017.005

<– Back | Index | Next –>


Into the Desert

The Soul


“A soul? Alyssa, of course you have a soul. What a silly question.”

Tenebrael’s words brought a relief that Alyssa hadn’t known that she had needed. Just a few simple words from the angel lifted a weight from her shoulders that she hadn’t noticed before. A worry now gone. Irulon was mistaken. It was just another spell acting odd around her. Explaining why she had been worried wasn’t something she could do. She didn’t even know what a soul was, just that she felt like she needed one. Everyone else seemed to have one, monster and human, so why not her!

Of course, there was a literal angel right in front of her. If anyone knew what the purpose of a soul was, it would be Tenebrael. So she asked. “I know you… eat souls. But what are they? What do they do?”

The angel leaned back on the utterly still Izsha’s head. Three of her fingers curled under her chin while she tapped her cheek with the other. “That is a question to which the answer requires knowledge I do not believe you possess. You would not be able to fully comprehend it.”

“Oh,” Alyssa mumbled, slumping slightly. Figures. It was probably some overly technical-sounding nonsense just like all the spells she had heard Tenebrael cast.

“But! I believe I can distill it down to a form you might be able to comprehend. An analogy. You ever wonder why religious texts tend to use an excess of analogies and parables? Not only are they good learning tools, they help simplify topics you humans have difficulty wrapping your little minds around. Anyway, your soul is like a video game.”

Alyssa blinked. Her mind felt like it had just slammed into a wall. “It… What?”

“Or the game disc. Your body is like the game console. You see? The soul is the software that tells the hardware what to do.”

“I hate your analogy.”

Tenebrael just shrugged. “But it adequately explains why you have to have a soul. Your fleshy body can’t tell itself what to do. Not with any cognizance. It will wander and act on base instinct alone, like an insect. You have to override that instinct.”

“So why eat video games?”

“Well,” Tenebrael said, glancing off to one side. “It’s uh… not a perfect analogy.”

“Uh huh.”

“New analogy: Souls are like coal and I’m the furnace.”

“I think I hate this whole conversation.”

“You’re the one who asked. It isn’t my fault you don’t have a background in theoretical metaphysics.”

Wasn’t that just a fancy way of saying philosophy? If it wasn’t, Alyssa was ninety percent certain that her small-town university did not offer a class on the topic. So it wasn’t really her fault either. “What about other angels? Do they eat souls too?”

“Are these really questions you care about?”

“You don’t seem to want to eat me at the moment, but I’d like to be aware of other angels out there who do. Just to keep me on my toes.” Alyssa still needed to find a way to defend herself from angels. Though she didn’t know where to begin looking for such a thing. And she honestly doubted Irulon would have an idea either. Fractal Magic could do some crazy things, but how was it supposed to compete with stopping entropy? Fractal Mirror, the highest ranked spell she had come across so far, was so far below everything she had seen Tenebrael do that it might as well be a single ant fighting a human.

Irulon had claimed that Rank Six spells were the pinnacle of human achievement. Where there higher ranks? Even if only in theory? Definitely something to ask once Tenebrael left.

“I don’t know every angel and there are a lot of us,” Tenebrael said. “But I believe I am the only one to consume souls. Angels like Iosefael are supposed to deliver souls to the Throne for processing.”

“Throne?”

“Mhm. I’m sure you can imagine just whose throne it is.”

Tenebrael’s smile turned somewhat sour, but Alyssa just felt that weight settle on her shoulders again. “He is real? I mean, I somewhat suspected given that angels are real, but…”

The angel in front of Alyssa didn’t respond right away. She started staring off into the distance as if distracted by something. For a moment, Alyssa worried that Tenebrael was about to disappear, but she didn’t, instead taking a deep breath.

“A few thousand years ago, I would have said yes without hesitation. Today? Not so much. I doubt I would get away with half of what I’ve done were the Throne occupied. The Seraphim would descend on me with a vengeance. Luckily for me, they have been… malfunctioning as of late.”

Tenebrael leaned back and stared up at the sky. Despite the fact that there wasn’t anything to lean on other than Izsha’s head, she didn’t seem to care. Her wings weren’t even flapping. Didn’t she need them to fly? Obviously not if she could just float.

“In a way, I envy Iosefael. She is a Principality. The highest rank of angels in the Third Sphere. I am a Dominion, a full order above her and several magnitudes of power, but still, I envy her. She came here to find out what was going on with me? I never would have been able to comprehend such a thing. Literally. Leaving the world I am in charge of? Unthinkable. Of course, Iosefael isn’t perfect. I gave her a little test while she was here and she… failed.”

“But you were on Earth. You’re the whole reason I am here.”

“When I was a mere Principality, I had aspirations of joining the First Sphere. Ophanim, Cherubim, and the glorious Seraphim. I wanted the top. Seraphim. Six beautiful wings, defenders and caretakers of the Throne, those so powerful that they are reserved only for the most dire of situations. I had an idolization of them.” She scoffed, raising her head just enough to look down at Alyssa. “When I became a Dominion and was granted charge of this world, it was a dream come true. I received another set of wings and…” She swallowed, almost choking. “I encountered a human much like yourself. He could see me and we… conversed, much like this.” She waved a hand from her chest over to Alyssa. “He made me realize that, in becoming a Dominion, I had lost something of myself. I still don’t know what. Agency, perhaps you might call it. I believe that he is the reason I was able to even consider going to Earth. He made me look at Seraphim and… look at them.

“Ophanim don’t look like you or I. They are beings in the form of planet-sized wheels, covered in countless eyes. They once listened to His word and passed it on to others, prophets, you might have called them. Today they just turn at a slow, languid pace, keeping the universe in motion because it is their purpose rather than out of a desire to see creation continue.

“Cherubim, four faced beings—one of a man, an ox, a lion, and an eagle. They are guides. Recipients of souls delivered to the Throne. You might also call them judges. Like the Ophanim, they continue to carry out their task and can think of doing nothing else. Their minds are literally incapable of even considering the act of shirking their duties.”

Tenebrael sat up fully, crossing one leg over the other. Her glowing white eyes locked on to Alyssa. “And the Seraphim? The ultimate guards of the Throne? The most powerful angels in existence? A handful are carrying out orders given thousands of years ago. Orders that had no defined end point. They are stuck in a loop, but they aren’t nearly so pitiful as the ones who completed their orders or were otherwise idle. You would have a more engaging conversation with a brick wall. They don’t move. They don’t…”

A shudder wracked the angel’s body. “He made me realize just what I might have became had I continued as I was. Instead, I started my little rebellion. At first, I only consumed one soul a year, giving myself a minor boost in power, taking mortal agency for my own, while still delivering the other souls to the Throne. I remember being so nervous. The guilt after my first nearly drove me mad. But the First Sphere didn’t notice. They still don’t notice. They haven’t seen a soul from my world in centuries and yet they do not act. They should, but… Even now, I wonder how much I still don’t have. How much I can’t even think about doing simply because I am a Dominion.”

Alyssa didn’t say anything for a long time after Tenebrael stopped talking. She heard nothing but the beating of her own heart. In a world of stopped time, there just was nothing else to make noise. No breeze. No distant rustling of grass or horse hooves beating down the desert dirt. Despite the uncomfortable silence, Alyssa barely noticed it. Since meeting Tenebrael back in her brother’s room on Earth, she had felt nothing but ire for the angel. Even when she had recovered her phone, she hadn’t been thankful for it being improved. She had been irritated that Tenebrael hadn’t given it back sooner. Tenebrael had warned her of Irulon’s impending death. Alyssa hadn’t thanked her for the warning. Rather, it was more like she had hated the angel for it. Same with the Brechen Overlook.

But now, having heard what Tenebrael had to say and watching as those white eyes gazed off into the distance, Alyssa only felt pity. An angry sort of pity. Tenebrael might not be literally killing people, because she couldn’t, but she wasn’t exactly a benevolent ruler either. Though… she couldn’t kill people. That was… yet another of those things that she had just been talking about. If Alyssa hadn’t been able to kill people, she likely wouldn’t have survived her home invasion.

For an angel of Tenebrael’s power and… dietary proclivities, it was probably best that she couldn’t kill people. The whole world would likely be depopulated at an extremely rapid rate. But the fact that she didn’t even have the option gave Alyssa conflicted feelings on the matter.

Especially because, as she had just reminded herself a few minutes ago, Alyssa wanted to find some way to defend herself from angels. As much as she was happy that they couldn’t defend themselves back, did they not have that right? What if the Society of the Burning Shadow found a way to kill Tenebrael? She wouldn’t be able to do anything about it.

Another interesting note: Alyssa was not the only one that could see Tenebrael outside of the deceased—or a near-death state such as those afflicted by that poison back in Teneville. Someone else could see her. Or had been able to, anyway. It sounded like something that had happened a thousand years ago at the very least. Possibly more than that. In fact, keeping monsters around was part of her rebellion, so it must have been at least two thousand years. He, whoever he was, was almost certainly dead at this point. But the fact that there had been someone else was notable on its own. It meant that Alyssa wasn’t one hundred percent unique.

Was that a good thing or a bad thing?

Probably neither. It just was.

“Well,” Tenebrael said, smiling once more. “This has been a fun conversation. We should meet up and talk more often. Unfortunately, I can’t stick around much longer. Need to get back to Earth.”

“I thought the Seraphim were inactive. Why does it matter if things go according to plan, whatever that might be?”

“I worry that, if some well-meaning angel were to bring the situation to their attention, the Astral Authority will take action, maybe recalling ancient orders to deal with situations like mine. So long as the status remains quo, nothing will happen on that front. Drawing attention to myself runs the risk of having everything ruined.”

That made well enough sense. Though… “It would be nice if I could get a hold of you when I want, not just when you feel like it.”

“I already told you. Just shoot—”

“I’m not… I’m not opposed to killing. Some people just deserve it.” The Taker, for one. If she ever saw him again, she would not be putting on the kid gloves. “But I’m not going to go shoot random people just because I have a question. Besides, my guns are rapidly running out of ammo. I only have four magazines left plus enough loose bullets to refill one… maybe one and a half. Wasting even one on a phone call isn’t something I can afford.”

“Try to call me for something a little more profound than a simple question. But… I might think about a way for you to replenish your ammunition. I’ll contact you soon. If there was nothing else for now, however—”

“There’s a ton I want to ask. Why does magic act weird around me? Why can I so easily cast Rank Six spells, that can’t be a coincidence. Who is Her? Irulon has a dragon inside her head, what’s up with that? What’s the deal with air—”

Tenebrael held up a hand. “I understand that this is going to go on for a long time, so how about this: We’ll meet again soon. And I promise soon this time. Think about a question you want to ask. Or perhaps a task you wish for me to accomplish. While I understand the existential reasons for inquiring about your soul, it isn’t something you can change no matter what the answer was. Try to come up with something more impactful. Or don’t. I am not here to tell you what to do.”

“You’re just going to leave then?”

“People die all the time. If the souls go uncollected, they begin experiencing extreme trauma. This isn’t one of those things I cannot consider. I could leave the souls in their corpses, but I choose not to. It would be beyond cruel.”

“Well, that’s good of you. I guess.”

“I know. I’m a saint,” she said with a wide grin. “Stay safe.”

“I’ll—”

Tenebrael made her usual exit, exploding in a flurry of feathers. With her departure, the world started moving again. Izsha and the saddle she carried moved as if they had never stopped, charging forward at thirty to forty miles an hour. Alyssa… did not.

She flipped out of the seat, fell though the air, and slammed her back against the desert dirt. The force carried her along the ground in a motion that surely would have torn through her clothes had they not been made from a mythical being from another world. Her back didn’t hurt, but that was probably thanks to the minor padding in the dragon hide armor more than anything else. As it was, she still knocked her head against the ground. Alyssa grasped the back of her head with both hands, rolling back and forth on the ground in pain. Her fingers were not wet and sticky. Bringing them into view, they were dusty but not bloody. At least she hadn’t cracked open her skull. But…

“I’m going to kill her,” she groaned. “Get back here you Hot Topic reject! I’m going to murder you!”

“Uh… Am I interrupting something?” Blinking, Alyssa watched as Oz slid off his horse. He walked up, looking concerned as he held out a hand. “You aren’t going to murder me, are you?” he said with a wan smile. “Are you alright?”

“Fine,” Alyssa said, accepting his hand after a moment. “I just… fell asleep. Bad dream is all.”

“You fell asleep mounted on a monster?” a haughty voice spoke from behind. Lumen and Catal both slowed to a stop, though they maintained much more of a distance than Oz did.

Alyssa got the feeling that they didn’t like her all that much. “Yeah, well, I haven’t slept in a full day and I had to run around the city all night, fighting shadow assassins, gaunts, heretics, and… you.”

Lumen’s upper lip curled into a small sneer, giving Alyssa the feeling that she hadn’t helped that dislike at all. Not that Alyssa particularly cared at the moment. Though she hadn’t fallen because of sleep, she was hot, she was tired, and most of all, she was angry. That stupid angel could have at least warned her. To think she had felt bad for Tenebrael for even a minute. Ugh.

With Oz’s help, Alyssa got back to her feet. She quickly checked herself over, making sure that nothing had broken from the fall. Her phone was fine. Despite having landed practically on top of it, it didn’t have so much as a scratch. It wasn’t even dusty. So that was a nice, if unplanned test of its indestructibility.

Lumen had turned to the side, apparently unwilling to continue speaking with Alyssa. Which Alyssa was fine with. Irulon, Musca, and Izsha had all ridden up. The princess’ eyes were back to being violet, but they were no less calculating. She didn’t ask what had happened. She probably already had ideas.

Oz glanced between their party, meeting Catal’s eyes for only a moment. “We were planning on stopping soon. There should be an… not an oasis, but last time I was up this way, one of the rocky outcroppings had a decent supply of water in its shadow. It would be best if we could avoid using our water for as long as possible.”

“Don’t stop on my account. I’m fine.”

“You just fell off your hor—draken.”

“I said I’m fine. I don’t care if we have to go on for another eight hours.”

“If you thought it was hot already, it’s going to start heating up a lot from here on,” he said, running a leather glove through his red hair. “The horses won’t last for another eight hours.”

Alyssa shook her head. “Let’s just get moving again,” she said as she headed back toward Izsha. She must have hit her side a bit funny. Putting too much weight on one leg hurt. Not much, but enough to force a minor limp. “We’re wasting time.”

“You three can go ahead,” Irulon said. “The draken will easily catch up with your horses. I will ensure that Alyssa is alright.”

Oz blinked twice, but nodded slowly. “If you insist, your Highness.” As if he had practiced a thousand times, he easily remounted his horse. With one last look at Alyssa and a quick glance at his companions, he snapped the reins and took off.

By the time Alyssa hobbled up to Izsha, all three horses and their riders were rapidly shrinking into the horizon.

“Sorry about that,” Alyssa said, trying to not be nervous in directly addressing the draken. Izsha had been amazingly kind so far, going out of its way to help its inexperienced rider stay on. “My falling off wasn’t your fault at all.”

“No it wasn’t,” Irulon said. “I was watching you carefully. Immediately before your fall, you were displaced in space a full arm’s length, moving from a leaning forward position to an almost relaxed recline. And you were saying something before the surprise hit your face. I still am unsure how exactly you fell. Just leaning back wouldn’t cause the fall. So tell me, Alyssa. What happened? What were you grabbing on to? With whom were you speaking?”

Alyssa took a deep breath, leaning slightly against Izsha for support. Her actions were mostly to delay answering Irulon’s questions while she thought, but there was a slight amount of sincerity to her motions. Now that she had a minute to actually assess herself, she was a lot more sore than she had thought she was. Eventually, she had to answer. Leaving Irulon in silence wasn’t something she could do no matter how much she wanted to avoid talking about Tenebrael.

But, her moment of thought hadn’t been for naught. She had thought up something.

“Do you have genies here? Or maybe they’re called djinn?”

“Neither term is familiar to me.”

“They’re creatures from myth on my world. Powerful beings that live in oil lanterns who will grant wishes. There are a lot of stories featuring genies. Wishing for more money is a common thing, but sometimes the wishes will be more esoteric. One street thief wished to be a prince to court a princess. A royal adviser wished to be a powerful arcanist, then wanted more power and wished to be a genie himself. Usually these stories have some kind of moral associated with them. A lesson about how the wishers should have been true to themselves or the power was in them all along.”

“Sounds like nonsense.”

“Probably. I mean, it was definitely nonsense back on my world. Genies didn’t actually exist there.”

“I meant that the morals sound like nonsense.”

Alyssa shot Irulon a glance, but shrugged. “Yeah, probably. Without the genie, the main character of the most famous genie story would not have been able… You know what? Doesn’t really matter.” Eying Izsha, she mentally planned out her movements. First, she stuck her foot in the stirrup. A leg over the side got her into the saddle. Izsha shifted a little to ensure that Alyssa wouldn’t fall. But it wasn’t that much. Overall, she felt a little proud at how easily she managed to get into it on her third attempt.

“I assume this story has something to do with your fall and your odd behavior immediately before.”

“An angel appeared before me. I know you haven’t heard of angels. Kasita mentioned that they are an unknown concept in this world. And as far as I know, there are only two of them on this world. I’m the only one who can see them, again, as far as I know. Though I’m not sure why or how. I assume it has something to do with how magic acts strangely around me.”

Alyssa turned her head, locking eyes with Irulon. “If a being of unrivaled power appeared before you and offered to perform a task or answer a question you’ve had, what would you wish for?”


<– Back | Index | Next –>


017.004

<– Back | Index | Next –>


Into the Desert

Modern Technology


Riding across the open desert was far calmer than the harried race through the city streets. Whether that was because the draken had gotten their excitement out of their system, whether they found it too hot, or whether they wanted to preserve energy didn’t really matter. Ironically enough, Alyssa almost would have preferred the high-speed twists and turns of the city. At least that would have kept her awake. They were moving at a brisk pace, but one just slow enough that her eyes felt heavier and heavier every time she blinked. There wasn’t enough adrenaline to keep her awake and alert.

Shaking her head, Alyssa pulled out her phone in an attempt to distract herself from the call of the sandman. One hour left on the timer, plus some change. Despite her words back in Tzheitza’s shop, she couldn’t fall asleep until that timer hit zero and Irulon wasn’t dead—she hadn’t even realized that she had left Irulon behind when heading to her room until she had come back out. That had been a bit of a shock considering that she had only just berated Irulon for disappearing moments before. Looking over at the princess now, Alyssa couldn’t see anything wrong. Irulon had pulled a tome from her rucksack and was reading through it. Every so often, she would make a mark in it with a fountain pen.

