Chapter 1: Metal
Mattias the Tinkerer drove his cart up to the face of the ruins. The dusty old place had been an engine mine, but over a hundred years ago it was declared dry, boarded up, and left abandoned: there was nothing left in the ruins below to salvage, they said.
But, it was Mattias’ personal and professional opinion that the miners always missed something. They only cared about the intact powerstones and working drives, not about the shards, spare parts, and broken-but salvageable pieces that could be extracted. Until last week, they hadn’t cared when Mattias had come in, spent a few hours picking up their scrap, and hauled off a cart load. Some of the men even said he was doing them a service as a garbage man.
That all changed when the new foreman came in. The first time Mattias showed up to pick his damaged parts and powerstone fragments, she’d watched him for about half an hour, then took his haul, drove him off, and promptly put men to work gathering, sorting, and selling what Mattias had once gotten for his labor alone.
Well, Mattias thought, he’d show that miserable harpy yet. It was possible that tinkerers had picked the old mine clean long ago, but it was also more than possible that everything the operation itself didn’t want was still there.
The entrance was still boarded up, which was good. At the very least, anyone who’d plundered before had nailed the planks back up, and judging by the rust that would have been before his time. Carefully, Mattias took out his hammer, pulled the nails, lit his lamp, and entered the mine.
A few minutes in, and he had already half filled his first bag with a mix of parts, metallic scrap, and the ever-useful bits of powerstone. There were heaps of everything he was looking for, meaning Mattias only had to take the best for the time being – no one had sold the scrap back then, and no one but Mattias was crazy enough to go looking for it!
It was about then, as he was examining some large stone fragments, that he heard a small, female voice.
“Help me.” She said weakly, “Help me please.”
“Where are you?” Mattias called. Part of him feared encountering another human in the mine meant a claim was staked, but much stronger was his impulse to aid anyone who had somehow gotten trapped in the darkness.
“I can see your light on the wall.” She replied, “I… I must be on the other side of a pillar from you.”
Mattias looked around the room, and indeed there were several large pillars in about the direction the voice was most coming from. Mattias walked towards then.
“I think I’m headed towards you.” He said, “Keep talking, so I can follow your voice.”
“All right.” The woman said. Definitely ahead of him. “Is there anything particular you’d like me to talk about?”
Was that a hint of humor Mattias detected? A good sign, he thought, from someone who could not or dared not move on her own.
“How about you tell me about yourself?” Mattias asked.
“I’ll try.” She said, “But I don’t know how much I’ll be able to tell you.”
“Well,” Mattias said, “Everybody’s got secrets, I don’t mind if you don’t tell me yours.”
“I don’t mean that.” She said, “I’m broken. I… have trouble remembering, for now.”
Poor girl, Mattias thought, she must have hit her head.
“Well,” Mattias asked, “How long have you been down here.”
“A long time.” She replied.
“A week?” Mattias asked.
“Much longer than that, I fear.” She answered.
Mattias couldn’t imagine it. If you put him in the darkness for a week, with nothing to eat or drink, he’d have gone mad even if he was still alive.
“It’s okay.” He said, “We’re going to get you out of here, and back to civilization.”
“I would like that very much.” She said, “But I fear I may not be presentable.”
Her voice was very close – the other side of the pillar Mattias had reached. Slowly, he stepped around it, and what he saw amazed him.
This woman – the one he had been speaking to – she was a machine!
If not for the open panel on her thigh, though, she might have fooled someone at a glance. Her hair, long and wavy, was spun gold thread that hung like the real thing, and her silvery skin, though obviously some silvery metal primarily, was brushed with copper to give it an almost lifelike tone. And her eyes! The metal woman’s eyes were so like the real thing – bright, green eyes full of life – that Mattias could not even guess what combination of glass, gemstone, and sorcery had been used to create them. She was a work of art, no doubt. Whatever artificer had created her was a master beyond compare.
“Do I frighten you, stranger?” she asked. Her mouth didn’t move, though her eyes followed Mattias.
“No, ah… I’m sorry.” He said, “I’m well… I’m something of an artificer and-“
“An artificer?” she asked, “Oh, excellent! I would not trust someone without skill to effect the repairs I need! I mean… you will help repair me, won’t you?”
