Isolated Element

1: Catoptromancy


It had been a few years since she had last come this way. Already, nothing was at all like she remembered. Years back, Traverse Town didn't even have its proper name; it was only known as the settlement cobbled together from Gaia's refugees—from Radiant Garden to Corel to Nibelheim—a hybrid of survivalist shelters and shanty-town as more and more hunks of unfortunate Worlds materialized in the outskirts, sometimes bringing hundreds of new people with them. A few years ago there weren't quite five thousand folk crowded in here, getting by on salvaged bits and crisis aid given by the Elveshmean military and the Elvaan Źduhace (the Elven Dragoon Order). If not for the work of Radiant Garden's more progressive intellectuals, Gaia's ties to Elves and even fellow Human nations would not have been so strong, and if not for these ties, the alarm at the sudden radio silence would not have been so swift in onset. If not for this, Traverse Town would likely have remained a guttering, suffering den of survivors—languishing and on their own.

Aqua sympathized.

As she disembarked the transport cruiser into a grey, stale-smelling rain she noticed immediately the place's changes. She pulled the sides of her hooded poncho together, pausing by the platform's railing to look out over the newly-constructed bell tower, and the mis-matched buildings surrounding it. Formerly, this area had been half-built and strewn with piles of salvaged rubble. The wrecked hulk of an Interspace-Airship hybrid, the Highwind Mark IV, had lain propped up on blocks, its engines burst and drained of power. It had since been moved—or taken apart, likely to go towards the Mark V. Shaking the oil rivulets dripping down her hood away, Aqua brought herself back to the present. Traverse Town was now equipped with signs; she began following some, scanning the terraced levels and built-into underpasses for signs of nightly lodging. A warm, elevated porch caught her eye—its swinging sign lit up with a covered manatech lantern, the orange glow making "Bedknobs+Broomsticks: Food—Rooms—Entertainment—Vacancies Available" legible through the weather. She climbed the stairs to the entrance, taking a moment to shake the rain from her poncho again, to not drip a soot-marred trail all through the place. The least she could hope for was that this one wasn't already grimy, and without her griming it up for the proprietor.

It did turn out to be clean inside, mostly. A few active spiderwebs decorated the high, out-of-the-way corners, but a polished oak bar-top was well-shined, and a row of recessed booth seating looked to be mostly clear minus some spice containers. It was a tiny place, a staircase and a cramped elevator entrance intruding halfway into the diner-like area. Clearly, most of the establishment was on ascending floors and this scant hole-in-the-wall was the only important thing besides cheap beds. At first she assumed she was alone on the floor—some clanking in the doorway behind the bar area implied one distracted kitchen worker only. A sound like sheafs of silk rubbing together turned her head, and the slight, constant movements caught her peripheral vision.

She jolted, instinct forcing her to grip thin air after a Keyblade that would no longer come to her. After all this time, she'd assumed she would be used to the full range of weird entities roaming the Three Realms, but apparently this… entity, was still a surprise.

He was wedged into the outermost side of the closest booth, in the shadowy corner. His feet were propped up on the table and half-crossed, but it was not their electric-green claws and webbed toes the color of "drowning victim" that was so terrifying: The rest of him was by far more strange. Tall, slender, with swept-back pointed ears and some of his dark reddish hair braided into an Elf-Knot identified his species—and the bustling array of mutations he bore brought that species into question again. Above the protective gloves and bracers he wore, his forearms were that drowned-blue color, and slithering with several large tentacles each. His ripped jeans were a similar story at the hip joint—and even more sprung from a point near his shoulder blades. The deep V-neck of his shirt allowed a travesty of more subtle issues to be on display: His shoulders and across his collarbones had stubby, green quills protruding from them, the veins of his neck close to the surface were a green hue too and hideously engorged. On second glance, Aqua suppressed a shudder of revulsion as she saw the veins on his arms and even one faintly popping from his temple were the same. A moment passed in which this Grey Elf paid no attention to her—engrossed with a ratty-looking, thin book propped open against one knee—but then, vivid purple eyes flicked over to the onlooker.

"Well, well, cydezé," the twisted elf greeted her, gaze flicking over her from the Keybearer's Chi-Rho emblem on her chest to the lacing ornaments over her corset and spur-stabilizers on her boots, landing at last on her muted blue hair and bright eyes. "They say it's rude to stare, stranger."

"Sorry, I, uh…" Aqua stalled her movements by force of will, as instinct was sending her creeping backwards. "I couldn't help but look."

