032.001

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Interlude

Decorous


The world was ending.

Figuratively, but very possibly literally as well. For months now, things had been strange. Off. Once familiar aspects of the world, constants as unchanging as granite, were now twisted.

Decorous clasped his hands together, staring. He didn’t stare at anything in particular. The room was the Lords’ Dining Hall of the palace. An exclusive area reserved for only those of the highest standing in society. And an intensely familiar place for Decorous. He had spent many evenings within, eating, communing with his fellows of higher standing. He knew its intricacies like he knew his own hand. From his table made from the finest marble, carved by craftsmen so skilled that its surface gleamed like a mirror, to the elegant tapestries of the twelve great houses adorning the walls. At the head of the room, one more tapestry hung, larger than all the others. A deep black banner. Golden filigree adorned the edges, outlining a shield. In the center of the shield, a great depiction of a column held two ravens aloft. It was by far the most ornate of all the thirteen tapestries. The largest as well. Expensive gold-violet thread drew out detail in the shield, the filigree, and the ravens while the pillar had been woven of spun stone.

House Yora’s red banner emblazoned with eight swords, three pointed straight upward and five pointed down, fanned out in an arc beneath, stood proud in the prestigious spot to the left of the royal family’s tapestry. It was one of only three house banners with actual gold inlaid in the thread. A symbol of his house’s great quarries and mines. Of the service that they could and did provide. One of the main reasons, aside from the large population of Yora, that he could sit within the opulent chambers.

Normally, a number of other lords, ladies, and their sons and daughters could be found feasting within during evening time. It was rare that the actual leaders of the lands would gather all at once. But there was always a representative at each table. Usually, that came in the form of children. Occasionally cousins or some other family relation. In the rare case when one of the leading families couldn’t spare anyone, they would appoint a steward to take their position in case some vital piece of news needed to be communicated when a Message wouldn’t suffice.

The Lords’ Dining Hall served as an informal communications platform.

But that communication broke down with so many missing.

Decorous could count the nonservants in the room on one hand. Even House Yora lacked anyone apart from himself.

Part of the problem was that a few houses had pulled out of Lyria almost entirely in protest of some of the Pharaoh’s recent decisions. His interactions with monsters being the hot topic of debate over the past while. There was always some controversy or another. No one could hold power and not have their decisions criticized by someone. But monsters were a sore subject with most people. Sons, daughters, and even regular peasants who signed up for a shot at a more noble lifestyle—too many good soldiers lost their lives to monsters, usually at the Fortress of Pandora. Though there were plenty of communities of monsters north of the border. Those ones at least tried to keep a lower profile to avoid extermination. If they didn’t… then they would have to be fought. Large scale fighting always involved casualties.

But even among those who had pulled out in protest, they would still leave a steward behind to remain in communication with allies and, if necessary, the royal family. However, as part of their protest, they were ordered to skip functions such as these meals. That alone reduced the numbers in the hall by more than half. Even still, it couldn’t account for the desertion tonight.

Not every house had pulled out of the city. Some even supported the Pharaoh. Depending on location, some houses wound up quite friendly with local monsters, usually through trade and little else; even then, they kept such relations quiet. Even they were mostly gone. Still living in their manors within the city, but cowering from the events of two evenings ago.

Or, at least, that was what they would say if questioned. Decorous admitted that there was a minor issue of safety. Very minor. It was true that several city guardsmen had been murdered. But that had been on the outskirts of the city. Most manors inside the city were well within a five minute walk of the palace. And half the nobles took a carriage anyway.

A part of it might have been the other incident of that night. The one that practically the entire city had seen. Decorous still didn’t know what that had been about. Rumors spread among every circle of the palace. The Pharaoh had waved it off, citing it as something that wasn’t worth investigating further at this time, so he didn’t even know which rumors were true. Most agreed that Tenebrael had been involved in some way. Especially those familiar with the Princess Irulon. Some of those shapes in the sky had reflected the tattoos that adorned Princess Irulon’s face. And if it truly was something related to Tenebrael, it wasn’t hard to understand why the Pharaoh would have waved it off. The Pharaoh, despite unpopular policies, was the intermediary between Tenebrael and the people.

But Decorous doubted that the state of the hall was thanks to that in the slightest.

His eyes drifted off, focusing on one of the furthest banners from the head of the room.

A blue banner with a chevron. Three yellow—not gold—roosters, each clutching a spike of grain, were arranged around the chevron. At the tip of the upward facing chevron, an armored helmet looked out over the dining hall. The emblem of House Worx. It was something of a surprise that it was still hanging up.

That house was the real reason why no one had been attending the various court functions for the past few days. No one wanted to be associated with them. No one wanted to show their face and risk someone remembering a conversation between them and someone of House Worx.

To anyone not wanting to be accused of treason, House Worx was more toxic than gorgon venom.

The eldest son of their house had been captured the night everything happened. And had confessed everything. The family’s plan had involved unleashing several demons in the city. While the hellhound hunted them down, they were going to orchestrate or outright fabricate the hellhound going insane to further unrest among the people. They had carried a fairy into the city with the intent of getting the hellhound under their control, at which point it was to go on a rampage, destroying homes and killing people. They somehow managed to get the support of the Juno Federation to help use the monsters. Some control magic that the Pharaoh was keeping quiet on.

Everyone named as a conspirator who was in the city was currently in the darkest dungeons that the Pharaoh could find. The rest of the family was blacklisted. If any dared to show their face nearby, they were sure to find themselves imprisoned as well. Decorous had even heard talks about marching the city guard to Worx to install new leaders in the relatively small yet wealthy fishing hamlet. Though that wasn’t likely to happen anytime soon. Not with the city guard at the lowest count in ten years.

And yet, despite that, both those loyal and dissenting were currently vying for favor in an attempt to get their sons, daughters, or other relatives installed as the head of Worx.

Even Decorous had considered trying to curry some favor to get himself a more prestigious position. Although he hadn’t been involved in this particular incident, he knew of several individuals who had aspirations for the royal seat. Selling them out might get him his own lordship. As the third son of House Yora, he wasn’t likely to get anything better than he had already.

Of course, betraying his conspirators would only mark him as untrustworthy, potentially putting a hamper on his own aspirations. He would be left with no choice but to bow to the Pharaoh’s law. Which might just be what the Pharaoh wanted.

Quite the conundrum.

A servant finally brought about his meal. The great clock on the wall, elvish make, said that he had been waiting for a full half hour. It was completely disrespectful to be served so slowly. The servant didn’t even offer a word of apology, simply setting down the large plate of roast duck, garnished with garlic and carrots, with a steaming fresh bread. Decorous, however, did not complain to the servant as the young boy filled his goblet with fresh wine. It could have been an accident, coincidence, or simply poor timing. Complaining wouldn’t turn back the clock and get him his meal faster. Besides, he couldn’t be sure that the servant hadn’t been ordered to make him wait.

All the servants in the palace belonged to the Pharaoh. Criticizing the Pharaoh’s servants at a time like this was sure to get eyes turned in his direction.

So he ate in peace and silence, rather enjoying the lack of people. It wasn’t often that he got to eat a hot meal within the Lords’ Dining Hall. The servants always delivered the meals hot from the kitchen, of course. It was just that so many people used meal times as conference times that he often wound up talking until the chill set in.

He quickly realized that today would, once again, be a day of cold meals.

His elder brother entered the room, looked around once, then casually made his way over to the table of House Yora. He wore a tight-fitted suit in Yora’s particular shade of red with a deep violet Inverness cape draped around his shoulders.

“Decorous,” he said with a nod, idly waving a hand to catch the attention of one of the servants.

“Hello Val. Surprised you came today.”

“Please. As if any grime from this unfortunate incident could possibly rub off on us.” He took a seat, looking around the empty room with a smile before looking straight at Decorous. A dangerous glint crossed his eyes. “Nothing will rub off on us, will it, Decorous?”

“I had nothing to do with it, if that is what you are insinuating. Having a hostile force cross a gate and murder the guards is a blight upon my personal honor as the captain of the city guard.”

“Of course. Of course.” That dangerous glint left his eyes as Val leaned back in his seat. “And you would never do something that would harm your reputation in the eyes of your peers.”

He hadn’t so far. Not to his knowledge, at least. There would always be those who would dislike him, of course. He couldn’t help that. And he didn’t want to be liked by everyone. Respected, yes. Liked? Optional. “If you can’t believe that,” he said slowly and quietly. There was no one around. No one who would overhear. Most tables in the dining hall were enchanted specifically to block eavesdropping attempts anyway. The enchants were extremely expensive, but most viewed them as completely necessary. “If you can’t believe that, at least believe that I remember our conversation the day the hellhound joined the plague containment teams.”

“Oh? And your opinions on it now?”

Setting down his fork, Decorous considered his words carefully. His elder brother had advocated for the hellhound, though not publicly. They both, along with several other houses, had been waiting in the wings for an incident to arise in order to condemn the Pharaoh for his decisions.

Yet none had.

“Although plague incidents remain high, and likely will increase after the incident the other night, casualties are low among the city guard. In fact, while the plague containment teams are outside my domain of management, I believe the incident a few nights ago was the first death since the hellhound joined the team. Compared to previous high plague infections over the same period of time, that is quite amazing. Civilian deaths are also drastically lower than normal.”

“Those are all facts, young Decorous. What are your opinions?”

Decorous picked up his fork and knife, sliced a sliver of meat, and ate it while trying to decide what answer his brother wanted. Did he want him to double down on the idea that the hellhound would be a menace to the city despite all evidence to the contrary? Or did he want him to answer more honestly? Would Decorous even be being honest with himself if he said that the hellhound wasn’t a problem? That was probably the real reason he was hesitating. His instincts screamed that it should be chained up and publicly executed. At the same time, it had undoubtedly saved human life.

“I think,” Val said before he could answer, “that we should rethink our objectives. The Pharaoh wants to bring in monsters like that and use them to help humanity. We already use slaves in the workforce, mostly in construction. The Black Prince and his pet lizards did fend off the Juno Federation last year with an ease unseen before.”

“You’re saying we should switch sides? Agree with the Pharaoh and support his decisions involving the monsters?”

“Oh no. No. Of course not. The Pharaoh still needs to go,” Val said just a little louder than Decorous would have preferred. A quick glance around showed no one close enough to breach the eavesdropping countermeasures. Thankfully. “But the Pharaoh is setting a precedent. Open association with monsters is acceptable. The public won’t be pleased. We would obviously rather not have riots around Yora. However, what the peasants don’t know won’t hurt them, right? Who are they to say what is best to do with our own standing knights and soldiers.”

“Soldiers? You… are saying that you want monsters among the Yora guardsmen?”

“So long as we select the right monsters, of course. Carefully controlled and monitored as well. But otherwise, why should we not?”

“For one, they’re monsters. I don’t think I need to explain any more, but since you brought it up, the Yora guard tend to be in charge of exterminating monsters that spring up, whether through slipping past Pandora or simply because they lived elsewhere. I can see a monster being happy to slaughter the odd brigand and highwayman, but we have hardly any of those around Yora as is. They well know our zero-tolerance policy for such ruffians. So a monster wouldn’t be much use for that. Setting them against their own kind won’t work.”

“Are you so certain? I’ve been doing a great deal of research since all this business with the Pharaoh went down. I’ve been in and out of the Observatorium as well as convinced the Knights Solaris to allow perusal of their vast treatises on monsters. As it turns out, many monsters only band together because of humans, how numerous we are, and our well-known disdain for their entire kind. If not for us, I doubt they would get along with each other all that well.”

“So you think giving some species safe harbor will make them turn on their fellow monsters? It won’t be that easy. You’ll be inviting the enemy into our safe and protected lands. What kind of monster would you even try to… court? Surely not a hellhound,” Decorous said with a shiver.

He considered himself quite experienced with disturbing things. It came with the job. As captain, he had a duty to his men, even those who fell in combat. In seven years of being a guardsman in one form or another, he had fought against plenty of inhuman creatures. But… hellhounds… there was something about them. The way they looked at people, their eyes burning with demonic flame. The Observatorium said that there was nothing demonic about hellhounds, but why name them that if not?

The one time he had seen a hellhound—before the Pharaoh’s pet, that was—had not turned out well. A pair of them had decimated twelve strong men before being put down.

“Perhaps,” Val said with a placid smile. “A hellhound seems to be working out well for the Pharaoh, after all.”

Decorous slumped, giving Val something to laugh about.

“You shouldn’t worry so much,” he said, patting Decorous on the back. “Nothing will happen right away. Yora keeps the territory clear of all threats. Convincing any species of monster that we’ve had a change in heart will not be a simple task. Nor a quick one, I imagine. Besides, you’re stuck here in the city. All you have to worry about is what new monsters the Pharaoh will bring in next.”

“Please tell me you haven’t heard some rumor.” The last thing he needed was more nonsense going on. The draken, at least, stayed out of sight. If more monsters popped up and started running around like that hellhound… if more hellhounds appeared…

“Well,” Val said, standing. “Just thought I would get your thoughts on the matter. I’ll keep you informed if things change.” Without any further words of parting, he started heading out. He hadn’t even received a meal, let alone eaten. Then again, given how long Decorous had waited for his food, Val might have been waiting all night.

Decorous found himself glancing off to the banner of House Worx as Val wandered off. It would be nice to get away from everything. To run his own territory as he saw fit. No monsters. No Rank Six arcanists who scuff the moon. No princesses throwing their weight around.

Well… he really wouldn’t be that free of everything. Even if he did manage to curry enough favor to even be considered—and he fully admitted that he would likely be starting far behind individuals from several of the other houses—he would still be required to attend court, visit Lyria, and otherwise interact with the Pharaoh and the people of this city. Even if he appointed a steward or had children, he would still have to make appearances on occasion. And children took far too long to grow to a useful age.

There just wasn’t a victory condition no matter what he did. Even if they got rid of the Pharaoh, Val’s plan might still come to fruition. It wasn’t like Decorous couldn’t understand the benefits of throwing monsters into the grinder over humans, but…

Could hundreds of years of animosity really be swept away just because a few armies wanted to use them as fodder?

Groaning, Decorous reached for his wine.

Only to find it completely empty.

Sighing, he waved over the servant once again.

He had a feeling he would be drinking a lot tonight.


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031.009

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Astral Authority

Hunting and Hunted


Chasing a suspect through a city should have been easy. Should being the key word. Alyssa had magic. She had a way to find people through walls with her ability to see souls. Draken and Fela were unbelievably fast and could smell anything from miles away. The Pharaoh and Irulon were Rank Six arcanists who, despite Alyssa’s best efforts, had an even wider range of available spells than she did. The Pharaoh in particular. He had tried using time magic, both to speed himself up to the point where he blurred past a full-speed Izsha, and to slow down their target.

No matter what, the bald man remained out of reach. He disappeared around a corner just as Alyssa rounded one corner. He turned invisible just as the Pharaoh seemed like he had his hands around the man. Everyone except Alyssa suddenly forgot about him the moment they organized their chase enough to surround him.

Something was clearly wrong. If not for the others being able to see him on occasion, she might have suspected him of being an angel. Thus far, she hadn’t seen a single male—or masculine—angel. But there were tons of angels. Alyssa only knew the names of four and had only seen two others beyond those. Deciding that they were all females, and obviously females at that, based on only six examples was ignorant to the extreme.

She suspected that he might be using some kind of miraculous artifact. Similar to the Society of the Burning Shadow at the desert outpost, it was possible that an angel like Adrael had conveniently dropped something that allowed such evasive prowess. Or perhaps he had come across—either through his own invention or through lost records—some kind of magic that even the Observatorium was unaware of.

The Observatorium was the center for all magical learning in the entire world. She didn’t think it was just a prideful boast when Irulon said that nobody else understood magic to the degree that they did. But the world was large. And she knew that there was magic that the Observatorium had not been able to replicate. Irulon had said that portals like the ones Alyssa had created were a thing thought to exist in the First City, but had been lost. And then there was whatever magic had actually destroyed the First City.

So it was possible he was using entirely human means to avoid capture.

As Alyssa directed Izsha around yet another street—the fourth right turn in a row—she couldn’t help but feel like she was being led around by the nose. A waste of time while allies of his did something else?

“Tenebrael,” she said, pistol pre-aimed at where he should be. “Immobilize my target. Rend him unable to act save for the questions he might answer. Let the miracle manifest and carry out our will.”

Two people could play at using unknown magic here.

Alyssa’s finger squeezed the trigger. The hammer slammed down, causing the gun to lurch in her hands. Despite her poor aim on the back of Izsha and from hardly seeing the man, the beam of black light actually curved, swinging around the outside edge of a building to pierce his Achilles tendon.

He sure let out a human-like cry of pain as his face slammed into the ground. With him on the ground, casting Spectral Chains was no issue. The ethereal links bound around him, pinning his arms to his side and keeping him from moving. Not that he looked like he could run anywhere anymore. His entire foot was missing from the ankle down. Not just detached, but completely and totally absent. If there was some small consolation for the man, it was that the wound looked cauterized. He wouldn’t bleed out from it.

Irulon was running up behind Alyssa, riding on the back of Musca.

Unfortunately, Alyssa wasn’t sure that she could stick around much longer.

The bright lights of the Astral Authority up high all froze when she crafted her request to Tenebrael. She couldn’t see them clearly. Not without her binoculars. Had they done the same when she had killed that Patience earlier? Probably not. There hadn’t been so many of them earlier. In fact, that one Patience might have been the only one in the entire city at that point in time. It had been the large mystic circle that had drawn their attentions. She had personally witnessed several of the fake-angels passing through portal-like gates. The signature of Tenebrael’s miracle, and such a powerful miracle at that, had drawn them. And now, they were on the lookout. On the hunt for even a small miracle like the one she had used to incapacitate the bald man.

Alyssa glanced over her shoulder. Would Irulon be able to handle him if she ran off? Normally, Alyssa would have thought so without a doubt in her mind. But more than once, this man had caused some kind of confusion effect. Irulon, and the others, had suddenly simply forgotten exactly what they were supposed to be doing. Like they hadn’t remembered that they were supposed to be chasing this guy. Alyssa wasn’t sure if it hadn’t affected her because of her connection to Tenebrael or because of Adrael’s staff attached to her back blocking magical effects.

Gritting her teeth, she slipped the staff out of its sheath on her back. With only a glance to Irulon, Alyssa threw it high into the air.

Irulon caught it on its way back down without the appearance of the slightest strain.

“Izsha. Run past. Find someplace to hide,” Alyssa said as she allowed the Spectral Chains to dissipate. She could have dragged him along behind her, but that probably would have killed him. She was fairly certain that tying people to a horse and having it run around had been some kind of medieval execution technique. Instead, she and Izsha continued right past him, trusting Irulon to handle the bald man. Hopefully protected from whatever magic he had thanks to the staff.

If she lost the staff…

Iosefael said she would return at some point. Although she lacked Tenebrael’s black book, she might have it within her to locate an angelic weapon. And if not her, then perhaps Alyssa could just do it herself.

For now, Izsha raced on. The Astral Authority split into two groups. One looked like it was headed toward where she had originally fired the pistol. If they didn’t ignore Irulon or the bald man… They would. They had to. Irulon might have Tenebrael’s tattoo on her face, but she obviously was not Tenebrael. The other group, on the other hand, was after Alyssa.

She wasn’t Tenebrael either, but her connection might make her feel a whole lot more like Tenebrael than Irulon’s tattoos did for her.

In fact, she hoped that they would decide to all come after her. At least she knew that she could kill them if necessary. Alyssa didn’t even know how they might test whether or not Irulon, the Pharaoh, Brakkt, or any of the others might be able to harm one. They would have to capture one. If they did so, allies would come, most likely.

They should only have to worry about it for a few days anyway. After tonight, she was to head out to Owlcroft. As long as Tenebrael’s plan worked, the Astral Authority would be out of Lyria’s airspace by then.

“Tenebrael,” Alyssa said, aiming her pistol upward. “Those who dare to hunt you threaten your most loyal subjects. Offer your divine protection to the worthy while bringing down the hammer of wrath upon the false-angels of the Astral Authority.”

A black beam raced from the barrel of the gun. Just as it had with the bald man, it curved in the air to correct for Alyssa’s poor aim, piercing the nearest Patience through its… head thing. And it didn’t stop there. Coming out the back of the woven silver, the beam split in two. A Diligence tried to dodge, but the snake-like form of the dragon was too large. The beam speared it through its center, seemingly spreading out within the creature to kill it. A vein-like pattern of black-white light intensified on its scales until…

Alyssa winced. The bright light of the Diligence exploding dotted her vision with afterimages. But it wasn’t bad enough to miss the other beam of light utterly obliterate a Kindness. Unlike the bolt that had hit the Diligence, that beam continued on through.

