030.010

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Vacationing

Acquiring Assistance


Alyssa stepped into the palace stables, exiting a shimmering portal. She barely managed to drag Iosefael through before the rippling liquid dispersed into the air. Tenebrael had ended up allowing Alyssa to leave the little box without any trouble. More surprising, she allowed Iosefael to leave. It was a close thing, but it had to have been intentional. The portal only collapsed after getting the angel out.

In contrast, the other portal was still up and running. All the draken were on this side, even Izsha, which Alyssa was pleased to see. Brakkt was here too, which meant that there probably wasn’t anyone on the Teneville side. Not unless Irulon or one of the others had gone back. They weren’t in the stables at the moment, so Alyssa couldn’t be sure where they were.

Brakkt, Alyssa couldn’t help but notice, had his hand on his sword, ready to draw it. Even after he had seen who was standing in his stables, he remained on guard. It wasn’t quite a glare that he offered Alyssa, but it was close. Dragging Iosefael behind her, she moved right up to him.

“Sorry,” she said. “I’m sorry for taking Izsha into the city without clearing it with you. It didn’t cause any trouble, did it?”

He pursed his lips, breathing deeply through his nose. “Izsha was spotted returning to the palace without a rider. That will likely cause me some hardships in the future.”

“Sorry,” she said again, this time ducking her head slightly. “If it helps, it was probably worth it. I suppose we’ll have to wait for the fallout to see exactly what happens, but I got what I needed.” I hope.

Iosefael hadn’t actually taught her anything yet. The angel had claimed that she wouldn’t be able to do much of anything while in Tenebrael’s black box. Aside from offering a quick verbal dossier on the Astral Authority—which Alyssa needed to write down in her notes as soon as possible—they hadn’t done much else. Alyssa was taking a gamble bringing her back here. She could probably teleport away. She might even be able to do it from within those chains, though she hadn’t done so while being dragged into the portal to begin with so it was hard to say for sure. But Alyssa was relying, maybe a bit too much, on the idea that angels weren’t supposed to lie. That had burned her before with regards to Adrael, but Iosefael seemed by far the most prim and proper angel around. At least of those angels that Alyssa had encountered.

Iosefael promised to help. Alyssa believed her.

And if Iosefael went back on her promise, Alyssa would find the angel, Sparta kick her into a portal, and leave her to rot in Tenebrael’s prison. She was in no mood to play games while a whole host of fake angels attacking her was a possibility.

“I take it that’s an angel?” Brakkt said with a nod to the bundle of ethereal chains. “Not Tenebrael.”

“No. I mean yes, it is an angel. Not Tenebrael though.”

“Will her feathers help with Tzheitza’s research?”

Alyssa blinked. She hadn’t even thought about that. Brakkt probably had his sister in mind. Octavia, not Irulon. They still wanted a cure for the demonic infection. “You know what? I’m not sure. I imagine so. I’m sure she won’t mind donating a few.”

“Wait, what?”

Ignoring the squawk from the angel, Alyssa glanced over to the large portal that led back to Teneville. “For now, I’m going to take her to my home. We might be doing some rather destructive magic, so an empty lake seems like a good place to practice. But I’ll be sure to pluck her clean before she leaves.”

“What!”

“Why is it in chains if it agreed to help?”

“Yeah, why am I in chains! I said I’d help you.”

Alyssa frowned down at the angel. “I don’t trust you to not follow only the letter of your word. Saying you’ll help me is all well and good, but if you don’t help me for ten years, it isn’t very useful help.”

Iosefael’s shoulders slumped in the chains. “But… you need to let me go. People died while we were in that box. Without Tenebrael here, they’ll… rot. It’s not pretty. You wouldn’t want to subject your worst enemies to it.”

Biting her lip, Alyssa nodded. She didn’t want to cause unnecessary suffering. But… “What happened to Kenziel?”

“Who?”

“An Archangel Tenebrael recruited to do your job for her one time. I thought she would be doing so now, but… maybe she got locked into one of those boxes too.” Tenebrael had said something about putting her away in a box. Until taking that portal into the obsidian room, Alyssa had thought that was just a turn of phrase. But now, it was probably literal.

Iosefael shuddered in her chains. “I never really interacted with Archangels before. Just Adrael that one time. They aren’t a common sight on Earth these days. But… look, I’ll come right back. I promise. I just… I need to gather these souls before they rot any further.”

“Hmm… No distractions? No detours.”

“No. Right back as soon as I collect them.”

Letting out a slow breath through her nose, Alyssa stared into the faintly luminescent green eyes of the Principality in front of her. That was her programming talking, almost certainly. Being in charge of collecting souls, it was probably hard to ignore. But… Alyssa released her hold on the Spectral Chains. As the ghostly links faded, Iosefael stretched her wings wide.

“If you don’t come back—”

“I will! I will!”

Alyssa glared right up until the angel vanished in a flurry of white-gold feathers. Then, she sighed as she looked back to Brakkt. “Guess I’m delaying my plans. Hopefully for only a few minutes.”

“You didn’t gather her feathers,” he said as one of the ones wafting through the air disappeared on contact with his face.

“She’ll be back. She better be back. But… she did have a fairly important task to attend to. If I had kept her here, it would have just been harming completely innocent people.” As far as Alyssa knew, it was still a mystery how Adrael had managed to attack mortals. But, thinking about how desperate Iosefael sounded, Alyssa couldn’t help but wonder if the Principality might have tried attacking her had she tried to keep her from her job.

Maybe that was it. That assault on the Society of the Burning Shadow had been interfering with all Adrael’s hard work, her very purpose for existing. A mandate handed to her by the Throne. Alyssa could see herself getting a little upset at something like that.

Looking around, Alyssa found the stables something of a mess. All the saddles and saddlebags were off the draken, but most were lying on the floor with their bags still full of gear. No one else was around. Alyssa wasn’t exactly expecting Irulon to help out and Kasita really couldn’t do much heavy lifting, but where was Tess, Fela, and even Alyssa’s mother. Of all people, Alyssa didn’t think her mother would shirk off helping unpack.

“Did the others just leave you to take care of this on your own?” she asked, watching as he pulled some leftover provisions from one of the packs. With their shortened trip back, a good amount of what they had taken with them was no longer needed as travel supplies.

He looked at the cloth-wrapped dried meat, perhaps considering whether or not to store it. Eventually, he just pulled out the meat and tossed it to one of the draken. Setting the cloth to the side, he pulled out another package of meat and tossed that one to another draken. “It’s fine,” he said as he worked. “I told them they didn’t need to stay. Fela is assisting your mother in carrying your weapons to her home. Irulon is gathering research materials for this portal. I believe she wishes to examine the statue in Teneville a little closer as well. Tess is carrying a few of my sister’s effects up to her chambers.”

“Well, let me help at least.”

“You know where all the gear goes?”

“No… but…” Alyssa put her hands to her hips, frowning as the Black Prince tossed another slab of meat to a draken. “If all you’re doing is feeding the draken our leftover supplies, I can do that. Then you can put some of the gear away. Or were you going to brush the draken down? I can do that too. That will free up some of your time. At least until the angel comes back. I’d feel bad about just sitting around and watching you do all the hard work.”

Brakkt looked down at the meat in his hands for a moment before tossing it too. Izsha was the one to snatch it out of the air, chomp on it a few times, and swallow it mostly whole. “Sometimes it is easy to forget that someone other than me doesn’t mind being in the presence of the draken. Very well,” he said, turning toward the storage room.

Draken facial expressions were not easy to read. That said, the three draken who had yet to get a snack took on an obvious glower. One even made a bit of a threatening trill in the back of its throat. Alyssa didn’t think that they would pounce on Brakkt with his back turned, but… She bent down and grabbed three packages of meat, quickly unwrapped them, and tossed them one by one to the three angry dinosaurs.

As she finished, Brakkt returned with the same dandy brush that she had seen him use on occasion. “Go with the direction of the scales, but don’t be afraid to go against them if they’ve got grit stuck underneath. Focus on dirt, dry scales, and other material—especially around where the saddles were sitting. Don’t touch the talons. They require special care. I’ll handle that later.”

“Right.” Alyssa had never brushed down draken before. Or horses, for that matter. But she had seen him do it before. The brush had a little leather strap on the back side, perfect for sliding her hand against the wood to keep it in place. The bristles were coarse and rough. If she used it on her own skin, she would probably look like she had fallen off a bike onto a sidewalk. Draken scales were far tougher than skin though.

When she looked up from the brush, Izsha was standing just a few steps away, clearly intending to abuse their familiar relationship to get brushed down first. Alyssa was fine with that. If she made a mistake in her inexperience and accidentally hurt Izsha, she was far less likely to get her head chomped off. Best to use her favorite draken as training.

At first, Alyssa diligently worked without distraction. Izsha seemed to enjoy the treatment. It almost purred as she pulled a small pebble from between two large scales. Brakkt walked back and forth across the room at a relatively leisurely pace. He would pull something from the bags and either carry it off to the storage room or add it to one of the piles that were probably destined for elsewhere in the palace. But the longer she worked, the more the silence weighed on her.

She didn’t think she was on bad terms with Brakkt. Not like she was with Oxart at the very least. But after them fishing and firing guns together, she had thought that they got on rather well. Having known him for two months, she had the distinct impression that he preferred the company of the draken over that of any human except perhaps Irulon.

Then again, they both liked draken.

“So… what got you interested in draken in the first place?” Alyssa asked, mostly in an attempt to fill the silence, but that didn’t mean that she wasn’t genuinely curious. She actually spent a fair amount of time around Brakkt but she felt like she knew almost nothing about him. Other than that his armor was a little scary and that he was a good swordsman. But it was a good safe topic that might let her get to know him on a more personal level.

“That’s a hard question to answer,” he said as he hung an emptied saddle on a rack near the storage-room door. “I don’t really know where it began. I guess… I once caught a snake when I was child. I kept it as a pet.”

“You saw a snake, decided to make it a pet, but thought to yourself ‘two fangs isn’t enough, I’d rather a creature have a mouth full of sharp pointed teeth’? Is that right?”

He smiled. She got him to smile. That was a win all on its own. Brakkt didn’t seem like the kind of person who smiled all that often.

As Alyssa moved on from Izsha—who wasn’t all that filthy to begin with as she had taken a dip in the lake not long before they left—she carried on an extremely casual conversation with Brakkt. They didn’t speak of anything heavy or dramatic. No troubles of Lyria or worries over existential threats. Just simple things. For instance, Alyssa learned that Brakkt enjoyed traveling outside the city. Not just their little trip down to Teneville, but in general. He liked getting away from duties, responsibilities, and his younger siblings.

Much like Irulon, Brakkt had never held much interest in ruling Lyria. Or anywhere, for that matter. But, if something happened to Ryab, his eldest brother, he would take the throne out of principle more than anything. It made him an effective shield against those younger siblings that might have more ambition than their position offered.

Between his mild magical prowess, diligent training, his enchanted sword and armor—the former of which never left his side, even while sleeping—and the draken, Brakkt was not a soft target for assassinations.

If he could, he would spend most of his time outside Lyria’s walls. Camping, living off the land, maybe even trying to find another dragon just for the fun of it.

Alyssa talked about herself as well. How her first go around in Teneville went and her journey to Lyria up to and including rushing past the gate guards because of her nervousness about wearing noble colors. “Though,” she said as she thought back, “I haven’t seen many people around here wearing purple. I’d have expected Decorous to always be marching around with a purple ermine cloak waving behind him in the wind.”

“City guard aren’t allowed to wear any heraldry except in specific situations, such as within the palace for dinners or balls or court with the Pharaoh. It’s supposed to be a sign of their devotion to duty.”

“If that’s the case, you should probably forbid all the other fanciful things Decorous wears.”

“It isn’t our decision. The nobles collectively run the city guard. They are really only under our control during times of attack or strife.”

Alyssa opened her mouth to ask about the palace guard uniforms, which did incorporate purple, but feathers in the air interrupted her. Iosefael appeared in the air, hovering above the line of draken that had assembled for cleaning. The dinosaurs were surprisingly organized about the whole thing. Alyssa felt a little bad that she had to step away. “She’s back,” she said, staring straight up.

It was a good thing that Iosefael didn’t wear a dress. Her golden armor hugged her body and didn’t leave much to the imagination, but it certainly left more than a wide open dress would if she was anything like Tenebrael.

Iosefael looked around before descending. It was a nervous type of glance, like she was expecting to be ambushed at any moment. When she finally got down to eye-level with Alyssa, she actually shuddered. “Hi.”

“Took you a while.”

“Someone else died right as I was about to come back and then someone else and then one more, so I went and collected three more souls.”

“Uh huh. You look nervous.”

“What if they see me with you? I don’t want to be attacked.” Her green eyes drifted off to the portal in the middle of the stables. “And that is definitely something they’ll keep an eye on once they notice it.”

“I’m surprised they don’t have… what were the scouting ones again? Kindnesses? I’m surprised they’re not watching me constantly.”

“They probably are. Or maybe they don’t know. If that’s the case, you should stay as far away from these as possible. And cut off your connection to Tene.”

Alyssa pressed her lips together. If she wasn’t already on this Astral Authority’s list, that would probably keep her safe for the time being. But… that would really only keep her safe. And likely only for a short time. The Astral Authority was apparently hunting for Tenebrael. Something on Earth had garnered their attention. Whether that was Alyssa undoing the spell on her mother, Tenebrael arguing with Iosefael, or some other angel passing by and noticing something wrong, it set them after her. Even one of those other two angels noticing that they had swapped souls could have done it.

“What happens if they get Tenebrael?” It was the question that burned in her mind. “What happens to this world?” The Seraphim might not be acting because whatever programming they had was broken, but that still didn’t mean good things if Tenebrael disappeared.

Without her, magic disappeared. She had already said that all spell cards were just compressed prayers to her. If she disappeared, Alyssa couldn’t see them working anymore. The people of this world wouldn’t be ready for such a thing. They didn’t even have flint and steel to light fires. Their farming relied on magic to revitalize the fields and accelerate growth, even if the actual sowing and reaping was done by hand. Without harvests continuing, people would starve.

And the monsters, what would happen to them? Kasita was basically an all magical being. What would happen to her if some other angel came in and replaced Tenebrael as this world’s Dominion. Even if Kasita could survive the loss of Tenebrael’s magic, Iosefael claimed that the monsters weren’t even supposed to be in this world in the first place.

Even if the Seraphim didn’t come by and blow up the planet like they were the Death Star, Tenebrael’s death or incarceration would still mean the end of life as it currently existed on this world.

Iosefael’s silence wasn’t a comforting factor either. It meant that Alyssa’s thoughts on the matter were more or less accurate. Probably.

“Iosefael,” Alyssa said, straightening her back and looking the angel directly in the eyes. “We’ve wasted enough time. Let’s get started.” And maybe, after learning how to defend myself, we can figure out a way to help Tenebrael.


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030.009

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Vacationing

Angels Deserve to Cry


Alyssa couldn’t help but feel a little nervous. Not at the prospect of talking with an angel. Definitely not. Not only had she spoken with angels in general before, but she had spoken to this one. There really wasn’t anything special about angels. Aside from the deity-tier power that they wielded. But they weren’t supposed to wield that at her, so everything should be just fine.

No. It wasn’t Iosefael making her nervous.

It was the other side of the portal.

When Alyssa had prayed—asked for a solitary location to talk, she had been expecting something like a room in the palace. Maybe an abandoned cabin out in the woods south of Lyria. Someplace… normal.

Alyssa looked around, wondering how she ever could have been so foolish as to expect normalcy.

They were in a room. A single room. The walls, ceiling, and floor were all constructed of that same obsidian-black material that had made up Tenebrael’s temple and now made up her statue. They could even be inside that statue for all Alyssa knew. It wasn’t like she could tell. There were no windows and no doors. The room was completely cut off from everything.

As Alyssa watched the portal close behind Iosefael, that nervous feeling only grew. If Tenebrael didn’t want her to leave, this place could actually be her tomb. Angels weren’t supposed to harm humans, but hadn’t it been Iosefael who had implied that indirect methods of killing would work? There was no food anywhere to be seen. But she didn’t think she would starve. If anything, she would suffocate.

There was definitely some kind of magic in the place. The walls and floors were smooth, as was the ceiling. No light sources of any kind. Yet she could see as if she had Night Vision active. In fact, she had to double-check that it wasn’t active.

She could only hope that there was some magic providing oxygen. Or rather, converting carbon dioxide into oxygen.

Alyssa was tempted to raise an arm and try opening another portal. Just knowing that there was an out would put her nerves to rest. But… it was possible that this whole room was to trap Iosefael. Tenebrael had made a few references to a tiny box being used to store both Iosefael and Kenziel at various points in the past. This could be that box. If she tried to leave, Tenebrael might not let her come back for fear of freeing Iosefael.

Gnawing on her lip, she glanced over at the shivering pile of chains. Although she had offered up the token protests while being dragged inside the portal, the angel hadn’t said a word since she made it to this side. The chains didn’t rattle as they moved. They were ethereal. Not real. And yet, despite Alyssa having never heard them make noise before, she could have sworn that there was some… chattering coming from them.

Alyssa wanted to leave. But… the oxygen in the room wouldn’t run out immediately. If Tenebrael was going to let her leave, then doing it now or after a talk wouldn’t matter much. If she wasn’t… well, Alyssa was just going to have to… She didn’t want to say that she was putting her faith into Tenebrael, but that was roughly what she was doing. The end result was already written in stone. Alyssa just couldn’t read the text. She wouldn’t know until she tried.

And she needed to have a conversation first.

As much as it amused her to see Iosefael chained up to the point where no part of her was actually visible despite the translucent nature of the chains, it didn’t make for an easy conversation. Dismissing half of all the spells she had cast helped. One more than half freed up Iosefael’s face.

Her green eyes were wide, but she wasn’t staring at anything in particular. She was just… scared. Frightened. And… were those tears?

Alyssa sighed. She shouldn’t feel bad, but somehow, it felt like she was bullying. Bullying a divine being. It sounded silly, but the way Iosefael’s blond hair jittered as she trembled just made Alyssa feel like she was the bad guy here.

“Iosefael.”

Those tearful eyes snapped up to Alyssa. She hadn’t actually started crying, but at this point, a mean look might get her going.

“T-Tenebrael,” Iosefael stuttered in a whisper so quiet that Alyssa actually had to lean down. “Please. You can’t leave me here again.”

Alyssa closed her eyes, sighing again. “I’m not Tenebrael. I’m Alyssa. I won’t allow you to say that you’ve forgotten.” First of all, Tenebrael had mentioned something about angels having perfect or nearly perfect memory. Secondly, Iosefael had called her by name just before being dragged through the portal. Just because her eyes were glowing and she had used a spell that only angels should be able to use didn’t mean that she was Tenebrael.

Despite her clear and concise words to the angel, Iosefael did not seem to hear. She continued to mumble Tenebrael’s name along with a few other tidbits of information. “I didn’t betray you. It wasn’t my fault,” was the most interesting of all her mumbles.

That got Alyssa to lean in much closer. She went so far as to kneel so that she would be eye-level with the bound angel. “What wasn’t your fault? What did you do?”

“N-Nothing! I did nothing!”

Alyssa couldn’t help her frown. She was pretty sure that her cousin, Uncle Earl’s six-year-old daughter, had said the same thing in exactly the same tone after knocking a glass vase to the ground. A part of her wished that Kenziel had been the one collecting souls. Although she had really only had one interaction with the diminutive Archangel, she had come off as slightly more mature. Well, except for her sales pitch to Tenebrael. But that was more of a target audience problem than it was a poor display of immaturity.

“Iosefael,” Alyssa said, clasping her hands onto the angel’s bare shoulders. The chains were slightly in the way, but she managed. “I want you to tell me what happened the night you tried to collect my mother’s soul.”

The angel didn’t answer right away. Although her trembling slowed with Alyssa’s hands on her shoulders, it didn’t vanish completely. There was clearly some trauma associated with this room. Combined with her earlier request to not be left here again, this had to be that prison Tenebrael had kept her in. So…

“If you tell me,” Alyssa said in the kindest voice she could manage. “If you answer my questions and do as I say, I’ll ask Tenebrael really nicely if you can leave.” That was about all she could do. Tenebrael would either let her leave or not. Though, if Tenebrael tried keeping Alyssa here, she would definitely be making attempts to get out.

An Annihilator would probably just kill her. It might destroy the cube, but using such a spell in an enclosed space couldn’t be healthy. However, the material the cube was made from might be more susceptible to destruction in other ways. If it was miraculous or otherwise supernatural, Alyssa might be able to break it apart the same way she had broken apart Adrael’s trap wire spell.

Something to try later. For now, she stared into Iosefael’s green eyes, hoping that the stupid angel could pull herself together long enough to speak a few coherent words.

If this wound up as fruitless as the interview with a demon… Alyssa had no idea what she would do.

“You would do that for me?” Iosefael’s eyes moved. For the first time since entering the room, she actually looked at something.

“Do?” Alyssa blinked. “Do what?”

“Ask Tene if I can leave.”

“Um… Sure.”

