034.007

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Breath of Air

Approaching Trouble


Alyssa felt like something was missing. She had never lost an arm or even a finger before, but what she was feeling at the moment had to be something akin to phantom limb syndrome. Every so often, she would find herself trying to close her eyes and check the souls around her only to be met with nothing but darkness. She had bought a rather large wool coat from one of the local shops, but it really wasn’t doing much to keep that unearthly chill away.

She figured she would get used to it. The first twenty-five years of her life went by without Tenebrael’s presence settling around her shoulders like a fleece mantle, so surely things would go back to normal. But there was just a slight niggle in the back of her mind that Tenebrael’s power was like some hard drug. Even after only a month of sharing a connection, she might need years of therapy to get back to normal. And the slightest trouble in front of her might result in a relapse.

But… that was probably an overexaggeration. It had been a week since meeting Tenebrael and severing the connection. At least so far, she hadn’t felt much of a need to use Tenebrael’s power. Or a desire, really. The few times she had tried looking for souls had been more out of habit than anything else.

It took twenty-one days to break a habit. Or so the saying went. She was a third of the way in so far. She just needed to find something to distract herself with.

Like Izsha and Irulon.

The latter had almost finished with what she hoped was a working method of jump-starting the synchronization. Alyssa could no longer look at Izsha’s soul to see how the poor draken was doing, but given the lack of progress or regression in Izsha before she had severed her connection to Tenebrael, the state of its soul was probably static at the moment.

Irulon had been a bit annoyed that Alyssa was no longer connected to Tenebrael, but after citing the Astral Authority as an ongoing issue with remaining connected—and something that put everyone else around Alyssa into danger as well—she had relented on her scolding. Alyssa did feel a bit guilty over not being able to look into Irulon’s souls anymore, especially after the princess had confessed her fear to Alyssa that she was erasing herself from existence.

But she wasn’t able to do much on that front without Irulon’s help anyway. By the time Irulon was ready to start working on herself, Tenebrael would hopefully have finished her suppression field, thus allowing Alyssa to reconnect… at least for a short time to help Irulon. She wasn’t all that certain that it was a good idea to remain connected on a permanent basis again.

Her mother might be right. It was just a little too abnormal. Even for this world.

Aside from Izsha, which occupied a large majority of her time, Alyssa had also been spending a lot of time with Volta.

Even now, she sat in the court arcanist’s office with him, discussing matters of monsters while trying to avoid looking in the direction of the cursed sword. The sword just… had this look about her constantly. Alyssa was fairly certain that, if not for Volta somehow keeping her under control, the cursed sword would go on a rampage throughout the city, killing as many people as it could until someone finally managed to put it down. Of all the monsters she had seen, the sword probably unnerved her the most. Even more than the gaunt. The gaunt was creepy, yes, and nearly invincible, true, but it didn’t look human. It didn’t have a facial expression, let alone one that screamed murder to everyone around. It was no wonder that the sword kept herself wrapped up in a cloak at all times.

Volta was pleasant enough to talk to, thankfully.

“So you’re saying that those eel-like monsters migrated all the way from the southern coast to a desert, then into a tiny little pool of water within a dormant volcano? Why? They traded a huge ocean for that little cavern. I could understand it if they were escaping from south of the Fortress of Pandora, but the ocean? And why a desert? It just doesn’t make any sense.”

“You know, I’m not entirely sure,” Volta said, the false man leaning back in his chair. From an objective standpoint, it was quite amazing how well the man blended into reality. Everything from blinking to breathing, stretching to slight shifts in his posture to get a little more comfortable… It made Alyssa wonder whether that was all consciously controlled or, much like a real person, simply unconscious movements. “We don’t often ask about each other’s histories or what led people to where they are today. That oftentimes brings up poor memories. Some share willingly, such as those you freed who mentioned your name. But I don’t believe that the eelfolk ever did. They could have been fleeing from a destroyed habitat, a slaughtered community, or a life in bondage and slavery.”

“Do they have natural predators that live in the ocean? Because even if one or all of those things were true, I couldn’t imagine fish traveling for weeks over land and through a desert. I mean, at least find a lake or something. There’s a pretty big one just south of Teneville. My… I have a… house there. If they could get to Lyria, I could get them there very fast. If they’re interested, that is.”

“Asking wouldn’t hurt, but they’ve been there almost as long as I have been. They might have a new sense of community about them. Living in such small quarters breeds companionship, even if I doubt mantises and eelfolk would normally be that friendly toward one another.”

“Hm… Is there a lot of strife between different species of monsters?”

“That depends entirely on the species in question. Some get along with others quite well. Some only interact with certain others. Some tend to alienate everyone but their own species. And there are a few that are more or less hostile even to others of their own kind. With as many varieties of monsters as there are out there, we would be here all day trying to map out which ones interact with others in which ways.”

“That sounds like—”

Alyssa cut herself off as Volta raised a hand. The doppelganger didn’t start talking, simply choosing to wait. At the same time, the cursed sword pulled her hood back over her head and covered her face with a dark brown scarf. The second Volta put her hand back down, a heavy knock tapped against the door three times. There must have been some kind of alarm spell to warn Volta of anyone outside the door. Which explained how they could talk so candidly about monsters without others hearing.

“Enter.”

Almost before the low voice called out, the door swung wide open to reveal a panting guardsman wearing the fleur de lis on a grey sphere, the emblem of Illuna, on his brown tabard. Helmet off, he stared around for just a moment before sighing. “Master Arcanist, sir… and, uh, guest,” he added with a glance to Alyssa. “Your presence is requested at the eastern wall.”

Alyssa felt a sinking feeling in her stomach, wondering just what trouble was poised to attack this little city. Lyria had come under attack so many times since coming to this world. She had to wonder whether or not it was her presence somehow attracting enemies or whether it was just something that happened on a chronic schedule. “They asked for me?” she said, pointing at her chest. “Who asked for me?”

“It was the…” His eyes flicked up to Volta for a moment before his voice dropped to a whisper. “The Black Prince.”

“Oh?” Alyssa perked up a bit at that. Ignoring the hushed and slightly terrified tone in which the guardsman spoke, Brakkt asking for her was actually good news. If it were something vital or dangerous, he would have sent her a Message. Sending some poor guardsman running to find her was more or less just a way to save on having to draw out more Message cards. Alyssa felt a bit bad about it, especially because it looked like the guard had sprinted all the way here—he was still trying to catch his breath—and had gotten spooked because of the sender at the same time.

But it was good news for her.

“What is this about?” Volta asked, standing. Volta’s real body hopped to the side, holding onto the fake body’s hand as it stood as well. “Has something happened?”

The cursed sword moved immediately to stand right in Volta’s shadow, giggling slightly as she moved.

The guardsman didn’t respond right away. Not for a lack of trying. He was just having a little trouble breathing, half doubled over from his run.

Alyssa, getting to her feet as well, stretched slightly. Hearing that Brakkt wanted her and not someone else made her just a little too relieved to be overly concerned at the moment. There might still be trouble, but it would be minor trouble. Maybe an infected shambling toward the pit—though he would probably just take care of that himself. Or… the Astral Authority? He wouldn’t want to handle one of them on his own, but that seemed Message-worthy. Actually, the more she thought about why he might want her and Volta, the less certain she got about just why he might ask for them. If it really was something small, infected or otherwise, he and Fela could take care of it.

Her stomach tensed again as she considered that it was something big, but not something that had to be dealt with immediately. Lacking time sensitivity, a guard would suffice in place of a Message…

“Tell us on the way,” Alyssa said, deciding to hurry over and get information directly from Brakkt. “East gate, you said?”

The opposite side from Owlcroft and the forces fighting there. Outside the east gate were the stables that Izsha was resting in. The Plains of the Dead were even further east. Not a lot of habitation in that general direction. Some kind of opposing army could come from there, but—and Alyssa was far from a military strategist—she thought they would come from the northern or southern directions instead. An army would rather march through populated lands to resupply on the raided villages.

Unless they were targeting Illuna directly and had been trying to keep themselves a secret until arriving…

“It’s monsters,” the guard managed as Alyssa slipped outside the room.

Alyssa froze, looking past the guard to find a genuinely shocked expression on both of Volta’s faces. With the cursed sword bundled up in her mask, Alyssa couldn’t see her expression, but there was a slight pause in her steps as she followed along behind Volta.

“Monsters?” Volta said with almost no delay.

“A whole bunch of them,” the guard said between breaths. “They’re marching on the city. We’re scrambling all the guards and alerting his lordship as well.”

“How far away?”

“Half a day by horseback. A pair of rangers spotted them this morning and rode back immediately, only arriving a few minutes ago. The monsters were not mounted, but monsters might be able to run faster than humans or even horses. The rangers met the… Black Prince near the gate and informed him as to what they saw.”

Ignoring the awed tone he used around Brakkt’s epithet, Alyssa shook her head. “What kind of monsters? How many exactly?”

“I… I don’t know what kind. But they counted up over forty monsters.”

Forty. Almost double the amount of people at the oasis. For a moment, a thought entered her mind that something had happened back there that forced them to flee. Knowing their leader was some highly ranked person in the city, they might have had to take a gamble that they wouldn’t be slaughtered on sight.

But forty was too many.

Too many for Alyssa too. She hadn’t used up many Spectral Chains cards recently and had been drawing several, but chaining up forty creatures at once might not go over as well as chaining up just one or two. She did have a few Annihilators, but…

She would rather know why they were here before she decimated the landscape.

And whether or not they were being mind controlled like that troll army that had attacked Lyria when she first arrived in the city.

“You don’t know what is approaching? Useless scouts,” Volta grumbled. “What good is having them if they don’t even properly scout? Knowing the kinds of monsters could change the context drastically.”

Alyssa could not agree more. “What about Illuna? How many soldiers can you muster?”

“Everyone’s on alert. Over a hundred men are gathering at the eastern wall. We have enough equipment to arm a militia of roughly the same number of people, though I can’t speak for the maintenance or quality of said equipment.” He paused, just about making Alyssa trip down the stairs as she hopped to the side to dodge him. “Should we toll the bells for the militia? I’ll… I’ll head to town square and—”

“Calm down, Javick. Let’s see what awaits us before we disturb everyone’s day. It might not be that big a deal.”

“Monsters are attacking the city! We’ve had a reprieve from the demons lately, but… we’ve never had monsters attack the city!”

“Just be thankful that the demons aren’t still attacking us. Dealing with enemies on two fronts would be a trying endeavor. And these monsters may not be attacking. We shouldn’t act with haste only to regret our choices in the future.”

“What else could they possibly be doing?”

“Are you forgetting?” Volta said, offering a small gesture toward Alyssa. “We are playing host to a few monsters at the moment. A hellhound and several draken, among others. Perhaps they have heard such news and are merely curious.”

“Then they should have sent one monster as a representative.”

“Only to wind up killed on sight by our rangers? A group is a far safer method of travel.”

As they reached the main entryway, they encountered another pair of guards, ones who looked mildly less out of breath than the one who had fetched Volta. With them was a familiar face. Wearing a far more militaristic uniform, Martin stood at the door, attaching a sword to his hip.

“Ah, Martin,” Volta said as if inviting the older man out to a cup of tea. “How are you this fine afternoon?”

A bushy eyebrow lifted, half-cocked for a moment before a wan smile crossed Martin’s face. “Does nothing perturb you?”

“I try to remain level-headed regardless of the situation.”

“And I would prefer to know more about the situation, court arcanist. What divinations have you for me today?”

“Nothing much, I’m afraid. I’d like to see for myself this approaching force. There is a chance things aren’t nearly as dire as they appear.”

After a slight grunt, and a bit of armor plating, Martin led them across the yard filled with geese and turkeys out to a small stables. Rather than riding on a horse, he led them all, including Alyssa, into a rather spacious carriage. It set off immediately. Volta, sitting next to the cursed sword, simply closed her eyes and relaxed. The fake body did, anyway. As unexpressive as her real body was, it was not unobservant. The cursed sword at her side sat almost perfectly still, as if not trusting herself not to do something she might regret.

Martin, on the other hand, stared out the window. His leg bounced up and down with a constant, nervous rhythm.

It only took twenty minutes for the pair of horses to pull them all the way to the eastern wall. Even still, Alyssa found herself a bit surprised that he hadn’t hammered the floorboard clean out of the little carriage.

All three guild members, Lisa, Brakkt, and Fela were standing around, talking with the guards or otherwise preparing for what might happen. The only ones of her party to not be here were Irulon, who must have decided to continue her research, assuming that everyone else could take care of whatever problems happened, and Kasita, who was probably sticking with Irulon. The draken were missing as well. Ensou was just outside the gate, making a pair of guards there awfully nervous, but the others must still be down at the abandoned stables with Izsha.

Alyssa felt a pang of guilt at leaving her friend alone without her or Brakkt there, but… if the situation was serious, it might need the two of them to stay away for some time.

Upon their arrival, people immediately split off. Some moved to speak with Martin, presumably informing him as to the status of their defenses or possibly any further information on the approaching group. Others went up to Volta, probably giving him similar information.

No one approached Alyssa and she didn’t really get the feeling that she was invited to either of their conversations, so she walked right up to Brakkt and her mother.

“We’re going to head out on the draken,” Brakkt said without word of greeting or pleasantries. “They’ll be fast enough to get a look at these monsters and get word back.”

“Sounds like a plan. I’ll…” Alyssa hesitated, realizing just what that meant for her. “I’ll stay here the, shall I? I suppose I could draw out another Annihilator. Though I would prefer to not use it.”

He had his armor on, though his helmet was off. That gave a clear look at his face as he frowned slightly. “Musca has agreed to allow you to ride her.”

“M… Musca said that, huh?”

“More or less,” Brakkt said with a shrug of his shoulders.

“You know? I was just thinking that I could use a few more Spectral Chains as well…”

“Alyssa,” Lisa said with no small amount of admonishment in her tone. “From what I gather, the city is preparing to fight. I don’t know what these monsters are, but I have seen Fela.” Her tone dropped to a hushed whisper to keep anyone around from listening in. “Forty Felas against a hundred poorly trained soldiers is going to be a slaughter.”

“I wouldn’t call them poorly trained,” Brakkt said, turning his head to look over the assembled force, the guards watching from the wall, and Volta and Martin. “They handle infected on the regular. This close to Owlcroft, they have to be decent at their job, enough to keep from being overrun, anyway. But… it is true that infected don’t tend to work as a group. Their fighting style may be incompatible with even a loosely organized group of stronger enemies.”

“Even if they can fight back, many will die. And many monsters will die as well. I… Well, some monsters I’ve heard about deserve some sympathy. Something I learned from my time overseas—something I wished others would have learned as well—if negotiations can be made, then all efforts should be afforded to make them.”

Alyssa opened her mouth, about to suggest that maybe Fela should take the draken on her own given how well Alyssa’s last attempt at negotiation went. The oasis monsters had not taken kindly to humans barging into the sanctuary.

But then she remembered Fela’s attempt at negotiation. That shrug as she turned to Alyssa with a blank look and said that she had tried.

“Kasita really should be the one to negotiate,” Alyssa said. And it was true. Kasita had been the one to defuse the situation in the oasis. “Can we grab her before we go, at least?”


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034.006

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Breath of Air

Nox


Alyssa stared at an array of spell cards laid out on the table in front of her, wondering just what was different about them in comparison to what she was doing with Tenebrael’s connection. And she was having a hard time coming up with anything. Aside from the obvious, of course. The cards needed the paper and a drawn pattern while all she needed to make use of Tenebrael’s magic was a verbal… prayer. But… wasn’t that what the Enochian on the cards was for?

Spell cards had definite and predictable effects. Her connection to Tenebrael didn’t. That probably came from the way spell cards didn’t change. Although drawn individually, all spell cards of the same spell were effectively photocopies of each other. They had a static and unchanging nature that gave them their predictability.

Alyssa couldn’t control the size or shape of the mystic circles that popped up when she called down a miracle. At least, she didn’t think she could. Her discussion with Iosefael on the subject revolved almost entirely around the actual spoken words of the prayer rather than any geometry. Tenebrael had insisted that she would need to know advanced mathematics in order to use the Throne’s power directly, so perhaps delving into that might give her more control over mystic circle construction.

The words she spoke could be controlled, to a degree. She still felt as if, once in a while, some spoken words might not wholly be her own. It wasn’t quite to the point of completely taking over her mouth as had happened for the first few miracles back in Teneville. If she wanted, she could override any influence that might push her to say one word over another.

Every time she asked for a miracle, she used different words and phrasing. Per Iosefael’s advice, more desperate situations necessitated longer requests and repeating the same prayers over and over again tended to diminish the value of the miracle. Which seemed somewhat odd to her. Most religions that she knew of relied heavily on repeated rituals where things were generally not supposed to change. Whether that be praying in a certain direction, saying the same prayer every time, or just little things like bowing heads. Here on Nod, the spell cards, the same ones that she had already established were all identical, worked the same and to the same effectiveness no matter how many times she or anyone else cast them.

Besides that, there were only so many ways to phrase kill this thing before she would wind up having to open a thesaurus and pick related words at random.

Perhaps disregarding that tidbit of Iosefael’s advice would be for the best. At least to test some things out. If it failed, then she could go back to saying whatever came to mind. But a repeated, memorized phrase could be said much faster than random words as they came to mind.

And if that bit of Iosefael’s advice turned out to be incorrect, perhaps the bit about the length could be discarded as well. Shrinking down requests for miracles into single sentences or even single words could help out a lot.

What she really needed, and what Alyssa was really trying to do, was to increase the reliability of using Tenebrael. Because the angel’s power truly was a thing to be used. But unless it could be relied upon to have predictable effects, it was… dangerous to use.

Using her pistol as a medium for delivering a laser beam seemed fairly reliable even with varying words. Creating a portal? Alyssa gave it fifty-fifty odds whether or not anything at all would happen.

In a desperate situation, a fifty percent chance of escaping was unacceptable.

Sighing, Alyssa looked up from the spell cards. She quickly glanced around the room, somewhat hoping that Tenebrael would show up. If this place truly was cut off from the rest of creation—as Iosefael had phrased it—then there really shouldn’t be any reason why Tenebrael couldn’t also show up. But it had been a full hour at this point. No sign of the angel.

Alyssa wasn’t sure if she was supposed to try portaling back to the real world or how she might know whether or not it was safe to travel back. She didn’t really want to go back only to find the Astral Authority still swarming around looking for her. Or to, as Fela had mentioned, have the return portal alert them to her presence and start the whole issue all over again. Hence her hesitance to do much without something of a sign from Tenebrael.

Not that she really minded a moment of modern convenience. Much like her first trip to Earth to rescue Chris, the refrigerator was full of food. Fast food. Slow food. Fancy food and cheap food. She had a hot bowl of instant noodles in front of her alongside a bowl of caviar. Alyssa had never had caviar before. Frankly, she wasn’t sure what the appeal was. Having tried it, she was pretty sure that she would take a bowl of cheap noodles first if offered a choice again.

On the couch next to her, Fela was happily snacking on an oversized stick of beef jerky. The hellhound had been going through the fridge and cupboards like crazy, pulling out one of just about everything. The only things that didn’t interest her were the dishes of pure vegetables or grains. Peanut butter was apparently fine, but a bag of mixed nuts was not.