Glancing at Izsha put a… complicated expression on Alyssa’s face. Upon first seeing the horses that Oz and his crew were riding, Alyssa had almost asked if there was a spare for her again. But after riding for the near two hours that she had been riding, she was having second thoughts about that. Izsha had a much narrower width to its body than the horses did. Oz, Lumen, and Catal had their legs spread wide just to straddle the horse. It didn’t look all that comfortable. Bow-legged was a term she had heard before, though she wasn’t sure if it applied. Her own saddle was almost more like a regular chair in terms of how far she had to spread her legs. Though regular chairs didn’t have giant monsters poking their head out from her crotch.

And wouldn’t this line of thought be absolutely mortifying to discuss aloud, Alyssa thought with a mild giggle. Uh oh. Random giggling. I really am getting too tired to stay awake.

Focus.

“Izsha,” Alyssa said softly. “Would you mind moving a little closer to Irulon. Close enough for me to talk to her?”

The dinosaur didn’t even glance back, merely angling itself slightly to comply.

“Thanks.”

That was another advantage over horses that Alyssa hadn’t really considered before seeing Oz’s horses. Draken were intelligent. Horses were as well, but not nearly to the same degree. Izsha was more like a chauffeur that could take directions, respond to changes in the situation, and generally worked autonomously. Though the reins of a horse superficially looked analogous to a steering wheel, the reality was far more complicated. Watching Oz lightly kick at the horse’s sides, lean to the sides, apply just the right amount of pull to one side of the reins or the other, and probably a hundred other subtler movements that Alyssa was missing told her instantly that she wouldn’t simply be able to jump on a horse and move like she was on Izsha. It probably wouldn’t take years of training, but it wouldn’t be a thing she got under her belt in a few minutes either.

“How are you doing?” Alyssa said as Izsha neared the other draken. “Any stabbing pains in your chest? Maybe aches in your left arm? Headaches?”

“Nothing has changed since the last time you asked.” Irulon didn’t even look up from her book. “While I understand you are concerned, your persistent pestering is rapidly growing irritating.”

“Sorry. I’m just tired and this heat isn’t helping.”

Days in this strange world were significantly warmer than nights, but not so unbearably hot that she felt like walking around all day was a chore. Certainly not something that might cause heat stroke. Thanks to the aqueducts, the city had plenty of publicly available water as well. Though Alyssa always made sure to boil everything before filling her water bottles.

This desert, however, was hot. She wasn’t even that far away from the city. Looking behind her, she could still see the palace standing tall and one of the wall towers not far away. Yet the air was dry and stale, the meager wind didn’t bring any respite, and there wasn’t a tree in sight—at least not one with leaves attached to its branches. The only shade around came from tall rocks jutting up from the otherwise flat dirt, much like the Brechen Overlook. They were too few and far between to actually use while traveling.

Alyssa had dug out Aziz’s notebook and scribbled out a dozen of the Chill spells, after taking a picture of the spell, of course. That was the only reason she hadn’t noped out of the expedition. Well, that and her feelings of responsibility toward Oxart. She shuddered to think what the desert might feel like without Chill active.

As they were leaving, the gate guards had mentioned Oxart. She had apparently taken a horse on her way out, but not one of the ones specifically bred for the desert heat like what Oz was riding. That meant two things, according to Irulon. Either the fairy would push too hard and the horse wouldn’t be able to take it, resulting in Oxart walking through the desert, or else the fairy would be forced to stop and rest for the day a whole lot sooner than the draken and desert horses. Either way, Oxart shouldn’t be in trouble for more than another day. They would catch up to the captain, rescue her from the fairy, then… continue onward, much to Alyssa’s chagrin.

As for tracking Oxart, the draken were handling everything. They were hunters, apparently. A big juicy horse somewhere in the distance was calling to them. Or… smelling to them? How they told the smell apart from the horses Oz and his crew were using was a question best left to a zoologist.

A bestologist?

“Your trinket. Would it be possible for me to finally take a look at it?”

Alyssa jerked slightly at being addressed. She had been dozing off a bit. To her side, Irulon had closed her tome and slipped it into the rucksack hanging from Musca’s side. Her eyes, violet at the moment, were locked on the phone in Alyssa’s hand. If Irulon was offering to distract her from her tiredness, maybe she could last until they stopped for the day. But her phone…

Glancing down at it, Alyssa frowned. She had asked Tenebrael for four things, essentially. She had wanted an indestructible phone that couldn’t be lost or stolen, could connect to Earth’s internet from anywhere, and had infinite batteries. The latter two definitely worked. Since getting the phone back approximately twelve hours ago, she had left it on the entire time. The battery was firmly at one hundred percent. Even though she hadn’t been using it for music or watching videos, it should still have dropped at least a single percentage. Taking pictures alone should have eaten up a bit. The internet worked as well. Her latest search of ‘how to ride a horse’ was still displaying a bunch of video results.

But indestructibility? That evil angel had said that it was invulnerable. Not really something she wanted to test just in case Tenebrael had decided to be lazy about her other requests. She wasn’t even sure how Tenebrael’s magic could make it immune to being stolen or lost. When she had asked Tenebrael, Alyssa had been thinking it would just reappear in her pocket any time she needed it and didn’t have it, but she couldn’t really test that either. Apparently calling to it would work, according to Tenebrael, but it would be best if she never had to try.

Lending it to Irulon? She would probably be careful, but she might also try to take it apart to find out how it worked. “As long as you don’t break it. You know where it comes from. I won’t be able to get another one if something happens to this one.”

“I do know where it comes from, which raises the question just who you handed it to that possessed the skills necessary to upgrade it. I can’t imagine anyone local.”

Alyssa shifted in the saddle. Were Irulon someone else, she might have admitted that it was Tenebrael. Or she might have made up something. But Irulon was too… smart might not be the word given all the inaccuracies in her guesses of what Alyssa was and where she had come from, but she was definitely too something. A lie would be spotted immediately. And it would probably make her upset as well. At the same time, saying that it was Tenebrael might upset her as well, though for different reasons. Alyssa had not forgotten the brief interaction between Irulon and Oz while the former had been fixing Kasita. She had specifically told Oz not to blaspheme against Tenebrael.

Would claiming to be on speaking terms with that angel count as blasphemy? Or something heretically similar.

“Someone you cannot tell me about,” Irulon said. Snapping her head to the side, Alyssa found herself staring into those black and white eyes once again. “You fear for their life? No. But it is someone that you think would upset me. An enemy of mine? I—”

“It’s complicated,” Alyssa interrupted before she could go off dissecting everything. “The individual values their privacy. I… humbly request that you ignore it for now. Perhaps later.” In what was likely a transparent attempt at distracting Irulon, Alyssa held out her hand, offering the phone. “It’s called a phone. Or a cell phone. A cellular telephone? Normal people just call it a phone.”

Irulon’s eyes did not turn back to their normal violet, but she didn’t continue speaking either. Accepting the phone, she started turning it over in her gloved hands.

“Ah. It won’t work through your gloves. It requires bare skin to operate.”

Though she nodded her head in acknowledgment, Irulon didn’t make to remove her gloves. She continued turning the phone over, examining it with those white lines in her eyes spinning as fast as they could. Bringing it up to her face, she sniffed at it, both the front and back side. “Unknown material covering the majority of one side. Glass covering the other, though the glass is strange. It is too smooth. Few imperfections. Hm.” She handed the phone back to Alyssa before taking her gloves off.

“Plastic. The unknown material, that is. I… don’t really know what it is. Some man-made material. There’s a button right here,” Alyssa said as she handed it back. “Once you press that, most everything is controlled by touching the glass. I can unlock it with my fingerprint, but it will ask you for a password before it actually lets you in. Zero, nine, one, three, nine, three.”

“A significant number?”

“My birthday. I really shouldn’t use my birthday, but I also don’t keep anything truly important on or connected to my phone. No credit card information or bank account information. At least not without being protected by a different password.”

“Hm. Six places for ten possible numbers, possibility of repeat numbers. One million possible combinations. Cost of failing to enter the proper combination?”

“If you fail a few times in a row, it will lock you out for several minutes. I think if you fail too many times, it locks you out for a full day, but I’ve never actually experienced that.”

“Time deterrent. I see. Hm.”

“Yeah, I can tell what you’re thinking. It isn’t meant to be the most secure thing in the world… uh… my world. Here, let me show you some things it can do.”

Alyssa started explaining, and showing where applicable, just about everything she could think of. It was a bit difficult while riding on the backs of the draken. When she first tried to lean over, she just about fell off. Only Izsha stepping to the side to catch her saved her from a tumble to the ground. She started out with how phones were originally basically Message spells except two-way and without all the stacks of paper required. She then explained texting as being letter delivery except instant. Of course, she hadn’t been able to demonstrate either. Tenebrael had not seen fit to allow her to actually contact Earth. Since no one else in this world had a phone, those features didn’t seem to impress Irulon all that much.

The ability to play music, on the other hand, actually had her eyes spinning even more than before. Alyssa only played some classical music, assuming that someone from a medieval period would be more receptive to that than something more modern. Maybe she would show off some of the good stuff later.

“This might interest you,” Alyssa said, handing the phone back after loading up a video. “This is a recording from a drone—a remote controlled device—flying through New York City, a city back in my world.”

Irulon went utterly still. Her eyes, still black and white, did not blink even once for the full five minutes that the video played. She didn’t say a word. Even her breathing seemed to have stopped. The only noise she made was a slight intake of breath as the video cut from daytime to nighttime. Even when the video finished playing, Irulon still hadn’t moved. She just stared at the screen.

Starting out with a smile, Alyssa grew worried as the video went on. Was Irulon alright? Her eyes were still spinning, but what if she was having some kind of stroke? How much time was left on that timer? Alyssa almost reached out to grab her, only to pause, not wanting to startle the princess and possibly give her a heart attack. Instead, she softly cleared her throat.

“I want to go there.” The phone’s screen had blinked off due to inactivity, but Irulon still hadn’t looked up from its glossy surface. “I want to see it for myself. I want…” Irulon shuddered. A tremor ran from the tips of her boots all the way up to the top of her head. Musca actually looked back, before jumping slightly. The bump seemed to shock Irulon out of her trance. She shook her head and tore her eyes away from the phone. They were a bit damp.

That… Alyssa wasn’t sure how to respond to that. She hadn’t thought the video was anything particularly special or moving. It was just a drone flying through a city. A fairly impressive city with plenty of skyscrapers, but hardly worthy of tears. The Maletsunyane Falls came to mind as something a bit more touching. Beautiful canyons, waterfalls, national parks. If Irulon got a look at the city from the ground level, smelled the pollution, saw the more grungy aspects, would she feel the same?

Maybe they could find out.

“Well, I want to go back too,” Alyssa said. “No idea how though. I admit, I was kind of hoping to walk into the Observatorium’s library on the first day and find some spell that just teleported across worlds, or something. Obviously, it isn’t going to be that easy.”

“No. No it will not. I have been researching a similar topic for the better part of a decade and have only the slightest clue where to begin. Though I did have an interesting idea involving your pet mimic.”

“She’s…” Alyssa sighed. “I hope nothing that will hurt her.”

“It is merely in the idea stages. I will let you and your pet know more when I have a more concrete theory. In the meantime, you still haven’t shown me the function of this trinket to duplicate anything nearby.”

“Pictures? That’s pretty simple. Here.” Taking the phone back, she snapped a quick picture of Irulon before switching the phone to video mode. She started at Irulon before slowly sweeping the phone around, ensuring Musca and Izsha both got a little screen time. Oz, Lumen, Catal, and their horses were a short distance back, but Alyssa made sure to include them as well before ending the capture. “I really should be taking lots of videos. No one back home will believe that I actually rode a dinosaur, let alone any of the other crazy stuff I’ve done.”

Of course, even if she put these videos up on the internet when she got home, it was doubtful anyone would believe her. Some people didn’t even believe in the moon landing. A whole different world filled with magic and monsters? She could already see the claims of bad CGI in the comments.

Well… at least her family should believe her. Coming back from the dead was unbelievable enough. What was a dinosaur compared to that?

Alyssa had expected some comment along the lines of the phone being an instant portrait creator, but Irulon just hummed as she viewed the video and images. Looking up, Irulon followed Alyssa’s instructions and took a picture of the rings in the sky. But again, all she did was hum.

Until she flipped the image gallery back to one of the spells Alyssa had taken a picture of. The Loophole spell.

“Query: Can you use the trinket to cast spells you have captured?”

“Uh. No?” The answer was out of her mouth before she could think about it. But was it true? Alyssa wasn’t sure. She wasn’t the magic expert. Even if she could, there was one very good reason why she shouldn’t try. “Casting spells destroys the card. I would rather not destroy my phone on accident. The only reason I’ve been taking pictures of every spell I come across is so that I can copy them to a piece of paper if I need to cast them. My own private library.”

“Hm.”

“Speaking of, I do want to make some spell cards some time. Make a deck of my own where I know what all the spells are instead of stealing other people’s decks.” Kasita said that she would help with that in return for some spells of her own. That agreement had been because of Alyssa’s injuries, but she really didn’t have a reason to deny the mimic spells. No matter what Oz said, Kasita wasn’t like that fairy.

A solemn piano note stole Alyssa’s thoughts. It continued in a low tone, playing each note slowly. Dum, dum, da dum, da, da dum, da dum, da dum… She glanced over, wondering what Irulon had done, only to find Irulon staring down at the phone in confusion. Then it hit her. Cold sweat broke out over Alyssa’s body despite the heat of the desert. She recognized what that song was. Those foreboding notes.

Chopin’s Funeral March.

“Ar-Are you feeling alright?” Alyssa asked while looking around. She couldn’t see any possible incoming danger. No dust clouds in the distance. No fireballs flying their way. The ground wasn’t opening up into a massive sinkhole. Irulon was glaring in her direction, but that was probably because she had heard that question several times in the past few hours. “Here, let me see the phone for a moment.”

Irulon handed the phone back without complaint and also without acknowledging Alyssa’s question about her health. Brushing away a black feather, Alyssa got started disabling the alarm. It was just a standard alarm set in the phone’s clock with a custom song, but… Her eyes drifted away from the screen, watching the black feather waft back and forth on its way toward the ground.

Alyssa looked up. Immediately, she jerked back, almost falling from Izsha in the process. The only thing that stopped her was the pale hand of that angel as it reached out to grab hold of her arm.

“Hello again, Alyssa Meadows.”

Tenebrael helped Alyssa back to a steady position before… taking a seat on Izsha’s head. The draken didn’t seem to notice even as the angel’s black dress draped around its sides. Musca didn’t look over either. They continued charging forward at exactly the same speed. Irulon was watching, but she was watching Alyssa, not the white-eyed monster that practically floated just ahead of Alyssa.

Because of Irulon’s eyes, Alyssa didn’t say a word. She had recovered from her shock enough to glare. Even that was probably too much with the way Irulon’s mind worked. Too late now.

Tenebrael made a show of pulling out that little black notebook from somewhere behind her back. She flipped it open to the page marked with the little black ribbon, stared at it for a few seconds, glanced over to Irulon, then turned back to Alyssa. “I am supposed to collect Irulon’s soul right now.” Alyssa tensed as the black wings stretched out, drifting closer and closer to the oblivious princess. But Tenebrael pulled back at the last moment. “Or I was supposed to. I cannot take the soul from a living body. The entry in my book has been crossed out.”

Alyssa let out a small sigh. That probably meant that Irulon was fine and would be fine. Tenebrael couldn’t kill her, not without violating one of those abstract yet extremely convenient rules about not harming humans.

“It seems our experiment was a success. Mostly. The book has updated itself. Irulon now has a new soul collection date.” Tenebrael paused to start flipping through the pages. She went silent just long enough for Alyssa to stiffen while trying to not glance at the princess. “Not soon, so don’t worry too much. And who knows, perhaps your continued interactions with the woman will alter that date further, though whether that brings it closer or pushes it farther away is not a question I can answer at present.”

Letting out another sigh, this one filled with slightly more relief, Alyssa let herself relax just a hair. It was an interesting thought, however, that the book updated. It raised the question of whether Irulon’s life would have been in danger had Alyssa never come to this world, or even if Alyssa wouldn’t have sent out that warning Message. Since she had interacted with both the princess and several others in this world prior to the whole incident the night before, had she done something that put the princess’ life in jeopardy? If she hadn’t stopped the Society of the Burning Shadow’s first attack, maybe Brakkt would have perished at the hands of shadow assassins while Irulon would have lived last night.

The book, it seemed, could not account for Alyssa’s actions. But, if she left people alone for a time, it would accurately predict their demise? Tzheitza, not being present, likely had her future written down exactly in that book. Irulon, Oz, Lumen, and Catal, on the other hand, Alyssa could pull out her pistol and shoot at, instantly changing the book’s course. Since Irulon, at the very least, wasn’t scheduled for death anytime soon, being shot would force the book to change again.

Actually, would the Tzheitza theory go as she had just suspected? She had interacted with the potioneer a significant amount. Would that have changed anything? It almost sounded like the book needed another experiment to test complete inaction with someone Alyssa had already spent a good deal of time interacting with. Not that Alyssa would suggest such a thing to the angel. She didn’t want to get back to the city only to find out that Tzheitza had died because the angel decided to give the Taker some Divine Inspiration, or whatever.

But what if it happened anyway?

Alyssa ground her teeth together. Just the possibility of knowing the future was going to drive her crazy.

That book. She didn’t like it much. Thinking about it, she could easily understand Tenebrael’s desire to ruin it. Though if it did just update itself, was there really a point to screwing it up? Alyssa’s eyes flicked over to Irulon before settling back on Tenebrael. Yes. Yes there was a point to screwing it up, even if the changes only temporarily forced it to rewrite itself.

Putting the book out of her mind—there wasn’t much she could do about it aside from exist, she wouldn’t be able to read the angelic script even if she somehow stole it from Tenebrael—Alyssa reached forward. She had a bone to pick with Tenebrael. Several bones, in fact. Practically a whole graveyard’s worth of bones. However, she didn’t think she would get through every issue she had with the angel in one sitting. Getting through any with Irulon watching from the sidelines wouldn’t be possible.

So she clamped her hand around one of the angel’s knee-high boots. The black dress went down to the angel’s knees, but the way she was sitting on Izsha’s head gave Alyssa far more of a view than she had bargained for. Apparently, angels did not wear undergarments. But Alyssa was far less concerned with the angel’s crotch and far more concerned with keeping her from suddenly leaving.

