itself had frozen. Frost crept along the deck, coating the twisted remains of the black metal plating, grinding the spinning propellers to a screeching halt. The fire from the engines died and gooseprickles dotted all of Zidane’s exposed skin.

“Weiss,” Rosso said. “She has returned.”

“Shiva,” Garnet breathed.

Far away, across the snowfield opposite from the direction they’d come, Zidane spotted the almost spectral form of a woman hovering above the snow. With one hand outstretched, icy wind spread outward from her, rime coating the sparse trees and anything poking out of the snow. The few animals and monsters he could see – mostly the Emperor’s minions – froze solid as soon as the ice touched them, some even dropping right out of the sky. The freezing wave did not slow as it neared the wreck of the Dreadnought .

“It’s time to get the hell out of here,” Amarant said, turning for the direction they’d come.

“On foot?” Angeal asked.

“I’ve told you – you won’t set foot from here alive,” the Emperor said, hatred in his eyes. More lightning rained down, shocking both Blank and Garnet, who fell to their knees.

Zidane saw red. “Your mistake,” he said, springing into action. His daggers struck the magic shield that the Emperor conjured just in time and he flipped away from the return swipe of the Emperor’s scepter. Not allowing the Emperor the benefit of distance, Zidane closed right back in, just as a glyph exploded under his feet. He was sent careening through the air, his face burning from the sudden heat and the cold, but before the Emperor retreated, Blank had taken Zidane’s place.

“Get outta here,” Blank said, holding his sword against the Emperor’s scepter. “There’s not much time!”

“But how!?” Garnet asked. “Let me focus… I can make us a Torsion!”

Before she could gather herself, Rosso swept in with a horizontal slice, but Thancred intercepted it before it could strike Garnet. “Shiva’s going to get you lot too, you know,” Thancred said, grunting against Rosso’s strength.

Vincent pointed to the sky. “There! It’s the Enterprise and the Strahl ,” he said.

“Cid and Balthier have fixed the airships,” said Leon. “Perfect timing.”

Zidane made a sprint toward Blank and the Emperor, leaping up right onto Blank’s shoulders and kicking against him to get more leverage over the Emperor. The force of his kick launched Blank backwards, toward Garnet, making him tumble against the deck.

“The hell!?” Blank exclaimed.

“Go!” Zidane shouted back at him, joining the hilts of his daggers together as he flipped around the Emperor, striking wherever he could reach. “There’s your ticket outta here!”

The ice wave came ever closer. Both the Enterprise and the Strahl flew up to the deck, taking the others on board.

Garnet pushed past Blank and Thancred. “If you think I am leaving without you…!”

Weiss managed to open a Torsion in the scuffle, disappearing into it without bothering to check if Rosso followed. Zidane’s blade clashed against hers, both of their double-ended swords ringing as he moved to prevent her from fleeing, but when the Emperor moved he had to make a choice.

He saw their flight from the Evil Forest, all that time ago, as the stone curse spread out from the center of the wood to prevent the escape of any living thing from its boughs. He saw Blank, who hadn’t made it in time.

Even the Emperor tried to make for Weiss’s Torsion, but Zidane pivoted away from Rosso and struck. He would not threaten people that Zidane cared about.

Blank tried to urge Zidane toward the airships. “Are you crazy!?”

“Rule four of Tantalus,” said Zidane, bracing himself through a barrage of fire and pure magic. “If you gotta flee, don’t leave without your most precious treasure!” Hoping Blank would get the hint and take Garnet out of there, he renewed his attacks on the Emperor.

“Zidane!” Garnet called to him. “Hurry!”

“Impudent trash!” the Emperor growled. “Why are you not yet crushed beneath my onslaught!?”

“You’re forgetting rule five!” Blank shouted. Now, it was only the four of them left on the deck. “No Tantalus left behind!”

“Yeah, well, there’s a reason that one’s so low,” Zidane said, skirting around explosive orbs that tried to converge on him. Energy swirled around Zidane as he focused everything he had on protecting the others, wishing above all that they had time to escape. Pink fur grew from his arms and legs, an expression of his power that came from within – his soul ablaze with his Trance. “Go! Get on the ship before it’s too late!”

Garnet shouted for him again. “I refuse to leave here without you!”

A shockwave of magic erupted from the Emperor in return, all of his ire focused on Zidane, and Zidane only had enough time to glance back at his friends long enough to see Blank throwing Garnet over his shoulder and leaping onto the deck of the Enterprise , as she beat his back with her fists. The ice spread behind the Emperor’s back – resisting his magic shields and the heat of his spells – freezing him solid in less than a second, scepter readied to channel destruction.

Zidane, satisfied, turned away in time to see the airships departing, with Garnet shouting something to him across the gulf between them.

Faster than it took him to blink, the cold set in and severed his last breath.


BLANK


“No! This is unacceptable! Take me back!”

Blank didn’t take his eyes off of the ice-encrusted Dreadnought as they flew away, the vision of Zidane’s blinding power seared into his eyes. He was silent as he stood at Garnet’s side. She didn’t look away from Zidane down there either, even as she shouted in vain to turn the airship around, tears at the corners of her eyes.

“We can’t go back,” Blank said, surprising himself with the evenness of his voice. He wondered if Zidane looked at him or at Garnet as he became entombed in ice, or if it was the airship as a whole. No, he couldn’t think of it as an entombment – that was too permanent. A constraint, perhaps. “Not now, anyway, when that ice lady could just freeze us all, too.”

Garnet whirled around, slapping him in the face before he could duck away from it.

“How dare you?” she said, a hardness in her glare that he had never before seen on the young queen. “I did not wish to leave him there!”

Blank rubbed his cheek. Her strength was deceptive – not only did his face sting, but his jaw hurt. He didn’t have it in him to say that Zidane wanted him to get her out of there at any cost. At least the Emperor seemed to be just as frozen; it was a shame that the two bloodthirsty maniacs seem to have escaped, though. “Maybe we can thaw him out,” Blank suggested. He dropped to one knee, his head bowed away from Garnet’s pained gaze. “But until then… I will protect you, in his place.”

“I don’t need protection,” Garnet replied, lowering her hand. “Rise.”

The others on deck walked over to Blank and Garnet, their body language subdued as if hesitant to approach. A teenage boy with pointed ears and white hair tied into a long braid spoke first. “All hope is not lost, Garnet,” he said. “Perhaps it is merely an enchantment that may be broken upon Shiva’s defeat.”

“Or we can free him by using another with command over ice,” said a man with equally pointed ears and silvery hair. Blank wondered if they were related. “Alphinaud tells me that Ysayle has just awoken.”

Garnet nodded to the man, her face set into grim determination. “The woman who channeled Shiva’s power… I should like to meet her, if I am to place my hopes in her power as you say, Estinien.”

Blank, too, wanted to grasp onto that lifeline. “Using ice magic to dispel a freeze… I hope it works.”

“If not, then we will seek the power of flame,” said another man, this one bald with a poncho that concealed most of his body. “We have options open to us to save that young man’s life.”

A woman who looked as if she may have been born from snow emerged onto the deck, her steps unsteady as the wind brushed her long, white hair and blue robes. She looked around, eyes falling on Alphinaud and Estinien. “There is a chill in this air,” she said. “And I am not sure it is simply due to these winds. Where are we?”

Estinien looked at her with wide eyes, as if he doubted what was in front of him. “Ysayle…”

“Ysayle!” Alphinaud ran up to her side. “You should not be up and about so soon – you were wounded. How are you feeling?”

“Alphinaud?” she asked. “I am quite disoriented, but I think that is the worst of it. That man with the lance upon his back… Could that be you, Wyrmblood? I’ve never seen you bereft of your helm.”

“Aye, it is,” said Estinien, gathering himself. “It’s been quite a long while.”