At this, Mattias sighed worriedly. “I will if I can,” he said, glancing at the open panel again. Even the intact artifice of the Old Kingdom, the irreplaceable engines dragged out of the ground millennia after ruination buried them beneath earth and roots, were clunky next to the construction he saw in even that barest glimpse inside her. Though her parts were wire and string, they looked almost more like muscles than motors. “But… I’ve never seen anything like you.”
“I… can instruct you.” The metal woman said, “I can still access my memories of the basic facts of my construction, and will be able to call up more once my major systems are repaired.”
“All right, then,” Mattias said, “what am I going to need?”
“Better tools and better light.” She replied. “You are an artificer? Perhaps you could bring me to your workshop.”
Mattias suppressed the urge to laugh. The first time a girl asked to go home with him, and it had to be like that?
“I don’t know.” He said, “I can’t get my cart down here.”
“According to basic specifications,” she said, “I weigh eighty-seven pounds. That is within the range a human can carry?”
That light? He could carry her pretty easily but it made him wonder even more at her construction.
“Okay.” Mattias said, “We’ll get you out of here, then. I’m Mattias, by the way. What’s your name?”
She thought for a moment.
“Not in the system specifications,” she said sadly, “Perhaps you could call me something simple until I can remember?”
“We’ll figure something out.” Mattias said. He knelt down, placing one hand behind her back and another beneath her knees to lift her. Even knowing her weight, she was surprisingly light. “So, how’d you end up here?”
“It was about a hundred years ago.” She said, “I… began breaking down, and I can’t remember why. I came here because I was weak, and it was both isolated and had most of the parts I’d need to effect repairs. But as I was working on my legs, my hands seized up, and with my legs disabled for the repairs, I couldn’t move to find someone to help me.”
“I’m sorry you had to wait so long.” Mattias said.
“It is fine.” She replied, “I… I think the reason I am not able to recall personal details is because I suppressed them to endure the long dark.”
“Well,” Mattias said, “Soon enough, we’ll get you up and working, and then we can figure out just who you are.”
***
Three days after finding Metal (as they agreed she should be called), and she already had about the functionality one would expect from a human: She could walk about on her own, and use her hands, and Mattias suspected she only asked for his help with further service to humor his desire to be useful.
Her face was one of the earliest things restored after motor function. In its full glory, it was as expressive as the real thing. Her voice, which had been slightly stilted with her mouth disabled, was now formed and enunciated like a real human and had a live, musical quality rather than the tinny one of most speaking artifacts.
Her mind was very realistic too. Conversing with Metal, it was easy to forget that someone must have made her somewhere along the line, designed her such as she was, and there was a part of Mattias that wondered just how important that actually was. Even if they’d been programmed into her, she had thoughts and emotions. Even if they were artificial in the end, she still felt them as keenly as any living person would. She was kind and fearless, but also had her head in the clouds and seemed prone to miss small details, even ones that were staring her in the face. She wasn’t made for cold efficiency, she was made to be a person, and part of Mattias was sure she was.
Another part of him was horrified at the thought he might be falling in love with a construct – a gorgeous, charming, erudite construct, but a construct all the same. Even for a tinkerer, a profession that most regarded as prone to strangeness, that was out of line.
Well, he agreed with himself, all he had to do was not fall for her and he’d be fine. Maybe talking with her would even give him a clue how to talk to real women.
But, between everything, it wasn’t totally surprising when Mattias woke up to find Metal working at the stove. Not cooking, of course, tinkering: she had it half taken apart and was frowning at a collection of powerstone fragments.
“Oh,” she said, “You slept a long time.”
Mattias scratched his head, “Yeah, well I was up late. What’s the project.”
“I noticed your stove burned wood to cook your food.” She said, “Very inefficient. A simple red mana enchantment should get you a more even and potentially hotter flame, with no fuel required.”
“Red mana…” Mattias muttered, “You can do magic? Not just artifice, but real magic? Since when?”
“I started examining some memories last night.” She said, “There’s… a lot of memory and a lot of kinds of memory. I started with the bits relating to magic. It seemed safe enough, assuming I take it slowly.”
“Why not the other stuff… the personal stuff?” Mattias asked.