"'Swhat they all say!" He snickered, snapping his book closed. She couldn't be so sure of this relaxed, humored response; her eyes lingered on the tentacles as they coiled back over themselves. "No offense taken at all, eh, miss..?"

"I'm Aqua," she suppressed a flinch, especially as one of his eyebrows raised in intense interest.

"Aqua, eh?" Finally, he slid the mutated pair of feet down from sight. "Excellent. I'm named Oppidimy—though some call me the 'Octomancer'. Or a walking accident." He chuckled again, grinning. "Now we're introduced, at least—so! You didn't come in here after me, I'll assume, but surely you're looking for someone."

Aqua's brow twitched as it was tempted to furrow, "What makes you say that?"

"You have that 'looking for someone' quality," he smirked, tipping a hand towards the scene outside, "It's a safe assumption. Most who come here are, in fact, trying to find people."

The young Keybearer half-bit her tongue; appearance aside, she was unsure of how wise it would be to make even a guarded mention of her goals. Oppidimy was clearly a mage of some sort: What kind was as uncertain as how he'd come to be half-elf, half-aberration. And what kind of magic-user he was made all the difference.

"Actually, I wasn't looking for someone," she chanced it. She figured she could downplay the importance it had, leaving little clue that the lost item in question was the sacred Keyblade. "Something, actually. Several somethings."

"Lost some stuff?"

"Actually… more like stolen." She sucked in a breath, reigning in the residual outrage that lingered even years later, "A sword, and a set of plate armor. They were very important to me and I don't have much idea of who took them from where I last saw them."

Oppidimy clicked his tongue, eyes hooding in a disgusted expression as he nodded.

"That's cute—people really are out there like that. World's in the process of ending and they'll still try robbin' you blind." Aqua blinked hard at the statement, but he carried on overtop of her visible bewilderment, "Odds are, the culprit's one of a short and nasty list; the only types who would be out to steal anything that wasn't provisions, these days.

"I might be able to help y' out," a slow, crooked smile spread over his pointed features, and his gloved fingertips settled together into a triangle of scheming thoughts. "At least, if you'll have me. At the very least I could help rule out some of these skeezballs."

"And how would you accomplish this?" Her voice turned suspicious, and the Rurcelan mutant obviously cottoned on. He disbanded the triangle of wicked contemplations with a series of assuring waves, shaking his head and chuckling.

"Ah, ah, I know that tone—relax! My methods are one hundred percent legitimate, completely moral. Even though I blend in quite well with society's villains and monsters, the 'look' was not exactly intentional. But, if you'll take up my offer, you'll see how it serves to my advantage."

As Oppidimy began to stand and tuck his book amongst the grips of the tentacles issuing from one elbow, Aqua tilted her head:

"…So you specialize in espionage?"

The elf raised a gloved finger to his lips and the quills on his bare shoulders went rigid, suddenly looking grim and serious.

"Not so loud," He slid past her, the Keybearer wearing a stone face even as she cringed internally at the tendrils coming inches from brushing by. Stepping towards the stairs, he turned back to call over his shoulder, smirk returned: "Come see me some time if you need a hand, yeh? I'm in 32. I'd suggest giving that old office door a knock so you can get a room of your own before it gets too late." He began to cackle, "Owner's a bit narcoleptic, so knock hard!" His laughter echoed, becoming cartoonish as he ascended the narrow stairwell and the raucous noise faded out. She paused a few seconds just to breathe.

Never had she encountered someone quite so exaggerated—it felt like a front—or a trap. She could be the intended victim, but just as easily the intended bait, a lure to draw in the unsavory targets he'd referred to. Only further investigation would bring that to light.


As suspected—the place was a cheap joint for cheap beds. The need in town was high, and the cramped room she was assigned was, at the very least, livable. Crumpled under the stiff, rough-textured outer sheet, every attempt to calculate the dubiousness of the elf's offer, versus the likelihood she could finally close in on her lost Keyblade, set her sleep back another hour. And another. But slowly, surely, sleep and Aqua arrived at an uneasy truce.

She had the dream again. Different—and clearer.

The vision of that round, white, metal-plated room, the gaps in this armoring (or acoustic featuring?) showing faint glints of pipes, cables, and other hints at underlying manatech. It mocked her. She was for a second so infuriated at its recurrence that she almost missed the new features: Insignias in a stark black marked the walls, familiar but strange. It was much like the Keybearer's Chi-Rho—or the Heartless Emblem, itself very much a cheap plagiarizing of the order's sign—upside-down, so that the spikes forming the "Chi" took the peak position.

