Stormblade C13: Pack Bonding (1)
Added 2025-06-16 13:07:02 +0000 UTC13 - Pack Bonding (1)
It was a rare cloudy Monday in Phoenix, and I shivered when I got off the bus outside the Peoria GC center. Not that it was cold. It hadnât been cold since January, when it had actually gotten below freezing for a few hours. But a windy, cloudy day was enough to get a shiver out of me.
Two whole days, and the egg hadnât been discovered by anyone not named Jessie. It also hadnât changed at all. That gave me a lot more confidence in my decision to keep the thing. But if Ellen and I couldnât come up with a build plan that would keep whatever monster hatched from it both under control and inconspicuous in the real world, Iâd decided to get rid of it. And Iâd set a deadline of one week from today.
That would be enough time to figure out if this was possible and start putting together the build plan. Iâd re-evaluate once we had something concreteâor evidence that this was stupid. It would also be enough time to get my second skill merge finished. But only if I pushed it. A lot.
There was just one problem: it was 9:30, and I was right where I needed to be. But Ellen wasnât anywhere to be seen.
Men and women in shorts and tank tops packed the gym to the left, their bodies slicked with sweat. Weights crashed as fighters and tanks with the strength of elephants pushed their muscles to their system-enhanced limits. A blur zipped by on the track overhead; whoever that was, they werenât fast enough to create a sonic boom, but the air roiled behind them.
A and B-Rankers. They had exclusive use of the gym from five AM until noon so their workouts wouldnât accidentally hurt a lower ranker. S-Rankers had their own buildings, specially built for their beyond superhuman bodies. After noon, the next five hours were low-rank time, and after that, open gym for two. Then the cycle repeated, twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week.
That meant most of the lower ranks were in the archives, at day jobs, or heading for portals right now. Maybe sheâd already gone inside; sheâd wanted to meet at 9:15, after all. So, as the higher ranks worked out, I headed right, into the library.
A Governing Council library was a weird mix of paper books and journals, computer-stored information, and film footage of portal breaks and interviews with delvers. Iâd spent hours watching videos of delvers using Grassiâs Greater Swordplay and its components, or breaking down Flowing Stream Stance, but today, I ignored the viewing rooms. What I was looking for wouldnât be on film. Instead, I headed for theâ
âHey, Kade! You got started early, huh?â Ellen barely suppressed a yawn from the library door.
I turned. Then I stared.
I couldnât help it. Outside of her battle robes, Ellen looked like a completely different person.
Sweatsâor pajamas, I couldnât tell. Messy hair in a bun. Glasses, which definitely hadnât been present during the portal clear. A paper coffee cup in one hand, and her identification card and car keys in the other. The effect was a tiny bit unsettling, and I couldnât help but look at her for any hint that this was the same woman whoâd ripped chunks out of monstrous wolves with her magic. She was tooâŠcute wasnât the right word.
Sleepy-looking. That was it.
The hip pouch was the only thing that gave her awayâthat and the way she fiddled with it as she tucked her delver registry card away. âI reserved a study room in the back. We can talk over what we need there without too many people overhearing us.â
I shrugged and followed her, still bemused. âDid you just roll out of bed?â
âIâm running a little behind, alright. Some stuff came up that I had to deal with,â she said.
âLike?â
âFamily stuff last night. Thatâs my business, sorry.â She let the yawn win, flushing a little, but I didnât miss the almost microscopic way her eyes narrowed.
I decided to let the matter lie. If sheâd overslept, that was on her, but it also wasnât my problem. Sheâd gotten here at almost the time she said she would, and that was good enough for me. We had a shared goal: figure out the best merged skills for making a portal monster into a familiar.
And the moment we sat down across from each other and Ellen started pulling notes from her pouch, I knew she was taking it seriously. âI did a lot of digging into how familiars work with delvers over the weekend, as a refresher for myself. Video clips of different archetypes and roles, how they interact, and how delvers keep their familiars out of danger. None of them came with skill names, but I think we can reverse-engineer the merged skills based on what they do. That is, if we canât find any thatâll work here in the archives.