Metal looked away,
“Metal?” Mattias asked, “Is something wrong.”
“It is… foolish.” She said
“What is?”
“I… part of me does not want to access those memories again. They frighten me. What if I was a bad person? Would I become that person again? And even if I don’t, the memories stretch a very long way back. It might be overwhelming to experience all of that.”
“Well,” Mattias said, “You never know until you try.”
“I am aware.” Metal said, “That is why I have isolated memories related somehow to parts of my structure. When I work on repairing and optimizing those systems, I will regain the memories associated with them to understand why… and more of who I was.”
“So I guess we’ll be calling you Metal for a while longer, huh.”
“I am fine with that.” Metal said, “It describes me, even if it is not very poetic.”
A construct with the soul of a poet. In a professional sense, Mattias didn’t want to believe it was possible. More importantly, though, he realized, was the fact that she was a construct who could cast spells – he’d been thinking about her too much as a person, but now it struck him that this was an amazing opportunity, if he could swallow his pride enough to take it.
On one hand, if Metal could use magic, she could presumably teach someone else. On the other hand, he’d be learning from a machine – a tool that somebody built. It wasn’t natural, unless…
It occurred to Mattias that it might be the point of her. So human-like, so gregarious, and so willing to let him in to some of the details of her workings, patiently explaining the task at hand and the steps he had to take. She could very well have been built to be a teacher, and if she was then there was no shame in learning from her.
“You know,” Mattias said, “If tinkering with my stove and putting yourself back together doesn’t take all your time, maybe you could teach me some of that magic.”
Metal inclined her head, “I would be happy to, Mattias.”
Well, he thought, that went well.
***
Mattias sat at a shady, corner table in the tavern. As enjoyable as his time with Metal – either working on her now nearly complete repairs or learning magic from her was, he needed a break. Or, at least, he needed mostly a break – he still fiddled with the magic, threads of azure energy from his hands moving and restructuring the gears of the small, clockwork toy he had brought with him to practice on.
He stopped when someone sat down across from him, and looked up from both his drink. It was Jakey, a low-life most people called ‘the Rat’, but who Mattias generally thought of as a friend. They’d been close enough as kids, and old habits died hard.
“Neat trick.” Jakey said, gesturing at the little automaton, “You must have gotten your hands on a lot of shards before the boss lady shut you down, huh?”
It took Mattias a moment to realize that his companion had seen the magic, and thought it came from the same source as every previous display, and a longer moment to figure out how to reply. It wasn’t a sin or a crime to know proper magic, but it would provoke more questions as to how he’d learned, and if Jakey the Rat knew something, soon enough everyone from the High Boughs to the Outer Rim would know.
“Yeah,” Mattais said, “At least, a few good ones.”
“Anyway,” Jakey said, “I’ve got a business proposition for you.”
“What’s that?” Mattias asked wearily.
“So, this woman comes into town today – pretty little thing, but you know, probably don’t say that to her face, she seemed kind of weird and intense. Anyway, she starts asking after some kind of metal woman, like a construct girl. It seems real stupid until she up and offers a practical mountain of gold to whoever gets her this thing so, what the ****, why not? She’s probably working for some rich freak, anyway… anyway, yeah, I was figuring you could build one. Scrap-diving doesn’t get you the best materials but, old buddy, I’ve got good sources on that. Anything you need, I could get it, and we’ll split the reward, fifty-fifty… what do you say?”
Mattias thought about it – not about accepting or refusing the offer, but how it seemed too much to be coincidence that this would happen so quickly after he pulled Metal out of that mine. Mattias hadn’t told a soul about her… but at the same time, he hadn’t exactly been totally clandestine about things like the windows of his house. Perhaps he would have to start.
“I don’t know, Jakey,” Mattias said, “I’d hate to do all the work of planning out something like that and putting it together if it might all come to nothing.”
“Come on!” Jakey whined, “If you’d have seen the offer you’d be building already, and don’t tell me you haven’t ever thought about building a girl construct before.”
“No,” Mattias said, “I haven’t. But I’ll tell you what – you talk to this woman and if she’s not looking for a specific metal woman or anything like that, you tell her we’re willing to get on the job and build to her specifications. That way we’ll have a contract, and we’ll be sure we don’t lose out.”