So really, there was no need to rush back. Although Brakkt might be a little worried. Alyssa had tried sending a Message, but she wasn’t sure if it had gone through. If the cube could block out whatever angels used to detect something that was supposed to be as omni-present as the Throne, it probably also blocked out mundane Messages.

Her phone didn’t seem to work to call Jason, for instance. She had tried asking him to send a Message to Brakkt, but the call wouldn’t connect. It did that same jamming-signal thing that it had done when Adrael had blocked its use.

Without the ability to contact anyone, there wasn’t much to do aside from sit about and puzzle out the mysteries of magic.

Alyssa held out her hand. Notably, her fingernails darkened before any words came out of her mouth. In fact, they darkened before she fully decided on what exactly she was going to do. It was clearly anticipating her intent. Which said something mildly disturbing about the intelligence of the connection she shared with Tenebrael. Unless it was Tenebrael herself getting ready to act through Alyssa, but that went counter to Iosefael saying that most of the miracles didn’t directly involve Tenebrael.

As for what she was going to do, something simple would be for the best. Light. It was the simplest spell in terms of mortal-usable spell cards. And it was probably the first thing she had ever done with Tenebrael’s power. It wasn’t particularly useful as an ability inherited from Tenebrael given how prevalent light and enhanced vision spells were. Still, as a testing bed, Alyssa couldn’t think of anything better.

Especially nothing that she wanted to cast while inside a small cube. Transportation might let the Astral Authority come in. Anything destructive might wind up too big and end up turning the small chamber into an incinerator. At worst, overpowered light might leave some spots in her eyes for a time.

At first, Alyssa tried to simply use intent to bring forth some miraculous light. Whatever intelligence was in her connection with Tenebrael could clearly sense her desire to create a miracle. So why not try to get it to work for her? If she could silently create miracles the same way that she could cast spells, then she wouldn’t need to bother with any prayer at all.

But after ten minutes of trying, she wasn’t getting any results at all. It didn’t matter how she framed it in her mind or how she imagined a ball of light appearing on her hand. Her fingernails stayed black, but no mystic circles ever popped up. Perhaps she would try more later on, or after she got used to manifesting a miracle repeatedly in the regular way. Starting with the hardest task was probably not the wisest choice.

Obviously, the wisest choice would have been to figure all this out weeks ago. But when she had first made the connection with Tenebrael up until meeting with Iosefael, she hadn’t thought that she would get embroiled in a war with divine entities. Since meeting with Iosefael, or perhaps since encountering her first member of the Astral Authority, using and practicing with the connection was too dangerous.

And maybe the even wiser choice would simply be to cut her connection with Tenebrael. The Astral Authority would no longer be interested in her. She wouldn’t be able to manifest miracles, but she wasn’t really able to without drawing their attention anyway. After Tenebrael booted them off her world, she could always reconnect.

But for now, while inside Tenebrael’s isolation chamber and separated from the Astral Authority, she might as well continue trying to make something happen.

“Light,” she tried. It was still starting with the harder end, but it also felt like the next step up from trying pure intent.

Except for Fela looking over with one of her eyebrows raised, nothing happened.

“Light,” Alyssa said again, trying to not feel self-conscious about shouting a random word. “Light.”

“What are you doing?”

“Trying… anything, I guess. Light,” she said again. “Light.”

“Is anything supposed to be nothing?”

Alyssa sighed, keeping her eyes focused on her hand. “No. It’s supposed to make light.”

“I’ve seen you make light before. With human magic, you didn’t say anything at all. With that other magic you use, you gave a big speech.”

“I’m trying to cut down on the speeches. But… Light!” Alyssa let out another long sigh when her exclamation failed to produce any results. “But my brother once asked me if he ever told me the definition of insanity. It’s doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result. Actually, it wasn’t just once that he said that. It was like his favorite phrase for a few weeks several years ago. Then he forgot about it, I guess.”

“Huh…” Fela mumbled, gnawing on the jerky.

“Let there be light,” Alyssa tried, testing out what might be the most famous religious phrase back on Earth. This time, she actually felt something. Nothing visible, but something deep within. It felt a lot like the times when she manifested a miracle successfully. Emboldened by the feeling, Alyssa tried the same phrase another three times. Each attempt produced the same result.

So, in fitting with her brother’s odd advice, she varied up the phrase, injecting some of her own personal knowledge of how reality functioned into her words.

“Let the glory of the Throne shine forth.”

Nothing. Not even the mildest of sensations. It was worse than her first attempt, even.

“The Throne? What’s that?”

“I… really don’t know, I guess. The seat of whoever was supposed to rule over the angels, but I guess it’s been empty for some time.”

“It’s more than just a seat,” a faintly melodic voice broke into the conversation.

Turning, Alyssa had to frown. Tenebrael sat on the side of the bed, legs crossed, with feathers falling all around her. She looked prim and perfect as usual. A stark contrast to the true demon earlier, who definitely looked like she had taken some damage in her fight against the Astral Authority.

At Owlcroft, the demon had mentioned that she and her forces wouldn’t be able to fight them off for as long as Tenebrael needed. Seeing the angel now reminded Alyssa of that little conversation, making her wonder just how long Tenebrael did need…

And whether or not she had time for even a brief conversation at the moment.

“The Throne is reality. Everything you’ve seen, touched, smelled, felt. All of that is the Throne. I don’t know where it came from, who built it, if someone built it, how it exists, when it began its existence, or how it could have formed when it literally is everything—a sort of chicken and egg scenario—but I do know that its previous occupant used it to shape everything, from us angels to the universe as you know it.”

“And what happened to them?”

Fela blinked, cutting off the fire from her eyes for just a moment. “What? Oh… she’s here, isn’t she. I’ll just eat more then…”

Alyssa turned to Fela with a frown before directing that frown at Tenebrael. “Is there really no way for you to show yourself to others? I feel bad leaving everyone out of our conversations.”

“It’s against the rules. Besides, I’m not here for long. Just to take you back to Nod.”

“Are there even rules here? I thought this place was cut off from the Throne. Which calls into question how it exists in the first place if the Throne is everything.”

“My greatest genius. Using a sliver of what power I can call upon to shape just a tiny bit of reality to the point where it effectively doesn’t actually exist. Remember that mathematics lesson I tried to show you once upon a time?”

“Yeah?”

“That was actually the equation for this place. Or a part of it, anyway.”

“So… far beyond my ability to comprehend. I see.”

“As for what happened to the Throne’s occupant… well, that’s the big mystery that’s been plaguing angels for years now, isn’t it? Maybe they died of old age. Maybe they just got bored and decided to up and leave. Maybe they found some new Throne-like toy to go play with.” Tenebrael shrugged her shoulders. “I don’t particularly care which. It doesn’t matter to me. All that matters is that it is empty.”

“You intend to take it over?”

“If it was so easy to walk up to and sit upon, I would have done so a long time ago. Brick walls though they are at the moment, the Seraphim will undoubtedly vanquish any who approach.”

“Will they? Because you used to be concerned that Archangels would go running to the Seraphim at first sign of anything amiss on your world. And that obviously wasn’t the case. Or rather, didn’t Kenziel mention something about Adrael constantly petitioning for the Seraphim to act? Your world doesn’t seem to be destroyed, so…”

That concern might not be that big a concern anymore. I will admit that I had been unaware of Adrael’s presence for who knows how long a time. But the Throne is different. All but about three of the Seraphim stand around it in an endless vigil in the Endless Expanse. I can’t say that any angel has tried to sit on the Throne, but a few have tried to get close. They are… no longer with us. The Seraphim cut them down without hesitation.”

“Hmm… Do you think you’ll ever be able to challenge them? I mean, that is your goal, right? Take over the Throne?” Tenebrael hadn’t ever expressly stated such an intent, but it seemed fairly obvious to Alyssa. There was a powerful artifact just sitting around, unused. Ripe for the taking. One that might be able to help destroy whatever plan involved those black books of death—which Tenebrael had stated as one of her primary goals.

But Tenebrael didn’t answer. She stared down at nothing in particular, seemingly giving the question serious thought. But eventually, she did look back up. “Perhaps someday. Perhaps. However, that is a long time off. Until I can simply wave my hand and destroy the entirety of the Astral Authority, what hope do I have against even a single Seraphim? They’re gnats in comparison, but they’re forcing me to hide.”

“Isn’t that what you’re working on right now? You said a month, right? How close are you? And… can the demons hold out that long?”

“Oh no,” Tenebrael said with a chuckle. She waved her hand like an old lady denying that anything special was going on. “Have you seen that demon lately? That’s what I would look like if I actually tried to fight them. And she had a whole army backing her up, so I would probably wind up far worse off. No, what I am doing is simply trying to block their ability to spring up those portals all over the place. That should buy me the freedom to go back to normal… mostly. One or a few might still squeeze through to this world, but I can handle a few. I just won’t have to worry about an avalanche of those little gnats burying me so deep that I would never see the light of day again. And… hopefully… I shouldn’t have to worry about any Cardinal Virtues either. They won’t be able to squeeze through like the little ones.”

So they were still going to be around looking for Tenebrael, just in lesser numbers? That sounded irritating for Alyssa in particular.

Perhaps she should just end the connection. It helped out a lot in situations involving the Astral Authority, but she only got in those situations because of the connection.

Maybe after Tenebrael finished, she could reactivate it, but for now, it was probably best to disconnect. Especially with how hard they came after her following that demon showing up.

Alyssa opened her mouth, but hesitated, not sure if she should mention it to the angel or not. Would Tenebrael be offended? Would she recommend against it?

Tenebrael stood, rising to her feet from the bed with a slight stretch. “Well, I think I have had enough of a break for today. Got to get back to work. And we need to drop you off back in the regular world. Don’t worry, the Astral Authority has been recalled back to the pit. They won’t be around when we put you back.”

“They’ve been getting better and better at detecting me using your magic. Will there come a time when just walking around without doing anything will be enough to draw them? Should I… end our connection? If only temporarily.”

After drawing in a short breath and looking over Alyssa with her glowing white eyes, Tenebrael could only shrug once again. “If you feel it is necessary. I’m not going to stop you. Having had the connection active for so long will probably help reconnect at a later date without nearly so much hassle as you’ve gone through in the past.”

“So no side effects or anything?”

“Not on my end.”

“Ah,” Alyssa said, slumping slightly. “So helpful…”

“I’m sorry. I just don’t have much experience with this kind of thing. It isn’t that common to begin with, but I don’t remember any stories of others in roughly your position having anything bad happen to them after their miracle work was done with.”

“Then I’ll end it now. Just in case the Astral Authority notice on returning to Nod. I’d rather not be swarmed immediately.”

“I don’t think they would notice, but I suppose I don’t know for certain.”

Alyssa closed her eyes anyway, concentrating for a moment. She had ended a connection between herself and Tenebrael once before, so it wasn’t a wholly new experience. It didn’t require all the effort and trouble of going to that floaty place like starting the connection took. After just a few moments of thought, Alyssa felt it.

Like she had been sitting in front of a warm campfire that got snuffed out. A faint chill set in. Nothing too uncomfortable. It was just that the radiance of Tenebrael had vanished.

A light went out.


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034.005

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Breath of Air

Distractions


The demon swung her scythe directly toward Alyssa.

Alyssa jumped. She flung herself through the air, slamming into a shocked Fela with all her weight. They hit the ground hard. Fela had it worse with Alyssa landing on top of her, but the fluffy hellhound was strong. She wouldn’t be hurt by a little tackle.

That scythe would have hurt a whole lot more.

Rolling off Fela away from the demon, Alyssa sprang to her feet with a Spectral Chains already forming at her fingertips.

But the spell died off as she took in the situation.

The true demon wasn’t even looking in her direction. Not anymore. Her scythe was down at her opposite side, posed as if she had just finished her swing.

In front of the true demon, right behind where Alyssa had been standing before tackling Fela, the silver-filigree form of a Patience stood with its spear poised to strike. Only it wasn’t striking. It wasn’t moving at all. Its white wings slowly drooped downward, losing any tension in them.

The demon lifted her scythe once again. Not the quick flash of movement that she had made earlier. She simply nudged it toward the Patience, poking it lightly in the chest of its doll-like form.

Its body rocked backward, but its head came off its shoulders at the neck, rolling forward to the demon’s feet. As the body hit the ground with a thud at Alyssa’s side, the demon brought her heel down on its porcelain mask, shattering it into pieces.

Alyssa backed up, throwing a quick glance around to make sure there wasn’t a second member of the Astral Authority around. There wasn’t, not as far as she could tell. Just the decapitated Patience, the deceased infected, the true demon, and Fela—who was back on her feet and backing away from the Patience along with Alyssa.

“It’s that thing again, isn’t it?” Fela said. “The one that collects their souls? I can smell it.”

“Can’t see it?”

“There was a brief haze right when it attacked, but… you got in the way.”

“Sorry. But yeah. The true demon is here, standing in the larger pentagram.” As Alyssa spoke, the demon swung her scythe once again. Although she was well out of reach, Alyssa still jumped a few steps back. But the demon still wasn’t aiming at her. Rather, the chipped blade crossed right through the corpse of the infected. It slid through with far less effort than when Alyssa used her spectral scythe to remove souls. Rather than cling to the tip of the chipped scythe, the pentagram opened up underneath the body, drawing the soul directly through.

Only when the new pentagram faded from the burning embers to a regular etching in the dirt did the demon finally look directly at Alyssa. She raised her hand in a jovial wave, but unlike every other time the demon had appeared and waved, there was a certain amount of exhaustion to her movements. It was a subtle thing. If asked, Alyssa wouldn’t be able to pinpoint exactly what about the wave made it look tired. Maybe it was the slight sigh as the demon lifted her arm or maybe it was the angle of the wave.

The wave got cut off early as a golden portal opened up just behind the demon. A kick of the demon’s boot got the heavy scythe moving even with the demon’s other hand in the air. It tore through the golden border of the portal, rending space itself. Whatever was coming through didn’t make it before the starry field behind the golden border collapsed into a tiny point.

Alyssa had to shield her eyes from the momentary flash of light.

This time, the demon let out an actual sigh before shooting a mild glare at Alyssa.

It was enough to make her almost feel sorry for the demon. Maybe she would even consider apologizing if the demon wasn’t literally an enemy of all living humans. Instead, Alyssa shot the glare right back. “You should leave before you draw more here.” Draw more to me, more like. Just because the Astral Authority was focused on the demon at the moment didn’t mean that they wouldn’t take a swipe at her if the opportunity presented itself.

In fact, if a Kindness spotted her, they might just remember their original purpose in coming to this world. Just the lower level Patiences and grunts were annoying and dangerous, but there were still three other Cardinal Virtues. Assuming they hadn’t joined with the Justice in attacking the pit. Even if they had, Iosefael hadn’t actually said that there was only one of each type of the Virtues. There could be a dozen Justices out there for all Alyssa knew.

The thought had her shuddering. But her thoughts weren’t so distracting that she missed the casual shrug of the demon’s shoulders, followed by some one-handed gesticulating. There were no words accompanying the gesticulation.

“Oh, so we’re back to charades again,” Alyssa said, irritated. It couldn’t be coincidence that the demon had popped up just as Alyssa arrived at the body. It had to have been waiting just for her. That meant that she had something to say. But if that something involved sitting around playing twenty questions while the Astral Authority harassed them, the demon could go screw herself. “I know you can speak. So either speak or leave. Or rather, just leave. Unless you’re here to tell me that you are nearing victory over the Astral Authority and Tenebrael doesn’t have to worry anymore.” Judging by the Astral Authority popping up here, that was probably not what was happening.

Sure enough, the demon shook her head. The little scraps of hair poking out at all angles made her look rather like a sea urchin as the motion made it stand on end.

“I thought not,” Alyssa said, backing away. “Then we’ve nothing to talk about. You can go back to your fight. Fela, we should get out of here.”

“But…” The hellhound’s eyes drifted toward the circles on the ground. Leaving without destroying them went against practically everything she had learned since starting her job as a professional demon hunter in Lyria.

Two circles shouldn’t be a big issue. Not for a few minutes, at least. If they walked away until the demon disappeared, returning and quickly upheaving the land enough to destroy the pentagrams would be a simple matter. So long as the demon was around, Alyssa wasn’t willing to get closer. From the brief fight in Lyria between the demon and a Patience, Alyssa knew that she could leave that pentagram. But that was the only time that she had actually seen it happen. Every other time the demon appeared, she preferred to stay well within its boundaries with only the scythe leaving.

So Alyssa grabbed hold of Fela’s arm and started pulling.

They made it three steps before the golden light of a portal bathed the small grove.

A massive portal opened to the true demon’s side. One of the largest Alyssa had seen. A lion-like forearm, as big as a small car, slammed into the ground. A second paw quickly followed.

Unlike the previous times, the demon did not attack. She didn’t swipe at the portal to collapse it. Neither did she strike the approaching Equanimity. Instead, she winked at Alyssa—or blinked, it was always hard to tell with only one eye visible—and waved. Flames in the pentagram flared, obscuring Alyssa’s vision of the demon.

The Equanimity’s claws cut straight through the pillar of fire without resistance.

The demon was gone. Vanished back to the pit or wherever it came from.

But the Equanimity was still emerging from the portal. The majority of its body matched with its lion-like paws. A pair of wings sprouted off mid-back, while the rest of it was a giant chimera with a scorpion’s tail, but no head. Its snake-like neck ended abruptly with yet another of those porcelain masks sitting on the stump. That neck whipped around, staring at the embers still burning in the pentagram where the demon had stood only moments ago. It snapped to the corpse of the infected.

While it moved and inspected, it was silent. Utterly silent. A creature like that, if it weren’t some fake-angel, would likely be making some noise. Maybe even a roar of frustration or repeated sniffs as it tried to locate its missing prey. But it just swooped around, observing.

Alyssa tried to remain as still as possible, as silent as possible. She didn’t even cast a spell for fear that the shimmering field of fractal glass might alert it to her presence. Aside from the occasional swipes while fleeing from the Astral Authority, she had never actually seen an Equanimity in action before. She didn’t know how fast they could move or how far the reach on that long scorpion’s tail was. But she had a sinking feeling that she was well within range.

At her side, Fela was being just as wary. Since the Astral Authority could be seen by mortals, Fela had to be well aware of the threat they were standing in front of.

Please just go chase after the demon, Alyssa thought, watching its head as it moved back to inspect the pentagram where the demon vanished.

But the moment the thought crossed her mind, the Equanimity reared on its hind legs.

Alyssa, still grabbing hold of Fela’s arm, cast a quick Shorten Distance. She practically shoved Fela thirty feet away, clearing the area just as the Equanimity crashed back down. One of its paws landed on the corpse. Blood and bone splattered across the grove.

Alyssa didn’t stop to watch what happened next. She gave Fela a shove.

“Run!” Alyssa shouted.

“I’m not leaving you!”

“I’ll be fine. I can use Tenebrael’s magic, but you…”

“If you do, won’t more come?”

A risk, but…

After casting another Shorten Distance to get a lead, Alyssa took off in her own sprint. Fela kept up at her side, but the hellhound could definitely go much faster than she could. The stupid mutt was keeping pace just to stick with Alyssa.

It had definitely taken notice of their presence. Trees were falling left and right, sending sharp cracks through the forest as the trunks broke with more lighter cracks from branches breaking. Leaves cushioned their falling, making the inevitable landing far less noisy, but no less terrifying to look at.