A smile of pure joy spread across Iosefael’s face. Those tears that had managed to stay back until now started falling. “This must be what they call fire-forged friends,” she said. “Even though there is no fire.”

“I don’t think that’s the phrase… Sure.” Whatever. “Iosefael. What happened that night? Where is Tenebrael?”

A shadow crossed Iosefael’s features, wiping the smile from her face. “It’s all my fault.”

Alyssa crossed her arms, waiting. She could be patient. This had been a month coming. In this tiny box where no one could interrupt them, it wasn’t a problem to allow the angel another minute to get her thoughts together. Especially because this thought conflicted with her earlier claim of it not being her fault.

After a minute or so of Iosefael staring down at the smooth obsidian floor, she continued without looking up. “We argued. It was a long and drawn-out argument. I… I still don’t know exactly why or how she turned her world into what it is. But I think I understand. Especially after watching you.”

“You’ve been… watching me.”

Aside from the handful of times when Iosefael had appeared directly before Alyssa, she hadn’t noticed the angel’s presence at all.

Iosefael nodded. “I watched how hard you’ve struggled to survive, even against angels like Adrael. I wasn’t watching every moment, of course. I have my duties to attend to. But you are a child of Earth. My child, if you think about it.”

Alyssa was trying to not think about it. But she didn’t want to interrupt, so she didn’t say as much.

“Watching you fight so hard against what should have been your destiny made me realize that Tenebrael just wants to be like you. Or maybe not you specifically. She wants to be like humans in general. And that is something I understand. I like humans too. When I have a moment, I like to sit in a park and just watch them. People-watching, I think it is called. It is a regular pastime among humans, I understand. That’s why I started in the first place, because—”

Alyssa didn’t want to interrupt, but she felt like Iosefael’s words were straying further and further from the topic of Tenebrael with every sentence. “So Tenebrael wants to be like humans.” It wasn’t that strange a concept. Tenebrael had mentioned that the higher ranked the angel, the less free will they had. While Alyssa doubted that Tenebrael wanted to give up the power afforded to her by her position, she easily believed that she wanted a more human-like will. “But how does that lead to you arguing?”

“I understand Tenebrael’s desire. So I decided not to interfere with her world anymore. It was her world and she could do as she wished. As she explained it to me, the Throne knew all and it wouldn’t have given her a world if it hadn’t wanted her to act the way she did. It sounds strange and wrong, but I cannot deny her logic.

“But then I found her on Earth. That soul from her world inside your mother. Once was bad enough,” Iosefael said with a pointed look at Alyssa. “But you were an accident. That night was no accident. We argued for quite a long time, shouting at each other. Well… I shouted. Tenebrael kept her demure calm about her. Honestly, I was angry enough that I probably would have tried fighting her again if I hadn’t been trussed up, even knowing I would lose.”

Iosefael’s deluge of words slowed to a stop as she hung her head. If her arms and legs had been freed, she probably would have pulled her knees up to her chest in a self-pitying hug. “It wasn’t me,” she whispered soft enough that Alyssa, already sitting on the floor, had to scoot closer to hear properly. “I didn’t call them. Someone must have noticed because it wasn’t me. I didn’t betray Tene.”

Alyssa waited. Whatever dam had broken to allow Iosefael to speak so much had clearly not broken enough. She was just sitting, biting her lip with no sign that she would speak anytime soon. So Alyssa patted her on the back, just between her wing and her shoulder blade. She even let a few more chains fall off the angel in order to properly pat her bare skin instead of the ghostly links.

“I believe you,” Alyssa said softly. “And I’m sure Tenebrael knows too. But who didn’t you call? Who came?”

Her voice barely moved the air around them. “The Astral Authority.”

“Seraphim?” Alyssa hissed, a slight fear creeping into her voice. Tenebrael was alright, wasn’t she? Alyssa’s glowing eyes were a sign of that. But the Seraphim were the ones Tenebrael feared. Possibly the only ones.

Iosefael looked surprised as she slowly shook her head. “N-No. No Seraphim.”

“But… aren’t Seraphim and the Astral Authority the same thing?” Alyssa said, trying to remember those notes on angels that Tenebrael had given her months ago.

“Uriel leads the Astral Authority, and a few other Seraphim are also leaders, but… they don’t do much these days.”

“So it’s just lesser ranked angels.”

“No? I can see where you’re confused. Many religions on Earth got some things mixed up, like what are angels and what aren’t. Kindnesses, Humilities, Chastities, Prudences, Justiceses… Fortitudes? Temperances?” Something must have crossed Alyssa’s face because Iosefael slowed down with a mild pout. “None of these ring bells? That’s the phrase right? Ring bells?”

“Look, I wasn’t ever very religious. I know all those words individually, but I don’t think I know what you’re trying to say to me now. Before all this,” Alyssa said, waving a hand around vaguely, “I could have been considered agnostic at best.”

Iosefael’s pout deepened, but she nodded. “They’re divine beings, but they aren’t angels, to put it simply. They were created to fight fallen angels and demons of Inferno. Or the Pit. Hell. Whatever you want to call it—it’s had many many names.”

“That’s all you needed to say,” Alyssa mumbled more to herself than to Iosefael. “So this anti-demon task force noticed Tenebrael and started fighting her?”

“Oh it caused a terrific mess. Just terrific. No human died, but there was so much destruction. They definitely noticed. A few archangels are trying to get things back on track—”

“Tenebrael isn’t dead,” Alyssa interrupted. No one died, that meant that her father and Clark were alright. Beyond that, she didn’t really care what the angels were doing on Earth. It wasn’t like she could do anything about it. “Did she get captured? Injured?”

“She’s hiding, I think.”

“Hiding?” That would certainly explain why she was avoiding Alyssa. Opening her mouth, Alyssa almost asked where Tenebrael was hiding. Upon thinking for a second longer, she hesitated and decided that it was probably a silly question. Iosefael would have been more certain in her response if she knew. “How can we help?”

“Help? Oh no. No. Don’t do anything to help. The Astral Authority isn’t under the same restrictions as regular angels. A Patience will spear you without any of the hesitance that Adrael had.”

Alyssa raised an eyebrow. She couldn’t remember any hesitance in Adrael’s actions. That archangel had tried to kill both Irulon and Musca. Izsha too, using the shield. If not for Alyssa and Tenebrael, Adrael would have human blood on her hands. It was a thought that Alyssa had considered before, that Adrael had been able to act as such because of Alyssa’s presence. If the angel had known that all the damage she had inflicted would be reversed, perhaps that was what had allowed her to attack. It was just a theory. A theory Alyssa hadn’t talked about with anyone—Tenebrael had been missing and she had no one else to talk to about those kinds of angelic matters.

“In fact…” Iosefael stared at Alyssa, locking eyes without blinking. The intensity actually made Alyssa shift where she sat. “You asked Tenebrael to bring us here… Have you been doing that kind of thing often?”

A flash of annoyance had Alyssa gritting her teeth together. “Define ‘often’ please,” she said. If Tenebrael screwed her over…

“I saw, with my own eyes, a Kindness in this world. Where there is one, there are many. They are watching, searching for signs of Tenebrael. I think they think that she has fallen, but… Tene hasn’t. I know she hasn’t. She isn’t being orthodox, but she isn’t a… a demon.”

“You don’t have to convince me. I thought she was at first, but having met an actual demon… Tenebrael is drastically different.”

Iosefael blinked twice. “You what?” If not for the chains around her, she probably would have jumped up as she shouted. Instead, she just jerked before falling back against the wall. “Why would you meet a demon? What did you do? What did it do to you?”

“Nothing. It’s fine. I learned my lesson.” Though, if anything, the demon had helped if in a roundabout way. By giving Alyssa that ember, it had basically been the whole reason she had connected to Tenebrael. The ember had been destroyed and nothing bad had happened…

As the thought ran through her mind, a cold sweat dripped down Alyssa’s back. That… couldn’t have been the plan all along. The demons couldn’t want the Astral Authority here. They were demon killers. The ember had been something that would have harmed or transformed people. Or, if left alone, it might have sprouted into some kind of demonic tree. The demons wouldn’t have given it to her with the intention of her destroying it using Tenebrael’s power…

Right?

“You said a Kindness is watching for Tenebrael. It is watching for miracles that she helped to create? Like that portal?”

“That would be accurate, yes.”

Alyssa stood, palms sweating. It was fine, right? No angels or fake-angels had shown up when she created that giant statue of Tenebrael. If they hadn’t noticed that, then what was a portal? “What would the Astral Authority do if they found evidence of Tenebrael? Like a portal… or a three hundred foot statue of Tenebrael?”

“That’s oddly specific.”

“Just answer the question, please. They aren’t going to start killing people, are they?”

“Regular people? Probably not. I don’t think humans really register on their senses. They were designed to fight demons, which really aren’t that different from angels. On the other hand, you?” Iosefael tilted her head back and forth with a pained expression. “Maybe? They might also try to use you to get to Tenebrael. I don’t imagine that would be pleasant.”

“Great.” Alyssa grit her teeth as she started pacing back and forth. At least they weren’t going to go slaughter a defenseless Teneville. “Great,” she hissed. “What do they look like? What are they likely to attack me with? How do I kill them?”

“Kill them? They’re divine beings. You can’t kill them. You can’t fight them.”

“Try me. Are my pistols going to work?” The trip to her house hadn’t just been for vacation. They had emptied out the gun safe. With the draken, they had been able to carry everything. All the ammo, a few shotguns, a few rifles, and an armload of pistols. Of course, guns probably only worked on mortal opponents. Humans and monsters. “I doubt it right, but what if you did something to them? Surely you can cast a miracle that lets them harm divine beings.”

“I can’t—”

“What about magic? I’ve blasted quasi-demons to the moon hard enough to kill them. Surely some spells will work on these fake angels.”

“There’s no—”

“And this,” Alyssa said, reaching behind her back. Slipping her hand into the leather holster, she gripped the golden staff and pulled it out, planting the bottom into the ground at her feet. “It protects me from human magic, which is nice, but what about angelic or fake angel magic? Can I use it as a weapon too? Surely it can do more than just smack and skewer things. How do I use it? Tell me.”

And if all that failed… That demon had said that her demonic scythe could harm angels. If it could harm angels, it could hurt fake angels. But that was a last resort. An absolute last resort. The demon would probably hand over her scythe without complaint, but, as Tenebrael had said, the silver platters came with a cost. Alyssa did not want to find out the price after she ate.

Crossing an arm to rest both hands on the staff, she stared down at the angel. “Well?”

“Are you going to let me speak?”

Alyssa blinked. “Sorry. You tell me that these things are watching for me and it makes me a little nervous. I don’t want them popping up out of nowhere and attacking me.”

“You don’t have to worry about that here. Can’t you feel it? We’re cut off from everything. Even the light of the Throne itself doesn’t reach inside this prison.”

Frowning, Alyssa pulled out her phone and checked herself in the front-facing camera. “My eyes are still glowing. Tenebrael is still connected to me.”

Iosefael let out a long sigh. “I don’t know how. I don’t know how Tenebrael could have made an area like this in the first place. To be cut off from the Throne, we would have to be outside Creation itself.”

“I don’t really know what that is supposed to mean,” Alyssa said. Iosefael opened her mouth, probably to explain. “And I don’t really care right now. I’m more worried about this Astral Authority and how they might decide to interact with me, my friends, and Tenebrael. In that order. So are you going to help me? Or do I have to leave you here, cut off from the Throne for potentially a very long time.”

“You said you would let me out!”

“I said I would ask Tenebrael if you do as I ask. Right now, I’m asking you to help me.” It felt bad to bully the stupid angel, but Alyssa couldn’t accept no for an answer. If she walked out of here without Iosefael’s help, some Kindness or whatever could drop down on her and she would have to rely on Fractal Mirror. A spell she only had two of in her deck. Two or three of these Astral Authority fake angels attacking in quick succession would almost certainly result in her death. She needed to know what they were capable of and what worked against them. They hadn’t attacked so far, but that could be luck more than anything. Even if she broke the connection between her and Tenebrael now, it wouldn’t guarantee that a Kindness hadn’t noticed her build Tenebrael’s statue.

They could just be waiting, watching for something more.

Alyssa sighed as she stared at the angel gnawing on her lip. Sleep might be a luxury that she wouldn’t be able to afford for a while.

“Iosefael.” Alyssa knelt, resting the staff on the smooth obsidian ground. “A human is asking for your help. You’re the only one who can help me. And if you help me, I’m sure it will help Tenebrael too.” She didn’t know what that stupid angel’s plan was, but it probably involved Alyssa doing all her work for her. Stupid angel. Keeping her irritation off her face, Alyssa smiled at Iosefael, letting all the chains around her vanish. “Haven’t you always wished there was something you could do for humans?” Tenebrael had mentioned that Iosefael loved humans. “You’ll help me, right? I can’t protect myself from the Astral Authority without you.”

Iosefael’s wings spread out slowly, like she was stretching her arms after being cooped up in one position for far too long. With the way she kept her eyes on Alyssa, it was probably an unconscious action. “Okay,” she said in a whisper.


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030.008

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Vacationing

Portals


“Oh good. The palace isn’t on fire,” Kasita said as she emerged from the portal.

Alyssa and Irulon, the only other two through the portal at the moment, stopped and stared. They certainly were in the palace. It certainly wasn’t on fire. As soon as everyone else was through the portal, a full three days of travel time would have been sliced off their journey.

That wasn’t the best part, in Alyssa’s opinion. The best part of the portal was that she didn’t have to go past Teneville again. The only reason she could think of to return would be for the tomatoes if she wanted to open a pizza parlor. And for that, she could probably send some merchant to gather them up. If the tomatoes were growing at all. With everything that had happened and her avoiding the brothers, she hadn’t actually found out how they were doing.

But that was an aside. “I’m glad that the palace isn’t on fire, but is there a reason you mention it?”

“Ufu! You were gone, I was gone, Irulon was gone, Brakkt was gone, all the draken and Fela too. I figured we would come back to find the city in ruins.”

Irulon huffed a scoff. “Please. Lyria has stood for hundreds of years. Well before you were born or Alyssa came to this world—”

“It would be before I was born too.”

“—And it will be standing long after we are gone. Just because we’ve been involved in a few incidents, don’t get it into your head that we are overly special. Well,” Irulon paused with a glance to Alyssa before focusing on Kasita again. “You and I aren’t special, at least.”

Alyssa wanted to protest the treatment, but couldn’t. Her eyes were glowing with Tenebrael’s power. Even in a world of monsters and magic, that was still extremely unique. She didn’t feel special, but it was quite obvious even to her that, from anyone else’s perspective, something was strange about her.

“Or maybe,” Kasita said with a hand half covering her smile. “Maybe since we got back a few days early, the destruction just hasn’t started yet.”

“Please don’t jinx it,” Alyssa said with a mild groan.

“You could just put the palace back together.”

“I’d rather not test such things.” Especially because the last thing had wound up turning into a giant statue of Tenebrael. Doing the same to the palace would not be appreciated.

Probably.

Before she could say as much, a splash of water came from the portal. Not actual water. Just the sound. Lisa stepped through with a shudder. Once fully clear of the portal’s shimmering liquid surface, she shuddered again, running her hands over her face and hair.

“That… is somewhat disorienting. And I feel like I’m all wet, but I’m not.”

“Yeah… Like belly-flopping into a cold pool.”

“While standing up.”

“But we’re here,” Alyssa said with a slight sigh. “We’re back. It worked.”

“Ufu~ And the palace isn’t even on fire!”

Alyssa mouthed a silent ‘ignore her’ to her mother, who promptly nodded. Despite having had her back turned to Alyssa, Kasita shot a pout in her direction.

Tess came through next, moving immediately to stand at her master’s side. Then the draken came, one by one. There was a long break between each. At least a minute. Although Alyssa didn’t think that Tenebrael would do something to harm everyone, she had thought it would be prudent to avoid going through the portal too closely together. She hadn’t known if they would simply step through, or if it would spit them out on the other end, leading to a large pile up, or even if it was a Fly situation.

Although… at further consideration, winding up half-draken or half-hellhound didn’t sound terrible as they were a lot stronger and tougher than humans, but she would probably wind up the wrong half. Assuming they didn’t get spliced together and die instantly.

It probably wasn’t a worry that she should have, but she had watched plenty of science fiction and fantasy movies. Watching a few dozen movies at her house with everyone else had just reminded her of all the troubles that might lurk around every corner. If even a fraction of them wound up true, she would have a lot to worry over.

That was besides the actual things she had to watch out for, like hostile monsters, religious wars, and demons.

And angels, of course.

Although, lately at least, she wished that she actually had to worry about angels a little more than she was at the moment.

As Irulon headed over and stuck her arm into the portal—examining it and the effect with her eyes all dark—Alyssa closed her eyes. She quickly scanned around the city, looking for souls that might be… near departure. The trip to Teneville had turned out useful for discovering more about her connection to Tenebrael, but it had not produced any actual encounters with an angel, hers or otherwise.

Immediately after creating the portal to the palace stables, before even walking through it, she had tried to create a portal directly to Tenebrael. That hadn’t worked. Same with a portal to Earth, though she hadn’t been expecting that one to go through at all. Perhaps there was something else she could do with Tenebrael’s power to get into proper contact with the stupid angel, but nothing had come to mind. Finding someone on death’s doorstep was still the most likely avenue to get into contact with any angel.

If Tenebrael allowed, she could create a portal directly to a dying person. That was a far better option compared to trying to rush halfway across the city with only a moment of notice.

Lyria was a large city. It had a large population. It was far from New York, but there were enough people around that Alyssa couldn’t count them. A stark contrast to Teneville. In that vast mass of souls, Alyssa saw one person. One person showing signs of imminent death.

Without thinking, Alyssa extended her arm.

Nothing. No welling of power. No warmth flooding through her arm. The nails on her fingers stayed their… usual… whatever color unpainted nails were. The room didn’t light up with Tenebrael’s signature color.

Why? Did Tenebrael know what Alyssa was trying to do? Angels were not omniscient. They didn’t know everything. If they weren’t paying attention, even mismatched souls could slip under their noses. Just how closely was Tenebrael paying attention to Alyssa? Was it that she didn’t want Alyssa to meet with whoever was currently collecting souls, Tenebrael or otherwise? Or did she not know at all and was simply blocking the spell because she didn’t want her magic used for frivolous tasks? Alyssa could easily make a case for either. She could possibly test it by creating portals to various other locations. If the portal went through, it would almost guarantee that Tenebrael was trying to block her from this specific situation. If the portal creation failed… it really wouldn’t prove anything one way or the other.

In fact, there could be plenty of other reasons why the portal creation wasn’t working at this very moment. Tenebrael could be exhausted or a single portal might be all that she could maintain. That dumb angel was not the god she pretended to be, even if she was close. She definitely had limitations. And that could be another reason. If her programming restricted her to only allowing miracles under specific situations, this could be failing for some esoteric reason that only another angel would understand.

She was wasting time. She could think all she wanted later. She could test all the portal destinations she wanted later. But this person was dying now. He wasn’t dead yet. Ten minutes, perhaps. It was an old-age death. Illness or heart failure caused by advanced age. One she had seen a handful of since she connected with Tenebrael. If she hurried, perhaps…

“Izsha!”

Her draken had been one of the first through the portal. With the time between each draken, only about half had emerged so far. Brakkt would be last through. Alyssa could have popped through to mention something, but every second wasted increased the chance that this guy died before Alyssa could get to him.

“I need you to take me somewhere as fast as you can, can you do that?” Alyssa had one foot on the stirrup, but she waited for Izsha to bob its head before fully hopping into the saddle. “Thanks. Irulon, can I borrow a Empty Vessel? I haven’t had a chance to successfully draw—”

“Where are you going?”

“To get some answers,” Alyssa said with narrowed eyes. “Time is of the essence.”

“Hm. I see,” she said, pulling her hand from the portal just in time for another draken to pop through. Flipping through her tome, she produced a single page. “I wish you luck.”

“Thanks.” Alyssa snatched the card from her hand as Izsha rushed past, heading toward the closed doors of the palace stable. Shoving its nose against the doors took a few seconds to open the massive doors. As soon as a wide enough crack had opened, Izsha took off.

The shroud around them had clearly not been designed with such fast movement in mind. Alyssa could see the shards of glass struggling to keep up. Around her level, the shards were thickest. Izsha’s feet? Someone might possibly see through the shroud if they stood at the right angle, but the holes in the shards likely wouldn’t allow more than a glimpse. Alyssa had to hope they were moving fast enough that a few scaly legs appearing every now and again would hopefully not cause too big of a commotion.

As they tore through the crowded streets, Alyssa found it hard to care. If she could just reach this old man before he passed away, all the trouble would be worth it.

Hopefully.

If it wasn’t, she would probably be in a lot of trouble with Brakkt.

Izsha jumped from one side of the street to the other, going straight over the heads of a gaggle of merchants. Most people didn’t tend to look up, but at least one or two people had seen them flying overhead. Their shouts chased after Alyssa as she directed Izsha down another street. The man wasn’t dead yet. And they were so close.

Just a little bit further.

Just a little bit.