“Oooh!” Jakey whistled, “I get it now. Sorry, pal, I underestimated you. That’s smart but… uh… what do you mean specific?”
Mattias shrugged in an attempt to be nonchalant. “Maybe something Old Kingdom? I don’t know, and that’s the point.”
“Whatever you say, chief.” Jakey replied, “I’ll talk to the lady and see what she wants… maybe after we each have another drink, eh?”
“Actually.” Mattias said, standing up, “I think I’m going to head home and… take stock of what I’ve got. See you around.”
Mattias quickly paid his tab and left the tavern. He did not want to seem too hurried as he walked through the streets or unlocked his door, but there was a part of him that was frantic when he stepped inside.
Metal looked up at him and smiled.
“Ah,” she said happily, “You’re home.”
Then, her mood darkened somewhat.
“Are you unwell?” she asked.
“No,” Mattias said, “I just heard some strange news.”
“Well,” Metal said, “I’d like to know what it was.”
“A friend of mine,” Mattias said, “Says there’s a lady in town looking for a mechanical woman. I think she might be looking for you.”
“I see.” Metal said, “This troubles you?
“Well,” Mattias said, “After you’ve been down in that mine for a hundred years, I can’t think of any friendly reason someone would just now start asking after you. Can you?”
“No.” Metal admitted, “But I still have hardly scratched the surface of my memories. After all, I still don’t even know my own name. If someone knows of me, perhaps a hundred years is not a long time for them.”
“I’d hope so,” Mattias said, “But I’d rather not take chances.”
“I understand.” Metal said, “I suppose not all people can be expected to be as kind as yourself.”
Mattias shrank back a bit, unable to feel comfortable accepting the complement.
“In any case,” Metal said, seeming to sense his unease, “should we continue with your magic lessons?”
“Yeah,” Mattias replied, “I’d like that.”
***
The next evening, there was a loud knock on Mattias’ door as he was practicing the charms he had been taught.
“Stay out of sight.” He said, “Please.” Metal nodded, and retreated into the back room as Mattias went to the door.
The person at it was a stranger, a youngish woman with long, straight brown hair, pale skin, and icy blue eyes. If this was the woman Jakey had been talking to, though, he had exaggerated. She might have been pretty enough, but there was just something off about her. Maybe it was just the shadows.
“May I help you?” Mattias asked.
“We are looking for Mattias, an artificer I was told lived here. Are you he?”
Mattias craned his neck to look over the woman’s shoulder. There was no one else there to amount to ‘we’.
“Depends.” He said, “Who’s asking.”
“My name is Sorinne.” She replied.
“Sorinne, well, I am Mattias and I am an artificer, so perhaps you could tell me what you were looking for?”
“A woman made of metal,” she replied, “And yes, a very particular one, who we have reason to believe you have met.”
There was that ‘we’ again. She enunciated it very strangely, as though she wanted him to hear just how out of place it was. Vaguely, he remembered something about Old Kingdom royalty from a play… but that didn’t make any more sense than the thought she had some imaginary friend.
“I don’t know what you’re talking about.” Mattias said, “Jakey wanted me to make you a construct girl, said you’d pay pretty good.
“We… offer a great reward if you would render us the woman we seek. We aren’t interested in any new creations. I hope you understand.”
Everything about Sorinne made Mattias feel strange and uncomfortable. Whether it was that eerie something in her countenance, the way she slipped between referring to her self as ‘I’ or ‘we’, or just some small tic in how she spoke and carried herself that hadn’t registered past the subconscious, he couldn’t help but feel that she was up to no good.
“Sorry,” he lied, “I haven’t seen anything like that.”
“Would you mind if we came in, then?” she asked, “I don’t want to impose on your hospitality, but…”
“The place is a total mess.” Mattias said, “You’re not really going to be able to put your feet up even.”
She frowned in a way that made Mattias think she had only been asking to be polite.
“If you’d like to rest a bit, I’ll buy you a drink down at the tavern. It’s not far.”
“I’m sorry, Mattias,” Sorinne said, “But we really must come in.”