All the while, the actual Equanimity remained silent as it chased them.

The scorpion tail lanced between trees, slamming into the earth near Alyssa. One step slower would have seen her skewered.

“Just go!” Alyssa shouted, breaking off from Fela in the hopes that it was chasing her.

Though a few steps delayed, Fela turned, angling herself to keep in line with Alyssa. Though she did accelerate until she was a few steps ahead.

“Pathetic wretches dare to abandon their allies, leaving them to fight the demons while they chase after unrelated prey? Tenebrael! Let us show this deserter what happens to those who dare to face us.” Alyssa pulled her pistol out of its holster, stopped running, turned, and fired.

A black beam of blinding light lanced between the felled trees, dodging one falling, and slammed straight into the chest of the Equanimity. Alyssa pulled the trigger three more times. Three more black beams fired out.

Alyssa didn’t stop there. The Equanimity was larger than anything she had fired at before. And it wasn’t stopping even with four gaping holes in its chest. She pulled the trigger again and again and again. Its scorpion tail was reared back for another stab. Alyssa didn’t flinch. She lifted her aim…

And got yanked to the side as Fela grabbed her around the waist.

“What are you doing?” Alyssa shouted as Fela picked her right up and started carrying her off.

“What am I doing? What are you doing? Are you trying to get yourself killed?”

“I’m trying to win!”

“Win? Did you even look up?”

Up? Fela had shifted her into something resembling a fireman’s carry, so it took a bit of craning of her neck to look to the sky.

A draconic Diligence had its mask split vertically in two, gathering golden light behind that mask in preparation to fire. Two Patiences flanked it on either side.

“Teleporting!” Alyssa shouted an instant before she Shortened Distance.

Even with the warning, Fela still stumbled, almost sending them both to the ground.

But they were clear from the beam of light that slammed into the forest behind them.

That bitch, Alyssa thought to herself. The demon clearly used them to get a bit of a reprieve. Even if it wasn’t enough to draw the attention of a Justice, it was enough to get some of the lower level things off her back for a short time.

As Fela carried her away, Alyssa cast an Empty Vessel spell. However, even as the shards of glass formed up around the two of them, the Astral Authority didn’t stop chasing. It wasn’t the same way that they had followed the same direction Alyssa was heading in a vague sense like they had done for a time in Lyria and while leaving Illuna. Even after Fela changed directions, the nearest Kindness followed her with its porcelain mask.

Kasita had noted that the Astral Authority was getting better at locating uses of Tenebrael’s magic before arriving at Owlcroft. But now, it seemed that the Astral Authority had locked onto her even despite using the cloaking magic.

“Alright. That’s bad,” Alyssa muttered, giving herself a sardonic chuckle. “Put me down. Then run away. They’ll chase me. I… I’ll get away somehow.”

“Is this about Izsha?” Fela managed to shout even as she bolted over a large boulder. The ride on her back wasn’t nearly as smooth as the ride on a draken’s back.

The landing briefly knocked the air out of Alyssa’s lungs, keeping her from responding.

It did nothing to stop Fela from talking. “I’m not going to leave you just because you’re scared I might get hurt. I like you. You saved me, you’ve been a good friend. I’m not going to abandon you because Izsha got hurt.”

“That— Telep—” was as far as Alyssa got before she had to Shorten Distance again, keeping them out of range from another Diligence blast. “You stupid mutt. We… We need intervention. Our enemies cannot be outrun. Though they aren’t angels, their stamina is surely endless. Even if it isn’t, there are uncountable reserves just waiting for the signal to enter into the fray. Throne only knows why they haven’t fallen upon us like an ocean wave.” Fela was quick, but with her being weighed down with a person over her shoulders, she wasn’t anywhere near the speed of Izsha. The Astral Authority was closing in and only repeated Shorten Distances were keeping them at bay.

And Alyssa’s supply of that particular spell was going to run out sooner rather than later.

The rest of her spells weren’t going to do much good. The Astral Authority lacked souls. Using a scythe designed to remove the soul probably wouldn’t have much of an effect. A fireball might—those people in Illuna had managed to kill an Astral Authority thing using mundane magic and even mundaner weapons—but those were limited as well. She had an Annihilator. Several, in fact. But using them without knowing what was behind her target was just asking to wipe out small towns. Besides that, there were Astral Authority fake-angels flying about everywhere now, including in front of them.

Alyssa, pistol still in hand, fired ahead of them. A black beam struck a Patience even without her saying anything.

Fela ran right over its falling body without the slightest hesitation.

“Intervention can take many forms,” Alyssa continued. “From felling our foes to immobilizing them long enough to escape their sight. Even a quick escape might work. Whatever form intervention takes, Tenebrael! Get us the hell out of here!”

When nothing immediately happened as Alyssa shouted, a thought crossed her mind. Have I been relying on her too much? There was a time when Alyssa had wanted to avoid relying on Tenebrael for anything at all. That had lasted right up until Tenebrael disappeared. And then… after getting the connection between them active at all times, she had been using and abusing it for every situation. She had come to expect miracles to manifest whenever she wanted. Whenever she was in trouble. To gain deliverance from any situation that troubled her.

Statistically speaking, even assuming that every word of every religious text on Earth was true, she had likely run through more miracles in the last month than any miracle-worker had in their entire lifetimes. If she continued at this pace, by six more months, she might beat out every miracle-worker put together.

Granted, most of them probably didn’t have regular conversations with angels, but the point still stood.

Even as a shimmering blue portal opened in front of Fela—and as Fela charged in less because she wanted to and more because she couldn’t stop in time—Alyssa had to wonder if she shouldn’t find alternate ways of solving her own problems.

The other side of the portal collapsed with a rush, barely not shearing off the ends of Alyssa’s hair with how quickly it closed.

“Where are we?” Fela said. Now that she wasn’t rushing through the forest, Alyssa could feel her breathing. Her chest heaved and shrank every second as she sucked in fresh air. Both her arms trembled slightly and her stance wasn’t all that steady. “Your house?” she continued between breaths. “But the walls are all wrong.”

Alyssa, deciding to get off the hellhound before the poor girl collapsed in exhaustion, landed on smooth black tile. There wasn’t much to look around at. The chamber was small. Ten feet high, ten feet wide, ten feet long. The entirety of the interior was lined with that same black tile material. The same stuff that Tenebrael’s statue and temple were made from. It was a familiar location.

“Tenebrael’s isolation box. She sticks angels here for a time when she doesn’t want them doing anything because… it cuts off their connection to the Throne. Which is probably why we are here. The Astral Authority must not be able to detect us while we’re inside.”

“Won’t they notice as soon as we leave? If they’re sensing the portals and other things you do…”

“Maybe. Tenebrael might have a plan for that,” Alyssa said, walking forward. Unlike last time, when the room had been a featureless empty cube, it was now lightly furnished. And the furnishings were modern. There was a long couch, a queen-sized bed, a shelf full of books, even some drapes over a cartoonish drawing of a window on one of the walls. A small area had been partitioned off by a counter. Behind it was a stove, a microwave, and a fridge.

“For now,” Alyssa said, “I think we’re meant to stay here. Even if we weren’t, I don’t think it would be a wise idea to return before the Astral Authority has had a chance to calm down some.”

Fela stayed silent for a long moment, staring at Alyssa all the while. Eventually, she started to get a better look around the room. Her eyes stopped at the miniature kitchen. “Hey, if this is like your house, is it going to have some of that food I ate that one time?”


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034.004

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Breath of Air

Spring Cleaning


“How you doing today, Izsha?”

The old stables were quiet today. Brakkt had taken the other draken out for some exercise and a bit of hunting. Only the tiger-striped Musca and the still-comatose Izsha were around. The former had been… unexpectedly protective, not wanting to leave Izsha for much. Not even for a good hunt. It was sweet. At least, Alyssa thought so. Brakkt thought Musca was sick.

“Irulon is up and at ‘em. She’s still trying to translate her vision to proper words, but assures me that you are her very next priority. Even above herself.” If only because she thought Izsha’s issue was relatively easily solved in comparison to her own entanglement with the dragon.

Alyssa had taken up the task of keeping the stables clean and tidy. Brakkt had offered, but Alyssa felt like she needed to be doing something. With Irulon doing the magic side of things, Alyssa had to find her own way to help out. Physical labor looked good on her.

It wasn’t the most pleasant work to do, but it was work that needed to be done. Izsha’s body was still alive. At risk of using an analogy as bad as Tenebrael’s video game one, Alyssa saw the situation kind of like a car idling. There was no driver, but the engine was still running. To keep it running, it needed fuel. And, since it was burning fuel, there was obviously going to be some exhaust.

Thankfully, it wasn’t all physical labor. Magic helped out quite a bit. It wasn’t quite waving a hand and vanishing everything unwanted into thin air, but having what was effectively a power washer at her fingertips was nice. It wasn’t a real power washer. Not nearly strong enough. But that meant that washing down Izsha with it wasn’t going to cause any abrasions or injuries. Especially not with draken scales acting as armor.

Closing her eyes for a moment, Alyssa did one of her periodic checkups on Izsha’s soul. There weren’t any changes. Which was probably a good thing. It would obviously be better if Izsha was showing signs of recovery. Izsha getting resynchronized with itself on its own would have taken some burden off Irulon’s back. However, if there was change, there was the possibility that Alyssa wouldn’t recognize whether it was a positive change or a negative one. So long as the situation remained stable, she wouldn’t have to extrapolate information from her inexperienced sense.

“You’re looking good soul-wise,” Alyssa said in a hopefully not obviously-false chipper voice. She noted that there was some interaction between them, especially as she spoke. That interaction had been increasing a bit over the past few days. The very first day that Izsha had spent trapped inside its body, there had been hardly any interaction at all. Now, there was only a slightly below average level of soul-sharing.

So maybe there was a change after all. She wasn’t quite sure what that change meant, whether it was good or bad. But it was probably good given that other people shared souls. More importantly, Alyssa took it as confirmation that Izsha was hearing and understanding the world outside its body. If Alyssa ever found herself trapped like that, unable to move or even act, she would definitely want someone coming by on the regular, talking to her. Alone time was nice on occasion. Forced isolation wasn’t.

“There weren’t any fish in the market today, unfortunately. After asking around, it seems that the local river that supplies much of the city with its water needs doesn’t have year-round fishing. Only during specific migratory times. There is always a little, but it’s rare and expensive. So I’ve got a wrapping of mutton instead.”

For most of Alyssa’s time in the stables, Musca just sat off in the corner, staring or even sleeping. The moment Alyssa mentioned meat, Musca’s long neck stretched out as it perked its head up.

“Yes. I have some for you too,” Alyssa said with faux exasperation in her tone. “You skipped out on going with Brakkt just because you knew I was coming with an easy meal, didn’t you?”

Musca gave a low clicking trill from the back of its throat.

“Oh don’t worry. I’m not going to tell Brakkt how lazy you’re getting. It’s the least I can do for you spending time with Izsha anyway.”

Heading over to her bag in the corner of the room, Alyssa pulled out two fairly large hunks of meat, wrapped in some waxy brownish paper. She honestly wasn’t sure that it was enough meat for the full-sized draken. At least not for a full meal. But that didn’t stop Musca from jumping up, wagging her tail back and forth like a puppy begging for food.

Feeding Musca was easy. Just give the meat a twist, a flick of the wrist, and the dinosaur chomped it right out of the air. Content with how much it got, Musca returned to lying down, only masticating it a tiny bit before swallowing it mostly intact.

Izsha, on the other hand, was a bit more of a delicate matter. In the modern world, comatose patients received nutrients through intravenous drips or feeding tubes. As far as Alyssa could tell, no one had ever invented such things here. From the information she had gathered from Irulon, people who fell unconscious and didn’t wake… generally didn’t wake ever. Same with paralysis.

But Alyssa had a process. One that might save other people who had fallen into more usual comatose states once she spread knowledge of it a bit. There was a spell simply titled Grind. It was effectively a magical mortar and pestle. Applying the spell to a slab of meat would result in something akin to ground beef. Adding a bit of water to the mixture with a second application of the spell produced a fairly unappetizing meat slurry. The reddish-brown liquid was a bit thicker than water, but not so thick that a modified Draw Water spell—provided by Irulon after Alyssa described what she wanted to do—couldn’t affect it all. Using Draw Water, Alyssa basically just shoved it right down Izsha’s throat.

It was a bit of a tricky process. In a natural, passive state, the lower esophageal sphincter was closed. And at the upper end, the throat opened to the lungs to allow for breathing. The first time Alyssa tried this feeding technique, she was pretty sure that she had just about drowned Izsha in meat slurry water. Which, in her opinion, would have been a terrible way to go. Go again, in Izsha’s case. It took a bit of practice to guide the slurry through the esophagus correctly.

The lack of involuntary coughing was a good sign.

At the end of it all, the stables were clean, the draken fed, and Izsha got a bit of interaction. It took a few hours, but it was time well spent in Alyssa’s opinion.

“I’m going to head back to the city now. I’ll be back later in the evening, so don’t worry. There’s just… a lot going on. Always lots going on,” she added with a slight sigh. “I thought Brakkt said that he would be back by now, but… Well, I doubt anything bad happened to him with him being him and the other draken with him, but I might need to check in on him as well as everyone else.” Alyssa hesitated in leaving. She didn’t like to leave Izsha alone. Musca was around, true, but since holding up inside the stables, either Alyssa or Brakkt had always been present.

“Message. Brakkt,” Alyssa said as she pulled out and burned a spell card. “You’re a bit late, so I wanted to make sure that nothing has gone wrong.” While sending the message, she cracked open the worn-down door to the stables and peeked outside. The city wasn’t on fire, though the sky was. But the sky being on fire had become a normality of life. For the time being, anyway. There weren’t any members of the Astral Authority flying through the air. Closing her eyes, she saw droves of demonic souls, but they were off in the distance, still battling at Owlcroft. She couldn’t spot any in the city itself. So if something was holding him up, it probably wasn’t anything big. “Message me back when you get a chance.”

He probably was just enjoying being out of the stables, hunting with the draken. It made Alyssa feel a bit awkward, like she was some kind of nagging mother, but one couldn’t be too careful in times like this. Every single day, she woke up expecting the fight between demons and the Astral Authority to spill over into the city. Sometimes, at night, she was certain that she could hear thunderous crashes and blasts of wind that might have come from the Justice swinging its massive sword around. It might just be her imagination. Owlcroft was several days away even on draken. Then again, real thunder could travel for miles, so it was entirely possible that her mind was not playing tricks on her.

But Brakkt wouldn’t have gone off in that direction anyway. So the city would get caught up in any trouble well before he would.

No. He was definitely just out hunting.

Nodding to herself, Alyssa turned back to Izsha and Musca. “Alright,” she said. “I can stick around for a bit longer. Maybe I can—”

~No problem on my end. I just lost track of the time. We are already heading back. Sorry for worrying you.~

“Ah.” The pressure on Alyssa’s mind receded with the end of the Message. “Brakkt is safe,” she said, smiling to herself. “He’ll be back very soon.” Deciding that she might as well wait around for him, Alyssa took a seat on the large cot he had been using as a bed for the past week and a half. It was a fairly uncomfortable thing. Being suspended on some criss-crossing beams of wood helped keep him off the ground, but whatever wool or hide it had been made from was scratchy and itchy. The large blanket he used was a fair bit more comfortable. Hopefully he wrapped that completely around his body when sleeping on it.

True to his word, Brakkt returned in only about twenty minutes. Alyssa occupied the time just telling Izsha and Musca stories. Fairly nonsensical stories. Nursery rhymes and such. Really, just things to occupy the time and give Izsha something to listen to that wasn’t awkward silence. Given that she had been doing this for nearly two weeks, she was running out of things to talk about. Pretty soon, she was going to have to start pulling up The Adventures of Tom Sawyer on her phone and just reading from that while cleaning, feeding, and keeping Izsha company.

And she wasn’t even sure that Izsha would be interested in some human literature from a world away. Maybe she could find a novelization of Godzilla stories instead.

Or maybe a Land Before Time novelization would be for the best.

For now, her rendition of This is the House that Jack Built came to a close.

Despite not having much resemblance to human expressions, Alyssa was positive that Musca looked relieved with the interruption.

Ignoring the draken, both Musca and the others who were walking in with a bit of blood still around their chops, Alyssa walked up to Brakkt. “Successful trip?”

“You could say that. Got them all happy, exercised, and fed. And…” Brakkt wasn’t wearing his armor today, though he had brought it with him. Instead, he had a well-worn tunic and baggy pants. As he trailed off, he hiked up the sleeve of his tunic, showing off his arm.

An emerald green snake was coiled around his forearm from his elbow to his wrist. Its head rested on his hand, right between his thumb and index finger. Yellow eyes with a narrow slit in the middle stared up at Alyssa for just a moment before it tried slithering its body further up Brakkt’s arm to where the sleeve was still down.

Brakkt was just smiling, moving his other hand to brush it back down to his wrist.

“A snake.”

“A malachite viper. I didn’t know they lived in this region.”

“Vipers are venomous.”

“True. Malachite vipers are theorized to come from gorgon locks. It tends to use its venom defensively, turning aggressors into glistening sculptures that it can then derive sustenance from. Wouldn’t want to be scratched by this little guy’s teeth. It might be the last thing you do… Unless…” His eyes flicked over to Izsha, smile slipping slightly.

“No change,” Alyssa said, glancing back. “Irulon estimates that she’ll get to preliminary spell creation in two days. It might still be a few weeks after that before she produces anything truly usable. I’ve just been keeping both Izsha and Musca company, for the most part. It’s about all I can do at the moment.”

“I’m sure they appreciate it.”

Musca let out an irritated clicking noise from the back of its throat, prompting a small chuckle from Brakkt.

The chuckle died off as a more serious expression crossed his face. “While out, we did find an infected meandering about the woods.”

“You were east of the city? Right?” The direct opposite direction from Owlcroft. Closer to Lyria than the pit, though only marginally. At Brakkt’s nod of affirmation, Alyssa scowled. “I don’t suppose you noticed which direction it was moving?”

“Hard to say exactly, but more or less toward the city.”

“Or toward Owlcroft?”

Brakkt just shrugged his shoulders.

“When you killed it, did the pentagrams appear?”

“That was a part of the reason I was delayed in returning. After twenty minutes, nothing happened. We eventually decided to continue with our outing, but we checked back on it again on our way back. Nothing changed.”

“That probably means the true demon is too busy fighting the Astral Authority to take a break and collect the soul…” Which meant that there could be tons of infected souls just waiting to be reaped across the world. Any that had died in the past weeks. There wasn’t much that Alyssa could do about them, but this one… “I’ll head out if you’ll give me directions. Leaving the body as is would be asking for trouble. Either the true demon will come for its soul and leave pentagrams lying about or someone might stumble across it and wind up somehow infected themselves.”

“Alone?” His eyes shot to Izsha as he clamped his jaw in a grimace. “I—”

“It’s fine. Stay here with Izsha. Fela has been wanting to get out of the city anyway. I think she liked Lyria a whole lot more if only because people were less likely to approach her on the streets.”

“You’ll be alright with just the two of you?”

“Yeah. Neither of us are strangers to demonic infection or activity. And it is already dead. If things turn sour, we’ll run and hide.”