Until it hit a Chastity. The bulwark of the Astral Authority stopped it dead. Chastities were insectile in appearance. Much like that of a spider crossed with an ironclad beetle. With feathered wings. They didn’t look like they had much in the way of weapons, but the armored hide didn’t even have a scratch after being struck by the bullet.

Although the miracle stopped dead then and there, it still achieved the effect Alyssa wanted. Three of the Astral Authority were dead. Those that remained switched their pathing, aiming toward her rather than toward Irulon.

In fact, it worked so well that it might have worked too well.

Two of those square portals opened in the air, each depositing a Patience.

One of which appeared directly above her, swiping down with its spear.

“Izsha!” Alyssa shouted, ducking her head. “Must go faster!”

The draken’s powerful muscles coiled up for a spring forward, launching them through the streets. Alyssa raised her pistol again, only to freeze. Another portal opened directly in front of them, much larger than those that had appeared higher up. Izsha hit the ground just in front of it, digging its talons into the ground in an attempt to stop itself.

“Left!” Alyssa shouted, eyes widening as she pulled out a spell card.

An arm emerged from the gaping portal. Like a lion’s paw, complete with golden fur. One at least as big as Izsha. Probably bigger. Whatever body it was attached to was clearly too small to fit through the portal, but it didn’t need the rest of its body. The paw slammed down, cracking the ground and even the walls of nearby buildings. Izsha, thankfully, followed her instructions perfectly. Alyssa and Izsha just barely squeezed out from underneath thanks to Shorten Distance, a Rank Three Physical type spell.

The space it could warp was only about the size of a room. But that was enough to get away from the lion arm reaching through the portal.

Alyssa aimed her pistol again, request to Tenebrael already on her lips. But she paused. Not because of another portal popping up, but because of a realization.

The Astral Authority had lost dozens of members in their assault on the massive circle above the city. And yet, despite those losses, they had continued throwing more and more members at it until they had overwhelmed it through sheer numbers. If they were limited by how many they had, Tenebrael would surely have simply killed the rest and been done with it.

She had to assume that continually killing them wouldn’t do much of anything.

From Iosefael, Alyssa knew that their portals weren’t just conjured out of nowhere. A Charity had the sole role of creating those portals. They could traverse worlds and such without a Charity around, but it was a longer and more involved process. They weren’t angels. They didn’t have direct access to the Throne and the many worlds it was connected to like angels did.

Finding the Charity and killing it might give her enough of a momentary advantage to defeat the rest. Or to escape.

The only other option was to hide outright. And if she couldn’t figure out a way to locate the Charity, hiding might be the only option.

Ducking under the bladed tip of a Patience’s spear, Alyssa wasn’t sure that they were going to give her much of a chance to do that. Maybe another distraction? She had to wonder if such a thing would even work with them already after her like they were. When she had conjured the large circle above the city, and even when she had killed that first Patience, there hadn’t been any others around her.

“Izsha, let’s get out of the city.” That, at the very least, would mean that she didn’t have to worry that another Equanimity would stick its paw out of a portal and crush some poor farmer’s cart of cabbages. It would also give Izsha perfectly clear and open terrain to rush across at top speed.

Izsha turned, hightailing it straight away. They were still near the easternmost gate. Though, now that she was being chased, it felt like they were much further than Alyssa wanted to be. And some of those things were getting close.

A Patience swooped in. Alyssa almost fired at it, only deciding at the last moment to not create more miracles with Tenebrael’s signature. Doing so would only draw more to her. Instead, she cast the tried and true Spectral Chains.

It didn’t kill the Patience, but it did stop it from spearing her through the head. Wings bound together against the silver filigree of its body underneath the chains. It plummeted into the ground. Dust, brickwork, and gravel kicked up into the air. Izsha whined slightly, likely having felt like a ship at high speed having its anchor catch on something solid. Spectral Chains did stretch—new links sprouted out of thin air—but not enough to support the speed at which they were moving.

Alyssa canceled the spell. She didn’t know if the impact had done any damage to the Patience. It certainly did not fly back into the air before she had to focus on other things.

Like the Diligence firing a blast of… fake-angelic magic. Projectile Reflection was still up from earlier. She wasn’t going to trust it to deal with something that had taken out a significant portion of the giant mystic circle. Another Shorten Distance got them out of immediate danger. As they skipped ahead, Alyssa decided to try an Empty Vessel.

She honestly hadn’t expected it to do much. Angels ignored Empty Mirror. Even ones like Iosefael that were affected by Spectral Chains. She suspected it had something to do with the way angels perceived souls. And yet, glancing over her shoulder, the entire gathering of the Astral Authority had… not stopped. They were all still traveling in the same direction, but they were no longer honed in on her.

Quietly, just in case they could somehow hear through the alternate reality field, Alyssa spoke to Izsha. “Break off. Head along the wall. We can jump it if we still need to get out of the city.”

Izsha made a noise that might have been an agreement. Or it might have simply been an acknowledgment. Either way, the draken took the next crossroad. As they changed directions, Alyssa kept a careful eye on her pursuers.

They did not follow.

Still, she did not stop Izsha. Not until they were well away from the Astral Authority. Even though she had watched half of her pursuers vanish back into their portals and the other half disperse around the city—probably looking for her—she still felt nervous stopping. It would have been simple for a portal to pop up behind her and unleash a lion’s paw. It wasn’t like they made noise.

She had taken a moment to send a text to the other phones. Fractal magic did work to hide her. It might help if one came snooping around Irulon. Alyssa couldn’t discount the possibility that it was a property unique to her. Too much was unknown at this point in relation to the Astral Authority.

But, for the time being, it seemed as if hiding had worked out. Which was an amazing thing. Her plan to locate the local Charity had included another request to Tenebrael, which would only have drawn even more attention to her. Besides that, she didn’t know their actual range. The Charity could have been a week’s worth of nonstop draken ride away for all she knew.

Together with Izsha, Alyssa stood by and simply watched the skies for a full hour. They stopped right near the wall, well away from any normal foot traffic areas. Just in case. But none of the Astral Authority ever came close to her. They were investigating along the route she had been taking when she used Empty Vessel, but, after an hour, all the lights in the sky had vanished. Most seemed to have gone back into portals. There were some others that simply flew off, some into the city and some out. She still waited an extra half hour after the last light disappeared from the sky.

“Take us over the wall, Izsha. Just in case we need to run again.”

The draken tilted its head enough to look back. It was one of those looks.

“Sorry for dragging you into this,” Alyssa said, giving what she hoped was a comforting pat on the head and not a patronizing one. “I’d go off on my own and drop the invisibility, but I worry that they will notice you and come after you even if I’m not around.” Sighing, she stroked the scales, still not even sure that the draken could really feel it underneath all that armor. “I still want to find a way to properly communicate, but using more of Tenebrael’s power seems like a bad idea at the moment.”

In fact, it was probably a bad idea all around until she followed through with Tenebrael’s plan. Even then, she might want to wait until Tenebrael enacted whatever she was going to do to deal with the threat as a whole. Which… was unfortunate. That meant no portal to the pit. Nor to anywhere the Pharaoh had requested.

Izsha, either accepting the apology or simply deciding to go along with Alyssa’s request anyway, did jump the wall. The landing wasn’t quite as gentle as Alyssa had gotten used to, but that was probably because the ground on the other side was sloped away from the wall rather than any intentional annoyance on Izsha’s part.

A short distance away, Alyssa finally let the Empty Vessel drop.

Again, she waited for about a half hour before deciding that nothing was after her right at that very second.

She still didn’t head back into the city right away. Instead, she decided to get a quick update. She had ended the conference call while being chased, so had to dial up Jason’s number, hoping that Irulon still had the phone.

“Alyssa?” The first ring hadn’t even finished. “Are you alright?”

“Fine, Mom. Is Irulon there?”

There was a hesitation before an answer came. Alyssa could tell that Lisa had something else to ask. Probably something about all the nonsense that had happened since night fell. But, she answered the question rather than asked one of her own. “She is in the middle of interrogating the man you helped capture.”

“Find out anything interesting?”

“Actually, just about everything, as far as I understand it. He is answering all questions asked of him.”

“After how evasive he was?”

“Irulon thinks you had something to do with it.”

“Me? But I… I… Oh.” Wait. The request to Tenebrael. She had asked that he be unable to do anything but answer questions. “Yeah. That might have been me.”

“It seems as if he was hired by nobles of the city. The plague related items and equipment were going to be an attempt to draw out Fela and involve her in some incident.”

“Really? He wasn’t part of the Society of the Burning Shadow? The nobles killed their own men at the gate?” The city guard, including those who protected the gates, were men sourced primarily from the various cities and towns deemed large enough to have their own knights and trained soldiers. “Unless… Check with Oxart. I bet all of them were recruited locally. Probably in recent weeks at that.”

“You seem to be handling this well… Tell me, this kind of stuff…”

“It’s what I had to deal with practically every week for my first month or two inside the city. Everything calmed down the moment you arrived.”

“I see,” Lisa said after a long pause.

“Yeah.” Alyssa didn’t know what else to say. She had already gone over everything that had happened to her since arriving, and quite extensively at that. But it was probably one thing to hear about it and another thing to experience it firsthand. “Tell Irulon that Izsha and I will be back shortly, barring any more encounters with the Astral Authority.”


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031.008

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Astral Authority

Retrograde Cognition


Retrograde Cognition was an interesting spell. It forced the caster into a coma-like state. But only from the outside perspective. Inside Retrograde Cognition, Alyssa felt like she hadn’t even moved. She stood right where she had cast the spell. Though standing was a relative term. She didn’t really have a body. Or her body was there, but she was no longer directly connected to it. Irulon was still next to her, as was the Pharaoh. Izsha and Fela too.

The cart as well.

And the bodies.

The cart had a driver and two horses. All three were dead. It didn’t look violent. At least, not demon-violent. The infected that Alyssa had seen tended to tear apart their victims, dismembering and decapitating them. The driver looked like he had been strangled by a garrote wire. He had a bright red mark around his neck and even a few cuts along the line that had bled. Not a lot of blood, just enough for the small cuts that were there. The poor horses were in a bloodier state. Both had their throats cut. A large pool of their combined blood covered most of the street. But even that wasn’t close to what she had seen among plague victims.

All the cargo Irulon had described was gone. Completely. No trace of it remained. If Alyssa didn’t trust Irulon, she would have suspected that there never had been barrels with pentagrams or already deceased bodies in the back of the cart. It was completely empty. The cart itself wasn’t damaged either. Not the wood frame or the hide cover stretched over the back.

It really made her wonder just what the poor guy had been thinking. Had he been some hired merchant to deliver goods, only to be disposed of after outliving his usefulness? It certainly seemed that way from first appearances. She couldn’t imagine someone agreeing to be murdered at the end of the trip.

Retrograde Cognition played the scene backward. For several minutes, there wasn’t much action at all. Irulon and the Pharaoh walked around, investigating. None seemed to come to any conclusions.

Then they started watching the sky. Irulon tried speaking on the phone several times. But only the first time succeeded. Or the last time? Keeping causality in mind was a bit difficult. Both Irulon and the Pharaoh started—or ended?—casting spells. None had much effect that Alyssa could see, so she assumed that they were analytical in nature. Every so often, Irulon would try saying something into the phone.

Alyssa actually felt a little bad that she hadn’t responded to anything. Granted, this had likely been right in the middle of her discussion with Tenebrael. Still, watching the two grow more and more panicked—from her rewinding perspective—just made Alyssa feel sorry for them.

She wondered what they were saying. What they thought about Tenebrael’s face appearing in the sky. Irulon hadn’t bowed down as Alyssa might have expected, but that was probably because she had warned them that something strange might happen. She had thought it would be a statue, but she hadn’t explicitly stated as much.

There wasn’t much that they could do about the moon. It worried them, especially the city guard and nobles who saw Alyssa as a powerful arcanist who showed up out of nowhere and made friends with the royal family. But there wasn’t much they could do. It was too much of an out of context problem for them to deal with. She had been a little worried about assassins immediately after bringing her mother to Nod, but after weeks of nothing happening, she had decided that they probably wouldn’t try to attack her.

Now this.

She would have to keep an eye looking over her shoulder constantly for a while.

Eventually, the circle above the city vanished. Irulon talked with her father, came out of Retrograde Cognition, went into Retrograde Cognition, and arrived. In that order. The pool of blood from the horses was much smaller at this point. The Pharaoh cast spells, more analytical ones, in an attempt to determine what happened. He arrived just a few minutes before Irulon.

Then he was gone. Or had yet to arrive.

Retrograde Cognition was a temporally annoying spell, but at least it wasn’t giving her a splitting headache.

The blood from the horses continued to flow back into their bodies. Alyssa watched closely, waiting for the moment when they had been killed, looking for any sign of what might have happened.

The horses uncollapsed, wobbled to their feet, and reared back in panic at having their necks slit.

But there was no sign of what actually cut them. Both their necks had been cut at the exact same time. The coachman was already dead, though it looked like he was reviving with the way the playback was rewinding. Something gripped his neck, but she couldn’t even see a wire.

What was it? A shadow assassin? Alyssa tried to cast Unseen Sight. She wasn’t in her real body. Looking down, she couldn’t see herself at all. It was more like she was in some kind of strange astral form or a lucid dream. As such, she didn’t have her spell cards with her. Nothing happened.

Tenebrael, she thought—not having a mouth meant no speaking. Grant me eyes. Give me the ability to see what is unseen within this vision of the past.

There were no mystic circles. She didn’t have fingernails that would turn black. And yet, Alyssa felt the warmth of Tenebrael rush through her. Unseen Sight normally just overlaid a hazy cloud of off-color smoke over the top of an invisible being’s form.

Although she felt like the spell had worked, she still couldn’t see anything. They all just… died. Or came alive, depending on the temporal perspective. The horses had their throats slit. The coachman tried to grasp at whatever was strangling him, but his fingers didn’t seem to find purchase on any invisible wire or hands. They just passed right through it. Alyssa tried to get closer to see, but it was no use. No matter the perspective, she couldn’t see a thing.

Except, ducking underneath the cart’s cover, she did see one thing that Irulon hadn’t mentioned.

Those supposedly dead bodies weren’t quite dead. In fact, they were getting better.

As the coachman struggled, they got up, grabbed the cargo, and started shambling off with it all. Five steps away from the cart, they just vanished. Though, from Alyssa’s perspective, they appeared from nowhere, went and set down the cargo, and flopped over against the bed of the cart. But, ignoring rewinding effects, it looked a lot like they had wandered into an Empty Vessel field, but she would have expected the miracle she had just cast to work through it. Unless it really hadn’t succeeded at all and she was just assuming that it had. There really was no proof one way or another.

The biggest clue first came when the coachman started getting strangled. For whatever reason, he had stopped the cart right in the middle of the street. He looked around, not quite confused about why he might have stopped, but maybe a little unsure. However, he looked off to the side and started talking with a bright smile on his face.

But there was no one there.

For one second. Then there was.

Alyssa blinked, completely bewildered as to where the man had come from. He simply appeared.

The man wore a fanciful suit of white, violet, and deep gold. It wasn’t a modern Earth suit, but more along the lines of something Decorous would wear. The man wasn’t Decorous. His facial shape was more narrow and his chin protruded a whole lot more. Besides that, he was bald and had eyes in such a faint blue that they were more grey.

But he smiled. The coachman laughed at something. They seemed like they were on good terms, honestly. They spoke for a good few minutes before the man walked off and, a few moments later, the cart and horses all traveled out of Retrograde Cognition’s viewing range.

Willing the spell to end, Alyssa lurched. Her perspective jumped from standing up in the middle of the street to lying down well away from the pooling blood with her head resting on Fela’s thighs. She clamped her mouth shut, taking careful breaths to avoid further upsetting her stomach.

Irulon stood above her, staring down with simple violet eyes. She, thankfully, remained silent, probably because she knew well enough how Retrograde Cognition felt upon first waking up. Alyssa distinctly remembered how she had reacted after waking up following the search for Oxart. It was amazing that she had been able to speak afterwords without having to sit around.

But Alyssa couldn’t lie around all night. With help from Fela, she got back to her feet. The Pharaoh stood off to the side, staring at her with a thoughtful expression on his face. And, while she had been out, it looked like Lisa, Oz, Lumen, and Catal had caught up. Her mother was closest to her, looking over her with obvious concern. Hopefully not too much concern given that she had watched Irulon perform the spell not so long ago, but… there was probably more to be concerned about than just Retrograde Cognition. Several city guards were running around the scene as well, doing their own investigations into the cart while trying to find some trail to pick up.

“Tell me what you saw.”

Alyssa looked over to Irulon. It was another few seconds before she decided that she was alright to speak. “Did you see a bald man?”

“The coachman wasn’t bald. Unless you are referring to the corpses, then no. I did not see anyone.”

“I asked Tenebrael to help me see,” Alyssa said, dropping the tone of her voice to avoid being overhead by anyone outside those already in the know. “Honestly don’t know if it helped because I didn’t see the man for a few more minutes, but if you didn’t see him at all…”

“Assume it worked.”

“Right. You know? I think I missed this.”

“Missed… the city being attacked?”

“Well, not that specifically. It’s just… my first two months in this world had been a nearly non-stop fight for my life. Then, this past month… I thought I wanted it. A nice relaxing life where I just delivered potions and stopped by to see my friends. It should have been ideal. But now, despite the city being under attack, despite the Astral Authority flying about, despite people dying… I think I’m secretly happy.”

Irulon pressed her lips together in what might have been a small smile. “It isn’t a secret if you tell people.”

“Oh. Right.”

“Retrograde Cognition causes a fair amount of disorientation. Don’t talk about random things. Try to stick with what you saw.”

Alyssa nodded. Focusing, she started relaying everything that she had seen while under the spell effect. The longer she spoke, the more steady she became. At the start, she had been using Fela as a cane, but by the end, she was standing straight on her own. Her words became more steady as well. And her mind. She realized just how silly it was to have said what she did.

She was deliberately avoiding a glance toward her mother.

But then, could her mother really complain? According to Oz, Lisa had apparently decided to run off to adventure as well. Escorting some noble princess back to their home province. Sure, Oz had said that it wouldn’t be that dangerous, but he had also said that the fairy extermination mission wasn’t dangerous. The Society of the Burning Shadow outpost hadn’t been figured into the equation and had been entirely unexpected, but Alyssa still doubted that anything involving fairies could be counted as safe.

“The cause of death for the coachman and the horses is still unknown,” Irulon said as Alyssa finished. “But I suppose that it can be assumed that this bald man had something to do with it. Interesting that you were unable to locate a shadow assassin. I definitely saw the effects of one at the gate, though I admit that I wasn’t able to actually see it.”

“Like I said, I asked Tenebrael to help me see some things, but the things I saw might not have been everything. Those mummies, for instance, they just wandered off and disappeared. I couldn’t see where they went… Hey, speaking of zombies… can your toymaker spells bring the coachman back to life enough to ask him what happened?”

“Such a thing was among my original research designs when developing that line of spells. Unfortunately, as my interest in Death magic declined and my fascination with Fractal magic intensified, such designs fell by the wayside.”

“So… no.”

“Afraid not. He would be as mindless as those goblins you saw me use it on back when.”

Alyssa glanced around, stretching her back. There was an odd kink in it. Probably as a result of having been in an awkward position for the duration of that spell. Calling her phone to her hand, she checked the time. Twenty minutes. She had been in Retrograde Cognition for twenty minutes. Or… not quite. That included the time she had spent talking with Irulon. Still it had been some time.

Those corpses and the cargo they had made off with would surely be long gone by now.

Closing her eyes, she tried to scan the souls around to see if she noticed anything odd. Irulon stood out, her twin souls warring with each other as usual. The first place Alyssa checked was underground. With Waters Street having used elvish engineering to create secret passages and rooms with trap doors, it seemed like a logical place to hide out if they weren’t planning on doing anything immediately. If they were planning on doing something right away… well, the palace wasn’t on fire yet.

There was something a few streets away. Alyssa wasn’t quite sure what zombies—or mummies in this case—would look like to her soul sight, but she knew what demons and the infected looked like. One of those things down there was definitely an infected.