âSo, the first question isâŠwhat do we want these familiars to do? I think with my magic, I can do plenty of damage, and Iâd like to shore up my weaknesses,â she said. âI want either more Mana regeneration, a second Mana pool, or something similar. And then I want my familiar to be able to protect me. Iâm not exactly building for toughness, and unlike some people, I donât like pain.â
I waited for her to rattle off the dozens of things she wanted her familiar to be able to do. Then, when sheâd finally finished, I cleared my throat. âFirst, I donât like pain. I just accept it as the cost of fighting. Second, I think youâre approaching this wrong. Which skill merge are you planning on using for this?â
âProbably my third, so four skills coming together for the one. My buildâs a little bit in flux right now.â
âAnd one of them has to be Familiar Bond, right?â
âI think so. So that gives us three extra skills to work with.â
I shook my head. âThat gives you three and me two to work with, and we need to think about what our familiars have to do before we can think about what we want them to do. They have to exist in the middle of Phoenix, inside the walls, most of the time. Weâll need to be able to hide them from everyone else until we prove to people that theyâre under control and too valuable to get rid of. So, Iâve got two open skills in my merge. At least one of them has to protect the familiar from being found out. The second one, for me, is extra.â
For a moment, Ellen looked irritated. Then she took a deep breath. âYouâre doing this as your B-Potential merge? It wonât be a powerful familiar.â
âNo, it wonât have many skills in the merge, but I have a feeling itâll be plenty powerful,â I said. Then I stood up. Weâd only been sitting for a handful of minutes, but I had a goal in mind, and I needed to get to work. âLetâs look for stealth skills. Thatâs a good place to start.â
ââŒâș
Ellen headed for the computers and started searching for known familiar-based skills and merge combos.
I had a different plan. My search took me into the paper stacks, where Iâd slowly pieced together the specific combinations of skills for my first merge. It wasnât that Mana Sense or Arjunâs Script were rare. It wasnât even that combining one or two of the four Iâd put together was uncommon; many supports learned Arjunâs Script and Tonyaâs Binding as part of a greater library of written spells.
It was that Mana Sense and Skill Control didnât work with Arjunâs Script and Tonyaâs Binding. The kind of magic Ellen could do, with her shadow-based skills and spells, wasnât the same as Scriptwork. Written spells didnât need their inscriber to sense mana or control their skills. They did all that work in advance in return for being wildly inflexible in their execution.
So, when Iâd built the merge plan that had eventually become Stormsteel Core, I hadnât been able to rely on anyone elseâs builds. Iâd had to figure out the whole puzzle myselfâwhich component skills would have which effect on the final product.
And I had a feeling that binding a familiar and keeping it hidden would be similarly complicatedâand it would require some weird skill choices.
Familiar Bond was almost certainly the starting point, though. Iâd already mentally selected it, even though itâd take some work to learn. It created the conditions for an actual bond to occur. Sure, humans would pack bond with anything; Ellen and I almost certainly werenât the first to drag a live portal monster back through a portal.
It had probably been a cat the size of a rhino.
But just because we could pack bond with anything didnât mean that particular âanythingâ wanted to pack bond with us. The skill took care of that problem. It was the basis for communication and an understanding between an utterly foreign mindâa nonsentient, animal consciousnessâand a human one. Not slavery or mind control. Just the seed of a kernel of trust.
But even after two daysâeven though I was starting to relax about itâthe eggâs presence was still a sword of Damocles hanging over my head. That would only get worse wheneverâŠwhatever it wasâŠhatched. I didnât need a familiar-based stealth skill to hide it.
No.
I needed summoning magic, and somewhere to put it. Somewhere where no one would be able to look unless I let them.
So, in the two hours it took for Ellen to find dozens of skills that she thought would work for her, Iâd found only four.
Jemmaâs Sigils fit in well with my current fighting style. It used Sigils to trigger summoning effects directly from the inscribed spell. That matched up with the lightning Bindings and wind Scripts I was already using, but I had no idea whether I could tie the Sigils to a specific being. If I couldnât do that, using Jemmaâs Sigils would be all but pointless.
The other option for the actual summoning was Dimensional Anchor. I could literally tie a summonâs existence on Earth to a single object. If I did, channeling magic into that object would cause the summon to appear. The drawback was that if the object was destroyed while the summon wasnât summoned, that creature could never be summoned again, and if it was on Earth when the host object brokeâŠit would go feral, just like any other portal monster.
Luckily, I had an object I could summon and unsummon at will. I just had to figure out whether the Dimensional Anchor could be applied to a summonable object to begin with.
As far as putting the monster somewhere, I had two solid choices.