Ysayle lifted a hand to her temple. “There was such hatred clouding my mind. A voice that whispered terrible things, enshrouding me in darkness so complete that I never thought I would be free of it.” As she spoke of her ordeal, Alphinaud and Estinien explained – partially for Blank and the other newcomer, Josef’s, benefit as well – that they suspected a man named Zemus poisoned her mind due to her ability to summon Shiva through herself. They also took the opportunity to introduce Blank and Ysayle to everyone present, including a knight they called the Warrior of Light and another woman named Maria.

“Weiss and Rosso spoke of a war?” Maria asked. “Blank, did you hear anything of it?”

“Very little,” Blank replied, leaning against a stack of crates. He still kept his distance from Garnet, but she looked away from him as if ashamed of her outburst and striking him. “The Emperor’s monsters were just brutes who didn’t know anything useful, if they could even talk. But I’m guessing they’re gathering forces thanks to this Zemus fellow.”

“It is thanks to Zidane’s sacrifice that the Emperor is out of the picture, at least for now,” Josef said, partially to comfort Garnet. “His evil knows no bounds. I already lost my life once against the forces of his empire, but if I was in Zidane’s shoes I would not have hesitated to do the same again. He is a fearsome foe, especially if he was allowed to gather his devilish forces.”

“We have only just gotten you back,” said Maria, frowning.

“Zidane has faced much worse and survived,” Garnet said, with a chilly, queenly composure.

“I would know more of this war,” said Ysayle, looking to Alphinaud. “But if I understand correctly, this is not the first war you have faced in all the time you have been in this world? How did it begin?”

“Two gods named Materia and Spiritus summoned us here to fight on their behalf,” Alphinaud explained. “It is battle that sustains this world. Those two gods are no longer in such fierce conflict anymore, but we champions still have reason to clash with those like Weiss or the Emperor.”

Ysayle shook her head. “But even that war has a beginning. I seek to know why such a world sustained by war exists. Come now, Alphinaud, Estinien – I would have expected you two to question such things after all we have experienced.”

“You raise a good point,” Estinien said with a grunt. “If a thousand years of doctrine did not stop us from uncovering answers, then I suppose we have no excuse for not questioning the reason for this war.”

“Materia and Spiritus carry the legacy of two other gods who came before them,” said the Warrior of Light. He seemed to consider Ysayle’s words for a moment, his brow furrowing. “And though many of our number fought in those endless cycles of battle, none remember them fully except for myself. But through all of those cycles, even I cannot say how they began.”

“One of these days, you have to sit down and tell us all you know,” said Maria, putting a hand on her hip. “Which of us fought in those cycles?”

“And why were they cycles to begin with?” Alphinaud asked, rubbing his chin. “Ysayle has the right of it… these are questions we should have been asking. I daresay this new war brewing is related.”

“It may help us to understand the intentions of this ‘Zemus.’ Or at least his methods,” said Ysayle. “To use me for such nefarious ends no sooner than when I arrived to this world, revived… I feel almost tainted. Foul.”

“There is much we do not know,” Garnet said, turning back toward the open sky. Now, the Dreadnought was far below them. “But first we must find Shiva. Or some way to free Zidane without releasing the Emperor.”

Blank’s gaze followed Garnet. He wondered if it should have been him frozen in the ice down there. Zidane had always been better at the hero stuff – people were always just drawn to him. Sometimes, Blank wondered if he urged Zidane ahead in their flight from the Evil Forest because he had always known that on some level. Maybe getting petrified in Zidane’s place had been his way of being the hero for once.

Damn that guy , he thought. He should have fought harder. Zidane was supposed to be up here with his friends, thinking up ways to thaw out Blank. All this with wars and evil sorcerers was beyond him.

Blank uncrossed his arms and went below deck, not sparing a second glance for Garnet or any of the others.


ALPHINAUD


Ysayle’s questions weighed on Alphinaud’s mind as they trudged through the snow at the edge of Shiva’s frozen wasteland. He wondered how much they should have been asking of Materia and Spiritus before they became crystal pillars. How much the Warrior of Light knew, and what he withheld and why. Part of him had always assumed the answers to be benign, and that their former leader would share once their memories of whatever cycles of battle they had faced before had returned… But what if those memories never came back?

It was one thing to await memories of events from their own worlds. But what of whatever they had faced in the past here? Just how long, or how many times, had they been to this world? The Warrior of Light had also said not all of them had experienced those “cycles” – so it made Alphinaud wonder who among them did.

Ysayle, as always, seemed unbothered by the frigid wind and ice. Shiva’s freeze extended to a level far beyond Alphinaud expected, making him think it was a miracle that the airships had managed to outpace the cold. The ice spread out from the wreck of the Dreadnought , making it seem like a ship lost in a sea of glimmering crystal. Monsters reached out from the ice – ogres, ahriman, wolves, and more – petrified in time.

“Makes me think of Lake Bresha a bit,” said Snow, reaching out a gloved hand to touch the ice that crested above him like a wave. “That was a lake frozen in crystal.”

Quistis gaped at the ice looming over their heads. “Shiva was capable of such a thing? Amazing…”

“The fall of the Glacian, Shiva, shifted the climate of an entire region around her remains,” said Lunafreya, regarding the wall of ice with a grim countenance. “I know this to be well within her power.”

“Shiva is truly such a goddess of ice in your worlds?” Ysayle asked. “In mine, she was a historical figure, and mortal. A saint branded a heretic for extolling peace with the Dravanian dragon hordes against the Church’s will.”

Clive knelt down to give Torgal a treat and glanced at Ysayle. “I don’t understand. I thought you capable of summoning her?”

Alphinaud jumped in to answer as Torgal brushed against Ysayle, who patted him fondly. “In our world, Primals are constructs of aether given form through fervent belief or worship. Ysayle, bearing the Echo, was capable of summoning without risk of her mind being tempered.”

“Indeed, though I should explain this for myself, as it was my own folly,” she said to Alphinaud with a smile that looked a little wry, and a little sad. Alphinaud’s ears heated as he remembered how she had been shamed for it. “That gift of the Echo gave me visions that I believed to be from Saint Shiva herself – leading me to proclaim myself Shiva reborn in my search for followers among fellow heretics to end the war. The Shiva I summoned was a Primal conjured merely of my own fancies, in the end.”

“I see the contrast to what a Dominant is now,” Clive said. “I know Shiva as an Eikon – and her Dominant is someone I know very well. I think she’d like you, Ysayle.”

“I look forward to meeting her one day, then,” Ysayle replied. She scratched Torgal behind the ears. “And Torgal here reminds me of my dear hound, Fenrir. But Torgal is far fluffier, aren’t you, boy?”

Torgal yipped in pleasure and licked her hand.

Jornee grinned at Ysayle. “To think there are people whose fates are entwined so closely with Shiva’s… I know Shiva as an eidolon, and goddess of the elves. I count myself very fortunate to have met her and fought alongside her.”

Snow scratched his head. “I’ve been wondering why all of you’ve only got one Shiva,” he said. “Shiva’s my eidolon, but they’re a pair of sisters – Stiria and Nix. What about you, Yuna? I can’t be the only one who knows them that way.”

Yuna’s eyes widened and she shook her head. “No, I’m afraid to say I don’t know Shiva as a pair of sisters. She is the aeon of Macalania Temple, a region frozen in ice.”

Quistis laughed into her hand. “Yes, I think you may be the only one, Snow. Shiva’s a solitary Guardian Force, but common for beginner SeeD cadets to bring on their exams.”

“I met her and Ifrit together, their powers drained by Kefka,” said Terra, her head hanging. “She entrusted her magicite to us and implored us to save the other espers. Shiva’s history seems long entwined with all of our worlds, don’t you think?”

“Indeed,” said Lunafreya. “Ripples of her essence have echoed among all of us. Even after the Glacian fell to the empire, Shiva blessed me with my dearest friend, Gentiana – her form as a messenger.”

His hand hovered over Shiva’s ice. Without even touching it, Alphinaud feared the possibility of frostbite. “What say you, Ysayle? Is dispelling Shiva’s ice within your power?”

