Subject: General Theories, Ch. 5: ... To A Unified Theory
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Posted on: 2018-05-03 12:49:00 UTC

The sky outside the window of the Group Dynamic was warm and clear and inviting, with only the merest wisps of cloud far away. It was also an electric orange colour, as if the whole world was a street light. It hung serenely above an enormous plain, full of rich purple grasses and stubby, thick-trunked trees like fat acacias. There was one close by, and Siobhan could see a bright white fruit hanging from its boughs. Without really understanding how, she knew it was delicious, some distant bit of human ancestry screaming at her to eat it and find more.

The distinct lack of Norwich only made it more enticing.

The three Nigerian wizards from the next table over were the first to investigate, creaking open the door of the Group Dynamic as they cast a few spells to enable them to breathe. As intoxicating as the view out there was, Siobhan's head was still turned by wizardry, even - perhaps especially - when put to such casual use. She was watching closely as they stepped outside, but didn't quite see them leave. A blink at the wrong moment. She never was much cop at staring contests.

Seeing them out of the window, though, they seemed... happy. Much happier than they had in the pub. A few more wizards joined them, fascinated by the country they saw outside. And more. And more. And more. The hubbub was gone, now. Siobhan, Purple, and Wombat were alone.

"Why," said Wombat after a long moment, "are the bar staff still here?"

One of them made a strangled hissing noise that the two wizards understood as "More than my job's worth, guv."

Siobhan shrugged and looked at her blue Coke. "Does this... does this normally happen?"

"Eh, sometimes. But they put a sign up when they're going anywhere, and I've not seen it. Going off-planet like this unannounced? Screws up the coordinates for a claudication. Maybe I missed the memo or something, but I normally go, and Gary the Gasworks is usually pretty good about letting people on the mailing list know."

"So, you're saying that the landlord of this place takes the entire pub on a bloody interplanetary booze cruise?"

"No!"

Siobhan sagged a bit. "Let me guess. Gary the Gasworks isn't the landlord."

"Skree, chick, no flies on you, are there? How would he even fit? This gaff's not that big." Purple pecked at his pint of nuts. "Nah, Gary's just the bloke who sorts out the invites. He doesn't get offworld much, on account of how he can't move, so a bunch of local wizards help him get around."

"Wait." Wombat's voice was slow and incredulous. "Is he actually-"

"The St. Martin's gasworks, yeah. Nice bloke. He planned my stag do."

Siobhan stared into her drink for a while as she tried to process that. It felt a bit like her brain was starting to dribble out of her ears.

---

"Okay, time for another blue soft drink." Siobhan stood up. "Want anything, you two?"

"I'm alright, ta," said Purple. "Do you fancy something stronger?"

"Christ yes."

"Tough."

Siobhan came back with a tray a few minutes later to find Purple staring wistfully out of the window.

"Reminds me of Akosho Gul," he said. "I think it's the fruit trees. Probably the sky, too. You never forget your first new sky."

"Yeah," said Siobhan. "I don't think I'll ever forget this. It's so... so different."

"I just... I've got to go out and give it a try. Just one of those fruits. Don't worry, I'll ask first, I'm not a gannet."

"Okay. Just, you know. Be careful out there, alright?"

"Will do, chick. I'll save you some. Not a lot, but some." Purple took off from the pint glass and flew towards the door. "I mean, it's in my name, after all!"

Siobhan's eyes widened and her breath caught the her throat and she nearly knocked the table over as she scrambled to her feet but it

was too late

and Purple was out of the door and gone.

---

Siobhan dragged her Manual out of a pocket, brushed bits of grimy sand and desiccated crisp fragments off the cover, and slammed the book open on the table so hard that Wombat briefly became airborne. As with all uses of a Manual, it opened at the page she needed. As with all uses of her Manual, the information was couched in bone-dry academic prose and tangential examples from history, with spell diagrams beaten into bronze plaques or painted on cave walls.

"Are you okay, Siobhan?" Wombat's voice was shot through with veins of black worry like a marble statue.

"Emics and etics," Siobhan replied.

"Eh?"

"In-group and out-group analysis," she mumbled, along with more stuff Wombat couldn't hear.

"... Eh?"

"I'm an idiot. A massive, massive idiot. I got so caught up in magic and everyone else's magic that I forgot what was going to happen."

---

Purple soared through the door, dimly noticing the flash behind him, and he danced through the air until he collided bodily with the voluminous bum of an extremely confused elephant.

Once he shook the stars out of his vision, he looked around at the array of wizards...

Crammed into the Colman's mustard museum.

"... Oh, SKREE!"

---

"The fruit tree outside. I saw white, which is weird because fruit isn't white, it's brightly coloured to attract people to it. But Purple saw a purple fruit, because I want answers and he wanted... I dunno, lunch? The point is, what did you see?"

"... I thought we were floating in deep space or something."

"Because you don't really want anything, at least not that can be shown outside a window."

---

"You don't understand, Patience, she's not on errantry, she's on ORDEAL!"

---

"So, the question is: If something is so strange, so tempting that nearly every wizard in the building ran out to investigate, why didn't the snakes? No job's that vital, even bar work. Especially not bloody bar work."

"Okay..." Wombat looked even more frightened.

"So we've got snakes, we've got temptation, we've got a weird fruit. You see where I'm going with this, right?"

"Oh."

---

"I can't get into the pub," one of the orbs shrieked. "Something's blocked it off from me!"

---

"Took you long enough, didn't it, lad?"

Siobhan spun around to see one of the tree snakes glaring at her, a look of pure loathing in its eyes.

"I - I'm not-"

"Why are you so intent on denying who you are? Why do you think people can't tell? You love answers so much, answer that one, boy."

Siobhan felt the tears trickle down the curve of her face. Inside, she felt nothing at all.

"I'd like to speak to the manager, please."

"And what are you gonna say, boy?"

"The only thing."

---

Purple spun in mad, electric circles above the Princes Arcade, trying to cast a spell, any spell.

"SIOBHAN!"

---

The manager came down, and she was androgynous and dressed well and as beautiful as a dying star. "Now then, little wizard, how can I help you?"

"Fairest and fallen," Siobhan said, her voice thick with the effort of not stammering, not giving in, not letting everything win, "greetings and defiance."

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