The house was larger than most. As expected of someone living so near the palace. She didn’t think it was a nobleman’s house. They were more of mansions and were generally situated right around the palace on the edges of large circular courtyards. Cul-de-sacs really. This was large without being a full blown mansion. The home of a wealthy merchant, perhaps. It even had a small gate.

A gate that provided no defense against Izsha hopping over it.

“Find somewhere to hide.” Alyssa felt a bit bad about putting that kind of pressure on Izsha, but there wasn’t time to figure out a hiding spot. As soon as Alyssa moved too far away, the Empty Vessel would stop protecting the draken. And it wasn’t like Izsha could follow her inside.

The door was locked. A great many of the houses within and outside Lyria didn’t have locks on their doors, but she should have expected that the wealthier homes did. Just as she started worrying over which of her spells might get her inside without destroying the entire rest of the house, a scaly tail whipped out and snapped the door in two.

Blinking, stunned at the splinters that were wafting through the air, Alyssa stood where she was until a pressure against her back nudged her forward.

“Thanks!” she said as she rushed inside. “But you really need to hide!”

She didn’t stop to see if Izsha actually followed her directions. The draken were as smart as people, which sounded disingenuous, but it was true. It would figure something out.

Closing her eyes, Alyssa noted only two other people in the house. Both were rushing toward her, startled at the noise. Dismissing her Empty Vessel, Alyssa immediately cast the much smaller Empty Mirror. The shards of glass locked into place around her just in time to shield her from the two women rushing down the stairs. The second they were out of the way, Alyssa slipped behind them, climbing the stairs as quietly as she possibly could. There were only four rooms, so even without her ability to locate souls, it wouldn’t have taken long.

The door to the room was wide open, probably left open by the other two as they rushed away. A pang of guilt struck Alyssa’s chest. Because of her and her selfishness, she had taken away their final moments with a loved one. Though, as soon as she saw the withered man lying on his bed, she knew well that, from his perspective, any final moments were long past. With his sagging skin, sunken eyes, and scrawny wrists, he looked like he had passed days ago.

Ignoring the shouting going on downstairs—I sure hope Izsha got out of sight—Alyssa gently closed the door. Those other two could return at any moment, so she wasn’t dismissing her shroud, but she would like to speak to whatever angel showed up without interruption if at all possible.

Now… all she had to do was wait.

Alyssa quickly found that to be the most awkward part of this whole affair. Every other time she had met an angel in the process of collecting souls, it had been in the middle of a fight. Or immediately after one. She had been high on adrenaline each of those times, panting and sweating more often than not. Plenty of things to worry over.

Here and now, although she was a little hopped up on adrenaline from the race over, she was really just waiting for this old man she didn’t even know to kick the bucket.

Definitely awkward.

She supposed it was a good thing that creating a portal hadn’t worked out. She couldn’t even imagine the look on the faces of those other two women. A wife and a daughter, perhaps? They surely wouldn’t have taken kindly to someone popping up out of nowhere.

Alyssa, somewhat exhausted from the rush over, took a seat in a chair that had been set up next to the bed. A small basin with water and a rag hanging over the edge were on the floor nearby. Between its position and the way some drips of water led to the old man’s head, it was clear that someone had been wiping him down just recently.

Left with time to think, Alyssa couldn’t help but wonder what kind of people they all were. Was he a murderer, a slaver? Or a kind and loving father or even grandfather? Were those two women vultures, waiting for an inheritance? Or would they be mourning for years? Something in between?

Tenebrael had healed Alyssa several times in the past. Each of those times, she hadn’t said a word. No magical circle had popped up before her flesh mended. It just happened with nothing more than a touch. Alyssa doubted that the same would be true for her. She had touched Irulon, Brakkt, Lisa, Kasita, Fela, and half the draken. None had been injured, at least not obviously. Irulon, at the very least, would have mentioned a bruise healing far faster than normal after being touched. Because of that, Alyssa didn’t think that she could simply reach out and touch the old man.

But if she beseeched Tenebrael? Formed a proper request? What then?

Alyssa deliberately tore her thoughts away from that trail of breadcrumbs. She did not want to feel the warmth welling inside her. If she did, how could she possibly not try to heal the man. He was old, with his wispy white hair and wrinkled skin. Far older than most people that Alyssa happened across. She couldn’t say what the average lifespan for humans was here, but she imagined it was younger than on Earth. He had probably lived far more than most got to, so she shouldn’t feel guilty about doing nothing.

Right?

Alyssa clenched her teeth and closed her eyes as she tried to ignore the weakening breaths from the man next to her. The raised voices from the people downstairs helped. More people had come. Guards, perhaps. Alyssa could see their souls snapping back and forth with the two women a bit more rapidly than normal. Izsha had almost certainly not known what Alyssa had come here for. Still, she would have to thank the draken later. Destroying that door had definitely caused enough commotion to buy at least a short while of solitude.

Now, all she had to do was wait.

It wouldn’t be long. In just the few minutes Alyssa had been here, she could distinctly tell how shallow the breaths had become.

In fact…

Alyssa leaned in just a little closer. Straining her ears, she heard nothing. No breathing. No movement of cloth from even the most subtle movements.

Nothing but the thunder of her own heartbeat.

He was dead. Though, she supposed that she already knew that. Her sight of souls had informed her well before she leaned in closer.

The angel, whoever it was, would arrive soon. Alyssa got to her feet, moving a short distance away from the body so that she could see the entire room. This man’s death was not going to be in vain. This angel wasn’t going to get away without answering a few questions.

Any moment now.

Tenebrael often took well over a minute to arrive. Alyssa really didn’t have the experience to know if that was average or if Tenebrael was just a lazy angel, but she was leaning toward the latter option. A few golden feathers popping into the air around her almost confirmed that suspicion.

Twin white-gold wings appeared first along with an angel wearing rather scanty golden armor. With the way Alyssa had moved across the room, the angel’s back faced Alyssa. Even still, Alyssa immediately recognized the second angel she had ever met. The one who had said that she would kill Alyssa at her earliest convenience if she ever went back to Earth.

“Iosefael.”

The angel, whose eyes had been locked onto the corpse, squeaked. She spun, hovering slightly as her wings flapped in the air. “Tenebrael. I—” Those glowing green eyes with their cross-shaped pupils blinked twice as she focused her gaze. “A-Alyssa?”

Spectral Chains lashed out, wrapping around the angel. With her wings bound, she dropped to the floor, grunting. But Alyssa wasn’t done. More chains formed around the angel, wrapping up her head, her legs, her arms. Chains formed on top of chains. Seven. Eight. Nine. Ten full Spectral Chains cards vanished from Alyssa’s deck. The faint whimpering from inside the mass of ghostly chains was about the only reason anyone would be able to tell that there was something inside it all. Well, the only reason Alyssa could tell. No one else would be able to hear the whimpers.

“You and I are going to have a nice, long chat. Maybe I’ll even let you go if you answer my questions.”

“Bu-But!”

“No buts. I am in no mood for buts, angel.” Even with the mass of chains piled on Iosefael, Alyssa could see her flinch back. Alyssa hadn’t liked Tenebrael on principle more than anything else. The possibility that she had wanted her to kill her own mother had irked Alyssa, but it was true that nothing had happened in the end. At the moment, Alyssa was more worried about Tenebrael than angry with her—though finding out that Tenebrael had been intentionally avoiding her would change that rather quickly.

Iosefael was another matter entirely. She had threatened to kill Alyssa when they first met. She was supposed to have been their ally against Adrael, but Alyssa had to wonder how much she had actually tried to stop the Archangel. And now… she was almost certainly the cause for Tenebrael’s extended absence. After all, she had been the one to find out about Tenebrael swapping the souls on Earth.

“But the soul. You have to let me go so that I can collect the soul.”

That… was actually a good point. She had watched the man die. Making him suffer inside his own rotting body was too much.

But she didn’t have to let go of Iosefael.

Extending a hand, Alyssa cast a Spectral Axe. The long tip of the scythe was well within range of the body. A quick swipe that had none of the resistance of demonic infected pulled out the vaguely luminescent mist. Dismissing the scythe, she reached out and dipped her hand into the fog. The crystal that formed at her fingertips was not as smooth and perfect as those she had seen in angels’ hands, but it was an improvement over the misshapen lumps that were Alyssa’s first attempts at soul crystallization.

All she could do was hope that it wasn’t hurting the old man. Tenebrael hadn’t said anything upon seeing Alyssa’s other crystals, but she probably didn’t care.

“There. Now we can go.”

“Y-You can’t do that?”

Alyssa didn’t bother responding. She had just done that, after all. Instead she raised an arm. This time, she did feel something. Why Tenebrael hadn’t wanted her to quickly arrive but was allowing her a speedy exit wasn’t a question that Alyssa could answer. But she was grateful. Even if she was invisible and even if nobody could perceive Iosefael, the chains were visible. Getting out the front door with all the commotion going on down there wasn’t possible.

“Tenebrael, please grant me passage to somewhere a private conversation can take place.”

Her fingernails turned black. The mystic circle formed and expanded, encompassing a person-sized space in the room. Compared to the massive portal between her home and the palace, this was just a tiny little doorway. But it worked well enough.

“What are you… You can’t do that!”

Shaking her head, Alyssa grabbed the chains with both hands and started dragging the squirming angel through the magical door.


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030.007

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Vacationing

Thinking with…


Waking up in her own bed should have been a familiar comfort.

It wasn’t.

She had figured it out. What had been bothering her.

The lack of familiarity wasn’t just because she had a hellhound curled up at the foot of her bed. Kasita sitting in the chair, playing a game on Clark’s old computer wasn’t the problem either. They were certainly differences to what she remembered, but they weren’t the real problem. Maybe contributors. But, in some strange way, they were actually the most familiar aspects of waking up.

It was the soft bed, the air conditioning, the blankets that didn’t scratch at her skin. Even after three days of using the house as some kind of vacation home, Alyssa still wasn’t reacclimated to all the comforts. Perhaps that was a good thing. Their vacation was over. It was time to head back to Lyria. Back to the hard and lumpy beds, the utter lack of taste in food, hot days and cold nights…

Maybe she was going to miss modern comforts.

Maybe Jason could switch away from farming equipment and start making advancements in the electricity and textile industries. With magic, it probably wouldn’t be too difficult to get something up and running in only a year or two.

And wasn’t that a depressing thought. The last time Alyssa had been to her home… This home… She had thought that she would be back on Earth in months. A quick trip to Lyria, a look through their magic books, then back to her real home. Now it was quickly approaching a quarter of a year on this world and home was really no closer. In fact, it might even be further now than it ever had been. Tenebrael’s vanishing changed things.

That wasn’t perfectly true. With her connection to Tenebrael and the granted ability to use more divine magic than most people had access to, certain paths were open to her that couldn’t be found in the Observatorium’s books. The statue of Tenebrael down in Teneville was just one such example. She doubted that anyone in this world could have built it in seconds the way that she had. In fact, she wasn’t even sure that preparation would have helped much.

Alyssa had yet to witness a large-scale ritual in person—something along the lines of whatever spell put the dragon’s soul into Irulon’s head—but she knew that they required months of research and development. Even if Irulon wanted to put another dragon into her, or into someone else, she would have to start almost from scratch all over again. Large scale rituals were fickle, apparently. They interacted with far more variables than more standard spells used. The circles and Enochian used to describe the effect had to be reworked to fit with new environments and objects.

And Alyssa could cast those kind of rituals—those miracles—as easily as she could toss a fireball across the room, while connected to Tenebrael.

Well, not quite that easily. No matter how much Alyssa wanted, she couldn’t just wave her hands and conjure up a box of cereal or a hamburger. It seemed like something she should be able to do since Tenebrael had created all that food for her the first time she revisited Earth. But the words just didn’t come. Even trying to make up a prayer-like spell on her own did nothing.

It was probably the prayer breeds dependency thing again. Tenebrael didn’t like to answer prayers for that reason. Or so she had said. In reality, it was probably just that she was an extremely lazy angel.

As Alyssa showered and dressed for the day, she tried to think up similar things. Miracles that she might be able to cast. Or that Tenebrael would help her cast. Healing was a big one that she wanted to do, but also one she hadn’t been willing to try. No one was injured and, while Irulon might be willing to destroy a table to test Tenebrael’s magic, Alyssa wasn’t willing to chop off Tess’ arm in the hopes that she could get a finicky miracle to work.

For some reason, Alyssa just had this feeling that anything less wouldn’t be worth the bother. She couldn’t just give herself a paper cut then try to heal it.

After drying off her hair, Alyssa got back into her room with no new ideas. Or rather, she had tons of ideas, but none she thought Tenebrael would be willing to help with. The temple and the light had been revitalizing faith in her followers. Definitely something she would do. The table had been a bit more iffy, but she had probably allowed it to bolster Alyssa’s confidence enough to fix the statue. If Alyssa destroyed another table, Tenebrael probably wouldn’t care.

So she needed something large. Something important. Possibly something that would help her followers.

Sighing, she leaned on the back of Kasita’s chair, watching the girl play some game. It was Clark’s old computer. After he had left for college, Alyssa moved it into her room, though she didn’t often use it. Games really weren’t her thing. For a while, she had used it for her own essays and papers, but then she had stopped attending classes. It had collected dust ever since. “You’ve been playing this all night?”

“Not this specifically,” she said, blasting the… wall?

Oh, Alyssa thought, watching as a hole opened up to another section of the game world. Clark tried to get me to play this one.

Kasita jumped through, falling through the air only to shoot another few holes into the world. After passing through several, she wound up flying clear to the other side of the map far up high. That allowed her to shoot a portal against the wall there and walk back to the bottom, pick up a cube, and walk it through the portal.

She was saying something about how the games had given her more insight into Earth human culture, but Alyssa was hardly paying attention. The gears in her head were grinding together. Patting Kasita on the head, she turned and left. Irulon was down in the basement in a small guest room. Just a quick jaunt from Alyssa’s room.

Tess, who had been sleeping on an old couch downstairs, was already awake. Alyssa felt a bit bad about making her sleep on something so uncomfortable, but there wasn’t much choice unless she was going to share Irulon’s bed. The house was large, but not that large. Alyssa didn’t feel too bad, however. The couch was probably more comfortable than what she had at the palace. It was definitely more comfortable than taking a few pelts and sleeping in a tent in the backyard.

Brakkt had taken Clark’s old room.

Ignoring the protest from Tess, Alyssa barged right into the room. It was early in the morning. She well knew Irulon’s sleeping habits.

As such, Alyssa froze with her heart trying to jump from her throat when she found Irulon wide awake in the middle of getting dressed.

“You’re not asleep.”

Irulon, apparently not caring that she had no shirt on, grabbed her tome from the end table and flipped it open. “What’s happened?”

“Oh, um… nothing.” Alyssa turned away. She had seen Irulon nude before, but it was always something of a shock to barge in on someone getting dressed. For a moment, she thought to shut the door and simply wait, but Irulon didn’t seem overly bothered and Alyssa wanted information as soon as possible so that she might start planning a few things.

In turning away, she found Kasita—hand hiding a smile—had followed her down. Tess was glowering from the couch. Perhaps it would have been wise to listen to the latter’s warning. Oh well. Too late now.

“I just had a thought and wanted to ask you a few things. I didn’t think you would be awake already.”

Tossing a glance over her shoulder, Alyssa watched the tension bleed from Irulon’s shoulders. Setting the book back where she had gotten it, she grabbed one of Alyssa’s tees and slipped it on. “Your showers,” she said as she dressed. “They’re quite refreshing. I enjoy the heat and the constant pounding of the water against my skin. I’ll have to see if I can replicate the effect. Physical magics aren’t my specialty, but I doubt it will be that difficult.”

“Shame we don’t have a hot tub.”

“A… hot tub?”

“Basically a bath, but they often have little jets under the water. I’ll show you a video if you want to try copying that too. That’s not what I came to ask though.”

“Perhaps I’ll assemble a team from some Observatorium students,” Irulon mumbled as she did up the button on her shorts. Alyssa preferred pants over shorts even during the heat of summer, but she did own a few pairs that fit Irulon. “What did you want?”

“Is there any magic that you know of that will create… gates. Not like the palace gates, but like a hole in the world that connects two distant locations. Like, say, from here to the palace.”

“Portals.”

“Yes… How did you know the name of—”

“I’ve discussed the concept before with you, though that was in the context of traveling to another world using Kasita or another mimic as the actual portal.”

“Oh right. I do remember that.” Vaguely. It had been when Alyssa had asked Irulon to help fix Kasita’s constant uncontrollable shifting. That had been a while back relative to just about everything else and, at the time, she had been a bit more concerned with Kasita’s wellbeing than using her as a portal.

“From my occasional inspections of Kasita, I believe I have made significant progress on a theory that might lead to accessing the mimic reality, but I’m far from ready enough to actually try anything.”

“That’s okay,” Alyssa said, not at all sure that she wanted to visit a whole other world. Earth was big enough that she probably would never see everything on it even if she had actually been trying for her whole life. Nod was that all over again. A third world would just be superfluous at this point. “I mostly just want to know if there is any way to instantly travel between here and the palace.”

Irulon shook her head slowly. “Not particularly. Nothing that everyone here would be able to use, anyway. We could set up Recall points, but those are single use, one-way, and temporally limited. There is a Time-Fractal spell that will create a tunnel of warped time between two points. My father uses it to travel between Lyria and the Fortress of Pandora in only a few weeks instead of the months it normally takes. But that has to be constantly maintained and, without a powerful enough will, has been known to collapse quite destructively on the tunnel occupants.”

“So, no one would have seen a portal before if I make one?” That fulfilled one of the possible criteria for Tenebrael to help out. Maybe. It would really be a lot easier if Alyssa could just talk to the angel, but she had already tried using Tenebrael’s magic to communicate. It hadn’t worked.

“I don’t know that no one has seen such a thing. There is evidence, mostly apocryphal, that the First City had a massive transportation network capable of moving people vast distances in the blink of an eye. It is speculated that portals like what you described were the method. No recreation has been successful. Are you saying you can do it?” she said with a tattooed eyebrow raised.

“Through Tenebrael all things are possible?”

Irulon crossed her arms, tapping a finger against her elbow over and over. She was probably disappointed in the lack of conviction in Alyssa’s tone. Still, she didn’t argue. She nodded instead. “Your other efforts have been fascinating and enlightening. I look forward to this attempt. Will you be starting soon?”

“I… wasn’t planning on it. But I suppose I should. If it fails, we’ll be taking the draken back to Lyria after all. I wouldn’t want to delay us trying to get this.”

“Hm. I’ve yet to eat,” she said with a glance over Alyssa’s shoulder. Tess made a small noise before rushing up the stairs, probably on her way to prepare something that she was supposed to have made before getting distracted with Alyssa. “So perhaps delay until after that?”

“I haven’t had breakfast either,” Alyssa said.

“Excellent. Let me tell Tess to prepare two portions and then we can discuss some specifics of this portal you want to create. Perhaps that will help make the attempt a success.”

Alyssa doubted it; the whole thing hinged on Tenebrael and whether she was feeling up to literally answering a prayer. The thought brought up old feelings on the matter, about how Alyssa shouldn’t rely on such a fickle angel. But she had gone a month without contact. At this point, she was going to take what she could get.

So Alyssa didn’t complain. She and Irulon headed upstairs and plopped themselves down around the dining table. Tess had taken to using most of the kitchen surprisingly well. Not so much the microwave, probably because she couldn’t stick her hand inside to feel the temperature like she did with the oven. Today’s breakfast was some kind of potato hash. There was an overabundance of ground beef, like everything she cooked for Irulon, but also potatoes and eggs along with some kind of fruit—it was a bit like a mango in taste but a rather interesting shade of green. With the exception of the meat, which had been down in the freezer until recently, it was all supplies that they had brought on the trip. Even refrigerated food items went bad after more than two months of sitting around.

While Tess prepared and served the meal, along with some extra for Brakkt, Fela, Lisa, and herself, the discussion with Irulon went… well. Most went over Alyssa’s head. Not quite so far over as Tenebrael’s mathematics lesson had gone, but it was a similar feeling. It wasn’t like Alyssa had learned nothing of magic, its uses and limitations, and spell construction in the past month. She had. She spent most afternoons at the Observatorium. But she rather imagined the conversation was somewhat similar to a high school student after their first health class trying to talk shop with an experienced neurosurgeon.

What she took away was that portals like what Alyssa wanted to create were theoretically possible. The biggest reason why nobody had truly bothered with them was a matter of permanence. The problem with a spell that required two distant stationary locations was that the locations were not stationary. Earthquakes, though Alyssa had yet to experience one on this planet, were not uncommon. Even smaller-scale shifting of the land would destroy such a spell, requiring recalculation of practically everything from scratch to recreate it. Taking months to create a portal that might destabilize in a week only to have to start all over again was just not worth it.

Alyssa was hoping that Tenebrael would be able to get around that. If she couldn’t… well, Jason was going to work on trains sooner or later. They wouldn’t be portals, but they would help. And they would probably be necessary anyway. If Alyssa really could wave her hands and make portals to anywhere in the world, it would be such a military strategic advantage that they would probably make attempts at keeping them secret from the general populace and potential enemies for as long as possible.