Looking up, Alyssa frowned. There were still five of the Astral Authority up in the air, seemingly investigating the sky for… Tenebrael? That had to be it. But there was an infected right down here. Were they just going to ignore it? If so, that didn’t bode well for Tenebrael’s plan to get them off her back. Come to think of it… “Irulon, just before I did the… thing in the sky, one of those Patiences came down and killed an infected. And then fought with the demon who retrieved its soul. Is Octavia… I mean, I know your father was hoping that Tzheitza’s potion might reverse the infection, but these things aren’t friendly toward demons or infected.”

Irulon didn’t even start to answer. Although he was a short distance away and Alyssa hadn’t been speaking too loudly, the Pharaoh heard. He moved closer, staring with unblinking violet eyes. “Those creatures,” he started, but paused. “My son was attempting to explain them to me when we became aware of the situation in the city.”

“They are demon hunters, though they won’t hesitate to put their weapons through the heads of mortals if we get in the way or otherwise annoy them,” Alyssa said, answering his unasked question. She decided not to mention the anti-Tenebrael aspect of them. Perhaps to Irulon later, but it wasn’t anything they could help with so no need to worry them over divine matters.

Deciding not to bother delaying until later, Alyssa gave Irulon and the Pharaoh a quick rundown of everything she had learned from Iosefael regarding the Astral Authority. It really wasn’t much now that she was restating it. The Astral Authority were constructed to destroy demons and areas of demon infestation. There were several different types, each with their own role to serve, whether that be observation and scouting, direct combat, supportive combat, or defense among others. They were all distinctly inhuman and, while Iosefael had neglected to mention masks, they all seemed to wear porcelain faces carved in the shape of a completely average human.

Unfortunately, she couldn’t tell the Pharaoh how easy they were to kill. Alyssa honestly didn’t know if they could be killed without resorting to divine methods such as enchanted bullets. Though… That was something that Alyssa wanted to try.

“Hey, Oz!”

Neither the Pharaoh nor Irulon used weapons. Both relied on their own magical talents to get them by. Alyssa was a Rank Six arcanist as well, but she still carried a combat knife and pistols. Too many pistols at the moment thanks to Tenebrael. Still… she figured that they should keep something as backup. The Pharaoh had been operating the way he had for who knew how long. And there was no guarantee that he didn’t have a weapon under his robes.

But Oz’s sword was far more notable and was definitely not enchanted.

“Can I borrow your sword?” Alyssa asked as politely as possible when he neared.

Reaching for it, he started nodding only to hesitate. “Why?”

“Don’t you want it enchanted?” She honestly didn’t know if she could. It felt like something she could do. Maybe even enchant it enough to let it harm the Astral Authority.

Although his eyes momentarily lit up, he quickly backed up with a small frown. “Guillem will literally kill me if anything happens to her little darling weapon.”

“Didn’t you just finish paying it off the other week?”

“That’s another reason. I don’t really want to go back anytime soon to get a new one.”

“Hold on,” Irulon said. “We seem to be getting distracted from the main topic. The intruders in the city?”

“Ah. I think… Well, there is something below us. Not directly below, but off in that direction,” Alyssa said, waving a hand eastward. “But I don’t know if it is who we are looking for or even how to get down there. Short of using an Annihilator, that is.”

The Pharaoh shook his head. “I do not believe we are in quite so dire a circumstance that we should resort to destroying the entire city just yet.”

“Do you see anything else of interest?” Irulon asked.

Alyssa closed her eyes again and started examining souls in the city. Nothing particularly stood out to her aside from the thing underground. Which was probably a good thing. Between several plague incidents, the deceased guards, the draken and Fela running through the streets, and the mystic circle above the city, enough had happened for one night. The city probably couldn’t take much more.

There was definitely going to be a resurgence in protests around the Palace come morning. The only reason they weren’t picketing right now was probably because of a fear about the possible danger.

Opening her eyes, Alyssa started to shake her head in response to Irulon’s question only to hesitate with a blink.

There was one person standing among their circle who was not supposed to be there.

A balding man wearing an ornate suit stood near the cart, among a few guards. None of them paid any attention to him. He just stood there, idly staring at the Pharaoh, then Irulon, then Alyssa.

Something must have shown in Alyssa’s eyes. Irulon’s fist clenched around the tome chained to her hip. She immediately started looking around. But her gaze passed right over the bald man. Once he noticed his daughter glancing around, the Pharaoh looked too. Just like his daughter, his eyes drifted from one side of the bald man to the other without even a hint of recognition.

Alyssa pulled her pistol, flicking the safety off as she aimed.

But that slight motion made her blink. And in that instant of a blink, the man was gone. Snapping her head from side to side, Alyssa tried to find him. But he was nowhere to be seen. She even tried to close her eyes and scan for souls again. Had he even had a soul? She hadn’t been paying attention to the guards investigating the cart. Or any normal souls at all, really. She couldn’t say one way or another whether he had appeared normally or not.

“What is it?”

“The bald man. He was here for a second. Just… staring at us. But… not anymore.”

“The person present in your Retrograde Cognition?”

“No one else noticed.” Alyssa took her finger off the trigger, but she kept the pistol out and at the ready. Maybe they had been too busy to notice. The Pharaoh and Irulon had both had their backs to him. As did Oz’s group. Izsha and Fela should have noticed. Unless they thought he was supposed to be around. That was entirely possible. He looked like he could pass as someone around Decorous’ station.

Looking around, Alyssa spotted him. “There,” she said quietly, aiming toward an alley off to the side of the cart. He was walking away. Casually. Even though she had spoken just barely loud enough for those in her immediate vicinity to hear, he still paused, looked to her, tilted his head, and vanished around the corner of the building.

Alyssa moved forward, slowly and carefully, bringing up a Projectile Reflection as she walked. Just in case. Irulon was on her heels, along with a few of the others, but Alyssa hardly paid them attention. Her focus was on the mysterious stranger.

He did have a soul. One tainted by the plague. It wasn’t heavily tainted, but his soul was just a shade dimmer than those around him.

And Alyssa wasn’t going to let him get away.


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031.007

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Astral Authority

A Walk Beneath A War-torn Sky


Alyssa and Tenebrael walked along the road away from the city. It was a casual walk with no rush and no panic. Fela and Izsha both accompanied them, though their position must have been a little strange with their inability to perceive the angel. They heard one half of a conversation. Alyssa gesticulated to nothing at all. It was a good thing that they knew invisible creatures existed or Alyssa would probably have looked like she was losing her mind.

It might have looked like that anyway.

“Just blow them all up! That thing and your statue in Teneville are doing that anyway,” Alyssa said with a wild gesture toward the circle above the city. “If I can make one of those, you can surely make a few dozen.”

“Quantity is not the problem. Adaption is. There are no Chastity-class Authorities up there at the moment. Once they do show up, I imagine it will be dismantled in minutes. As for my statue, it is little more than a trinket. Its refire rate means that it would only be able to attack a single Authority every minute. Roughly.”

“You mean to tell me that, even with all your power and you being the ruler of this world, you cannot fight them off? Why are we even on a time limit before you have to disappear? Just stop time and I’ll shoot them all down.”

“A temporary solution. And a vastly imperfect one at that. You cannot possibly fend off the entirety of the Astral Authority on your own, even with time stopped. And as soon as it restarted, they would notice my presence. They would quickly redirect their efforts toward me, if I used a miracle of that magnitude. As for being able to wave my hand and wipe them off this world… I told you a long time ago that I was not ready for the Astral Authority to come down upon me. Now we need to distract them long enough to implement some emergency defenses. Ones that will be able to stand up to repeated attack from even the Cardinals.”

“And how do you propose we do that? They don’t look remotely human.” Alyssa paused, glancing back at Izsha. “Let me rephrase. They don’t look like they can be reasoned with. I doubt I can walk up to one, toss a ball, and say ‘Look! A distraction!’ let alone tell them to go do something else while you do whatever it is you need to do to prepare. They look like robots.” Maybe it was just the mask and their completely inhuman bodies, but Alyssa just couldn’t see anything working out.

But of course, Tenebrael smiled. “Isn’t that what you just did? You tossed a great big ball above the city and told them to fetch. Now we have a moment to talk.”

Alyssa frowned and sighed, shaking her head. “So what. You want me to toss an even bigger one out there? Just how big does it need to be to distract them long enough? And how long is this going to take. I have a feeling that you angels have a very skewed perspective of time. A hundred years might be nothing to you, but I doubt I’ll even live that long.”

“In reverse order, it won’t be that long. At least not for a temporary bulwark. To truly keep myself safe, it might be quite a while, but I think we can get it done in the order of months if not weeks. As for distracting them, a larger one of those might work,” she said, looking over her wing. “But, like with stopping time, as soon as I do something grandiose, it will draw them away from that distraction and to me. Rather, we need to occupy them with something else that they want to be doing. Or rather, what they were designed to do.”

Tenebrael stopped and glanced back. Alyssa followed her gaze.

The mystic circle above the city was… not doing so well. The little golden lights of the Authorities zipped about at such speed that they were impossible to tally up. There were definitely more than twenty up there, but probably less than forty. Laser beams kept killing them. Anytime one died, another would pop out from one of those square portals with golden edges. Sometimes two would pop out. Sometimes the lasers would kill two before any popped out. That all just made it more difficult to count.

But the Authorities were making a dent. Roughly a fifth of the massive circle had gaping holes in it. Alyssa was surprised that it was still functioning at all. The movements of the ethereal lines resembled a machine, if she squinted and had far too much to drink. A machine missing a fifth of it would probably explode if someone tried to turn it on.

“That’s not going to explode, is it?”

“No. It will just fade away once enough damage has been done or a critical component winds up hit.”

“Oh. Good. All those Astral Authority fake-angels aren’t going to dive-bomb the mortals in the city, are they?”

“Doubt it. Maybe if some human was trying to protect a demon, they would spear them, but otherwise, I’m not even sure that they can perceive mortals.”

“What about me?”

Tenebrael took her eyes off the battle to look at Alyssa. She shrugged, which did not offer much boost to confidence. “I wouldn’t go waving my banner all over the place if I were you. But the amount of my power you have is so minuscule that I doubt they can see you very well.”

Maybe it was somewhat comforting. Not much, but a little. “So. Distract them with what they were designed to do.” It had taken a moment to remember, but Iosefael had mentioned their purpose. “They hunt fallen angels and demons. I don’t know exactly what fallen angels are, but you’re clearly one. Will they prefer demons—”

“Excuse me?” Tenebrael put her hands to her hips. “I am not.”

Alyssa raised an eyebrow, feeling not even the slightest amount of belief. “Then why are they attacking you?”

“I mean,” Tenebrael started, pouting, “it isn’t like I can’t understand being mistaken for one. Still, no need to be offensive.”

“Uh huh.”

“It’s serious business, alright?”

“I don’t really care what you are. My question still stands. Will they prefer to target demons over you?”

“Most likely,” Tenebrael said with a hearty nod. “Especially if we give them more than enough demons to occupy them for a good while. That should leave me free to work, though I’ll still have to be careful not to draw too much attention, and it should help you as well. I know how much all the demons cropping up around the city bother you. Or… Do they bother you? You did seek that one out.”

“That was to try to find you! You disappeared! I didn’t know what to do!”

“So you decided to do exactly what I told you not to do?” Tenebrael shook her head, clicking her tongue in disappointment.

Alyssa got enough disappointed looks from her mother. She didn’t need them from Tenebrael too. “You weren’t answering the phone! No one was dying around me! It was almost like people were conspiring to die far away from me. There wasn’t any—”

“You really aren’t a very good reaper, are you?”

“I’m not going to kill some random person just to talk to an angel!”

“You were killing people left and right for a while there. I’m sure you could have found—”

“What is wrong with you?”

Tenebrael blinked. “What?”

“It’s like this every single time you show up. We start talking and everything seems fine. Sometimes I even feel sorry for you. For a god-like being, you seem to have it rough. But then you always do something like this. Maybe it is about my mother. Maybe you’re keeping information from me that would make everything easier. Maybe you bring up something that you should have told me long ago. Or maybe you just try to get me to go around slaughtering random people for the fun of it. Do you have to try to piss me off? Or does it just come naturally?”

Alyssa’s breathing came faster than normal. She could feel her blood pumping. Her fingers felt mildly tingly and her hands were coated in sweat.

Behind her, Fela and Izsha glanced at each other. They could only hear half the conversation. It was a really good thing that they knew that invisible beings existed. Alyssa flying off the handle like that would definitely have been cause for major concern otherwise. It probably still was cause for concern.

But Alyssa wasn’t done. She jabbed a finger right into Tenebrael’s chest. “You are so out of touch. It’s not like I don’t know why you are out of touch. I assume it comes with being an immortal being. Lives of mortals are so transient that you don’t even notice them. But…” Clenching her fist, Alyssa closed her eyes. “You treat me like a toy. You act like I’ve got a leash around my neck. But even dog walkers let the dog walk ahead or beside them. You’re dragging me along like I’m a sack of potatoes.”

A deafening silence occupied the space between them. Tenebrael stared. Her face was entirely impassive. Her eyes, wide and unblinking, stared at Alyssa without deviation. Not even an Authority crashing to the ground nearby got her to flinch.

Alyssa did flinch. A spike of panic jumped through her veins for just a moment upon looking at the deceased Patience. Not for fear of the false-angel, but for fear that Tenebrael had used that brief glance aside to vanish without a word.

She let out a sigh of relief upon turning back to find Tenebrael still staring.

Maybe because the panic had replaced her anger, but Alyssa was starting to get uncomfortable with the unblinking look on Tenebrael’s face.

“Look,” Alyssa said. “I’m going to help you out. We’ll do whatever we need to get rid of these things,” she said, thumbing toward the molten scrap that had once been a Patience. “It isn’t because I like you or even really want to help you. It is simply a choice between the status quo and people who will likely leave this world in ruins with no thought to their actions beyond their immediate goal.”

“I never wanted to hurt you,” Tenebrael said, voice hauntingly hollow. “Not even when you first started screwing things up back on Earth.”

Alyssa took a breath. Her hand drifted closer to the hilt of her pistol. “If you are saying that as a preface to hurting me, I swear, I am going to shoot you in the face with your own magic. If you are trying to apologize…” Alyssa shook her head. “Figure shit out and come back and give me a proper apology. In the meantime…” She glanced up to the circle above the city.

It was quickly falling apart. Even though the number of golden Authorities in the sky hadn’t changed, their combat tactics had. Groups of them were hiding behind larger versions which managed to deflect some of the beams. The larger ones provided cover for smaller ones. Without raising her binoculars, she couldn’t tell exactly which dots represented what species of Astral Authority fake-angels, but she had a feeling that the larger ones were Chastities. Bulwarks. They could absorb or deflect a lot more than the smaller Diligence and Patience species.

They had only been at it for ten minutes at most. Probably less than that. And yet, the mystic circle was dotted with enough holes that probably only fifty percent of it remained. The less of it there was, the faster the rest would fail.

The time to converse was rapidly running down.

“Just tell me what you need me to do. And please don’t tell me to slaughter half the city or something stupid.”

“No. Nothing so drastic. Rather, you will have to leave the city.”

“Ah. Lovely.”

“To the west of the city lies… I believe the humans called it Owlcroft? Whatever it once was, it is now a scar on the land. A portal to the underworld. Hell. The pit. Go there. Conjure some great magic bearing my signature.” Her luminescent eyes finally looked away from Alyssa. Only for a moment. She stared up at the sky above the city. “The Astral Authority will respond. They will invade Hell. The demons will be forced to respond.”

“If Hell is such a big deal to them, why are they not responding right now?”

“You don’t think the increase in demonic infection incidents is a coincidence, do you? They are trying to distract the Astral Authority just as much as I am. They even destroyed my temple!” Tenebrael’s tone shifted away from her usual almost harmonic voice for just a moment as she squawked in indignant rage. But another Patience crashing to the ground returned her to a somber expression. “I’m sorry Alyssa. Time is up,” she said without even looking up at the sky. “I doubt we will have a chance to speak again until the Astral Authority have discovered the portal to Hell.”

“Yeah, yeah. I expected that,” Alyssa said with a sigh. She wasn’t even mad anymore. Just tired. “Go on. Get out of here.”

“One more thing.” Tenebrael reached back behind her, dipping a hand into the feathers of her wings. “I apologize that it took so long to return these.”

Two pistols hovered above her extended hand. They rotated slowly as she brought them around, moving until the grips were pointed toward Alyssa and the end of the barrel toward Tenebrael. It looked like they had been polished to a shine. Despite having dropped one off the Brechen Overlook and dropped both to the ground more times than she cared to remember, neither had a single scratch as far as Alyssa could tell.

The ring of spell cards between them wasn’t in the same pristine state. The white paper was still covered in dirt and grime.

Alyssa snatched up all three offered artifacts regardless of their cleanliness. She checked the magazines, found them fully loaded, then pulled back the slide on each pistol only to frown as a round popped out of each. She didn’t think they had been at capacity when Tenebrael had taken them.

Not wanting the two bullets to go to waste, she bent and picked both up, pocketing them.

When she stood up straight again, there was nothing but a few drifting feathers in the air.

She… supposed that she should have expected that. But at least she had an actual goal now. For over a month, she felt like she had been drifting. Going with the flow. It wasn’t the worst way to live. Lots of people did it. Lots of people were perfectly happy.

Alyssa had been like that before her near death experience. Back on Earth, she hadn’t ever really had major goals. She had been happy to go to work, go to the gym, watch movies, and cook a few meals for the family on occasion. Even when she had been attending school, it hadn’t been because she had some major goal or aspiration that she wanted to achieve. Going to college had simply been what her parents had expected of her.

Since coming to Nod, things had… changed. Alyssa had to give herself small goals just to keep moving forward. Where ‘forward’ actually took her wasn’t something she cared about. Just so long as she wasn’t sitting around doing nothing. It was just a way of staying sane. Not that she thought she would literally go insane or anything. It was just… she needed something to do.

But the more she got used to the world, the less she felt the drive to need something to distract herself. Modern conveniences aside, Lyria wasn’t a bad place to live. At least not for her. Waters Street was gone, but there were probably other gangs whoring out people and monsters, kidnapping, killing, and such. And even regular people who had harder lives than she had with no prospect for advancement. And it helped that things had been peaceful lately. Though, tonight was clearly not a peaceful night.

Alyssa looked back up to the city. The walk with Tenebrael had carried her a short distance away, but it really hadn’t been that long a walk. Izsha and Fela could sprint back in seconds. Even on foot, Alyssa wouldn’t be that far behind them if she really pushed herself.

There was still work to be done back in the city.

Maybe.

Actually, with any luck, the Pharaoh would have fixed it all by now. He was a Rank Six time-manipulating arcanist. According to Tess, he would end invasions as fast as he could snap his fingers.

Alyssa didn’t know if she believed that, but his strength was no joke. He might have trouble against her, but that was because she cheated. She had a staff that blocked the effects of spells cast in her direction. Her status as a Rank Six arcanist was mostly for show. Irulon thought she was higher. Much higher. And now, with Tenebrael’s warmth coursing through her veins…

Honestly speaking, if they were to actually fight, he would probably still beat her. Alyssa didn’t know how old the Pharaoh was, only that he was a lot older than he looked. That age had to have come with experience.

Pulling out the phone, Alyssa put the earbud back in and listened. At least the shouting had died down. “Anyone around?”

She immediately winced. The sudden burst of noise forced her to pull the earbud out again. “Could you all not talk at once!” she shouted into the phone, knowing that her voice was just more noise. “Look. It’s nothing to worry about, alright?”

As she spoke, a pin dropped. The mystic circle flashed and exploded. Alyssa threw a hand up over her face just in time. A wave rolled over her. She just about fell over from the force, but it quickly passed. When she lowered her arm, she found that the wave hadn’t even ruffled the fur on Fela’s body.

Alyssa took it in stride.

“There, see? It’s gone.”

“What in Tenebrael’s name is going on?” Oxart shouted.

“I can explain later. Just know that it was a Tenebrael thing.” There was going to be some meeting about it. Alyssa was sure of that. She would have to attend. She would say a few words. Then the other attendants would sit around and argue for half a day without her input. It was the same thing that had happened after she had scarred the moon. Hopefully, because they already knew that she was a giant danger, they wouldn’t argue for so long.

If she actually went to some meeting. Getting to Owlcroft seemed far more important than explaining her actions.

Oxart started talking again. Irulon did as well. There was a lot of background noise. Alyssa, sighing, pulled the earbud slightly away once again.