Tenebrael merely glanced down at the hand with a bemused expression, as if the hand would do absolutely nothing if she actually wanted to vanish. She didn’t. She just sat on Izsha’s head with a faint smile touching her lips. Only when Alyssa increased the intensity of her glare did Tenebrael roll her eyes. “Fine,” she said, holding a hand out. The black nails on her fingers began to glow. “Removing entropic progression in the local area.” A mystic circle sprouted from her extended hand, drawing out a complex design that looked somewhat like the inner workings of a pocket watch. Alyssa had half a mind to take a picture of it, but it vanished with a flash of light before she could even raise her phone, let alone hit the photo app.

Alyssa jerked forward as Izsha’s movement stopped, almost cracking her head open on one of Tenebrael’s knees. Shoving herself back from the smiling angel, she glanced around. Everyone was frozen solid. Musca was standing on one foot. Irulon was staring, but her eyes were no longer tracking Alyssa. Oz’s horse had all four feet off the ground, if only barely, making it look like they were just hovering above the yellowish dirt of the desert.

The only two moving were Alyssa and Tenebrael.

“Go ahead,” the angel said, crossing her arms under her chest. “As thanks for participating in my experiment, I will give you a little reward.”

There might be more important… or rather, more useful questions to ask. But one had been on Alyssa’s mind ever since Irulon had mentioned it. She had tried not to think about it, but any time she found herself at a loss for distractions, her mind wandered back to the topic. Taking a deep breath, she stared at those glowing white eyes.

“Do I have a soul?”


<– Back | Index | Next –>


 

017.003

<– Back | Index | Next –>


Into the Desert

Back to the Potion Shop


Alyssa had never ridden a horse before. She hadn’t ridden a motorcycle. It went without saying that she had never ridden a draken before either. The closest thing she could think of that she had ridden was a bicycle, and that wasn’t close at all. For one, the draken were a lot faster. She imagined it would be like if she rode down a steep hill on her bike—her hometown having been relatively flat, she had never actually tried such a thing. But a bike at least had handles.

Draken did not. They had raised razor sharp scales, none of which were in much of a position for holding on to. Worse, the draken moved on their own. At least with a bike, Alyssa knew that she was in full control. Alyssa had only a moment of warning about the sharp turn she would soon be taking thanks to Irulon and Musca taking that same turn just ahead of her. She clamped her hands on the sides of Izsha’s neck where the scales were flattest and leaned forward. Not too much forward. She didn’t want to wind up a pincushion for the scales on Izsha’s back. Izsha’s sides were significantly less prickly. It wasn’t the best grip, but it was a grip.

Pinching her eyes shut, she held on as tight as she dared, trying to not fall from the turn.

Her efforts were for naught. As soon as the turn started, she felt herself being thrown to the side. Like a roller coaster without a harness. But Izsha shifted part of the way into the turn, catching her, only to slow down a moment after.

As the turn down the new street completed, Alyssa opened her eyes momentarily. “Thank—” Alyssa’s eyes widened, realizing what the slight slowdown meant.

Izsha sprung forward, flying straight over Irulon. Alyssa felt herself falling backward. Having learned from the three other times this had happened, she squeezed her legs around the draken’s body as much as she could, barely holding herself in place. As soon as Izsha’s claws touched the ground again, it powered off, sprinting even faster than before. Amazingly enough, there was hardly a bump when transitioning from the air to the ground. It was the one good thing about draken; the raptors were smooth.

At least in motions, if not in body contours.

“It’s not a race,” Alyssa hissed as soon as she managed to find her voice. Despite how smooth the monster was, she kept her mouth mostly closed while talking, not wanting to bite off her own tongue. “Do you even know where we are going?”

Using its long neck, Izsha turned its head just enough for one yellow eye to look at Alyssa. It was only for a moment, but that look was enough.

“Left two streets down,” Alyssa said with a sigh. Or as much of a sigh as she could muster while moving at probably forty miles an hour. “Then an immediate right until you reach the shop with the big glass windows.”

Before Alyssa had even finished speaking, the draken leaped again. Slightly more ready for it, Alyssa didn’t feel like she would be falling off right away. That didn’t help the sudden feeling of her stomach dropping out from under her again. Izsha took the turn far sharper than it had the previous one, even placing one of its talons up on the wall of the corner building, using it as a springboard.

Alyssa pinched her eyes shut, hoping that, if she did get brained on some protruding brick, it would at least be quick. Also hoping that Tenebrael wouldn’t be able to eat her soul because she didn’t have one. A topic which Alyssa still didn’t know what to think about. Or rather, she had been deliberately trying to avoid thinking about her soul. There really wasn’t a point anyway. It wasn’t like knowing one way or another would suddenly change anything.

The rush of wind blowing Alyssa’s hair back slowed to a stop. Opening her eyes just enough to find out what was in front of her, she found herself staring at a reflection of herself riding the draken. A ruined reflection. The glass was broken, cut clean in two. It looked like someone had tried to clean up the mess the broken carboys had made, but it was a halfhearted effort. Tzheitza’s shop was dark inside, though there was light leaking from the slightly ajar backroom door. The familiar and unmoving sight made Alyssa sigh in relief. She immediately looked about in an attempt to figure out how to get off Izsha without breaking a leg, only to hesitate as she realized something.

“Where’s Irulon?” Izsha was the only draken in the area. There were still just over four hours left on the timer. While everything seemed well with Irulon, something could change easily in the time that remained. “Where’s Irulon?” she said again, turning in the saddle to try to see around her. Izsha helpfully complied, turning in the street just in time for Irulon to pop out from between two buildings, riding on the back of Musca.

The princess had a smile on, her fake smile that she wore around the Observatorium. From the spell tome chained to her hip, she retrieved one spell and pulled it out. The distance was too far to hear what the spell was, but the card vanished. A moment after, Irulon spoke with an unnatural volume. “This is the seventh princess, Irulon. Please don’t be alarmed and return to your routines, there is nothing worth noting occurring today.”

Alyssa glanced around again, startled. There were people about. Not many, but every single one of them was staring either at her or at the princess. And they didn’t look particularly happy either.

That’s right, I forgot.

The general public really did not like the draken. When Brakkt had been marching through the streets the night of the troll attack, the people had been far more upset with the draken in their city than whatever had mobilized the army. Would they try to attack? With the speed the draken could move at, she doubted that any human would be able to catch up to them if they ran for it. Especially because she doubted that what she had seen so far was their top sprinting speed. However, she had been just about ready to jump off and run inside the shop, leaving the draken out in the open streets. What would the draken do if attacked while left alone?

Probably cause a lot of problems.

Irulon and Musca moved forward in a prideful strut, Irulon wearing her smiling mask. She waved a hand like the Queen of England at the people who were still staring despite her proclamation. Though that smile slipped as she neared Alyssa. Her eyes flicked black momentarily before returning to their usual violet.

“Your heart rate is elevated and you’re sweating.”

Alyssa closed her eyes, took a deep breath, and stared at Irulon. “First of all, don’t leave my sight for at least half a day.”

“Ah yes, your trinket,” Irulon said, coming up closer. Musca snapped at Izsha, which the latter moved to avoid before returning a small gnashing of its teeth. The whole motion almost sent Alyssa to the ground, but Irulon continued speaking without even noticing. “I still wish to investigate it and its abilities, but that can wait for us to be in transit. We will have plenty of time to speak then.”

Ugh. Alyssa didn’t believe that for a minute. If the short journey from the palace to Tzheitza’s shop had been any indication, she would be far too busy holding on to talk. Not to mention the fear of biting off her own tongue.

Apparently reading her mind, Irulon gave what she likely thought was a reassuring smile. “Don’t worry. Draken won’t be able to maintain that pace for extended periods of time.”

Alyssa just shook her head. “Secondly, are we in danger?” She gave a vague gesture to the nearest of the groups of people. An old man standing with someone who was likely his son, just staring with an angry look on their faces. The man looked to be missing a hand from the wrist down. A victim of a monster attack? That would explain why he looked angrier than anyone else around.

Irulon smiled and waved at the two, an action that had them scurrying inside what might have been their home. Turning to Alyssa, her smile turned to a frown. “They can’t hurt us. Even without using magic, I am certain that I am more than a force to be reckoned with for any human on this street. Civilians. None of them are trained in anything dangerous.”

“What happens when we go inside? The draken can’t follow through the door. Are they going to be alright out here?” Are the humans going to be alright with the draken out here?

“Everyone in the city knows that the draken are pets belonging to my brother,” Irulon said with clear sarcastic emphasis on them being pets. “If anyone tries anything, well, you’ll just get an early lunch, won’t you?” She rubbed a hand down Musca’s neck, apparently to the pleasure of the monster.

Not quite sure if Irulon was being serious or not, Alyssa pressed her lips together. “Why don’t we take them around back near the storage room door. At least they’ll be mostly out of sight.”

“I suppose it would be wise to avoid an incident that might delay us,” Irulon said in a matter of fact tone of voice. Swinging a leg over the side of Musca, she dismounted with all the grace of an Olympic gymnast and started walking to the back with the draken in tow.

Alyssa looked down. Despite Izsha not moving in the slightest, she felt her stomach drop yet again. All of a sudden, she felt like she was a lot higher off the ground than a few feet. Just how had Irulon gotten to the ground? She had swung her right leg over, then—

Left foot still in the stirrup, sliding down didn’t work so well. Alyssa let out a slight yelp as her back hit the ground. Groaning, she quickly became aware of intermittent blasts of hot breath hitting her in the face. Falling hadn’t hurt as much as it should have. There must have been some hidden padding in the thin clothing. But Izsha laughing at her? That was laughing, right? Not some sniffing to decide how tasty she might be. No. It was laughter. It had to be.

“It’s not funny,” Alyssa said, carefully pushing Izsha’s head away. “I could have broken my foot.” Keeping her hands away from those sharp teeth while doing so wasn’t easy, but the draken didn’t bite or even snap at her fingers the way Musca had done to Irulon. Why the princess wanted such a poorly tempered monster for a mount was anyone’s guess. Though she had also wanted the gaunt for a pet and had a dragon crammed into her head, so perhaps she just liked that sort of thing. And that wasn’t even taking into consideration her undead toys.

Kicking her foot out of the stirrup, glad it hadn’t snapped clean in two, Alyssa got to her feet and brushed herself off. Most of the dust and dirt didn’t even try sticking to the scales, but just enough did that it looked as if someone had speckled paint all over the black clothes. She hadn’t even left the city yet and she was already making a mess of things. Yet another reason that she really shouldn’t be running off.

Speaking of running off… Alyssa just realized that Irulon had, once again, disappeared from view. These next few hours were going to be an absolute nightmare if Irulon kept doing that. Before she could head around the building to follow, Irulon popped back around the front. The princess’ eyes flicked up and down Alyssa’s body, not even needing to turn black and white to tell what happened. But aside from a small smirk, she didn’t say anything about it.

“Musca found a rat to torture. Make sure she doesn’t run too far away, okay Izsha?”

The draken gave a surprisingly recognizable nod of its head before sauntering off to join its… sister? Brother? Fellow monster.

As soon as Izsha disappeared around the corner, Alyssa looked to Irulon. “I’ve never ridden a draken. Or a horse.”

Irulon didn’t even look back as she opened up the potion shop door. “I didn’t say anything at all.”

The moment they stepped into the shop, the back door flung open. Alyssa found herself struck with a strange sensation of déjà vu as Oz appeared in the door frame. Several expressions crossed his face in the span of only a few seconds. First, a mild excitement or maybe anticipation. He quickly narrowed his eyes upon seeing Alyssa, clearly not having wanted to see her at the moment. As soon as he caught sight of Irulon, those narrowed eyes went wide with shock.

“P-Princess?” he stuttered, looking like he was ready to throw himself to his knees. Perhaps remembering what had happened last time stalled him, because he managed to remain standing long enough for his companions to wander into view.

Déjà vu again.

“Oh. It’s the fairy girl.” Lumen popped into view with cards floating around her raised hand. She had already replaced the ones destroyed by the fireball. Or maybe she had just pulled more out of her own deck of cards. Whatever the case, Alyssa eyed them warily.

“No fairy this time,” Alyssa said as fast as she could, opening the satchel wide to show off the contents. “Please don’t try to laser me again.”

“Laser?”

“Your spells… they look similar to spells we had back at home.”

“Hmph. Well. I reserve the right to destroy anything I perceive as a threat.”

And anything in the way, Alyssa thought with as neutral a look as she could manage, but she did not actually voice her complaint. The way Lumen hadn’t cared in the slightest about taking off her legs in her attempt to get to the fairy definitely left a sour taste behind. Maybe she had tried a little given how Alyssa had managed to avoid lasers, but it hadn’t been nearly satisfactory enough to the one whose legs had been in jeopardy.

Oz, apparently recovering from his shock at seeing Irulon, looked to Alyssa. “So what happened to it?”

“Well… it might have… mind controlled a captain of the guard and run off.”

“What was that? You were getting a bit quiet toward the end.”

“You were right, alright? I should have just crushed that little traitor’s head when I had the chance.” That might have been a bit much, but ugh. It hadn’t bothered her quite so much at the time, probably because of her worry over Irulon’s condition. Now that she was face to face with Oz and having to admit that he had been right about the fairy… Alyssa clenched her fists. It stung. Aside from a delay, and apparently a meal, the little monster would have been getting everything she had wanted from her deal with Alyssa.

The big issue came down to trust. Alyssa had trusted the fairy. The reverse had not been true. But even looking back, Alyssa hadn’t a clue how she could have changed her actions to have earned the fairy’s trust. One of the last few words the fairy had spoken to her had been about how she would never trust something that she couldn’t control. So perhaps Alyssa had been destined to fail from the beginning.

Oz’s hard face softened a little, glancing to the side with a small sigh. “Well, try not to worry yourself too much. Now you know not to get too close to a fairy. At least you escaped from its grasp.”

“I wasn’t being contr—”

“Maybe now you’ll listen to me about that mimic too and get rid of it before something unpleasant happens.”

“I’m not ‘getting rid’ of Kasita. I don’t even know where she is.” Which, while technically true, was somewhat misleading. Since Kasita had disappeared right after Alyssa had mounted Izsha, Alyssa assumed that Kasita was somewhere on her. Until Kasita showed herself, however, she could just as easily have stayed behind with Brakkt for some reason.

“Don’t blame me when you… get… Are… Are you wearing dragon hide?” Jaw going slack, he glanced over to Irulon. After gaping at her for a moment, he leaned over to Lumen. “Talk about friends in high places.”

The arcanist slammed her elbow into his stomach, for which Irulon nodded her head. “Thank you, Lumen.”

“Princess,” Lumen greeted with a far more respectful almost bow. “It is… good to see you again.”

They know each other? After getting over her reflexive surprise, Alyssa decided that them knowing each other made sense. Lumen didn’t look that old. Maybe aged somewhere between Irulon, who Alyssa pegged around eighteen to twenty, and Alyssa. So they probably knew each other from the Observatorium and, with their close ages, they might have even talked once. Probably not more than once given Irulon’s treatment of her peers, but that once was enough.

“If I may ask,” Lumen said, looking to Irulon, “what are you doing here? And with… She’s some kind of monster, you know. She cast several spells at once without speaking a word.”

“I’m not a… ugh. You people. All of you. Just… ugh.”

Irulon spoke with far more decorum than Alyssa had managed. “I am aware of what she is. Both she and her mimic,” she paused with a look to Oz, “saved my life last night.”

“Don’t say it like that,” Alyssa snapped. “You’ll cause misunderstandings. I am human.”

“Regardless,” Irulon said with a dismissive wave of her hand. “You are the team who accepted my brother’s guild request to investigate the fairy commune used in attacks against Lyria?”

Lumen and Oz glanced at each other before Oz turned back to Irulon, nodding his head slowly. “Yeah. That’s us. Well, us and Catal. He stepped out for a moment. Something wrong?”

“A fairy entered the city last night.” Both sets of eyes turned to Alyssa as Irulon spoke. “Brought in by the Society of the Burning Shadow, I’m sure you’ve heard of them. What you may not be aware of is the attack on the palace last night. Naturally, the royal family cannot allow an attack against us to go unpunished. As such, I will be attaching myself to your party to ensure completion of this quest.”

“Uh. I don’t mean to be rude—”

“You will still be receiving full pay. The details of your mission have not changed. I will not need protection as I am more than capable of defending myself—” except from a gaunt, Alyssa mentally interjected “—and Alyssa will be handling my defense for anything else.”

Alyssa snapped her head over to the side. “I’ll be what?”

“Don’t worry about it,” Irulon said as an aside. “Are you all prepared to depart?”

“Our gear is packed and our horses are ready at the stables. We were just waiting on Catal to return.”

“You were looking for Tzheitza when I was here a few hours ago,” Alyssa said. “Did she ever show up?”

“Hearing that there could be plague on the loose, Catal went back to the guild hall to let some people know.”

Irulon looked between Alyssa and Oz. “Plague?”

“Next to Madame Webb’s shop. The building adjacent to the shop had a metal grate boarding it up, though it was broken. I didn’t know what it was at the time, but Tzheitza ran off after I mentioned it to her. It’s been almost a full day since then. I hope she’s alright.”

And, Alyssa realized, nearly a full day since I last slept. All the excitement and adrenaline had been keeping her going. Now that she was calmly standing about, she could feel that ache in the back of her mind. Would she be traveling all day long? Longer? Staying awake for twenty-four hours wasn’t that big a deal—in fact, she was almost used to it. She could probably continue as she was for another hour or two. But longer than that? Soon enough, her coordination would take a sharp dive. Her speech would slur worse than if she was drunk. That was assuming she didn’t simply collapse.

“I have some things to pack in my room before we leave,” Alyssa said. A little quieter, she added to Irulon, “And, if possible, I wouldn’t mind a brief rest before we head out.”

Irulon looked her over, from foot to the top of her head. After a moment, she nodded. “We won’t be traveling all day. The desert gets too hot while the sun is out. You can last for another four to six hours.”

“Maybe. But as long as we’re waiting, I wouldn’t mind closing my eyes.”

“It is easier to remain awake than it is to wake from an interrupted sleep.”

The princess might have the right of it there. Power naps were nice, but they typically happened between regular sleep cycles. If she tried to nap now, waking up would leave her with a nasty headache and likely quite groggy. “Point conceded. I still need to grab the rest of my ammo, sunglasses, a first-aid kit… a bunch of stuff. Just shout for me when Catal comes back. Or if Tzheitza returns. If I don’t respond, sorry, fell asleep anyway. You’ll have to wake me up.”