“Alas, I am afraid it is not,” Ysayle replied.

“Not even my fire magic works to melt it…” said Terra, frowning. “We shouldn’t mention this to Garnet for now. I don’t want to make her worry more than she already is.”

Jornee held a flame up to the ice, which yielded not so much as a drop of water to her. “Indeed… This is disconcerting. If even Clive’s flames cannot melt this ice to free Zidane, what can?”

Clive discovered a natural gap in the wall, giving them freedom to climb atop it. “Shiva’s defeat, what else?”


GARNET


Garnet didn’t know how Kuja could bear the cold garbed in what little clothing he wore.

Not that he didn’t bemoan the temperature. He certainly did. Yet he accompanied them nonetheless when he heard that Zidane had been frozen by Shiva. Though he claimed that Zidane was a fool for letting it happen, Garnet felt oddly comforted by his presence. Also, she supposed Kuja wasn’t entirely wrong.

They made for the airship wreckage, expecting Shiva to find them and finish the job she had started. Monsters had been frozen across the entire field like grotesque sculptures, meaning their journey was not impeded by battle, but the cold alone was enough to slow their progress. Garnet pushed herself forward, reminding herself with every step that Zidane was waiting for them. The longer he was imprisoned in the ice, the slimmer his chances of surviving the ordeal.

She trailed a little behind Ysayle and Estinien. She didn’t mean to, but she overheard their conversation.

“I am not sure how to articulate this, but it seems your edges have softened,” Ysayle told him.

“Well, this armor has fewer spikes.”

“That is not what I meant,” she said. “You’ve gone through much, I hear. Alphinaud even mentioned you have befriended more than one dragon – including one of the first brood.”

“It’s true,” Estinien replied. “Ishgard and Dravania have achieved peace, so I took to traveling the world and threw my lot in with the Scions. Say, have you ever had an occasion to sample some Hingan cuisine?”

Garnet heard a lilt of amusement in Ysayle’s reply. “I can’t say I have.”

“Then perhaps we can find something like it in this world. I’m sure Quina might know how to replicate it,” Estinien said. “Fried squid may not sound appetizing, but you must try it.”

Ysayle laughed, betraying the notion that she had a heart of ice like her epithet indicated. “Estinien, I must say – I never thought we would speak so easily to each other like this. And it is clear Alphinaud looks up to you. You really have changed.”

“Well… Much has happened,” Estinien said, staring ahead so Garnet could not see the expression on his face. “Things you never had a chance to experience.”

Alisaie piped in, jogging up to Ysayle’s side. “Alphinaud does idolize Estinien quite an embarrassing amount, if you ask me.”

Ysayle laughed again, but before she could reply, more ice bloomed around the Dreadnought wreckage, burying it until it grew to be akin to a temple of frost. Garnet nearly slipped on the ice under her feet until Beatrix helped steady her. Zidane was only getting further and further away. The eidolon danced over the rime-encrusted airship, paying them no mind as they neared.

Noctis formed a visor with his hands to shield his eyes from the gleam of the ice. “What’s Shiva up to now?”

Garnet detected no change in Shiva’s behavior, but Beatrix shouted out a warning and held out a hand to stop Garnet. “She comes!”

Spikes thrust up from the ground, inches away from impaling Garnet where she stood. Magic glistened as a rain of icicles fell on them from above, blocked only by the shields that Beatrix and Ysayle conjured just in time.

Kuja whirled out of the way of the icicles. “Out of my way, snowflake,” he said, almost like a snarl, as magic orbs spun around his waist. He gestured toward Shiva with a flourish, enveloping her in a pillar of light. “And now to melt the ice!” A deluge of flames followed the holy light, the heat so powerful that Garnet felt it even from the ground.

Estinien hefted his lance and jumped up the side of the frozen airship to reach Shiva just as the flames cleared. Garnet gasped when the spells faded and she saw only empty space, but Shiva appeared a moment later in midair behind Estinien and struck him with the orb she wielded as her weapon. Alisaie shouted for Estinien through grit teeth, unleashing a hail of fire magic of her own.

Noctis teleported up to Shiva, hurling his blade in and out to keep from staying in one place for too long. A blizzard surrounded Shiva in defense, but Ysayle gestured with her staff and the blizzard dissipated, giving Noctis and Alisaie the opportunity to strike. Estinien landed, frost coating his armor, but otherwise he looked unhurt.

Garnet pushed herself into action. Raising her staff, she called to the power that rested near her forehead – where her summoner’s horn once was – and communed past the veil that separated this world from wherever the eidolons lived. Normally, she felt a response brush against her consciousness, a hint of wisdom along with the great power, but now when the eidolon formed it was just a being of pure magic and no sentient thought. Flame converged on Shiva as it solidified into Ifrit’s fist, slamming her into the ground.

Beatrix pressed the attack, sword thrusting and slashing, and Shiva struggled to deflect her blows with shields of ice. Ysayle summoned ice shards of her own, but Shiva paid them little mind as they sliced across her form. Her eyes narrowed as her orb grew, rotating rapidly in her hand, and she whirled away from Beatrix just as Estinien, Alisaie, Noctis, Kuja, and Ifrit closed in on her. Garnet and Ysayle, standing further back, were the only ones to notice the ice magic launched at them from behind.

“Watch out!” Garnet exclaimed, as the spell struck and an explosion of ice spread from the point of impact. Only Ifrit failed to avoid the attack, but his flames defended him from the worst of it.

“Another Shiva!?” said Ysayle, breathless. Garnet indeed spotted another Shiva flying overhead, a perfect clone of their opponent. “How is that possible?”

“Maybe Snow was right and she does have a sister,” Noctis said with wry amusement.

Beatrix stepped away from the spreading chill, so cold and so dense that it was visible in the air, like a pocket of Mist. “Do you forget? She often split to challenge us in the World of Illusions. We can handle this.”

Noctis staggered. “Ah, right – mine can do that, too.”

Garnet braced herself; two of them together were bad news, and Shiva hadn’t yet unleashed her attack that instantly froze her surroundings – like she did to Zidane. As she cast protective spells on her allies, she fell back in alarm when two blurs, one red and one white, sliced across the second Shiva. When they landed on the ground, Garnet’s eyes widened when she recognized Rosso and Weiss.

“All hail the emperor of Deepground,” said Rosso, bracing her blade behind her. “We have come.”

Every muscle in Garnet’s body tensed. “To help us?” she asked, her voice heavy with doubt.

The second Shiva rose up high, a halo of rime floating around her head, and just when she gestured to volley icicles at them, a dark shroud burst and enveloped her, before shrinking inward with umbral blades that made her dissipate into nothing. Garnet’s head whirled to find the source of that sorcery, spotting a robed figure standing atop part of the Dreadnought’s frozen plating: Emet-Selch.

Alisaie nearly growled when she saw him. “What are you doing here?”

“Dealing with this Primal, of course,” Emet-Selch responded, rolling his eyes. “Not that I want to, but it is a representation of Zemus’s power – and with this war coming, it’s past time for me to make my own moves.”

Estinien twirled his lance, leaping away from the combat while Beatrix and Noctis kept Shiva occupied. “You’re the true identity of Emperor Solus, aren’t you? Blank told us that you helped him.”

“For his schemes – not out of the goodness of his heart!” said Alisaie, joining the hilt of her sword to her floating crystal. An explosion flared around Shiva, indicating to Garnet that Alisaie still viewed Shiva as the biggest threat.

“Yes, yes, we all know I adore a good scheme,” Emet-Selch said, casting spells with a twist of his wrist. “You forget, I fight for the little people now – and since you and yours refuse to step aside and let the Manikins flourish without you, I ought to let Zemus eliminate you all. Alas, he is a threat to every living being in this world.”

Bullets from Weiss’s blades tore through Shiva’s icy defenses. “You, another emperor? Don’t make me laugh.”