It might be prudent to come up with an excuse about why she couldn’t create too many. Assuming Tenebrael let her create any to begin with. Making one between Lyria and Pandora probably wouldn’t be a terrible idea, but she could already imagine the Pharaoh walking up to her and asking her to make one into the heart of the Juno Federation’s government headquarters. She had no love for them—they had tried to kill her personally a few times and the rest of Lyria several times more. At the same time, most of their citizens were probably just peasants no different from the farmers around Lyria. She would need several assurances that the Pharaoh and the rest of the nobles wouldn’t instigate genocide before she even thought about trying to open a portal there.

“Having second thoughts?” Irulon asked as she tried to pick out bits of fruit from her breakfast. With how finely Tess had chopped everything up and mixed it all together, Irulon wasn’t too successful. That was probably the whole reason Tess had done so in the first place.

Although she started with a shake of her head, Alyssa jerked to a stop and slowly nodded instead. “Just thinking about applications of permanent portals and whether or not they’re a good idea.”

“I believe I know exactly what you mean. But what other people might do is no reason to not do something yourself.”

Alyssa… wasn’t so sure about that. She was almost certain that she could remember a quote from the developers of the nuclear bomb regretting having ever worked on it—though that might have been her imagination; if she remembered, she would try looking it up on her phone later on. Of course, in their case, someone would have developed the nuclear bomb eventually. There were just too many people capable of research and development. In contrast, the Pharaoh was probably the only person truly capable of developing a time bomb—heheh—and, even if he did create a devastating spell, someone else recreating it would be nearly impossible. There were only four Rank Six arcanists in Lyria, if Alyssa included herself. There might be ten total in the entire world. Maybe more, but the vast majority wouldn’t have the magical education necessary to create even a Rank Zero Flame spell.

“But I’m probably getting way ahead of myself. Even if Tenebrael lets me create this one portal, who is to say that she’ll agree to more?”

“Personally,” Irulon said as she finally decided to simply bite the bullet and eat the hash without picking through to get the meat, “I’m less interested in shaving three days off our journey than I am about being able to analyze such a portal. It could lead to clues that might allow us to visit even your world.”

“Don’t say that too loudly or that stu— that angel will never let us try.”

“I’ll keep my expectations low. The portal Kasita creates naturally still needs some studying anyway. Where has that mimic gone anyway?”

Alyssa glanced around. Her mother had come out and was… napping on the couch. Really, if she was that tired, she should have just stayed in bed for another hour. Brakkt had taken a seat at the table as well, facing them and obviously listening in, but he hadn’t said anything aside from a greeting. He was capable of moderately ranked magic, but Alyssa was willing to bet that most of Irulon’s explanation had gone over his head just as much as it had gone over hers.

Kasita was nowhere to be seen. She had been sitting around, but… well, if she had heard Irulon’s comment just now, she probably wouldn’t appear again for a while. Although she liked Irulon, Kasita really did not enjoy being poked and prodded.

“Regardless,” Irulon said. “Shall we try?”

“Might as well. We’ll do it in the backyard, that way the draken will be able to get through if it does work. Oh!” Alyssa perked up, throwing a glance to Brakkt. “If the portal goes straight to the palace stables, they’ll be able to run around out here at any time without worrying the citizens of Lyria!”

He thought for a moment, scratching at his goatee. “It is a security flaw.”

“People can’t approach my house. You and Irulon were trying and failing until I invited you in.”

“Besides,” Irulon chimed in, “I pity the army that marches into the den of a dozen draken.”

Brakkt grumbled a noise that Alyssa was almost positive he had picked up from the draken, but the noise relented soon enough. He gave a nod of his head, waved his hand in dismissal, and went back to his breakfast hash.

“Perfect,” Irulon said as she followed Alyssa outside. “Having it in the palace will provide ample opportunity to study it at my leisure.”

Deciding not to comment on Irulon introducing a security issue to the palace out of laziness—especially because she was complicit too—Alyssa simply took up a stance on the back porch. The portal needed to be close enough to the house that it fell under Tenebrael’s protections, but far enough away that the draken could all maneuver into it without smacking tails through windows.

Stretching a hand out just as she did for the statue, Alyssa felt it. The magic churned inside her, like heating water from lukewarm to a boil. The nails on her fingers turned as black as the space between stars. But no words came to her. The other times when she had tried doing something with angelic magic, the connection between her and Tenebrael had remained in its low-level inert state.

So what did it mean? What she wanted to do was valid, probably. But Tenebrael’s voice wasn’t layering on top of hers to craft a prayer?

Alyssa spent twenty minutes trying various modes of thought. During that time, the others had come and gone. Brakkt stopped by to watch for a few minutes only to wander off to get the draken ready. Tess, after cleaning the kitchen, sat down on the back porch’s swing with Irulon. Lisa came out, shook her head in disappointment a few times, and then wandered back in.

Lowering her arm turned the boil down to a simmer. It was still there, still wanting to be used, but simply less active without her intentions trying to focus it into a miracle. “No words are coming to me,” Alyssa said, wondering if Irulon had any insight.

Irulon hummed, thinking with her eyes a normal violet rather than connected to the dragon. “The other times,” she said after a few minutes of silence. “When you created the light, fixed the table, and created Her statue… Those were the first three times you had asked for her help, correct?”

Alyssa wasn’t sure that she would phrase it like that, but for the sake of continuing Irulon’s line of thought, she nodded.

“They were training you. Teaching you what you need to do to successfully plead for intervention in the future. Administrators at the Observatorium do a similar thing to young and inexperienced students.”

“Teaching me? Teaching me what?”

“Perhaps it is time to craft a prayer to Tenebrael of your own volition, rather than having Tenebrael speak a prayer to Herself.”

Alyssa pressed her lips together into a frown. It… made sense. Tenebrael had talked about baby steps, first showing off one small aspect, such as connecting together, before expanding onto something larger. Or before allowing Alyssa to try for herself. So showing her how to say a prayer before making her do it herself was right up Tenebrael’s alley.

At first, Alyssa scowled at the thought. Even though Alyssa was connected to the angel and wanted to use her to do something, she didn’t actually like the idea of doing it herself. Before, she could have just excused it as Tenebrael forcing her to say something. However, thinking about it a moment longer, Alyssa started nodding.

If she could say whatever she wanted, she would probably have more control over what got done. She doubted that she would be able to conjure up a portal to Earth, but having her own will drive the words had to be better than having Tenebrael do it all for her.

With one final firm nod of her head, Alyssa raised her hand. Her fingernails turned black again, this time, gleaming with that strange black light that Tenebrael’s magic emitted.

“Tenebrael,” Alyssa said, speaking completely on her own. “Please grant… me a boon. A gateway between this home and the Lyrian palace draken stables. A permanent portal so that your servants might traverse the land swiftly and safely.”

Light blossomed from her extended hand.

A mystic circle.


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030.006

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Vacationing

Sporting Goods


It was a good thing that Alyssa’s home was relatively large. Brakkt and Irulon each had their own rooms, with Brakkt staying in Clark’s old room and Irulon in the basement guest room. Tess had to sleep on the couch downstairs, but she seemed happy enough with the situation. Compared to using the tents during the trip down to Teneville, a couch in a climate controlled environment was enough to get her to stop making odd glares out of the corner of her eye whenever Alyssa was around.

So that was nice.

Of course, both Fela and Kasita had decided that they would sleep in Alyssa’s room. Well, Kasita didn’t really sleep. She had taken to using Clark’s old computer to explore Earth culture. Which Alyssa was fine with.

Once upon a time, Alyssa would never have been able to fall asleep with other people in the room. Especially with one making noise. A few months on Nod had fixed that. She had somehow gotten to the point where, no matter the situation, she would fall asleep within ten minutes of lying down.

Though, things felt… off. She wasn’t quite sure why. She didn’t think it had anything to do with demons or Tenebrael. But something about the situation was just…

She would have to think more on exactly what was wrong.

For the time being, Alyssa went through her morning rituals almost like she had never left Earth. A quick shower, a bowl of cereal, and even a bit of news on the television. Not that any of the news really mattered. They wouldn’t be talking about anything she cared about. Maybe if she had made it home right after her last visit to Earth, but she hadn’t. Her phone could get some news on it, but she had honestly been too frightened to look anything up. Now, they just talked about usual morning news stuff. Traffic conditions. The weather. Some vaguely inspiring story about an elementary schooler selling lemonade and not getting arrested for not having a permit.

Really, Alyssa had never been one for news.

In taking her cereal bowl back to the kitchen, she paused at the back window. Brakkt and Ensou were standing out by the edge of the lake. Ensou was lying down in the grass, tail thwacking against the ground every now and again. Brakkt was half standing, half sitting on Ensou’s side, staring out toward the water. And not just staring.

Dropping off her bowl at the sink, Alyssa spent a moment digging through some of her brother’s gear before slipping on some boots and heading out.

The lake was a short distance away from the house. Not too far. Maybe as much as a full two minutes of very casual walking. Really, if not for Ensou being so large, she might not have even noticed Brakkt from the house. It wasn’t like he was in his armor at the moment. Rather, he wore something resembling a bath robe. One hiked up around his knees.

Which made sense. As Alyssa got closer, she realized that he and Ensou were both partially in the lake water. A fairly thick string of woven hemp had been tied around Ensou’s tail. Every time the draken moved its tail, it rippled through the water out for quite a distance. Maybe as far as fifty yards out, though that was pure eyeballing it. Alyssa had a feeling that she knew what they were doing, but wouldn’t be able to say for certain without asking.

“Fishing?”

Ensou raised its head just enough to angle one of its eyes in her direction while Brakkt looked over his shoulder. The way he looked, Alyssa felt a bit bad. Had he been sleeping while standing up against Ensou’s side? But he didn’t seem upset with her presence. Instead, Brakkt nodded. “I thought I’d see if I couldn’t get a few for us and the draken.” He looked over Alyssa, mostly at the rod she had over her shoulder. “What have you got there?”

“A fishing rod. I, uh, thought I saw you with one from back at the house, but it might have just been the light gleaming off the surface of the water.”

“Can’t say I’ve fished with such a device. It looks like an elf designed it.”

Alyssa looked the rod over. He was probably talking about the reel because… yeah, it was a fairly complex bit of spinning technology. Or rather, it probably wasn’t that complex compared to some things on modern Earth, but if someone asked Alyssa to build one, she would give them a blank look.

“Well, I can’t say I’ve ever fished with a draken tail, so I guess we’re even,” she said with a smile. “Mind if I join you? I’ve been thinking that I need to work on wilderness survival skills. While I’ve fished before, gutting and preparing fish for eating isn’t something I’ve done before.”

“You’ve fished, but you haven’t eaten fish?”

“No. I’ve eaten fish. Just not one that I caught myself. Back in my world, the majority of people get their fish precut and prepared from our… markets. In fact, I doubt even ten percent of people have gone fishing, but a lot more have eaten fish. Large boats will cast nets as big as the boat into the ocean, catching fish by the thousands. They then deliver those fish to processing centers for preparation and distribution to the markets.”

“The more I hear of your world, the stranger it seems. Even your home,” he said, turning slightly to see all the way back to the house, “it doesn’t use any magic, but it feels like it does. The cool air, the fridge, the television and computer. It is quite fantastical.”

“I wonder if I shouldn’t bring Guillem out here and see what she makes of all the technology.” Based on how she acted when Jason showed her the designs for the steam tractor, she would probably faint at the thought that humans created all that without magic or help from elves. “But Jason probably needs to give her a primer on electricity first. For now, mind if I join you in fishing?”

“First, Ensou, let’s see if we caught anything.”

As Brakkt stopped leaning against Ensou’s midsection, the draken got to its feet. After shaking a bit of moisture off its side, it started walking back toward the house. The hemp rope, still tied to its tail, pulled with it.

After a short few feet, Alyssa realized that the rope wasn’t just a single long rope. It had several others tied to it periodically. Each of the extra ropes were only a few inches long, maybe as much as a foot in extreme cases. And each was tipped with a hook.

Soon enough, a fish came out, attached to the end of one of the smaller hemp ropes. Another fish came out. And another. By the time Ensou had pulled the rope all the way out, Alyssa had counted up sixteen fish. Considering that Brakkt had really just been sitting around and Ensou had just thumped its tail a few times, it seemed like a pretty good haul. Though that might depend on exactly how long he had been out here.

“When did you start fishing?”

“The break of dawn.”

“Wow.” That had been about two hours ago now. Not the longest time for fishing—in fact, over a dozen fish in two hours was probably a fairly decent rate judging by the very few times she had gone fishing with her father and brother—but that wasn’t what she found surprising. “I can’t believe you and Irulon are related. She didn’t get up until well after noon yesterday.”

As he knelt down to pull the fish from his fishing line, dropping them into a wicker basket, he nodded with a small sigh. “I am quite used to waking and sleeping at a moment’s notice. On outings, it can be vital to get whatever little sleep possible. My sister, on the other hand, would choose to simply stay awake for days at a time if the option to sleep for a while never presented itself.”

“I think I’m more like you than Irulon. In that respect, anyway.” Looking over the basket of fish, Alyssa had to wonder if she should even bother catching her own.

But, as soon as Brakkt finished pulling the fish from the rope, Ensou waded out into the water, moving in a long arc to avoid getting caught in it. Making it back to the shore, Ensou flopped over. Brakkt, once again, resumed leaning up against the large draken.

So Alyssa decided to show Brakkt how her fishing pole worked. Mostly the reel. The whole thing seemed a bit curious to him.

“You only catch one fish at a time? Even without Ensou, I would have propped up a long rod of wood on some sticks and tied the hemp and hooks to that, leaving it for some time while I took care of other things.”

“It’s a very modern fishing rod. Because of those markets I just mentioned, this kind of thing is more for sport or relaxation than it is for surviving off caught fish.”

He didn’t seem all that impressed. So, after attaching an artificial lure—she didn’t have any live bait, but it didn’t look like he did either—she gave the rod a swing of her arms.

And nearly hooked Brakkt.

“Sorry,” Alyssa said, face burning with embarrassment. At least he had quick reactions. If he hadn’t ducked… “It’s been a few years. I’ll just… move over here for a moment.”

Brakkt watched her go, slightly more wary than before.

Alyssa couldn’t even look at him as she moved to get herself some extra space.

Closing her eyes, she tried to remember all the steps. Dangle a few inches. Hold the line against the rod. Open the bail. Right. She had forgotten that fairly critical step. Point forward, then bring the rod vertical. The movement was all in the elbows and wrists. No shoulder swinging. Halfway back to the lake, let go of the line.

It took three more tries to get a good cast. She didn’t even try to catch a fish for another ten casts, deciding to just practice getting the line out into the lake. Alyssa headed back toward Brakkt only once she was sure that she wasn’t going to embarrass herself further. Even then, she could almost feel him eying her.

Not wanting to get her line tangled up in Brakkt’s hemp rope, Alyssa cast off at a bit of an angle.

When it sailed perfectly, plopping into the water without hooking into any people, Alyssa let out a small sigh of relief.

Now she just had to remember how to actually set the hook in the fish that bit and keep them from getting away.

After another two hours, she had allowed several fish to escape, snapped her line twice, and managed to catch one beefy fish. It wasn’t as large as the largest of Brakkt’s fish, but it would have kept her fed for a day or three if needed.

Of course, Ensou had to show her up by pulling in the hemp rope line, bringing up another dozen fish all at once.

Still, for her first time fishing in years, Alyssa was fairly happy with her catch. Now she just needed to know what to do with it.

Thankfully, Brakkt was more than willing to show her. After wrapping up his hemp rope, he selected three fish from his bounty, leaving the rest for Ensou to distribute among the others. As he and Alyssa started back to the house, she couldn’t help but ask, “What if Ensou decides to not distribute them all?”

“Ensou might be the largest of the draken, but even he will find himself having a bad time with the others mad at him.” With a look over his shoulder and a mild shrug. “Even if Ensou eats the entire bunch, it’s not like the others will starve. They can fend for themselves, whether that be through trying to snap up some fish or hunting in the forest. I gave them free reign to do whatever they wanted so long as they keep away from Teneville.”

Back at the house, Brakkt dropped the fish off on the patio table. Just before Alyssa could run inside to grab a few knives, he went and pulled a pair out, offering one to her. “You said you haven’t ever sliced up fish? Watch closely.”

Alyssa did so. With his guidance, she managed what was a fairly decent job of cleaning and gutting the fish. It took about a half hour to do so. For her. After taking a few minutes to show her exactly what to do, Brakkt whipped through his three fish much faster than she managed.

A few minutes in, Fela popped her head out. Her paw-like hands weren’t really the best at turning modern doorknobs. Lots of doors in Lyria were more of a handle style, making them easier for her to open. As such, Lisa had to come over and open the door.

Like letting the dog out.

The hellhound didn’t say a word. She came out of the house, right up to the porch table, and squatted down. The little flames from her eyes were just barely above the top of the table. She sat there, staring. Unmoving. Watching.

Right up until Alyssa dropped the knife on the fish, slicing its head clean off. As she tossed it over her shoulder, the hellhound jumped into the air and caught it in her mouth.

Alyssa could only shake her head.

“Having fun out here?”

“I don’t know if fun is the right word, but I’m getting the hang of it. How does fresh fish sound tonight?”

“Not like we had anything planned. Though, I am going to open the safes and go over all our weapons. Make sure they are cleaned, well maintained, and otherwise ready to go.”

“Ah.” Alyssa looked up to where her mother stood in the open door, shaking her hands to get some of the fish guts off. “Aside from the ones I took, they shouldn’t have been touched.”

Lisa pressed her lips together. “I found a shotgun and a rifle lying on the floor of my closet.”

Alyssa winced. “Oh. Well, in my defense, I found myself in a whole new world and, when I was getting the guns out, I think I was distracted by an angel threatening to kill me.”

“Don’t let it happen again.”

“You’d think she would be a little more understanding,” Alyssa mumbled as the door shut with her mother on the opposite side.

Brakkt gave a low chuckle. “That sounded quite kind, actually. You should have heard Irulon after I borrowed one of her books. I don’t think I’m ever going to get within reaching distance of her bookshelf ever again.”

“I could see that,” Alyssa said, setting down her knife. She was pretty sure that she was done. Brakkt’s sliced up fish looked quite a bit better than hers. Not in terms of fish quality, but just in the presentation. His cuts were cleaner and obviously more practiced. “Hey, since my mom is getting them out, you want to try shooting a gun? I promised Kasita that she could as well. And maybe even keep one as long as she doesn’t go flying every time she tries to fire one.”

“Is that an actual concern when firing a gun?”

“For Kasita, yes. Her body doesn’t have much mass. But I have watched regular humans smack themselves in the face before due to the power of some guns. Or because they were unprepared.” Alyssa looked down to the fish on the table. “Shall we hand these off to Tess for actual cooking? Or did you want to do that too?”

“I’ve cooked fish before, but I’ve never handled a weapon from your world.”

“Excellent.”

It took the better part of an hour to get everything set up. Alyssa had to wash her hands. Irulon wanted to try as well. Lisa wasn’t going to let people fire guns for the first time without her supervision. Alyssa had to wash her hands. Targets had to be set out, one spinner target and two pieces of plywood with posters of zombies on top. Gun selection had to be made as well. A tiny lightweight .22 pistol for Kasita. Larger pistols and revolvers for everyone else. Even a fairly heavy assault rifle, civilian version.

And Alyssa had to wash her hands.

Even after three washes with soap and hot water, they still smelled like fish guts.

Lisa got started with ground rules. No pointing at anything but the ground or the targets. Keep fingers off the triggers. Guns should always be treated as if they were loaded. Not to remove ear protection. “Do not look down the barrel, Princess Irulon.” And other such warnings.

Kasita, as it turned out, could hit exactly what she wanted to hit. Rapid fire was, however, impossible. Even with the tiny rounds, she still stumbled back with every shot. While her accuracy was impressive, Alyssa could tell that she was deeply dissatisfied with the situation as a whole. It wasn’t anything specific that she did. Just that her excitement at first being handed the pistol drained rapidly with every shot.

A heavier pistol would increase her inertia, but all the other pistols shot larger caliber bullets, which tended to have more force and more recoil. Besides that, while Kasita might be able to hold a heavier pistol, carrying one around just wasn’t going to be a thing she could do.

Alyssa moved right up behind her, holding her shoulders to help steady her. “If you found a wall to stand against, it might work out,” she said after Kasita managed two shots without needing a complete reset between them. “Though, it might limit your disguise ability if you’re carrying that around all the time.”

“Yeah,” Kasita said with a sigh. “Maybe it’s best to just stick with magic. When I asked for a gun of my own, I hadn’t realized that I would be allowed to make my own spell cards.”

Honestly, that was probably for the best.

Irulon was next in line. Her first two shots missed entirely. Test shots, she claimed.

Alyssa scoffed.

But only at first.

After that, Irulon didn’t miss once. Even moving rapidly from target to target, she hit everything she aimed at. Both eyes were black with those white rings, so she was clearly using the dragon to cheat a bit. But Alyssa couldn’t argue against its effectiveness. In fact, Alyssa imagined that, even riding full speed on a draken, Irulon would be able to hit everything perfectly.

