(I) Affliction
Here is Chapter 145 of "Path of the Deathless": -72 (I)Affliction"They do not have a dedicated automaton slave overseer," Can Hu said. "I know... Donât miss it!
-72 (I)
Affliction
"They do not have a dedicated automaton slave overseer," Can Hu said. "I know this because I observed the condition of their automaton slaves. Most of them are not being used for long-term service. Instead, they are being dismantled."
"Dismantled?" Shiv said. "Theyâre not keeping the automata alive?"
Can Hu groaned a note of low anger. "Their parts are to be sold. That is the primary profit from the automaton slaves. That is why you mostly do not see them mingling with the others. Good automaton slaves are sold as servants to specific Pathbearers as rewards. But even they are harder to maintain than organics. They require replacement components and active engineering. They need to commune with the System to maintain their awakened code stability. Automata are expensive and require devotion. Or they require the expertise for self-maintenance."
"Like you," Shiv said.
"I am different. I was always different. Penitent Chassis were meant to be enduring. We were designed from old world technologies before we awakened. Many of the altered automata are adapted, aligned to the System's rules. And they start out more fragile and vulnerable than we."
"Right, yes, I remember this," Adam said. "The Law of Skill Supremacy. It's why automata can't just replace their own parts and bypass Toughness. If you put a piece of adamantium on an automaton and use it as a transplant or a replacement component, the adamantium will become as brittle as their actual skill tier and level.â
"Indeed," Can Hu concurred. "And so, though automata can work near constantly and function in harsher environments than most organics, they still require maintenance, energy, and time for internal code maintenance. That means logistical supportâespecially for the binary within their minds. This kind of logistical support is not present at Gate Theborn, and as such, the machines are merely temporary at best and fated to be taken apart. But this is to our advantage."
Can Hu placed a few stones on a few buildings listed as âautomata holding sitesâ on the metal table that also doubled as their map. "I have found most of the automaton slaves in these locations. They are stored within storage containers, and the floors above are dedicated to decommissioning and dismantling.â Can Hu paused as a stream of ones and zeros flashed back into its head. "Several of my drones have slipped in. This operation is run mostly by human mercenaries, and they are actively sorting the captured automata between immediate decommission, gradual dismantlement, and long-term service.â
Shiv sneered. âItâs like everything in this place is run like a godsdamned slaughterhouse.â
"That is the nature of a place when you treat people who dwell inside it like theyâre just things," Can Hu replied.
"Yeah, well, they're going to find out what my nature is real soon," Shiv said, scowling.
Uva said, casting a thought into him.
âRight,â Shiv said, nodding. âWe wound to kill, not just to hurt. So far, we've bled them a little and have everyone in the gate on edge. But theyâre not broken. Not yet. Thatâs where we want to get toâa point where Confriga has barely any support even within his own home.â
"Still, we did well for a day," Uva said. "Two dead Master-Tier Psychomancers free up my effectiveness substantially. The missing bureaucrats and administrators will also see the day-to-day functions of this gate grind to a halt. I expect the mercenaries to start suffering first, as their payments and contracts will soon be trapped in limbo.â The Umbral Psychomancer paused briefly. âPerhaps we should also destroy all their local banks to completely collapse the local means of exchange.â
The Young Lord eyed Uva and immediately began picking out all the banking establishments on the map. âThat is a good idea, actually. And it will do more than thatâitâll devastate the connected businesses as well and turn things to the black market.â Adam froze and then turned to regard Siggy.
The goblin shivered as Adam looked at her. âUh? What?â
Adam considered her for a beat. âShiv. Did you say this one was a drug dealer?â
Shiv nodded.
Adam approached Siggy with a plot churning in his mind. âAdept Siggy. I have a few questions for you to answer.â
âUh, Iâll try to⌠give you answers,â Siggy stuttered.
âBe thorough,â Shiv said, spiking his Dread Aura. The goblin nearly fell over.
âFirstly, where do you usually deal?â Adam inquired. âAnd after you answer that, tell me what you usually deal.â
âWell, Little Gomorrah is a big place. A-and the thing I hand out the most is Drift. Thatâs gonna be in tight supply now that the gateâs under lockdown, though. I wonât be able to just get that stuff out of thin air if you want me to start slinging again.â
âNo,â Adam said. âI just want to know where the black market is, and how to get there. Should we collapse the official channels of trade within this gate, it will cause a breakdown and a rush for precious goods.â The Young Lord hummed. âAh. Now it makes sense.â
âWhat?â Shiv asked.
âThe Republic fought a brief war with the Storm King of the Lost Atlantic before,â Adam began. âIt didn't go particularly well. During that time, a great many cities and towns were destroyed, and the economy nearly collapsed. We went from paper currency to a mithril standard in the aftermath because practically everyone was trading that material anyway. So. I think this means we have two sets of banks to hit. The obvious bank in the open, and the primary source of precious goods in this placeâs underbelly.â
Shiv grunted. âWell, just show me the place and the targets, and I'll see what I can do.â Then, Shiv paused. âWait. Little Gomorrah⌠Siggy, does that place sell food too? I was only briefly there last time. I know itâs also a brothel.â
âA brothel?â Uva said, turning to regard Shiv. âYou didnât tell me you went to a brothel.â
âI wasnât really focused on which walls I was crashing through when fighting 811.â He almost smirked at the absurdity of the memory. âWe were beating each other to death through several private rooms.â
He sent her what he could remember, and Uva squeezed her eyes shut. âI⌠And the orc told you he loved you a few minutes later?â
âYep,â Shiv grunted. âBut to the pointâŚâ
A case of theft: this story is not rightfully on Amazon; if you spot it, report the violation.