“Is now really the time for this?” said Ysayle, her barrage ceasing as Shiva rose high above them all. She narrowed her eyes. “She is readying something powerful.”

For a moment, Garnet feared an attack that would freeze them all right then and there, but Emet-Selch spoke with a low voice. “Her aether is turning inward… why?”

Kuja scowled. “How disgraceful. She means to strike herself down. Zemus wishes to remove her from the equation, does he?”

“And take us with her, I’d wager,” said Alisaie. “That means Zemus is panicking – he doesn’t want our hands on that magicite, no matter the cost. Everyone, focus your attacks, now! Don’t let her unleash that power!”

“You dare give orders to me?” said Weiss, energy following his sword slices. “I will make Zemus regret ever crossing me – but fear not, I will murder each and every one of you first.”

The icy mist surrounded Shiva again, churning and swelling as if about to explode outward and envelop them all. Beatrix led the charge, holy light searing a path through the haze. Spectral weapons from Noctis surrounded Shiva as his Armiger struck from all sides. Orbs of light and blazing fire danced around Noct’s attack, impacting with a volley of explosions as Kuja laughed aloud. Rosso and Weiss struck together, followed by Alisaie with magic trailing after her sword. Just when Estinien dove down from above, wreathed in dark dragonfire, Garnet finished her summoning. Glyphs of darkness glowed underneath Shiva as the eidolon Ark manifested, unfolding with a deluge of pure power that it unleashed below, just in time for her allies to clear away.

When the force of all their attacks faded, Shiva fell to the ground, her orb shattering as she slumped over. But Garnet didn’t release her breath of relief yet.

“It is done,” said Rosso, though she did not lower her weapon. “Now, Weiss – what do we do about these darling weaklings?” she asked, her voice laced with danger.

“As tempted as I am to brutalize them after they expended their power in that fight…” said Weiss, walking away. “...Rending such weak enemies asunder would give me no pleasure. Not when I already know their full capabilities.”

“I’m almost flattered,” said Alisaie, but there was no humor in her voice.

As Weiss and Rosso vanished without even a second glance toward them, Garnet scrambled for the airship wreckage, intent on climbing up to the deck where they left Zidane. But just as she made for it, Kuja appeared in front of her, his hand held out to stop her.

“Wait,” he said, brow furrowed in what might have been concern. “Shiva’s power… It is fading.”

“Yes, I know,” said Garnet, pushing past him. “Now this ice will thaw, and Zidane will be freed.”

Rather than melting away, however, a crack cleaved through the ice covering the airship, echoing out over the field like thunder. She climbed as fast as her limbs and the slippery ice would allow her, using any foothold and handhold she could find. She just needed to reach the deck. She just needed to see Zidane, and be there as the ice melted. Then they would deal with the Emperor together, free as well. Her hands scraped against the ice, leaving traces of her blood behind, but she disregarded the pain. There’d be time to heal it later. Distantly, she heard Beatrix calling after her, along with more cracks of the ice. Maybe this was reckless, since Kuja could fly and he would get there faster. But he hadn’t moved from where he tried to stop her. 

It didn’t matter; she climbed up to a level just below the deck, and she saw Zidane gleaming in the sun – still as a statue, staring out over the landscape. She felt a renewed burst of energy in her limbs as she climbed the rest of the way.

And then her world shattered.


Y’SHTOLA


Y’shtola arrived just as the ice all around them shattered, shards glistening in the sunlight as they faded. Shiva’s aether rapidly faded with it. She saw Kuja flying away from the airship for reasons she couldn’t immediately discern. The entire wreckage buckled as the ice that partially supported it vanished. She sensed the aether of Garnet up above and worry coiled in her chest, wondering what she was doing all the way up there by herself.

But then she caught it.

A trace of aether, the energy that composed magic and souls. Two people – Zidane and the Emperor.

And just like Shiva’s, it faded away.

“Wow… This is pretty,” said the Onion Knight, who accompanied her. He spoke of the millions of tiny ice shards that glittered on the wind. He knew naught of what had just happened. Y’shtola didn’t have the heart to tell him.

Josef’s snow craft came to a stop, letting Y’shtola and the Onion Knight dismount it. Josef frowned as he looked toward the airship wreckage. “It seems they beat Shiva, but… something feels wrong.”

“Is that Garnet all the way up there?” the Onion Knight asked, peering toward the deck high above them. She had fallen to her knees. “Did she get hurt!?”

The Onion Knight ran ahead toward their gathered comrades, who were collecting themselves in the aftermath of Shiva’s defeat. The Primal herself still sat on the ground, a hand over her chest.

“I lament this loss of life,” Shiva said, her voice heavy with melancholy. Motes of light surrounded her as her body began to fade, transforming into magicite. “It was the dearest wish of Materia and Spiritus that we safeguard your lives… but in that, we have failed. Now we rely on you instead.”

“Loss of life?” Alisaie asked, sheathing her blade as realization dawned on her. “Oh, gods…”

“Return all pieces of magicite to the World of Illusions,” Shiva said. “I do not deserve to ask such a thing of you… but only then will our powers be restored. Only then can we resume our bestowed duties to prevent your deaths.”

Prevent, but not undo. Y’shtola narrowed her eyes at Emet-Selch, wondering what he was doing here, but he ignored her and walked toward Shiva just as she finished turning to magicite. It floated right into his palm. “Unhand that at once,” she said to him.

“Now, now. Don’t get so worked up,” Emet-Selch said, but even he seemed somber. “I could take this, but it has no use to me. And before you ask – no, I cannot retrieve that boy’s soul from the afterlife. I oversaw the Lifestream of our world only, and I only saved you from it because you foolishly threw yourself in, body and soul. Even I cannot reverse death.” He directed his admonishment toward Y’shtola, speaking of the time he had saved her life – perhaps the only thing he did to their benefit, no strings attached.

The Onion Knight clenched his fists. “No… Is Zidane…?”

“In the course of my travels, I have uncovered some information that may be of interest to you. One of the secrets buried at the heart of this world, concerning those previous cycles of battle,” Emet-Selch said, holding his free hand over the magicite. It glowed with magic, and then faded. He tossed it toward Alisaie, who caught it, and then he vanished without another word.

Alisaie blinked. “What?”

“He is a foe of yours, is he not?” said Josef. “Can we trust anything he says?”

Suffused with Shiva’s aether, Y’shtola struggled to discern what had changed about the magicite at first, but then she realized. “He imbued it with his memory. Like an Ancient’s crystal.” And he had discovered something about the cycles that he deigned to share with them? Her curiosity had been piqued.

But then Garnet’s cry echoed out over the snow, smothering all else in silence.


GARNET


Garnet had no anger left for Blank.

Tears continued to fall on the flat of Zidane’s dagger as she held it in her hands. She curled up in the hold of the Enterprise , staring at the blades, wishing they would yield something – anything – of Zidane’s will. She felt, perhaps foolishly, that they were all she had left of him.

Zidane, the one who pulled them all out of their darkness with a helping hand and a smile.

Zidane, who showed her the world.

Zidane, who taught her that she was never alone.

Even now, she had her dearest friends at her side. Vivi and Eiko sat on either side of her, weeping quietly. Blank held Zidane’s other dagger. Quina took Eiko’s other side, patting her hair and saying nothing for once. Freya, Amarant, and Beatrix stood over them, as if guarding their grief. Even Steiner let out a few choked sobs. Kuja had stopped by once, said nothing, and departed. No one knew where he went after that.

She was not alone.

But how could she feel comfort in that, in anything, when Zidane was gone?


Character Abilities

Lunafreya

ULT: Power of the Gods

Effect: Increased Force time, Burst phase damage

Luna's ULT is an original, which summons aspects of all six Astrals. After use, her Force time and Burst phase damage are both increased.