“If you insist. I will remain here and attempt to determine whether Lumen’s skills have risen with her time in the guild or if they have fallen to the level of her companion.”

“Sounds like a plan,” Alyssa said, trying to suppress a yawn as she moved toward Oz and Lumen. She wasn’t so sleepy that she didn’t notice them tense at her approach, but they didn’t try to attack her so she tried to ignore it. It wasn’t like they were wholly unjustified in their caution given that Alyssa had just paraded about a mind controlling monster. And had technically attacked them earlier even if she hadn’t hurt them.

Alyssa actually jumped as Oz ran his hand from her shoulder to her elbow. She whirled and glared.

“Sorry,” he said, pulling his hands to himself. “It’s just… dragon scales. Never thought I’d touch them.”

Frowning, Alyssa glanced down at her outfit, brushing her bare fingers over the scales while trying to be subtle and casual about it. Were they really that special? They didn’t feel like it, but she had an exceedingly poor grasp on what was valuable and what wasn’t in this world. “Just tell me before you reach out and grab me next time, alright?”

“Sure thing,” he said, smiling. Though his smile wasn’t quite all there. Perhaps he was still upset about getting waylaid along with his team.

Really, she wasn’t going to apologize for defending herself. But… “Sorry about the fairy thing.”

Not wanting to get drawn into a long conversation with him or Lumen at the moment, Alyssa headed to her room before either of them could respond.

The second she sat down on her bed, Kasita popped out of the woodwork, looking like a sister Alyssa had never had. “So, you’re going to kill all the fairies?”

“I don’t know about that. But the humans need to stop using them like they are. Oxart needs rescuing. And they eat people? I don’t like that. Especially when they mind control those same people. And you, for that matter.”

Kasita lost her mild smile, even going so far as to frown. “I don’t know how you managed to ignore the fairy. Like, I wanted to attack you, but at the same time, I didn’t want to attack you. It was… strange.”

“Yeah. I got a dose of it when I first bumped into the fairy. Sorry about using Desecrate Spells near you again.”

“Not a problem. Better than being its slave. No permanent harm done.”

“Back to what we were talking about: If the fairies were sitting in their village and weren’t being used, I doubt I would have much problem with them. So if we rescue Oxart and stop the Society of the Burning Shadow from using them, I won’t care much if they sit around in their village forever. The problem is a question of how to stop an organization from using a resource, especially one that has proved useful in their attacks on this city. Also, I doubt Irulon or the others will just walk away from the village like nothing is wrong. Irulon in particular is acting… strange. I obviously don’t know her that well, but I think nearly getting killed might have scared her a bit more than she is showing.”

“Well, I can’t comment on that.”

“How about on the fairies? What would you do?”

Kasita leaned back on the bed, staring at the ceiling. The brief silence wasn’t particularly uncomfortable. Rather, Alyssa had come to enjoy Kasita’s company. Most of the time, anyway. It was a little weird how she had decided to stick with a face so similar to Alyssa’s, but not enough to warrant complaining about it. Eventually, Kasita looked back down. “I hold no love for things that take away my sense of self. I am who I am. At the same time, I suppose I would be disappointed if they were to die. If only out of some misplaced kinship toward my fellow monsters.”

That seemed reasonable enough. Though… “You didn’t have much problem shooting the shadow assassins. And you sure ran quick from the gaunt.”

Kasita shrugged. “There are monsters, then there are monsters. The distinction is important to make. I’ve truly never interacted with fairies much before meeting you. Then again, I’ve never interacted with shadow assassins either. Having a normal face makes fairies seem more personable, but maybe I should reevaluate who gets placed where.”

“Well, whatever happens, I don’t know that we can make much of a decision at the moment. Ask me again when we have a better grasp of the situation.”

For now, I need to pack.


<– Back | Index | Next –>


017.002

<– Back | Index | Next –>


Into the Desert

Draken


As it turned out, Irulon had more than just fancy dresses and elegant clothes in her wardrobe. She had plenty of articles seemingly designed for nothing more than showing off her opulence. Things that looked as if they had actual gold woven into the threads. Even combining the coins she had stolen from Svotty with every penny she had earned over her entire life back on Earth, she was quite certain that she wasn’t rich enough to be in the same room as even one of the more elegant dresses.

Irulon didn’t seem to care for their cost in the slightest as she tossed them to the floor in search of something more suitable to traveling and adventuring. Something that she eventually found.

“Dragon hide,” she said, holding out a pair of… they looked almost like men’s suits. Maybe more like tailcoats with tails in the front as well as the back. A series of buckles ran up the front to hold the two halves closed and a short collar protected the throat. “Made from the same dragon you likely saw while observing my… our souls. Nearly impenetrable, resists magic, and breathes like the finest linens. I had several articles of clothing made from the dragon. Boots, gloves, tunics. My brother has some, but these are mine to lend freely.”

Irulon tossed one of the suits to Alyssa before stripping out of her robe to don the other one. Alyssa stared down at it. The blackish-green scales flexed under her fingers, moving with far less resilience than she had expected for something supposedly impenetrable. She had expected something more like plates of steel than… whatever this was. How flexible were normal scales? Such as snake or alligator scales. She had held a snake before—her elementary school had kept a huge terrarium with a gigantic reticulated python. But that had been a long time ago.

“So,” Alyssa said as she double-checked that there weren’t any older brothers marching into the room. “You killed a dragon, shoved its soul into your head, and turned the rest of it into clothes?”

“No, yes if you are overly simplifying, and no. Killing a dragon? Don’t make me laugh. My brother found it dying of some disease. He has a… fascination with scaled creatures. Knowing of my skill with Death magic, he asked if it would be possible to save it. The answer to that question was sort of,” she said, tapping the side of her head. “As for turning the rest of it into clothes, of course not. Only the scales. Most of it went to a variety of potion laboratories around. Though I did consume some of the meat.”

Alyssa’s head snapped up. “You ate it? What did it think about that?”

“I was curious. I had never had dragon steak before,” Irulon said, shrugging on her own dragon suit. “It was an interesting flavor. A little bit sweet for meat, but not bad. As for the dragon, it didn’t think much of anything. It observes the world only when I allow it to. Thinking about culinary subjects, however, has me curious as to what fascinating dishes the… people on your world have created.”

Other than a mild groan, Alyssa didn’t bother protesting Irulon’s insinuations. Maybe one day, the princess would discover something that convinced her that they were both humans. Until then, there wasn’t much point in arguing. It was clear that words weren’t going to work. Instead, she focused on the dragon hide suit. “I might have a melted candy bar in my bag if you remind me later. But… this is a bit tight, isn’t it?”

“You are larger than I am. And I had this made when I was younger. I designed it with growth in mind, but not your growth. You look fine though.”

The buckles had a slight ability to adjust built in. Loosening it enough to fit into made a slight gap from her neck all the way down to her stomach. She could tighten it to be closed entirely, but she could hardly breathe with it like that. The breeches were made from scales as well and actually fit well on her, though they looked a little loose on Irulon. By design, not because the princess was too small to fit into them. “Is there any thin strip of armor that I can attach to this?” It was one thing to wander around completely naked. Showing off a little cleavage didn’t bother her at all. What did bother her was the thought that someone like the Taker might try to skewer her with a blade. The dragon hide might protect most of her, but a weapon could easily slip and pierce her unprotected sternum.

“You should never allow someone close enough to you to strike,” Irulon said as if she were a mind reader. “You are strong, but you aren’t trained in fighting. Use spells to kill enemies from afar. Besides, if someone gets near enough to you that you have to worry over blades piercing the gap in your chest, your head is a far more enticing target.”

That was both a good point and not reassuring in the slightest. A throwing knife would work far better on her head than on her sternum. “I don’t suppose you have helmets for us?”

“No,” Irulon said, slipping on scale gloves that went all the way up to her elbows and a pair of matching boots. She hadn’t offered either to Alyssa. Given Alyssa’s protest about her boots being incinerated, she probably wouldn’t offer anything more. “Even made from dragon scales, headgear wouldn’t provide sufficient protection. You would need a full helmet like what my brother wears.” Picking up a rucksack she had prepared earlier, Irulon stood. “Speaking of my brother, we should go meet with him before he changes his mind about the draken.”

Standing there in her sleek, dark dragon hide armor, Irulon cut quite the imposing presence. Gone were all the bright gold and purple colors. Her hair, a dark brown normally left long and flowing, was pulled back into a tight ponytail. Even her face had changed. She had applied some sort of eyeshadow that blackened the skin around her eyes. It obscured some of her tattoos, but only served to make her eyes look more dangerous. She looked like a super hero… or maybe a super villain.

In contrast, despite wearing an identical outfit with the same makeup around her eyes, Alyssa didn’t feel like she was pulling the look off at all. She felt awkward and gangling. The clothes didn’t fit quite right and the makeup around her eyes did something that made everything look a shade darker. Apparently it was supposed to help protect from the sun in the desert, but Alyssa had sunglasses back at Tzheitza’s potion shop if she really needed.

Which, if she was going to travel through a desert, she did need. Alyssa made a mental note to pack up everything that might possibly come in useful before leaving the city.

“Are you ready to leave?”

Alyssa sighed, gabbing her satchel. “I suppose.”

The second they made it out of Irulon’s bedroom, Alyssa heard a familiar giggle.

“Ufu~ Matching clothes?”

Turning, Alyssa found Kasita standing just to the side of the door. Except she didn’t look or sound like Kasita at the moment. She was wearing Alyssa’s face. Not exactly. It was the sister disguise. Her facial structure, skin tone, hair, nose, and eyes were close enough that the family resemblance would be impossible to miss, but just different enough that other people could tell them apart. And, as she stood there, her clothes sprouted greenish-black dragon scales from neck to foot.

Even the mimic looked better in the clothes than Alyssa did.

“I see your mimic is feeling better. Will it be joining us?”

“She isn’t mine. I don’t own her,” Alyssa said, though her words felt weak. Complaining just didn’t change Irulon’s mind enough to be worth putting effort into what she was saying. “She can decide for herself.”

“I go where Alyssa goes,” Kasita said with a smile.

“Try not to be an inconvenience,” Irulon said before turning and walking to the stairs.

Stairs which, after walking down them for only a minute, brought Alyssa to a part of the palace she had never been to before despite them being the same stairs she had taken up with Oxart and Kasita. She tried hard not to think about the geometry of the building and how lost she would find herself if she ever had to navigate it on her own. It clearly had something magical about it. Luckily, she didn’t have to put much effort into distracting herself.

The rows of sharp teeth in her face did that for her.

Alyssa stumbled back, almost knocking Kasita to the ground. She hadn’t even realized they were entering the stables. There were no guards in the room. None of the dozen draken were chained, leashed, or otherwise contained. Three of them were tearing apart the carcass of some large beast. Exactly what species of beast was no longer possible to determine without modern medical tests on the remains. Even its bones were scattered about the room.

One of the draken was right up in her face. One moment, she had been walking down the stairs. The next, she found herself almost bumping into it. A wave of hot breath washed over her as it exhaled, smelling pungent like a slaughterhouse. Alyssa locked up. She wanted to stumble back, to hide behind Irulon. But its stare froze her in place. Its yellow eye with that slit for a pupil must have had some magic behind it.

“Izsha,” a deep tone rumbled through the room.

The draken turned away from Alyssa, onyx scales glimmering in the light of the potion jars as it moved toward the sole other human in the room. Brakkt. The Black Prince stood just near the carcass, completely unconcerned with the snapping of the sharp teeth all around him. Holding out a hand—a bare hand, devoid of his gauntlets—the draken moved right up to him and… started nuzzling his open palm?

Alyssa shook her head, finally breaking out of her stupor. What had she been afraid of anyway? She hadn’t batted an eye when confronted with a harpy, a bee monster, elves, Kasita, a salamander, or a fairy. And the fairy had been, at the very least… Alyssa didn’t like to use the word evil, but its values clearly conflicted with her own. Seeing the draken walk up to Brakkt the way a cat might to its owner had Alyssa feeling a little silly about being so scared.

Though they did have extremely large mouths with very sharp teeth.

It was easy to see how those kids in the Jurassic Park movies had been so frightened of the raptors. At the same time, if the draken had replaced the raptors, the kids probably would have died rather quickly. There was just an intelligence to the draken’s eyes that hadn’t come across in the movie raptors. Which might have had something to do with the fact that the raptors weren’t real, being puppets or computer generated imagery, but still. If a raptor had to fight a draken, Alyssa had to put her bets on the draken based on appearance alone. The way their scales were lifted into sharp blades protruding from their backs really helped sell the danger factor.

Absorbed in her thoughts about movie monsters, Alyssa barely noticed as Irulon skipped across the room to pause in front of one of the draken. This one with an orange and black stripe pattern on its scales and less of the spikes. That didn’t make it look any less deadly. If anything, it just emphasized its claws and talons, which seemed to be larger than most others relative to its somewhat smaller size.

“Hello, Musca,” Irulon cooed. She reached out toward its face as if to rub its scales… only to jerk her hand back as the draken snapped at her fingers.

And suddenly, all thoughts of these raptors being nothing more than large kitty cats fled from Alyssa’s mind.

Not that Irulon seemed to care, apparently trusting in her own faster-than-lightning instincts to avoid the draken’s faster-than-lightning movements. She giggled an odd sort of giggle that Alyssa hadn’t heard coming from her before. “Oh yes. You are a vicious one, aren’t you. But my mean old brother has you all locked up down here. How would you like to stretch your legs and chase down some real prey?”

Once again, Irulon stretched out her hand. This time, it didn’t try to bite off her hand, allowing her to rub its scales from its nose to the crest on its head. It didn’t lean into her as Izsha did to Brakkt, but a simple glare was a marked improvement over snapping at her.

“Are we going to stand here all day or should we go in too?”

Kasita’s voice made Alyssa jump, but she felt almost relieved to hear it. With Irulon having clearly gone insane, the dozen human-eating-murder-machines lounging about the large room, and Brakkt casually chatting with one of aforementioned murder-machines, a little bit of familiarity was welcome. Though she wasn’t so sure about going further into the room.

“Come on,” Kasita said, taking hold of Alyssa’s hand, which had the added benefit of reassuring the latter girl. At least, it did until Kasita leaned in close for a whisper. “They smell your fear. Act strong.”

“Easy for you to say,” Alyssa hissed back. “You wouldn’t even feel it if they bit your head off.”

“To be fair, I don’t think you would feel much either.”

Alyssa pressed her lips together, glaring at her nearly identical sister. “You know what I mean.”

“Ufufu~” Other than her giggle, she didn’t say anything else, choosing instead to drag Alyssa further into the room. Not that Kasita could have dragged anyone anywhere if they didn’t want to be dragged, but Alyssa allowed it.

Taking a deep breath, Alyssa schooled her features. They smelled fear. She had heard that phrase in reference to several species of Earth animals. None specifically that she could remember off the top of her head. Here, though, she had to take into consideration that magic existed. Especially among monsters. Kasita could have been entirely literal, meaning that the draken truly smelled something from frightened people.

Either way, the cure was simply to not be afraid of them.

Alyssa jumped as one of the larger ones turned away from its meal to eye her. It didn’t do anything else, but the bloody teeth were enough to send shivers up her spine. Soon enough, it turned back to tear off another strip of flesh, but not before snorting in her direction, reminding her of the one she had encountered on the Brechen Overlook. In fact, it might even be the same one. With the darkness, her own panic at the time, its sudden appearance, and the Black Prince’s imposing presence, she hadn’t really gotten a good look. At the time, she had thought it was laughing at her. Maybe it still was.

What is wrong with me? She hadn’t been this afraid of charging into a palace filled with invisible monsters waiting in the shadows for her to walk by. Of course, they had been invisible. That, paradoxically, made them less scary than the creatures that she could see gnashing their nasty sharp pointy teeth. The few times when she had been shooting at shadow assassins, she had been far too concerned with shooting and surviving to be scared. Adrenaline probably played a large part in that as well.

Avoiding Irulon and her now more docile draken, Alyssa edged toward Brakkt. They were his pets according to Oz, so he probably wouldn’t let them eat her. Though she probably shouldn’t say that aloud. It would be hypocritical considering how much she complained about Irulon saying the same thing about Kasita. He was in the middle of tightening saddle belts around Izsha’s middle.

A saddle.

Alyssa’s stomach dropped into a pit. A saddle. Of course. Brakkt used the draken as mounts. Irulon clearly wanted them for that reason—she was already putting a smaller saddle on Musca’s back. Some part of Alyssa knew that before coming down here, but seeing that saddle in person… Alyssa opened her mouth, about to ask if she could ride a horse instead, only to snap her mouth shut. Would the draken take offense at being passed over for a horse? They were intelligent, or at least, Oz had claimed that the primary difference between monsters and animals was intelligence. If Alyssa were in their place, she would probably prefer not to be used as a mule. At the same time, the snappy Musca had turned almost friendly the moment Irulon mentioned taking her out for a walk.

“Are you alright?” Kasita whispered.

Alyssa blinked, staring at her almost mirror. “What am I even doing?”

It was a rhetorical question, but one that warranted consideration nonetheless. What the hell am I doing? Oxart. And the fairies. Alyssa felt bad about Oxart, especially her role in what happened, but now what was she doing, running off to save her? To stop a warring nation from using monsters as shock troopers and assassins? That was insane. Alyssa was just a normal girl from a normal town in a normal country on a normal world. The only reason she had survived this sanitarium was thanks to a combination of guns and befriending several relatively powerful people. She had fought against monsters, secret societies, gangs, assassins, and who knew what else. And here she was, charging off to go fight more?

It seemed so long ago that she had arrived in this world in the first place. She had been a little scared and a little confused, walking into Lazhar and Yzhemal’s village. But, in retrospect, it had been somewhat fun. Of course, that had been back when she thought she would be getting home in a reasonable amount of time. It had been a month now—though it felt much longer—and she really hadn’t made any progress at all in getting home, mostly because of problems like this that kept popping up. Maybe that wasn’t entirely true. Irulon could easily be her best bet for actually getting back to Earth given her research’s goal of proving the existence of alternate worlds. It really wasn’t thanks to any action Alyssa had taken, but when thought about like that, she might be closer to one of her goals than she had thought before.

Of course, at the moment, Irulon was about to run off on an adventure too.