In contrast, her older brother was far more normal. It was like how Alyssa had acted her first time shooting guns. In fact, it was almost eerily similar. Right down to Lisa standing just behind him with her arms crossed, watching as he hit the larger zombie targets, but without the head-shot accuracy that Irulon and Kasita had displayed.

Alyssa fired off a few rounds of her own and was quite pleased with her accuracy. She didn’t do too much. While they had a decent stockpile of ammunition, that was quite literally all the ammunition in the world. Barring Tenebrael descending, bearing gifts of bullets or Alyssa figuring out how to use Tenebrael’s magic to accomplish the same task, wasting it all by shooting targets just wasn’t that great an idea.

So they finished up after only an hour of shooting. Both Irulon and Brakkt tried out a few of the different guns. Irulon even managed to ricochet a bullet off the metal plates of the spinner target and into one of the zombie heads.

The end verdict from both royals was that magic was more versatile. Brakkt’s sword, with the enchantments on it, actually helped him fight. It was too much of an advantage to give up for a weapon that, while long range, would probably not significantly harm most monsters that were dangerous enough to warrant trying to use them. Irulon thought that she might be able to make better use of a gun than her brother, but wanted to investigate possible magical enhancements to the devices. Or set a team of Observatorium students to do the same as her own time was limited to the point where she wasn’t that interested.

Regardless of whether or not they wanted a gun for their own uses, Lisa marched everyone back to the house for a round of dismantling and cleaning.

Which, if anything, only convinced them that guns were not worth it. They were much harder to clean than swords.

Alyssa was fairly happy, however.

The strong scent of gunpowder overpowered the smell of fish.


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030.005

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Vacationing

Home Away From Home


Alyssa sat on the living room couch. The cushioned leather seats were a stark contrast compared to everything that existed outside her transplanted house. Padding just wasn’t much of a real thing in Lyria. They tried. The people of this world definitely tried. And they even tried in different ways. Some inns or homes used straw stuffed into burlap-like sacks. Yzhemal’s inn, perhaps because of the many sheep that the village tended to, filled their beds with wool. Alyssa wasn’t sure how the palace softened the beds in the guest rooms, but they came the closest to Earth comfort.

It was a welcome change. Not just from being on the road from Lyria to Teneville, but from the world itself. Alyssa had visited Earth a few times, but that had been a while ago now. And only the first visit had really provided the opportunity to relax. The second visit had provided some good food, but that was it. The final visit had just been disastrous no matter how she tried to look at it.

Because of that final visit, she had been somewhat apprehensive approaching this version of her house. But this was the version of her house that she knew. Her room hadn’t been torn apart. The bed was still in its right place. Her dresser was full of her clothes. The fridge, food, and other supplies were just how she had left it all that time ago. It was more familiar than the real thing, oddly enough.

She had been surprised at how little it had changed. Aside from the one pane of broken glass at the front door, which had been broken by the burglars, everything was intact. Even the thin bit of saran wrap and tin foil she had taped to the hole hadn’t been damaged. Either nobody from Teneville ever hiked a day south of their town and no wild creatures or monsters cared about a giant house out in the middle of nowhere or Tenebrael had done something to ward off most things. Judging by how Izsha had been hesitant to approach until Alyssa specifically told it that it was okay to get closer, Alyssa was betting on the latter option.

Still, aside from some vines climbing up the side of the house, it was pretty much exactly how she had left it.

A part of her wondered why she had ever left. The cool air conditioning kept the heat of the day away. A movie was playing on a much larger screen than her phone. She had even popped some microwave popcorn for herself and Fela. Mostly Fela, as the hellhound wound up eating practically the entire bowl in only a few handfuls.

Which, really, was the best part about having left the house. Alyssa didn’t regret venturing out into the real world in the slightest. It had been scary at times, but she had also had a fair amount of fun. If not for venturing out, she wouldn’t have Fela chomping on expired food, packages included, at the moment. Her feet wouldn’t be resting on Kasita’s lap. She never would have met Tzheitza, Irulon, or any of the others. Sure, she could have done without the Taker and the Juno Federation. The demons too, though those jerks had been as close as Teneville.

It was entirely possible that destroying Tenebrael’s temple had been in the demon’s plan book for a while now. If Alyssa were a demon disgruntled with the lack of effectiveness of her plague because of faith in Tenebrael, destroying the temple would have been a very high priority. Taken in that light, destroying the temple at the same time as she had met with the demon might have actually been coincidence. If not coincidence, then perhaps as a direct attack against Alyssa in an attempt to weaken her faith in Tenebrael.

Alyssa wasn’t sure that she actually had faith in Tenebrael to begin with. At least not in her existence. In Alyssa’s opinion, the concept of faith required a lack of proof. It required belief despite uncertainty. And Alyssa was absolutely certain that Tenebrael existed. That wasn’t faith.

But it probably worked to the same effect as far as demonic infection was concerned. Or perhaps her connection to Tenebrael had washed away any initial infection that she might have acquired after contacting that demon. Either way, Fela hadn’t complained about her smelling like demons, so Alyssa wasn’t too worried.

“I don’t get it.”

Alyssa blinked, lifting her head from the couch’s armrest to look at Kasita. “Get it?” she said slowly, completely confused as to what the mimic was talking about. “Get what?”

“This movie.”

Blinking again, Alyssa turned her head to find green text scrolling up the screen. “Oh. It’s over.”

“I mean, it was neat when those people turned into those guys with sunglasses—it reminded me of myself—but all the plugging into computers is a bit confusing. Maybe there is some human element to it that I’m missing.”

“Probably the computer element, really.”

“I know what a computer is.”

“Yeah, but you only know from an abstract point of view. You’ve never really interacted with a computer aside from my phone, and my phone isn’t like the things in the movie at all.” Alyssa pulled her feet off Kasita, sitting up on the couch properly. “What did you think, Fela?”

The hellhound jerked, eyes snapping over as she slowly pulled a sharp nail from the giant tub of peanut butter that had been sitting in the closet for who knew how long. Her black fur around her claw was matted brown. “It’s good,” she said, running a tongue along her claw. “Is there more?”

“Well, the next two movies aren’t that good and would probably just be more confusing.”

“I meant this stuff,” she said, waving the tub around.

“I know,” Alyssa said, dropping her head back to the armrest. There could be another thing of peanut butter in the pantry, but Alyssa might want a jelly sandwich at some point, so she didn’t mention it. Not just yet.

Instead, she stood and walked over to the side window. It was still night out. Or rather, it was early morning not long before the sun would rise. She couldn’t actually see the statue in the distance—thankfully, as she didn’t know that she would be able to relax all that well with Tenebrael’s giant eyes peering over the hilltop—but the light from the halo and the magic circle gripped in the statue’s hand did coat the edges of the horizon in that strange black-white light. It wasn’t as bright as a real halo, which was probably a good thing. The entire land south of the mountains would be permanently washed in daylight if that were the case.

“Think the others will get here soon?”

“You didn’t actually tell them that you were leaving.”

“I figured they would notice and guess where I went.” She could have sent a message, but at the same time, she had been enjoying herself. When her mother and Irulon inevitably arrived, she wasn’t sure that she would be able to relax around them. “Also, I just couldn’t stick around there anymore. I don’t even want to see how Lazhar and Yzhemal will look at me if we ever see each other again.”

“Ufu~ Not planning on going back?”

“Not if I can help it. Ugh.” Obviously, if another demon were to show up, she would help out. But Fela had run around the entire village several times and hadn’t smelled anything wrong. And now, with Tenebrael’s giant face greeting the village every morning and night, it was hard to imagine that there would be a second incident.

Though whether or not the village remained populated was another matter entirely. The people here were highly religious. More than anyone else, as far as Alyssa could tell. But if she had lived here, she would definitely be making plans to move somewhere else. Even if that somewhere was just the first village north of the mountain pass.

Alyssa tensed as she heard the front door creak open. One hand drifted to the pistol holstered at her hip as she pushed herself off the couch with the other hand. It took Kasita resting a hand on her arm for her to realize her heart was hammering.

There was nothing to worry about. This was Nod, not Earth. She had magic, she had looted more guns from the gun safe, and she had allies. It wouldn’t matter if a burglar, assassin, or even demon walked around the corner. She… They would deal with it.

It wasn’t any of the three. Alyssa knew it wouldn’t be. Even before she recognized that familiar cadence to the heavy footsteps, she knew that there hadn’t been anything to worry about. The house had been untouched for months. Obviously no one would disturb it now.

Sure enough, her mother stepped around the corner, looking wide-eyed and bewildered. Her fingers brushed over the calendar that hung on the fridge—date still unchanged from when the house had been transplanted to this world several months ago. It took her two steps into the kitchen before she noticed Alyssa standing near the couch. She started for a moment before her face softened.

“You had us worried, you know? Running off like that…”

“I’m alright mom,” Alyssa said, slumping back down onto the couch. “I just… I’m sure you can understand why I wanted to get away from those people.”

“You could have said something,” she said as she walked closer. Only when she crossed over the linoleum dining room onto the carpet of the family room did she seem to notice that there were others in the room. “Kasita,” she said with a nod of her head. “And Fela?”

“Hi,” the hellhound said, waving a peanut butter-covered paw.

Lisa wrinkled her nose.

“She smelled me leaving and followed after,” Alyssa said, answering a question that her mother might not have even had. “We put on a few movies, though I think I fell asleep for most of them.”

“At least you got some sleep.”

“Yeah… So, what happened in the town? I didn’t really stick around to see them get over their initial shock and awe.”

Lisa leaned up against the side of the couch—the couch without Fela—and sighed. “The one with the funny hat—”

“Lazhar.”

“Yeah. Him. He declared that the next three days would be purely for celebration. Then he brought out big kegs on a cart and stared pouring ale for everyone that asked.”

“That… sounds like him, I suppose. Maybe a bit subdued compared to what I was expecting, but I guess I don’t really know what I was expecting.”

“I believe this village is going to have a boom in population in around nine months.”

Alyssa pressed her lips together, searching for the joke in her mother’s eyes. A joke she couldn’t find. “Okay. Maybe a bit less subdued. I think I’m glad I left.”

Lisa nodded slowly. “I could have gone without witnessing an orgy. At first, I thought you were a part of it all. I’m much happier now knowing that you came here to watch movies with your sister and…” She trailed off, looking to Fela.

Alyssa waited, but she never finished the sentence. It wasn’t that her mother disliked Fela. She just didn’t know how to act around monsters. Kasita was easy, she looked like a human and acted like one. She was amicable and good natured. Fela was good natured too, in Alyssa’s opinion, but her appearance definitely made some people act strangely. Alyssa might have even been intimidated if she hadn’t met all those other monsters. Compared to a gaunt, Fela was just a fluffy little puppy.

She could only hope that her mother would never have to encounter a gaunt.

“What about Brakkt and Irulon… Or maybe I don’t want to know what they did.”

“Irulon was with me. She expressed, in quite harsh words, how disappointed she was in the disrespectful behavior of the town. I think she was tempted to do something, but we ended up retreating to the inn… where she sat by the window all night, not sleeping as far as I could tell. She was just watching that… statue you made.”

Tenebrael made it. I didn’t want to make a goth parody of the Statue of Liberty.”

Lisa just shrugged. “Don’t know what happened to Brakkt. He showed up a half hour ago, a bit worried that two of his draken were missing. He was going to Message you, but Irulon took a wild guess and said that you would be here with the draken.”

Alyssa leaned to the side, glancing around her mother. There were no princes or princesses standing around, making her raise her eyebrow. “So, you came alone?”

“I don’t really know why, but they’re having trouble coming closer. Even Irulon was confused.”

“Oh. Izsha, Fela, and Dasca were having that problem too. I just said that it was alright to go closer and the problem went away.” Alyssa stretched and yawned, unable to help herself. She probably hadn’t gotten nearly as much sleep as she should have. “Guess I should go invite them in too, huh?”

“Probably,” Lisa said, turning away from Alyssa. She looked around the room, eyes mostly drifting. Every so often, she would pause on something. The photograph from Egypt. A vase on the end table with a gold-dipped rose. A family photograph from a few years back. “This is… surreal.”

Her voice was soft. A whisper under her breath. Alyssa wasn’t sure if she was supposed to have heard it, but she did.

“Just when I thought I was getting used to this world, we come here.”

Alyssa nodded slowly, not sure at all what to say. Alyssa didn’t really find the house itself to be surreal. Maybe that was because she had started out in it and knew it well enough. But if she closed her eyes for a moment and then really looked, she could almost forget that she had ever left at all.

Which just made the presence of Fela and Kasita all the stranger.

Shaking her head, she headed out to the front door. Before she even opened it, she could see a few draken and a few humans puzzling about why they couldn’t get much closer than about a hundred feet away. It was a bit odd to see Irulon walk forward only to hesitate, look around like she had forgotten why she had come in the first place, then turn back to Brakkt.

Deciding to pull them out of their misery, Alyssa headed out. She didn’t need to go all the way. About halfway to them, she cupped her hands around her mouth and called out. “It’s alright, you can come on in.”

Shaking her head, Irulon hesitated. But, one step followed another. Like the spell was broken, she walked right up to Alyssa without any of that hesitation or forgetfulness.

“Hm.”

“That’s it? Hm?”

“I have the weirdest headache right now.”

“Well, we have acetaminophen inside. Come on. Brakkt as well. Unfortunately, the draken will not fit inside. I think Izsha and Dasca headed to that lake that’s a ways behind the house.”

“Acetaminophen?”

“Medicine. Or a drug. It’s good with headaches. Makes them fade away after about thirty minutes. Come on,” Alyssa said with a gesturing wave back to the house. “You might not have been able to experience your visit to Earth, but you wouldn’t have seen much more than what is inside this house anyway. It’s a little slice of another world.”

After a woozy shake of her head, Irulon started following. Brakkt and Tess followed along as well, the former looking around with mild caution while the latter just walked in Irulon’s wake with her hands clasped together. Alyssa opened the door, but Irulon paused out on the front porch.

“These plants, I don’t recognize them.”

Following Irulon’s gaze, Alyssa found herself staring at the little potted plant shoved into the corner of the porch. For having been neglected for over two months, the plant was doing surprisingly well. There weren’t any flowers blooming on it, but Alyssa could honestly not recall if it was even the kind of plant that produced flowers. But its leafs were large and thick in a roughly triangular shape.

“Can’t help you,” Alyssa said with a shrug. “My dad was the one who tended to all the plants and the garden. Maybe my mom knows? I doubt it.”

“Hm.” Irulon’s eyes lingered a moment longer, making Alyssa wonder if she saw something magical or useful in the plant, before she turned to the rest of the house. Her eyes quickly found the broken pane of glass that Alyssa had patched up. She stayed looking at that long enough that Alyssa wondered if she should say something about it, but ended up moving on to the doorbell.

It was an intercom system, one of the cheap ones without a camera. No one had actually used the voice part of the intercom in years. The only use the entire system got was ringing the doorbell through the speakers set in each of the bedrooms. Well, ringing most of the bedrooms. Alyssa had kept her volume turned all the way down unless she was expecting a package.

Deciding to show it off, Alyssa tapped the button. With the door open, the chime was clearly audible from the front porch.

“It lets us know we have visitors even when we’re on the opposite side of the house.”

“They don’t use your phones to contact you? I thought everyone in your world had them.”

“Not everyone everyone, but sometimes visitors will be unexpected, or have no way of knowing how to contact us by phone. So we have the doorbell.” Alyssa didn’t think that it was that strange a concept, but Irulon was staring with her draconic eyes. Here in Nod, Irulon would have a servant replace the function of a doorbell. Well, Earth had butlers and live-in maids that might have performed the same function, but they weren’t prevalent in modern society. Especially not among the low to middle class. Peasants here wouldn’t need doorbells, really, because most houses were single-room. Shops like Tzheitza’s should have used actual bells rather than the modern electronic equivalent, but now that she thought about it, the potion shop had nothing of the sort.

Irulon reached out and tapped the tip of her finger against the button.

The chime rang again, identical to the first time. Except, an indistinguishable shout from Lisa accompanied the noise.

Before Irulon could ask how it worked or push the button again, Alyssa grabbed her arm and started guiding her into the house. “If that’s a shocker, wait until you see the rest of the place. I’m sure there are tons of little things I don’t even notice as being strange that you’ll like. And…” Alyssa turned to Brakkt and Tess. “If you don’t want a tour, Fela and Kasita are sitting in one of the rooms. They got to look around last night. I’m sure there is some edible food from my world to entertain you. There is usually a tub of ice cream in the freezer, though it might be a bit freezer burned after two months.”

“Actually, I would prefer a tour.”

“I will stay by Princess Irulon’s side.”

“Alright,” Alyssa said, nodding slowly to each of them. “My house isn’t nearly the size of the palace’s first floor, so this won’t take long.”

After five minutes of trying to get Irulon to stop flicking the lights on and off, Alyssa decided that she had never said a more ignorant statement in her entire life.


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030.004

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Vacationing

Monumental


Alyssa stood in front of the temple ruins. It… was a lot bigger than a table. And that was the understatement of the century. She could have stepped over the remains of the destroyed table. This thing would take five minutes to walk from one end to the other. The height before it collapsed hadn’t been anything to scoff at either. While it wasn’t a palace or one of the towers around Lyria, it would probably be the next highest building if put up on a chart of the tallest structures in this world.

And somehow, Alyssa was supposed to fix it. Or Tenebrael had to fix it and she had to let the stupid angel work through her.

At least she didn’t have the entire village following after her, watching as she worried over whether or not the temple could be repaired. She didn’t know what Lazhar had said, but he had gotten the villagers to back off a bit. He hadn’t backed off, however. In fact, Lazhar stood next to her, wearing his festival costume. A smooth black suit with off-center buttons, silver shoulder plates, and a white angular hat.

Seeing him walk up to her while dressed in such a strange fashion had not been amusing.

Even less amusing was the way he just stood by, as if waiting for her to speak. Knowing what she knew about the festival and how every word the pilgrims spoke was written down, Alyssa had a feeling that she would be subjected to the same treatment. In fact, he had probably spent the night writing down every word he could remember her having spoken from their first visit until she had created that light yesterday morning.

So she hadn’t spoken a word since he walked up. At the same time, the silence was almost unbearably uncomfortable. What did he want? Why was he here? Why was he wearing that festival outfit? If he wanted something, he should have said it already.

Maybe time had dulled her memory. It had only been two months or so since she had last been to Teneville. While interacting with the villagers the first time around, she had definitely gotten a sycophantic feel from the majority of the people. Especially from Lazhar. It had actually scared her a bit until she realized that they weren’t going to murder her for disbelief, even if they did engage in ritual suicide on the regular.

Now, seeing the way he was acting around her, she couldn’t help but wonder why she had ever thought it would be a good idea to come back with glowing eyes. Granted, she couldn’t have possibly known that the temple had been destroyed only a week earlier. They probably wouldn’t have acted like this if not for that—she would have kept her eyes safely hidden behind her sunglasses.

Alyssa was absolutely not enjoying the current situation. If she had a bit less morality, she might have tried to take advantage of it. These people would undoubtedly give up their money and belongings if she asked. That was another reason she was being careful about not speaking as much as possible. Who knew what offhand comment she might make that would have them emptying their pockets… or worse, set them off to start a holy crusade for Tenebrael.

If she were still alone, Alyssa had a feeling that she would be in a far less desirable position. It might be hard to imagine given how little she desired her current position, but at least Kasita, Irulon, Fela, and her mother were not kissing the ground she walked on. Irulon, Alyssa could tell, was acting slightly strange, but was trying to reel it in at the same time. Alyssa could appreciate that. Her mother disapproved of just about everything, which would have been annoying in other situations, but here, Alyssa welcomed it. Fela and Kasita hadn’t changed much at all. Fela already thought that she was scary and making a big bright light that cowed an entire village hadn’t changed that at all. Kasita, more than anyone, knew Alyssa’s real feelings about Tenebrael and everything else.

Which was why Alyssa shot a glance to Kasita, silently pleading with the mimic to say something that might get Lazhar to talk. It didn’t really matter what they talked about. Just as long as it would let out some of the pressure.

The mimic grinned the exact kind of grin that made Alyssa reevaluate her decision to have Kasita speak for her. But it was too late.

“So, Lazhar was it? Think my sister can rebuild this temple?”

“If that is Tenebrael’s will.”

“But what about Alyssa’s will? She could just walk away. Are you saying that the temple will pop up even without Alyssa channeling Tenebrael’s power? Or maybe you’re saying that nobody could do anything if Tenebrael doesn’t want her temple fixed up. I don’t know about that. I watched the Pharaoh rewind the time of an entire house, resetting everything to how it was a few hours before. I bet he could do the same to this temple here.”

“The Pharaoh is a mediator between Tenebrael’s will and the people. It is his duty to find a balance between the two. If he were to arrive and repair the temple, that too would be Tenebrael’s will.”

Alyssa raised an eyebrow. She hadn’t heard that part of the Pharaoh’s job description before. Was that what Egyptian pharaohs were supposed to do as well? She had always thought that a pharaoh was just a fancy title for a king or an emperor. A ruler.

A similar thought had to be running through Kasita’s head. She pouted, placing her hands on her hips in apparent frustration at failing to catch Lazhar in some kind of verbal trap.