Iris

ULT: Daemon Hunter

Effect: When using EX, copy both party members’ damage from their previous turns

Iris's ULT is also an original (like all of her existing abilities). It references how she becomes such a well known daemon hunter after the time skip. After use, her EX gets a permanent buff. Normally with her EX, she copies the damage dealt to enemies by one party member on their last turn, but now she does it for both party members on their previous turn, giving her a significant buff.


Ysayle Dangoulain (Staff) Ice magic damage, ice enchant/imperil, follow ups, delay, instant break

15: Hailstorm

35: Heavenly Strike

EX: Dreams of Ice

LD: Ice Golems -> Diamond Dust cast when they take or inflict 4 attacks

FR: Frigid Armor (with Meliadoul)

BT: Oblivion

ULT: Absolute Zero (Effect: When striking native ice weakness, attack twice)

Burst theme: “Oblivion,” theme of the second phase against Shiva

All of Ysayle's attacks come from the Shiva trial fight, where Ysayle is fought as a boss. Predictably, she is an ice mage and an enchanter, specializing in it like Palom. She has a little more utility than he does, though, since she has follow-ups, delays, and instant break capabilities. She summons Ice Golems with her LD, who use follow-ups, but when they either attack 4 times or Ysayle takes damage 4 times, she will cast the high damage Diamond Dust ability. After using her ULT, she will repeat her ability a second time if the enemy is natively weak to ice.

Notes:

This chapter was a pain to write, perhaps the most difficult so far - so I just wanted to get it done with! I hope you all enjoyed it regardless.

Next character hint: An eccentric character who enjoys cards.

Chapter 75: Lost Chapter: It Begins With a Question

Notes:

Last Chapter's Force partnership:

Ysayle with Meliadoul: Both are characters who have a crisis of faith - either in themselves, their family, or their driving motivations - and are initially enemies to the protagonists. One is a heretic and the other chases heretics.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: It Begins With a Question


Ezel Berbier ( Final Fantasy Tactics Advance)

Voiced by: Wataru Takagi

A Nu Mou shopkeeper from Cadoan who created the Anti-Law cards to disable the Judges’ Laws. Regarded as an “eccentric loony” for his mischievous and anti-authoritarian behavior, Ezel has no care for those who cannot appreciate his genius. A gifted mage, he practices hermeticism – an advanced form of alchemy.

Ezel Berbier


EIKO


Eiko watched from the ballroom’s mezzanine. Quietly, knowing she wasn’t yet noticed, she waited and listened.

Several of her comrades gathered around a table bearing each piece of magicite as they discussed the events at the snowfield and the wreck of the Dreadnought just days before. No one from her world was present.

It was the Warrior of Light who spoke first. “Y’shtola, might you inform us of how to access the memories contained within Shiva’s magicite?”

“It reacts to aether,” she said, folding her arms as she sat back in her chair. “Better than explaining, I can show you – I have viewed the memory several times already.”

Eiko propped her chin up on her hands as she rolled her eyes in boredom. She mostly tuned out their discussion of how Emet-Selch imparted his memories onto the magicite, explained by G’raha Tia, while Yuna compared it to spheres from her world. Y’shtola spelled the magicite so that it projected a magic field of some sort, which was interesting enough, but Eiko found it somewhat distorted thanks to viewing it from a higher angle.

It showed Emet-Selch in a room. Somewhere cold and sparse with lots of colorless and strange machinery. A person appeared in front of him after he interacted with one of the machines, floating and staring ahead as if not seeing Emet-Selch. Eiko thought the man in the image, someone she had never seen before, looked like a ghost.

“Does anyone know who that is?” Laguna asked. “That some kinda projection? A projection within a projection… weird.”

G’raha’s ears perked up. “I cannot say they look familiar. Emet-Selch’s location is foreign to me as well – it looks like some sort of laboratory.”

The Warrior of Light narrowed his eyes and the person in the projection spoke.

Report 016 ,” said the projection, his voice muffled by something that made it difficult for Eiko to make out words. “ It has been determined that… began with… a deal between…

The Onion Knight frowned. “Huh? It’s like it keeps cutting.”

...each cycle to generate energy ,” the projection continued to the memory of Emet-Selch. “ My superior forbids…

Eiko stood up, unable to bear it anymore. Her anger had been building up inside of her until it burst and she felt the hot tears falling down her cheeks. She stomped her feet and shouted at them over the projection’s voice. “Who cares about all this!? How could you all be sitting here listening to this dumb thing? It’s like no one cares that Zidane… that Zidane…”

Her lip quivered as the words failed her.

Everyone looked up at her, eyes wide. The Onion Knight spoke first. “Eiko! It’s not that none of us care…”

“C’mon, kiddo,” said Laguna, pushing his chair out to stand. “Of course we do! I’ve been devastated, honestly – this is the first time a bunch of us have gotten together like this…”

Eiko interrupted him, not caring how rude and childish she was being. The memory crystal dimmed as the projection faded. “I don’t care! Garnet cries every day, and you… all of you… you’re just sitting here talking about stuff that doesn’t matter!”

She turned away from them and ran. Her eyes were still wet, but she wiped the tears away with the heel of her palm as she sped through Balamb Garden’s halls, putting as much distance between her and the ballroom as she could. She didn’t care if anyone followed. No one stopped her, either, or perhaps didn’t even notice as she exited through the gates and into the fields beyond.

Eiko had known loss before this. She grew up alone in Madain Sari, after all – every other summoner, including her parents, had passed when she was almost too young to remember. She lost Mog, too – even though she had become Madeen, her most treasured eidolon, and stayed with Eiko in her own way. And then, after her adventure had ended, Vivi had expired, too. That was the hardest, even though they knew what was coming.

But this… with Zidane, it was different. It was sudden.

She kept running. The chocobo stables were long behind her by the time she realized she probably shouldn’t have gone this far out without telling anyone, but she was past the point of caring. Ever since the fight with Shiva, she hated how Garden felt. Her friends had all dealt with it in different ways, but Eiko just wanted everyone to mourn Zidane for longer. He deserved that much. After a few days, it almost felt like most people just wanted to forget about him.

Vivi, of all people, angered her the most.

Exhausted, her throat hoarse and her eyes dry from all of her tears, Eiko finally stopped running and realized that she had gotten herself lost. She found herself in a forest of tall, proud oak trees, their boughs so thick that they would support a grown-up walking on them. Colorful mushrooms bunched up at the base of nearly every tree, and when she wiped her eyes on her sleeves she gasped when she saw a person kneeling among them, regarding her with a raised eyebrow.

“Hello, little one,” they said. “Are you lost?”

“No, I’m not lost!” she insisted, but hiccuped. Great – whoever this was – with their long, floppy ears and strange, conical hat – they would think she was just a crybaby. Come to think of it, she had never seen anyone who looked like them, and she had seen a lot of different types of people in Lindblum and Alexandria. “Who’re you?” She supposed it was a bit rude; Mother would have hated the way she spoke to them, but right now she couldn’t bring herself to care.

“My name is Ezel Berbier,” he said, standing up straight and offering her a short bow. “Is that a Summoner’s horn you bear? But you’re so young, and don’t appear to be Viera, either! My, my – how impressive!”

Eiko sniffled. “Thanks. What’re you doing here?” She didn’t know him, after all, and she supposed she should have been at least a little on guard.

“Just exploring this new, fantastical world – and collecting mushrooms for potion making,” Ezel answered. If he was bothered by her rudeness, he didn’t show it. He hummed as he went back to his work. “I could ask the same of you.”

“I just wanted to be alone.”

“I can relate. Other people can just be so dreadfully dull sometimes, can’t they?” He plucked a mushroom by its stalk, examined it, sniffed it, and then tossed it away. “Ah, too poisonous. Would you like to help me, little one?”

Eiko’s eyes widened. He was so casual about poison mushrooms! “Isn’t it dangerous?”

“Exceedingly,” he responded, his long, thick tail sweeping among the fallen leaves on the ground. “But I am sure there is nothing to fear for such a talented Summoner like you. Besides, I am an expert in such things.”