“Look.” If they were going to talk over each other, she might as well try to talk over them. “I’ve finished outside the city. Fela, Izsha, and I are returning. If you guys don’t stop shouting at me, I’m going to hang up and let you people take care of everything.” Maybe she was still a little irritated from her conversation with Tenebrael. Taking it out on her friends and allies wasn’t the best, but… it was so annoying. “Irulon. Just tell me where we will be most useful.”

“We’ve found the cart. There is a problem, however. All the humans are dead and those corpses are missing.”

“You can’t just Retrograde Cognition to figure it out?”

“One moment they are alive. The next, dead. Either something is wrong with the spell or something strange went on. Possibly Time magic, but my father insists that it wasn’t him.”

“So what do you need me to do?” She could try asking Iosefael. The angel had said that she would return at some point. But hunting her down would be an exercise in futility unless she happened across someone on death’s door.

“We were considering your… enhanced usage of spells like Annihilator. The topic came up when we considered that something was hampering Retrograde Cognition’s usage. If you were to try it…”

Alyssa nodded. She didn’t like the idea of using another Fractal spell that might be remotely similar to Fractal Mirror, but if it helped figure out what was going on, that would be for the best.

She needed to resolve this as soon as possible. Then, she needed to figure out exactly how to get to Owlcroft.

“Just tell me where you are.”


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031.006

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Astral Authority

Watching From Above


No longer invisible, running through the streets with Fela and Izsha was sure to cause problems. In the past twenty minutes, their group had passed by a number of people. Not a one of whom had remained calm. They fled, ran indoors as fast as they could, or, in the case of one old woman, simply fainted. Alyssa didn’t bother trying to stop them to explain. Not only would it have taken far too much time, time Alyssa didn’t have, but it was for their own good as well. On a night like tonight, indoors was probably the safer place to be.

The Pharaoh could deal with the inevitable angry populace in the morning. That was his job. Not Alyssa’s.

Of course, city defense wasn’t really Alyssa’s job either, but it was one she had somewhat adopted. Really, she should be trying to figure out some way to get paid doing it.

Deciding to bring up the topic of a reward later, Alyssa scanned everywhere around her as Izsha chased after Fela. Infected had a vague but noticeable difference in their souls. A bit of oil or slime to their souls where regular humans had none. If these intruders were using infected as Irulon had suggested, there should be some sign of them.

But she was getting nothing. And Alyssa wasn’t sure if that was a relief or incredibly concerning. Fela certainly picked up on some smell. It was entirely possible that she was taking them to some infected completely unrelated to the intruders. Having three infected-related incidents in one night wasn’t actually that surprising. It just meant it was a bad night. Most nights went by without Fela finding anything at all.

The fact that the intruders had pentagrams in their cart brought all the incidents into suspicion. Were they natural? Just incidental accidents caused by declining faith? Or was it something more sinister? What if the Juno Federation had gotten their hands on embers and were trying to distribute them among the people? It was just speculation right now, but she could see it happening.

Especially if a demon had managed to replace Adrael. It could whisper into Liadri’s ear, pretending to be the same old voice that it always had been. But now, it could be directing their organization down an infernal path.

Alyssa needed to find them quick.

“I’ve reached the crossroads you described,” Irulon’s voice came on over the phone.

Opening her eyes, Alyssa glanced around. “We’re at the northern end of the markets at the moment, a bit off the main path to avoid as many people as possible.”

“Understood.”

The markets were definitely a bad place to be. Even after night had fallen, there were more people around than there were at just about any other single location. An infected appearing nearby, targeted attack on the city or completely random, could cause panic, death, and very likely a ripple of new infected across the city over the next month. There had already been two incidents tonight, both of which had been witnessed by people. There would already be an increase in demons. She could hope that the latter incident would help to stifle matters. Her voice had not been quiet when calling upon Tenebrael’s power. But most had already fled by that point. Unlike the incident in Teneville, people hadn’t all come out of the woodwork to gawk once things had settled down.

Things felt like they were spiraling out of control. Individual fights went well for the most part. But the attrition was taking a toll. Or it would be soon. And she wasn’t sure what to do about it besides playing a Whack-A-Mole game.

Idly, Alyssa glanced down at her fingernails. Then she looked up to the palace. An odd thought ran through her mind.

How would that look with a giant statue of Tenebrael perched on top?

It was probably a silly idea. And it probably wouldn’t work the way Alyssa hoped it would. Given the spell earlier hadn’t harmed the true demon, a laser beam-equipped statue probably wouldn’t even notice demons even if they overran the city. It would attract the Astral Authority. It might kill a few of them, but they would probably figure out some way to deal with it sooner or later.

The best way it would help would be through hope. Giving the people something to look up to like that, especially through conjuring it in such a miraculous way, might stop plague incidents cold overnight.

And that might be worth it.

Though maybe not on top of the palace. If the Astral Authority did find a way to destroy it, the pieces would rain down on the city.

Where else would one be? The courtyard right in front of the palace? A park? The market square? Maybe all the way out at the walls. She wasn’t just trying to protect the rich districts, after all. Having a giant statue of Tenebrael at each of the four main gates would certainly make for an intimidating presence for any who didn’t believe in her. Alyssa would love to see the look on the faces of Morgan and Bercilak if they showed up again with those statues around.

But that was all just idle thought for now. It might not even work. To create the one in Teneville, she had used the fallen pieces of the temple. It was a material that looked like obsidian, but might be entirely divine for all Alyssa knew. There certainly weren’t large deposits of it around the city.

They were near the easternmost gate. She could try. Just a quick test.

It might not be a bad idea. And it would stop more infections.

If it didn’t work, she wasn’t out much other than a short amount of time.

Decision made, Alyssa whistled. “Fela!”

The hellhound skidded to a stop, giving Izsha a moment to catch up. “What’s up? I know I’m winding back and forth, but it is a hard smell to track down.”

“You’re doing just fine. There’s just something I wanted to try. I don’t want you running off on your own.”

“I’ll be fine, I’m—”

“No. These people might have a fairy with them. They might also have that misty smoke. I’m not going to take any chances with leaving anyone alone.”

Fela frowned, displaying some teeth in the process. The furry ears on top of her head twitched around, trying to hear everything. Despite her frown and clearly being on the lookout for anything suspicious still, she nodded.

“Irulon. We’re headed to the main east gate,” Alyssa said into her phone. “There’s something I want to try. It’s off the trail, but it might help more in the long run.”

There was a pause. For a moment, Alyssa worried that she had been disconnected. She checked, but the call was still ongoing. “Irulon? Mom? Oxart? Chris?”

“I’m here,” Chris said instantly.

Irulon responded before he even finished. “I am as well. I was just trying to think up what you might be up to. It’s something… strange, isn’t it.”

“I mean, some people might think it is strange.”

There was a small sigh of exasperation on the other end of the line.

Oxart’s raised voice sounded somewhat distant. “You better not be blowing up my city.”

“Though I disagree with Captain Oxart’s usage of a possessive pronoun, I agree with the sentiment.”

“No. No blowing up. At least not from me. I’m feeling more constructive tonight.”

“Hm. Fine. I will meet up with my father instead of you. Do what you need.”

As Alyssa slid her phone back into her pocket, Fela looked up. “What are we doing?”

“You know that giant statue of Tenebrael? We’re going to try to make one here.”

“Why?” she asked as Izsha started toward the gate. Fela had to start running on all fours to keep up.

“Morale boost, mostly.”

“Is that really such a good idea to do right now? Shouldn’t we use your strength to vanquish our enemies?”

“Wouldn’t it be better to prevent plague infections from happening rather than deal with them as they crop up?”

“Would it actually help?” Fela tilted her head, looking a little confused as she kept pace with Alyssa and Izsha.

“Besides, this might also help fight.”

“Oh.” Just like that, the confusion vanished. She stared straight ahead and seemed perfectly happy with the change in destination.

Speaking of destinations, the eastern gate was identical to the other gates with one key difference. It was the location of one of the three towers that dotted Lyria’s walls. One was to the southwest and the other was almost straight north of the palace, just a short way west of the northern gate. They were all the same as each other. Long but narrow brick chimneys with a circular bulb at the very top. On the bulb’s roof, a triangular spire jutted up into the sky.

Even including the spire, none of the towers could match the palace’s height. They might even have been shorter than Tenebrael’s statue down in Teneville. Still quite tall compared to the rest of the city’s skyline.

It wasn’t directly on top of the gate, probably as a result of the engineers not wanting to weaken the base by cutting giant holes in it for carts and the like to pass through. Which was a good thing. Alyssa wanted to plop a statue down directly on top of the gate, if at all possible. Maybe just on top of the road outside the city. She didn’t want to damage the physical gate.

None of the guards were dead, which was nice to see. None gave her any trouble either. Alyssa had garnered some notoriety thanks to her associations with Irulon, Brakkt, and Oxart. Fela was well known among the city guard. Draken were as well, though not on an individual basis. It probably helped that Alyssa was on her way out of the city. They were guarding against unauthorized entry, not exit.

They probably got a little nervous when she dismounted half a football field away and faced the gate, but as long as they didn’t start slinging spells, she was fine with them being a little nervous.

The hard part was what to say. How to configure a valid request to Tenebrael. Alyssa had been thinking about it the entire way over. She could remember what she had said in Teneville. But that had clearly been designed for speaking in front of a crowd. The only crowd around now was Izsha and Fela. Would she need to pull half the city over in order to build one?

If it failed, she could try. For now…

Alyssa took a breath and let it out slowly. She focused on her connection to Tenebrael, feeling the warmth their connection provided.

Her fingernails turned as black as the night sky.

“Tenebrael. A city of your followers is in jeopardy.” A mystic circle sprouted from Alyssa’s fingertips. The glowing black-white was a good sign, but not one Alyssa could focus on at the moment. “Demons infest the population. The Astral Authority has come, seeking evidence of you. Intruders would have your name scoured from history. Show them that you will not be cowed. Tower over those who would fight against you. Let your glory radiate over the city, find the enemies of the people, and cast them out!”

The sound of a pin dropping thundered in Alyssa’s ear.

The mystic circle spread out, growing larger and more complex with every added line. It continued until it was twice Alyssa’s height.

Then it just… disappeared. Vanished. Winked out of existence.

No statue had popped up.

It had failed?

Alyssa sighed, slumping. She had thought it had been going so well too. Sure, she hadn’t specifically asked for a statue, but she thought she had done a pretty good job implying that a statue should pop up out of nowhere. Maybe rephrasing would be best. ‘Dear Tenebrael. Please erect a statue. Thanks, signed Alyssa.’

Holding out her hand, Alyssa prepared to try again. She took a deep breath and let it out nice and slow. Her fingernails hadn’t turned back to normal and Tenebrael’s warmth was still surging through her body.

But before she started, she noticed Fela. The hellhound, standing at Alyssa’s side, had her head craned straight back, staring upward.

Getting a bad feeling, Alyssa followed the hellhound’s gaze.

A chill ran through her body. It was that feeling. That bad feeling that happened sometimes when she screwed up, knew she screwed up, and had no idea how to fix it.

The city was lit up from above. A three-dimensional almost spherical mystic circle rotated slowly over the city, well above the tip of the palace. Or, it looked slow. But that was probably just because of how big and how high up it was. The outer edge of the circle was probably rotating faster than any living being had ever gone on this planet. Maybe that was an ignorant statement given that spells like Accelero existed.

Alyssa noticed a few interesting shapes among all the criss-crossing designs. The most obvious of which were oblong ovals, pinched at either end. The entire interior was a luminous white. All except for two thin grey lines… right where the inner and outer edges of an iris would be. There were two of those ‘eyes’ looking down on the city from above. Other people, people not quite as familiar with Tenebrael as Alyssa or without the analytical abilities of Irulon, might have dismissed them as one feature among the many geometrical shapes within the churning mass of mystic lines. But because they were there, Alyssa recognized another feature.

Surrounding the eyes, deep black lines weaved in and out, shaping up to be nearly identical to what Irulon and Tenebrael had tattooed on their faces. There wasn’t any skin connecting the eyes and the tattoos. Even without that, it looked like a giant Tenebrael had dipped her face beneath the clouds to spy down on the city.

Alyssa stumbled backward as strength left her legs. She stumbled right into Izsha. A few of the more prickly scales jabbing into her back was enough to tear her eyes away from the… whatever it was. She honestly had no idea. Not the slightest clue. Her request had been for Tenebrael to destroy enemies within the city. But it didn’t look like it was doing much aside from watching at the moment. Did that mean that there were no enemies? Or just that none had ventured beneath those eyes? Did staying inside protect them?

Or was the whole thing something else entirely?

Looking away from the circle brought Alyssa’s attention to her headphones. They were hanging out of her pocket, dangling down near her ankles. She didn’t know when, but at some point, they had fallen out of her ear. Bringing them back up, she held them a distance away.

There was a lot of noise coming from a lot of different people. Lisa. Oxart. Chris. Irulon. Tess? It sounded like there was an Oz and Lumen in the background too. A few other people as well.

In fact, she could hear noise from the city itself as well. Even standing a quarter of a mile down the path from the walls, there was noise. It sounded like a football stadium. The entire city.

Panic was probably too small of a word to describe what was going on at the moment.

“What is that?” Despite all the noise on her headphones and from the city, Fela’s voice was the first clear sound that she could hear.

And she didn’t have an answer.

A bright golden orb zooming upward from the city proved enough of a distraction. Alyssa pulled out her binoculars to get a better view on whatever it was, but before she could, a dozen beams of light rained down on the golden orb.

It was an Astral Authority fake-angel. She could see the porcelain mask and fading aureole, but she couldn’t tell what kind it was. It didn’t look like a Kindness or Patience, but it was so mangled that the possibility was there.

Two more golden orbs in the distance started flying up toward the giant mystic circle. More beams rained down, but the Astral Authority had wised up to the tactic and weren’t flying in straight lines. It made looking at them through the binoculars incredibly difficult. Alyssa barely caught a glimpse of one before she managed to focus on it for a second longer.

A Diligence. It looked like a snake. Or maybe a Chinese dragon. Two pairs of wings carried it upward and helped it slither between beams. The porcelain mask at the front split in two—not where the mouth was, but a vertical split—and a bright golden light fired out.

Some of Tenebrael’s circle shimmered and faded as the light passed through it. It didn’t stay broken for long. Enochian and geometric shapes quickly filled in the vacancy.

A much wider beam fired from one of the eye-like shapes. Too wide for the Diligence to dodge.

There wasn’t much left of it to fall when the beam faded.

More of the Astral Authority started swarming around the city. Not all looked like they had been there from the start. Little square doorways opened up in mid-air to admit one of the fake-angels every few seconds. The more fake-angels that appeared, the more black beams fired down upon the city.

Alyssa’s heart clenched with fear that those black beams were destroying buildings and even killing people. But, tearing the binoculars off the battle in the sky, Alyssa couldn’t find a single column of smoke. No dust being blown in the air. When one hit the side of the palace, it didn’t even leave a scorch mark.

Maybe that was thanks to Alyssa’s phrasing. She had requested that the enemies be destroyed, not the citizens or anything else. Whenever Iosefael reappeared, she would have to thank the angel for warning her to be more specific in her requests. Though… given that she had wanted a statue to appear, perhaps she still hadn’t been specific enough.

“Wonderful, isn’t it?”

Alyssa’s sigh of relief turned into a hiccup of panic. She had her pistol out and half a miraculous request on her lips as she turned. The words died in her throat.

Tenebrael, hovering just a few inches off the ground and leaning against Izsha’s hindquarters, waved a hand. A few black feathers drifted through the air around her. “Been a while.”

Slowly, carefully, Alyssa holstered her pistol. She took a step forward. Drawing back her fist, she slammed it into the stupid angel’s nose.

Tenebrael jerked back and immediately started rubbing at her nose. Alyssa did the same to her knuckles. It was like punching a wall. Except if walls gave a little.

“That wasn’t a very nice greeting,” Tenebrael said, frowning. Her face didn’t even look marred.

Alyssa was fairly sure that her hand was bleeding. “That’s for disappearing for so long. Where the hell were you?” Fela was staring, but Alyssa didn’t care, the hellhound knew about angels. Izsha did as well.

“Those things,” Tenebrael said with a wave of her hand at the sky, “have been buzzing around like annoying flies. Or perhaps wasps is a more apt term.”

“So you show up now? There are more of those things around than I’ve ever seen! I wasn’t even aware of them until two weeks ago and didn’t even see one until today.”

“They don’t get involved with mortals. Most of their duties revolve solely around beings related to the Throne. It isn’t surprising that you haven’t seen them. As for why now?” Tenebrael pointed upward. “Thanks to you, there is quite the distraction to keep them occupied. They’ll notice me sooner rather than later, but we should have a moment to talk now.”

“Talk.” It had been nearly two months since she last saw Tenebrael. She had things she wanted to ask about. Iosefael had answered some questions, mostly about the Astral Authority and the usage of the connection to Tenebrael. But there were so many other things she had thought of over the weeks.

And yet, she was drawing a complete blank.

Was it because of how distracted she was? The giant circle overhead, the Astral Authority, the intruders in the city, the mounting demonic issue, and Tenebrael’s sudden appearance all swirled around in her mind to the point where she had no idea what to ask.

“Indeed. Talk,” Tenebrael said. “I believe we can solve both our problems. Well, two of our largest problems, that is. The Astral Authority is a great thorn in my side. And I believe the demons have been annoying you, have they not?”

Whatever questions she had thought up and forgotten would have to go on hold. Alyssa nodded. “Annoying would be putting it lightly.”

“Then let us talk.”


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031.005

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Astral Authority

Demonic versus Divine


“Don’t engage,” Alyssa said as loudly as she dared. “Don’t attack. Don’t… You can see it, right?”

“What in Tenebrael’s name is that?” Trik whispered. It wasn’t a direct answer to Alyssa’s question, but it was answer enough.

“A Patience.” A member of the Astral Authority right in the middle of the city. It wasn’t doing anything obviously related to hunting Tenebrael, but maybe that shouldn’t be a surprise. Their original purpose was to hunt demons and fallen angels. They likely found humans-turned-demon offensive.

Well, that much was obvious. The thing pulled its spear from the demon’s chest, swung it around, and lopped the head of the demon clear off. According to Fela, that demon should have been a fairly dangerous one. But the Patience cut off its head with far less effort than Brakkt had done to the Taker.

It stood there, standing over the corpse with its spear held in both of its hands. Or… Its hands were ball-like without fingers or even a palm. On appearance alone, Alyssa would have said that it was magnetic. The spear just clung to the ball-like hands. But knowing better, it was probably magic of some sort.

“At least we don’t have to fight the demon,” one of the men said.

“Are you kidding? What if we have to fight that? At least we know what infected are capable of.”

“I don’t think it will hurt humans,” Alyssa said, biting her lip. Izsha, Fela, and—as much as she complained about people suspecting she wasn’t human—herself were another matter entirely. Izsha and Fela were monsters. Relics, Iosefael called them. And Iosefael didn’t particularly like their existence. Whether or not a fake-angel would care wasn’t a question that she had thought to ask Iosefael.

As for Alyssa, she had a connection to Tenebrael. The Astral Authority should be interested in that over just about anything else.

Perhaps sensing her apprehension, Izsha took a few steps backward.

“We should give it some space. Lots of space, preferably.”

It was still just standing there. Its porcelain mask was locked onto the corpse of the infected human. If it did so much as turn toward them, Alyssa had a Spectral Chains ready to fire. And her pistol. She wasn’t about to let her friends or Trik and his men come to harm. But Alyssa wanted to avoid a fight if possible. Tenebrael might be happy to blast these things out of the air, but Alyssa wasn’t half as confident in testing herself against an unknown foe. Especially not in the middle of a populated city.

Unfortunately, although Izsha was moving back, Trik remained where he was. And with him, his men. He was their leader, not Alyssa.

“We can’t let a monster roam the streets of the city unchecked.”

“This isn’t a normal monster. It’s…”

A flash of flames signaled the true demon’s arrival.

The Patience turned to the pentagram, readying its spear.

The demon appeared, already swinging her scythe. Raising its spear, the Patience stopped the curved blade just an inch from its crocheted neck.

A beat passed with no movement from either. The Patience’s porcelain mask showed no expression while the demon’s eye crinkled. Mirth? Worry? It was so hard to tell with only that small patch of her face visible. Flicking her gaze to Alyssa, the demon winked? Or maybe just blinked.

Whichever one it was, that was the signal for the fight to begin in earnest.