The miasma of her unconscious half-lucidity swam around her as she struggled to turn around and face the raised central area. She had already seen what was arranged there during the prior dream states. Her armor, and her Keyblade, where she knew it last. If the passage of time was to be believed, someone had been keeping it tidy and dust-free.

The chair was new. Aqua's jaw hung in silence a moment, unable to react, as she faced its occupant. Outside of this recurring hallucination she knew she was asleep—and she wondered if he, within the dream, was also. His dark-toned skin and wildly-arranged silver hair were uncomfortably familiar, and his face itself also so but for different reasons. His ears were slightly-pointed as a half-elf's would be, but since his eyes were closed she couldn't tell if he possessed the mish-mash of colors and features she dreaded. She had seen this man before, she was sure this was… but somehow, her mind refused to let her assume this was the same person. Or persons, technically. He had to be, and yet… she was sure this quietly seated man was another entirely.

Her frown began to appear, giving some control of her face and voice back. Whoever this dead-ringer for Terra (and Xehanort) was, there was no likelier suspect for the role of the one who had relocated this Chamber—her Keyblade with it.

"Where are you?"

Aqua nearly jumped, though her dream-self felt far too sluggish for it. Exactly as and exactly what she had been gathering up energy to say the man with closed eyes had asked in a low murmur, devoid of feeling. Though, this she supposed could be from him truly being asleep—mumbling and aware of her regardless.

"No," she barked, "You tell me. Where are you? And who are you?"

The man paused, eye movements flickering behind their lids. In painfully slow motions, he began to shake his head.

"I cannot answer you. You must tell me first." He was still almost deadpan, with a hint of tired annoyance creeping in now.

"You can't force me to tell you, and you can't do anything to me. This is a damn dream-state. So, if you want anything, you first."

He huffed, his brows twitching, and the sleek black fabric that made up his gloves straining as his grip on the armrests tightened.

"No," he growled. "You don't understand. I cannot answer you first because I have no answer. I don't know who I am." He let silence return to the humming void around them, becoming neutral in expression, "But perhaps, if you tell me your name, I can know more."

A spike of hope softened her expression; the frustration and the intonation was so like his, melded neatly with the rigid aura of calm he imposed on himself—two traits so Terra-esque and incongruous with each other they seemed unlikely to be performed. And very un-Xehanort, in this way.

"I'm Aqua. Do you have a name, by chance?"

"I do," he nodded, brows knitting slightly, "But it would mean nothing to you. It is a chosen name, taken after the time you seem to recognize me from."

"Are you Terra?" She forged ahead, prepared for a let-down.

"I am aware of who that name belongs to, but I do not think so," he surprised her, "Before you ask: I am equally aware of the one called Xehanort. I am not him.

"You have seen this Chamber before, haven't you?" A dim inkling of curiosity entered his soft tone, surprising her alongside the change of subject. "Years ago I began to see this place. In my dreams at first, and then, every time I closed my eyes. I suspect you saw these visions. You saw the way into the room, hidden in what is left of the bastion of Radiant Garden."

"How did you figure that out?" But, already guessing the answer, her eyes wandered to the sections of her armor propped on the central dais.

"I have memory I can't explain," he began. "I remember the name of the one this Keyblade, and its armor manifestation, belongs to. Aqua." Sudden, jarring, he seemed unable to resist letting his eyes snap open and zero in on her with their bright, orange intensity, "This belongs to you, doesn't it?"

An immediate shock came over her—but not only from being eye-to-eye. As soon as it happened, a spell broke. She felt roaring in her ears; the Chamber of Repose winked out and she was filled with the sickening sensation of half-awake, confused floating just above one's body. Psyche-wise, she felt slammed back into her self as she bolted awake, still curled under the cheap inn's terrible sheets, the room quiet and empty.

She sat up, waiting for some soreness that never came. A vivid dream. Not exactly, but closer than really being there. For a minute she just listened; a few muffled clangs of activity echoed from some lower floor, and she could hear through razor-thin walls the sounds of folk opening and shutting doors, exchanging bleary greetings, and going about the act of "morning". A sliver of weak light creeping in between shut curtains confirmed the early, small hour. She collected her wits, and stood. She wasn't getting any more sleep now anyways.