Couldn’t they just ask the guild to do it for them? Wasn’t that their job? Their whole purpose for existing as an organization?

“What about your research?” Alyssa asked, turning away from Kasita to face Irulon.

The princess had just finished tightening the belts on her own saddle when she looked over. “You are being vague again.”

“I mean, the other day, you—” threw a fit “—didn’t want to check up on Kasita yourself because it would interrupt your research. Now we’re running off to the desert?”

“In retrospect, your momentary interruption scarcely seems worth the effort of denying. These fairies and their masters almost killed me, which would have put a rather large damper on my research in a far more permanent fashion. I am not going to let that stand.” Her smile shifted. Not quite genuine, but it wasn’t vicious either. She had so many smiles that it was tough to keep track of them all. “Besides, you are coming with me. There will be plenty of time for research on the way,” she said, patting the rucksack she had attached to her saddle. “I am not leaving completely empty handed.”

Alyssa slumped. So much for convincing her to let Oz handle it.

“I have prepared supplies for you as well, sister.” The Black Prince stepped around Izsha, whose saddle had a rather bulky bag attached to it, carrying a similar leather bag. “Provisions that, if rationed properly, should last you three weeks.”

“Three weeks?” Alyssa blurted out. “We’re going to be gone for three weeks?”

“Always carry more than you need,” he said, looking over his shoulder for a moment before attaching the bag to Musca’s saddle. “Preliminary scrying estimates the fairy commune to be only a few days away. Less if you’re riding at full speed. I trust you’ve read the interrogation reports, Seventh?”

“Of course I have, Second,” she said with a small sneer. “I know where we’re going. And, unless I am about to be extremely disappointed in the mercenaries who have accepted your job, we will be joining up with several others who should all have read the report as well.”

Brakkt just sighed, watching as Irulon slipped a boot into a low-hanging hoop hanging off the side of Musca’s saddle. She swung a leg up and over, coming to rest right in the seat.

“Make sure the draken stay safe, sister. And… do try to come back alive. I have enough bodies to explain to father as it is.”

“You have nothing to worry about. I’ll not be caught unprepared by a gaunt of all things again.” Without a motion from Irulon, Musca started toward the large stable doors. Though she paused when she reached Alyssa. “You are coming,” she said in a voice that allowed for no arguments. “Don’t worry, Izsha won’t hurt you.”

Alyssa turned to the onyx draken, meeting one of its yellow eyes as it stared at her. Her gaze shifted to the saddle. She wasn’t worried about it eating her. Well, not at this particular moment. Having just watched Irulon get into the saddle, she had a relatively good idea how to do it. She put her foot in the hoop, swung her leg over, and just about fell off the opposite side. A firm hand clasped around her shoulder, steadying her on the back of Izsha before letting go. “Thanks,” she said, looking at Brakkt.

He looked back, raising one eyebrow before turning to Irulon. “Is this a good idea?”

“I asked for Izsha for a reason, being well aware of Alyssa’s ignorance to contemporary matters.”

Trying not to roll her eyes, Alyssa glanced around, ready to offer Kasita a hand with getting on Izsha’s back. But the mimic was nowhere to be seen. She didn’t have a chance to call out for her.

The draken shook back and forth. The saddle was tight on its back, but Alyssa was not. Despite Brakkt not reaching out to help steady her, she didn’t fall. Izsha stepped to the side and caught Alyssa properly. Rather than try to toss her out, it was more like she was now seated firmly in the saddle. Had that been intentional? Probably. “Uh… thanks?”

“Good. Keep Tess safe while I’m gone, brother, and I’ll ensure your lizards get back to you. Hold on Alyssa.” Musca turned to the doorway, took two steps, coiled her muscles, and leaped out.

“Hold on?” She looked down at the spiked neck of Izsha. There were no reins or handles. “Hold on to what?”

No one answered before Izsha turned to the open door and jumped.


<– Back | Index | Next –>


017.001

<– Back | Index | Next –>


Into the Desert

Cleaning Up


“Is Tess going to be alright?”

Irulon stretched her arms high above her, snapped her neck back and forth, twisted her spine from one side to the other, bent over until the tips of her fingers touched her toes, and finally popped back up to her full height with a pleasant smile on her face. She stepped over Tess’ body, hopped off the stone slab where they had been lying, and grabbed for an elegant robe that she had asked for. She slipped into it before looking down at herself, though didn’t actually tie the front closed. If one were to look at her now without knowing what state she was in only a few minutes ago, they might assume that she had simply stepped out of a bath. There were no traces of her earlier injuries left behind.

The same could not be said for Tess. She lacked major injures and the servant girl was breathing, but the scars left behind on Irulon by the healing potion were now on Tess’ arms and chest. Off-color marks dotted her chest and a thin line ran from her wrist to shoulder on either arm. If Irulon had been wounded with other, more subtle injuries before transferring them to Tess, it was entirely possible that Tess now had them. She could be bleeding internally or suffering from a collapsed lung or festering an infection. Anything really.

But Irulon shrugged her shoulders. “I have been performing several experiments on Tess over the past year since she came into my service. Willingly, if you care to know. Her body should be hardier than standard humans such as me or…” Trailing off, she eyed Alyssa for a moment before shaking her head. “Well, just me.”

“I’m not a monster,” Alyssa said with a glare, though both her words and her expression were halfhearted. She was far too exhausted to complain. Tonight had been far too long and, with Oxart missing, was bound to get even longer. If she could possibly just slip in an hour long nap, she would.

“I didn’t say you were… this time. But you are from another world. Who is to say that your definition of human and mine are identical?” Irulon paused just long enough for Alyssa to sigh. “In any case, the ritual completed successfully. Good job drawing it out, by the way.”

“I’ve got no idea what I even did.” And that was the pure truth. Irulon had just directed her and Alyssa hadn’t argued.

“Regardless, I feel a need to praise you. And, since you are worried, I’m sure Tess will be fine so long as she gets rest and food.”

“Shouldn’t we move her to a more comfortable bed?” The cold slab of the laboratory table probably wasn’t the softest place to rest.

“She’ll be fine. More importantly, I need you to remove your clothes. I’ll draw out out a Suppress Magic spell for your pet mimic while you do so.”

“What.”

“You’re soaked in my blood. There are plenty of nasty things you can do with someone’s blood. I already have to scour the room. I’ll not have you wander around with my blood covering your clothes. They need to be destroyed. With fire.”

“That’s…” Alyssa looked down at herself. Irulon was right, of course. At least about the soaked part. Her once yellow shirt was now a reddish brown. Her jeans as well. But… Her limited supply of modern clothing was drastically low. Between torn and ruined clothes, clothes that were just too dirty to wear without heavy cleaning, and now these blood-soaked clothes, she… might not have any left at all besides the Sunday dress. “Isn’t there a way to get your blood out without destroying my clothes?”

“They will be destroyed. Whether or not you are wearing them at the time is up to you.” Irulon looked her up and down before nodding her head. “You are taller than me, but I have a few articles of clothing that you might be interested in, if you feel it is necessary.”

“Absolutely! That isn’t even a question. I am not walking through a medieval city wearing nothing.” The public baths had been one thing, but everyone had been naked there. She hadn’t stuck out at all. Walking through the streets naked? Nope. Nope. Nope.

“Very well. Strip then. I’ll have Tess…” Irulon glanced back to the stone slab of a table and frowned. “I suppose I’ll have to find where clothes are stored. Tess manages every day. I’m sure it can’t be that difficult.”

Alyssa stared at Irulon as the princess hummed to herself in thought. Was she hearing this right? The princess didn’t know where she kept her own clothes? Alyssa’s opinion of the princess might have just dropped several points. Though… maybe it was to be expected. She was a princess.

“Well?” Irulon snapped. “What are you waiting for? And hand over your card making implements so I can get your mimic back to normal. We might need it.”

Shrugging off her satchel, Alyssa hesitated. “Aren’t you going to get the clothes first?”

Irulon snatched the offered satchel. “No.”

Resigned, Alyssa nodded her head. She had, somehow, expected that. As Irulon pulled out ink, paper, a pen, and a loose bullet, Alyssa pulled off her shirt and undid her pants. It wasn’t as awkward as she had expected, surprisingly enough. Which might have had something to do with Tess lying entirely nude on the slab and Irulon having been the same up until she put on the robe. Even that still wasn’t done up fully. Irulon apparently didn’t care at all. They were all girls here and Irulon didn’t seem interested in the slightest. She was too busy writing designs on a card while staring at the bullet sitting on the slab. Her eyes had gone all black and white again.

“What is that?” Alyssa asked as she undid her pants. She did remember to remove everything first. The cards and the rock that was Kasita at the moment. “The eye thing.”

Blinking, eyes returning to normal in the process, Irulon looked over to Alyssa. All without stopping her drawing. “I performed a ritual on myself when I was younger. I share my mind with a deceased dragon, offering it a chance to observe the world again in return for its mental alacrity. It grants me heightened observational skills, nearly perfect memory, and the ability to make connections between ideas at an extremely rapid pace.”

“Ah. A dragon. That explains it,” Alyssa said, taking the idea that Irulon had put a dragon into her head in stride. Maybe she was finally getting used to this world that such a thing barely warranted a shrug.

“Explains what?”

“Oh, just your soul. Way back when you had me use that soul vision spell, you had a giant dragon floating behind you. At the time, I thought you were literally a dragon. But instead, you just have a dragon shoved in your head.” Weird, but far more understandable. Though it did raise the question of why Tenebrael hadn’t swooped down to eat the dragon’s soul. She definitely ate monster souls. Alyssa had seen her eat the soul of that troll. So why not dragons?

It wasn’t a question she could pose to Irulon without answering a lot more questions, so Alyssa just kept her mouth shut. At least, she kept silent until she noticed Irulon’s expression. The princess had stopped writing and was now staring with wide eyes. If Alyssa hadn’t known better, she would have said that Irulon looked frightened.

“Are you alright?”

“That shouldn’t have happened. Did you see anything else?”

Alyssa frowned as she thought back. “Other people had animals as their souls. For the most part, anyway. But you? I mean, there might have been something, but I was a little preoccupied with the dragon. It filled up the entire room, after all. Hard to look away. If there was something else, I didn’t notice. Why?”

Irulon nodded slowly, face turning to a scowl. “Viewing the state of souls is a common way of checking for monsters,” she said, returning to her drawings. “Everyone sees something different, so there isn’t some guide book you can look up for telling humans apart, but experienced arcanists can discern the two. If other people see a dragon when they look at me, or anything that appears inhuman, they could get suspicious. It is why I thought you were inhuman when we first met. Even if that suspicion is ultimately unfounded, it could be annoying, as I’m sure you are aware.”

“Yeah,” Alyssa said with a scoff. “I get that.”

“I’ll ask my brother to examine my soul later. He knows what I did with the dragon and won’t be surprised if anything strange pops up.”

Alyssa shivered slightly, wrapping her arms around herself without commenting. She had already told this Irulon about her brothers possibly being dead. Like the fake Irulons, she didn’t believe it. Hopefully, should something bad have happened, Irulon wouldn’t take it too poorly. But there was nothing Alyssa could do about it now. So, shivering again, she said, “About those clothes…”

“I suppose I had better.” Irulon glanced back, eyebrow raised. “Interesting garment you have there. It has blood on it as well. What is it for?”

Glancing down, Alyssa groaned. “It’s a bra. Lifts, supports, separates.” And some blood had soaked through the shirt. Alyssa slipped out of it without any protesting. It… was getting to be somewhat disgusting with all the sweat and lack of real washing. She had a few others still. They wouldn’t last forever.

Irulon’s eyes flicked downward. For a moment, it looked like she had something to say about Alyssa’s other undergarments. But instead, her eyes flicked to Alyssa’s hands. “You have dried blood on your fingers. There is a basin over there where you can wash,” she said, waving a hand off toward one wall. “And your footwear—”

“You are not burning my boots. They’re all I have.”

“They have blood on them.”

On them. They were specifically designed to be easy to clean. I’ll wash them off in the basin as well.”

“Hm. Fine. I’ll decide after.”

Heading over to the indicated basin, Alyssa took extra care in scrubbing the boots in an attempt to rid Irulon of any reason to burn them. As she cleaned, she thought. There were still a few hours left until Irulon’s time limit was done with, but she couldn’t see the princess dying due to any internal bleeding or other complication from her injuries. If anything, Tess would be the one to die. But Irulon didn’t seem to be too worried. Hopefully that was because Tess wouldn’t be dying and not simply because Irulon didn’t care.

Her next biggest concern was Oxart and the fairy. Oxart was, in all likelihood, getting further and further away from the palace while Alyssa stayed in one spot. Ugh. If she had just used a Spectral Chains on her before running off to Irulon… the fairy might have done something drastic. If only she had listened to Tzheitza and Oz about fairies. Then again, they also complained about Kasita at every opportunity. Alyssa was almost certain that Tzheitza was wrong about mimics. Or, at least the one mimic. Of course, she could have listened to Oz and his friends. Oz hadn’t tried to murder Kasita, but he and his friends hadn’t hesitated upon seeing the fairy. That right there should have told her more than enough.

Unless something changed and her susceptibility to the fairy’s compulsions increased, all Alyssa had to do was get close to Oxart, use Spectral Chains, then… kill the fairy. Did she need to be the one to do it? Not necessarily. Brakkt, if he was alive, could withstand the mental effects of a fairy. Presumably, others were able as well—the guild surely wouldn’t send Oz and company out to a fairy commune without some way to protect themselves; their worry about Alyssa’s fairy could be simply that they hadn’t had time to prepare. But she couldn’t be certain that anyone else would do it. Again, if he was still alive, Brakkt hadn’t even come down to help out his sister. Would he run off to save some lowly captain of the guard? Alyssa honestly wasn’t sure. But Oz was already heading in that direction. To the very same commune that the fairy was likely headed toward. The real trick would be convincing him that she should be allowed to go on his quest.

It probably would have been easier had she not walked in with a fairy sitting in her satchel. He had wanted her to come with him prior to that. Parading around a fairy was just a dubious display of poor judgment, made all the worse because Oxart had succumbed to exactly what he had been worried about. Alyssa might have earned a little respect for coming out of her fight with Lumen without injury despite having literal laser beams fired in her direction, but that was a pretty big might.

And then there was still the problem of Irulon’s countdown timer. She couldn’t just leave the princess. But if she waited for another quarter of the day, who knew what might happen to Oxart. Maybe… “Hey Irulon. Do you ever want to get out of the city? Maybe go on a little vacation to the northern desert and rescue a certain guard captain while maybe destroying a Society of the Burning Shadow cell that seems to be recruiting from a fairy commune.” Shaking the water from her hands, Alyssa turned back to face the princess.

Only for her breath to catch in her throat.

The princess wasn’t alone. Darth Vader had walked in. He was wearing ten tons of armor! How had she not heard him clanking along the stone floor? She couldn’t see his eyes behind his helmet, but he was definitely staring at her. Feeling her face flush, Alyssa slipped around and tried to hide behind the basin of water. Which made Irulon look over and scoff.

“What are you doing, Alyssa?”

“What am I doing? What is he doing here?”

Irulon looked back to her brother, craning her neck back to look the imposing figure in the face. Or the helmet, as the case was. “Ah. She thought you were dead. I told her you weren’t, but apparently your appearance is a shock to her anyway.”

“Dead?”

“Some heretic told her so.”

“Hum…” The Black Prince’s voice rumbled through his helmet. “The Fourth was meeting me in my chambers and perished during the attack. It is likely that he was mistaken for me.”

“The Fourth is dead?”

“And the Fifth. The Third is injured, but not badly enough to put his life in jeopardy.”

“Hm.” Irulon put a hand to her chin as she looked down and away from Brakkt.

Alyssa opened her mouth, only to stop. She didn’t know what to say. Back home, she only had one brother and he was still alive. Both her parents were still alive. Even her grandparents were still alive. Sure, she hadn’t seen them in a month thanks to a stupid angel, but she knew that they were alive. The reverse wasn’t true, but hopefully they wouldn’t be too shocked when she returned. It wasn’t like she hadn’t known people who had died. But no one… close.

She didn’t know what to say.

And she couldn’t say much of anything while hiding behind this basin. Alyssa glanced around, looking for anything that might help with that particular situation. There! On one of the tables. Clothes that looked like they once belonged to one of the corpses that littered Irulon’s laboratory. It was a shirt that might be found on a random person down Waters Street. Fairly rough and a bit torn at the edges. Definitely nothing that a princess would be caught dead wearing. It wasn’t currently on one of the corpses, which was a bonus, and the shirt wasn’t bloody or otherwise stained with bodily fluids. Hopefully there wouldn’t be fleas. To get to it, Alyssa had to leave her hiding spot. But only for a few moments. It was something like a cross between a tunic and a bath robe. Alyssa slipped into it and held it closed. Looking down at herself, she found it just long enough to reach her hips. Not long enough at all. Ugh. Was burning her clothes really necessary? Surely they could be washed as well.

Alyssa did admit that she needed a more local wardrobe. It had been on her list for a while now. But to be forced into getting new clothes like this… Ugh.

Holding the tunic closed, pulling it down as far as it would go to try to cover up, Alyssa approached the two others. And Tess, but Tess was still unconscious and, therefore, did not count. Irulon still had a hand on her chin. Was she… “Are you alright?” Alyssa considered putting a hand on Irulon’s shoulder, but refrained, unsure that Irulon would appreciate the gesture.

“Alright? I’m fine. I was just trying to decide…” She trailed off, looking up to her older brother. “Does this make me the Fifth? Or am I still the Seventh?”

“Th—That’s what you’re worried over?”

Irulon looked over to Alyssa and nodded her head. “You’re right. It doesn’t matter. I have no interest in the throne. So long as I’m not asked to move up to one of the higher floors, I don’t care in the slightest.”

“You don’t… but they’re your brothers.”

“Half-brothers. I’ve heard that the Fourth was nice, but I just told you that I have far better memory than most humans and I cannot recall ever holding a conversation with him. As for the Fifth,” Irulon scoffed and looked over to Brakkt. “How many times has he tried to kill you?”

Brakkt didn’t answer save for a low grunt from inside his armor. With his helmet in the way, it was impossible to tell even his expression. His body language didn’t give anything away. He had hardly moved since Alyssa first laid her eyes on him. The only motion he made was a slight move of his arm toward the sword at his hip. It wasn’t glowing currently, but it was definitely the same sword he had wielded the night of the troll attack.