Alyssa had thought that the pentagram was some kind of container for the demon. Like a shackle to keep it in place. But the demon didn’t seem to care about her thoughts. The Patience swept its spear toward the demon, only for the demon to perform a handless cartwheel backwards out of the circle. The scythe in her hands spun twice as fast as the cartwheel, swinging upward to knock the spear away. A second swing would have taken the Patience’s arm off if not for a quick movement on its part.

“Trik, it’s fighting something none of you can see. If you must stay, get your men to block off the streets. Keep civilians from getting close.”

“I can see it.”

Alyssa blinked, taking her eyes off the fight for only an instant. “What?”

“I can see it,” Trik said again, staring intently. He wasn’t the only one. Every single one of the guards, and Fela, had their eyes locked onto the fight, following motions of a scythe and the acrobatics of a demon that they shouldn’t be able to perceive. “Every time their weapons connect, the other one appears for just a second.”

Really? Alyssa didn’t notice. Or couldn’t. She saw them both one hundred percent of the time. “It’s a true demon,” she said. This wasn’t really the time to explain, but… “It isn’t a creature that you or your men can fight. I doubt the Pharaoh could handle it. Please, just get your men to safety. Get them to keep the people of the city away.”

The spear carved through a wall of a house, gouging it to the point where the entire wall shuddered. It missed the demon though. She just slipped underneath.

“Right.” He shook his head. “Right. Ack,” he started barking off names and orders.

As the guards split off to either side to try to block as many paths to this street as possible, Alyssa slid off Izsha’s back. The draken was fast, but she doubted it would be fast enough to outrun either of those things if they suddenly changed targets. More importantly, she felt she could aim far better on the ground. If she could hold one in place with Spectral Chains, a pistol shot should take care of it.

Though, she was a little uncertain about which to aim at.

The demon was a bitch corrupting humans to the point where they killed indiscriminately and had to be killed in turn. But… was she actually more than just a soul collector? The plague infected people who lost faith in Tenebrael. As far as Alyssa knew, the true demon only appeared at the end of the process.

Although, she had dropped off that ember for Alyssa. And had almost certainly dropped off the one earlier this evening. What had that been about? Were the demons aware of the Astral Authority’s presence? Had it been a way to call this Patience here to fight? Or maybe the demons were trying to bolster their numbers in preparation for a battle against the Authority.

Iosefael might know.

On the other hand, the Astral Authority, including this Patience, were enemies of Tenebrael. And, as enemies of Tenebrael, they were very likely enemies of everyone on this whole world. Even if they never raised a weapon against humans or monsters, if they succeeded in killing Tenebrael, this world would be doomed. Adrael would be free to start up her crusade against anyone who believed in Tenebrael in some attempt to ‘fix’ the place. Infected demons would overrun the world. Magic would fail to work across the board, removing even the ability for people to create fire let alone deal with those other problems.

Alyssa took aim at the Patience.

And she waited.

The infected demon in Teneville had managed to dodge her Spectral Chains by slipping a bed in between them the moment she had cast. A bullet moved faster than the chains, but, even if her aim was perfect, she doubted that it would work. The Patience was too fast, moving too acrobatically. At times, its silver filigree form was just a blur. It would be able to dodge both the chains and a bullet. Or, if not dodge, then block with something.

She needed it still. She needed an opportunity. Every angel that she had captured had been standing still, if only for a moment. They could move quickly. She had seen that in the fight between Tenebrael and Iosefael. But they always stopped to chat and gave her an opportunity.

For some reason, she doubted that the Patience was interested in conversation. It was too inhuman. It was a weapon built for the express purpose of hunting dissidents to the Throne. If it could speak at all, it would only do so as a way to further that goal.

Of that, Alyssa had no doubt.

Which meant that it was up to the demon. Alyssa sure as hell wasn’t going to wade into a battle between two super-mortal monsters, both of whom likely didn’t care if she survived and might even try attacking her simply because she was associated with Tenebrael. No. The demon would have to provide the opportunity.

And if the Patience killed the demon? If Alyssa was lucky, it would stand still for a moment. Just a single moment was all she needed.

Alyssa watched and waited, glad that neither creature was fighting their way toward her. A blade slashed. A spear swiped. Fela was growling. She had been since the fight started. Just a low, guttural growl at a constant rate. Magical sparks flew as the scythe ground against the haft of the spear. Izsha had backed up another two steps. In the distance, Alyssa could hear Trik’s men shouting, warning passers about the danger.

The scythe hooked around the Patience. A single tug would split it in two.

The Patience slipped its spear between the blade and its body. The tug just pulled it right up against the demon’s body.

And she kept pulling. Sparks rained from the point where metal touched metal.

The demon’s burning red eye flicked away from the Patience just long enough to look at Alyssa.

She winked.

“In Tenebrael’s name, I bring down the hammer of her wrath on all who would raise a hand against her. Let the miracle manifest and obliterate her foes.”

Alyssa pulled the trigger.

A blinding beam of black light fired from the muzzle. The Patience couldn’t do anything, trapped by the demon’s scythe. The beam struck the false angel in the mask. It cracked, split in two with a quarter-sized hole between the eyes. Both pieces fell to the ground along with the body of the Patience.

Despite having been directly behind the Patience, the demon came away unscathed.

Alyssa clicked her tongue in annoyance. She had specifically worded the request such that it would hit the demon as well. Apparently, the demon was not considered a foe or someone who would raise a hand against Tenebrael. Irritating, but not wholly unexpected. After all, Tenebrael had been the one to admit that she struck a bargain with the devil to modify how her world worked.

The demon wasted no time in running up to the pentagram. Only when it disappeared did Alyssa realize that, somehow, despite fighting for its life, it had managed to carry out its duty and scythe the infected corpse to send the soul through a smaller pentagram. Had it just been playing the whole time?

“You killed it?”

“It wasn’t our ally,” Alyssa said, lowering her pistol. Scowling, she reached up and pulled off her sunglasses. There were two holes in the glass right where her eyes would have been. Dribbles of red-hot melted glass clung to the bottom of the frames. “The demon is gone as well,” she added, slipping the ruined glasses into her satchel. They might still be possible to repair later. At least so long as she worded a request properly.

Looking to her side, she found Trik just staring at the corpse of the Patience. Fela stood beside him, but she wasn’t staring at the destruction. Her tail whipped back and forth as she looked up to Alyssa. Feeling a bit uncomfortable with something in Fela’s gaze, Alyssa turned to the Patience. Like the Kindness, it didn’t disappear. The aureole lost its shimmer and luminescence. That was it. No angel or demon came to harvest its soul. Closing her eyes and concentrating, she found nothing.

Trik finally broke his gaze with the Patience, turning to look to Alyssa. Although the start of a word had been on its way out of his mouth, it cut off as he flinched. “Tenebrael’s will, huh?”

“Seems that way.”

“You don’t know for sure?”

“It’s not like she comes down and talks to me.” Not anymore. Bitch. Maybe with two of the Astral Authority dead, Tenebrael could slip away from her hiding spot for a few moments. Alyssa doubted she would even if she could. For some reason, she pictured Tenebrael hiding out in some basement home theater, watching events with an oversized bowl of popcorn in her hands.

Based on everything that had happened so far, it struck Alyssa as odd that Tenebrael would hide herself to such an extent. Both members of the Astral Authority were dead. Neither with any particular trouble or hassle. One at Tenebrael’s hands through her statue and one at Alyssa’s hands using Tenebrael’s power. It seemed like, even if there were a hundred of them, Tenebrael should be able to wave her hands and delete them all with laser beams.

There had to be something she was missing.

That something was probably related to the other members of the Astral Authority. Chastity, Equanimity, Charity, Diligence, Patience, Kindness, Humility. There were five members that Alyssa had yet to see. Not to mention the higher ranked Prudence, Justice, Fortitude, and Temperance. According to the other angels, the Seraphim themselves weren’t going to act. But she supposed that might be a concern as well.

Still, would it kill her to send a text message?

With that reminding her to pull out her phone, Alyssa did so. “Just killed a demon and a Patience,” she said. Stifling the inevitable question, she added, “A Patience is a monster on par with a high level demon. It was hostile to the demon, but not friendly toward me.”

Trik glanced at Alyssa, shook his head, and started toward the battle site. The two other guards who had stayed nearby, including one of the ones with a tattooed sword, followed him. They all walked with a wariness, like the Patience would spring up and attack them at any moment. And Alyssa could honestly not fault them for their caution. After all, she was only mostly sure that it was dead. It sure wasn’t a smoking husk like the Kindness had been after Tenebrael’s statue fired that laser.

He would probably mention that she had fired without provocation later.

Ah well.

“You’ve discovered another new monster type? Is this one invisible as well?” Oxart had apparently returned. Sounded like she brought an attitude with her as well.

“Actually no. It seems like all of the plague containment team were able to see it. I’m sure they’ll write up a proper report later,” Alyssa said with a bright smile. She wasn’t a member of the city guard. They couldn’t force her to write a report. And since other people could see it, she didn’t even need to describe it much. “I will offer one word of advice, if you see any more, or any monsters with porcelain masks, don’t antagonize them. I don’t think they’ll care about most mortals, but they might if you try attacking. And this one was matched in combat with a true demon, so good luck to anyone who ignores my advice.”

“I’ll pass the word along. Which would be easier if…” Her voice got quieter for a moment as if she were leaning away from the phone. “Tenno! Are Messages working yet?” Alyssa couldn’t hear a response, but the resulting swear was not a positive one.

“Any word from Irulon yet?”

“She is still asleep after having cast that spell,” Lisa said. “Her servant isn’t letting anyone near.”

How long had it taken her in the desert? Alyssa tried to remember, but was drawing up a blank. She had been a bit distracted at the time, worried that a billion ants had been about to attack them. It might have been five minutes, it might have even been a half hour.

“Ah. Wait. I think she’s stirring.”

“Good,” Alyssa said. “Let me know what she says.”

When Irulon had woken up in the desert after Retrograde Cognition, she had been quite groggy and a bit irritated. That would probably hold true now. Alyssa wasn’t sure if that was a side effect of the spell or Irulon’s sleeping habits as a result of her merger with the dragon. Either way, it would probably be a minute or two before she heard anything useful.

So Alyssa spent her time keeping an eye on things around her, both making sure she wasn’t being ambushed and watching the actions of the plague containment team. Trik had sent one of the two guards off to inform the others that the situation was resolved. Meanwhile, he and the guard with the glowing sword started destroying the pentagrams. Fela sniffed around, poking and prodding the body of both the infected and the Patience. Alyssa admitted being a little nervous watching her do so, but it seemed well and truly dead.

“You alright, Izsha?” Alyssa asked, noticing that the draken was still several steps behind her, almost like it was trying to put her between it and the battle site. Seeing Izsha display any sign of fear was a bit strange, but maybe not unwarranted. Especially not after watching Musca and Irulon get skewered by a relatively similar being.

The draken did not answer. Because of course it couldn’t. Alyssa still wanted to figure out a way to talk to them, but in lieu of that, she patted her hand on its neck in what was hopefully a comforting motion. Izsha seemed to appreciate it.

“Alyssa?” Lisa said over the headphones.

“I’m here.”

“Handing the phone to Irulon.”

“Thanks.”

She waited just a moment, gently rubbing her hand down the smooth scales on Izsha’s neck while Irulon got on the line.

“Alyssa. Your deduction of a shadow assassin being present was correct. I was not able to confirm the presence of a fairy, but it seems likely. There were horses and a covered cart. Things you’ve already heard from your mother. However, I was able to discover at least some of their cargo.

“There were three bodies. Human bodies. Or humanoid, I suppose. They were wrapped up to the point where I couldn’t see secondary characteristics.”

“Are mummies living monsters in the world? Or undead monsters, I guess.”

“What?”

“Mummies. Like zombies?”

“Zombies, I understand. I’m not sure what you’re talking about though.”

“Never mind. I guess not.” Given that the ruler of Lyria was a pharaoh, she would have suspected that mummies at least would exist, even if they didn’t walk around and create giant sand walls of doom, but the confusion in Irulon’s voice said otherwise.

“Anyway… There were several crates and barrels as well. I was unable to see inside them, but two of the barrels had a distinct shape of a pentagram on the front.”

“Demons?” Alyssa said, glancing to where Fela had jumped onto a roof to sniff around some more. “They’re using demons?”

“Circumstantial evidence points to that conclusion.”

“Great.”

“I think I shall meet up with you.”

“Sounds fine. I’m going to get Fela. We’re going to sniff around that crossroads I was at earlier. See if we can’t find these idiots before they do something foolish.”


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031.004

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Astral Authority

Patience


Running through the city on Izsha’s back would have been far more freeing if not for the need for stealth. Even though night had fallen, people were still out on the streets. Not as many as during the day, but this was prime time for farmers to visit taverns and inns for a quick evening meal and maybe some entertainment. Unfortunately for some, one particular tavern was missing their rock star of a lute player tonight.

“Find anything? Oxart is asking again.”

“Not yet,” Alyssa said, holding the phone up to her ear. “I think Izsha thinks there is something in the air. We’re near the Observatorium, but heading further east, away from it.”

“Stay safe Alyssa, don’t go charging in without reinforcements.”

“I know, mom. I learned that lesson already.”

A three-way call let them stay in communication with each other without the possibility that one group got ambushed before they could type out a text message. And it was faster in general. She hadn’t known it was possible with the semi-outdated phones that Jason and Chris had, but Jason had suggested they try. It was nice, but sometimes they started talking over each other. Still, better than nothing. In fact, it was drastically better than nothing.

“This is Oxart,” came the stiff voice of the former guard captain. She sounded a bit distant and some background noise had sprung up. Chris had probably changed to speakerphone. “These… phones,” she said slowly. “How difficult would it be to procure more of them?”

“Nearly impossible. The way I got them was…” Tenebrael had provided them. And Alyssa had Tenebrael’s power at the moment. It might be possible to get more.

Especially with what Iosefael had told her. Tenebrael’s power was finicky. But it wasn’t based on the whims of the angel, apparently. Whether or not a miracle manifested was solely down to willpower and the verbal prayer that Alyssa had to speak. The times when Alyssa had failed to create a miracle hadn’t been because Tenebrael was denying her—probably, Iosefael had said—but because something in a prayer or her own mental fortitude had been missing.

So, theoretically, she could figure out exactly what she needed to say to conjure a few phones. And now that she was thinking about it, doing so for Kasita, Irulon, Brakkt, and a few others like Oxart would probably be a very good idea. But, she had a feeling that Oxart was asking about something else. Perhaps giving a phone to every single one of the guards under her command. If Alyssa could magic up a whole crate of phones, that might be possible. But if she had to go one by one…

It might still be worth it. She had to admit that much. Though they had better make her wealthier than the Pharaoh if she did. However, she had been thinking in the short term a lot since arriving in Nod. Half the problems she had gotten involved in were her own fault for thinking in the short term rather than viewing the bigger picture.

Alyssa wasn’t going to be around forever. She had no intentions of dying anytime soon, but she did still want to return to Earth. Or, if possible, create a connection between here and Earth. Originally, she had wanted to leave completely, but now, she had people whose company she enjoyed. It was disheartening to think that she might never see Irulon or Tzheitza ever again, among others. However, even if she lived out her entire life on Nod, she highly doubted that there would ever be someone who could replace her in terms of acting as Tenebrael’s proxy. If her mother had been able to see Tenebrael, she would have suspected that it was a genetic ability. But that wasn’t the case.

“Talk to Jason,” Alyssa eventually said. “He is a guild scrivener currently working with Guillem, the elf blacksmith, on a few projects. Ask him if he could come up with some way to make telegrams.”

“Telegrams?”

“I’d explain more, but…”

“Right. Focus on the current situation.”

“Speaking of, what is further east of the Observatorium? I don’t think I’ve ever really been in this whole quadrant of the city before.”

“There are several upper class markets along with wealthy but non-noble dwellings such as those of merchants. Public works buildings also primarily occupy that section of the city including the primary city inlet for the aqueduct, the largest bathhouse in the city, the Eastgate Guardhouse, several storage warehouses for both food and goods, and the amphitheater. In addition, there are several goldsmiths and silversmiths operating in that area, along with artist workshops, the primary papyrus supplier for the city, and a particularly notable silk weaving guild.”

“Great.” Alyssa had already identified food and water as being possible targets for poisonings. She had already informed Oxart of her suspicions of the cargo the intruders might be carrying. The bathhouse could also be targeted. It would have to be a slow acting poison in order to hit as many people as possible. Gold and silver sounded like they would be targets, but probably not to someone like the Juno Federation. Precious metals were more for the common thief than international spies and assassins.

However, papyrus might be another big target. All spell cards were created from specially manufactured papyrus-based cardstock. Targeting that wouldn’t instantly cripple the city, but it would make things much harder for arcanists. Even if only temporary, supply would become limited and prices would skyrocket. The Observatorium and the students within might not be able to afford to continue their lessons and practice. Alyssa imagined that the palace kept a private supply of papyrus. A ruler seemed like the kind of profession to run through paper like crazy. Irulon and the Pharaoh might not be hit that hard by a sudden lack of cards, but the city guard would probably have to be a lot more discerning in what they cast and how often.

Alyssa had to purchase her own spell cards from the market. So she would be affected too.

If Alyssa were strategizing for the long-term, papyrus supply would make for an excellent target. Especially if she could ensure that supply remained low, maybe by burning, poisoning, or otherwise destroying the papyrus plants themselves. After a year of limited access to spell cards, Lyria would be a far softer target.

“I hope you’ve sent a decent amount of guards to… Hold up…”

Izsha slowed down as they reached an intersection. The why wasn’t immediately apparent. It was a normal intersection as far as Alyssa was concerned. There were buildings at the corners. Shops by the look of their large windows and signposts. Over the roof of one, she was fairly certain that she could see the bathhouse Oxart had mentioned right beneath one of the larger aqueduct veins.

There was no sign of any intruders no matter the direction Alyssa looked. There were tracks from carts, but there were tracks from carts everywhere. One of the streets at the crossroads had a particularly large pile of horse droppings—whose smell was just now reaching Alyssa, forcing her to wrinkle her nose—but even that wasn’t unusual. For all the magic they had, this was still a medieval society. Where horses traveled, there was evidence of their passing. At least Lyria had the benefit of sanitary teams going around to clean up such things.

Even with being unable to tell how fresh the smell was, Alyssa was leaning toward that being the direction they should head. It had to be relatively recent. And unless Izsha was way off the mark—a possibility as she was pretty sure that Izsha had picked one among a myriad of smells to follow—evidence of a horse recently passing was as good of a clue as they were likely to get.

But Izsha looked from one side to the other, seeming just as confused as Alyssa. Draken were hunters. They knew how to track targets. Two had tracked Oxart clear across the desert using just a small sample smell from the fairy and Oxart. Then again, the desert probably had far less smells to get confused about. It was a wide open area without a lot of people.

Alyssa blinked, then blinked again.

Thinking about the desert reminded her. The draken had gotten confused at one point while tracking Oxart. It had taken Irulon using some post cognition spell to discover that the Society of the Burning Shadow had captured Oxart and the fairy. They had used that smoke-mist stuff to do so, which had interrupted the draken’s tracking.

But the mist had come from an angelic artifact. One that had been destroyed… right? Perhaps they had excavated the collapsed church building and recovered enough of it to use. Or maybe Adrael popped up again and simply gave them another one. Maybe neither had happened and they simply had a small supply of the mist in those canisters that Morigan had used on the very first fairy that Alyssa had ever seen. Either way, the doubt in Alyssa’s mind made way for certainty that the Society of the Burning Shadow was, indeed, back again and that it was their mist making Izsha confused.

She promptly conveyed the results of her logic dive over the phone, resulting in a swearing Oxart.

“I don’t have any cards of Irulon’s post cognition spell,” Alyssa added. It just wasn’t a spell she had ever thought she would need. “I think it was called retrograde cognition?” And Irulon wasn’t around either. Oxart had gotten in contact with the palace, but Alyssa hadn’t met up with them. Not yet, at least. Without Messages and without them having phones, her ability to communicate with Irulon was severely limited.

Alyssa looked down at her fingernails. They were normal at the moment, not Tenebrael’s particular shade of black. There were several options she could try. From a portal to bring Irulon here, a miracle to the effect of Retrograde Cognition, a miracle to track the intruders better, and about a dozen other things.

But she was wary.

It had just been that one Kindness so far, but that one was proof enough that the Astral Authority was present on this world. Unless she completely broke off her connection to Tenebrael, she would likely draw their attention sooner or later. But hoisting a neon light in the sky above her head while in the midst of another crisis seemed like a foolish and small-picture way to go about things.