“Do you speak with Tenebrael often?”

Lazhar shifted at Kasita’s last question. Unlike before, he didn’t respond right away.

Kasita took that as encouragement. “If you don’t,” she said, “how do you know her will?”

That was a question Lazhar had been more prepared for. He started answering right away. “We don’t. Not with absolute certainty. It is my duty to identify the signs, hear the words of pilgrims, and use other methods of divining intentions. When the temple first fell, I admit, I despaired. I neglected my duty, failed to see what Tenebrael wished for me to do.

“With Alyssa’s arrival, it has become clear to me that I have been given a second chance. An opportunity to make right what I had neglected.”

Alyssa had to suppress a groan. A vindictive part of her mind wondered what Lazhar would say if she mentioned the complaints Tenebrael had about him during the festival’s closing ceremony. But… no need to be cruel.

He and the rest of the town weren’t actually doing anything that Alyssa hadn’t wanted. She had given them hope back. Of course they were going to try to approach and celebrate her. Alyssa’s dislike of the situation likely didn’t enter into their minds at all. By claiming to be a messenger from Tenebrael, she had effectively given up her rights as a human. Not in the sense that she had become a monster. It was more like the way celebrities back on Earth were often viewed as objects rather than people. The way they were treated by the press and social media…

The lack of interconnected people in this world had been inconvenient at times, but right now, Alyssa couldn’t be more pleased that they didn’t have any websites to plaster her face all over.

Refocusing on the rubble of the temple, Alyssa sighed. For this village, it was definitely going to get worse once she fixed the temple. Maybe fixing it now, without too many people around, would let her slip away before things got too hectic. She could jump on Izsha, head off to her house, and hide out there until everyone else was ready to leave.

It was mostly Brakkt who wanted to stay at this point. He and Fela had been going around, scaring villagers while searching for any more demonic activity.

Like she had done with the table, Alyssa tried to picture the temple fixing itself. She tried to imagine shards melding together into one seamless structure. But Alyssa never felt the surge of warmth building up inside her. The words didn’t come.

Something told her what was missing. Alyssa couldn’t explain how she knew. Nothing whispered into her mind. No obvious signs presented themselves to her. It was just… instinct.

“That stupid angel wants the town to watch.”

“What was that?”

Despite mumbling under her breath, Lazhar had heard from a few paces away. Hoping that he hadn’t heard her calling Tenebrael stupid, Alyssa spoke a little louder. “How soon can the town be gathered here?”

“Right away!”

“Wait… wait,” Alyssa said, reconsidering. “It’s the middle of the day. People are out working, harvesting, and felling trees. Don’t disturb their work more than it already has been. Wait until this evening. After nightfall.” She waited just a moment before adding on one last thing. “And it isn’t a requirement to show up. If people are tired from a long day of work and just want to relax in their homes, make sure they know that I won’t be offended in the slightest.”

Take that you stupid angel. With any luck, a full day of hard work would tire out at least some of the village. They would still have a temple popping up overnight. That should stave off any demonic menace even if they didn’t witness the temple’s restoration in person.

Unfortunately, she had a feeling that most people would show up even with her request that they relax.

“And you can rest for the remainder of the day as well.”

“Oh I couldn’t do that.”

“Of course not,” Alyssa mumbled. Lazhar had unknowingly proved her point about people showing up. The rest of the town almost certainly had similar feelings. Even if there were heretics or atheists among them, they would probably still show up just to watch what had been the center of their village for so long return to its proper form.

“I’ll be back just as soon as I put the word out about the gathering tonight.” He said so, but he hesitated as if waiting for Alyssa to say something else. When she didn’t, he slowly shuffled off, giving Kasita a nod as he passed her.

Only when she couldn’t hear his heavy footsteps did Alyssa let out a long groan. “Ughhhh. I think I would rather fight three demonic Takers at once than deal with this.”

“Show me how to connect to Tenebrael and I’ll take your devoted followers off your hands for you.”

“I don’t know how I could show you. Tenebrael did it to me intentionally the first time. Since then, both times have been an accident. But I doubt you would enjoy a bunch of humans running around you. I got sick of it after ten minutes.”

“But ordering around humans hasn’t been a dream of yours.”

“That’s true,” Alyssa said with a sigh as she sat down. The bed-like benches that were around the festival flower hadn’t been damaged by the temple’s collapse, so they provided perfectly adequate sitting locations. They weren’t actually that comfortable considering they were essentially deathbeds, but they probably couldn’t have much cushion or padding while outdoors. She wasn’t sure if people were supposed to just sit on them whenever like they were park benches, but if someone complained, she would just take off her sunglasses and give them a glare.

Like the benches, the festival flower had escaped the temple’s destruction unscathed. It didn’t look like much at the moment. The flower was currently under a glass dome, protected from the elements. And also rain? Did people water it? Or was it all magic? The lavender petals had yet to bloom. Though, now that she thought about it, why were the petals lavender in color? Tenebrael had a theme of black or grey with bits of white. Shouldn’t the flower be the same? If Alyssa were Tenebrael, she would have made the flower black.

How old was the festival? That was a good question. It was possible that Tenebrael hadn’t always been going through a goth phase.

Alyssa had a thought to destroy the flower. The ritual sacrifice it represented was fairly abhorrent to her moral center. However, she wasn’t sure that she could. Not now that she knew just how important faith in Tenebrael was. It was a disgusting practice, but a handful of already suicidal people dying was a far better alternative to entire cities being overrun with demons.

Still, the temptation was there.

Lying back and ignoring it was the best option. The less she thought about it, the less she would feel the urge to flick some spell toward it. Instead, she decided to try to make the best of her vacation by taking a little relaxing rest beneath the bright blue sky.

Kasita settled in near her, sitting upright around Alyssa’s knees. Her hands were on the opposite side of the stone bed, supporting her as she leaned back to stare upward.

“I wonder what people think of the moon,” she said softly.

Alyssa turned her gaze to the almost ever present moon, staring at the pockmark marring its otherwise smooth surface. Relative to the rest of the moon, it was just a tiny dimple. On Earth, no one but astronomers would likely have noticed. At least right away. But Earth’s moon was covered in craters from meteors, so a dimple wouldn’t stand out as much. “Most of Lyria knows that it was a fight with infected, thanks to the Pharaoh. I don’t think his proclamation reached very far outside the city. Maybe messengers carried the news to other large cities, but… I suppose you could go ask someone from around here.”

“I was thinking monsters rather than people. Humans tend to be fairly adaptable. I wouldn’t be surprised if, after the initial shock wore off, most humans simply shrug and go about their day. But to the inari of the southern forests, I know they use the moon in much of their foretelling of the future. I wonder how they have taken having the moon so scarred. I hope they aren’t panicked too badly.”

Using the moon in predictions… Alyssa could easily see how a scar might be seen as a sign of impending doom. “What are inari? I don’t think I’ve heard of them.”

“Mostly humanoid. Their most defining traits are their tails, which they can have up to nine of, and their pointed ears that look similar to those on a fox. Or Fela. They are a peaceful sort. I’ve heard they even have trade with some human villages, though they typically travel in disguise, hiding any inhuman features beneath heavy cloaks.”

“Hmm…” Alyssa stretched, arching her back. “You know, I thought I might open a pizza parlor if I wound up stuck in this world. I still don’t think that would be a bad idea, but I think I would enjoy traveling. Meeting people and monsters. Maybe trying to bring humans and monsters closer together.”

“Well, it certainly can be done. Look at Fela and the draken.”

“And you.”

Kasita nodded. “But there are a lot of monsters out there who, even if they are generally peaceful, would prefer that things stay as they are.”

“I bet. And there are some races that would make me nervous if they began interacting with certain others.” Like fairies. “But I can see some amazing benefits of races joining together. Like, I told you what Jason and Guillem are planning, right? If an industrial revolution happens here the same way it happened back on Earth, people are going to be connected to a degree never before seen. At home, the industrial revolution happened without elves because we don’t have monsters, but here… if humans develop trains while every other race is left behind and even hated… I don’t think things will turn out well.”

A silence hung over the two for a moment. Alyssa thought it was because of the gravity of her statement, but Kasita quickly proved that wrong.

“I don’t know what you mean by industrial revolution or trains.”

“Right. Next time we watch something on my phone, remind me to pull up some documentaries.”

“Why not now?”

Alyssa opened her mouth to shoot down the suggestion, but hesitated. They weren’t doing anything aside from waiting for nightfall. Even if Lazhar came back, it wouldn’t change anything. So, with a shrug, Alyssa pulled out her phone. Luckily, there were plenty of documentaries on the internet. It didn’t take long to find a recent one dealing with trains and how they connected continents to permanently change the way humans lived. Some BBC production.

It was pretty good. Although it wasn’t a comedy, which were Kasita’s favorite things to watch, she didn’t complain or argue even after Alyssa went on to the second episode. It was, however, a bit long. Several hour-long episodes. Before they finished the third, the sun dipped behind the rings in the sky. The moon became far more prominent and…

Lazhar came back. A good portion of the town came with him, though, like during the festival, they didn’t ascend the steps that led to the flower dais.

Alyssa ignored them. The episode was nearly finished. Besides that, it looked like people were still gathering. So she didn’t feel too bad about waiting.

Now that they had arrived, however, Alyssa found herself distracted. She could hardly pay attention to whatever was going on in the documentary. It wasn’t that they were being too noisy. If anything, noise would help. They were being too quiet. A hundred people all gathered together always talked. There was always a low background rumble of indistinguishable chatter wherever a crowd existed. But here, there was nothing. Despite not having touched the volume, it made the sound from her phone deafening.

Alyssa wound up stopping the episode early anyway.

As she stood, she looked over the assembled villagers. There were… a lot of them. Alyssa had never really had a bad bout of stage fright. True, she had never been a part of a school play or performance, but she had given speeches in front of class. Those hadn’t ever bothered her. But here and now, she could feel that tug of nervousness deep within her stomach.

Should I say something? Alyssa wasn’t sure. Giving impromptu speeches wasn’t her thing. Instead of watching the documentary, it might have been a good idea to think about what to say. But… too late now. She didn’t have anything to say.

Presumably, Tenebrael would force her to utter some prayer, just as had happened both other times Alyssa had called upon the angel’s power. If Tenebrael really cared that her followers get some kind of message, she could say it herself through Alyssa.

Without a word, Alyssa turned away from the assembly. She looked out over the moonlight-crested rubble.

Alyssa took one breath. Then another. Holding out her arms, she felt it. Just a tingle at first.

“O Tenebrael. Your people have come to you, crying out for a sign to lift their fallen spirits.” The words came to her without Alyssa thinking about them in the slightest. All she did was open her mouth. It wasn’t quite like someone had taken over her body. Not like the time when the fairy had been controlling her before she had managed to break free. If she wanted, she could clamp her mouth shut.

But she didn’t. She let the words flow.

As Alyssa spoke, her hands started glowing. The light looked white in the darkness of the night, but it was more of an outline around the actual black light.

“Your enemies sought to dishearten your people. They destroyed what was yours.” The light formed into rings. Large magic circles that hovered high over the destroyed temple. If the mystic circle that had repaired the table was complex, this was on a whole other level. There was so much motion. And it wasn’t even a flat circle. The lines weaved in and out, up and down. They wrapped around in a sphere. And it kept growing as Alyssa kept speaking.

“They thought you would become cowed if they took down an insignificant structure. Let your enemies cast their eyes on this! A monument to your very being. Let your enemies bear witness, tremble and fall to their knees in despair, knowing that you are the Dominion of this world.”

The shards of obsidian-like stone flowed like water, merging together into a great basin. A tendril of the liquid stretched out, twice as thick around as Alyssa was tall. More bubbled up. A large bulbous shape a short distance away. The tendril and bulb further formed and it quickly became apparent that this was no temple.

Alyssa stared at Tenebrael’s face as the obsidian statue solidified from the mass. It didn’t stop with just her head. Her black dress with the heart-shaped cutout in the chest rose high up into the sky. Her thigh boots followed, leaving her standing in high heels.

The height was hard to tell from the base of her feet. Alyssa guessed from the short time when her head had been at ground level that she could have stood on her shoulders at Tenebrael’s chin and still had extra room before the top of her head. One arm was outstretched, not like the Statue of Liberty, it was around Tenebrael’s eye-level rather than jutting straight up into the air. The hand was clawed with the fingers pointing upward.

Even with the full statue towering over the village, the mystic circle had not disappeared. It kept turning and moving as a faint color filled in the statue. It wasn’t true to life. Not quite. But the parts that were supposed to be skin shifted from obsidian to marble. The eyes began to glow a bright white. The tattoos around the eyes remained obsidian black. Four wings blossomed from the statue’s back, spread wide like they were shielding the town from something terrible.

The mystic circle started to shrink. It didn’t disappear. Not completely. Instead, it moved up statue-Tenebrael’s arm. Tenebrael’s outstretched hand gripped the outer edges of the ring. The interior still twisted and moved, but the outer edge locked into place.

The warmth that had flooded into Alyssa finally faded. Even though the mystic circle was still up there, the spell ended. The miracle was complete.

Alyssa stared, just as dumbstruck as the rest of the town. That… was not what she had intended at all.

“Ufu~ That’s going to instill some faith.”

“Yeah,” Alyssa mumbled, not taking her eyes off the massive statue. “I think I’m going to grab Izsha and run away.”

“Don’t want to face your adoring crowd?”

Alyssa shuddered, afraid to turn around. Everyone would be staring up at the statue. They wouldn’t look at her. Still, she didn’t turn.

She just shook her head and walked away, heading toward the graveyard that used to sit behind the temple.


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030.003

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Vacationing

Carpentry


“So. You think you’re some kind of prophet now?”

Alyssa grimaced at the tone of her mother’s voice. Their relationship had been strained ever since she had arrived. This certainly wasn’t going to help matters. But… “I had to do something.”

“And that something was to pretend to be a messenger from these people’s god?”

“Yes.”

Lisa snapped her head over to Alyssa, directly looking at her for perhaps the first time since the little speech out in front of the villagers. For part of that, it had probably been the light. Alyssa didn’t blame anyone for not wanting to look at her with that going on. It had been beyond bright. But it had been a while since Alyssa had canceled that particular spell.

Miracle?

Either way, the look Alyssa was getting at the moment was just too scrutinizing. “Don’t look so surprised. I told you before that people get infected when they lose faith in Tenebrael. The demons see that as an opportunity to jump in and corrupt them. With the temple destroyed and some of their community already dead? The rest of the villagers would be dead—or worse—within a month. So yes, if pretending to be some disciple of Tenebrael’s saves even half of them, then I would do it again and again.”

“Is it really pretending?”

Blinking, Alyssa glanced over to where Irulon sat at the inn’s counter. “What?”

Irulon set a mug of her own Tyrian wine down on the wood as she looked over. They had been inside for well over an hour, but the glass still looked full. Thinking back, Alyssa couldn’t remember her ever bringing it to her lips. Though, admittedly, she hadn’t been paying all that much attention.

Her thoughts had been elsewhere. Even before her mother had vocalized her opinions on the matter. Every way she figured it, Alyssa felt like she had solved one problem by creating a dozen more. Before arriving, she had actually been looking forward to a visit to Teneville. A chance to see the brothers again.

But now? She was dreading their return.

They had gone off with Brakkt. As the de facto leaders of the village, they had a responsibility to ensure that the mess of the destroyed house was cleaned up and completely devoid of any demonic artifacts. Lazhar had wanted to stay anyway, but Alyssa insisted. He needed to care for his people long before he worried about her. The fact that he had taken that as gospel and hadn’t argued more did not sit well with Alyssa.

More than anything, Alyssa just wanted to slip out the back door, go home, pick up some guns, then head back up to Lyria and pretend none of this vacation had ever happened. But if she did that, the people here might think they were being abandoned again. She would have to stick around at least for a short amount of time. A day. Maybe two at the most. Then she could come up with some excuse. Other places needed her guidance, or some garbage like that.

“Is it really pretending?” Irulon said again after a long silence. She still hadn’t touched her wine. Instead, she shifted on the stool to face fully toward Alyssa. “I’ve been thinking about it for a while. Pretty much since the desert trip. But I didn’t want to mention anything because I know your personality well enough to know that you wouldn’t like the idea. But… Aren’t you a prophet? Tenebrael brought you here from a whole different world. She has appeared before you and has spoken to you in the past. Your eyes… Casting that spell without your deck of cards… Those are just further proof that she is allowing you to use her power.”

Alyssa… stared. She could hardly believe what she was hearing. Lazhar, Tenebrael’s high priest, would say something like that without a hint of irony. She expected that kind of thing from him. But for Irulon to say that with such a straight face… Slowly, Alyssa buried her head in her hands. Maybe she preferred her mother’s disappointment in the situation. At least there was little chance of Lisa getting on her knees in reverence.

“I’m not going to start worshiping the ground you walk on,” Irulon said like she could read minds. “I know you well enough to know how much you would hate that. All I wanted was to make sure you understood your situation fully.” With a casual shrug, Irulon turned away. She picked up her mug again and, this time, brought it to her lips for a small sip. “Incidentally, I don’t suppose you can use Tenebrael’s power to fix her temple, could you?”

“The only thing I’ve ever done with it was that light. And view souls, I suppose. Building a temple out of rubble seems like it might be a daunting task.”

“I only ask because, as noble as your efforts toward preventing infection were, I doubt they will be enough.”

Alyssa slumped. “What do you mean?” she asked, hoping that she was misunderstanding something. If she had just convinced a whole village that she was a messenger from Tenebrael for nothing…

“That light you created was impressive. I certainly hadn’t felt anything like it before. Small towns like this are generally devoid of magic entirely, save perhaps for one or two people who are capable of casting Flame. They’ll have found it even more impressive.” Irulon paused to take another sip of her wine before looking over to Alyssa. “But there is nothing persistent about it. Most of the village wasn’t even around to experience it. Unless you’re planning on staying in this village permanently—”

“Definitely not,” Alyssa said without hesitation. That would be a nightmare. At least she could disappear in a city as large as Lyria if she wanted.

“Then that light will be nothing more than a memory in the minds of a few. And memories fade. Meanwhile, the rubble of the temple will stick around. Even if it gets cleared away, the absence of the temple will stick out prominently. It will be a constant reminder of what has been lost. And constant reminders do not fade with time.

“Not to mention visitors. They won’t have experienced you or Tenebrael’s light at all. All they will have are the second-hand accounts of faded memories. Hearing about something difficult to imagine without experiencing it… and a destroyed temple. One of those things will spread further and faster than the other. I don’t think I need to say which.”

“Great,” Alyssa grumbled. Irulon was right. “Great.” Of course she was right. Irulon wasn’t infallible. She got things wrong all the time. But usually, only when she had incomplete information. That wasn’t the case here. “Maybe I can make an orb of Tenebrael’s light hover above the temple?” she said, looking between Irulon and her mother.

Lisa gave one of those ‘This is your problem, not mine. You figure it out,’ kind of shrugs. Thankfully, Irulon was a bit more helpful.

“Would it be permanent?”

“Uh…”

“Because that would probably work if it was. But if it isn’t, then as soon as it disappears, it will be just another thing that has abandoned them.”

Ugh. Irulon, of course, was right. Why couldn’t things be simple? She couldn’t even blame Tenebrael for this. It was those stupid demons. If not for their plague, it wouldn’t have mattered that the temple was destroyed. Tenebrael probably wouldn’t have been too happy, but at least no one would have to worry about death and damnation.

Alyssa jumped back, almost falling out of her chair as a shard of glass hit the wood table between her and her mother. The wood immediately started breaking apart, falling to the ground in pieces. Lisa looked just as shocked as Alyssa felt. As one, they turned to Irulon.

“Something to practice on,” Irulon said as she went back to her wine.

“Practice! Practice what? You destroyed Yzhemal’s table!”

“That won’t be a problem if you put it back together. I’m sure you can do it. Tenebrael put me back together and I am far more complex than a table.”

“I am not Tenebrael!”

“Yes. I am aware. That is why I destroyed something I don’t care about rather than something you or I own.”

“That just makes it worse!” Alyssa shouted as she stared down at what had once been a table. The spell had finished dicing it apart. Despite being made out of wood, the table now looked like broken shards of glass all piled up.

“Better hurry,” Irulon said like the situation didn’t concern her in the slightest. “The others might be back before long.”

Ugh.” Alyssa groaned. Hand her a hammer and a table saw and she could put one together. It wouldn’t be the nicest thing around, but she could make something functional. Of course, even the world’s largest hammer wouldn’t put together the shards and sawdust that this table had become. She didn’t know the first thing about fixing tables with magic. It wasn’t like she could just wish the table back together.

Could I?

Alyssa stared at the remains, wishing it were back together with her hand extended toward the pile. She even tried visualizing the whole table. Regular magic functioned off visualization. At least for her. Everyone else had to shout words, but Alyssa just imagined something happening and it happened so long as she had the proper spell card in her deck.

Nothing was happening now. The table shards remained stubbornly separated.

“Weren’t you saying something out there?”

“Out… To all the villagers?”

Irulon nodded slowly.