“It was only about twenty minutes out. By draken,” he added, looking around at the few he had taken with him. Dasca and Ensou were flopped over in some of the larger piles of hay and straw. Draken didn’t sweat. They just didn’t have the glands for it. Even still, they looked fairly worn out. Given how Izsha ran for practically a whole day when they fled Illuna, they could probably keep going for quite some time, but Brakkt’s eyes moved past them and on to Musca.

“I’ll walk,” Alyssa quickly said, noticing the direction of his gaze. Maybe she spoke just a little too quickly, but Musca still scared her a little. “I haven’t been doing enough walking since returning anyway.”

“You sure?”

“Yeah.”

“Alright… We followed the eastern road until it split. From there…” Brakkt continued, describing in a fairly precise manner exactly where they had left the body. He suggested that Dasca accompany her to help find it, but Alyssa wasn’t too worried. Fela’s nose would be able to sniff the body out as long as they got close enough. In fact, if it had somehow moved or if the true demon took the soul thus keeping Alyssa from detecting it, Fela might be the only one who could accurately find it.

As soon as Brakkt finished, Alyssa sent a Message to the hellhound.

It was only a few short minutes before Fela bounded into the stables, tail wagging and rearing to go.

Twenty minutes by draken stretched out to a good hour by foot. But it wasn’t a bad hour. Fela complained about human children for a good ten minutes. Then she switched topics to human food and how much she enjoyed both the meat and, surprisingly, the milk of cows. Somehow, that led back to human children and how irritatingly innocent they were when they should really be scared of things with sharp teeth and claws.

They made it to the split in the road in fairly good time. It was just a quick twenty minutes more to get to the spot Brakkt had indicated.

Closing her eyes and looking around, Alyssa quickly spotted the corrupt soul. It wasn’t long before Fela smelled it out as well. Her ramblings groaned to a halt as the flames coming from her eyes intensified.

The corpse was lying in the middle of a small grove. It had only been an hour, but the grass around the body was… discolored. Much like how the land was closer to Owlcroft. There wasn’t that overwhelming sensation of despair or fear, but the sky was still on fire. At Owlcroft, the sky becoming as it was removed all despair from the pit. A similar thing might be blotting such feelings out here.

Keeping a careful eye on her surroundings, Alyssa slowly approached with a scythe in hand.

Three steps away, a flash of burning fire lit up the earth near the body. A pentagram was etched into the ground.

When the flash died down, the true demon stood in its place.

It was the same demon. Alyssa was mostly confident of that. But things had changed. The tight black leather outfit was torn and damaged. The scythe’s tip was missing entirely while the blade had clear dents and dings in it. Black hair poked out from holes in the demon’s hat, giving her a frazzled look. But her eye was just as bright and burning as it had been the last time Alyssa saw the demon.

For a moment, they simply stared at each other. Fela, a few steps back, let out a growl as she got lower to the ground, ready to fight or flee as necessary.

The demon swung her scythe directly toward Alyssa.


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034.003

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Breath of Air

Soul Searching


Alyssa bolted up the stairs of the guild building toward the individual rooms. She practically threw some poor man into the wall as she sprinted upward without so much as a word of apology. Ignoring the indignant shout behind her, she continued to the third floor.

Like many taverns in large cities, the guild had an attached inn. Smaller towns didn’t have anything of the sort. One was expected to either sleep in their own cart or to ask for shelter with one of the local residents. Teneville had a larger inn because it was something of a tourist destination. Taverns that did have inns generally weren’t the nicest places around. Not a lot of people actually traveled, so there wasn’t much need for such places. Spare rooms were, much like Alyssa’s place at Tzheitza’s potion shop, oftentimes repurposed storage or even occasionally personal living spaces. Alyssa didn’t think that dedicated hotel-style inns actually existed.

But if they did, the guild taverns got closest. With their members traveling often as part of quests or jobs, the guild provided lodging in basically every major city. Even some smaller townships that were on well-traveled routes would have a single-room guild outpost. Technically, they weren’t supposed to be open to the general public. But when there were spare rooms around and wealthy merchants—and clients, oftentimes—who didn’t want to stay in old rundown rat-infested buildings, the local guild leaders might decide to rent out some rooms for some extra cash.

Irulon wasn’t a merchant or a client, but who was actually going to turn away royalty?

That she was rich didn’t hurt her chances of renting a few rooms too.

Martin, the local governor—or acting governor, for lack of a better word—had offered her and Brakkt a room in his manor. Irulon had politely declined, stating that she should be near the rest of her party. Brakkt would rather sleep out in a barn with the draken than play politics. Or so Alyssa believed, anyway. He hadn’t actually said that in as many words.

Irulon had been given one of only four rooms on the third floor. One with a good view of the surrounding cityscape. It was one of the nicer rooms. Probably one that they charged high prices for when wealthy merchants wanted to stay. And she had it all to herself. In comparison, Alyssa was with her mother, Fela, and Lumen down on the second floor. Oz, Catal, and Trik were all bunking together as well.

Despite that, Alyssa barged in without even knocking.

Irulon sat on the edge of the bed, hands pressed to her forehead. Her hair was disheveled, looking like she had just woken from a night of constant tossing and turning. The single blanket on the bed supported that theory. Her clothes weren’t neat and tidy either. It looked like she had just thrown on a short black dress without even trying to straighten it out.

At Irulon’s side, Kasita sat on the bed, worried expression on her face as she looked up to Alyssa. Her hand on Irulon’s shoulder tightened slightly before relaxing.

“I came as quick as I could,” Alyssa said, looking between Irulon and Kasita. The latter had sent her a Message saying that Irulon had woken only minutes ago. Alyssa had been eating breakfast down in the guild’s main room. It had been a clipped Message. Just a quick statement saying that Irulon was up. “What happened?”

Irulon didn’t look up. She kept a hand over her eyes like she was trying to blot out the light from the windows. “As you prophesied, I received revelation.”

“Don’t phrase it like that but continue anyway.”

No answer came. Not immediately. Alyssa fully moved into the room, closing the door behind her. She had more than enough time to shoot Kasita a concerned glance and to receive a shrug in return.

“Irulon?” Alyssa said after another few minutes of silence.

“I think I… might be in trouble.”

“Trouble?” Alyssa’s stomach sank as cold ice slid down her back. “Are you… Will you not be able to help Izsha?”

“Izsha?” Irulon said with a low, sardonic chuckle. “I believe I know exactly what is wrong and how to fix it. It won’t be easy. It will require some preparation. But I can set forth a plan to resolve that issue by the end of the month. Probably.”

The ice melted. Just a little. Whatever was bothering Irulon was still around, but Izsha would be fine. Hopefully. A month was a long time to be effectively comatose, but not insurmountable. They could get the body to eat. Maybe even move it around a bit to keep muscles from completely atrophying. It would be some effort, but that was effort Alyssa was perfectly willing to put in. And Brakkt wasn’t going to just leave Izsha either. He would help.

They might not be able to leave Illuna for that time. Maybe even a while after. But that wasn’t too big a worry. It wasn’t Lyria, but she could use a break from the constant attacks and chaos of humanity’s largest city anyway.

As long as the demons and Astral Authority stayed away, that was.

“If you can help Izsha, then…” Alyssa’s eyes narrowed. “What did that— What did Tenebrael tell you? You can probably just ignore it. Whatever she said or did was probably something just to annoy me.”

“It wasn’t anything she said or did. It was what I did.”

Alyssa’s eyes widened before narrowing once again. Slowly, she sat down next to Irulon on the opposite side from Kasita. “In that case, I’m sure she’ll forgive whatever it was.” Or rather, Tenebrael really didn’t care much for mortals in the first place. Unless Irulon had attacked Tenebrael and managed to do some damage, Alyssa doubted there was anything she could have done that would have upset the stupid angel.

“Hey,” Irulon said, looking up. Her eyes were their natural violet. “You can pull my soul out of my body, right?”

“Uh…”

“Or the dragon’s soul? Either one,” Irulon said, looking back down to her lap, “but you would probably rather have the dragon around than me.”

Alyssa blinked. A moment after, her face twisted into a scowl. Her hand raked across Irulon’s face. Not a hard slap, but it made a clapping noise. Hopefully it was enough to snap her back to her senses. “First of all, no. Second of all, no! Lastly, what did that stupid bitch tell you that brought this on?”

Irulon didn’t respond. She dropped her head back into her hands and just shuddered. “Tenebrael didn’t speak to me, so you can quit with that kind of talk,” she said after a long moment. “I’ve learned things. Things that, in retrospect, make taking on the dragon’s soul far less appealing. I’m pretty sure I’m destroying myself. Completely. And the dragon as well. It isn’t just death, but a death of death. It’s… I’m struggling to find the words for it. The information I’ve received wasn’t like a lecture at the Observatorium, it was more like flashes of images and insight.”

“So now you want to be separated?”

“No.”

“No? But you—”

“Not really. I enjoy my companion’s… companionship. To be honest, I can hardly remember what I was like before. I was always intelligent and driven,” Irulon said, straightening her back ever so slightly. “But the dragon has propelled me to new heights. My memory is perfect. I can think so much faster. Looking around, I can observe even minute details of the environment. My hand is far more steady when constructing spell cards. Even riding here on the back of Musca, I passively absorbed its movement and automatically compensated to write steadily.” Her straightened back slumped once again. “I don’t even know what I would be like if that were stripped from me. I don’t want it taken away.

“What I want and what I need are two separate things.”

Alyssa opened her mouth, but no words came out. She didn’t have a clue what to say to that. It must have been what her mother had been feeling just yesterday when she tried to comfort her over Izsha’s… situation. At the time, her mother had pulled her into a hug. That had made her feel better. Irulon really wasn’t the hugging sort, but…

She put an arm around the other girl anyway.

Irulon stiffened. Her entire body went rigid. Kasita shifted her hand to Irulon’s arm, letting Alyssa pull Irulon just a little closer.

“What are you doing?”

“Um…” Alyssa had expected the stiffness. But she had also expected that stiffness to melt away. Irulon wasn’t the type to cry. Not even over something existential. But there should have been something comforting about the situation.

Instead, Irulon was shooting her a violet-eyed glare.

“I just… Uh…”

Kasita leaned forward, looking directly at Irulon. “What does the dragon think about all this?”

Taking the opportunity for what it was, Alyssa quickly disentangled herself from the stubborn princess. Given all of Irulon’s bragging about her mental alacrity with the dragon’s enhancements, it was unlikely that Kasita would have distracted Irulon enough to make her forget. But at least Irulon didn’t say anything as she turned to face the mimic.

“To clarify,” Kasita said. “I meant about your current… partnership? The way things are right now. How does the dragon feel about that? Because I think I would be going insane if I had to sit around in your head all day.”

“Ah. The dragon is absolutely enamored with the situation as it stands.”

“Really?” Kasita said, disbelief obvious in her tone.

“Dragons hibernate for long periods of time and don’t really get to experience the world the way we do. Riding around with me has offered more entertainment than could be experienced in centuries within a draconic body.”

“So you both want to stay the way you are?”

“Want, yes. Need? As I just said—”

“Then fix it.”

Irulon blinked at being interrupted. “What? Fix what?”

“You’re smart. You’ve got the dragon helping you. You’ve even got Tenebrael offering information. So quit moping around and just figure out a way to stick together without ruining your souls or whatever—I’m not going to pretend to understand that stuff, especially not to the one person in the world who probably does understand it. But just… magic up a ritual and fix yourselves.”

“Just fix it?”

“Yeah.”

Irulon stared. Her eyes flicked to their black and white state for a beat of a heart before changing back to violet. “Wow. Just fix it. Why didn’t I think of that. Thanks, that makes everything better.”

Pressing her lips together with a small harrumph, Kasita pulled her hand off Irulon’s arm. “No need to get like that. I know you’re upset, but—”

“Sorry,” Irulon mumbled, rubbing at her forehead. “I feel like I haven’t gotten enough sleep. And there is so much to do. I can’t sleep.”

“I might have a solution,” Alyssa said. “Not a real solution that will let you stay together,” she quickly added before Irulon could get her hopes up. “But, while I was on Earth rescuing Chris and the others, Tenebrael created fake bodies. I was just thinking about it the other day. If you can’t just fix it, then you at least don’t have to decide between killing yourself or killing the dragon. You can keep your body and we can make a new one for the dragon.

“And for the record…” Alyssa narrowed her eyes ever so slightly. “I would prefer you no matter how useful the dragon is. Sorry dragon,” she said just a little louder, like she was calling out to some far off person listening in. “But I know Irulon. Irulon is my friend. I haven’t even spoken to you. I’m sure you’re very nice and personable, but I have to prioritize my friends over complete strangers.” Under other circumstances, she might not even believe that the dragon was real and was instead just some insane construct of Irulon’s mind.

But, having been on this world for months now, she knew better.

Though, now that she had said it aloud, creating a body for the dragon might be problematic. They were the size of mountains… on the small side. Brakkt might be happy to see a giant dragon with scales and wings, but for everyone else, that was a nightmare scenario. Especially if it got hungry.

Maybe just creating a human body would be for the best. If it liked being in Irulon, it would probably like a human body better than that of a dragon anyway. And might even be used to it already. In fact, making a clone of Irulon might be for the best. It would probably be easier to synchronize those souls together in that case.

But that wasn’t something that would happen this instant. “I think I would need to practice creating a body. I don’t think the bodies Tenebrael made were meant to last for any length of time. I remember her being… sloppy about creating them. We wouldn’t want to shove a soul inside one only to find out that the heart isn’t even hooked up properly.”

“That would be bad.” Irulon sighed, slumping back against the wall. It was a bit far from the edge of her bed, leaving her in a rather uncomfortable-looking position with her shoulders against the wall but her back against the bed. Even still, she didn’t try to get up or readjust. “I appreciate the options, but I’m still not sure what to do or what is best to do. I’m not used to this uncertainty.”

“Take your time and think about it,” Alyssa said. “You’ve been like this for a year or two, right? It’s not like today is the cutoff date where you have to be separated or else.”

“No,” Irulon said, nodding. Or trying to nod. Her slumped posture didn’t allow much in the way of head shakes. “You’re right. This isn’t like me. I need to take a moment and calm down. Panicking isn’t going to do anyone any good.”

It took a bit of effort, but Irulon shoved off the wall, straightened her back, and reached for one of the tomes sitting on the table next to her bed. Cracking it open revealed line after line of text written in a tiny print that Alyssa would probably need a magnifying glass to properly read. Assuming she could read it at all. The letters were of the Latin alphabet, like every bit of text in this world. Unlike everything else, the specific arrangement of the letters was not in English. Some words didn’t even have vowels. It was a code of some type. Some cypher to keep whatever she had been writing a secret.

Irulon’s eyes flicked black and white as she turned roughly halfway through the book. The text stopped abruptly, leaving the bottom half of the page blank. Picking up a wooden pen with a brass tip and dipping it into the half-empty inkwell on the same end table, she started scrawling out more of those tiny yet neat lines of text. She wrote and wrote, hitting three lines, then five.

By ten, Alyssa started to wonder if she hadn’t been forgotten about.

Glancing up, she found Kasita also looking around. Alyssa met her eyes and offered a small shrug.

Neither said anything, not wanting to interrupt Irulon.

After twenty minutes of non-stop writing, during which Alyssa and Kasita had moved over to a table in the room to quietly talk about the details of the supplies Volta wanted delivered to the monster sanctuaries, Irulon went to dip her pen into the inkwell again only to find the tip scraping against the dry bottom of the glass.

“Ah…” she mumbled. Setting the pen down, she leaned back, stretching her back. Her eyes quickly found Alyssa and Kasita. “You’re still here?”

“You didn’t notice?” Alyssa cocked an eyebrow. Irulon was always observant. “I didn’t want to just disappear on you. Not with you… distraught?”

Irulon started a scoff, but hesitated. After a moment, she nodded as if conceding the point. “I got distracted,” she said as she twisted her back one way then the other. A series of snaps ran up her spine with both movements. “Existential crisis aside, the information I now possess is fascinating. Revolutionary, even. I’m trying to parse it into words. But…” Her eyes shifted toward the empty inkwell. “It seems I need to go shopping.”

“I’ll go with you,” Alyssa said, standing.

“Unnecessary. I’m not… Writing down my thoughts has given me some time to process what I was feeling. And you were right. A few more days, weeks, or even months isn’t going to destroy me. I have time to find a solution. A solution that both I and my companion can be happy with, at that. Perhaps even…” she trailed off, glancing to Kasita. “Well, I shouldn’t get ahead of myself just yet.”

“Still, I need to go shopping as well. Both for myself and… Volta. The leader of that oasis of monsters. I’ve gotten a list and some funds with which to buy the items on the list.” Besides that, despite Irulon’s assurance, Alyssa didn’t really feel like leaving the stubborn princess alone at the moment. That first question she had asked, wondering if Alyssa could effectively kill her… It wasn’t the time to leave her alone.

Irulon stared. Her eyes were violet at the moment, but just as piercing as they could be while black and white. Maybe she didn’t know for certain, but Irulon probably suspected some of Alyssa’s true reasons for going with her. Food wouldn’t stay good over the month that Irulon had suggested that it would take to help Izsha. While she or Brakkt could probably take the other draken—or just horses, really—out for a few days to the sanctuaries, Alyssa wasn’t really planning on it. She didn’t want to leave Izsha alone either.

There were a few nonperishables that were on the list. Blankets, wool coats, and even a small supply of lumber for the oasis sanctuary—apparently they needed some wood to help support their carved tunnels and homes. But that was relatively minor in comparison to food.

Whatever Irulon knew or thought she knew, she didn’t speak of. Instead, she closed her eyes, nodded slowly, and smiled a grimace of a smile. “Alright. But give me a few moments. I am hardly in a state befitting of royalty.”

“Okay. I’ll be just outside,” Alyssa said as she moved to the door. Kasita followed her out, standing just to her side. “Shout if you need anything.”

“I am not an invalid.”

“That doesn’t mean that you can’t ask for help.” Alyssa put on a bright smile as she gently closed the door. As soon as the door clicked shut, the smile on her face slipped right off.

Kasita opened her mouth.

Without knowing what Kasita was going to say, Alyssa put a finger to the mimic’s lips, shaking her head. ‘Later,’ she mouthed. In a soft whisper, she said, “Would you go let Brakkt know that Irulon is up? And about the likely month it might be. And… Well, I’ll leave everything else to your discretion.”

“Don’t need help shopping?”

It was a joke. Probably. Kasita would only be able to carry a blanket or two. Much more than that would be too heavy for her body to take. So Alyssa shook her head. “I’ll take Fela. If we can coax her out of her room. I think she might be a little traumatized thanks to those children last time. Otherwise… maybe my mom will come.”

“If you’re sure…” At Alyssa’s nod, Kasita shrugged and started off toward the stairs. “I’ll see if I can’t meet up with you after.”

“Sounds good to me.”

As soon as Kasita disappeared from view, Alyssa let out a long sigh as she stared at the closed door to Irulon’s room. Closing her eyes, she concentrated on the souls in the room.

The normally constant battle between Irulon and the dragon had come to a halt. They were still snatching pieces of each other, but the war had turned cold… subdued.

Alyssa had no idea what it meant.

But all she could do right now was to smile and hope that Tenebrael’s dream information was going to be enough to help both of them as well as Izsha.