She put her hands on her hips. “I’m not scared!” If he was an expert, then what was the harm? Eiko walked over to him and crouched down to examine the mushrooms more closely. Ezel seemed only a little bigger than her, surprisingly.

“Just be sure not to touch your eyes after handling these, hm?” he said, and they went to work.

It was more involved than she expected it to be. He explained the properties to her and how to pick them the right way – for some, he only needed the caps. Others, the stalks. Sometimes, she needed to be careful to pull them all the way down to the root, and for certain colors she needed to leave a few behind. The area around Madain Sari was too arid for mushrooms, and these were all so different, but luckily Ezel knew all about them. He identified which ones were used for which potions, which ones were used for cooking – which Eiko took particular interest in – and which ones could be made into potent and deadly poisons.

“You’re really a big nerd, you know,” Eiko said after a while, when he made her smile after holding a pair of them up to his forehead, like horns. “Even though you don’t have glasses like Doctor Tot. I know you said you don’t like a lot of people, but you’d probably like him.”

“Is that so?” Ezel responded. “I will take that as a compliment.”

Though he made her smile, the weight in her chest hadn’t gone away. “I bet you were wondering why a proper lady like myself was crying out here all alone,” she said, finding an excuse to look away by scratching at some dirt caked on a mushroom she had picked.

“Oh, not particularly,” Ezel said, humming away. “But I figured you would speak up about it eventually.”

Eiko let out a heavy sigh. “We lost someone very important to us… to me… And aside from a few of us who knew him best, it seems like no one cares. They just went right back to talking about stuff that doesn’t matter. We didn’t even have a remembrance ceremony for him or anything…”

Ezel didn’t look at her as he sorted through his satchel. “Well, people grieve in different ways. Perhaps they don’t know the best way to honor him.”

“And Garnet, well, she loved him,” Eiko went on. “I did, too – a while back – but I just feel so bad for her. I don’t know how to be there for her. Even when he was gone for almost a year, after we beat Kuja, she was too busy to see us much, and though she was sad she didn’t really show it a lot because she was focused on her kingdom…” The words just poured out of her. She knew she was just rambling now, but she couldn’t stop. “And Vivi! Ooh, I don’t know what his problem is, but other than being sad when it first happened he’s been acting like nothing’s wrong! He of all people should be sobbing like a big old baby! How can he just… get over it so easily?”

“Ahh, and here we arrive to the core of what has been bothering you. Perhaps this Vivi simply understands the flow of life,” said Ezel, folding his hands as he turned toward Eiko. “When people leave us, that energy takes a new form – some call it a type of transmutation. And I believe that energy becomes part of every life they have ever touched, and some even becomes new life. So in a sense, that grief – that love – has a transformative power, and it never really leaves us. This is one of the core tenets of the type of alchemy I practice.”

“I guess you’re kinda wise, huh?” 

Ezel smiled, his eyes glinting. “Wisdom is just applying knowledge in an unscientific way. I prefer to be called ‘intelligent,’ thank you very much. But you ask the right questions, dear girl – never stop asking questions. It will serve you well in life.”

Eiko sniffled again, feeling her eyes burn. That weight in her chest, even if it never left her, would always be Zidane. Tears brimmed and she wiped them away, but jumped up when something yelped from the bushes.

“Uwahh! Eiko, your eyes! The mushrooms!”

Eiko whirled around on her feet and pointed angrily at Vivi as he stumbled out of the underbrush. “Vivi! What’re you doing, eavesdropping like that?”

“But, but, Mr. Ezel told you not to touch your eyes! They’re poisonous!” Vivi exclaimed, waving both hands in a panic.

Eiko’s eyes felt like they popped out of her head as she realized her mistake. “Noooo! Am I gonna die!?”

“Calm down, calm down,” Ezel said, placating them both with hurried gestures. “Those mushrooms are dangerous only to Nu Mou like myself. They are harmless to Humes.”

Eiko had only a moment of relief before she felt her face heat with anger and embarrassment. “You could have mentioned that!” Then she pointed at Vivi again. “And you! What were you doing eavesdropping!?” She inwardly panicked about how much he might have overheard.

“I, erm, saw you run out of Garden and I followed,” Vivi said, wringing his fingers. “And I just wanted to say sorry… I know I haven’t seemed sad, but I wanted to put on a happy face for everyone. Just like… just like Zidane would.”

Eiko pouted and crossed her arms. Trust Vivi to try and be tough and manly about it, like Zidane would! “I suppose that makes sense. But you can cry with your friends, Vivi! Ugh… I suppose we’ve been gone a while and we should head back.”

“Yes, I’m sure everyone’s worried,” Vivi agreed. “Why don’t you come with us, Mr. Ezel?”

“I suppose I can,” Ezel said, brushing the dirt off of his robes. “Perhaps you folks might have need of my shop.”


“It’s a little tight, but this will do,” Ezel said in an appraisal of his dorm room. “I hear that I have competition in the form of that chocobo woman, but my potions and tinctures and remedies are beyond compare.”

Eiko grinned. Ezel barely lingered in admiration of Garden’s exterior when she brought him here, and trudged right up to where Eiko said they all lived. “I’d be glad to help you gather mushrooms any day! I bet you’d make a good teacher for all of our classes, too.”

Three figures approached them from down the hall – Montblanc, Mewt, and Luso. Both Montblanc and Luso had eyes wide with surprise and recognition.

“Ezel! Is that really you, kupo?” Montblanc asked.

“There is only one of me, so I would expect as much,” Ezel replied. “I hope you are well, Montblanc.”

“Huh, you stopped talking funny,” Luso said, brow scrunched in confusion. “We came as soon as we heard you were here.”

“Who might you be, young man?” Ezel asked, peering at Luso. His eyes roved over them, falling on Mewt with something like faint amusement. “And nobody mentioned the prince of Ivalice would be here.”

“Ahh, so this isn’t the Ezel from my world!” Luso exclaimed. “There really are two of you, too!”

“Is that so?” Ezel asked. “Well, I stand corrected.”

“I’ve heard lots about you, Ezel,” said Mewt. “You don’t have to worry about me… I know my laws were harsh, and that you helped Marche disable the Judges’ power. But I’m not like that anymore.”

Ezel laughed. “Oho! No, I wasn’t worried. And I have no hard feelings about your laws – they were great for my Anti-Law business!”

Eiko put her hands on her hips as Mewt smiled sheepishly at him. “You might be nice, Ezel, but you’re just a money-grubbing merchant, aren’t you?”

“You forgot genius alchemist and enemy of the crown,” Ezel pointed out with a knowing smirk. “Well, how else am I to fund my experiments?”


Character Abilities

Cor

ULT: No Quarter

Effect: Increased link attack damage

Cor's ULT comes from his boss fight in the Gladio DLC. After use, all of his "link attack" damage follow-ups have increased damage.


Aranea

ULT: Swooping Blow

Effect: When inflicting weakness damage, instant break

Aranea's ULT comes from her boss battle. After use, every time she strikes an enemy's weakness, she will instant break them.


Ezel Berbier (Staff - Maces) Non-elemental magic damage, debuff immunity, Sap, Poison, Toad, Sleep, battery

15: Rasp

35: Astra

EX: Poison Toad Meteorite

LD: Azoth

FR: Scientific Method (with Y’shtola)

BT: Lawbreaker

ULT: Antilaw (Effect: Immediately recover from BRV Break)

Burst theme: “Law Card,” which plays in Ezel’s shop

In gameplay, Ezel's unique "Hermetic" job has only two abilities: Astra and Azoth. Both are represented here, but to help fill out his kit I gave him some abilities from the standard Alchemist job. His Burst and ULT are both original ability names, though.