First, I could use yet another written spell and entrap it âtemporarilyâ in another dimension. That had a few massive drawbacks. For one thing, it would require a complete redesign of my build, because the merged skill would take four skills at a minimum. I couldnât afford thatânot if I wanted to fit everything in for spellblade. For another, relying on four, five, or even six different scripts to operate sounded like a headache and a half. Arjunâs Script and Tonyaâs Binding were plenty already.
Second, I could create an extremely limited nondimensional space just big enough for the monster. A lot of different skills could accomplish this; limited âinventoryâ skills even interacted directly with the system. Most of the time, supports ended up with at least one of these for both looting and providing potions, buffs, and other tools to their teams. The one Iâd had my eye on was Spatial Sheathe. It allowed a delver to store a single weaponâany weaponâoutside of reality.
The other problem, thoughâand maybe a bigger one than just which skills could workâwas which would synergize with each other, which would synergize with Familiar Bond, and what would happen when I combined all three together. Iâd gambled last time. That had been fine for Stormsteel Core, when the main goal was getting a usable merged skill out of it, and anything that didnât kill my entire team and me was better than Stormbreak.
But while Iâd had an entire build planned around swordsmanship, and had even learned some melee combat skills, I could have adjusted if the final merged skill had forced me toward full mage, or tank, or any other role. It had worked out perfectly, but I hadnât known it would.
This would be my last skill merge before my build was settled. And that meant Iâd have two skillsâskills that Iâd already earmarked for the remnants of Stormfeather Scriptologistâto fix anything that went wrong. Two basic skills. That wasnât much wiggle room. I couldnât rely on luck.
âKade, you okay?â Ellen asked. She peered at me from under white-blonde hair that was slowly but surely escaping her bun as she worked on her own build.
âYeah. Why?â
âYouâve been staring at that page for almost five minutes, and your eyes havenât moved once.â She shrugged. âItâs kind ofâŠI donât know. Weird?â
âAh.â I shut the notebook and looked at her pile of papers. She used sticky notesâsheâd pulled at least ten different-colored ones from her pouch, and had covered several sheets of printer paper with dozens of sticky notes in every shade of the rainbow. âWhat are your thoughts?â
She pointed at the purple row. âI started with these. Theyâre base skills that other delvers have used to conceal their familiars. Most of them are useless, but Tattoo Familiar is an option. My parents would kill me, but itâs an option. So is some hardcore transfiguration magic, but only if you build into it earlyâwhich neither of us can. I could also try tying it to my shadow. Thatâs something other shadow mages have done, but they tend to create a familiar from their shadows, not the other way around. So, Iâm stuck on the âhow,â and Iâm just focusing in on the two skills Iâll be able to use toâhopefullyâshape my familiarâs growth.â
I nodded. âThatâs what the other colors are?â
âYep. I think I can get both the extra Mana pool and a defensive skill. What are you thinking?â
âIâm thinking about nothing.â
âYeah, I got that from the vacant zone-out,â Ellen quipped.
I rolled my eyes. âNo. I mean, Iâm thinking about combining Familiar Bond, Spatial Sheathe, and either Dimensional Anchoring or Jemmaâs Sigils. If I use both of my skills to make sure my familiar canât exist on Earth unless I let it, I think thatâs my best bet. And itâs probably yours, tooâor at least, something similar is.â
She stared, one eyebrow raised, at the book in front of me. âWhere did you find that?â
âThe book?â
âNo, the skill combo.â
I shrugged and leaned back. âI spent months in the archives figuring out my Unique skillâs merge to get the sword I use. That didnât give me an encyclopedic knowledge of how skills work together, but it did give me some insights.â
âAnd what about your familiarâs growth?â Ellen asked. She seemed genuinely curious, though some of the loose hair that hung across her brow was distracting her.
âI think whatever we hatch, itâs going to grow strong whether we guide it with skills or not. Itâs a monster, and itâll probably be able to rank up. Thatâs powerful by itself.â
She looked at me for another few seconds, then pushed a pen and a piece of paper my way. âWrite it down. I need a copy of your idea so I can play around with it myself. Weâve got some time before the eggs hatch; letâs make sure this will actually work.â
I scribbled my thoughts onto some of Ellenâs hot pink sticky notes, then let her take a picture of them. Weâd been in the library for close to three hours, and I needed to get a workout inâand learn the last skill for Grassiâs Greater Swordplay.
After all, theorycrafting would only get me so far.