Because if worse came to worst, it wouldn’t be a far-fetched thought to call down Iosefael to separate their souls. Even if it meant killing the poor dragon.


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034.002

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Breath of Air

Court Arcanist


“I have heard what happened to the draken in your care and what you and your party are trying to do for it. I sincerely hope it goes well.”

“Yeah,” Alyssa said. “Me too.”

Now knowing roughly what kind of company she was in, Alyssa had taken a seat at the table. Before, she had been a bit wary that some high arcanist of the local government wanted to talk to her. She wasn’t sure that she should be entirely comfortable in the presence of these monsters—she had only met and talked with them for a few minutes back at the oasis and that had not been the most peaceful of introductions—however, at least she knew exactly what she was dealing with.

A doppelganger. A creature in a similar vein to Kasita’s kind. Its body wasn’t illusory like Kasita’s, but it did construct paper-thin illusions out of its own flesh and blood. Its forms were a bit more substantial than Kasita’s, allowing it to actually lift heavier weights and occupy a space for real; however, its construct was just as inconsequential as Kasita’s. If someone stabbed the man, the little girl wouldn’t be harmed at all. Though it would probably break the illusion that kept her from being perceived.

The other one was a strange sort of monster. Apparently something that should not be north of the Fortress of Pandora, according to both Brakkt and Oz who had told Alyssa a little about the monsters they had encountered in that oasis on the way to Illuna. It had been a human at one point in time. Or half of it had been. The woman had picked up a monster known simply as a cursed sword. A living, sentient sword that formed a parasitic relationship with its host. At the start, the host might not even realize that the sword was anything other than a sword, but the more the sword got used, the more the sword gradually took over.

If the human ever died, the sword would simply go inert until some other unsuspecting person spotted it and picked it up. It was particularly dangerous to the uninformed. The cursed sword looked an awful lot like an enchanted sword, something anyone would love to pick up if only because of how much they could be sold for. But as soon as they did, they would feel a compulsion to use it rather than to sell it, starting the process over again.

Alyssa wasn’t entirely sure how that worked with souls. Closing her eyes and concentrating, she could only see one soul in the sword’s position. Perhaps the woman had died completely and had already had her soul reaped by either Tenebrael or Iosefael. Or perhaps it was something more along the lines of the final stages of Irulon and the dragon’s situation.

Either way, the sword was now simply sitting to the side, staring down at her hands with the occasional giggling. Creepy. Her very existence was disturbing, but she really made it all the worse with how she giggled and stared. But as long as the sword wasn’t going to hop bodies anytime soon, it probably didn’t matter all that much. The damage was already done for the person it had taken over.

Volta didn’t seem like the kind of person that would allow harm to come to her companions even if Alyssa wanted to do something.

If the woman died and the people looked like they would try to pick up the sword, Alyssa would try to stop them, of course. But that wasn’t likely to happen. Hopefully.

Though it did raise the question of whether or not the cursed sword could take over the body of something else. Tenebrael had made those empty meat puppets for replacing Jason, Chris, and Alyssa’s mother. She had put souls into them to fool angels, but Alyssa had to wonder whether or not the sword could make use of an empty one. With Tenebrael’s power at her fingertips, Alyssa might even be able to create empty puppets if it came down to it.

But, barring some disaster befalling Illuna or the oasis, that was entirely theoretical. And hopefully would stay that way. Alyssa really didn’t want to go about creating meat puppets if at all possible.

“If there is anything I can do for the draken, please, let me know.”

“Thanks, but I don’t know that there is much you can do. We’re currently waiting on a bit of information before pressing forward with our plan to get Izsha back on its feet.”

“I don’t have much experience with draken. Do you know what is wrong?”

“That’s what we are hoping to find out,” Alyssa lied. No sense getting complicated with talks of souls and angels. “For now, Izsha is stable and not getting any worse. It’s just that Izsha isn’t getting better either.”

The man posing as the arcanist frowned, putting a hand to his chin as he rubbed the small stubble that was growing around his chin. Volta’s actual body hardly moved at all. Oz, Brakkt, and even Kasita hadn’t mentioned anything about that, but it seemed that the fake-body took over most motions and actions, leaving the doppelganger’s true body in a somewhat inert state, only able to walk around behind the fake while it was up.

“We’ll handle it, don’t worry,” Alyssa said with a small smile. “Izsha has been a good friend to me. Brakkt cares for all the draken a great deal as well. We’re not going to leave anyone hanging out to dry.”

“Still, I wish there were something I could do.”

“It’s fine. Don’t you have your own problems you need help with? You surely wouldn’t have brought me here and revealed your identity if all you needed to do was to pass me a shopping list. And with your position, shopping for yourself probably isn’t that big a problem anyway.”

“Bigger than you might think. I can’t exactly hire a courier to deliver food and supplies to the oasis. Even dropping them off in the middle of the desert would be far too suspicious. People might not think I am a monster right away, but they might suspect that I am supplying brigands and highwaymen who litter the areas.”

That would probably be bad. Alyssa could see how Volta might come under fire for that. And it wasn’t like someone could deliver supplies directly to the oasis. Not without finding a trusted merchant who could handle it without selling the secret later on. That probably wasn’t an impossible task, but a risky one nonetheless. Volta wouldn’t want to do anything to jeopardize the likely prestigious and influential position of court arcanist too. As she mentioned, she had used the position to divert attention away from the oasis in the past.

“So it is just a shopping list?” Alyssa said after a moment. “When I met you in the oasis, I figured you were being literal about supplies. Finding you here made me think you were trying to bring me in on some secret sabotage or desperate quest to rescue a captured member of your community. But now we’ve gone back to supplies, so that’s nice I guess.”

“Well… If you want to do a bit more to help…”

Alyssa pressed her lips together, staring for a moment before sighing. “I can’t promise anything more than delivering supplies on our return journey. Not while Izsha is down with a sickness. But, I suppose I can listen and discuss with my companions any possible solutions.”

“Don’t worry. It’s nothing serious like rescuing comrades. Illuna doesn’t have many—if any—slaves and everyone living at the oasis follows strict rules to avoid detection. No one has been captured since I arrived.” Volta’s body double, who Alyssa still didn’t know the name of, shook his head. “No. Rather, in addition to simple food and maybe clothing supplies, I would like to ask that you visit another location and take some supplies there as well. It is not directly on the route back to Lyria, but the detour isn’t so great as to add weeks to the journey. They are not as close to a city as we are nor are they in the middle of a desert, so they can grow some crops and maintain livestock to a limited degree. However, they have had a bit of a famine this year. Over half their crops died with no yield. Some kind of pestilence, I gather.”

“I can’t deliver extra food to you and you have some of the other monsters take it down to this other location?”

“We aren’t really equipped to travel. No horses or carriages. If we ever have to flee, we’ll be fleeing on foot. As such, carrying even small amounts of food isn’t possible as we tend to eat what we can carry.”

“I see. We should have the carrying power, especially if Izsha makes a full recovery. How soon do they need food? Are they starving right now? And how far is it? It might be possible to have Brakkt run down with Dasca, Musca, and Ensou if it is needed right away.”

“They should have enough storage to last even a few months. There may even be another solution down the line. It’s just that this information came to my attention and I would prefer to help them out sooner rather than leave things to chance.”

“Understandable,” Alyssa said with a nod of her head, thinking.

It didn’t sound that bad. She wouldn’t say anything one way or another until she had conferred with Brakkt and Irulon, but a small detour wasn’t that big a deal. And if it let them skirt the edges of the Plains of the Dead, Alyssa was all for it. The biggest problem was going to be the guild. Would they take exception to several communities of monsters? Oz was already unhappy enough about being asked to keep the oasis a secret. Lumen and Catal weren’t far behind him. It was really only thanks to Brakkt and Irulon that they hadn’t told everyone at the local guild tavern about the little community of monsters.

Alyssa and everyone else carrying supplies might be able to split away without too much issue, but her mother would probably go with them. Alyssa really didn’t like the idea of being separated for too long. She could probably take care of herself and Oz wouldn’t let her come to harm willingly. But, especially in an area known for having criminals attacking caravans, Alyssa would feel much safer with them all together.

“I’ll have to discuss it with the others, but I don’t see too much issue. Not so long as it isn’t that far out of the way.”

“Until you agree, I’ll be keeping the exact location a secret. Not that I don’t trust you—I’ve been keeping an eye on you and your group, none of you have mentioned the Oasis thus far—it’s just that the less people that know, the less people there are that can leak the secret to people we would rather not know about our presence. We’re peaceful groups, just trying to keep a low profile and live our lives. But we will defend ourselves if necessary.”

“I wouldn’t expect you to lie down and die. But… It’s a shame that you have to live like that. Since coming to this… uh… land, I’ve been quite disappointed in the treatment of monsters by humans. I think there is a lot to gain on both ends by cooperating.”

“I can’t say that the treatment is completely undeserved,” Volta said with a sorry shake of the double’s head. “Monsters have definitely been the aggressors in more than one conflict.”

There had been a war with the elves several years before Alyssa had even appeared on Nod. Apparently that one had been started by elves. She couldn’t remember who she had heard that from, but it was likely either Oz or Tzheitza. Either way, it did raise the question of why the humans simply didn’t wipe out the elves. Or all the monsters south of Pandora, for that matter. Alyssa wouldn’t condone such actions, but she doubted most of the people of this world shared her opinions on matters. Was it just the current royal family and their passing friendliness with monsters that kept them from taking more drastic action?

Some things would be difficult to wipe out. Gaunts, for one. Dragons were another that Alyssa knew about. There were surely other things that would be extremely difficult to kill. But elves? From what Alyssa had gathered, most elves lived within the mountains on the southern coast. Perhaps that was the reason why. Inhospitable terrain that would be difficult to march an army through. Plus the elves’ penchant for engineering. If only one or two could construct secret passages right in the middle of Lyria, their entire society could fill those mountains with traps, escape routes, and even ways to get behind an approaching enemy.

Thinking about it like that, the elves would probably be an incredibly resilient force.

And who knew exactly what lived south of Pandora. The fortress apparently came under assault on a regular basis, but it managed to hold off against whatever was down there. Gaunts and cursed swords were probably the least of the most dangerous things in the area.

Once again, Alyssa thought to see it for herself. Once Tenebrael fully booted the Astral Authority from Nod, she would have to try to make a portal down there. The Pharaoh wanted one anyway. Though Alyssa did question the wisdom behind putting a portal right next to the largest human city. If hostile monsters ever did smash through the Fortress of Pandora, they could completely cripple the government by slipping through the portal. Probably multiple governments with leaders of other cities spending much of their time around Lyria.

Then again, having the time-manipulating Pharaoh able to act instantly should something happen rather than weeks or potentially months later—if a Message didn’t reach him—might make up for any potential security issues.

Ah well. That was something for other people to worry about. Alyssa would only worry about when, inevitably, something bad came through the portal and started attacking the city and she wound up caught in the middle of it all.

Maybe opening temporary portals would be for the best.

“You’ve been silent for a while.”

Alyssa looked up to find Volta’s fake body staring down at her, lips pressed into a gentle smile. “Just thinking troublesome thoughts,” she mumbled. “Nothing to worry over.”

“I see. I see. You’re staying with the local guild, are you not?”

“That is correct.”

Nodding, Volta looked toward the window. “I’ll have someone along with a list of supplies for both locations. Come see me before you leave and I’ll let you know how to get to the second. As thanks, I do have a collection of potions here. Perhaps some might help with your draken friend?”

“Its body is healthy. We’re just waiting on a bit of information for a spell that will fix Izsha’s mind. I’m doubtful that any potion will help.”

“Unfortunate. Sorry I couldn’t be of more help.”

“It’s fine. Offering is more than enough.” Alyssa stood, stretching a little. “I’ll be back after talking with my companions. If there was nothing else..?”

“Actually, one thing.” Volta turned back to face Alyssa, though neither of her bodies stood to match. “Raugis was asking for the… ‘handsome warrior’ who escorted her here.”

“Oz?”

“I don’t believe she mentioned his name.”

“Probably Oz,” Alyssa said, wondering just what Raugis might want to meet with him about. Surely his lame stories didn’t actually woo her. “I’ll let him know. If she didn’t mean him, he can figure it out himself,” she said to herself, turning to leave. “Thanks for—”

“Ah.” For the first time since entering the room, the cursed sword spoke. She held up a finger, staring right at Alyssa. Her eyes, gleaming out from under her hood, were like daggers as she stared.

Alyssa froze, shifting where she stood. The sword was just staring. Nothing else. Her finger was unmoving in the air like she wanted to mention something, but had simply shut down.

“Red? Something to say?”

“Ah. The sword,” she said. “Eheheh, I want to see it.”

Volta sighed, slumping slightly.

It could have been anything. And yet, Alyssa only took a moment to realize what she was talking about. “Brakkt’s sword?”

“Feel free to ignore that.”

“But I want to cut—”

“Ignore it, please,” Volta said, waving a tired hand toward the door.

“Right…”

Although her mask and cloak covered up almost the entirety of the sword’s body and face, there was still an obvious dejection in her suddenly slumped posture. Alyssa tried to ignore the monster as she made her way to the door.

Just before shutting it behind her, she heard Volta speak in a semi-harsh tone. “I’ve told you before—”

Alyssa put it out of her mind. The servant that had brought her up to the room had been waiting in a chair at the end of the hallway. Upon seeing the door open and close, he quickly stood up and, with hardly more than five words, he quickly led Alyssa back outside. All in all, she was out less than twenty minutes after arriving. A relatively short meeting, but she was just glad that there hadn’t been any big bombs dropped. No threats against her or her companions, no people trying to arrest her for whatever she might have done, no demons sneaking into the city. Just a simple request for help.

It was nice to be not thrown from one crisis to another for once. Especially because the current crisis hadn’t technically been resolved just yet. It was just on hold until Irulon woke.

With that damper on her mildly good mood, Alyssa decided to head back and check on the sleeping princess.


<– Back | Index | Next –>


034.001

<– Back | Index | Next –>


Breath of Air

Walkabouts


The city of Illuna was, thankfully, a city. It was large enough to give Izsha a private room in some unused stables outside the city. Brakkt and the other draken had not left Izsha’s side since arriving. Not even to sleep. Brakkt was sleeping on the same straw that the draken were and taking meals there as well. For three days, he had been out in the stables nonstop.

Alyssa had been the one bringing him his meals. They were fairly good meals, bought from the same sort of people that the local nobility purchased meals and food from. Unfortunately, even hurrying as fast as she could, she could feel the baked potatoes and roast losing their heat. She didn’t apologize for it. She had the first time, but now, she just handed the large wooden bowl-like plate over to Brakkt. He thanked her. Without even setting it near the large firepit in the stables to warm it back up, he started eating.

“Irulon finally fell asleep,” Alyssa said. It had been three days since portaling back to Illuna. Three days during which Irulon had been too excited to actually sleep. Like a child awaiting Christmas morning, except children could stay awake all night and the morning would still come. Irulon had to fall asleep. Considering how hard it was to wake her up, Alyssa could hardly believe that it had taken three full days of meditation to actually go down. Now she had to wonder and worry over whether or not Irulon would wake up in a reasonable amount of time.

“Good. I appreciate the update.”

“Any changes with Izsha?”

Brakkt shook his head as he chewed a bit of roasted beef. As soon as he finished, he looked down to Izsha. “None. Aside from breathing, I’m not sure if it has moved.”

Nodding, Alyssa closed her eyes. As she had done every time she came out here, she did a quick check on Izsha’s soul. The draken was still unconscious and hadn’t stirred even once. Similarly, the soul was still and mostly inert inside the body. Not totally. In fact, talking to Izsha tended to help spark those bits of soul-sharing that went on with normal healthy souls. “Don’t worry,” Alyssa said, resting an arm on Izsha’s scales. “With Irulon finally asleep, Tenebrael can help out. At least a little. We might even be able to have you all fixed up shortly after she wakes.”

Hopefully. With even Tenebrael unsure as to whether or not fixing Izsha was possible, Alyssa couldn’t say for certain that Irulon would come up with a solution. But certainty wasn’t really necessary. Irulon hadn’t been idle these last few days. Although most of her research material was back in Lyria, she did have a few tomes on soul research. The dragon inside her head apparently kept a library of just about everything it had seen as well. Her meditations had been as much spell research as they had been counting sheep.

As Alyssa spoke, Izsha’s soul reacted. Bits of it broke off to jump to Alyssa. The reverse was true as well, though Alyssa couldn’t see bits break off her own soul. Still, something resembling a soul jumped to the draken. The interactions were a good sign in Alyssa’s mind given how normal souls acted. More than that, more than just the metaphysical elements, Alyssa took the interactions as being a sign that Izsha was listening. Even if Izsha couldn’t respond, letting the draken know that things were being done and that they had a plan for the future hopefully gave hope. At the very least, it showed that people cared and hadn’t forgotten.

Unfortunately, Alyssa couldn’t do much else for Izsha. Not directly anyway. Not more than she already had. She was acting as the primary go-between for Irulon and Brakkt. With the former asleep, finally, Alyssa wasn’t quite sure what she should be doing. Kasita was sticking around with Irulon to ensure that someone was there when she woke up, but Alyssa should probably join her. She was the one who spoke with Tenebrael on the regular, after all. If Tenebrael was doing something strange, Alyssa might be able to answer a few questions. Or at least try to call down Tenebrael to make the angel answer some questions.

“Anything else you need?”

“I think I’m good for now. I’ll send up Musca with a note if I think of anything.”

The tiger-striped draken, not quite sleeping in one corner of the room, opened an eye and stared between Brakkt and Alyssa. For some reason, Alyssa felt like Brakkt was getting a much heavier glare than normal. Letting out a snort of hot air, the draken closed its eyes once again, settling into a large patch of straw.

“Alright. I’ll be back later this evening unless Irulon wakes. If she does, I’ll probably be helping her.”

He nodded as Alyssa took her leave.

Stepping outside the stables, Alyssa sighed as she looked up at the sky. Flames burned along the horizon. White and black flames licked the otherwise blue sky where a facsimile of Tenebrael’s tattoos hung high overhead. Both the flames and the emblem were fainter here than they had been at the pit. Yet they were still present. It was a strange thing. Something that shouldn’t work. Because, looking off in the distance toward Lyria—almost in the directly opposite direction from Owlcroft—Alyssa could still see the flames on the vanishing point between the planet and the sky. Yet, if she headed back to Lyria, she knew that they would continue fading away.

It was a strange phenomenon. And she wasn’t sure how far it would extend. Could Lyria still see faint flames? What about the emblem? It was even brighter, more obvious. Once night fell, the light show would be the only light in the sky aside from the pasty grey of the moon. That was how it had been the last few nights.

As Alyssa made her way back up the path to the city and through it toward the guild’s headquarters, she couldn’t help but notice that the aura of the city had completely changed. Prior to fleeing from the Astral Authority and venturing off toward Owlcroft, Illuna had been a fairly lively city. People walked around with their heads held high, laughing and generally having a good time as they went about their business. They had walked around as such anyway.

Walking through the city now, people kept their eyes down. More than a few could be seen praying on their knees, asking Tenebrael for… whatever. Forgiveness? Mercy? Judgment of their enemies? Alyssa honestly didn’t know. But they were afraid. It wasn’t just the sky being on fire. The Astral Authority that had appeared for Alyssa had spread throughout the city looking for her. While Brakkt and Irulon stayed behind specifically to warn off people who might try to attack or agitate the fake-angels, they hadn’t been able to warn everyone.