âYeah, it sells food.â Siggy wrinkled her nose. âGrubâs not that great, though. People are mostly there for the drinks and the succubi or incubi.â
And the grinding gears within Shivâs head turned just a little faster. âEveryone. I think I have a cunning plan.â
Adam placed his hands on his hips and laughed. âThis will be good. Letâs hear it.â
âThere are lots of other restaurants too,â Shiv said. âOther establishments and sources for food. Iâm thinking about their supply.â He promptly pulled out the , and Adam let out a groan. âThere are chapters in the on bacteria, viruses, and parasites. And I think some of the bugs and rats in our building are pretty sick.â
âShiv,â Adam began, seeming incredibly uncomfortable with the idea. âThis⌠this goes against every convention of warfare agreed upon between the Republic and other recognized nations.â
âWell, do they recognize Compact?â Shiv asked.
Adam paused. â...Not .â
âAnd I donât remember attending any convention either,â Shiv deadpanned. âUltimately, these people are slave trading bastards, so they can get tainted. And in fact, thatâs what Iâm going to do to themâtaint their damn food.â
âThis could have significant risks,â Uva said with a frown. âPlagues are a dangerous thing for a hidden dimension. Weave has suffered and still suffers immensely from the First Bloodâs biological agents. There is a chance that this could backfire and even affect us if it is done poorly.â
âAnd thatâs why I wonât do it poorly,â Shiv said. âIâll experiment on some bugs first. Then Iâll move on to some mercs and Vultegs.â
âWhere will you get mercenaries and Vultegs to experiment upon?â Adam asked. Uva and Shiv looked at Adam with shared expressions of suppressed amusement. âOh, Ascendants. I let you two out to do one night of mass killings and already youâre both bloody spiraling into moral depravity. Kidnapping people and experimenting on them is a crime!â
âWho says anything about kidnapping them?â Shiv asked. âIâm just going to cast a spell on them from over 200 meters away.â
âAnd we will have no shortage of volunteers,â Uva said. âIâll just make them participate consensually.â
The Young Lordâs eyes bulged in disbelief. âUva, thatâs⌠Really?â
âIt is technically accurate, is it not?â she asked.
âItâs effective. And theyâre pieces of shit.â Shiv justified.
âItâs still⌠Killing them is one thingâŚâ Adam grimaced, very much unsure about the moral dubiousness of it all.
Shiv and Uva looked at each other again and shared a smirk.
âSoft and fragile,â Shiv began.
âBut good and decent,â Uva finished.
The lovers then shared a snort, patted Adam on his respective shouldersâwho slapped their hands away with a scowlâand continued plotting how they were going to give every Vulteg, mercenary, and slaver the worst agony shits of their life without affecting anyone else.
âI have insights into biological warfare,â Can Hu spoke up. âI will provide additional recommendations where necessary.â
Adam licked his lips and looked around the room for someone else to protest. He stared at Siggy for a moment, and she awkwardly looked away from him. Finally, he looked to Valor, and the Legendary Pathbearer only sighed.
âI cannot fault you for wishing to have a level of conduct which everyone holds themselves to,â Valor began. Hope almost swelled inside Adam, but then Valor continued. âHowever, I murdered my mother and half-brother when I was around your age and then spread a grand fire that killed many who were not responsible and likely innocent to assist in my escape. What Uva and Shiv are planning should be rather effective as well. If nothing else, if their strategy is focused and Shivâs spell is well cast, we will see a diminished number of enemy Adepts in the field soon.â
âIt just feels dirty,â Adam muttered.
âItâs going to get dirty,â Shiv commented off by the side.
The Young Lord just sighed. âI suppose Iâll⌠Iâll oversee this so it doesnât turn into another mass death incident.â
âYou donât trust me, Adam?â Uva said, batting her eyelashes at himâalmost mockingly.
âNo. You donât care so long as somethingâs effective, and heâs enthusiastically doing this because he wants more skill levels. No, I donât trust either of you. Tell me exactly what youâre doing so we donât end up food poisoning a bunch of children to death too.â
Practical Metabiology > 31
Woundeater > 71
Adam, Uva, and Shiv observed the progressive of their labor through three stalls using Seer of Horizons. After a day delving through the finding the best location to target, ensuring that no slaves or innocents would be caught in the crossfire, and mind-wiping an elven chef, Shiv deployed instance one of his .
Two Vultegs wailed with pain. Oneâs cries were far weaker than the other's. At the far left end of the room, the healthiest Vulteg was shivering and delirious, but still standing. âL-Lord Scorn,â he whimpered. âPlease end my life. Please just kill me. There is no more left in me⌠Why do I stillâ
He shuddered as another series of stomach spasms followed.