“Where was Irulon’s last known position?”

“She was on her way to the gate to investigate the murders for herself.”

“Great.” One hundred percent in the wrong direction. “Where are you at, mom?”

“Southern part of the city. Not far from the gate. Oz, Lumen, Catal, and I can head there if you think that’s the best option.” There was a slight pause from her. Her phone didn’t have the same background noise that Chris and Oxart’s phone had, so it probably wasn’t on speaker, but there were some voices. Oz, possibly. Alyssa couldn’t hear what he was saying, but her mother made a few noises of agreement. “Right. We’re not finding much around here anyway. We’ll see if we can’t meet up with Princess Irulon.”

“Thanks. I’m going to continue looking around here with Izsha. Maybe we’ll pick up the scent again.”

“Stay safe.”

“Yeah. You too.”

With a pair of headphones, looted from the house, Alyssa was able to slip the phone into her pocket and still hear if Oxart, Chris, or her mother had anything to say. Unfortunately, the headphones lacked a microphone. She would have to fish the phone back out if she wanted to respond. But being hands free allowed her to point toward the horse droppings. “Let’s head that way, Izsha.”

Izsha seemed a little reluctant, looking back down the opposite street before following along with Alyssa’s suggestion. Alyssa couldn’t be sure why. It would be handy if the draken could speak, but…

For some reason, she pictured herself flying on an airplane, groggily waking up to Izsha calling out her name with its raptor-shaped mouth. The thought actually made her laugh.

Even with how silly it would have looked, the utility of it would definitely have been worth it. Once again, Alyssa found herself glancing down to her fingernails. Could Tenebrael’s power grant Izsha the ability to speak? Or even just allow Alyssa to understand. That would work to roughly the same effect. And, if she did something to herself, it likely wouldn’t be that big of a neon sign. Or rather, she already had a neon sign above her head in the form of her connection to Tenebrael. Adding one more neon arrow wouldn’t be that big a change.

Closing her eyes, Alyssa let out a slow breath as she concentrated. Just like Iosefael taught her. When she opened her eyes again, her fingernails were black. It was a bit of an odd sight to suddenly have colored fingernails. It was like those science fiction movies where makeup could be applied instantly with the touch of a button. She wouldn’t have picked black, but there wasn’t much she could do about it.

Rather than consider what color of fingernail polish she would prefer—Alyssa had never been one for such things—she tried to think of exactly what she wanted. A way to communicate with Izsha? She already had one-way communication. Izsha was plenty smart enough to understand English. That would more than likely change something about Izsha, which was not what Alyssa wanted. Asking for understanding would be the best way to put it in such a way that it only affected Alyssa. Hopefully.

After mentioning the words Alyssa had spoken to create the portals between her home and the stables as well as the portal to Tenebrael’s dark room, Iosefael had gotten a little upset. She had been dissatisfied with Alyssa’s requests to Tenebrael. They were short, insincere, and lacked specifics, which could easily result in unintended effects. Alyssa really didn’t care about the insincere aspect of her requests, but the others she could understand. Applying a miracle to herself had the potential to go drastically sideways. Given angelic nature to avoid harming mortals, she doubted that a malformed miracle would kill her. There were still plenty of things that might go wrong.

That was easier to see with a portal than a comprehension miracle, but Alyssa was sure that something could go wrong. Like, what if she traded her ability to understand other people for the ability to understand draken? That would probably not be the best result.

Izsha’s casual trot picked up to a swift pace before Alyssa could decide on exactly how she wanted to word her request to Tenebrael. Thinking the draken might have picked up the scent again, Alyssa dedicated her concentration to watching their surroundings. She could always try to communicate properly with Izsha later.

It wasn’t shadow assassins, fairies, horses, or any other kind of intruder that caught Izsha’s nose. A group of eight marched down the street in a loose formation. All of them wore the darker armor of the palace guard, though rather than a violet trim, theirs was a deep red. A plague containment team. At their head, Fela trotted along on all fours, obviously sniffing at the air around them.

Watching them march was an interesting experience. The few people on the street gave the group a wide berth. Fela had become fairly well known among the populace given how much she was on the streets. Even though she hadn’t once harmed a human, that didn’t stop anyone who spotted her from taking whatever cover they could. A few people even detoured into the buildings that were probably not supposed to be open to the public.

It was nice to see that there was far less panic compared to her first week out on the streets. One man even walked by nodding his head toward one of the guards, who nodded in return. He didn’t seem concerned about the hellhound in the slightest.

The guards had changed as well. On Fela’s first week out, all but Trik had been on guard to the point where they had looked more ready to attack Fela than demons. Now, even though she was at the head of the group still, they looked more like they were walking with her as comrades. Their eyes hardly stopped on her as they observed their surroundings for external threats.

External threats like Izsha barreling right next to them. From their perspective, it would have looked like it had popped out of nowhere, so Alyssa could forgive shouts of alarm, reading of weapons, and even a few spells. It helped that the spells wound up nullified thanks to Adrael’s staff. Trik, at the head of the group alongside Fela, quickly calmed them down with a few shouted orders.

“Sorry,” Alyssa said, giving Izsha a light thwack of her hand. She didn’t even know if the draken could feel it through the tough scales, but Alyssa’s hand sure stung.

“I’d appreciate a little warning next time,” Trik grumbled. “We’re a little on edge at the moment.”

“Yeah… Sorry about that.” Izsha probably deserved a bit more than a small whack upside the head for jumping into the middle of them immediately after they had just lost a few people to an ember at the bedehouse. “I heard about what happened.”

“Well, I can’t say that I’m upset to see you. I wanted to send the men home, give them much needed rest. But…” he trailed off, glancing toward Fela. “Duty is apparently calling us again tonight.”

Aside from a glance, Fela had hardly looked at Alyssa or Izsha. Her nose was in the air as she continued forward with her face set in a deadly serious grimace. Izsha had to trot to keep up. A few of the other guards had actually fallen far enough behind to have left the Empty Vessel bubble. From the outside, it must look like quite the sight to have people disappear and reappear every so often.

Alyssa decided to just cancel the spell. They were in the presence of palace guards. Izsha wouldn’t stand out nearly so much.

“She smells something else?” Alyssa asked as the glass shards dispersed into nothing around them.

“A big one apparently.”

“That’s… I hope unrelated to why I’m here. I don’t know if you’ve noticed, but Messages seem to be being blocked at the moment.”

“It would explain a few things.”

“The guards at one of the south gates were murdered and there are likely intruders inside the city. Maybe a fairy, almost certainly a shadow assassin.”

“Lovely.”

“My thoughts exactly. I have a very limited way around the Message blocking and am currently in contact with a few Knights Solaris as well as Oxart… speaking of…” She pulled out her phone. “This is Alyssa. I’ve made contact with Trik, Fela, and their plague containment team. We’re… Where the heck are we?” she said, looking around. Between her thoughts of communicating with Izsha and the sudden burst of speed to find Trik, Alyssa had no clue where they were in relation to the crossroads they had been at.

“Just north of the amphitheater,” Trik said, pointing southward. Sure enough, there was a large and very Roman Colosseum-esque building sticking out over the top of some of the smaller structures.

Chris, apparently having heard Trik, said, “Acknowledged. Oxart is organizing a few of the guards, but I’ll let her know the moment she is done.”

“We’ve reached the southern gate,” Lisa said. “Princess Irulon is in the middle of a… spell to determine what happened at the gate.” Retrograde Cognition, probably. “Will update once she is done, but Alyssa, apparently the Pharaoh is somewhere in your area.”

“The Pharaoh is here?” Alyssa wanted to breathe out a sigh of relief, but… that just meant things were serious or worrying enough that he had descended from the palace to take care of them himself.

“According to one of the guards.”

“I’ll keep an eye out for him.”

“Stay safe.”

“Yeah. You too. I—”

Fela stood fully upright, fur bristling.

“There might be a demon in the area,” Alyssa whispered into the phone. “Gotta go, I’ll keep in touch.”

Phone back in her pocket, Alyssa called out to the hellhound. “What is it, Fela?”

“It’s close, but…” she breathed in deeply and slowly through her nose. “Something was here not too long ago. A few minutes at the least. I think it is inside one of these buildings.”

“It was outside?” Alyssa heard one of the plague containment guards mumble.

“Means it is going to be a bad one.”

“Think that monster is any good at fighting demons?”

“Better it than—”

“Quiet!” Trik shouted. “Get yourselves ready. Ack, Radia, Lerk. Move up. And everyone, for the love of Tenebrael, do not touch anything that glows.”

Despite that comment, the three guardsmen who moved forward to stand side-by-side with Fela all had weapons that glowed. Not as bright or as all-encompassing as Brakkt’s enchanted sword. Theirs was more like someone had decided to tattoo a sword with green glow-stick fluid. Still definitely enchanted.

Alyssa pulled out her pistol, checked the magazine, chambered a round, and rested her finger on the safety. A normal bullet wouldn’t hurt a demon. Not significantly, anyway. But she had something to try regardless.

Unfortunately, she didn’t get a chance.

The house Fela had been staring at exploded. Bricks and rubble blasted through the air. Alyssa barely got a Projectile Reflection up before one slammed into her. One of the guards wasn’t so lucky. He went down to the ground, but he was still moving. That metal helmet of his might have saved his life. Fela punched a rock out of the air with a furious growl. Izsha took several hits to the side, enough to make it stagger. However, its position probably saved several of the guardsmen.

People on the street were screaming and running away. Trik was shouting at his men, trying to keep them organized.

But Alyssa stared with wide eyes.

On the ground in the middle of the street, surrounded by cracked earth, a woman with embers for eyes clawed at a silver spear in her chest. A demon. But the thing that held the spear was what had Alyssa’s attention.

It looked like a crochet doll, woven from silver filigree. There were no features on the life-sized toy. Not even elbows or knees. Its hands were stuffed balls of silver. But it had a shining aureole behind its head and a porcelain mask where its face would be.

One of the Astral Authority. A front-line warrior.

A Patience.


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031.003

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Astral Authority

Investigations


“Message. Brakkt. Three guards at the south east city gate are dead. It looks like they slit their own throats.”

Alyssa would have misjudged the situation completely if it weren’t for one of them still gripping a bloodied dagger. Perhaps he had been trying to fight off an assailant, but it didn’t really look like that. Alyssa was not a forensic expert. She couldn’t even consider herself a forensic novice. But when a man slumped up against a wall had the tip of his dagger pointed at him and a blood trail leading from his throat to the dagger, it was hard to come up with other possibilities.

If it looks like a duck and quacks like a duck…

“Message. Lisa Sharif Meadows. I hope you’re already at the blacksmith. If you aren’t, find somewhere safe and hunker down. Some guards were murdered.”

“Message. Ozheim,” Alyssa said as she pulled out a dozen more Message cards. She started sending warning after warning, making sure that as many people as possible knew. From Kasita and Tzheitza to Oxart and Trik. Even, somewhat begrudgingly, to Decorous. A group of guards murdered at the gate was bad news for just about everyone. The only people Alyssa could think of who might do such a thing were the Juno Federation and the Society of the Burning Shadow. She hadn’t forgotten her experience with the Shadow Assassins. They could easily have done this.

Though the why was a big question. Shadow Assassins could slip over the wall without making a fuss. In fact, Alyssa didn’t think the wall was anything too special. With a little bit of effort, most anyone could get past it without being noticed. With some magic, Alyssa could jump over. Draken could jump over as well. It wasn’t like there was barbed wire at the top, so simply climbing over a section would work easily. And with the city guard bleeding members because of the protests, there were probably plenty of places someone without invisibility could get over without being seen.

Whoever had done this was either stupid, a possibility she shouldn’t dismiss easily, or had something to move through the gate that couldn’t easily move over the walls. A horse-drawn cart full of illegal goods, or something similar. Which could mean that this wasn’t the Juno Federation, but some illegal organization. A gang like Waters Street.

As soon as she had finished sending her Messages out, Alyssa turned a glare on a certain feathered person.

“I can’t believe you won’t tell me what happened. I thought we were allies.”

“That’s not what I meant. I don’t know what happened. I don’t have Tenebrael’s book. You know how troublesome it makes trying to collect souls? I have to react rather than act.”

“Isn’t that all you do anyway? I don’t think I’ve seen an angel pop up before someone died.”

“What’s the phrase? It puts pressure on me? Not literally of course,” she said with a half-chuckle. “But I do miss knowing what I’m supposed to be doing.”

“You like being told what to do without having to think about it.”

“Exactly!” Iosefael said with a bright smile, not at all noticing Alyssa’s frown.

“Who is taking over your job on Earth anyway? Or are you jumping back and forth?”

“There was this short little Archangel who wanted to try her hand at being a Principality. Said she was friends with Tenebrael.”

“Kenziel?”

“Oh? It’s— I’ve wanted to say this one for a while and I think this is a perfect opportunity,” she explained with a pleased grin. “It’s a small world after all! You know Kenziel?”

“I wouldn’t go that far…” Alyssa shook her head. Which had a side effect of bringing her back to reality. There were dead bodies around. Iosefael had already taken their souls. She had been planning on sticking around until someone came by. More guards or Brakkt. Someone. But… No one had messaged her back yet. How long had it been since her Message to Brakkt? Or her first Message to Trik about Fela?

“Is there magic that blocks Messages?”

“Can’t answer that,” Iosefael said with a small sigh.

“Can’t or won’t?”

“I don’t know how Tene has her… magic set up. It isn’t natural. Humans shouldn’t have the ability to do the things they do in this world. Not without something like what you and Tene share.”

“Great…” With the amount of Messages Alyssa had sent out, not receiving even a single one in return had to mean something was up. Something besides three corpses.

Pulling out her phone, she sent off two quick texts. The first went to Jason, informing him of the situation and telling him to stay put. The second went to Chris. His inn wasn’t too far from the central garrison building. He didn’t need to get inside, but if he could inform someone that there had been murders at the gate and that Messages were being blocked, it would help a lot.

Both responded almost immediately. Chris was on his way to the garrison. Jason and Lisa were both down at the blacksmith. Safe. For now. That let her sigh in relief. She was tempted to rush down there, but…

“Izsha. Have you found anything?”

The draken had taken to smelling the ground around the crime scene. Unfortunately, Izsha turned back and shook its head in the negative. Without being able to properly communicate, she didn’t know exactly why Izsha hadn’t been able to find anything, but she had guesses. This gate was likely the least used gate in the entire city. Merchants traveling in and out of Lyria used it as well as anyone heading to the river to fish or visit the blacksmith. But there wasn’t much in the way of farmland immediately outside. Even without a few hundred farmers going in and out, there were still enough people, enough different scents, that it wouldn’t be easy to identify something suspicious among all that.

Alyssa had been hoping for something. Iosefael had only arrived a moment ago. The deaths had only occurred a minute before that. Whatever caused it had to have been fresh, but…

“Nothing, huh?”

Izsha shook its head again.

“I wanted to talk to you more,” Alyssa said to her angelic companion. “I saw a Kindness today.”

“Y-You did? What happened?”

“Tenebrael killed it.”

Iosefael perked up, eyes illuminated in the darkness. “She came out of hiding?”

“No. Her statue fired a laser beam at it.”

“Oh.”

“Unfortunately, with all this,” Alyssa said, waving a hand around the gate, “I don’t know that I have time to talk. Unless you can stop time? Tenebrael did that on occasion.”

“That’s not something I can do,” Iosefael said. Her wings slumped in disappointment as she spoke. “I’m just a Principality.”

The very first time Alyssa had met Iosefael, the angel had failed to send her back to Earth several times. Alyssa distinctly remembered thinking that the angel was useless back then.

And that thought hasn’t changed.

“Hmm…” Alyssa glanced down at her own hand, thinking. But, despite the urge, she shook her head. It would have been convenient. She would have had all the time to do whatever, whether that be finding out who did this, checking in on her mother, or just grabbing a snack from an inn. Yet it almost certainly would have drawn more of the Astral Authority. Not to mention the fact that messing with the fundamental forces of the universe was probably not a good idea… without supervision.

She had seen every episode of the original Twilight Zone. Messing with time without the guarantee of being able to fix it again was bound to go poorly.

Clenching her fist, Alyssa looked back up to Iosefael. “Has anyone else died a violent death in the city tonight?”

“Not so far,” Iosefael said, looking around. “But two people did just die on the other side of the world. Probably not related, but…”

“But you have to go.” Useless though she was, Iosefael was an angel. She was about the only person around that Alyssa could actually speak with regarding divine matters. “Come back when you get a moment or two. I want to know what the likely response of the Astral Authority will be, among many other things.”

“The problem with not having a book is not knowing when I’ll have time between deaths,” Iosefael said with an extended sigh. “But I’ll see what I can do.”

With a wave of her golden-gloved hand, Iosefael vanished into a flurry of feathers.

“Do they really have to molt so much,” Alyssa grumbled, waving a hand back and forth in front of her face. It was always irritating to stand so close to a disappearing angel. “Alright,” she said as she turned to address Izsha. “Chris is headed for Oxart. Knowing how she reacted when the trolls attacked, she’ll likely send out riders to check other gates and to alert everyone who needs alerting. And she’ll know who those people are better than me. So what do we do?”

As she spoke, she couldn’t help but glance off toward the smithy. It was clearly occupied. The forge belched black smoke at regular intervals. Even looking through her binoculars with Unseen Sight active, she didn’t see anything to be concerned about. As long as they were down there and whoever had done the killing was inside the city, they should be safe. That didn’t stop her from wanting to check in on them.

She perked up as she realized that she had the perfect excuse.

“They might have seen something.” They couldn’t have passed through the gate long before the guards had been murdered. Whoever had done it might have been coming up the path as they were leaving.

Whoever had done it was lucky that they hadn’t gotten her mother caught up in the killing. A flash of pure hate ran through her body as she realized just how close her mother had been. She couldn’t say what she would have done, but…

My fingernails are black, Alyssa noted with surprise. She took in a deep breath. After holding it for a count of three, she slowly let it back out. With the exhale, the color of her fingernails returned to their usual, unpainted state.

“Come on,” she said, hopping into Izsha’s saddle. “Let’s go see if they noticed anyone coming up to the gate. Maybe we’ll have a description for when Oxart’s people arrive.”

Izsha didn’t disagree. Together, they took off, flying across the path that led straight to the blacksmith. What would normally have taken ten to fifteen minutes to walk passed underneath them in an instant.

The building had larger doors than most houses. Perhaps to move larger projects in and out of the building. They were definitely large enough for Izsha to fit in. Alyssa almost went and pulled them right open, but she hesitated.

Having warned her mother that there was trouble afoot, she had a slight worry that she would walk in to find herself riddled with holes. Her mother, to the best of her knowledge, hadn’t ever been a shoot first kind of person. But this was a whole different world. It operated under different rules. And her mother was good at adapting.

So Alyssa paused outside, sent a text to Jason letting him know that a draken and a human were about to enter, and waited for a response.

Apparently, Guillem had traps in her workshop. It took a moment for her to disable them.

So it was a really good thing that Alyssa hadn’t barged in.

The door creaked open, just a thin little crack. Enough to see an elvish eye staring back at her. “Huh. I do recognize you. Barely.”

“What?”

Alyssa jerked back as the door slammed in her face. She glanced toward Izsha and got the draken equivalent of a shrug in return.

A heavy-sounding latch moved on the other side of the door. Once again, it creaked open, this time far wider.

“Welcome! Welcome!” the elf said as she moved out of the way. “Or should I say welcome back?”

Ugh. Alyssa had only met the elf once. It had been a fairly memorable visit. Mostly because of how the elf acted. Frankly, she was just a little too overactive to mesh well with Alyssa’s personality, but… well, if she was keeping people safe, then Alyssa wouldn’t complain too much.

Speaking of keeping people safe, Alyssa felt her muscles relax upon seeing her mother in the workshop. Everything was fine. No assassins, shadow or otherwise, had attacked. And her initial worry of the Astral Authority fluttering about seemed unfounded as well. Given that it had taken them two weeks to locate a giant portal next to the giant statue of Tenebrael, Alyssa doubted that they were truly investigating mortal affairs. At least, they hadn’t been. Now that they were, they might spend some more time around humans and Teneville in particular in an attempt to locate Tenebrael.

Alyssa could only hope that they would wait until the current crisis was over before they started causing trouble.

Speaking of the current crisis…

Lisa was toward the back of the room and she did indeed have her pistol out. Though her finger was nowhere near the trigger. It was good that she had taken the threat seriously, but… “I did tell you about Projectile Reflection, right?”

“You said it was a relatively rarely used spell because of its limited applications.”