Rasp deals BRV damage and inflicts Sap on foes, draining their BRV to battery the party. Astra batteries the party and makes them temporarily immune to debuffs. Poison, Toad, and Meteorite are all Alchemist spells - it deals damage, inflicts Poison (for BRV damage every turn, and this stacks with Sap), and inflicts a new debuff: Toad. Toad makes enemies take more damage, inflict less damage, and they can only deal BRV damage for a certain amount of turns. Azoth inflicts Sleep on all foes, but similar to Edward's version of Sleep, the duration reduces every time they receive BRV damage. After using his ULT, Ezel will always immediately recover from BRV Breaks that are inflicted on him (as a nod to how he messes with "laws"). All in all, he is a pretty dangerous utility character!

Notes:

Justification for Ezel: He is a secret playable character in Tactics Advance (but not A2!).

Next character hint: Next character hint:

Chapter 76: Lost Chapter: Misbehaving Mimicry

Notes:

So since my last update, I added *nine* new characters to my roster... Several of them won't appear for quite some time, but it happened because I decided to relax my restrictions against certain characters. For example (and this will be a spoiler), I wanted to hold back on adding Maduin from FFVI because he is a summon, not a playable character, and I did not want to add summons -- but he is pretty much unique to FFVI, has a close connection to a major character (Terra), and he follows the trend of this game adding posthumous dead dad characters, lol. And *technically* you do control him briefly in a flashback. So since I decided to add him, there were a couple of other characters who I felt fell under the same umbrella, and while I was at it I decided that I didn't really want any FF entry to have just 1 lone representative, so now they all have at least 2.

I have a whole list of characters who didn't make the cut that I will reveal near the end of this fic (so a long, long way away) and a few from that list who were shortlisted. A couple of those made it in now.

On an unrelated note, I realized that out of all the characters currently in the game, I had all of them appear in this fic so far with speaking roles... except for one: Jegran (whoops). So now, with this chapter, I can say every character from Opera Omnia has officially been in!

Last chapter's Force partnership:

Ezel with Y'shtola: Both are sharp-tongued, intelligent mages with a drive for understanding the world and perhaps subverting it when it suits them.

(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)

Chapter Text

Opera Omnia: Opus Divinitas

Lost Chapter: Misbehaving Mimicry


Gogo ( Final Fantasy VI)

Voiced by: Kujira

A mime that the party discovers in the belly of a Zone Eater – a fearsome creature on an uninhabited island in the World of Ruin. With everything about their identity and origins a mystery, Gogo chooses to join the party to mimic them in saving the world, perhaps only on a whim.

Gogo Amano artwork


JEGRAN


The Manikin’s face twisted in a pathetic approximation of pain when Jegran touched it with his hand, staining its crystal body a deep crimson.

It had tried to flee from him, so desperate to cling to its shade of life. But these crystal beings did not truly live; they were little more than fuel sources to him. In its foolishness, it intended to flee right into the surf rather than face him. It would have drowned, regardless – if Manikins were even capable of breathing.

Jegran turned away from the water and looked back at the way he came. All along the beach, humanoid figures of crimson crystal stood frozen in various poses, cowering or caught trying to run. He had left a museum of grotesques behind him.

But if he had to be honest with himself, even he felt pathetic.

He had been reduced to hunting for any scrap of energy he could find, crystallizing Manikins he found living in various hovels and any powerful beasts he found worth his time. With enough accumulated power, he would defeat those warriors – Layle especially – and stake his claim on this world. But here he was, on an island that seemed otherwise deserted. All of its Manikins had been vanquished.

The sand rumbled. Jegran braced himself as the ground underneath him swelled and burst, spitting a fountain of sand that swept toward him in a series of pillars. He smirked and jumped out of the way just as a titanic worm emerged from the ground, its maw a ring of jagged teeth. It roared out a challenge.

This was exactly the sort of prey Jegran had been looking for.

He unsheathed his sword, swinging with focused intent as the creature rumbled toward him. He avoided its mouth, slicing along its surprisingly scaly hide. It hissed in pain and contracted before suddenly ballooning, catching him off guard and upsetting his balance. It sucked in heaps of air, forcing him to dig his feet into the sand to avoid getting pulled in. Flexing the fingers on his right hand, he lunged forward and laid his palm on the creature’s side, crimson crystals blooming from its scales like blood from a wound. It stopped inhaling with a sharp gasp of air, then it hissed again and flailed, but the damage was already done – the crystals spiked through its body, rapidly devouring it from the inside out. Its maw hung open and it lurched, but just before its entire body turned into crystal a colorful mass ejected from its gullet.

Jegran raised an eyebrow as the unidentified object sailed through the air, some mass of cloth and feathers and tassels. It landed upright, and he realized with a start that it was a person, who landed on their feet with arms spread out for balance. They looked around, shoulders bunched up presumably in surprise at the state of the monster, and then they turned to see Jegran.

Swathes of garish cloth covered them head to toe, leaving only their eyes and fingers visible. Bright and colorful, the clashing patterns on their clothing were an eyesore to Jegran, but they were surprisingly clean considering they had just emerged from a creature’s belly.

“Who are you?” Jegran asked, keeping his distance.

“Who are you?” they replied back. “I am called Gogo.”

Jegran angled himself, ready to spring into action in the event that they attacked him. Gogo did the same.

“I am High Commander of the Lilty Empire, Jegran,” he said. “I was not aware that this beast had swallowed anyone whole. You are lucky that you did not turn into crystal as well.”

“It’s a shame you did that,” Gogo said, not taking their eyes off of Jegran. If he didn’t know any better, Jegran would have thought that Gogo blinked at the same time as him. “That Zone Eater was the only one I have found in this world.”

Jegran raised an eyebrow and his finger twitched. No, he wasn’t imagining anything – Gogo copied his movements exactly. Something about them was almost unnerving. “...A shame?”

“What is it you are doing here?” Gogo asked, seemingly ignoring his question.

Jegran narrowed his eyes. Predictably, so did Gogo. “I should be the one asking questions here. But I am seizing power to conquer this entire world and grind it under my heel. I will crush whoever opposes me.” He meant that last part as a threat.

Gogo took a step closer. “Then I guess that means I shall conquer this world as well. Lead on! I will copy your every move.”

Jegran smirked, despite his misgivings. Perhaps it would be worthwhile to have an accomplice again.


SABIN


Sabin hung from Syldra’s neck as he grinned at the wind rustling through his hair and the ocean spray coming off the waves. With the sun beating down on them, it was a welcome reprieve from the heat, and he was almost jealous of Faris getting to spend her entire childhood riding around the ocean like this. Gau seemed particularly excitable today as well; he whooped and climbed straight up Syldra’s neck to the top of her head.

“Oi, get down from there!” Faris called out, standing on Syldra’s back with the reins. “She hates scoundrels climbing around on her head!”

“Gau! Gau!” Gau called back, blowing a raspberry at her. “Gau like climb!”

Faris clenched her teeth. “It’ll be the brig for him, then…”

“Eh, what’s the harm?” Sabin asked, glancing back at her. Keiss and Diana sat calmly at Faris’s feet, lounging in the sun. “Syldra doesn’t seem to mind.”

“Ye don’t know her like I do,” Faris grumbled, but she said nothing more until a stretch of sand appeared on the horizon. “Land ho. Alright, monkey boy, time to get down from there.”

As they neared the island, Sabin’s jubilation abruptly died in his throat when he saw figures frozen on the sand, some of them sinking into the surf as high tide came in. All of them had been stained crimson, and as they got closer he was able to see their expressions twisted in horror. He found himself glad that Garnet and the others didn’t come along today – he wasn’t sure how they’d react to this so soon after Zidane’s eerily similar plight to being frozen in ice.

Sabin and Diana jumped off of Syldra and went up to the beach first. “How horrifying…” Diana said, her cape fluttering in the wind. “What happened here?”

Keiss flipped a dagger and clutched it with white knuckles. “Jegran happened. He can crystallize any living thing with a touch. Damn him… we were too late to help these Manikins.”