“Uh. I said something like Tenebrael hadn’t abandoned them and then told—”

“No. No. Before that. You asked Tenebrael to show her faithful a sliver of her light.”

Blinking, Alyssa tried to think back. It had been a hectic few moments. She had been hopped up on adrenaline from the brief fight with the demon. Her plan had been to convince the people that Tenebrael was with them just as much as she had always been with them… Well, rather, she had wanted to convince them that Tenebrael actually cared about them when the reality was almost the exact opposite. But the actual words she had spoken were a blur in her mind.

Irulon wouldn’t just make things up, so Alyssa must have said something… must have asked Tenebrael to help. But… was that something Alyssa would have done? Alyssa didn’t like asking Tenebrael for help. When she did, she asked her questions to the angel’s face. And Tenebrael had complained in the past about answering prayers.

Was that what I did? Said a prayer to Tenebrael?

The thought left a sour taste in Alyssa’s mouth, but the more she thought about it, the more it made sense. After all, Tenebrael had explained that the Enochian on regular spell cards was effectively a prayer to her asking her to intervene on the caster’s behalf. She had also said that she had granted a broad permission to her entire world just so that she didn’t have to do any work regarding the magic system.

So, lacking the Enochian on a spell card, Alyssa must have substituted in a verbalized prayer. The biggest question was how Alyssa had known to do that. It was much like how Tenebrael announced what she was doing before she actually cast a spell, so perhaps she had taken inspiration from that. But… Tenebrael didn’t phrase her words as a prayer. If Alyssa was taking cues from Tenebrael, would she really have said it as a prayer?

Looking back down at the remains of the table, Alyssa extended a hand and closed her eyes. She took a deep breath and slowly let it out.

Something was different now. The warmth filling her surged. Not quite to the degree that it had back in front of the villagers, but it was more than the neutral level that she had grown accustomed to.

Opening her mouth, the words just flowed. “Tenebrael. By your glory and your grace, all things shall be made whole.”

The tips of Alyssa’s fingernails turned black as Tenebrael’s oddly colored light burst forth. Another mystic circle formed. Spirals of a turbine engine, Enochian detailed beyond that of any examples Alyssa had seen on spell cards, dashed lines and dotted triangles. The geometry of the circle was far more complex than even the worst Fractal or Time spell. To make matters even worse, the circle was moving. The spirals were unwinding and the Enochian changed with every second.

The table moved. It didn’t move in any way that Alyssa expected. She had thought that the shards would all fly off, finding their original position before somehow merging with their neighbors to form a finished structure. Instead, the table just rose straight up from the sawdust, completely whole. A smooth top. A single post down the center. Four smaller legs jutting off the post. When the blackish white lines of the magic circle finally faded, there wasn’t a single speck of sawdust left.

Both Irulon and Lisa were staring. Neither said a word. Alyssa, for that matter, hadn’t said anything either. She was gaping just as much as them. Realizing that triggered a jolt of adrenaline. That was enough to break her out of her shock, at least partially.

Reaching her hand out to brush against the table, she was almost surprised to find it solid. It didn’t look how it used to. Before, the flat tabletop had been made with several cut planks. Each one had been different from the last. Some were smoother. Others were fatter.

Now, it was a perfectly smooth tabletop. Like something out of modern society. It even had a protective varnish, although it didn’t really look like wood anymore. It was just… smooth and uniform.

“All things shall be made whole,” Irulon said softly.

Alyssa snapped her head away from the table to find Irulon staring at it with her eyes all black with white rings. “I… I didn’t mean to say that?”

“Are you asking me or telling me?”

Alyssa looked down at her hands. Her fingernails, specifically. For a few minutes there, her fingernails had been just as midnight black as Tenebrael’s. They weren’t anymore. All her nails were normal. Even before being torn away from Earth, Alyssa hadn’t been the biggest fan of fingernail polish. Bringing a nail clipper with her from home had been one of her best decisions. People here tended to carve away their nails with sharp knives or big metal shears that looked like they were better suited toward shearing sheep.

Her initial thought had been that Tenebrael’s black nails were a result of paint like any normal person’s. Or rather, she hadn’t thought much of it at all. They were fingernails. Average. Ordinary. Hardly worth mentioning under normal circumstances. But now, she had to wonder if the black look to them wasn’t some aspect of angelic power.

“I meant to say,” Alyssa said slowly. “I meant something like ‘return the table to how it was.’ Or something similar. I didn’t mean to mention Tenebrael at all.”

Irulon’s eyes lit up. Not black and white or violet or any other color. It was a metaphorical lighting. The same look a child got on their birthday when they saw presents or cake. A small bit of motion pulled Alyssa’s attention away from Irulon’s face down to her hands.

She didn’t know when, but Irulon had traded her wine for a notebook and pen. Irulon’s hand moved quickly but perfectly steadily, demonstrating just how she could afford the time to fill her spell book with complex Fractal cards. On the paper in front of her, spirals and lines covered the majority. It was the exact same spell that Alyssa had just cast using Tenebrael’s power, though this version was obviously not moving. The Enochian was missing completely from the circle. In a column along one side, various characters were all lined up with little numbers to their sides. Notes for later? The order in which the characters appeared?

As perfect as the replica on the paper might be, Alyssa had to wonder what Irulon intended to do with it. Was she trying to distill a spell card version of it? Something anyone with the proper capability could cast? Or maybe she wanted to create a separate spell that would draw a moving image in the air to replicate the miracle that Alyssa had cast. Alyssa didn’t think that would work, but she didn’t bother saying so. Irulon had to know already.

And if it did work… That opened up a lot of possibilities.

Lisa finally moved, leaning heavily against the table. She pressed one hand against the side, looking like she was trying to break it again. Alyssa wasn’t sure what wood the normal tables were made from, but she knew it was fairly hard stuff. It had to be to withstand people using it over and over again. But the tables weren’t joined together with metal screws or fasteners the way a modern table would be. They were all pure wood, mostly using pegs to keep parts of the tables from slipping around where they shouldn’t. Although she hadn’t done a thorough inspection, Alyssa doubted that the new table had pegs at all. The entire thing, from surface to feet, was one piece of wood.

And a fairly tough wood at that if the strain on her mother’s face was any indication.

“Before we leave,” Irulon said, ignoring Lisa’s efforts to break the table again, “we should gather up as many of the villagers as possible and herd them around the ruins of the temple. Then you put it back together. Preferably with a big speech.”

Faith in Tenebrael would be restored. The villagers would have a new tale of Tenebrael to relay to visitors and offcomers, further spreading word of her. Most importantly, it would hopefully eliminate the possibility of more plague incidents in this region.

But there was one small problem. “This table looks nothing like the original. What if the temple doesn’t look the same either?”

“Then we simply say that any renovation to the temple is Tenebrael’s will. After all, can you say that such a thing isn’t true? I can’t. Not after hearing that you hadn’t intended to speak the words you said. Tenebrael is clearly acting through you at a time when she can’t be present herself.”

Alyssa sighed, not at all happy that Irulon was probably right. First of all, it meant that Tenebrael was somehow influencing at least a few of her actions. That thought was distinctly uncomfortable. While she didn’t like it, if it was limited to casting spells that she already wanted to cast, she supposed that she could stand it. The second she noticed herself acting strangely any other time, she would have to try cutting off the connection between them.

That was something she would have to ask Kasita to watch out for. As much as she trusted Irulon, Alyssa couldn’t help but feel that Irulon would encourage Tenebrael’s acting through her proxy rather than try to help stop it. Mentioning the fear in front of her mother would have a similar, if exact opposite, effect. As much as she didn’t like it, Alyssa recognized that, at least at the moment, she needed her connection with Tenebrael. Her mother hounding her to break the connection would only irritate matters.

But, aside from the possibility that some of her actions might be influenced, there was another problem with what Irulon had said. Tenebrael can’t be present. Alyssa had thought it before, but hearing it like that, it was almost certainly confirmation that something had happened to Tenebrael.

Alyssa still didn’t have a clue as to how she might help the angel.

The door opened, revealing a slightly less intense problem, though a slightly more immediate one. Half the village, at least, was outside the door. She had heard the noise of the crowd before the door had opened, though it had been faint through the walls. But now, it was silent as people pushed and tried to catch a glimpse of her. Thankfully, they didn’t all try to push inside. Brakkt and Kasita walked in. Trailing after them, Lazhar and Yzhemal. The former had his hat in his hands and looked like he had been trying to wring it dry a hundred times over. The latter kept a far more stoic demeanor, but Alyssa couldn’t help but notice the way he looked at her.

Neither acted in the way she remembered them acting.

Something told her that if she asked for a meal, she would get a feast.

This is going to be a long vacation.


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030.002

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Vacationing

Fiat Lux


Self-preservation was an interesting instinct. Not the fact that it existed—that was perfectly understandable—simply the way that the brain went about its task of keeping itself alive. For instance, Alyssa had to wonder exactly what was going through some poor villager’s head when they opened the door to leave their home for the day but saw a parade of frightening characters walking past. One gigantic dinosaur, one Darth Vader, one hellhound with literal fire pouring from her eyes, and three girls who, in comparison, were relatively normal—though one of those three was a mimic. The villager screamed and slammed his door shut again. Like the flimsy wood would protect him from a four ton monster.

And then, because of the scream, a few other people started emerging from their homes as well. Alyssa could see them move with her soul-sight. The moment the first villager screamed, bits of his soul lanced off to a few of the surrounding houses, interacting with the people inside. And, for some reason that Alyssa couldn’t fathom, a blood-curdling shout from a member of their own community triggered curiosity rather than any kind of fight or flight instinct.

Two more doors opened. One with a younger woman. One with an older woman and a little child that couldn’t be older than four. The older woman grabbed her daughter and dragged her back inside without a word. The younger woman… Alyssa managed to send out a quick Levitate to keep her head from slamming into the ground as she fainted. The fainting didn’t last long. Maybe thirty seconds. By the time she started to stir, Alyssa and the others were well past her house.

That didn’t stop the woman from getting to her feet and rushing away toward the fields, maybe to warn some of the people out taking care of them. Really, running didn’t seem like a very good option when confronted with a draken either. They were fast and strong. If Ensou so wished, she probably wouldn’t have made it five steps before he chomped off her head.

Alyssa was really glad that the draken were on her side.

The house with the infected was right at the southern edge of the town. The furthest building from the Temple. That was probably coincidence, but it was convenient. There were less houses around. Less chance of bystanders being caught up in any fight that went down.

And there definitely was going to be a fight. Fela walked in an aggressive stance. Her entire body was poised to pounce mid-stride. Brakkt had his sword in hand as he marched forward. Ensou was less obviously ready to attack, but having been around draken for quite a bit of time, Alyssa could see how the tension in its muscles differed from a casual jaunt through the forest. Irulon simply walked forward, looking furious as her hand hovered over her open tome.

For her part, Alyssa summoned a scythe. Tenebrael had called her a reaper on occasion. As much as she protested the title whenever it got brought up, she definitely had some reaping to do right now.

“It’s in the south west corner of the house. I can’t tell exactly what it is doing.”

“Is it up against the wall? Or closer to the center of the house?”

“Definitely closer to the wall.”

“Close enough to reach with your scythe?”

Alyssa blinked her eyes open, looking at Irulon. “Through the wall?”

“Spectral Axe passes through physical objects without interacting with them. If this infected is right up against the wall, just slice right through him. Easy.”

“That’s…” It would be possible. Looking up at her scythe, it was taller than she was if she put the base of the haft right up against the ground. The house wasn’t even that large. Unless someone stood right in the very center, she could probably hit them from some point around the building. Like almost every building in the village, its walls were made up of cobblestone up to about the waist level where it turned into wood logs. Mud or clay had been slathered between the cracks. Without a window, it was impossible to see inside with normal eyes. So she could hit their target, but…

“What if we’re wrong?”

Brakkt took the words right out of Alyssa’s mouth. If this wasn’t a demon, if this was just someone with a strange soul, or perhaps even a monster just trying to live among the villagers in peace, she would have just murdered them. Fela’s sense of smell was a fairly damning bit of evidence against the idea that they were mistaken, but what if the actual infected had run off, leaving someone behind who was currently in trouble?

“I’ll check.”

Kasita, having just volunteered herself, was already walking up to the house.

No one stopped her. Especially not Alyssa. She knew well how much Kasita wanted to help out. The actual fighting wasn’t something she could do, but a quick peek? That was her specialty.

Right before she reached the door, Kasita’s form vanished. Closing her eyes, Alyssa watched her soul worm its way underneath the door.

Kasita’s soul was different. Humans all had roughly the same kind of soul. Fela’s was more fiery, but still had recognizable elements of human souls. The draken… were like eggs? It was harder to say exactly. It didn’t help that the forms were probably all just Alyssa’s imagination and her projecting ideas on them. But Kasita’s soul was tiny. Just a little tiny spider-like orb. Even when she was in her human form, it was the same. Alyssa assumed that the size had something to do with how most of her real body was in another reality, or something similar.

The moment Kasita was fully under the door, an interaction occurred. One of those sharings of souls that happened all the time. Except this was one-way. A tiny bit of Kasita broke off—though her main soul never shrank—and dashed toward the suspected demon.

The very instant Kasita’s soul touched the demon, it reacted, rising into the air like someone jumping to their feet.

“It noticed!”

“Sever Reality.” A mirrored dome built itself from the ground up, forming around the building in a wide enough circle to encompass it entirely along with a sizable amount of land around it.

Alyssa and her allies were all inside, trapped with the demon.

“Split Reality,” Irulon said, not finished. A lance of glass fired from her outstretched hand, impacting the wall near the door that Kasita was moving back under. The wood and cobblestone immediately began falling apart with the pieces breaking into smaller and smaller chunks.

Between the dust and debris, Alyssa got her first look at the being inside.

It was a child. Like the one Alyssa had seen earlier, it couldn’t have been more than five years old. If she were standing next to it, the child wouldn’t have come up to her waist. But that was where the innocence ended. Everything else about the creature was just… wrong. Its aggressive stance, the way its face twisted and snarled at them, and, above all, the burning embers in its eyes.

There was at least one body in the room with it. At least one because it was somewhat hard to tell. Not only was the gap in the building’s wall constantly shifting as more debris turned to dust, but the body wasn’t all in one piece. Much like those corpses Alyssa had stumbled upon with the Pharaoh, it had been torn apart. One of the arms was jutting out of a pentagram that had been carved out of the ground. The fingers had been severed and were placed at the tips of the star. From the side of a bed, the head looked down at the array with gouged out eyes.

It had the same brown hair that the child had. A parent.

While Alyssa stared, stunned at the scene in front of her, Irulon and Brakkt had none of her hesitation. Three more spells fired off toward the child, two directly at it while the third bounced off the mirrored dome. The first dodge was a simple hop. To dodge the second, it twisted its spine in almost a full one-eighty, bending as it moved to go into a handstand. It twisted again, barely scraping beneath the third spell, planting its feet into the ground. Rising to a standing position like a puppet on strings, the child gripped a severed leg by the ankles.

Brakkt strode forward, dauntless and imposing. Even when it flung the leg in his direction, he didn’t react beyond slicing with his sword, severing the leg into two pieces that fell to either side of him. Fela moved behind him, keeping her distance to the point where she wouldn’t get in the way, but where she would be able to provide backup if necessary.

Alyssa, finally falling out of her stupor, allowed the scythe in her hands to vanish. It was too dangerous a weapon with three people fighting in close quarters. A small scratch could kill Brakkt or Fela. Or Kasita, who hadn’t yet reappeared.

This demon was clearly more alert and aware than the one she had happened across with the Pharaoh, but it didn’t seem quite as dangerous as the Taker. Even if it had only been for a short time, Alyssa had managed to stall the Taker with Spectral Chains.

Some sixth sense must have warned the infected. Just before Alyssa cast her spell, it kicked out, slamming a foot against the bed. The severed head flew off, aimed directly at Brakkt, while the bed popped into the air, blocking Alyssa’s view of the demon. The chains wrapped around the wooden frame. A tug pulled it out of the way.

The demon was nowhere to be seen.

Tense, Alyssa scanned the area. Brakkt and Fela paused while Irulon rotated slowly, like she expected to find the demon behind them.

Alyssa closed her eyes. Scanning the area with her ability to sense souls worked a lot better.

“It is behind the house, clinging to the wall, I think.” Her sight wasn’t all that precise, but within Irulon’s dome, there weren’t that many places it could be.

Brakkt started forward again, moving toward the side of the still crumbling house. But he paused, waiting just a moment.

Ensou jumped from behind Alyssa, making her stumble. It demolished the remains of the house with its landing, sending a tremor through the earth.

The demon tried to get away, but wasn’t fast enough for the draken. Its razor sharp teeth clamped around the child’s leg. Whipping its head to one side slammed the kid against the ground. A thrash to the left crushed one still-standing log of the house. Ensou wasn’t finished with only that much. Back and forth, back and forth. The child hit the ground over and over again with enough force to turn bone to dust in any normal human.

Ensou only stopped when Brakkt got close enough. One last flip of its head impaled the child on Brakkt’s sword.

Even that didn’t put it down for good. The child grasped at the sword, trying to pull itself off. Both Ensou and Brakkt kept it from moving properly.

Which gave Alyssa the time to approach. A fresh scythe appeared in her hand. With a grimace at how disgusting the whole situation was, she pierced the child’s chest and pulled.

It wasn’t as hard as pulling the Taker’s soul had been, but it was a fair deal more difficult than either of the other infected she had killed. It took three rough tugs to pull the sticky tar-like soul from the body. Even when the body went limp, the soul tried to grasp onto Brakkt, Ensou, and even Alyssa. She kept it well away from anyone, moving it to a clear area on the ruins of the house.

The demon… The real demon would show up soon.

Alyssa had half a mind to swing her scythe through the demon’s head. Maybe it wouldn’t do anything. In fact, it probably wouldn’t do anything. But even if it was just for the cathartic release, it might be worth it. Everything was the demon’s fault. Perhaps it hadn’t been a coincidence that the temple fell at roughly the same time that Alyssa met with the demon, but it wasn’t her who had destroyed it. The demons had decided to cause that misery, to cause a poor child to tear apart its own mother.

And now, Teneville, already disheartened because of Tenebrael’s temple being destroyed, was going to suffer the same fate that had befallen Lyria in the wake of the Taker and Octavia incident. The faithhazard was going to strike, potentially turning more and more of them into infected.

Looking around, Alyssa met the faces of her companions. Fela, Irulon, and even the recently reformed Kasita all had stony expressions. No smiles, no amusement, no joy in their victory without injury. Similar thoughts were probably going through their minds. They had been forced to kill a child. Even if it was an infected one, that didn’t feel right. It didn’t feel like a victory. Knowing what might befall Teneville just soured their success all the more.

The demon appeared before Alyssa could think further on the situation. Just like the other times, a pentagram burned itself into the ground near the soul. Flames flashed bright for a moment.

Then, the demon was there. Waving. She gave a jaunty flick of her wrist the way a friend might wave at someone they haven’t seen in some time.

Alyssa scowled. Almost, almost, she considered saying something. But last time, she had inadvertently wound up challenging the demon to… corrupt her? Whatever it had been, it hadn’t been good. So Alyssa said nothing. Even though she had wanted to, she didn’t even try to attack the demon with her scythe. She allowed the scythe to vanish and simply watched as the demon used her own scythe to reap the soul. Another pentagram appeared beneath it, sucking the tar-black soul down into the ground.

The demon waited a few moments after. She watched Alyssa with her one uncovered eye, perhaps expecting some conversation. When it became apparent that Alyssa was not going to say anything, she simply shrugged her shoulders and vanished just as quickly as she had come.

Which, honestly, was worrying in its own way. The demon hadn’t left behind an ember. Did that mean that it had gotten what it wanted from the one time that it had? Had that ember somehow caused the temple to collapse? Now that she was thinking about it that way, this whole incident could have been a complete byproduct of something else destroying the temple. The child could simply have lost faith in Tenebrael as a result of the temple falling and have wound up corrupted by the plague because of that.

“We should incinerate the bodies,” Irulon said, tone low.

“What will we tell the rest of the village?” Alyssa had to ask. “The dome might have hidden the truth from them, but they’ll know. In a community this small, everyone will know what happened by evening.”

“I don’t know. I… don’t know.” Irulon pulled out two cards. One, she aimed directly at the child’s body. A quiet utterance sent dark red flames rolling across its form. The second spell card was aimed at the heart of what had been a house only a few minutes ago. The flames didn’t rage. They simply burned. Irulon stared into the flames. “What does it mean, Alyssa?”

“Mean?”

“I’ve seen that temple three times in the past,” Irulon said, not breaking eye contact with the fire. “Each time, I found myself struck dumb at how… inhuman it was. Not just inhuman. It clearly had not been built by mortal hands. And now it is a pile of rubble.”

It was happening already. That wasn’t like Irulon at all. She knew what Alyssa’s glowing eyes meant and yet she was still looking like someone had crushed her hopes and dreams.