“But one of its applications is deflecting bullets. And the kind of people who might target us are also the kind of people who will know what guns are. Especially if this is the Juno Federation.”

“Then why carry a pistol yourself? Why offer one to Kasita?”

“First of all, Kasita can’t be hurt by a gun. A reflected shot is more likely to hit the people behind her. Which I definitely warned her about. Secondly, I’m just saying that you do need to be discerning in your targets.”

“Of course.”

“Good.” Alyssa nodded.

Noticing Guillem paying rapt attention to the conversation, Lisa holstered her pistol, turning to the side to keep it mostly out of sight. Did that mean that she had only drawn it when Guillem went up to open the door? The text messages could be trusted. Even if someone else got their hands on someone’s phone, no one in this world except Kasita and maybe Irulon knew how to send text messages. Then again, if that prudence kept her safe, Alyssa really shouldn’t complain.

More importantly…

“Did you see anything?” Alyssa asked, looking between her mother and Jason. “Those men were killed only a minute after you passed by. Even if you only saw cloaks or horse colors or anything, it might help the city guard identify them sooner.”

Even Guillem might have seen something if she had been looking outside her workshop at the time. It was a bit of a distance to see without binoculars, but Alyssa wouldn’t put it past the elf to have invented a telescope. Just looking around the workshop, Alyssa could tell that she had been hard at work on Jason’s farm tractor. There were three little models roughly the size of remote control cars. Two were in motion. They sat on a pedestal placed under the main body to keep the wheels from touching the ground. Alyssa didn’t notice a difference between the two, but the wheels of one were spinning far faster than the other.

The third model was leaking all over the place.

“There was a cart headed toward the gate when we left,” Jason said, nodding his head. “I think there was only one person with the cart? Someone sitting at the reins of the horses.” He had sounded certain about the existence of a cart. His voice was far less certain about a possible rider.

Alyssa glanced to her mother, hoping for confirmation.

Lisa had her brows furrowed, deep in thought. Slowly, she started nodding. “It was a covered cart. Like Oregon Trail wagons. There could have been more inside.”

That just made the contents more suspicious. While she had seen a few carts with tarps thrown over top, they were few and far between. To have one roll up to the city gate right as the guards were murdered… What would be inside? Monsters? There was almost certainly a Shadow Assassin. Oz and his party had destroyed the fairy oasis and she and Irulon had destroyed the outpost, but perhaps the Juno Federation had a few locked up in other locations.

Alyssa doubted that they would try failed tactics again. The gaunt and the shadow assassins could have accomplished more and would probably be a valid threat a second time. Especially the gaunt. If not for Alyssa and her overcharged Spectral Chains, that one could have been particularly bad. But a gaunt was far from the only scary thing out there. Alyssa had heard mentions, mostly from Oz, about things whose names sounded terrifying, let alone what they actually did. Mind flayers, shadowlurkers, gardens of eyes, and whatever a deep accursed was supposed to be.

And what if it was something other than monsters?

Working for Tzheitza had given her a fairly intimate knowledge of just what potions could accomplish. From fumes that would put people to sleep to incendiaries as strong as thermite, there were definitely some dangerous things that could be hidden away in a large cart. No direct bombs, however. Nothing Tzheitza made had an explosive element to it. Dragonsfire would bathe an area in extremely hot flames, but it wouldn’t apply the concussive force needed to topple buildings.

That wasn’t to say that such devices, magical or otherwise, didn’t exist. But even without them, damage could still be severe.

Alyssa typed out the description of the cart and… “Do you remember the horse colors?”

“There were two. Both brown, I think?” Jason said, looking to Lisa for confirmation. She nodded an agreement.

With the colors in the text, Alyssa sent it off to Chris. Brown horses were basically every horse in the city, but hopefully there wouldn’t be that many covered carts with two brown horses. The real worry was whether or not Oxart and the guard as a whole had enough people to search. If the cart was just headed straight to a high priority target, it might be easier. The garrison, noble manors, the palace, and the Observatorium were the most obvious targets that Alyssa could think of, but if it was a bomb or worse, poison, they might try to get to the aqueducts or some other vital infrastructure. However, if the cart was headed to some secret chambers underground to wait for a later attack, it would be significantly harder to locate quickly.

“Alright. If you think of anything else useful, text me.”

“Where do you think you’re going?”

“Izsha and I can make our way around the city much faster than most others. Messages are blocked, but phones work. With the phone, I can stay in contact with you. Chris is with Oxart, so we can coordinate and such. I have experience fighting shadow assassins among other things. I can’t just stay here. But you can.” Turning toward Guillem, Alyssa looked the elf in the eye and said, “Keep them safe.”

“You’re trusting an elf?” she said, cocking her head to one side.

“Are you going to do anything to them?”

“No! No!”

Alyssa shrugged and looked back to her mother. “Just stay safe here, okay?”

Lisa stared. For a moment, Alyssa thought she would say something about how this wasn’t her duty or that the city guard would handle it. Instead, she looked straight at Alyssa and said, “Wouldn’t it be better to have three phones out in the city instead of having one locked up in this workshop?”

“I could take it to Kasita or—”

“I’m saying, dear daughter, that I will be going too.”

Alyssa bit her lip, wondering why her mother had to make everything harder for everyone. But before she could say anything, her mother continued.

“We can meet up with the city guard or perhaps Oz and Catal. I’ll split off, going with some of them. There is no point in keeping two phones together, so we will have to split up. Don’t worry. I know how much you would complain if I said I was going to wander alone.”

Tapping a finger against her thigh, Alyssa eventually nodded. She didn’t have the time to argue all night. Not if she wanted to be of some use. “Fine. We’ll join up with the guild. But you listen to them, alright? They know more about magic and monsters than you do.” That was a lesson that had almost gotten her killed learning. She couldn’t let her mother make the same mistake.

Luckily, her mother wasn’t the type to head off into things without thought. She would listen to Oz’s advice.

“Of course,” Lisa said with a smile.

“Um. I’ll stay here, shall I?” Jason said, holding a single finger in the air. “Have to make sure our prototypes don’t get stolen.”

At least he was being sensible. He still had a bit of an inflated opinion of himself, but he wasn’t thinking he was the main character of some cartoon anymore. Not being able to use high level magic had been something of a blow to his confidence. If only Lisa was the same.

“Alright. Let’s go.”


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031.002

<– Back | Index | Next –>


Astral Authority

Burnt Chicken


“Smells like burnt chicken,” Alyssa said, waving her hand back and forth in front of her face. It didn’t help. The air was so saturated with the smell that a little fanning didn’t do a thing. She supposed it could have been worse. It was still rank.

Brakkt didn’t comment on the smell as he stared down into the ten foot deep hole from the lip of the crater. He had his enchanted sword drawn, but the tip was down and to the side. He clearly wasn’t poised to use it.

Alyssa had her pistol out and a deck of cards pressed between her offhand and the grip, but, like him, she had relaxed some since they saw what was inside the crater.

It was dead, that much was clear. Its eyes no longer bubbled and popped. They sat inert. The whole ones stared off into the void. The rest were… like deflated balloons. The feathers, which had been an almost luminescent white before, were charred black. Which, above all else, might have been the biggest shame of it all.

Tzheitza might have been able to use those feathers.

Turning away, Alyssa looked down into the valley. From the hill where the crater was, she could easily see Teneville. And the giant statue of Tenebrael. It was just how Alyssa remembered it being. Tenebrael, wearing her black dress with her hand outstretched. The hand held a swirling and ever-changing mystic circle. That had to have been what had shot down the Kindness. A weapon of some sort. Alyssa wondered whether it was automated or if Tenebrael had to manually fire on whatever target garnered her ire. She kind of hoped that it was the latter. There was less chance of getting accidentally caught in the crossfire if it decided it didn’t like Iosefael or some other angel that happened to be nearby.

Her eyes flicked downward. The rolling green hills had a few dots trudging across them. People from Teneville. If Brakkt could see the Kindness and had seen Tenebrael’s weapon, it stood to reason that the townsfolk would have seen as well. If a statue of her deity had ‘pointed’ in a direction, she would probably want to investigate too.

And from just how far had that beam been visible? Teneville was located on a small peninsula and the beam had gone over the water, but there were islands in that direction. And, if she remembered right from that shoddy map Aziz had let her take a picture of, the Fortress of Pandora was in roughly the same direction. What would they think about it? And the monsters as well?

“We’re going to have visitors soon,” Alyssa said, nodding toward the dots in the distance. From her few trips between her house and Teneville, she knew it was about a half-day worth of walking. The sun was just about to dip behind the rings in the sky, so if the townsfolk continued, they would be walking through the night.

Teneville wasn’t in that dangerous an area. The only real threat they had around them were the harpies, and those monsters made their home in the opposite direction at the mountain pass. There weren’t ant hives to stumble across, elves hidden underground lying in wait, or hostile nations setting up fortresses. So Alyssa wasn’t too worried for their safety.

The real question was what to tell them.

“Are there policies or protocols for dealing with new monsters?” She remembered Catal and Oz talking about something similar back in the desert, but they were the guild and Brakkt was royalty. Things could be different. Besides that… “I honestly didn’t expect you or anyone else to be able to see them. But since you can, I suppose we should probably treat them more like normal monsters than actual divine beings.”

Brakkt didn’t respond right away. He slid down the incline leading to the dead Kindness, raised his sword, and slashed through the bulk of the creature. Every eyeball that his sword touched popped and deflated, leaving loose scraps of eye-flesh behind. There was still no blood or insides to the creature even after its death.

“Hm,” he grunted. “I should like a live one to test my sword on. But, that I can actually interact with it is an interesting sign. I wonder…”

This time, he pulled a knife from his belt. This knife had a shiny silver blade, but was otherwise fairly average in appearance. It didn’t glow with magical enchantments like his main sword. In fact, it might have been the same knife he had used to slice up fish with Alyssa. And that was probably the point of pulling it out. Kneeling, he tried attacking the Kindness once again. The eyeballs popped, achieving the same result.

“Hm,” he said again, looking over the blade of the knife. From Alyssa’s position, she couldn’t see any residue on the blade. It gleamed just as much as when he had first drawn it. “I suppose treating it like a normal monster will work for now. But I would like to know what kind of defenses they have while alive.”

“Yeah. Me too. Iosefael taught me a few… prayers—” ugh “—that are supposed to help. But I think they rely on Tenebrael’s magic. I guess you could try and see what happens. Worst case, nothing at all.”

“I’ll make time for a few practice sessions. I’m sure Irulon will be interested as well. In the meantime, I may move ahead with my plan to move the draken out of the palace. The other portal building isn’t ready yet, but I’m sure they’ll have no complaints about living out in this forest. Will you?” he asked with a glance up to where Ensou was watching near Alyssa.

“Sorry about that,” Alyssa said as Ensou huffed out a response that was probably positive. “I could try destroying it and remaking it somewhere else.”

“I’d rather not take the chance that you can’t recreate it at the moment. Riding back to the palace wouldn’t be a problem under other circumstances, but I should inform my father of these developments as soon as possible. He will likely want to send his people to investigate. Having the portal open will expedite that.”

“Right.”

“Musca,” he called out, turning away from the fake angel’s corpse. The draken in question got a little closer to the edge of the crater, moving to stand next to Ensou. “Take Dasca, return to the palace, and bring all the draken through to here. Lead them to the forest. If it suits you, find a place to live for a time. Or just lie about doing whatever you want. But do not disturb the humans.”

Draken didn’t often make all that much noise. There were the occasional trills of excitement or warning. Alyssa had heard, rarely, sharp squawks that were likely intended to call attention to something or other. And that was really about it. This time was no different. Brakkt stared at Musca, locking eyes for a moment before turning away, apparently satisfied that it had gotten the message.

Musca trotted off to the lake where some of the less interested draken were enjoying a swim. Musca had probably only come in the hopes that there would be violence to be found. The only other two around were Izsha and Ensou.

“Let’s head back to the palace and gather up my sister and father before anything else happens.”

“We’re ignoring the villagers?”

Brakkt didn’t respond right away. He climbed up the slope of the crater until he reached Alyssa. Glancing down into the valley, he spotted the tiny dots and nodded. “I’ll be back before they arrive.”

Alyssa felt a bit bad about leaving the villagers to hike all this way only for them to eventually be turned away, but she didn’t really want to go tell them off herself. There was a chance that more of these Astral Authority fake angels would appear. While they would probably be interested in the portal, statue, and other instances of Tenebrael’s magic, Alyssa couldn’t help but find herself worrying over her mother and the other Earthlings. She hadn’t really thought about it before, but they had been brought here by Tenebrael using her magic.

After a brief stop at the lake—Brakkt wanted a few of the draken to guard the corpse of the angel from any scavengers—they headed back through the portal to Lyria.

The palace was not on fire. Alyssa took that as a good sign.

Before Brakkt went to the upper levels of the palace to find the people he needed to inform, Alyssa got permission to take Izsha out under the cover of an invisibility spell. Last time, he had given her quite the lecture. She did not want to sit on her knees again as he paced back and forth, calmly explaining how irresponsible it had been to drag Izsha around the city and then just leave it alone near the markets during a time of unrest. Alyssa hadn’t even realized that she had been near the markets, but that really hadn’t been much of an excuse.

This time, there wasn’t quite as much hurry either. The Earthlings were probably just fine. If some fake angels had descended and started causing problems, Alyssa would have expected more panic among the city’s residents. Instead, as Alyssa and Izsha made their way toward the guild’s building, she found the people on the street casually making their way to wherever they needed to go. It was just a normal night as far as any of them were concerned.

If everyone knew how nice it felt to cross the city on the back of a draken, they would probably be a lot more welcome. A horse couldn’t even compare. It was like the difference between a tricycle and a top of the line motorcycle. Of course, if everyone had a draken to ride around on like they were motorcycles, the city would starve in a day. Then the humans would probably wind up eaten as the draken looked for more food sources. And then they might eat each other? Brakkt’s draken seemed like a tight-knit group, but several thousand starving draken would probably be far less picky.

The draken weren’t motorcycles and it was a good thing they weren’t treated as such. Still, she was happy that Izsha let her ride around with it.

The guild, thankfully, had stables. They were for horses, of course, but the building was large and hidden from the sight of the public. That gave Izsha a perfect hideout while Alyssa headed inside.

Although the general air of excited adventurers gathering was still present, there were far fewer people present than Alyssa was used to. The guild building provided not only a place of work and job acquisition, but it acted as a tavern and an inn for most members. So, even in the dead of night, the place would be bustling where other inns closed up shop.

It actually took her a second pass to spot Oz. He was at the usual table, but he was decked out in his full gear. The same stuff he had worn while escorting her around the city and on their trip to rescue Oxart. Lumen sat next to him, tall mug of ale in hand. Her eyes narrowed immediately upon spotting Alyssa, followed by huffing and turning to the side.

Oz at least waved with a smile when he noticed Alyssa’s approach.

“Bit late for potion deliveries, isn’t it?”

“Not here for that today,” Alyssa said, throwing one more glance around. Her mother and Jason could usually be found here at this table with Oz, Catal, and Lumen. But they weren’t anywhere around at the moment. Which did make her a little nervous considering what she was here for. Yet she couldn’t help but ask, “Did something happen?”

Oz’s face turned grim, but it wasn’t him who answered.

“They found another one of those embers,” Lumen said, sounding disgusted. “Despite having been warned, a guardsman tried picking it up. Whispers are going around about how the nobles ordered the guard to bring them one, prompting him to ignore the warnings. Or it could be those fools at the Observatorium quietly putting a price on delivery of one. Regardless, the survivor said that he picked it up and…”

“Normally, the infection takes some time to progress. That offers ample time for quarantine. According to the survivor, that was not the case here.”

Alyssa clicked her tongue. She had been right not to touch the one from back when. That didn’t necessarily make her happy. In fact, a repeat incident was the exact opposite of good news. She had been hoping that the ember had been a one-off thing for the demons to try to trap her with. Now there was a second one? One nowhere near her? Was it supposed to be a message to her? Or were the demons simply using a new tactic against the rest of humanity?

“Has anyone found one of those embers before the one I picked up?”

“Not to my knowledge,” Oz said after a moment of humming to himself. “But I suppose I wouldn’t really know. Demons are… uh… not exactly my thing.”

Lumen let out a loud scoff. “That’s an understatement.”

“Well excuse me for not wanting to fight something that can catch a full power swing of my sword without even blinking. Not all of us can stand back and fire spells behind the front lines. I merely believe in leaving such things to those professionally trained for such things.”

“But you still went to get fully geared up?” Alyssa said, looking his armor up and down.

“Well, with half the guild empty, any jobs that come in might go for a premium.” He adjusted the leather padding around his shoulders, looking dignified and respectable. “How about it? Care for another escort around the city?”

“With my luck, we’ll wind up running head first into a dozen demons before we get to our destination.”

“You’re right. Can’t argue that,” he said with a casual shrug.

Shaking her head, Alyssa looked around one more time, confirming that the people she was here for weren’t actually here. “Have you seen my mother or Jason recently? They didn’t get caught up in this demon mess, did they?”

“No. No. They were here when the news came in. But Jason had an appointment with… that elf. I think Lisa went with him as an escort. Not on official job, of course. She isn’t a proper Knight Solaris yet.”

Yet. Alyssa had warned off Chris successfully, but not her mother. However, that wasn’t the issue at the moment. “They just left after hearing that demons were attacking?!”

“I think attacking is a bit of an exaggeration. As far as I understand it, the situation is already resolved. They just asked the guild to provide some extra support around the bedehouse, just in case.”

“They found it in the bedehouse?” Alyssa felt a slight chill go down her spine as Oz nodded.

“Yep. So long as that stuff stays out there, we’ll be fine here.”

Alyssa scowled, but… he was probably right. On her way over, she hadn’t noticed any panic among the people in the streets. If even a single demon was running rampant, people would have been fleeing. It had to be an isolated incident.

“What about Fela? Is she alright?”

Lumen put on a sneer, which Alyssa ignored.

“Your hellhound? Not sure. Didn’t ask.”

Alyssa promptly pulled out a Message spell. Fela didn’t carry spells with her. She really didn’t wear much in the way of clothes, just some modesty wraps around her chest and groin. Even that wound up doffed the moment she was out of public. However, Trik was a minor arcanist. Capable enough for a simple Message spell. She sent out a quick question asking about Fela, and Trik himself, but she wasn’t going to expect a response immediately. Especially not if there was an ongoing situation.

“Right. I’m going to head out to the blacksmith then. How long ago did they leave?”

“Oh… not long?”

“About half an hour,” Lumen said, pointing a finger toward a notched candle.

“Did they take a horse? Probably on foot, huh?”

She shrugged. Oz didn’t look like he had an answer either. Instead, he raised a finger. “Before you leave, I did have one thing I wanted to ask you.”

Oz…” Lumen started, warning in her tone.

But he just shrugged her off. “There’s a job coming up in the morning—”

“No,” Alyssa said, eliciting a sigh from Lumen.

“You didn’t even hear what it was.”

“I am far too busy to go gallivanting around. There’s too much on my plate. And that isn’t even accounting for the fact that I do not want to be an adventurer in the slightest.”

“Your mother is going.”

Alyssa blinked. Then she blinked again. “She what.”

Apparently, the issue of her mother’s interest in the guild was a little more immediate than Alyssa had thought.

“It shouldn’t be anything too dangerous,” Oz said, continuing as if he hadn’t noticed Alyssa’s sudden change in mood. “A nobleman has hired us to escort his daughter out of the city and to their home of Illuna. They have been getting some threats—” He paused, leaning in just a little closer to Alyssa, dropping his voice to a whisper at the same time. “—I’ve heard that this particular noble actually likes having the hellhound around. Don’t know if that’s related though,” he added a little louder as he leaned back. “But he is worried that any normal coach and guards would be ambushed en route. There shouldn’t be any threat of monsters or… angels. Hopefully no brigands either. I’m expecting a rather lax job this time.”

“Plan for the worst,” Lumen said before Alyssa could say something similar.

“Of course! That’s why I want Alyssa to come. Having someone who can blast apart a mountain with us will surely increase the chances that nothing will go wrong.”

“That might be overkill,” Alyssa said, running a hand down her face. Lisa was an adult. She could make her own decisions. But… there was still time to talk her out of going. To do that, Alyssa had to go find her mother. “If there are any other developments with this demon situation, Message me. Otherwise, I’ll probably be back to talk later.”

