Becoming Monsters is the creation of AiLovesToGrow, setting used with permission.
This idea comes from Amethyst Dragonfly.
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Chapter 23: A Second Step
Abbey awoke alone again the next morning, after sleeping the whole night snuggled in her fiance's arms (objectively the best place to sleep on Earth). She had a little bit of a headache forming and reflexively checked Status. Mana was still lower than she was comfortable with. Actually, it was lower than it should be by about a percent. It was hard to tell these days thanks to all the drain and the Wish fallout, but still.
Justin wasn't in the kitchen, though May was there giving little Alex an early breakfast. "Justin went out to the beach for something, but I'm not sure what. He wasn't wearing workout clothes."
"Thanks, May." Abbey didn't pause all that much, heading directly out to a crisp and cloudy morning.
Justin wasn't all that hard to find. Even if Abbey hadn't felt a gentle pull in his direction, he wasn't hiding. That, and his blue pajamas stood out against the white sand beach. The man was kneeling in the sand, a look of intense concentration on his face. A look that vanished as Abbey walked up. "Good morning, love!"
"Morning, Justin. What's got you out here in your pajamas?" She walked up to find two objects sitting on the sand in front of him: one small pane of glass about the size of her hand and one Copper Coin.
"An idea. I know how this project is going to go from here. Heck, I even reassembled most of the sword, going to have relatively little to actually remake when all is said and done. It's inside, locked in one of the empty rooms. Thing is, I realized that I haven't ever actually practiced the technique done this way." He held up the glass pane. "I already created and purified this one, didn't take much time or effort now that I know what I'm doing on that part." He suddenly threw it down against a rock, breaking it into several pieces.
"So now you are going to do that repair you want to do with the sword?"
"Exactly. I'll figure out what I'm doing small-scale, so that I don't have the big one blow up in my face again. And, well, so I figure out how to be efficient about it. I still don't want to waste mana when we have so little. Invest a little now, save a ton later."
"That makes sense. You don't have much time on the clock by the feel of it, though."
Justin nodded. "You're absolutely correct." He grabbed the chunks of glass and reassembled them, fitting mostly back together. Then, out came the phone. Justin set a timer for two minutes. "I'll do my best within the timer, but that should let me keep from going under five percent."
What followed was ninety seconds of frustration. Glass and metal did not want to naturally merge, the surfaces wouldn't quite mesh up, the magical Coin resisted Justin's efforts, and more. As he was about to give up, though, he found it. He could weave the surfaces together, much like the gold-ceramic mixture that
kintsugi
worked on in the first place, and by the time his timer actually went off he had managed to stitch together a seam an inch or so long between two shards.
He was breathing hard. "Okay, that wasn't exactly easy, but I think I can make it work. Slowly."
Abbey laid a hand on his shoulder. "Maybe take it five or so minutes a day after breakfast? That'll get it done in time for school."
Justin thought hard. "Maybe, but I'll be out of a job besides the little things at the open tent until I finish this and show it to Quiverbow. Is there anything about how to increase mana regeneration?"
"You mean besides having two active Wishes siphoning eighty percent of our combined pools?" Abbey's tone was
devastating
.
He hung his head a bit. "Yeah, besides that. I'm trying to make it right, you know?"
"Take care of yourself, rest, and don't use your mana unless you have to. Besides that, it's paying for potions or buffs that we can't afford until the crisis is done anyway." Abbey took a deep breath of the morning air. "You're about to tell me that won't work, but it's all I know of."
"I'll certainly do my best on the first couple of points, but I still have to actually get the materials for the project." He sighed. "I guess I'll figure it out. Take it slow until then. Do what I can by hand instead of with magic."
Abbey reached out her hand, he took the help standing up. Then Justin remembered to gather up the outputs of his experiments and double check for any glass shards he might have missed. Abbey shrugged. "Take it as a learning experience, I guess."
His head snapped up. "Oh no, learning experience! I have to MOVE, gonna be late for class!" He might not have gone on a deliberate run for exercise that morning, but the sprint that followed was strong enough to kick up clouds of sand.
Abbey chuckled. She walked in a much more sedate way into their home. "May, which way did he go?"