Something had to be done. And that something needed to be more than just Irulon glumly going about destroying the pentagrams with her splitting spells. It needed to be something big. Something that could give the people hope back if only to prevent more demons from popping up among them. None of the spells in her deck would fix the temple. Fractal spells could do a number of strange things, but Alyssa wasn’t sure that fixing the temple was one of them. Most of Irulon’s spells were centered around destruction anyway. If the Pharaoh were here, or if he had allowed Alyssa to photograph all his spell cards, rewinding the temple to a state where it had still been standing might have been possible.

But he wasn’t here.

A Message might get him moving, but unless his Time magic was powerful enough to bring him here instantly, it might well be too late. These people needed something uplifting now. Adding two deaths to their already disheartened community, one of them having been infected, would destroy what little morale they had.

“The dome is coming down,” Irulon said to the silent group.

As she spoke, the mirrored dome melted away.

Three dozen people had gathered around on the other side. Not the entire population of Teneville. Most were probably still out in the fields, unaware of the goings on within their home. Those here weren’t quite looking in the right direction, but, as per Irulon’s explanation the last time she had used that spell, the dome removed the contents from the outside world entirely. To them, it must have looked like a whole house had vanished.

Now, it had reappeared destroyed with two monsters standing nearby.

It only took a few seconds before the first person panicked. From there, the fear spread like a wildfire. Even before they screamed, Alyssa could see the terrified looks form on their faces as if in slow motion. In the distance, Lazhar and Yzhemal were running forward with Lisa trailing after them—Tess must have stayed back with the draken at the temple. But they weren’t going to arrive in time to calm everyone down. If the people left with their fears intact, the damage would have been done. The demon hadn’t needed to drop another ember. She had probably predicted this exact scenario.

“Sorry,” Alyssa said, not sure who she was apologizing to. Irulon? Her mother? Tenebrael? Whoever it was, only one of them heard her. Maybe she was apologizing to herself.

But she couldn’t let this stand.

“Silence!” Alyssa shouted. Reaching up, she pinched the corner of her sunglasses and pulled them off. A few people who saw her eyes gasped. One even dropped to their knees in reverence. This was Teneville. The people here had heard every word by those pilgrims who had gone through the festival. They, more than anyone else in the world, should be aware of Tenebrael’s characteristics.

But it wasn’t enough. Four people calming out of three dozen wasn’t enough. She needed everyone’s attention.

Alyssa raised her deck of cards, Annihilator on her mind. But, at the last second, she hesitated. A blast into the air would get their attention, but Annihilator was hot. It burned even those it didn’t directly touch to the point of being painful. She needed something calmer. Something more gentle. The same kind of feeling that she got when she touched angels.

Letting the deck drop, she kept one finger pointed upward. The same pose that she had seen Tenebrael perform dozens of times. She had no idea what she was doing. She couldn’t even tell if it was instinct or some divine hand guiding her. Whatever it was, the warmth from her connection to Tenebrael surged.

“Tenebrael,” she spoke aloud. “Please grace your faithful with a sliver of your light!”

A mystic circle of criss-crossing lines and shapes exploded from her raised hand. Unlike all the spells angels had cast over the past months, other people could see this one. The black light of the circle shined like a beacon. She could hear the gasps from Kasita and Irulon. More of the panicking villagers had paused to stare at her. Some, she could tell, were even more nervous than before.

The mystic circle shrunk in on itself as a blinding dark light covered the entire village. It wasn’t the harsh burn of Annihilator. It soothed. Even Alyssa could feel the soft warmth from the light.

Alyssa wasn’t trying to do anything complicated. Certainly nothing dangerous. She was simply attempting to grab attention. Light. The simplest spell. If she could cast anything using Tenebrael’s power, it would be that.

And it worked. It worked almost too well. It was so bright that no one could look at her. She had to tone it down.

The villagers and her companions came back into view as Alyssa’s eyes adjusted to the gradually dimming light. She could see them. And they could see her. Even those who had been in the middle of running away stopped to look back. Alyssa made sure to rotate slowly, meeting each pair of eyes. One by one, people gasped and put on a sudden air of reverence.

Alyssa really… had not thought far enough ahead. What was she supposed to say now? She had to say something, right?

“The… The temple was just a building,” Alyssa said, trying to project her voice just like she had learned in all those useless speech classes. “One Tenebrael hardly inhabited over the course of the year. Its destruction does not mean that she is gone or that she has abandoned us!” Suppressing a grimace—This is blasphemy. This is definitely blasphemy—Alyssa shaped the light. A simple act of will twisted it into a vague ring. Not quite a halo, but hopefully something similar to aureole from old paintings of religious figures.

Lazhar, finally having joined the ring of onlookers, clutched his hat in his hands as he dropped to his knees. “It is just like the book says,” he whispered, somehow loud enough for Alyssa to hear.

That seemed to be the trigger for everyone who hadn’t decided to kneel when she made eye contact. Seeing the high priest of Tenebrael get on his knees made everyone else drop as well.

Everyone except Alyssa’s immediate companions and… her mother.


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030.001

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Vacationing

Field of Glass


Teneville was a peaceful town. They didn’t have guards. If they had a militia, it probably wasn’t trained or capable of defending from much of anything. The way their peninsula had formed, such things really weren’t necessary. They had no real threats around them. The one route from the rest of the land to their town required going through a fairly narrow mountain pass. Large forces wouldn’t be able to traverse it easily. And they had Lyria watching from above.

They were defenseless. And if an attacking force came from sea or air—or some way more esoteric, such as magical methods of traveling—the rest of the world might not find out for weeks or months.

So it was something of a relief to find out that the town had not been attacked.

The original plan had been to head around the town, stop by Alyssa’s house out in the middle of nowhere, and leave the draken and Fela there so as to avoid alarming the villagers. That plan went out the window the moment they saw Tenebrael’s temple.

It was even worse up close.

The entire structure had collapsed in on itself. Like a toddler had stomped on it as if it were a sandcastle. Only one wall still stood, that being where the front door led out to the poisonous flower and ceremonial area. Even that was half crumbled. It was a field of obsidian glass shards, each as large as a person. Looking over the rest of the lot from her elevated position on Izsha, Alyssa felt numb.

For a lot of people of this world, they would probably feel something similar. A numbness. A worry. A panic, even. The temple of their god had fallen. Given its material and how different it was on an aesthetic level to everything else around this world, it probably hadn’t even been constructed by human hands. It was more than just a building to everyone. It was a symbol.

Lazhar had said it. The whole purpose of the festival was to give people hope. To remind them that there was something else out there, something worth fighting for. Whether or not Tenebrael deserved it, she was revered for the service she—probably unintentionally—provided. Alyssa, for as much as she had mixed feelings about the angel, couldn’t even disparage the people for their treatment of her. Some people just needed a little hope in their lives, regardless of where it came from.

With the temple gone, what would happen to the people? Would their hope crumble as well? Teneville’s isolation had likely dampened the spread of information. Depending on how recently the temple had fallen, nobody outside the peninsula might be aware of it. But word would get out eventually. Maybe it would spread wide. Maybe it would only be muted whisperings in the corners of taverns. But once the festival came back around, that would all change.

Everyone would know.

It wasn’t even hope that Alyssa was truly worried about. By Tenebrael’s own admission, her existence was a major contributing factor toward the prevention of the plague. Demons could very well begin running amok once word spread. The Juno Federation and the Society of the Burning Shadow might view the temple’s destruction as a sign of weakness. A sign of Tenebrael abandoning the rest of the world. It could very well become a trigger that would spark a true war.

And yet, Alyssa’s numbness didn’t come from the thought of war or even demons. What did the temple falling mean? For Tenebrael. For the world?

Now, perhaps more than ever, she needed to find someone dying so that she could speak to an angel. Any angel.

Tenebrael was in trouble. There was almost no doubt about that. Even if Irulon dropped dead in front of her, Alyssa doubted that Tenebrael would be the one to show up. But at this point, Alyssa would take anyone. Iosefael, Kenziel… even Adrael if it meant getting answers.

Maybe she should have taken off that demon’s mask to hear what it had to say. It wasn’t like she had needed to listen.

Looking around at the rest of her party, Alyssa couldn’t help but wonder what they might be thinking. Irulon’s eyes were black and white, signifying an active connection with her dragon. They danced here and there, examining everything while Musca carried her around the lot. Her lips were set in a constant grimace. One hand gripped her tome so tightly that it was shaking.

Fela didn’t seem like she understood the significance of the temple’s collapse. The hellhound was off Dasca’s back, walking between the shards of the temple while sniffing around. But her movements weren’t tense or worried. They were almost playful.

The same could not be said for Kasita. She looked about the same as Irulon, except with Alyssa’s face. “I don’t like this place,” she whispered from Alyssa’s back, voice tense and lacking her usual humor. “It’s like the staff or the feathers.”

“We’ll move into the town proper as soon as Brakkt returns. Just bear with it for now. If it helps, hide in my backpack or something.”

“I think I’ll do that,” Kasita said immediately before the mild pressure on Alyssa’s back vanished.

Her disappearing gave Alyssa a clear view of her mother. Like Fela, Lisa didn’t look like she understood the significance. She had been around this world for a month now, but Alyssa knew that she had gone out of her way to avoid Tenebrael’s religion and similar things. It helped that the priests were really not that pushy at all. There wasn’t much need for proselytizing when everyone already believed in the religion and Tenebrael didn’t seem to have any mandates regarding constant church going or other displays of worship.

Alyssa looked away, spotting movement. It wasn’t true movement, but rather the approach of three souls. They were out of sight, coming up the stairs that led to Tenebrael’s temple. After a moment of watching, Brakkt came into view flanked by two familiar faces.

Yzhemal and Lazhar. They looked… different.

Alyssa knew that the village had been alright, even from afar. Being able to see souls was handy for telling where people were. She hadn’t counted every single person, but there had been enough that nothing too disastrous had happened to the people.

But Lazhar looked positively haggard. When Alyssa had left Teneville, he had been a portly man with a smile on his face and a scraggly grey beard. Now he looked thinner. His dark eyes had sunken in. His cheekbones protruded a lot more and most of his beer belly had vanished.

Yzhemal had always been leaner than his brother, but that had been taken to an extreme. Both looked like they had been through a famine despite the plants and the landscape looking about the same as when Alyssa had left. If their crops were growing well, it had to be something more like depression or stress.

Both stopped suddenly as they caught sight of the draken. Brakkt had gone on foot to fetch them so as to avoid startling the entire village, but he must have told them as they didn’t look too shocked. Just frightened, which was completely understandable. To spare them having to come closer, Alyssa hopped off Izsha’s back and approached. Irulon did the same.

Alyssa didn’t know what to say. She didn’t know if they would even remember her. They had been a large impact on her life, but she had probably not been all that memorable in turn. She had shown up during a time when a hundred other random people had shown up. All she had done to distinguish herself was to work for Yzhemal for a few days and then feed them hamburgers. With her sunglasses in place, she wasn’t sure that they would recognize her even had it not been a few months since then.

Thankfully, she didn’t have to say anything. Irulon took charge.

“I assume my brother already told you who we are,” she said, hands clasped behind her back. “So no sense wasting time with introductions. What happened? How long ago? Any other relevant details?”

For a moment, neither spoke. They looked to each other, then both turned and stared between Brakkt and Alyssa before returning to Irulon.

It was Lazhar who spoke first in a trembling voice. Where he once had a boisterous tone, there was now a hollow note. “One week. It was… one week ago. I… I…”

“We were tending the fields late-afternoon,” Yzhemal said, speaking far more clearly. “Well, I was tending to some fields. I believe Lazhar was napping beneath the haystack.”

Lazhar just sighed.

“The first sign that something had gone wrong was a loud rumble. The ground shook beneath our feet. We weren’t sure what it was at first. It wasn’t until young Gren pointed out the plume of smoke rising that I started rushing back to the village. Thought it was a fire at first. But no. It was the temple falling. Each block of stone sent up a column of dust as it hit the ground.”

“We… didn’t know what to do. There was no way to stop it,” Lazhar’s shoulders slumped. He extended his hands out, grasping at nothing before pulling them back to his chest. “The temple just fell apart before our eyes.”

“A week. Hm.” Irulon turned, looking back to the fallen structure. Her eyes were black and white, but neither of the brothers had said anything about that. Perhaps Brakkt had warned them about that as well. But Irulon didn’t stay looking at the temple for long. She turned again, this time pausing on Alyssa. “Seven days exactly? Or something more like ten days?”

Yzhemal put a hand to his scraggly beard and started tugging it slightly. “Well, let’s see. The day it happened, didn’t sleep that night. Then we neglected the fields for at least three days. It took a day to pull Lazhar out of the distillery… then…” He nodded slowly. “Nine or ten sounds about right. Why?”

“Have you noticed any villagers isolating themselves?”

“Since that day, all of Teneville has been feeling down.”

Lazhar sighed, shoulders slumping even more, if that was possible.

“I would say that there are a few that I haven’t seen in several days. Would that not be normal for a situation like this? Tenebrael’s temple is… gone.”

“Perhaps. But there might be something more sinister afoot,” Irulon said. Breaking eye contact with Alyssa, she turned back out to the shards of obsidian. “Fela! Do you smell anything?”

Alyssa felt a cold drop of sweat run down her back. Until Irulon shouted, she hadn’t quite realized why a few extra days mattered. But that shout sealed it. Irulon was talking about demons. More importantly, ten days ago would have been the day Alyssa had met with the demon.

The hellhound bounded over, not even caring that Yzhemal stumbled back at the sight of her or that Lazhar looked like he had just left a sauna.

“There is something here, but it is faint. Old. Nothing has been near here in a few days.”

Irulon nodded as if she had expected that response. “What about the rest of the village?” When Fela shrugged, Irulon pointed down the steps Yzhemal and Lazhar had just ascended. “It isn’t that large. Running through would only take a few minutes.”

Fela looked like she wanted to protest, but a glare from Irulon made her snap her mouth shut. “I’ll be back in a minute then.”

As Fela bounded off, forcing Lazhar and Yzhemal to scramble out of the way, Alyssa spoke. “Kasita, are there any pentagrams in these ruins? Or… embers?”

Kasita formed up next to Alyssa, appearing out of thin air. She was already in the middle of shaking her head as she formed. “I don’t see anything, but there is a lot of area that I can’t see at all. Everything underneath rubble is just as invisible to me as it is to you.”

“Wh-What’s going on?” Lazhar stammered, eyes wide as he stared at Kasita. Behind him, his brother was staring down the steps, probably watching after Fela.

“Demons,” Irulon said, bluntly. “It was very probably demons that destroyed the temple. The same day that Alyssa found that ember. It can’t be a coincidence… Hm.”

“Alyssa?” Yzhemal looked away from the rest of the village and stared right. He definitely remembered.

But he was looking at the wrong person.

“Not her,” Alyssa stepped in front of Kasita as she pointed to herself. “Me. Hello again. I don’t suppose you’ve seen anyone with hot coals burning in their eyes?”

“What…”

“Sorry. I didn’t want to meet like this again. We were going to leave the draken and Fela at… a camp, but we saw the temple collapsed and feared that something bad had happened. Something badder,” she added with a glance toward the rubble. “Uh… how are the tomatoes coming along?”

“Smooth,” Kasita whispered.

Deciding not to give Kasita the satisfaction of a response, Alyssa ventured a little closer to the brothers. But she didn’t get to say anything before Fela came barreling back up the steps.

“There is one here!” Her large furry claw pointed off toward one of the small homes that made up the majority of the village. “It’s a fairly weak one, I think. Not a very strong smell. But it is there.”

“Keep an eye on it,” Brakkt said. A short whistle from him called over one of the draken. The one carrying his armor. “No sense not being fully prepared even if it is weak. Irulon, Tess, if you would assist me.”

“You should have brought your own servants,” Irulon grumbled. Despite her protests, she headed over and helped him unload and equip the armor.

While they worked, Alyssa waved her mother over. Alyssa had mentioned demons and the plague in the past, but Lisa hadn’t ever actually seen one, let alone fought against one. With any luck, that wouldn’t change today. Still, she should be prepared. Taking her aside, along with the brothers—both of whom looked bewildered by the sudden activity—Alyssa started explaining a few things. Given that it was Tenebrael’s primary presence on the world, Teneville probably hadn’t ever experienced plague outbreaks the way Lyria had in recent weeks. In fact, this was probably the very first infected south of the mountains.

It made Alyssa wonder just how smaller villages avoided infection. Larger cities, like those the nobles came from, probably had their own plague containment teams. Smaller towns like those between Lyria and Teneville didn’t even have a few guards let alone ways of dealing with demons. Was faith in Tenebrael just that high among the smaller hamlets and villages?

Very possibly, actually.

But Owlcroft had been a smaller village. That was the town that had been so overrun that it had turned into the pit. Perhaps, after this was all done, she would ask if there were any roaming plague containment teams financed by Lyria. And if there weren’t, perhaps some should be made. Just a small group that would circle around the entire continent, visiting villages and maybe even preaching Tenebrael’s praises in an attempt to lessen the likelihood of another Owlcroft.

For the moment, she was focused on her mother and the brothers. Specifically, on keeping them safe. “You all should stay here until we’re done.”

“We? Who is we?”

Suppressing a grimace, Alyssa glanced away from her mother to where Brakkt was half into his armor. “Me, Brakkt, Irulon, and Fela.”

“Why are you involved in this at all?”

Because it is my fault, Alyssa did not say. It could have been a coincidence that the temple fell the same day she had gone to the bedehouse. She doubted it. “Because I’m a Rank Six arcanist. A pistol or regular sword won’t hurt these things at all. But I can. I watched one hold up its own mostly-decapitated head and still have the upper hand in a fight against all of us. If it wasn’t for me, Irulon, and Kasita, it probably would have won.”

“I doubt this will be as strong as the Taker,” Irulon called over from where she was adjusting Brakkt’s pauldrons. “But if it is, we can pull the same trick as last time.”

“That’s… hopefully not going to happen. If this is a weak demon, a Spectral Axe should do the trick. I’d rather avoid carving a new hole in the moon if we can help it.” Tenebrael hadn’t been too happy about that. “It’ll be fine, mom. Just stay here. I can handle myself. And it isn’t like I’ll be alone.”

“You’re not going to destroy anything, are you?” Lazhar asked with trepidation lacing his voice. “I don’t know if the village can take it right now.”

“Better to incinerate the entire valley than allow another pit to form,” Irulon said, blunt as usual. Or maybe even more blunt. And somewhat aggressive as well. The temple being in the state it was might be hurting her more than it seemed.

“We’ll try to keep things as contained as possible,” Alyssa said softly. “But…” She moved over to where Fela was staring unblinkingly at the house she had pointed out. “Is it just the one?”

“I think so, but there might be more than one inside the house. Hard to tell. I kept my distance to avoid startling them just like Trik always tells me.”

“Good,” Alyssa said as she closed her eyes. Taking a breath, she looked. Not with her eyes, but with that odd sense of souls that came with being connected to Tenebrael. Forms popped up everywhere. Most houses had at least one soul within them. She spotted a few out in the fields, but far less than she had expected. Homing in on the house that Fela was watching, she saw it.

A form that wasn’t quite like the rest. It was hard to believe that she had missed it earlier, but she supposed that the temple’s collapse had proved distracting enough to hide it from her sight. If a normal soul was like a flame, this soul was like slime. They didn’t truly have any shape or form to her sight, but she could just feel the difference.

It had to be the demon.

Sweeping her gaze around the village, including toward Lazhar and Yzhemal, Alyssa found nothing more.

“I only see one. Can’t tell how it sizes up to the Taker though.”

“As long as we aren’t ambushed,” Irulon said, “we should be fine.”

“Overconfidence is a slow and insidious killer,” Brakkt chastised as he settled his helmet on his head. “In this particular case, it might be a rather quick killer if we are not careful. Do not forget how Octavia and the Taker moved and fought. I could have been overwhelmed in an instant had I let my guard drop. And neither you nor Alyssa have your armor.”

“Yes,” Irulon said with a clear scowl directed at herself. “This was supposed to be a relaxing journey. Now I feel foolish for having berated your attachment to your armor.”

“What is done is done. Are you prepared?”

Irulon gripped her tome in her hand and nodded slowly.

“Alyssa? Fela?”

“Ready!”

“Let’s get this over with,” Alyssa said, pulling out her own deck of cards.

“Draken,” Brakkt said, raising his voice. “Please remain here. Everyone rushing down there will agitate the villagers. Only Ensou will accompany us. And… if something happens to us, don’t make trouble for the town.”

Alyssa didn’t speak draken. She wasn’t even sure that they could speak to each other. Still, the noises they made at his statement were anything but happy. Although they growled and grumbled, only Brakkt’s blue-grey scaled draken approached the group. Which was something of a relief, even ignoring the problem of agitated villagers. Alyssa wasn’t sure if it was possible to have too many soldiers on a battlefield, but a dozen of the large monsters would definitely crowd the chefs out of a kitchen.

If that analogy made sense at all.

“Alyssa.”

Pausing, turning to her mother, Alyssa waited for the inevitable argument or complaint about her going off to danger.

Instead, Lisa set her jaw. “Come back. You aren’t allowed to drag me into this place only to leave me alone.”

There was a slight hesitation before Alyssa walked up to her mother, put her arms around her shoulders, and nodded. Not wanting to jinx it by saying that everything would be alright, she simply said, “Of course.”


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