Mattias thought about it. Clearly, she had some inkling Metal was inside, so if he let her in he wasn’t going to be able to keep her out of the back room.
“The answer is no.” he said, “If you want to do business, we can do business. If you don’t, I’m not letting you into my house.”
“I’m sorry.” She said again “I am really very, very sorry.”
“For what?” Mattias asked
“This.” She replied.
A wave of force struck Mattias and forced him backwards, tumbling over his workbench as the contents of his living room were tossed about or hurled against the far wall. Calmly, Sorinne stepped in. Mattias tried to stand, but found himself disoriented. That was when Metal emerged from the back room.
“There you are.” Sorinne said. Crimson energy crackled over her hands, and then a bolt of lightning arced to Metal. Metal grunted in what sounded like pain, but as the afterglow of the blast left Mattias’ vision, she didn’t seem to have been damaged.
“Who are you?!” Metal demanded, “Why are you attacking us?”
“We-“ Sorinne began, but then for a moment she doubled over and clutched her chest.
“You get no answer.” She said, “I’m afraid you need to die.”
“I will not submit.” Metal replied, “I hope you are prepared for battle.”
“Battle, good.” Sorinne growled. She hurled darts of fire and quick bursts of lightning, but Metal was ready for the assault. Some of the attacks froze in midair, lightning hanging still mid strike, globes of fire guttering and failing in place, while others dissolved into azure light. Several struck Metal, but it seemed that neither heat nor electric shock did much to harm her, at least at the intensity Sorinne could conjure.
All the same, as Mattias recovered from his daze, he realized that Metal was not winning the interchange – she was fighting entirely defensively, and her counters were intercepting less and less of Sorinne’s magic.
“Metal, run!” Mattias shouted, “Just get away!”
“Planeswalk and Mattias dies!” Sorinne half growled, half shrieked with strange inflection, ceasing her barrage for a moment “And do not think we will not find you wherever you hide.”
“Planeswalk?” Metal exclaimed. “Planeswalk…” For a second, Metal froze, her eyes snapping to some distant vista, and Sorinne began to cast another spell. Mattias recognized it – he may not have been studying red magic, but Metal had taught him enough of the basics – it was a ‘Shatter’ spell, or something else like it, intended to break an artifact into a million useless pieces.
The casting was only a split second, but before Mattias had even put together what the attack was, he was already moving with a spell of his own. He felt the essence of the deep waters, the distant islands flow through him, and as the rumble of Sorinne’s magic crossed the room, his own lashed out, and the spell became a momentary puddle of some mana-remnant, evaporating before it fell to the floor.
Sorinne looked at Mattias, her face expressing… horror? Grief? It was not what Mattias had expected to see. At the same time, Metal snapped back to reality.
“So,” Metal said, confident and mixing anger with humor, “It seems I am a Planeswalker… Thank you for the information.”
Sorinne just remained fixed on Mattias.
“You shouldn’t have done that.” She said.
A wave of black magic surged out from her, though Mattias was not able to see it coming. He held out his hands, trying to ready another counter, but he had nothing left! He had hardly caught his breath, much less prepared himself for a magician’s duel. Metal reached out too, but too slow – the magic struck him, and his vision darkened, his world filled with nightmares and the pestilent stench of rot.
Then, it all vanished. Mattias was in a space that was like nothing he had ever experienced. He could not see, nor could he hear, nor even feel, but there were senses analogous to them, that told him that the space was screaming without sound, that there was darkness there and also substance to perceive though it had neither light nor matter.
Was this death?
No… it was something else. He looked around with his not-sight and saw the points of ‘light’ in the void. He felt like he could reach out and touch them – no, enter them.
Those were worlds!
On one of them, he realized, Metal and Sorinne were probably still fighting, but which one? He couldn’t discern where he’d come from, and while there was a sense of near or far what was to say he had not been thrown far in the first place. He had to figure it out!
Or did he?
Sorinne had threatened his life to coerce Metal into staying in the fight. As long as he wasn’t there, she could escape, and whatever had happened to him, he still wasn’t ready to be of much use against Sorinne. Metal’s best chance, he realized, was if he stayed away.
There were enough worlds, he thought, that any one wasn’t likely to send him back into the fight. He reached out to one of them, and dropped in.