Around a dozen people, four soldiers and several others, lost their lives after managing to kill a Kindness. It hadn’t attacked back, but a passing Patience took off their heads with apparently little effort.

Just thinking about it made Alyssa sigh. If she had kept better control over herself, the Astral Authority wouldn’t have come chasing after her, those people wouldn’t have died, she could have gone to Owlcroft with Irulon and Brakkt, maybe Izsha wouldn’t have… died. Or maybe everything would have gone much worse. Brakkt, Irulon, Fela, and the other draken might all have been caught up in that Justice’s attack. It had been… overwhelming.

Maybe things couldn’t have turned out better. It was impossible to know. Not even Irulon or the Pharaoh’s magic could turn time back for a second attempt. As far as Alyssa knew, while Fractal Mirror could reveal possible futures, there was no spell to reveal alternate pasts. So she would never know.

Opening the door to the guild, she found it surprisingly empty. Martin, the local leader of Illuna, had hired out most of them to keep an eye on the city. Not because of those few guards who had died, but because of general uncertainty. He, like many others in the city, was afraid. The sky had people claiming that an apocalypse was upon them, even though Alyssa had tried to explain that it was actually a ploy by Tenebrael to get those fake-angels of the Astral Authority to deal with the demons.

Lisa was one of the few around. Oz, Catal, and Lumen were all helping keep an eye on matters around the city. Besides Alyssa’s mother, there was only one table of four present. A group that looked quite exhausted. All four were in full armor, maybe having just gotten off a shift watching the city. Alyssa caught a few glares from them as she walked through the room. She wasn’t sure if that was because of the Astral Authority showing up in her wake or because they had been present when she had chained everyone in the room. Either way, she ignored them. With her sunglasses broken, her glowing white eyes were on full display. She doubted that anyone was going to bother her.

And if they did, she had put several hours over the last few days toward drawing out a few dozen more Spectral Chains cards. She wasn’t going to run out unless she had to chain up a whole angry mob.

Which hopefully wasn’t going to be a concern at any point let alone the near future.

“How is it going?” Lisa asked as Alyssa sank into the seat beside her.

“With Izsha?” Alyssa picked a sliver of meat off her mother’s plate. “Still the same.”

Slowly, and somewhat awkwardly, Lisa put an arm around Alyssa’s shoulder and pulled her close. “I honestly don’t know what to say,” she said, gently rubbing the shoulder. “Your father was always better at these kinds of things than I was. I’m… a bit more standoffish. But I’m sure you don’t need me to tell you that.”

That was an understatement. Alyssa’s father had always been the one around. He made birthday cakes, he went to school events, he had driven Alyssa when she went on her very first date. As embarrassing as that last event had been, he was always the more… there parent. Not that Alyssa thought her mother didn’t love her or anything. It was just her job. The military kept her away from a lot of family events. One weekend a month, she had to go to work. Plus the occasional deployments that had happened, resulting in her disappearing overseas or just to training forts away from home for months at a time.

Alyssa didn’t resent her for it. It was all thanks to that sacrifice that Alyssa, Clark, and their father got to live comfortably. And yet… it definitely made it much harder to relate. And that went both ways. Alyssa respected her mother, but sometimes she felt a little guilty that most of that respect was the same respect that she might have for a teacher rather than a parent. It was a complicated emotion. One not even completely accurate in that analogy because there was definite love there, and she wasn’t sure that she had ever really loved a teacher.

But still… she didn’t quite know how to act either. Ever since her mother had come to this world, they both had kept each other at arm’s length. Interaction was common, but always a bit stilted, like neither knew exactly what to say or do.

So it was nice to hear that her mother felt the same.

“We’re just a little awkward together,” Alyssa said with a small smile. Sitting in her mother’s arms as she was, she honestly didn’t think she needed much in the way of conversation. “You don’t need to say anything. This is enough.”

A silence of the comfortable variety fell between them. Alyssa didn’t feel a need to speak as she snacked on her mother’s meal. It was still hot. She must have only gotten it a few minutes before Alyssa walked in. Which did raise one question. “How come you aren’t with Oz and crew?”

“Catal is negotiating a contract for the journey back,” Lisa said, pointing to one of the closed doors at the far end of the room. “I don’t think it’s going to go well, but we’ll have to see. Oz and Lumen are on shift for the night watch tonight. They’re trying to get a bit of a nap in before having to wake up for that.”

“I see.”

“Which does remind me… Someone was looking for you earlier.”

“Someone?” Alyssa repeated with a frown. The only people who should be looking for her were people who had traveled here with them. Fela, Trik, Kasita, Oz’s crew, or the royal siblings. None of whom should have been as unfamiliar as to deserve a someone.

“Didn’t catch their name,” Lisa said, confirming Alyssa’s worries.

“And you didn’t know who they were?”

“Never seen them before in my life. Some younger man with blond hair, accompanied by a few children.”

“Fancy clothes and maybe a fleur de lis somewhere on his outfit?”

“You do know him,” Lisa said with a slight accusation in her tone. “You know more about history than I do so I’m sure you don’t need me to tell you that both the infant mortality rate and maternal mortality rate during medieval times were… staggeringly high.”

Mom. I’m not… That’s…”

“There are also diseases to consider. The lack of contraceptive measures as well.”

Mom!” Alyssa pulled away, slipping out from under her mother’s arm. “First of all, I know. Second… no.”

“I just want to make sure that you’re staying as safe as you can be.”

Under other circumstances, Alyssa might have thought that her mother was joking. As religious as her household had been, sex had never really been a joking topic. In fact, the only other times she could remember such things being mentioned were during sex-ed as part of school and after her first period. So having it brought up now, Alyssa could only shake her head in confusion as to how her mother thought a mildly good-looking person would lead to anything of a sexual relationship. At least so soon. They had only been in the city for a few days, including before heading out to Owlcroft.

Alyssa was not the kind of person to hop into one-night stands.

“I don’t even know his name.”

“But you do know him.”

“He’s the court arcanist for Illuna. Not sure what rank he is, but probably at least a five. If he is looking for me, it’s probably something magic related. Nothing more.”

“Mhmm…”

Alyssa stood with a sigh. “I should probably go find him.”

“Weren’t you watching over Princess Irulon?”

“Kasita can handle that. Irulon only just fell asleep less than an hour ago. With her having been unable to fall asleep for half a week now, I doubt she’ll be up soon. And I don’t want to wake her early and interrupt anything… and waking her is almost impossible anyway,” Alyssa said, thinking back to all the times she had needed to wake the Sleeping Beauty up. A slight grimace crossed her face. “No. It’s best if she remains asleep until she wakes up naturally, at which point Kasita will likely send a Message.”

“Stay safe.”

“Yeah. You too… The arcanist, he didn’t say where he was going to be, did he?”

“He mentioned heading back to Illuna’s manor.”

“Alright. Thanks.”

Alyssa could not get out of there fast enough. Perhaps when she returned, her mother would come back to her senses. For the time being…

The manor wasn’t a long walk from the guild. Illuna was a large city, but probably only about a quarter or maybe a third of Lyria’s size. Actually getting into the manor was a bit more difficult. It had a pair of guards stationed outside the gate. The quacks of the geese and ducks landed like a trumpet on the ear as she tried to explain that the arcanist wanted to talk to her, but neither of the guards were listening. They had probably gone deaf from all the stupid birds in the yard.

She was just about to give up and leave until the arcanist came to find her himself when another person rushed outside, crossed the lawn, and ran right up to one of the gate guards. The person, dressed as a servant, whispered into the guard’s ear with occasional pointing toward the upper floors of the manor. Following his finger, Alyssa spotted the blond arcanist waving down at her.

After that, she got inside without any complaint. The servant brought her right up a set of stairs to the room Alyssa had spotted from the outside. He stopped at the door, knocked twice, waited for a confirmation from inside, and opened it for Alyssa. Throughout, the servant hardly spoke to her. From his occasional shifty glances, she got the feeling that he was a little nervous in her presence.

Yet another reason to find a way to replace her glasses. She should have asked Tenebrael, but she really hadn’t been thinking about such a small thing at the time.

The room was almost disturbingly reminiscent of Decorous’ office back in Lyria. It was overly gaudy with tapestries bearing the Illuna crest adorning the walls. A fanciful table occupied a good chunk of the room, though there was enough space that it didn’t feel cramped even with a few chairs around the table. Only two of those chairs were occupied. One by the blond arcanist with a little girl sitting on his lap. The other by that heavily cloaked figure that Alyssa had first seen him with when those children came up to bug Fela. Like then, the cloth bindings left no skin visible, though there were some odd lumps, mostly around the right side of the body.

Disfigured, perhaps? Trying to hide it? Alyssa didn’t know exactly what a leper colony consisted of back on Earth, but, if there were similar things here, it wouldn’t be a stretch to assume that otherwise normal people would want to hide any abnormalities. Though the heavy cloth on its own was something of an abnormality.

The door closed behind her as Alyssa entered the room, leaving the servant on the opposite side.

“I heard you wanted to speak with me,” Alyssa said, remaining standing at the opposite end of the table.

“Indeed, I am pleased you came to me as well. I don’t particularly like to go outside. Small dark places suit me much better than wide open streets or fields.”

Alyssa glanced around the room once again. It really wasn’t that dark at all. Several jars of that glowing potion were set about, providing proper illumination. They weren’t quite as bright as Tzheitza’s brews; whether that was because they were older and nearing replacement or because the local potioneer was less skilled wasn’t a question that Alyssa could answer. Still, she just shrugged it off.

“If this is about the sky, I don’t know when or if it will turn back to normal.”

“Dealing with the demons, is it?” he asked, glancing over his shoulder to the window he had been waving out from before. With the little girl on his lap, he couldn’t turn all that much. The little girl, for her part, just sat and stared at the table. It was a bit creepy, to be honest. Alyssa wasn’t sure which was worse, the man with the kid on his lap or the girl that hardly moved. “Despite the increased presence of guards along the city walls looking for incidents to respond to, there hasn’t been a single infected spotted. No plague incidents within the city either, though three days isn’t really much time to identify and eliminate such things.”

Fela might have been able to do that, but she had been spending almost all of her time with Kasita, Brakkt, or spending the nights with Alyssa. Perhaps she would ask if Trik and Fela would be willing to run around, just in case. Though Alyssa really wasn’t expecting much in the way of plague infections. Not with the emblem of Tenebrael hanging in the sky. The plague struck when faith was low. People were fearful at the moment, but their faith was probably higher than ever.

“But that isn’t what this is about at all,” the arcanist said with a grin. “Rather, is your offer for supplies still on the table?”

“Supplies?” Alyssa blinked. “What supplies?”

“Oh come now. I thought you saw everything.”

Alyssa blinked again. This time, she concentrated for a moment, focusing on the souls in the room.

There were only two souls apart from herself. The cloaked figure and the person… the monster sitting across from her.

She felt like slapping herself. How had she missed that. “Volta?” she said.

The little girl in his lap remained still, but the man smiled.

“So this is what you meant when you said you kept humans from discovering that oasis. And how you knew all about the situation with Illuna and the demons. You’re…” Alyssa let out a small chuckle in spite of herself. “How do people not notice that you’ve got the little girl attached to you at all times?”

“Oh? You can see my true self? Normal people ignore the real me completely.”

“Oh.” It was one of those things. “I didn’t get a good look at you in the cave before you melted your clone into your body, but I really should have noticed. I feel silly now. And that one…” Alyssa looked to the cloaked person. It had to be a monster too. Maybe one of the animal-eared monsters from the oasis, but… with the strange bulges on half its body… “The sword monster?”

“Eheheh…”

Definitely no mistaking that slightly muffled giggle.

“Does anyone know? Martin or anyone else from Illuna?”

“Martin does not,” the blond fake said with a shake of his head. “I believe I have fully infiltrated this city with none the wiser. And I would prefer that it stay that way.”

Alyssa’s smile slipped ever so slightly. “As long as you aren’t causing harm to the people here.”

“No harm. Just a bit of trouble every now and again. Our oasis has been nearly discovered on several occasions. So far, I’ve managed to distract the people here enough.”

“Then there is no problem.”

“Good. Then let us talk a little business about how you can help me out. And maybe I can find something you need help with in return.”


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033.013

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War And Peace

Help From Above


Iosefael hovered in the air high above the group of mortals. She stared down with piercing eyes, just as unblinking as Irulon’s. Both of them were focused on Izsha’s body. Or rather, both were focused on Izsha. Irulon couldn’t see souls and Alyssa doubted that Iosefael cared much about bodies.

She had not returned empty-handed. One of Iosefael’s hands was wrapped up in that golden glove that stretched halfway up her arm. Her other hand held a familiar staff. Adrael’s golden staff matched Iosefael’s armor well, but it clearly had not come away unscathed from being knocked away from Izsha. The ruby head of the staff had a long crack running through it. Gold around the opposite end of the staff had deep gouges lining the gold. Almost like a clawed hand had been trying to grasp it. Looking closer, the gold of Iosefael’s armor also had been scuffed up and… Was that blood drying on one of her boots?

Maybe being knocked away hadn’t harmed it at all.

The angel slowly drifted lower to the ground. Alyssa kept an eye on her, making sure that she wasn’t about to try to take Izsha’s soul. But, if anything, she almost appeared afraid of Izsha. Her movement carried her away from the draken until she settled to a stop near the ground just behind Alyssa.

“What did you do?” she hissed after a moment, still without blinking or looking away from the body.

“It wasn’t me this time. Irulon did it.”

Irulon turned her head, eyes flicking to Alyssa for just a moment before a look of understanding crossed her features. As she looked back to Izsha, she spoke. “An attempt at restoring soul-body resonance, Miss Angel. How does it look? I think it’s going quite well, but I suppose you would be an expert in these matters.”

“How does it look? How does it look?” Iosefael covered her mouth with her golden-gloved hand, rubbing at her cheeks before throwing the hand up in the air. “How… How did you do this?”

Alyssa looked back to Irulon, staring for a moment. But the princess made no sign that she was going to answer. She just stared at the now still but still breathing form of Izsha with her hands clasped behind her back.

It took an embarrassingly long moment to realize that Irulon wasn’t simply ignoring the angel. Irulon couldn’t see or hear anything the angel did.

“Just answer the question, Iosefael. How does it look? How is Izsha? Is it… right? Is the soul back to normal?”

“Normal? There’s nothing normal about any of this!” Iosefael tried to take a step closer, but Alyssa clapped a hand on her shoulder, stopping her. The angel finally took her eyes off Izsha to frown at Alyssa. “I’m not… I don’t even think I could take the soul right now. It’s not perfectly synchronized, but it is synchronized enough that, if I didn’t already know what happened, I would have thought that the relic was just having a bad day.”

“That’s… good. Right?”

“I don’t know! This has never happened before. Ever.” Her cross-shaped pupils flicked over to Irulon. “Well, except for that abomination. But that isn’t really that similar at all. Two souls occupying—”

“We’re aware of that problem. Focus on Izsha now, please.”

Iosefael fell silent, staring for a long moment. Again, she tried to get closer. This time, Alyssa allowed her to move forward a few steps, but she kept right up against her, ready to stop her if she tried to take the soul away. “The synchronization is off,” she said eventually. “Like a… Oh! You humans say that your hearts skipped a beat? It’s like that. Every other beat is in time, but the off beats are staggered erroneously.”

“Alright. How do we fix it?”

“I assume destroying the relic again is out of the question?”

“Obviously.”

Iosefael let out a short harrumph. “Then I don’t know. I don’t have any experience with this. Maybe it will fix itself. Maybe it will fall further out of sync until I can take the soul back like normal.”

“Some help you are,” Alyssa grumbled, rolling her eyes. Though, to be perfectly honest, she didn’t know what she had expected of Iosefael. It was apparently one thing to help by discussing the Astral Authority and miracles. It was another entirely when souls were concerned.

Irulon turned away from Izsha, looking to Alyssa. “What did she say?”

“The synchronization is off. It might fix itself. It might break itself again. Iosefael doesn’t know, nor does she have any suggestions.”

“Does she have a timeframe for either option?”

Not needing to translate from Irulon to Iosefael, Alyssa simply looked toward the angel.

Iosefael just shrugged.

“No. She’s worthless.”

“Hey!”

“Well, I might be able to fix it,” Irulon said, looking back to Izsha. “But let’s wait and observe a bit before we do anything.”

Alyssa pressed her lips together, but nodded her head. Irulon was the expert, after all. Apparently even more so than Iosefael. “Can Izsha be moved? We’re still deep within enemy territory. Even if the demons and the Astral Authority are busy with each other, I’d rather not have a stray being get flung from the battle and find us out here.”

“Levitation shouldn’t hurt anything. Just don’t drop Izsha. That probably wouldn’t do the poor draken any favors.”

“Right.” Alyssa looked over to Iosefael and the staff in her hands. “And what about you? Are you going to follow us around like some kind of banshee?”

“There are other people dying. I had to collect a few before coming back here. I have to go collect others shortly. But I’ll probably be back. Something is still off about this soul. And if it does deteriorate, I would hate to not notice because of the strangeness of its situation, leaving it rotting inside the body.”

“If it comes to that, I’ll handle it.”

“Like you handled it last time?” Iosefael snapped. “Would you even notice if something went wrong?”

Alyssa opened her mouth to argue, but hesitated. She honestly wouldn’t notice if something went wrong. That was the whole reason she had asked Iosefael to look at Izsha just a moment ago despite knowing that the angel wanted to take the soul. Looking back to Izsha, Alyssa closed her eyes and just watched for a moment. Iosefael said that the synchronization was off. But, no matter how long she stared, she couldn’t figure out how the angel discovered that. Unless Iosefael was using some other sensory ability that Alyssa either couldn’t access or didn’t know she had, it might just be something innate to angels. Or it came from centuries of practice.

Either way, even if she figured out exactly what to look for regarding the synchronization, there could still be a plethora of things she might miss simply because she was not an angel nor experienced with souls.

When she opened her eyes again, Iosefael was gone. The only evidence of her presence were a few feathers drifting through the air. The staff was nowhere to be seen either. She must have taken it with her.

“She’s gone,” Alyssa said for the benefit of Irulon. “And had nothing useful to offer aside from what I already mentioned.”

“That could be helpful enough for our needs. But you were right earlier. We should leave as soon as possible. I’ll speak with my brother and let him know of the changed situation. Do you need additional Levitation spells?”

“No. I have enough for now.”

“Very well. Keep an eye on Izsha for a few moments,” Irulon said as she started walking off to where Brakkt, Fela, and the draken had set up watch.

Alyssa sighed as she looked down to Izsha. She should have felt some relief. Although the synchronization was skipping a beat, Izsha’s body and soul were in tune enough that Iosefael wasn’t going to try to ferry her off to the Throne. That was a victory all on its own. But Alyssa still had that gnawing feeling in the back of her mind where she worried over just what she was doing. Of whether this was destroying Izsha on a far deeper level than simple death. Then again, even with all she knew now, she still didn’t really know what happened to souls that the angels collected. The non-Tenebrael angels, anyway.