In the stall to his right, a spent Vulteg lay crying from its single eye. It had collapsed forward, detaching from the waste-tubes and repainting the walls. He didnât have the strength to pray. He didnât have the strength to stand. Severe dehydration had set in, and soon unconsciousness would be his friend.
In the third stall was silence and death. Adam looked once in the third stall and never again as he struggled not to gag.
âWell, I think we got it,â Shiv said, nodding. âNew spell: Bowel-Breaker.â
âItâs just modified dysentery,â Uva said. âQuite effective though. You learned to cast that rather fast.â
âYeah, I just did a minor spin on what Ekkihurst did in the book. Heâs a lot more complex with his spells, but I do believe I got the basics down. Now, if I can only learn how to cure it⌠Itâs always harder to fix than to cause. Damn bodyâs too complicated. Iâll probably figure out how to mess up someoneâs genetic patterns before I ever get to solving the cancer problem.â With every word Shiv spoke, Adam shuddered. âHey, Adam. Can you go back to stall one? I want to check theââ
âNo,â Adam growled. âNot stall one. Never stall one again. We already made the poor bastard shit himself to death. Let him have some peace.â And the Dimensional Archer sighed. âI can only imagine what poor fool will be made to clean this.â
âThe only vector of spread should be the food you cast the spell on, correct?â Uva asked.
âYeah,â Shiv replied. âIt also doesnât last that long. A few hours at most. I managed to figure out how that worked on the bugs and rodents. By the way, we shouldnât go to the tenth floor anymore. I sealed the level off entirely to stop the infection from spreading, and I think I contained it.â
âI regret every second of this,â Adam whispered.
âI think it will be effective,â Uva replied. âWhen this is done, and most restaurants suffer a series of violent food poisoning incidents while Little Gomorrah seems relatively pristine as an option, more of the gateâs personnel will go thereâwhere Shiv will be cooking. And we can harvest even more information from there.â
âYou know most Pathbearers will eventually just stop eating and drinking when they catch on, yes?â Adam asked.
âBefore I incapacitate a good percentage of all Adepts in the city?â Shiv asked.
âIââ Adam bit back a groan. âI hate this. So I can only imagine how the Gate Lord will feel.â
Uva hummed. âShiv. Letâs test this on as many places frequented by the guards as we can. I think weâll be able to see some of the most obvious effects by tomorrow.â
âYeah. And sneaking around will be good for my Stealth as well,â Shiv said with a smile.
âSneaking around, poisoning food, and making people defecate themselves to death,â Adam lamented. âWho have we become?â
âHeroes, Adam,â Shiv said, entirely earnest. âWeâre doing all this for Blackedge. And the slaves. And more skill levels. Whatever it takes.â
âYou canât just justify everything by saying that over andââ
âWhatever. It. Takes.â Shiv began to chuckle. âI canât wait to find out how Confrigaâs going to react to this.â
"This is unacceptable!" Confriga roared. âThirty percent of the guard taking leave from their posts in a time of crisis! All of them fleeing toward the restrooms over and over! I will not accept this! I will find out what they are trying to hide from me! If this is another drug epidemic, I will flay every dealer I find!â
Leu followed closely behind him and winced. Master Shiv and the others warned her of what was actually happening, and though their ways were , she couldnât deny the effectiveness. "Gate Lord, perhaps I should handle this. The scene is... It's vile. It's disgusting. It's unbefitting of your person."
"Your concern is noted, Guardshead, but follow my orders and speak no more. I will rip those fools apart. I will rip them apart for defying me, for ignoring my commands. I have summoned them, and they will come even if they are on the verge of death!"
But as he blasted through the restroom door on the ground floor for the central Vulteg barracks, he saw a horrible, nightmarish sight. Confriga stumbled back, briefly shocked out of his blind rage.
On the ground were wailing Vultegs, all of them in various states of undress, and the floor, once white, was smeared with...
The Gate Lord looked away and he gagged at the . There were fights happening in the stalls. Vultegs were relieving themselves as they fought uncontrollably, jets of horrible color spraying across the wall, and the Gate Lord staggered away, shaken by the sight. "Leu! Execute all of these guards! Burn this place! Get the purifiers, burn this place!â And as he charged back up the hallway, he saw another small mob of guards rushing toward him with hands on their stomachs.
The Gate Lord stood still for a moment, just looking at each of the guards as they ran past his person. They didnât even acknowledge his presence or position. Thatâs how much pain they were in. Thatâs how bad the poisoning was.
âThe⌠Several of our Biomancers have gone missing,â Leu said, subtly trying to provoke the Gate Lord further. âAnd most of Compactâs top lawyers, the internal maintenance engineers, the gateway dimensionality engineers, the bankers, and two of our foremost Psychomancers. The Corpse-Shedder is taunting us.â
âCorpse-ShedderâŚâ Gate Lord Confriga muttered, his eye widening in absolute fury. He threw his head back and roared. His voice echoed out from the mana core in the sky, and a massive, howling blizzard smashed down upon the city as Confriga fully unleashed its mana in a wild act of careless rage.