“Glad you’re considering it,” Oz called out as Alyssa started walking away. Out of the corner of her eye, she watched him take an elbow to the stomach courtesy of Lumen, but Alyssa didn’t bother to stop to see if he was alright.

Outside the guild, Alyssa pulled out her phone. Her mother didn’t have one. Tenebrael had disappeared before handing one over. But that wasn’t the case with Jason. Knowing that they were together, Alyssa sent him a quick text asking where they were.

Just receiving a text in response made her sigh in relief. They were fine and almost to the city wall.

Hopping onto Izsha and consuming another of her limited invisibility spells, Alyssa directed the draken down the same streets that she had first taken with Jason to get to Guillem’s smithy. They could have made it there in only a few minutes, but Alyssa decided to take it slowly. Lisa and Jason were still walking down the streets. Alyssa would rather be with them than wait for them.

Especially while demons might be afoot.

The sun had finally set during the few minutes that Alyssa had spent inside the guild. People were still on the streets, but markets, merchants, and other sellers of goods were closing up shops. Even though it had only been a quarter of an hour, the crowds had thinned considerably. Which was a good thing. On the way to the guild, Alyssa hadn’t been able to take main streets. Side streets and alleys provided plenty of space for Izsha.

Superhero movies and comics always had people bounding from rooftop to rooftop to avoid the people on the streets, even if the person or thing doing the bounding was a two-ton lizard dog. Maybe modern construction techniques could handle two tons slamming into a suburban roof, but Alyssa highly doubted that any building around her now would survive Izsha hopping between them.

Izsha made a game of dodging citizens. The bubble of invisibility came so close to other people more times than Alyssa could count. But Izsha always moved away before someone would have actually walked inside. It jumped to the left, sprinted to the right, and hopped clear over a cart carrying wolf pelts and apples. Luckily, or perhaps intelligently, Izsha only jumped over the goods part of the cart and not the two people driving the horses.

While Izsha had her fun, Alyssa spent the time scanning the people they passed, looking for her mother and Jason. Although they both wore clothing from this world—even after having collected several suitcases worth of modern attire from the house, Lisa actually preferred a well made tunic—Alyssa figured that they wouldn’t be too hard to spot. Chris was fairly good at blending in with the local populace. Jason couldn’t fit in if his life depended on it.

And yet, there was no sign of them. All the way down to the southern gate closest to Guillem’s smithy, they were nowhere to be found. Hopping the wall, Alyssa didn’t see them on the path down to the little building near the river.

Had she passed them? Or had they made it down to the blacksmith before Alyssa even reached the gate.

If only she had a way to differentiate between souls while looking around for people. Angels could probably do it, so it stood to reason that the same would be true for her. She just hadn’t figured out how to do so yet. Aside from Irulon, anyway, but she wouldn’t advocate for her mother to take in a second soul just so that Alyssa could keep better track of her.

She was about to send another text when she spotted movement in the corner of her vision. Golden-white feathers floating around the gate.


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031.001

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Astral Authority

Kindness


Alyssa saw her first member of the Astral Authority two weeks after encountering Iosefael.

It had started out as a normal day. In the morning, she picked up a fresh batch of potions to be delivered. Some, she had even made herself. The Observatorium had ordered a small shipment of Tzheitza’s counter-demon potion. They had wanted some months ago, but Tzheitza and the Pharaoh had denied them, citing a scarcity of resources. Iosefael donating a whole sack of feathers alleviated that scarcity enough for her to offer some of the concoction. The extra material also allowed her to start up a dozen more experiments all at the same time, which Alyssa had assisted with, learning more about potionmaking in the process.

In addition to the delivery, Alyssa spent some time perusing the tomes and scrolls of the Observatorium’s library. She didn’t take to the task with all that much enthusiasm. It was just a case of not knowing what might work on angels that kept her from being fully invested in research. Spectral Chains worked, so it stood to reason that other spells would work as well. Iosefael had agreed to being a test subject, though she reserved the right to veto anything.

Iosefael hadn’t let Alyssa use an Annihilator on her. Neither of them were sure that it would work, but she hadn’t wanted to take the chance. Same with a Spectral Axe and a few other spells. If anything had a chance to work, Alyssa assumed it would be a Spectral Axe. It and Spectral Chains had the commonality of being Death spells with Spectral in the name. Finding more was her current goal, along with anything else that seemed like it might affect Divine beings.

Irulon had offered a few spells that Alyssa was going to try next time she met up with Iosefael. And she had pointed her toward the proper section of the Observatorium’s library.

Alyssa hadn’t stood idle with Tenebrael’s magic. Tenebrael’s miracles couldn’t be used to harm humans, not that Alyssa had really tried so far. But Iosefael had taught her a few tricks that might get it to work against the Astral Authority.

Unfortunately, Adrael’s staff was still inert and would stay that way. If Alyssa tried to connect herself to the Archangel, things might be different. For the time being, it still worked as a shield against magic. That alone validated its existence. If only Tenebrael had dropped off a weapon for Alyssa to use. But then again, Alyssa hadn’t ever seen Tenebrael actually pull one out. Adrael had used the staff and shield. Iosefael wielded a spear and sword.

Perhaps Tenebrael had nothing but her own magic to get by. Magic that Alyssa could now use.

And it all required prayers to the stupid angel.

Requests, Alyssa had decided to call them. Just to avoid calling them prayers if anyone asked.

After finding a dozen relatively advanced spells to take a snapshot of during the post-delivery Observatorium crawl, Alyssa packed up and headed out. Irulon hadn’t shown up today. The regular, non-princess students always gave her looks. She didn’t leave because someone glared or looked like they were thinking about making conversation with her. That was definitely a contributing factor, however.

Even with the Taker gone, Alyssa felt like she had a lot of enemies that she really didn’t need to rub off on anyone else. And if demons or angels decided to have a little war around her, others would easily find themselves caught in the crossfire. Irulon had wound up with a staff stabbed through her back because of that.

Leaving so early in the day provided a perfect opportunity for Alyssa to engage in her new favorite pastime.

Brakkt wasn’t in the stables when Alyssa arrived. Three of the draken were missing as well. Izsha, however, was right where she expected. Unwrapping a small hunk of meat that she had purchased on the way over, Alyssa tossed it to her favorite dinosaur. “You want to go out today?”

Izsha didn’t need asking twice. After chomping down its food, it moved right to the saddles and even helped Alyssa get the harness in place with its teeth holding it steady. Ten minutes later, Alyssa was out, flying across the grassy hills next to the lake. Her house and the portal next to it shrank into the distance as Izsha and Alyssa charged toward the forest beyond the lake. Musca and Dasca came along as well, though neither had saddles or a rider.

Being with the draken like this was surprisingly fun and freeing. Alyssa could almost forget that fake angels might show up at any time and decide that they didn’t like her glowing eyes. She could ignore the fact that the palace burning down in her absence was a mildly credible threat. The nobles pulling their support, instigating unrest, or inviting attack and sabotage were distant concerns out in the middle of nowhere.

The air in the city of Lyria wasn’t polluted like modern cities were. But it did have a certain smell to it. Especially in the less wealthy sections. Even with magically enchanted cesspits that tried to contain the smell until ‘gong farmers’ could get around to emptying them into the river outside the city, things weren’t perfect. Though it wasn’t all bad. There were apparently several ordinances and laws dealing with waste disposal. The streets around the buildings were the responsibility of the occupants. Failure to keep the area clean resulted in onerous fines.

Like the IRS of America, the waste management services were not to be messed around with. Even Waters Street had kept their area tolerable.

Beyond the occasional odd smells around, it was a fairly noisy city too. Obviously it didn’t have jackhammers tearing apart streets, emergency vehicles blaring their sirens, motorcycles revving their engines, or assholes playing music from their cars loud enough to wake the dead. The sound of wooden cart wheels on cobblestone paths and crowds of people in the busier streets still made more noise than one might expect.

Out in the forest south of the lake, there was none of that. The air was pure and fresh. She was the only person around for who knew how far. Despite their size, the draken were predators that didn’t make much noise even while charging at speed between the trees. The wind in her ears was a bit much, but even that was a natural kind of sound.

While it was late afternoon at the moment, Alyssa discovered that there was nothing she enjoyed more than the smell of the forest at the crack of dawn. She wasn’t quite sure what it was about that particular time, but something about it just made her feel so comfortable and relaxed. It wasn’t bad now, of course, but it couldn’t compare to early in the morning.

For the most part, Alyssa let the draken do whatever they wanted. She was along for the ride. As long as Izsha avoided low branches, Alyssa was perfectly happy to simply sit and de-stress. The draken were happy to run about to their hearts’ content.

After an hour, Alyssa spotted a draken that wasn’t part of her party. A few minutes after, she found Brakkt sitting with his back to a rather large stone, cooking up some kind of woodland creature that might have been a squirrel. Or a rabbit? It was a bit hard to tell. Between the fire, the way it had been skinned, and the shriveled appearance from being cooked, it really didn’t look like anything Alyssa was familiar with.

“Howdy,” she said, sliding from Izsha’s back as the draken came to stop next to him.

“Howdy?”

“It’s a greeting from my home. Well, it doesn’t get much use anymore outside of certain regions, but my dad always said it. And doesn’t this kind of thing just make you feel like a cowboy?” she said while waving her arms between the little cooking fire, the woods, and the draken.

“Cow… boy?”

“You know… never mind.” Sighing, she took a seat next to him. It was a bit warm still to be sitting next to a fire, but not so warm that it felt like a sauna. The rest also gave her a chance to stretch out. Riding the draken was fairly comfortable all things considered, but it did lock her into position for a while. Not to mention the stress on her thighs from clamping onto Izsha. Since riding them regularly became a habit, her muscles had gotten their due workout just from that. “Didn’t expect to find you out here,” she said after stifling a long yawn. “I mean, I figured you were out here because of the missing draken, but it is a pretty big forest.”

Reaching forward, Brakkt pulled the stick from the ground, twisted it, and planted it back where it had come from so that the other side of the squirrel could get some time facing the fire. “They probably smelled it and wanted to come see if they could steal a bit.” He glanced up to Musca, who was staring straight at the half-roasted critter. “Go find your own. There’s plenty out here.”

The draken made a warning trill, but a glare from Brakkt silenced it.

“They’ve been living in the palace for so long, they’ve forgotten how to hunt. They’ve become fat and lazy.”

Musca made another noise. Indignation? Offense? Whatever the noise was, it was clearly displeased with Brakkt’s comment. With a small huff of hot air, it turned and stalked off.

Brakkt just chuckled as he watched Musca. After a moment, he turned to Alyssa. “You want some? Should be almost done.”

“Implying I can’t hunt?”

“Can you?” he asked, eyebrow raised at her smile.

“I mean, I know the theory.” Turning a carcass into meat was, as she had thought when she had very first arrived in this world, not a part of her skill set. But she still didn’t think it would be that hard a task. Killing something to eat was probably more of a trial than chopping it up into edible chunks. Or, as Brakkt had done with his squirrel, she could simply roast most of it all at once.

Or she could just go fishing again. She knew how to do that well enough now.

It did smell good, surprisingly. Not like a steak or hamburger, but not bad. She had never tried squirrel before. At least, not that she knew of. Who really knew what some of those innkeepers were putting into their meat pies. Having seen Sweeney Todd, she would be lucky if squirrel was the strangest of foods she had eaten here.

Still… “I think I’ll pass.” Although she had lived in this world for a few months now, she was still very much a modern girl. Seeing her food in such an… unprocessed state was just a little off-putting. Fish was one thing, but… “Maybe next time? I wasn’t planning on staying out here all that long anyway. My mother and I were going to meet up later tonight for a little while. Kasita as well, once Tzheitza lets her off customer duty.”

“Ah.” He stood, stretching as he moved. “I suppose I should get back soon as well.”

“Don’t pack up on my account. I’d feel bad if I made you go back early. I’m well enough acquainted with the portal and the palace to find my own way.”

“We all have our duties to attend to.” Bending, he picked up the stick the squirrel was on and took a large bite out of its side. He chewed and chewed and turned and spat. A big hunk of something flew off into the woods. Bone? Fat? “Bit sinewy,” he said, taking another bit. “But the meat is quite tasty.”

“I’ll take your word for it.” The squirrel was really too small to share even if she did want some.

As he finished it off, he swept his leather boot over the fire pit, filling it in with the small mound of dirt and snuffing out the flames. Apparently having had enough, he tossed the scraps to Ensou, who had been sitting nearby. The blue-grey draken chomped down on it, stick and all.

Placing his fingers to the sides of his mouth, Brakkt whistled. The sharp cry echoed off the trees.

The scattered draken returned. Izsha hadn’t gone anyway, but Musca, Dasca, and a few others whose names Alyssa wasn’t quite sure of all trotted back.

“I’m quite glad that portal exists,” he said as he hopped onto Ensou’s back.

Alyssa did the same to Izsha. “Handy, isn’t it?” she said as they started heading back toward the portal.

Without any obvious command from Brakkt, the draken moved at a leisurely pace. Something that allowed an easy conversation between him and Alyssa. “Being able to come out here like this whenever we want is… quite a nice experience. Though having the Observatorium’s administrators and brightest students hovering around it every other day is a bit more irritating.”

“No progress in replicating it?” Alyssa doubted it would be possible given the portal’s origins, but really, what was different about what she had done versus what the spell cards did? They were both prayers to Tenebrael. Her version was just slightly more complex, both in the geometric shape of the spell and the words spoken.

“You would have to ask Irulon. She’s the head of their little task force.”

“Yeah. I’ve hardly seen her for these past two weeks because of that.”

“Hm. I believe my father intends to ask you for a favor. Having another portal between Lyria and the Fortress of Pandora would be an invaluable tool for resupply and reinforcement. In both directions.”

“Well, I can try. But that’s all up to Tenebrael.”

“I’ve mentioned as much. Even knowing it might not work, he has started construction on a building outside the city that might serve as a housing area for a portal. A place to use as a local defense if Pandora is overrun; we don’t want monsters having quick access to the center of the city.”

“Makes sense.”

“If it fails, if you can’t make a portal, I believe he intends to repurpose it as housing for friendlier monsters. Fela, the draken, and any other unconventional allies we may decide to invite in. A way to keep them out of the city in the hopes that some tensions die down. Though, as part of her job, Fela will likely still be roaming the streets every day.”

Alyssa nodded. It was surprising that such a thing hadn’t already been done for the draken. Then again, they really hadn’t been allowed outside all that much before. Only for the occasional short trips like the one Alyssa and Irulon had undertaken.

It was a wonder they weren’t all fat or atrophied. Or both.

Still, she was glad that they had the portal now. Its presence was even better than her original plan to get them exercise by running around outside the city. Of course, because they could disappear from the palace at will without even leaving it, they weren’t paraded around the city. The people of Lyria would never grow used to monsters if they never even knew that they existed.

But, until the heat from Fela died down some, it was probably for the best.

As they exited the forest and returned to the wide open lake near her home, Alyssa spotted something in the distance. A bright light in the sky, well below the sun. At first, she thought it to be a simple trick of the light. Perhaps sunlight reflecting off a particularly mirrored portion of the rings that surrounded the world. But it moved. It zipped around in the distance like an overly bright firefly.

It was that movement that made Alyssa nervous.

Iosefael had said that the Astral Authority were not humanoid like most angels. They had not been crafted to be so. They all had distinct shapes that, while different from each other, would be instantly recognizable as divine beings. Alyssa hadn’t been quite sure what that was supposed to have meant, but she had been on the lookout ever since that conversation for anything that might count as divine.

The glowing light just above the edge of the horizon might very well have been nothing.

To be on the safe side, Alyssa called out to Brakkt. “Stop! There’s something there.”

Perhaps due to some trust that had built up between them, Brakkt didn’t argue in the slightest. Neither did the draken. It took a moment to retreat back to the treeline around the lake, but once they were there, Alyssa hopped from Izsha’s back. Her binoculars were always in her little satchel and today was no different. Whipping them out, she focused in on the bright dancing light on the opposite side of the wide lake.

Iosefael had been right. There was no mistaking that thing for anything but a divine being. Even with all the monsters on Nod in all their shapes and sizes, she doubted any could generate that exact warmth of a light. With normal angels, they had halos that they could put on for that kind of light. Disk-shaped rings with gaping holes in the center that floated above their heads. Most modern depictions of angels in fiction and illustrations used that same ring.

This member of the Astral Authority didn’t have quite the same thing. Rather than a hollow ring, it had a large dinner plate of a halo that stretched from wing to wing. An aureole almost identical to the one Alyssa had shaped for herself while addressing the people of Teneville. In her case, the shaping had been deliberate. An attempt to replicate holy figures in old classical paintings. But now, seeing the same radiance and glory coming off this divine being, she couldn’t help but wonder if those paintings hadn’t been based off a creature rather like this one.

Of course, the rest of the creature was entirely alien. Despite having taken a few art history classes that had covered plenty of religious artworks, she had never seen anything quite like this creature. It had feathered wings, just like Tenebrael or Iosefael, though pure white in its case. But that was where the similarities ended.

This thing was just eyes. A hundred eyes in a misshapen sphere, all fighting each other for dominance. They bubbled out, moving like someone blowing on a straw dipped in a pool of soapy water. One large eye would pop, only to be replaced by a dozen smaller eyes that began expanding until they too popped. It churned Alyssa’s stomach to watch, but she imagined it would have been far worse if the eyes hadn’t been empty. There was no blood or guts splattering about with each pop, at least.

That was it. Wings. The old-fashioned halo. Eyes. Every angel Alyssa had encountered so far had been female. Or at least feminine. This thing wasn’t even in the same ballpark.

As it swiveled around the portal, Alyssa spotted one more feature that she had missed earlier. A face. Or perhaps a mask? It looked like it had been carved from stone. White marble or maybe a polished porcelain. It was roughly human, but androgynous. She wasn’t quite sure of its purpose, other than perhaps giving anyone speaking to it something to speak to. It really didn’t look like a natural part of the being at all. In fact, as it flittered around the portal, Alyssa was sure that she could see eyes beneath the mask bubbling and bursting like all the rest.

“What is it?”

Alyssa glanced to her side. Brakkt had dismounted as well to watch with her from behind a wide tree. He wasn’t wearing his helmet at the moment, so she had a clear view of his face. More specifically, she could see his violet eyes watching the distance. They moved about, but not randomly. He was tracking something. “You can see it?”

“I see a light. It’s too far to see more.”

Eyebrows raised as high as they would go, Alyssa handed over her binoculars. “I’m surprised you can see anything at all. But I guess it isn’t really an angel—”

“Eugh. What is it?” he asked again, this time with far more disgust in his voice. From his tone alone, she knew that he could see all the bubbling eyes.

“I think it is a Kindness. A scout and observer for the rest of these fake angels.”

“So what do we do?”

Alyssa didn’t have an answer for that question. It had been an inevitability that the Astral Authority would discover the portal and Teneville. But neither she nor Iosefael had any idea what to do when that happened.

Her hand drifted over to her pistol. She could kill it. There was just the one. With the tips Iosefael had given her, she had no doubt that she would be able to kill it. If she did kill it, it would likely delay the Astral Authority. Maybe only a day, maybe a month. It was hard to say. Their methods and operational procedures weren’t things that Iosefael had experience with.

If she killed it, it would delay whatever plans the Astral Authority had. But it would also likely garner their direct ire. As much as she wished it were the case, she couldn’t be on guard one hundred percent of the time. She had to sleep, after all. Not to mention other distractions.

So Alyssa moved her hand away from her pistol, content to simply watch.

The fake angel zoomed about the house and the portal for the better portion of an hour. Alyssa could tell that the draken were getting restless, but both she and Brakkt remained behind the tree, alert the entire time. No other Astral Authority angel ever appeared.

Just as Alyssa started wondering how long it would remain around, the Kindness backed away. It drifted higher and higher into the sky, keeping its mask locked onto the portal.

It passed in front of the sun, making it difficult to see.

A beam of black-white light intersected the sun.

Alyssa pulled up her binoculars, watching a smoking trail of divine mass fall from the sky. Wings burnt, mask cracked, the Kindness slammed into the hillside at the edge of the forest. The water of the lake rippled from the impact.

“Tenebrael,” Brakkt said in a hushed wisper.

Alyssa nodded slowly. That black light was Tenebrael’s signature color. It could only have been her. But… following the trail of the beam, she had a feeling that it wasn’t Tenebrael herself. It had come from the statue.

Clenching her teeth, she looked back toward the hillside, watching for any sign of movement. Aside from dust settling around the crater and a column of black smoke, there was nothing.

“Great. What now?”


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