A hand dropped down on her shoulder. Looking back, Alyssa found Kasita offering a comforting smile. For a long moment, neither spoke. Kasita hadn’t said much of anything during the few hours it took to reach Irulon and Brakkt. She alternated between concerned looks, comforting smiles, and having her teeth grit as she stared at nothing at all.

“It’s my fault,” Kasita finally said, voice a mere whisper.

“What? No, if anything—”

“I should have stuck with Izsha instead of being blown away. Maybe I could have cast a spell. Projectile Reflection would have stopped all those flying chunks of earth and rock. Or maybe if I had been able to get those infected off our tail, we could have met up with you. Or if I had been stronger, I could have stopped you from falling in the first place.”

“Kasita… All those apply just as much to me as they do to you.”

“But I can’t control what you do. Only what I do.”

“That’s… true. In a technical sense. But we all could have done things differently that would have affected each other.” Alyssa just shook her head. “It will be fine,” she said, not quite believing her own words. “Izsha is… injured. Nothing more at this point. We’ve got to look on the bright side of things. We got in, accomplished what we came to do, and got out. It was for Tenebrael, but with the demons occupied with the Astral Authority, it should help everyone around the area too. Illuna hopefully won’t have to worry about infected wandering up to their town, killing people and livestock. Maybe the Astral Authority will even beat back that sense of foreboding. Or perhaps Tenebrael’s emblem will hang in the sky for a long time, keeping that feeling from coming back.”

“Oh I doubt that will be the case.”

Alyssa jumped, jerking slightly as she turned to find a certain monochrome angel standing near Izsha’s tail.

Gritting her teeth, she glared at the angel. “Do you have to always appear behind me?”

“I think you said something like that before.”

“And yet you’re still appearing behind me.”

Tenebrael shrugged, turning her gaze to Izsha’s body. “Sorry about your friend.”

“Is there anything you can do? Or anything you can tell me that Iosefael didn’t?”

“Well, no to the first question. The body is already healed. I can’t do anything about the soul unless the body dies, and you wouldn’t like what I would do if that were the case. As for Iosefael, I don’t know what she said, but the body and soul are not quite—”

“In sync, I know. The soul is skipping a beat, or something. Irulon thinks she can fix it, but…”

“Hmm. That girl has truly earned the right to emulate my appearance,” Tenebrael said with a small smile.

“Can she actually do it?”

“If she got this far, I don’t see why not.”

“Any insight you can offer? Any tips to point her in the right direction?”

Tenebrael rubbed a finger across her chin as she turned to where Irulon and Brakkt were talking. With his armor on, Alyssa couldn’t see his expression. He had been… silent when Alyssa told him what had happened. Only after she finished had he offered a small nod, thanking her for trying her best. After that, his helmet had turned to Irulon and hadn’t left until she said that she was going to look into it.

Now, Irulon gesticulated, waving her hand over and over again. Not in any particular direction, merely moving it as she spoke, perhaps waving her own way on to the next segment of the topic. She wasn’t smiling, but she was much more animated than earlier, maybe trying to be encouraging for her brother.

“Perhaps,” Tenebrael said slowly. “Perhaps there is something I can do. Nothing big, mind you. Don’t expect this to solve all your problems. She already knows a great deal about souls. Perhaps even more than any mortal that has ever existed. But it isn’t everything. I might be able to give her a little flash of Divine Inspiration. Just a little insight into the inner workings of a soul. That might help her out. It might do nothing. I’m really not sure.”

“You can do that?”

“Just who do you think I am?” Tenebrael said, affronted.

“I mean, you’re not going to get into more trouble if you start giving hints to mortals? Or your programming isn’t going to kick in and force you to say something wrong, if you say anything at all?”

“I have a feeling that there aren’t many more people that I could get into trouble with. The Astral Authority is already here.”

“Archangels won’t care?”

Tenebrael shrugged her shoulders. “I’m not too worried about them. Without being assigned to this world, they won’t care that much. Look at Kenziel. She showed up wanting to fix the place but switched stories to helping me at the first sign of resistance.”

“What happens if a few dozen of them show up instead of one lone angel?”

“Then they will understand just what difference in power a Dominion can exert over that of an Archangel.”

Alyssa frowned. It wasn’t that she was trying to talk Tenebrael out of giving Irulon knowledge that might help. Rather, it sounded excellent. Almost too good to be true. Or maybe it was too good to be true and that was where her hesitation was coming from.

A horde of Archangels still didn’t sound like that great a thing to show up. Considering how long Adrael had operated without even being known about and then how little Tenebrael had done after that point, Alyssa didn’t like the odds of her succeeding against several of them. Besides that, they still had the Astral Authority to worry about. They might be occupied with the demons now, but if Tenebrael started throwing around magic with her name on it, some of them would surely come to take her out.

“And your programming?”

“Will have to be worked around. Already I can feel the mental blocks trying to stop me. But I can see a way. Tell Irulon to pay attention to her dreams tonight.”

“Really?” Alyssa said, giving the angel a flat stare. “Dream inspiration? Isn’t that a bit cliche? Can’t you just tell me and I’ll tell her? Or better yet, just write it all down in a nice easy-to-read tome so that things don’t get lost and forgotten with sleep haze.”

“It’s the easiest way, I think. I can’t tell you. I just tried, but I can’t even imagine myself saying words when I do. Writing it down would be similar. But a dream is a small bit different. Many revelations come through in dreams, partially because elements will be forgotten or changed upon awaking.”

“I hate angels.”

“I’m sure.”

“What about the Astral Authority?”

Tenebrael smiled, looking far more relaxed as she placed a hand on Alyssa’s shoulder. “You did well. Just leave everything else to me.”

Alyssa let out a small sigh, glad she didn’t have to do anything more on that front. She had, over the last few weeks, had enough of those things chasing her down every time they spotted her. Though that did raise a question. “Is it safe to use our connection to manifest miracles? Is the Astral Authority sufficiently distracted?”

“I suppose that depends.”

“Would they come after me if I made just a little temporary portal to Illuna?”

“Possibly. If you got away from the portal fast enough, it might be safe enough. I imagine they are in a bit of disarray so soon after discovering the pit, so it might be that no one at all will show up.”

“That would be nice.”

“I would avoid relying on it too much in the coming weeks, however. Only during emergencies and only when you can escape their pursuit easily.”

“So nothing has changed then.”

“Perhaps on your end, but I am now free to begin removing the Astral Authority from my world on a more permanent basis. Something I’m off to do right now.” Taking her hand off Alyssa’s shoulder, she took two steps back, waving all the while.

“Wait. Can you make the portal?”

Tenebrael tilted her head to one side. “You’ve created a few just fine on your own.”

“Yeah, but I would prefer to be absolutely certain that nothing will go wrong. Not with Izsha like this.”

“Hmmm.”

Besides that, Alyssa thought to herself, maybe the Astral Authority will chase you around instead if they do take notice. Skipping out on that headache would make just about any compromise worth it.

“I would like to do something to thank you for accomplishing my mission, but I am not sure I can manifest such a miracle without proper authorization. Soon. Soon I should be able to ignore many instances of such irritation, but not yet. Is there anything else you would like to ask of me?”

Yes, Alyssa almost said. She was sure that she had other things to talk about. But with most of her mind concerned over Izsha and the rest drained from the adventure, she was drawing a blank. So, after a moment of silence, she simply shook her head. “I suppose all I’d like is for you to answer the phone once in a while.”

“Believe it or not, but that requires quite an expenditure of my power. Enough that the Astral Authority would likely come knocking on both our doors. After they are gone, I promise.”

“I see. In that case, I don’t think I have anything immediately pressing. Just get your information to Irulon, I suppose.”

“Can do. I’ll check in soon. I’d like to know what Irulon does with the information I’m lending her. I’ll prepare it and then begin my operation against the Astral Authority. And any other divine elements that feel like challenging me. Ta-ta for now.”

In a burst of black feathers, Tenebrael vanished. Sighing, Alyssa turned to look at Kasita. The mimic hadn’t said anything during the entire exchange. She usually didn’t when Tenebrael was around, so it wasn’t that much of a surprise. Still, it would be nice for someone, not just Kasita, to be able to turn one-on-one conversations into more of a group discussion. Irulon could do that to an extent. And if she had pulled out her phone, anyone could have seen Tenebrael though the camera, though not with audio.

“I have to make a portal,” Alyssa said after a moment of silence. “Could you let Irulon know that she should be expecting Tenebrael to show up in her dreams tonight?”

“Ufu~ What an honor. She’ll be thrilled.”


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033.012

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War And Peace

Where It Belongs


Alyssa paced back and forth, hands nervously rubbing against each other as she watched Irulon take notes in a large book. Brakkt stood to one side, fully armored up as he, Fela, Ensou, Musca, and Dasca all kept watch for any hostile threats that might approach. They were still deep in the demon’s territory. None were around as far as Alyssa could see, but she had seen several likely feral infected making their way toward the pit as if called there. Any further out might pass through their little camp on the way.

And they probably wouldn’t be too friendly.

With Izsha’s body lying on the forest floor, they weren’t all that mobile if something did happen.

Alyssa clenched her fists as she stared at the body. It was still alive. Carrying it with a Levitation spell for nearly ten hours hadn’t changed that. Given the lack of change, it would probably remain alive until it starved to death as Iosefael had said, which might very well be a few weeks out. Even that might be avoided by shoving food down its throat. Muscle would atrophy, but they could theoretically keep the body alive as long as necessary to work on it.

Izsha’s body was effectively a coma patient. In the modern world, comatose patients could be kept alive through feeding tubes and intravenous liquids. It might not be as easy here in Nod with the lack of proper medical equipment and knowledge, but something could be worked out.

Whether or not anything could be done regarding Izsha’s soul was the real concern.

Alyssa had tried calling Tenebrael. The angel hadn’t answered. Alyssa really hadn’t expected her to do so. Not while they were only a quick walk from the pit, the Astral Authority, and the demons. She had shown up in Lyria while they were a lot closer, but there hadn’t been the gigantic Justice there.

She really hoped that she wasn’t going to be ignored until the next time Tenebrael needed something. Alyssa hadn’t gotten that vibe from their conversation in Lyria, but there was still doubt eating away at the back of her mind. If they got to Illuna and Tenebrael was still ignoring her, she might have to try some angelic magic to get Tenebrael down here. Alyssa thought she was getting the hang of using it more and more, so she might be able to do something where she hadn’t been able to before.

Then again, she hadn’t been able to fix Izsha.

But maybe relying on Tenebrael for that had been the wrong way to go about things. As Iosefael said, Tenebrael wasn’t able to fix death. It stood to reason that Alyssa wouldn’t be able to do so either. At least not while using Tenebrael’s magic and expecting her to do most of the work.

Alyssa stopped her pacing, pausing near Irulon.

She might actually be the best bet. At the very least, Irulon wasn’t tied down by the programming of the angels. Nor did she have their fatalistic outlook on souls and death.

So when Irulon put her pen down in the crack of the book, Alyssa looked to her with a modicum of hope.

“There might be something we can do,” Irulon said after a long moment of silence.

It was the first time anyone had spoken since Alyssa had explained what happened. And it was good news. Though Irulon’s tone of voice wasn’t exactly the most reassuring thing. Her face was set in stone, a grim glower as she stared at Izsha’s body with her draconic eyes.

“You said you have Izsha’s soul, right?”

“Yeah. It’s definitely inside me,” Alyssa said as she closed her eyes. “I can’t see myself still, but I can see Izsha.”

“You’re sure it is Izsha and not yourself? How do you tell the difference?”

“I was never able to see myself. I think… It’s kind of like how I can’t see my own eyes. I’m using my own soul to see so I can’t see it? If that analogy works. I haven’t been able to talk to Izsha though, not like you seem to be able to do with the dragon.”

“That doesn’t surprise me too much given what you said. I believe I ran across that synchronization issue you mentioned during my own ritual with the dragon. I didn’t call it that. I referred to it as our resonance. Part of the process in salvaging the dragon’s soul was aligning its resonance with my own. If you didn’t do that, communication would be impossible. In fact… I’m a little worried about the degradation of the soul that occurs if left in a corpse. You aren’t a corpse, but it is probably the broken resonance—the broken synchronization that actually causes the problem the angels mentioned.”

Ice flowed through Alyssa’s veins. “It’s been… almost half a day!”

“I’m sure it is better than being in a rotting corpse, but we shouldn’t leave Izsha there for too long. You can extract the soul, correct?”

“I think so. I mean, yes. I’m sure I can. Though it might attract the Astral Authority.” The mystic circles that had allowed manipulation of Izsha’s soul had long since dissipated. But Alyssa was fairly sure that she could reactivate them without too much trouble. Maybe even with a much shorter request.

She wondered if it said something that the one truly sincere… prayer—as much as she hated to use that word—had ended up failing. Though, perhaps she couldn’t say that it failed completely. It had allowed her to keep the soul out of Iosefael’s hands at least. But if it was hurting Izsha…

“Tenebrael,” Alyssa said, closing her eyes. “I need help. Again. The same thing as last time. A way to extract souls from their containers and manipulate them.”

Even with her eyes closed, she could see the mystic circles drawing themselves out in front of her. As expected, they popped up without much effort or work on her part. In fact, she could probably have just asked for a repeat of the previous miracle without any additional pomp and circumstance. As if knowing Alyssa’s intentions, the circles were right up next to her body. Stretching her arms out, Alyssa was able to reach inside herself.

As far as she could tell from a simple glance, Izsha’s soul wasn’t actually fighting with her soul. In Irulon, the dual souls were constantly warring with each other, grabbing pieces from the other and absorbing them only to have the same done in turn moments later. In comparison, Izsha’s soul was fairly inert. There was some motion. Every once in a while, it would do the normal interaction with something that Alyssa couldn’t see. Presumably her own soul. Even rarer, it would do it to someone else, sending off or receiving a small piece of someone else’s soul.

Having heard what Irulon just said, that lack of fighting was probably because they weren’t synchronized or resonating with each other. Izsha’s soul, at this moment, was just hitching a ride around. And hopefully not undergoing pain in the process. Or maybe pain was the wrong word—Alyssa still wasn’t perfectly clear on what happened to souls that went uncollected in their deceased bodies. She wasn’t sure that she could really understand what happened to them without learning a whole lot more about souls in general. Maybe Irulon might be able to figure it out, but the knowledge was far too specialized at this point.

This time, Alyssa didn’t get a surge of warmth from brushing her fingers against Izsha’s soul. Rather, drawing it outside her body had the opposite effect. A chill set in. A cold winter breeze knocked snow off the branches of an overhead tree right down the back of her shirt. The icy snow slowly melted to a cold water that soaked into her shirt, spreading over her entire backside. It was a… distinctly unpleasant sensation.

And it must have shown on her face.

“Is something wrong?”

“No. I don’t think so. Izsha’s soul is right here. It was just a bit discomforting to pull out.”

“You didn’t accidentally pull your own soul out, did you?”

Alyssa blinked and promptly shuddered a shudder completely unrelated to the cold sensation. “I hadn’t even considered that to be a possibility until just now. But I’m pretty sure I would have died if I had done so, so I don’t think so. Izsha’s soul is entirely here as well. No part of it looks like it’s left inside me. At least as far as I can tell.”

“You would know better than anyone, I suppose.” Irulon, eyes still black and white, stared at where Alyssa held out her hands.

But, Alyssa could tell, Irulon wasn’t actually tracking the soul. With it out of her body, she could see it without needing to close her eyes and start concentrating. It was just there, gently flowing around like a scaled candle flame. If that made any kind of sense.

“Can you see it?”

“No,” Irulon said, slight disappointment apparent in the tone of her clipped response. “That ability would have been exceedingly handy in my own ritual. The vast majority of the problem was figuring out how to extract the dragon’s soul and transfer it to my body without killing either of us.”

“If there is one thing angels are good at, it’s interacting with souls.”

“Hm.”

“Do you want the soul back in Izsha’s body now?”

“Hold it for a moment,” she said, picking up her pen once again.

Irulon started sketching. She started with a wide circle, filling in geometric lines and shapes, even smaller circles connected to the inside edge of the larger one. But after a minute of drawing, she paused, shook her head, and flipped to the next page in her notebook. This time, she started with a circle again, but the patterns of lines differed on the interior. Some segments even extended outside the circle.

And again, she hesitated mid-stroke, flipped the page, and started over again.

For twenty minutes, she continued sketching out spells. For twenty minutes, she flipped pages after dismissing pattern after pattern. Her eyes remained black and white the entire time. The little white lines were rotating around as fast as Alyssa had ever seen them. Half the notebook went by before Irulon finally seemed satisfied with a pattern.

Then she pulled out a second notebook. Holding both in front of her, she started tracing the pattern that she had ended up with onto the proper spell card paper.

And then she went back to the first notebook and started a new page. Words, now. Or rather, Enochian. Line after line of various Enochian characters covered the page. As with the patterns, she discarded large swaths of the characters. She would dip her pen in the vial of ink attached to her hip and drag it across entire lines. But she seemed to make progress. Some characters were left out of her deletions. Some would get a small dot in one corner rather than the line through the center.

After another twenty minutes, she had managed to pull out a few dozen characters from several pages of the notebook. Then, she went back to the spell notebook and started filling them in, creating a recognizable spell card. One far more complex, both in pattern geometry and the Enochian characters, than anything Alyssa had ever seen. Before this, Accelero had been the most painstaking to draw out, and she had been tracing it off the picture she had taken of the actual card. Just that had taken her as many attempts as all of the Spectral Chains cards she had created ever.

Irulon free-handed everything.

“Is that how spell creation works? Did I just watch you create a spell?”

“In reverse order, yes and no. This is a variant on what I used to get the dragon’s soul resonating properly. Heavily modified, of course. Normal spell creation would be a far more involved and complex process. I’ve already done something like this before and…” Irulon raised her pen to tap at her temple. Her eyes flickered between their normal violet and the black and white of the dragon. “My peers would say that I cheat, if they knew. The original took me nearly three weeks of work and experimentation. My companion allows me to skip a lot of trial and error.”

“There aren’t going to be errors… are there?”

“I admit, I would have preferred a longer testing period. Unfortunately, we lack both time and test subjects. I don’t believe this will fully work, but it should act as a temporary measure while I do some proper research. Place the soul in the proper body, please.”

Alyssa hesitated. She had confidence in Irulon. At least, as much confidence as was possible to have with her admitting that she wanted more time. At the very least, she didn’t think that Irulon would deliberately try to sabotage anything. She wouldn’t try to hurt Izsha.

Still, she hesitated. Iosefael had been right. Alyssa really didn’t know what she was messing with. And if her meddling did something irreparable to Izsha…

She wished Tenebrael were here. Unlike Iosefael, Tenebrael would likely try to help, although she might have mental blocks preventing her from doing too much. At the very least, she would be able to identify any problems with Izsha after Irulon’s spell did whatever it was supposed to do…

“What does the spell do?”

“A soul is a surprisingly malleable thing. I’ve learned how to make small modifications to it. That’s what I did to my companion. It is also one of the principles under which my Toymaker spells work, though that is significantly less precise and quite destructive to the soul. Still, they all served as valuable test subjects for this task today.”

That probably explained why no angels—or demons, for that matter—showed up to take the goblin souls back at the desert outpost. The souls were destroyed beyond the point of being salvageable. That… was probably not a good thing no matter what ended up happening. Later, she might try to convince Irulon to not use more of those Toymaker spells.