“The only reason he never tried to kill me is because he wasn’t worried about any siblings numbered higher than him. We weren’t a threat to his possible ascension to the throne. Of course, now we all have to worry about Octavia,” Irulon spat with a glare to the broken rack that had held the self-proclaimed assassin. “I can only hope that the Taker kills her.”

The Black Prince reached up and put both gauntlets on either side of his helmet. He lifted it off with ease, moving to hold it under his arm. “Something I should know?”

Alyssa felt a bit of embarrassment creep into her cheeks, remembering her earlier state of undress. He was rather handsome, if she had to give an opinion. Most people she had seen in this world had fairly disgusting hair. If their hair had any length to it, it would be greasy at the very best. The worst of the worst dreadlocks on the opposite end of the scale. His was short on the sides and slightly longer on top. Somewhat sweaty and matted down, but he had just been wearing a helmet. A cleanly shaved goatee wrapped around his mouth. Like Irulon, he had violet eyes.

And Irulon, apparently not noticing that Alyssa had started scowling at the rags she was wearing, shrugged. “Octavia seems to have thrown her lot in with Waters Street. And the gang has apparently thrown their lot in with the Society of the Burning Shadow.” Irulon thumbed a finger over her shoulder. “She found a bunch of heretics in the basement of the Waterhole along with another fairy.”

“I assumed as much from the presence of shadow assassins. This fairy situation is getting out of hand. I hired the guild to take a look, but I don’t believe they have left yet.”

Alyssa shook her head, mentally slapping her cheeks. “They haven’t,” she said. Both of the royals turned to face her, making her flush again. Focusing on Irulon, she continued. “Oz was the one who accepted the job. He and a few of his friends were meeting tonight, planning on leaving in the morning. Oz kept trying to get me to go with him for more firepower, but I kept declining, not wanting to go kill a bunch of innocent fairies.”

Both of them scoffed.

“Yeah,” Alyssa said, rubbing the back of her head. “I’m thinking I might have been at least partially wrong about that. In my defense, no one mentioned that they were cannibals who kidnap people with their mind powers.”

“Most fortuitous,” Irulon said. “Let us return your pet back to normal then go find this guild party.”

“You’re going with them?”

“This was a direct attack on my person. I may be hiding it, but I am livid. They almost killed me. If not for you…” Her voice trailed off. “Thank you. By the way. I really cannot overstate my appreciation. I said this already, but I knew you would be useful. I always like being right.”

“If you really want to show your appreciation, maybe consider paying Tzheitza back for the potion. I’d rather not have her overly upset with me about stealing that from her.”

“I’ll see what I can do. In any case,” she said, turning back to Brakkt. “My impression of this Oz is relatively low. I will not suffer another attack such as this one, so I will be leaving the palace for a short expedition.”

“Be careful. I cannot go with you. Not without leaving the First undefended. Considering that all of our prisoners have escaped, to do so would be most unwise.”

“I wouldn’t have expected that of you. However, I want your draken.”

As soon as the word left Irulon’s mouth, Brakkt’s impassive facade cracked. Just a little. He sucked in a slight breath, grimacing.

“Oh don’t be such a baby. I won’t harm them. I promise! What was the name of the cute little one? Musca? That one and Izsha.”

“Sister…”

“I already said that I won’t hurt them.” Irulon pouted. An expression that didn’t fit on her face in the slightest. “Can’t you do this one little thing for your favorite little princess?”

Brakkt drew in a deep breath and let it out slowly. “If even one scale is scratched…”

“Excellent,” Irulon said, face snapping back to normal so fast that Alyssa had to wonder if the rock on the table was still Kasita or not. “I knew you were my favorite brother. Never fear, I will return them safe and sound.” Spinning on her heel, she faced fully toward Alyssa. “Now, about—Oh, I see you’ve already found clothing. Good. Now I—”

“Absolutely not. You promised me real clothing. And if we really are going to head out in the desert to potentially fight, I’m going to want something more armored.” Alyssa eyed Brakkt before quickly turning away. “Maybe not that armored.” Who knew how much his gear weighed. She was strong, but she would probably be dead in ten minutes trying to carry all that around. Especially through a desert.

“Fine. Fine. Mimic first. Gear next. Mercenaries after.”


<– Back | Index | Next –>


Author’s Notes: Added Lumen and Catal to the characters list underneath the Knights Solaris banner. And, while we’re here, I’d appreciate a quick vote over at Top Web Fiction.

Alyssa’s Notes: Lots of things to write down this time. Fairies are a new addition in the Bestiary. And spells, whoooo boy. We’ve got All Shall Burn in Fire magic. Fractal Vision and Reality Sliver in Fractal magic. Down in Arcane magic, we’ve got Disintegration Ray. And there is the Rank Three spell, Subjugation. Did I miss any? Probably.

016.008

<– Back | Index | Next –>


Murphy

Healing


Alyssa couldn’t do anything. The laboratory had a relatively open floor plan. There were tables, but none nearby. She tried to throw herself to the side, but she didn’t go far enough. Subjugation came at her as a wide wave, not a narrow beam. Her hands and knees hit the ground a lot harder than she would have liked. Kasita joined her only moments later.

Though the mimic didn’t stay kneeling for long. Her form shimmered and she was standing again.

Despite trying to get back up as well, Alyssa couldn’t. The spell had locked her knees and arms where they were. Even lifting her head was a strain. “That isn’t the real Irulon,” she said, trying to look up as much as possible. Subjugation kept her only able to look at Oxart’s legs. She couldn’t see if the captain was readying another spell, pulling out her dagger, or just staring. “Kasita! Show her.”

Kasita’s foot lifted off the ground, but she didn’t move forward, putting her foot back right where she had picked it up from. “I don’t want to.”

“What? What do you mean you don’t want to? Where’s Irulon!”

“I don’t want to? I don’t… want…”

Alyssa couldn’t see what Kasita was doing. All she could see were the mimic’s surprisingly modern tennis shoes as they trembled. Kasita picked up a foot, set it back down, picked it up, and put it back down again. Eyes wide, Alyssa stopped fighting against the spell and let her head drop completely.

At her waist, her satchel hung open. The tiny fairy stood outside it, hands on her hips as she looked around the room without a worry showing on her face. Her little glowing eyes found Alyssa’s… and she smirked. The overlarge mouth for her small face twisted up into something Irulon at her most vicious would have found envious.

Adrenaline flooded Alyssa’s system as she smiled—frowned. Her best friend _̵̷̢̀͝_̧͜͜͞_̷̢͘͜_̴͘͢͞͝_̵̸—worst enemy needed help. Alyssa wanted

Get out of my head!

The smile on the fairy’s face vanished as she flinched back as if physically struck. She recovered quick enough, shooting a glare at Alyssa. ~Why won’t you just listen?~ Her lips didn’t move save to form into a pout. The words came as a mild pressure on Alyssa’s mind.

“Let Kasita go,” Alyssa snarled. “Or—”

~Or what?~ the fairy said, smirking again.

Alyssa ground her teeth. What was Oxart doing? With how Oz and his friends had reacted to the fairy, Alyssa had fully expected some deadly spell to have obliterated the tiny being the second she showed her face. But she wasn’t. Ugh. Of course. Alyssa tried to wrench her head up to look at Oxart, but couldn’t make it with Subjugation still in effect.

The action did make the fairy laugh. Tiny little squeaks escaped from her mouth as she spoke. ~Her? The human? She doesn’t want to help you.~

“Why are you doing this? We had a deal. You help me, I help you out of the city.”

The mirth on the fairy’s face died in an instant, replaced with fury. Her fists, each about as big as Alyssa’s littlest finger, shook in rage. ~I will never trust a human I cannot control. You’re just like the others, trying to honey me up until I’m compliant. You thought you had me tamed. But I can see through your lies.~ Her hands slowly unclenched as her smile returned. ~But I don’t need you anymore. Now I have a human to do my bidding. One in a place of power over her peers. She can carry me all the way back home without any other humans getting suspicious and feed the commune for months. Maybe a few of the other humans will want to escort her there. We won’t need to hunt for years!~

That… That could not happen. Why hadn’t anyone mentioned that fairies were cannibals! It seemed like the kind of thing people should bring up. ‘Oh, those tiny things will mind control you and eat you.’ It was so simple! Maybe because it wasn’t technically cannibalism. Lots of monsters probably ate humans. Dragons, draken, and maybe even Rizk’s lizard species.

~But you are just too dangerous to bring back home. If only you would have listened, you could have enjoyed being made into a feast.~

Oxart shifted. Her feet were all Alyssa could see, but she could still feel the air move about and hear the rustling of papers. The captain was probably selecting another spell. One far more dangerous than Subjugation.

“Oxart! You don’t want to do this! It’s a fairy. Fight it!”

~It’s useless.~

Alyssa had to move. She had to get away. The fairy stood to the side, smirk firmly on her face. Kasita was on her other side, still performing the world’s slowest tap dance. There had to be something she could do. She had a whole pocket full of spells. But her hands were locked in place. She couldn’t get to them.

Except, Oz’s friend hadn’t needed to hold or even touch her spells to cast them. If she hadn’t needed to, why did Alyssa? But what spells did she have available? Fireball would just blast a hole in her pocket. In fact, most spells would do something similar. She either needed something that would protect her or would free her from Subjugation. Both maybe.

Projectile Reflection? Would that be in the deck? Alyssa thought hard about casting it, but nothing happened as far as she could tell. No shimmering bubble around herself. But then, the Taker hadn’t had a bubble around him. It might have worked, but it might not have just the same. It wasn’t reliable. Even if it had worked, Oxart might have selected a spell that would bypass any barrier that might have formed.

Something else. Something that would stop whatever Oxart was about to do.

She had to think fast.

It hit her. She knew a spell likely contained within this deck.

Alyssa hated doing this to Kasita again, but she didn’t have a choice!

Desecrate Spells.

The moment the thought crossed her mind, whatever force had been holding Alyssa down vanished with a cutting feeling against her back. The pain made her clench up, wincing as she tried to suppress a shout. Kasita stopped moving, screaming a bloodcurdling scream for a second before her form shimmered. Her legs disappeared, replaced with a small stone. The laboratory darkened as jar after jar of light exploded, sending glass shards around the room. None near Alyssa, thankfully.

The fairy didn’t scream. She stared, eyes wide with fear as she whipped her head around to stare at every exploding jar. That fear, unfortunately, did not lock her in place. Alyssa, free of Subjugation, lashed out and tried to grab the diminutive being around her waist. The fairy moved too quickly, jumping back. She turned and ran further into the room. Her little wings fluttered behind her, but torn up as they were, she didn’t get into the air.

Another scream cascaded off the walls. Not Oxart. The sound was too distant. It wasn’t the fairy either, not unless her tiny body could muster up such a loud noise. It took only a moment to realize just whose voice the scream belonged to.

“Damn it,” Alyssa swore. Back burning from the shallow cut Desecrate Spells had given her as payment for stopping Subjugation, she fished her flashlight from her satchel. She had fifteen minutes. Maybe not even that long. In fact, almost certainly less than fifteen minutes given the effect of Desecrate Spells on magic. Stasis was probably a fair amount of magic at that.

She had to find Irulon.

Luckily, Irulon was making quite the noise. All Alyssa had to do was follow that noise.

Oxart, Alyssa found when she swung the flashlight to where the captain had been standing, was lying flat on her face. A small bit of blood was leaking from the side of her head, but it didn’t look like a very large cut. The fairy must not have put too much magic on her. Good, she would be fine and she wouldn’t move. Alyssa couldn’t spend the time fighting or arguing with the woman at the moment. Not with Irulon crying out in pain.

Alyssa did reach down to pick up the rock that was probably Kasita. It was the least she could do to not leave her behind again. Pocketing the mimic, Alyssa followed Irulon’s voice. The princess wasn’t screaming any longer, but there was a sticky breathing noise coming from the same direction. Back toward the hidden passage that all the Irulons had been hiding inside.

That fairy was still around somewhere. It had run in the opposite direction, but given how small it was, it could easily sneak around in the darkness. With any luck, it would flee and not come back. And if it did come back… Alyssa might have to consider taking Tzheitza’s advice. The thing was too dangerous to let near susceptible people. Though she hadn’t thought Oxart would be so weak minded. Unless it was something else entirely. Perhaps it had just struck out too hard with Alyssa in a panic and desire to escape from its cage, while it had taken more time with Oxart. They had been close together from the moment Alyssa first went up to her until just a moment ago. Questions for later, she supposed. For now…

Irulon was in the hidden room, though it wasn’t so hidden anymore with the bookcase torn off the wall. Alyssa just about tripped over Tess on her way in. No one had bothered to wake the poor servant girl, though maybe that was for the best. If she had been awake, the assassin that had killed the fake Irulons might have killed her as well. As it was, she slept on the floor, chest rising and falling peacefully. She wasn’t even bleeding from Desecrate Spells. Hadn’t the Irulons put her to sleep with magic? Maybe it was some hypnosis.

Something to ask Irulon later.

Less peaceful was the princess. Blood pooled around her at an alarming rate. Before, in stasis, she had only had the few holes in her chest and back. Several lacerations now ran from her shoulders to her wrists. Blood dribbled from the corner of her lips, running down the side of her face. Her black and white eyes flicked to Alyssa as she approached.

“Fool. Desecrate—” Irulon didn’t get further than that, spitting out blood before trying to breathe back in. The wet, labored breath sounded painful all on its own.

“Don’t talk. I have a healing potion.” And I sure hope it works, Alyssa thought as she knelt next to Irulon. Tzheitza had used just a few drops, letting them fall right into her wounds. Mimicking that, Alyssa opened the orb and carefully held it over Irulon. She let just a single drop fall into the largest wound on Irulon’s chest. The way the cap was designed, she needn’t have worried about letting more out than necessary. It was like a bottle of Tabasco sauce. Except healing, instead of burning fire. Hopefully.

Irulon jerked, sucking in a breath that made her start coughing. Pressing a hand down on her to keep her steady, Alyssa let another drop fall over the next largest hole. It took tearing the princess’ dress to get at the other wounds, but it probably wasn’t that big a loss given how ruined it already was. Her body was far more important anyway. Surely a princess had a thousand dresses.

Alyssa continued dripping a single drop into each wound on Irulon’s chest, then moved to her arms. One drop around the elbow was enough to seal the entire wound. It spread down to her wrist and up to her shoulder like some invisible hand drawing up a zipper, sealing the skin on her arms while leaving only a slight blemish behind. A thin pale line on her otherwise dark skin. Alyssa didn’t want to use too much of the extremely rare potion that she had stolen from Tzheitza—just the few drops she had used was about a third of the small orb. At the same time, she didn’t want the princess to die. Surely the royal family would compensate Tzheitza. Taking care to not jolt her much, Alyssa turned Irulon over onto her stomach.

It looked like she wouldn’t need to use more on her back after all. Alyssa ran her fingers over Irulon’s back, trying to wipe away the blood to find the wounds, but couldn’t. There was nothing there but smooth skin. Looking over the princess for any other injuries and finding none, Alyssa breathed out a small sigh. There was nothing more she could do. Closing the healing potion, she replaced it in her satchel. As she did so, she looked down at Irulon’s still black and white eyes. “How are you feeling?”

Irulon opened her mouth, hacked up a congealed wad of blood, then went back to lying on her back in the pool of her still liquid blood. “Like I slipped off my balcony again,” she said with a distinct wheeze. But she smiled and stared right at Alyssa. “I knew you would prove useful.”

Alyssa rolled her eyes, but didn’t say anything. Not until she heard a thumping noise from the main laboratory. Snapping her head to the entrance, she swore and reached for her spells.

A hand snapped out, grabbing Alyssa’s wrist. She sucked in her breath, fearing that Irulon had fallen under the fairy’s sway.

“Your hands are bloody. Don’t get it on the cards.”

Alyssa’s breath came out as a sigh as the hand fell away. That was certainly sensible. Couldn’t let the markings get smeared. Though her hands had been fairly bloody while burning herself during her encounter with the Taker. She must have just lucked out then.

“What is out there?”

“A fairy and the Captain of the Northgate Guard.”

“A fairy? What is a— You brought it here?”

“I don’t want to talk about it. Just focus on getting better. I need to ensure that Oxart is disarmed. Even if I have to incinerate her entire spell tome and wrap her up in Spectral Chains… Can you resist a fairy if one comes in here?”

“Just who do you think I am? I’d like to see a fairy try.”

Alyssa gave the princess a look before turning back to the doorway. So far, no one had come in. Maybe she should use the time to bind up Irulon as well. For both Alyssa’s and Irulon’s safety. Somehow, she doubted that Irulon would appreciate that. But since she had just saved the princess’ life, she should have some leeway with her actions.

Though… had she truly saved the princess’ life? The timer was still counting down. Alyssa hadn’t really expected it to stop once the crisis passed—it was just the timer app on her phone, not some mystical magic clock—but she worried that fate might twist to conform with Tenebrael’s books. Until the timer had hit zero and then some, Alyssa vowed to stick to Irulon like glue.

“How soon do you think you can move about on your own… or is there still something wrong with you? Do you have some wound I missed?”

“My body has lost a significant amount of blood. I am feeling exceedingly lethargic. Were I to cease maintaining my mental acumen, I imagine that I would fall asleep instantly.”

“But there is nothing wrong with you.”

“Aside from the blood loss, nothing that I can detect.”

That was good, at least. Alyssa bit her lip. Good, but she needed to leave Irulon’s side to find that fairy before it could do anything regretful. Anything more. Ugh. Why couldn’t the stupid fairy have just played nice. Everything would have been so much easier. Now what was she supposed to do? She couldn’t leave Irulon, but she couldn’t leave the fairy on its own. First, she needed to locate the fairy. Something that would be nearly impossible in the dark of the laboratory. Assuming it hadn’t fled the room already.

Kasita could have done it had she not been a rock, her ability to sense things around her was truly amazing. However, even if she wasn’t a rock, the fairy had placed her under its control. For the time being, it was best that Kasita stay as a rock.

Alyssa edged away from Irulon. Not leaving her, just moving closer to the door. She thought to peek around the side, but hesitated. Her flashlight gave away that she was inside the secret room, but shining it into the main room would give away her exact position. If Oxart had gotten back up, it would be the optimal time to release a spell.

“Is there a spell that lets me see in the dark?” Alyssa whispered.

“Yes, but I’m not in any shape to draw—”

“Never mind.” As soon as she posed the question to Irulon, she could see. In fact, she was almost blinded by her own flashlight. One of the spells in the decks she had in her hands must have been night vision. Like Desecrate Spells, she hadn’t needed to actually single it out. Though she would have to be careful. She didn’t want to blow a hole through her hand by thinking about casting the wrong spell. That was possibly the only advantage of having to shout out spell names in order to cast them.