Sabin felt nothing but pure disgust as he looked down the beach at all of the Manikins, their lives snuffed out by Jegran’s greed. His eyes widened in surprise when he caught another crimson mass just at the edge of the tree line leading into a dense jungle, dwarfing all of the Manikins in size. “Some sorta worm creature,” he said, pointing in its direction. “Jegran’s been busy.”

Gau sniffed the air. “Gau smell danger,” he said, crouching down on all fours. “Onion still here. And…”

“Onion?” Faris asked. “D’you mean Jegran?”

“Well, he is a Lilty…” said Keiss. “Not really the nicest way to refer to them, though.”

“Big Glove,” Gau amended. His nostrils flared and he tensed. “And Gau smell…!”

“Look out!” Diana yelled suddenly before Gau could finish, just in time for Sabin to sense the projectile headed his way. He leapt out of the way as a winged sword sliced into the ground, kicking up sand where Sabin had stood. A hulking figure followed right behind it, swinging a fist at Sabin which he dodged, knowing the dangers of its bearer, and he blocked the next strike from their other fist with his forearm. Face to face with Jegran, he scowled and kicked his foe in the chest, giving him space to get out of close quarters with his opponent.

Jegran managed to grab his sword as he regarded all of them, weapons drawn. “Here you are,” he said to them all, eyes flicking between them. “I knew you’d show yourselves eventually. Now I can display all of the power I have accumulated – a preview of the destruction you and yours shall all soon face.”

“You think just a couple Manikins and monsters will be enough to beat us?” Sabin asked, sinking into a Blitz stance. He focused his energy and swiped in a specific pattern at the air, his punches weaving his inner ki into an Aura Cannon that cleaved through space on its way to Jegran. Jegran swept out of the way, but before Sabin could follow up the attack, another identical beam of energy shot at Sabin from the trees, forcing him to block all of its force with his crossed forearms.

His skin burning under the concentrated force of holy energy, his eyes widened when it dissipated – fearing the presence of Master Duncan’s other pupil, Vargas. But when the energy cleared, he gaped when he spotted the figure in layers of colorful clothing.

“Rainbow!” Gau exclaimed. “Gau smelled Rainbow!”

“Gogo!?” said Sabin. “What’re you doing here – and with Jegran!? You’re supposed to be our friend!”

Gogo walked up to Jegran’s side, a mystery as always. He wondered if their adventure together had meant anything to Gogo at all, or if it was just an exercise in mimicry. “Is my scent that distinctive? Ah, perhaps I will have to learn to mask it better,” they said. “Jegran discovered me first, so I chose to mimic him this time.”

“A Mime?” said Faris. “And one without a spine, I see!”

“Sorry if that’s your friend, but we’ve gotta stop anyone willing to side with that monster,” Keiss said, eyes narrowed. He hurled a volley of knives at them both, but when Jegran dodged, Gogo did as well. They unveiled similar knives from their robes and tossed them right back at Keiss, who cursed and took cover behind a crystallized Manikin. “They throw just like I do…”

“I can mimic anything,” Gogo replied. Their eyes fixed on Sabin. “But I’d rather mimic friends!”

“Anything?” Diana asked, glancing at the crimson Manikins. “Does that mean Gogo bears the same ability to do all this?”

Sabin gaped again. Friends – did that mean…?

Jegran hefted his sword and pointed it at Sabin. “This new accomplice has proven to be adequate,” he said. Just as he moved to attack, an idea popped into Sabin’s mind and he punched the air at his side with his right fist.

Gogo copied his movement. Jegran realized what they had done just in time to turn around and meet Gogo’s right hand with his own. Crimson light shone from their joined fists as they pressed against each other, and for a moment Sabin feared the worst – that Gogo hadn’t copied Jegran’s power after all, and that they’d be turned to crystal just like the Manikins. But they hopped back away from Jegran just as the Lilty’s strength won out, and the crystal power didn’t seem to claim either of them – they canceled each other out.

“Impossible,” Jegran said, eyes fixated on Gogo’s right fist and the danger it now posed to him. “To copy even a power like mine…!”

“Even a power like yours,” Gogo repeated, and if Sabin wasn’t mistaken he detected a lilt of delight in their voice.

As if second-guessing the possibility of defeating them all now, Jegran gave each of them a hate-filled scowl and vanished in a flash of light.

“Shame that trick didn’t work. I’ve met a Mime also called Gogo who could do all sorts,” Faris said, grinning. “But that bottom-feeder couldn’t be trusted. Ye both wear similar garb, now that I think of it…”

“Rainbow! Rainbow!” Gau cheered. “Rainbow friend!”

“Rainbow friend,” Gogo said in reply, eyes twinkling. “What is it you are all doing in this world?”

Sabin clenched his fist, grinning. Though he knew nothing of Gogo’s identity, and he suspected that wouldn’t change, he felt like he understood them a little bit more now. “We’re here to save the world. Again – and the espers this time, too. We’d be happy to have your help once more.”

“Then I guess that means I shall save the world as well!” Gogo said, clenching their fist in a mirror to Sabin. “Lead on! I will copy your every move.”


Character Abilities

Ardyn

ULT: Shadow Step

Effect: Become immune to attacks for 2 turns after EX

Ardyn's ULT comes from the Episode Ardyn DLC when he is playable. After use, he becomes completely immune to attacks for 2 turns whenever he uses his EX.


Ravus

ULT: Stifling Shock

Effect: Enemy weakness to two or more elements doubles the damage

Ravus's ULT is an original, like most of his other abilities. As a Dark/Lightning attacker, he focuses on using two elements with his kit, and his ULT reflects that -- if that enemy is weak to two or more elements (including if it is due to Imperil), Ravus will deal double the damage to them.


Gogo (Whips - Flail) Non elemental melee dmg, damage copy follow up, enemy linked attacker

15: Copycat

35: Mimic

EX: Punishing Meteor

LD: Scorpion Tail Mimicry

FR: Mysterious Effect (with Ezel)

BT: Zone Eater

ULT: Rift Banishment (Effect: Compels linked party member to attack when Gogo does)

Burst theme: “Gogo’s Theme,” played when inside the Zone Eater

Gogo's kit was kind of tough to make. Their only unique command is "Mimic," which lets them use the last ability used by a party member. They can equip some other commands like Magic, but it is all dependent on what spells are known by their current party members. So I had to get creative. I based their kit around being a linked attacker, the mechanic introduced by Cor Leonis, and Gogo copies the total damage when they do so (similar to Iris's EX).

Their 15CP ability, Copycat, uniquely has them link to a selected enemy and copy their BRV value when Gogo does their attack. Mimic, their 35CP, has them link up to a party member and copy the damage dealt by the last party member's attack. Their EX, Punishing Meteor, is Gogo's Desperation Attack from the game. Their LD is an original that references their ultimate weapon, the Scorpion Tail, and that does damage that gives Gogo a buff which lets them copy any beneficial effects currently on their linked party member - whether it is BRV gains, an EX recharge, ability use regains, standard buffs, etc. Their Burst, Zone Eater, summons the Zone Eater they hang around inside of. Their ULT is a reference to Famed Mimic Gogo from FFV, but for the record I don't buy into the theory that they're the same character - it's just a reference. After use, Gogo compels their linked party member to attack on Gogo's turn (kind of a reverse linked attacker situation).

All in all, Gogo is a quirky, gimmicky unit, and I hope this suits them!

Notes:

Justification for Gogo: They are an optional playable character in FFVI.

Next character hint: This is actually one of the 9 new ones I just added... Though she was added to my roster to prevent someone else from being alone, she actually made it in before they did. Maybe this time she won't need to be saved?

(Because of this add, there are going to be 6 Lost Chapters in this batch before our next main story chapter. I'm going to try to avoid more than 5 LCs in a row in the future, but Act 6 will have a few. Sorry!)

Notes:

Please note: This story will contain spoilers for ALL games in the franchise, including ongoing ones. You have been warned!

Please comment and let me know your thoughts!