“As for exactly what it does, it should fluctuate the resonance of the soul until it matches that of the body. I think. As I said, it will require further tuning, but it should be better for the soul than leaving it in your body. And lessens the risk to you in the process. A concern I have given what you said about me and my companion.”

The companion that she didn’t want to separate from. Though, Alyssa wasn’t sure that she could blame Irulon. Not when the dragon let her craft a complex spell in only a few hours. But… “I don’t mind the risk. Not as long as it helps Izsha. And I’d rather risk myself than accidentally hurt Izsha. Maybe we should wait and just make sure that your spell is the best it can be.”

“You don’t just risk yourself, but Izsha as well. Regardless, I don’t believe that there is a good solution here. No matter what, there are going to be risks. My method eliminates risk for you, which is a drastic step up over keeping Izsha’s soul in your body on a semi-permanent basis.”

“That’s…”

“And if you’re still hesitant, consider this: If something happens to you, who else around could possibly put souls back in their proper places?”

“You?”

“Ah, but I can’t fight off Iosefael if she comes back for Izsha’s soul. Or yours, for that matter.”

Alyssa nodded slowly at that. Irulon had a point there. Of everyone present, only Kasita could detect angels. Even then, it was a fairly vague detection. And one that only worked if she was paying absolute attention.

Taking a breath, she looked down at the soul in her arms. It had gently wafted one way then the other during Irulon’s endeavors, but now, it was sitting still, maybe even perked up. If Alyssa hadn’t known better, she would have thought that it was paying attention.

Actually, she didn’t know better. Her assumption might very well be correct.

“Alright,” she said, stepping up to Izsha’s body. “Alright. I’ll put it back. It’s probably how things should go anyway. Izsha belongs in its own body.”

“Hm.”

Leaning down, Alyssa stretched out her arms. Watching with her eyes open was a strange thing. The soul, her hands, and even arms up to her elbows just sank into the body. If she wasn’t so worried about Izsha, she might have tried waving a hand around a bit, even going so far as to play in it like the body was a pool of water. It had a similar texture and feel, surprisingly.

But, as it was, Alyssa closed her eyes and watched as the soul spread out to fill most of the chest before spreading up to the head. With it in place, she withdrew her arms.

As she did, even more of that warmth left her body. She didn’t know why Izsha’s soul was so warm. Those others that she had handled, the ones she had turned into their crystallized forms, hadn’t felt so warm. Perhaps it was something to do with her being a monster. Or maybe, because she was connected to Tenebrael now, she could feel something that she hadn’t before. That, thinking about it for a moment more, was most likely the reason. She could see souls in bodies, so she could feel them too.

Irulon watched her intently as she stepped away. “Peculiar,” she said. How do your hands pass through the flesh like that?”

Alyssa looked down at her own hands, still coated with the stretched out, glove-like mystic circles. All she could do was shake her head. “I don’t have any idea.”

“It was a rhetorical question,” Irulon said, pulling a small dagger out of a pouch at her hip. With the notebook open on Izsha’s side, she dragged the dagger down one edge, neatly slicing the piece of papyrus from the rest of the notebook. The sheet was much larger than standard spell cards. Maybe as large as a three-by-three grid of them.

After slipping the dagger back where it came from, she held the giant spell card out in front of her like it was any other card. “Resonation,” she intoned, voice low.

The card vanished in a puff of smoke.

Immediately, Izsha’s form started twitching.

Alyssa took a step forward again, but Irulon held out a hand, blocking her way forward. The princess stared down at Izsha with unblinking draconic eyes. Her face was entirely impassive, showing no emotion, no sign of whether or not the spell was working or killing the draken.

Though given that Izsha had already died once…

Shaking her head, Alyssa closed her eyes and watched the soul itself.

In a normal person, even normal draken, the soul normally just sat about, drifting slightly within the confines of the body. The giving and taking of parts notwithstanding. It didn’t fill every corner of the body. They weren’t person-shaped. But they did occupy the majority of the body’s chest and all of the head area. In line with Tenebrael’s terrible analogy of how the body was a game console and the soul the game itself, perhaps the brain was the wireless receptor. Or the controller? Or maybe she should stop thinking about that terrible analogy altogether.

Izsha’s soul was not drifting naturally. It twitched and shuddered, jerking and thrashing.

It kept going.

Ten minutes.

Twenty minutes.

No one said anything. Brakkt remained on watch. Irulon didn’t blink once. Alyssa alternated between watching the body twitch and watching the soul thrash.

Roughly an hour after Irulon started the spell, the spasming died down. Izsha’s body stilled, though it kept breathing.

Alyssa bit her lip.

And a few golden-white feathers started drifting through the air around her.


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033.011

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War And Peace

Last Ditch Attempt


“Does anything hurt? Does anything feel strange? Are you… alright?”

Izsha stood upright and it stood under its own power. There was a bit of a wobble, but considering that Izsha had just died, that might be expected.

However, Izsha didn’t respond. Not in any significant fashion. Alyssa didn’t expect the draken to turn around and start talking, but she did expect something. Anything. A nod. A shake of the head. A noise. But Izsha didn’t move. Alyssa had thought that standing upright was a sign of good things, but now…

Aside from Alyssa’s voice, there were plenty of other outside stimuli that Alyssa would have expected a reaction from. The Astral Authority was flying around en masse. Infected, both feral and of the weapon-wielding intelligent type that the Taker seemed to have become, were doing their best to take down any that strayed too close. The Patiences didn’t seem to have the intelligence—or perhaps patience—to sit back and let their longer-ranged allies handle things. As soon as one would pop out of a portal, it would immediately dive down toward the nearest infected. Which only seemed to work out for a quarter of them. They would immediately find themselves pounced upon and torn apart, often without even managing to spear their target. There were just too many infected.

More and more were pulling themselves up from the edges of the pit with every passing second.

Another portal opened near Alyssa. The golden edges of the Astral Authority’s preferred mode of transportation were bright enough that she could tell they were appearing even when out of her direct line of sight. Her hands were still inside Izsha, but she had found that she could pull one out long enough to draw a pistol without disrupting anything.

So she did.

Pistol in hand, Alyssa aimed over the top of Izsha toward the opening. Although nothing had come from it yet, the opening was roughly the size of a person. Larger would have meant a Diligence or even an Equanimity, but person-sized indicated a Patience or Kindness.

Sure enough, a silver spear emerged first. A porcelain mask attached to a silver filigree body stepped out. It took one look around before settling its blank visage on Alyssa.

“Tenebrael,” Alyssa said, finger already squeezing down on the trigger.

But she didn’t get a chance to finish.

An arrow slammed into the Patience’s face, splitting the mask clean in two. The silver around the protruding arrow began tarnishing, turning a foggy yellow-brown color. The spear fell to the ground, sliding down a small slope on the riverbank until it landed in the water with a light plop.

Alyssa pivoted as the portal closed, swinging her pistol around to aim at the attacker.

It was a demon. Or an infected. She honestly wasn’t sure if there was a difference between the two. It was a man, just a bit taller than the Taker, with burning embers for eyes. He had another arrow out, nocked, and the string drawn back to his shoulder.

There was a brief moment where Alyssa met his eyes. Her finger remained still tight around the trigger.

But he aimed upward, piercing the wings of a Diligence. As it spiraled into the river, he turned again, nocking another arrow as he found a new target.

Letting out a small sigh, Alyssa reholstered her pistol as she focused back on her current problem.

Izsha hadn’t reacted in the slightest to any of the goings on around them. Not even an errant twitch of its head. If a demon, feral or otherwise, started attacking, Alyssa had a sinking feeling that even then, Izsha wouldn’t do anything.

“One of those demons took a swipe at me,” a familiar voice complained over Alyssa’s shoulder. “How uncouth. Have they no manners? I can’t even believe what Tenebrael is… What are you doing?”

“Iosefael,” Alyssa said slowly as she looked back. Had it only been ten minutes? It felt longer. A lot longer. Iosefael should have been back a long time ago. And yet, at the same time, it felt like it was all too soon. Alyssa had thought that she had been making progress. Between the soul reacting and interacting, Izsha looking right at her, and the body standing upright, everything seemed like it should have worked. She had to be close. Just a bit more… massaging.

But…

What if all she was doing was hurting Izsha? It had to be possible. It just had to. If Irulon had swapped positions with Alyssa, she surely would have figured it out. But every moment that passed without Izsha recovering just gnawed at her once ironclad confidence. Even with all the help from Tenebrael and with Iosefael agreeing to wait before death’s coach could ferry the soul away, she had failed. Had it been doomed from the start?

“I… I don’t know what I’m doing,” Alyssa admitted, feeling the last vestiges of her determination crumble.

A warm hand rested on Alyssa’s shoulder, though it was quite cool in comparison to Izsha’s soul. It was probably supposed to comfort her, but it had the opposite effect. “I’m sorry. I tried to tell you…”

“Why? Why isn’t it working? What am I doing wrong? I thought I understood what Tenebrael wanted me to do, but…”

“Tenebrael wouldn’t know what to do. I doubt any angel could tell you.”

Alyssa’s eyes strayed away from Iosefael’s face, looking past the angel’s golden-white wings to where the Justice and the true demon were still battling each other. Even though she had been using Tenebrael’s magic for who knew how long, the Justice hadn’t tried attacking her. Its face was lined with cuts and scars from the true demon’s scythe. It didn’t bleed, but the marks were there. One corner of its angled jawline had been cut clean off, revealing nothing in the way of flesh or muscles. It was just more of whatever made up its pure white skin.

It had only been a few minutes since the demon had spoken to Alyssa. An ally of life, she had said. Would she know what was wrong? Could she give even a small hint toward what Alyssa was doing wrong? Even though she had gone to the demon when Tenebrael had been missing, Alyssa hadn’t made any kind of deal. It had been a mistake, introducing those embers to the world, but she had gone in already knowing that she wasn’t going to give up anything for information. Tenebrael just wasn’t important enough.

Izsha, on the other hand…

“They couldn’t help you either,” Iosefael said quickly, not even needing to follow Alyssa’s gaze. “That one would tell you that she could help, but would end up corrupting and perverting your friend into one of her minions. The relic might continue existing in a way that you could interact with, but nobody would be happy with the situation except for that one. And that’s the best case scenario.”

Alyssa grit her teeth. She didn’t want to believe that. But at the same time, she knew that Iosefael was telling the truth. Even had she not known that angels were not supposed to lie, there was evidence for her claim. Seeing the Taker again, watching how he showed up in defense of the true demon and then went on to call her his lady… Izsha would wind up the same.

A slave to the demons, used in a war against the Astral Authority like all the rest.

If it was even possible in the first place. As far as Alyssa knew, there were no cases of monsters becoming infected. That didn’t necessarily mean that they couldn’t contract the plague. If the true demon was going to make an exception for anyone, it would be for Izsha at Alyssa’s behest, if only because she wanted to get her hooks into another human.

But Alyssa couldn’t do that to Izsha.

There had to be another way.

She needed more information. Irulon. Even Tenebrael would likely try to help if Alyssa asked her while she was around. Even if she just had a little more practice or time, Alyssa could probably figure it out herself. She thought that she was so close with the way Izsha’s body was up, but…

But there was no more time. Iosefael was here to take Izsha’s soul now. Even though Izsha counted as a relic in their eyes, the angels weren’t going to just let the soul go.

Clenching her teeth together, Alyssa sunk both hands back into the mystic circles.

“Alyssa, it’s too—”

“I said I would let you remove Izsha’s soul. I wasn’t lying about that. But I’m going to remove the soul myself.”

Iosefael fell silent. She didn’t float forward or make any other movement to stop Alyssa.

Alyssa took that as a go ahead.

A scythe would remove it instantly. But, given that it was a weapon developed by humans, Alyssa wasn’t sure if it would hurt Izsha or not. It was probably designed around the same principles as their wings, but Alyssa couldn’t be sure. Regardless, gently pulling it out with her hands seemed far more caring than swiping a blade through Izsha’s body.

Like with the scythe on non-infected, the soul came out without any force required. It didn’t even take a light tug. The moment it passed beyond Izsha’s scales, the body wobbled. But it didn’t fall over. There wasn’t any part of the soul left inside. Alyssa even closed her eyes and checked. All of Izsha was a wispy mist in Alyssa’s arms.

“Since I healed the body,” Iosefael said when Alyssa looked to her, “it is in a strange state of being. It is technically alive, but there is no will behind anything it does. The body will stay here until it starves to death. But, without a soul, it won’t actually be dying? What a complicated situation you’ve created here. But I think I can probably kill it. First, the soul.” Iosefael held out a hand, looking morose. “No offense intended, but I’ve seen those abominations that you’ve made of souls. It would be best for someone more experienced to compress it for transportation to the Throne.”

Looking from Iosefael down to the mist in her arms, Alyssa stared.

The Throne. Some place off in the aether. Supposedly, all souls ended up there. Or most of them. Those Tenebrael consumed didn’t. Neither did those that were corrupted. Infected by demons or… whatever Irulon’s Toymaker spell did to them. No angel or demon had shown up for those.

Alyssa had never been all that religious. She had grown up with her mother, of course. Their household had been somewhat religious, but she herself hadn’t. Now, she might even be less religious than ever. Angels existed, sure. So did demons and souls. But anything beyond that? It was all up for grabs. The concept of Heaven chief among them. The Throne didn’t sound like any Heaven that she had heard of. And angels weren’t like they were in anything she had read before. They were more like computer programs, given tasks to follow that they couldn’t deviate from. And if they did deviate from them, it was more likely to be a bug than anything else.

Could she really just hand over Izsha to such an unknown fate? The soul wasn’t in the body anymore. From what she knew, it shouldn’t be in pain anymore from being inside a decaying corpse. But Iosefael wasn’t likely to see it that way. Iosefael, as a Principality, had a duty to collect the souls of the deceased. She wouldn’t just let a soul remain free floating.

There had to be something.

And there was.

The idea popped into her head.

Something must have shown on her face.

Iosefael’s eyes widened as she looked at Alyssa. Her wings spread wide. “Wait! Don’t—”

Too late. Alyssa ignored the angel, pulling her arms to her chest. The mist-like soul flooded into her body.

Irulon had once talked about the ritual that had saved the dragon that now resided in her body. It hadn’t been a quick thing. From inception to execution, the ritual had taken well over six months to complete. Most of which had been research and development, not even actual magic. The ritual had been completely specific to both Irulon and the dragon, the time of year and their respective ages, the health of both, and even the weather around where the ritual had been conducted. Should Irulon want to perform the same ritual again on a different target, almost everything of the original ritual would have to be tossed in the trash.

It had been a long and involved project. The only reason it had worked in the first place was thanks to the dragon’s longevity even while dying of some illness. Had Brakkt wanted her to save any other creature, it probably wouldn’t have worked simply because of the time investment.

Perhaps now, with the dragon helping her to think and calculate things much faster, Irulon could have used a similar ritual on some other being in a fraction of the time. Hopefully. But even that was probably a stretch.

Regardless, Irulon hadn’t gone ahead with the ritual until she had been absolutely positive that it was going to work.

Alyssa had no idea what she was doing.

The moment Izsha’s soul was inside her body, she felt it. The warmth that she had experienced while handling Izsha’s soul using the miracle spread across her entire body, filling up every last nook and cranny. Even after filling her body to the brim, it didn’t stop there. With nowhere else to spread to, the temperature started going up. Alyssa started to feel like she was back on the plains of the dead.

She stumbled back, feeling the sweat bead over every inch of her skin.

“Okay. Don’t panic,” Iosefael said, mouth moving at a hundred miles an hour. “We can still fix this!”

“I’m not panicking,” Alyssa bit out.

“You’re not? Okay. That’s good. I’m not either.” She fidgeted, jumping from one side of Alyssa to the other, looking her up and down. “Okay. Okay. So, this is fixable. I’m sure it is. I just need a minute to think.”

“Go away,” Alyssa said, slowly standing upright. Her fingers felt like she was holding them right next to a campfire, but… it wasn’t too bad. At least they weren’t in the metaphorical campfire. “Go find some other souls to ferry off. Izsha is staying with me.”

“Alyssa. We talked about this with your friend… You can’t… It’s just not… Your body—”

“It’s a temporary measure,” she said, voice getting a little steadier. The heat was dying down now. Slowly, but definitely. “Just until I can talk to Irulon. And maybe Tenebrael.”

“But—”

“I know you want the soul. I know you can’t help me. It’s your programming as a Principality, I don’t blame you for it. But just go.” Alyssa took in a deep breath. “I’ll deal with this myself.”

“You don’t even know what this is.”

“I’ll be fine. And if I’m not, then at least I’ll have tried.” Alyssa closed her eyes and concentrated. She still had to find Kasita. And then they had to escape before the Astral Authority finished off the demons. Or vice versa. Tenebrael seemed to think that their fight would continue for some time. Long enough for her to do whatever she needed to do.

Alyssa didn’t want to take the chance that she was wrong.

So she scanned, looking among the myriad of souls, searching for just one that wasn’t tainted by the demonic corruption.

“Your other relic is over this way.”

Blinking her eyes open, Alyssa found Iosefael still standing in front of her. Except, instead of looking panicked, she now simply looked resigned as she pointed a finger away from the pit. Turning in the direction Iosefael was pointing, Alyssa closed her eyes again and finally noticed what had to be Kasita.

She must have been flung even further away than Izsha.

“Thank you,” Alyssa said after eying Iosefael. The angel didn’t look like she was about to try something, so she just shook her head.

Which ended up with her staring at the flopped-over body of Izsha. It was still alive. Still breathing. But…

Another Lighten Load and a Levitate had it moving along with Alyssa as she trudged up the riverbank’s slope. Iosefael followed along, gently flapping her wings every so often to keep her feet off the ground. Alyssa wasn’t sure why Iosefael was following her…

Actually, she knew why. She knew exactly why. She just didn’t care. Her head hurt. Her legs hurt. Her side hurt. The Astral Authority and the demons were still in the area, still posing a danger, even if they were preoccupied with each other.

“Adrael’s staff is missing,” Alyssa said. The thought came to her suddenly, and she decided to use it to maybe get rid of Iosefael. At least for a time. Surely she wouldn’t keep following her around forever. There were bound to be other deaths across the world sooner rather than later. “I have no idea where it might be, but it was attached to Izsha when that Justice’s sword hit the ground.”

Another sudden worry sparked in Alyssa’s mind. She quickly tossed a glance over her shoulder at the largest member of the Astral Authority that she had seen so far.

Ropes were tied all up and down its arm. The other ends of the ropes were in the hands of dozens of infected. A real Gulliver situation. Unless it got loose, it seemed like that sword would stay unused for the time being.

“Adrael’s staff?” At first, Iosefael seemed confused. Then she made a squeaking noise, one that forced Alyssa to turn back to find growing horror on her face. “Oh no. We can’t let that fall into the hands of the demons.”

Without another word, she disappeared, taking to the skies.

Which suited Alyssa just fine. She trudged forward, putting one foot in front of the other like it was all she could focus on.

Kasita was up ahead. Alyssa could see her now—she was in her human form. A shout got her attention.

“Alyssa! I’m so… Izsha?” Her eyes widened as she looked over the floating form of the draken. “Is… Is it?”

“I’ll explain later,” Alyssa said, not stopping even as Kasita ran up to her. “Let’s just get away from here for now.”


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