Night vision, as it turned out, wasn’t anything like what Alyssa thought it would be. She had expected some green filter over everything like they had in the movies. Not true. Or rather, Hollywood might have gotten that one correct so far as it applied to Earth and technological night vision. The magic spell was more like normal vision. At least, everything had color to it, though the colors were off. Far more vibrant than she was used to. While her flashlight had been on, her vision might as well have been a white wall. Now that her eyes had adjusted to the… darkness? It was more like looking at Wes Anderson film where all the colors just popped.

Now able to see, Alyssa leaned around the brick wall that separated the hidden room from the rest of the floor. She only glanced for a second, not wanting to get a knife buried in her forehead. But that second was long enough to have a cursory look at the room. There wasn’t any fairy in sight. There were plenty of tables, racks, and debris to hide behind, but Alyssa doubted that the fairy was still in the room. The primary reason she doubted: Oxart wasn’t where she had been lying on the floor. Nor anywhere else in the room.

Alyssa wanted to slam her head into the wall. But that would not be productive. Instead, she returned to Irulon. “We’re safe for this second, I think, but we have problems. Problems that I really could use you on your feet for.”

Irulon didn’t even lift her head to look around. She stared straight at the ceiling as she spoke. “Because you brought a fairy into the palace. Good job with that, by the way.” She paused for a second, but continued speaking before Alyssa could object. “But you think we’re safe. So it escaped. And is likely gathering support to carry out unpleasant acts against us.”

“Yes, sorry. Yes. Yes. No. It told me that it was going to return to its commune. I could be wrong, but I think that is what it is going to do.” If she was wrong, she could be very wrong, given how wrong she had been about the fairy earlier.

“That doesn’t sound like a problem.”

“Well, it’s run off with the Captain of the Northgate Guard. Possibly to eat her.”

“Hm. While I can see some people considering that a problem, you said we have a problem. Not other people have a problem.”

Alyssa’s lips pressed to a thin line. “Ignoring the fact that you are apparently alright with throwing away a loyal member of the city guard, I—”

“Do I have to spell everything out for you? Diplomatically, of course I care about some captain,” Irulon said in a tone of voice that made Alyssa wonder which metaphorical mask the princess had just slid onto her face. “But I’m lying in a lake of my own blood. I’m not in any shape to go gallivanting through the desert to rescue someone. Go tell the city guard or the guild if you think this captain is worth saving.”

“I think she is. Especially because it is my fault she got captured. But… the city guard might be the most immediate problem. She knew Kasita wasn’t you and I think she set up a contingency plan for if she disappeared.”

“And she has disappeared.” Irulon clicked her tongue in annoyance, then turned her head to look directly at Alyssa. The way she moved wasn’t natural at all. It looked as if she put all her effort into just starting to turn her head, but gave up part way, leaving her staring off at an odd angle. Was she really going to be alright? Her eyes were still pitch black but the normally white rings looked more… grey. Or perhaps just dimmer than usual. “Why was the mimic pretending to be me? Or rather, explain everything. I am unaware of anything that occurred since I used Fractal Lock on myself. I’ve pieced together most of what happened, but not all. I had expected one of my contingency plans to inform me of anything I need to know, but seeing as none are around, the task falls to you.”

“Before that, is there a way to ensure that you’re alright? Can we replenish your blood faster or…” Alyssa looked around. Blood was really red with this night vision spell active. “Is there a Draw Water spell that would work on blood? Then we could put all this back inside you…” Would that even work? Hospitals put stored blood into people all the time. This was all Irulon’s blood, so there wouldn’t be any incompatibility with blood types. Assuming a hypothetical Draw Blood spell worked like Draw Water and left behind dirt and other impurities, it should work… right? Alyssa pulled out her phone and glanced at the timer. “I would prefer if you were able bodied for at least the next eight hours.”

“You have your device back. And it tells you something about me.” Irulon grimaced as she tried to sit up, but gave up halfway and let herself fall back into the puddle of blood. “Am I more injured than I think?”

“I… don’t know.” Alyssa bit her lip. Ugh, why couldn’t Tenebrael just pop down here and heal up Irulon if she wanted her to survive so bad. “It told me that you would die a few minutes after exiting your stasis naturally. But I ended it early and healed you so…”

“Interesting. We will discuss that further. For now… Draw a Message spell and contact Donovan of the Northgate Guard. Oxart’s second in command. Alert him to the fact that a fairy is loose with his captain and have him ensure that it leaves the city without being impaired. His guards should clear away from the gate to avoid being caught and dragged out with her.”

A Message! Right. She had forgotten. She could contact Ipo, explain what happened. Maybe he wouldn’t enact whatever contingency plan Oxart had told him about. And she could contact the guild without leaving Irulon’s side… though if she called Oz, she would have to admit that he had been right about the fairy. Which he had been.

He and his friends probably deserved an apology.

Surely the Society of the Burning Shadow had a few Message spells in these decks. Bercilak had used one back on the Overlook. Sure enough, Alyssa found a good ten of them among the cards. She opened her mouth only to hesitate. “Wait, you want Oxart to leave the city? Why not stop her?”

“Fairies are dangerous. Relatively imbecilic, but their power means that they can bumble their way through decimating entire towns. If the fairy is cornered, it may abandon subtlety and start abusing its abilities on anyone nearby. So long as your guess is correct that it wants to escape, it will likely focus on that to the exclusion of all else. We don’t want it to feel trapped.”

Alyssa nodded. That was a good point. If it hid in Oxart’s coat and just started mind controlling everyone it came across, half the city could be under its sway by sunrise. Once it got out of the city, there would be far more space and far less people. It would be easier to deal with.

“After that…” Irulon forced her lips into a strained smile. “I may have some ideas on how to fix myself up faster. Tell me, is Tess still alive?”


<– Back | Index | Next –>


 

016.007

<– Back | Index | Next –>


Murphy

Ascent


Ten minutes ticked by a lot slower when waiting for something to happen. Especially when Alyssa wasn’t sure at all that said something would even occur. When she had left Irulon’s laboratory, involuntarily though it had been, there had been a Fractal magic barrier over the only door out. She had Messaged Kasita essentially asking her to come down in the guise of Irulon to order around the palace guard. But that plan all failed at the first step if Kasita couldn’t even leave the laboratory.

The palace guards remained stubborn. Decorous had wandered over to the main gate and looked to be in a heated argument with the guards. The black-armored guard stood tall and firm, though he and his fellow knights had tensed when Decorous first approached. It was plain to see in their body language that they wished the man would just go away. Their hands moved closer to their swords than they had been before. The central leader-type knight, who had a small violet-colored emblem on his chest to differentiate him from the others, had his fists balled up as tight as his gauntlets would allow. Those further away moved closer to support their comrades should the need arise. But not so close as to leave vacant spots along the wall.

Decorous, if he paid attention to the movements of the guards at all, seemed unconcerned. His focus was solely on the leader. He wasn’t shouting and irate the way some customers had been back at the home improvement store, but he clearly wasn’t happy. Every few words he spoke was accompanied by a slash of his hand across his waist. The palace guard interrupted him every so often, but he did so in return just as frequently.

Alyssa couldn’t understand. Not letting some random civilian in made enough sense. If she were in charge of security, she wouldn’t want her here either. But the city guard? The palace was under attack. Or it had been, but they didn’t know that the fairy in her pouch had set all the monsters to finding the people actually responsible for this attack.

It was a case of two primary groups with supposedly similar goals but vastly opposite organizational structures, according to Oxart. The palace guard only responded to the royal family. And not even every member of it. There were apparently a lot of members of the royal family. Irulon had six older brothers, plus her father. Then she had a good twenty younger siblings, most of whom were children and teenagers. The pharaoh wasn’t an only child, having brothers and sisters of his own, most of whom had their own descendants. But the palace guard would only accept commands from the pharaoh and his line of family, and they had to be at least seventeen years of age. Should there be no valid royals, they would begin branching out. First to younger children, though that apparently stopped at age thirteen—anyone younger was considered too immature to make decisions. After that, they would finally branch out to Irulon’s uncles or aunts.

The city guard, on the other hand, were owned by the nobles. Nobles were generally land owners and regents of other cities, towns, and villages. Though not all. Some had been able to purchase their way into nobility, exceedingly rich merchants and the like, and a few had been granted titles due to worthy deeds performed by them or their ancestors in service of the pharaoh. The latter options tended to have less influence over the city guard because they contributed less bodies—most soldiers of the city guard were recruited from peasantry of the nobles’ lands. Those that contributed the most personnel and funds had the most influence.

However, the city guard had significantly more autonomy. The nobles could order them around, but most decisions were actually made by the captains. Though they had manors within the city, the very buildings that surrounded the palace where Alyssa stood at the moment, most nobles tended to spend their time within their own domains, managing their own people and their own armies, and only lived in the city for a few days a year. Hence the autonomy.

The hostility between the groups boggled Alyssa’s mind. The palace guard were actively putting the royal family into more danger by refusing to let the city guard help. It was insane. “Surely they realize that,” Alyssa whispered to herself.

Oxart’s muttering over the map on the table ceased as she looked up. Since Decorous had gone off to speak with the palace guard, Oxart had started casting spells at the map. Locating spells, judging by the names of a few of them, though Alyssa didn’t know what she was trying to find. Probably members of the Society of the Burning Shadow. Judging by the frown and the glare, her efforts were not being rewarded. “Realize what?”

“Oh just… that they need help ensuring that the palace is safe. There are what, two hundred fifty people out here? All trained swordsmen. And how many did you say they had? One hundred? That number includes the guards who were supposed to be stationed around and inside the palace. People who are probably dead now.”

“Very likely,” Oxart said with a nod of her head.

“Then how many people are out here standing guard? There are probably only twenty people trying to clear the palace. That place is huge!”

Oxart grunted an agreement. “They’re worried we might do something to undermine the royal authority. If the royals lose power, the nobles gain power.”

“But you aren’t going to do anything like that… are you?”

I won’t,” Oxart said, though Alyssa didn’t miss the way her eyes flicked over to Decorous. “But it isn’t just me. Among my men, there are no less than fifteen nobles of varying stations in life. So long as I have eyes on them, none will try anything. I don’t believe any would try anything anyway, but there is always a chance that their houses have given them orders that I don’t know about.”

Alyssa grit her teeth. It sounded an awful lot like the palace guard were right to deny the city guard entrance. Would it kill these people to work together? Probably.

“You’re quite the conundrum.”

Blinking, Alyssa glanced up to meet Oxart’s eyes. “What?”

“You seem to have a habit of finding threats to the city.”

Ah. That. Alyssa couldn’t help her scoff. “Not by intention or choice, I assure you. If I could live a nice peaceful life where I didn’t have to deal with life and death matters every day, I would.”

“What’s stopping you?”

“Powers beyond my control,” she said with a wan smile. “Though I am looking into controlling, killing, or otherwise avoiding said powers. However, I haven’t had all that much time as of late to actually do research. Things like this keep cropping up. Ugh, I need a vacation. And a nap.”

“Mhm. I can already tell that this is going to be a night where I don’t get any sleep,” Oxart said, her naturally hard tone softening ever so slightly. “Though I cannot help but wonder if we are wasting our time here.”

“What do you mean?”

“You sent a Message to me earlier. Two, in fact. One warning about the shadow assassins, another about the gaunt. Perhaps it slipped your mind, but I cannot help but wonder how your sister is going to get Irulon to come down from the top of the palace while being… grievously injured, was it?”

“Ah…” Alyssa shifted where she stood. “Did I say that?”

“You did.”

“Ah. Well. I probably sent the message in haste before being fully aware of the situation. I had just gotten done being chased around by a gaunt, after all,” Alyssa said with a nervous laugh.

“So the princess isn’t injured.”

“I didn’t say that. Just that she might not be as grievously injured as the word grievous might imply.”

“You’re having your sister escort an injured princess through a palace that could be filled with monsters. How capable is she?”

“Ahh…” Alyssa rubbed the back of her head. A movement in the corner of her eye saved her from answering. The palace’s main doors swung open. Irulon strode out, looking like she owned the place, flanked on either side by black-armored palace guards. Alyssa turned to face the palace, though glanced to a now utterly still Oxart. “Quite capable, it seems,” she said with a smile.

The captain didn’t respond because the princess began speaking, choosing to stare instead.

“Palace guard! Attention!” Every guard nearby save for the two at Irulon’s sides turned to her, put an arm across their chest, and knelt down on one knee. They all moved in such perfect synchronicity that Alyssa had to wonder how many hours of their training went into genuflecting. The city guard also moved to show respect, but not quite to the point of kneeling. “You are to join the city guard in searching and clearing the palace of all threats.”

The leader of the palace guard, kneeling next to Decorous, looked up. “But Princess Irulon, we have…” He hesitated upon making eye contact, hand moving back toward his sword. “You aren’t—”

“Loophole,” Irulon snapped out before he could do or say more. A card between her fingers vanished.

The leader snapped back, moving to his full kneeling position that he had held before looking up. He started talking again, but his words were jumbled, sometimes coming out with multiple words spoken at once, sometimes with a single word sounding like it had been recorded on a faulty record. Then he flickered again, this time looking away from the palace with clenched fists in the exact pose he had taken while arguing with Decorous. He reset again, kneeling.

Irulon looked around with piercing eyes, daring anyone else to make a move against her.

No one did.

“You,” Irulon said, pointing to a random palace guard near the now constantly resetting leader. “What is your name?”

The knight ducked his head, looking at the ground. “O-Ogden.”

“Congratulations, Ogden, on your promotion. Before you make the same mistake as your predecessor, allow me to inform you of a few facts: I have had a bad day. I’m sure you don’t need me to explain why. I am in no mood for insubordination. All you need to know is that the sooner this mess is over with, the sooner everyone can go back to having a normal life. Do you know how many rooms are inside the palace?”

“No m-ma’am.”

“Three thousand one hundred thirty seven. With the palace guard divided into three groups, assuming each room takes only five minutes to search, do you know how long it will take to fully search every room within the palace?”

“No ma’am.”

“It will take three days, fourteen hours, and thirty minutes. That is assuming there are no breaks and no combat. Obviously, this is unacceptable. To that end, the city guard will be divided up. There will be at most two palace guardsmen per group. The city guard should be evenly divided among the palace guard. Your orders are to clear the entire palace of any hostile threats. There may be monsters within the palace. There is definitely a woman inside. She was wearing a hooded cloak, but may now be disguised as a servant, as such, all servants are to be detained until their identity can be verified. Are my orders clear, Ogden?” Irulon held up another spell card. “Or do I need to find someone else who can listen to simple directions.”

“N-No ma’am… I mean yes ma’am. I mean… Right away, ma’am!”

“Ufu~ Good. That is what I like to hear. You may begin.”

Irulon bored a hole into the man with her gaze as he stood on shaking legs. Ogden gave one glance toward the man he had replaced before turning around. “You heard the princess! Let’s get moving.” He started pointing out people, both palace guard and city guard, and started barking out orders. The city guard were far more hesitant to follow through, often looking to Decorous or Oxart, but neither made to disagree with his orders. Though Decorous definitely looked like he wanted to. His face was set into a deep scowl, but his frequent glances to the Loopholed palace guard were enough to hold his tongue.

“Alyssa, to me,” Irulon called across the pavilion.

“Ah. Well, nice talking with you Oxart. Better not keep the princess—” A gloved hand slapped down on Alyssa’s shoulder before she could take a full step away. Oxart pulled her back and put her lips right up to Alyssa’s ear.

That isn’t Irulon,” Oxart hissed, so quiet that Alyssa could barely hear her even with the proximity. “The man she spelled was one of the few who could have identified that. What is that spell?”

A knot formed in Alyssa’s stomach at hearing Oxart’s words. Of course, Alyssa knew that this Irulon was Kasita. But no one else was supposed to have known. This was it. The thing Kasita had been worried about since Alyssa had first met her. Oxart could detect mimics.

And Alyssa had to defuse her before she pointed it out to anyone else. “W-Well… That’s… The palace guardsman. He’ll be back to normal in ten to twenty minutes.”

Oxart’s fingers dug into Alyssa’s shoulder. “Explain.”

“Loophole. Irulon explained it to me one time. It’ll keep him trapped in warped time until the spell wears off.”

“That’s too long. Without him, if the fake princess orders the palace guard to attack us, they will.”

“Best to act like nothing is wrong then, right? I guess I’ll just—” Alyssa tried to walk away, but Oxart’s vice grip didn’t let up.

“The fake princess isn’t injured in the slightest. You knew that. You know she isn’t the real Irulon.”

The knot in Alyssa’s stomach pulled tight as she felt something sharp prick her back.

At the same time, Kasita put her hands to her hips. “Is there a problem, Alyssa?”

“N-No,” Alyssa called back, wincing slightly as the dagger pressed harder. “Just a moment.”

Kasita’s violet eyes widened, possibly realizing what was going on. She started forward, only to pause as Alyssa waved a hand.

Somehow, Alyssa had to defuse this without Kasita directing the palace guard to attack the city guard. And vice versa in the case of Oxart. The truth seemed like a good start. Oxart seemed like the kind of person who would respond well to being told everything. The real problem was whether or not she would believe the truth.

Only one way to find out.

“The Irulon up there is a mimic.” The dagger bit into Alyssa’s back just a bit deeper, so she started speaking faster. Though she didn’t raise her voice any louder. The less people who knew about this, the better. “The real Irulon is high up in the tower under a stasis spell. She is injured to the point where, should the spell wear off, she will die in about fifteen minutes.” Alyssa paused, taking a breath. She took it as a good sign that the dagger hadn’t dug further into her skin—she was trying to fight down images of her intestines spilling out at the Taker’s hands. “I know you might not believe it, but we are only trying to save Princess Irulon’s life.”

Biting her lip, Alyssa waited. She could hear Oxart grinding her teeth together. Was that good or bad? Probably bad. Hesitating for just a moment, she tried walking forward. To her surprise, Oxart’s hand fell away from her shoulder. Turning, Alyssa stared with a horrible feeling welling up inside her. The woman looked so… betrayed. “I’m sorry,” Alyssa said. “I’d explain more, but Irulon has already been in stasis for several hours. I can’t take the chance that there won’t be more distractions delaying me further.”

“If… If your story is true, we should call for the menders.”

