The moment their vision cleared, they found themselves facing off against an unexpected group. This wasn't because they were part of Legacy or the government, but precisely because they were part of neither.
Sylas was fairly certain of this conclusion because they were a ragtag group of three, or so it seemed.
They were led by a gruff man whose eyes were red with fatigue. To his left was a middle-aged woman with short cut hair and a tightly held pearly white crossbow, and on his right was a young man who couldn't have been more than 17 or so years old.
They immediately struck Sylas as a family, and right now they were in the middle of a cascade of danger.
Swinging scythes fell from the air and swiped at them from all directions. They were trying to make their way to the other side, but given how things had gone in this world until this point, Sylas didn't believe that this overly simple "trap" was all there was to it.
If it was just about avoiding the swinging scythes and making it to the other side, any one of them could do it in their sleep. But with the trend of the puzzles of this world only becoming more difficult the further he descended, Sylas didn't believe that that was the end.
Since Sylas didn't move, Alex didn't move either. Both didn't seem to care that there was a family about to lose their lives.
The middle-aged man noticed them, but he only grit his teeth. He understood the ways of this world well enough to understand that it was impossible for him to expect anything of Sylas and Alex. In fact, had he been in their position, he would do the same-observing from the side and waiting to catch something that might help him and his family protect their lives.
Sylas, though, wasn't observing the family very much. He had already seen through the mystery of the puzzle. The real reason he didn't move was because he didn't want to be interfered with. Who knew what people on their last legs might do out of jealousy? If he could avoid the confrontation and let this pyramid kill them instead, he would be more than happy with that.
He closed his eyes instead, feeling out the differences caused by Ithkuil to his psyche. They were still quite shocking to him.
But if he had to guess why there were so many, it must be that the laws of the world had a lot of filtering to do when it was commanded through normal language.
As much processing as humans had to do to understand other humans, wouldn't the system or the world itself have to do the same?
When Sylas communicated what he wanted the Runes to do, how exactly did that process work?
He always described a lot of what he did with this world as moving his "intent." When he opened his notifications, he did it with his "intent." When he chose an option from the system, he did so with his "intent." When he communicated with the system to trigger the activation of a Skill, he did so with his "intent."
But if he boiled it down to what it truly was, wasn't he just thinking a thing?
His intent was just a complicated formulation of thoughts, and ultimately, his thoughts were formed in the language of Earth even if said thoughts didn't come out with words themselves.
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