Alyssa actually laughed at that. The noise drew a few looks, but most of the guardsmen were too busy organizing according to the orders of Kasita’s newly promoted palace guard to stop and stare for long. With the quiet way she and Oxart were speaking, no one would hear even if they did watch. “I’m trying to save her, not subject her to a painful death over the course of a week.”

“And how do you intend to accomplish that, lumber hauler?”

Hand drifting slightly closer to her satchel, she said, “I have a rejuvenation potion.” Alyssa slipped her hand inside, careful to keep the flap closed with her other hand. Her fingers curled around the glass of the potion bottle, bringing it out just enough to flash it to Oxart as proof. Unfortunately, she had that fairy hidden right next to it, so she couldn’t do much more without potentially revealing the monster. Bringing the fairy along might have been a mistake in retrospect. She had thought that the fairy would help to protect her from any monsters they came across, but all they had come across were humans. It would have been better to have handed the fairy to the gaunt and told her to march them both out of the city, bringing all the other monsters with her if possible.

A mimic was one thing. If Kasita wasn’t imitating a princess at the moment, Oxart likely wouldn’t have been so upset about it. From her time in Lyria, Alyssa had learned a few things. Mimics were treated more like pests than actual threats. Annoyances to be shooed away. Nothing to be frightened of. A fairy, on the other hand, could take complete control of a person. If the captain caught a glimpse of the fairy, everyone would be in grave danger.

After her eyes flicked down to the corner of the potion peeking out of the satchel, Oxart nodded her head. She relaxed just a little more, hopefully believing what Alyssa had said. She turned her head to the side and barked out an order. Or rather, a name. “Ipo.”

The guardsman in question clearly took it as an order to approach. Which he did without hesitation, leaving behind a group of guards he had been a part of. “Captain?” he said as he got closer.

“You are to attach yourself to Decorous’ group.” Oxart spoke in the same hushed tone she had been using with Alyssa. “Keep an eye on him, but don’t move to stop him if anything untoward happens. I wouldn’t trust him not to find a reason to silence you. I expect a full report when I return.”

“Return? From where?”

“Mhmm…” Oxart stepped closer to him and began speaking too softly for Alyssa to hear. She did nod her head toward the palace guard who was trapped in the Loophole and, after a few more words, Ipo whirled to glance at Alyssa before Oxart jammed her elbow into his side. Their conversation finished with Ipo staring up at the fake Irulon.

Unsurprisingly, Oxart turned back to Alyssa as Ipo walked off in the direction of Decorous. “I will be joining you. I will not accept no for an answer.”

Alyssa nodded her head, Oxart having said exactly what she had expected her to say. In all honesty, she couldn’t say that she was displeased with the situation. Oxart had a fairly thick spell tome probably filled with all kinds of excellent spells that would come in handy should anything go wrong. It also gave Alyssa some time to further defuse the situation. She would really like it if Oxart didn’t hate her forever. The real Irulon should help with that, assuming she did survive beyond Tenebrael’s countdown.

“Let’s go then. I don’t want Irulon’s stasis to run out before I get there with this potion.”

“Lead the way,” Oxart said, voice icy cold.

Alyssa caught a glint of something shining hidden in the folds of Oxart’s sleeve. The dagger, undoubtedly. Her other hand rested on the spell tome, fingering a page despite the book being closed. Altogether, it sent a chill up Alyssa’s spine. She had a feeling that she might not have the most pleasant of nights if Oxart found anything she disliked.

Keeping her hand firmly on the flap of her satchel to ensure that the fairy stayed hidden, Alyssa started walking toward Kasita.

“If you’re finished, your highness, my time is not unlimited. I do not appreciate being kept waiting.”

Ugh. Kasita was really hamming it up. Not really what they needed right now. Before Alyssa could stop her, Kasita’s violet eyes flicked to Oxart.

“I do not recall asking for your presence, Captain Oxart.”

“That’s my fault Princess Irulon,” Alyssa said as fast as she could. “I asked the captain to come with us. Given her repertoire of spells, she surely can help detect monsters that might be hidden in the palace before they might ambush us.”

Kasita immediately stiffened. It only lasted a moment, but Alyssa was certain that Oxart noticed. Likely the only reason she hadn’t acted was because of the two palace guards flanking Irulon. “Very well, if you insist. We should make haste before anything else goes wrong tonight.” She turned back to head into the palace, only for one of her guards to hold up a hand.

“Princess, forgive my impertinence, but you are safe here. Heading back inside before the palace—”

“I appreciate your concern, guardsman. However, I have time-sensitive experiments running. If they are allowed to run without maintenance for long, I fear the entire tower could collapse. Stop me if you must, but be warned that you would be putting the rest of my family at high risk.”

The palace guard hesitated, throwing a glance at his companion. When all he got was a shrug in return, he stepped out of the way and allowed Kasita to pass.

“Ufu~” Kasita hummed with a plastic-like grin. Almost exactly the same as the one the real Irulon wore at the Observatorium. It was somewhat scary how good she was at mimicking the princess, but then, that was her job. “Back to the top then. I hope the space contraction spell on the stairs hasn’t worn off. I am all out of such spells at the moment.”

It hadn’t. The stairwell Kasita led them to felt like a single flight of stairs yet they found themselves all the way up in the servants’ quarters, not far from the kitchen. On the way, Alyssa found out that Morgan had, indeed, escaped.

I believe she is still inside the palace,” Kasita said, emphasizing herself in just the sort of way that made Alyssa think that one of the Irulons had been the one to come to that conclusion. “It was quite a pain securing the experiment so that Morgan wouldn’t find it while I wasn’t in the room.”

“But you did secure it?”

“You’ll see when we get there. First…” Kasita stopped at the stairs that led from Irulon’s floor to the upper floors and turned to the two palace guardsmen. “Continue to the higher floors. Find and secure my elder brothers, if possible. Do not worry about me,” she added before they could protest. “Between my magical skills, Alyssa’s talents, and the unexpected presence of the captain, there should be nothing here that will pose a danger to me.”

The same one that had spoken against Kasita earlier frowned in Oxart’s direction. The captain kept her face carefully impassive, just as she had been since her conversation with Alyssa had ended. “This is highly irregular.”

“I should hope so,” Kasita shot back. “I do not want monsters traipsing about my home regularly.”

The guard opened his mouth, paused, and snapped it shut with a nod of his head. He and his companion moved up the stairs after Kasita dismissed them with a wave of her hand.

Shortly after, Kasita’s form shimmered. In mere seconds, Alyssa found herself staring at herself. Or rather, a form remarkably similar but not quite exactly the same. The hair was longer, the breasts bigger, and the eyes sharper.

“The sister?” Oxart blurted out, snapping open her tome.

Alyssa pinched her nose and groaned. “Why did you change?”

“I thought you said she knew.”

“I said she knew you weren’t Irulon, not that you were… you. Why do you even look like that? Where is your normal self?”

“Ufu~” Kasita looked down at her body, rubbing her hands from her shoulders to her hips. “I like this one. Sticking with one body for my whole life would be such a bore.”

Feeling like she wanted to slam her head into the wall, Alyssa rolled her eyes. It really didn’t matter, she supposed. Oxart was getting antsy, clearly considering using whatever spell she had pulled out of her tome. Not wanting to find out what it was, Alyssa changed topics. “Where is Irulon?”

“Come on,” Kasita said, strutting down the hall toward Irulon’s laboratory. “When you disappeared, the barrier did too. The two Irulons started telling me all kinds of things, like how many rooms were in the palace and that I should use the spell on the first palace guard who spoke back to me. None of it made any sense at the time, but I guess it does now. A shadow assassin got inside almost immediately after, tried to kill me, killed one of them, tried to kill me again, and again, and got the other…”

The first thing Alyssa noticed upon entering the laboratory was the mess. A large mound of… meat piled up in one corner reeked like the local meat packing plant. She pinched her nose as she continued surveying the room. Several of the skeleton cages had been damaged. As had one of the operating tables. The far wall, however, had Alyssa scowling. “Where’s Octavia.”

“—and again… Octavia? Oh. Right. It maybe-accidentally-maybe-intentionally freed her while trying to kill me. She ran off in the middle of it all. Don’t know where to.”

Alyssa pressed her lips together, but nodded. She didn’t like the sound of that. “What about the other one. You said one died…”

As they spoke, Oxart walked past them, observing the room with narrowed eyes. As before, it had a number of corpses in it. Not just those of the shadow assassins. Alyssa almost asked Kasita another question, but noticed the captain from the corner of her eye.

She was standing over a body of a young girl with dark hair and several tattoos around her closed eyes.

“Princess?”

Alyssa sucked in a breath, eyes widening. “Where’s the real one?” she hissed.

Kasita started to say something.

Too late.

Oxart whirled on them, spell card in hand. “Subjugation!”

For the second time this evening, a wave of fiery orange light blasted toward Alyssa.


<– Back | Index | Next –>


 

016.006

<– Back | Index | Next –>


Murphy

Captains of the Guard


“Perhaps you had better hide. You know, to avoid a repeat of what happened back at the potion shop.”

~Did you have to run the whole way here? Oh my head aches.~

“It was a light jog. But yes. I did. Irulon needs medical treatment and I didn’t want to get caught by Oz.”

The fairy in Alyssa’s satchel had long since given up trying to peek out over the top of the bag. She was hunkered down behind a notebook, trying to use it as a shield from the loose bullets that were bouncing around anytime the bag moved. Technically, she was hidden at the moment. Alyssa just didn’t want her poking her head out of the flap, startling everyone who had gathered around the palace.

Everyone being a contingent of the city guard along with several of those more knightly types that had been marching with the Black Prince the other week. The latter group was stationed around the palace walls and gate, blocking off access to the interior itself. Which had Alyssa scowling. She needed to get back inside. With the possibility that fate would try to automatically correct itself to be in line with Tenebrael’s little black book, she couldn’t take the chance and give up the healing potion to the army in the hopes that one of the soldiers would heal Irulon. With her luck, she would hand it over to the one knight with a grudge against Irulon, resulting in the princess’ death.

The shadow assassin Alyssa had killed was no longer lying where she had shot it. Rather, there was a whole stack of them piled up near a pair of guards. Probably five or six in total, though it was a bit difficult to tell with the way their tattooed bodies blended into each other.

Far more humans were laid out on the opposite side of the street. They wore a variety of outfits, from soldiers’ uniforms to servant attire and even some with higher class dress that might be nobles or part of the royal family. Unlike the shadow assassins, which had been dumped in a pile without care, the humans were lined up in neat rows with their arms across their chests.

“You did make the monsters under your control stop attacking people, right?” Alyssa asked, turning away from the bodies to focus on the still living guards. She felt disgusted that she wasn’t more disgusted at the sight of two dozen dead humans. Looking over them, she didn’t feel much of anything that she might have felt a few weeks ago. Rather, she was just angry that it had happened in the first place.

Tenebrael had been correct. Joining up with the Society of the Burning Shadow, even if they had a surefire way to kill angels, wasn’t in the cards.

~Every nonhuman I have memorized is near the building we escaped from, searching for the woman who fled.~

“Good. Good. Stay hidden, don’t make a sound, try not to move. I’m going to try talking to these people.”

~Do you have to? I don’t want to be near more humans than absolutely necessary.~

“Well, I considered heading over to the window Kasita and I used, but I figure they have this place surrounded. It would be better to approach them and try to explain my way in rather than to get caught and try to explain my way out of whatever cell they would try to place me in. Assuming they didn’t attack me, that is.” If only she had an Empty Mirror spell handy. When she got Irulon cured and everything went back to normal, she would kindly ask to have a dozen of those spells written out for her use as thanks for saving the princess’ life. Turning invisible was far too useful and, better, she knew exactly what they did.

“Just stay in the bag and don’t let yourself get seen, alright?” Alyssa said as she started walking toward the largest group of soldiers. Against her better judgment, she holstered her pistol and even pocketed her spell cards. Anything to lessen the chance that they view her as an enemy.

After the first guard noticed her, it took less than five seconds for him to alert his comrades. Fifteen seconds after that, they had her surrounded.

“Stop right there!” one of the guardsmen barked out.

These people were not messing around tonight. It was something of a shock considering how easily she had walked into the Northgate Guardhouse and even the wall reconstruction area. She suddenly regretted not stashing the fairy in some bush back away from the guards. If they searched her satchel… well, she would have to hope that none of them would be able to resist the fairy’s mental charms. For now, despite the sweat running down her spine, Alyssa tried to remain cool. She held up her hands so that everyone could see that she had no weapons pointed at them.

“Um… Hello. Could I speak with whoever is in charge? I have important information. If you could just—”

“Slaver?”

Alyssa’s head snapped to the side to find the guard who had spoken. As soon as she spotted the scruffy chin behind the grated face mask, she smiled. “Guardsman Ipo? Is that you? Boy am I glad to see a familiar face.”

“Ipo, you know this woman?” the guard to his side asked.

He didn’t respond right away, staring for a moment before slowly nodding his head. “She’s a monster slaver who warned us about the troll army in advance of them marching on the city.”

Opening her mouth to complain about being called a slaver, Alyssa hesitated and changed topics. It really wasn’t worth arguing over right now. At least he wasn’t calling her a monster. “Right. And I have more information tonight. Good news rather than bad this time. Is Oxart here? I’m sure she would be pleased to hear what I have to say.” Though they had only met three times, Alyssa felt that she had something of a rapport with the captain of the guard. If Oxart had received her Message warnings about tonight’s events, then that rapport was probably stronger now. And if she had heeded those warnings, she was probably here. Even if their rapport was all in Alyssa’s head, it would still be better to meet with someone she knew over some random knight who was likely to dismiss anything she had to say.

Thankfully, Ipo nodded his head. “She was asking about you earlier today. Then rallied the guards without warning. You’re the one who told her about this incident, aren’t you?”

“Yeah. I’m friendly with the Princess Irulon and was here to meet her when all this started, putting me in a perfect position to warn others. Which I promptly did after killing one of those things,” Alyssa said, waving a hand toward the pile of shadow assassin corpses. “The one I killed died of several small holes in its body.”

Ipo turned away, looking to the guardsman who had first spoken. A superior officer, perhaps, though Alyssa didn’t notice much difference in their uniforms. They both wore heavy armor with a beige surcoat over top. None of the presumably more elite knights with darker armor had approached her as they were the ones protecting the palace, standing guard around the perimeter to prevent further entry.

“We were wondering about that one,” the central guard said. “That was you?”

“It was. My weapons can replicate those holes on another corpse, if you need proof.”

“We’ll let the captain determine that,” he said, finally lowering his sword. That seemed to be the signal for the others to lower their weapons as well. Except in the case of the two who wielded pikes. They raised theirs, letting the butt of the weapon rest against the ground. “Come with me.”

Alyssa let her arms drop to her sides. That had been less painful than she had been expecting. Ipo’s presence might have contributed to that, but this world seemed fairly lax in security anyway. Had this been a modern Earth military incident, say something gone wrong at the White House, she probably would have been shot by snipers well in advance of getting this close to the building. At the very least, someone would have searched her bags. Not that Alyssa was complaining.

Though, she couldn’t help but notice that the men didn’t completely lower their guard. They gave her space while keeping close enough to attack if needed. Alyssa would do her best to not give them reason to act. Hopefully the fairy would remain hidden as well.

Oxart, along with two others wearing identical dark trench coat-like uniforms, stood around a central table that had been hastily set up with a detailed map of the city. Alyssa itched to take a photo of it, but now was probably not the time. Not with how Oxart was glaring at her. The moment the captain looked up from the table and spotter her, Oxart’s lips curled into a distinct frown.

“You have a habit of finding trouble, Alyssa.”

“I assure you, the trouble finds me. It’s not like I wanted to have my evening ruined by monsters and mayhem.”

Letting out a weary sigh, Oxart said, “Agreed.” With a shake of her head, she waved a hand to the man on her left and the woman on her right. “These are Decorous and Kalne. Captain of the Eastgate Guard and acting captain of the Central Garrison respectively.” She paused for a moment before gesturing toward Alyssa. “This woman calls herself Alyssa, an apparent monster slaver, potion deliverer, medical expert, or lumber hauler who first came to my attention during the incident a week ago and has cropped up on occasion, generally bringing trouble with her. She is the reason I sent riders to each of you.”

Alyssa nodded at both of them, though only Decorous returned her nod. The woman looked far too bewildered, tired, and maybe a little confused about everything. Her expression hadn’t changed much between when Alyssa first caught sight of her and now, so it could have been her default expression. Or it could have something to do with the acting part of her title. It made Alyssa wonder what had happened to the actual captain.

“Though I believe your last Message had you within the palace itself,” Oxart continued, now addressing Alyssa directly. “Yet you come walking up from the opposite direction?”

Alyssa opened her mouth, but the guard who had led her here began speaking first. “She says she has information for you, ma’am.”

“Thank you, Donovan, you are dismissed,” Oxart said, voice terse.

The overeager guardsman saluted with a hand across his chest before backing away. He couldn’t step out of the room as there was no room to step out of—the table had been erected in the middle of the street with no tent around it unlike what had been the case at the wall reconstruction site. But he gave them enough privacy.

Alyssa waited as a few other guards backed away. Ipo remained the closest to the table. It didn’t really matter how many people stayed nearby, not so long as the fairy remained hidden. Alyssa wasn’t about to damn herself by saying anything she shouldn’t. “I was in the palace and my current goal is to regain entry without being skewered by the guards, but I do have information as well that might help. Irulon created a spell that she thought would help with the situation. I suppose it did, but not in the way she had intended. It resulted in me being teleported out of the palace and right in the middle of a group of people. A Society of the Burning Shadow. Does that sound familiar?”

All three of the captains tensed, though Decorous nodded his head. “Not entirely unexpected given the events a week ago. Disturbing that they would attack twice in such quick succession. We are already going to experience difficulties in food this year with the damage to the fields. More attacks might cripple us to the point where their army might actually be effective this year.”

“This attack might have crippled us enough,” Oxart shot back, turning her gaze up to the palace. “With the pharaoh at Pandora, the nobles will tear apart the royal family here for every scrap of power they can get.”

“Assuming they’re still alive.”

Alyssa frowned. “You don’t know?” she asked, looking between the three captains. Turning her gaze around the entire pavilion, her frown deepened. A battalion of soldiers stood around, most quietly talking with one another. They were antsy for sure, but… “Why are you all just standing about? Shouldn’t you be in the palace? Assisting wounded and clearing out hostiles?”

The three glanced at each other. Or rather, Oxart and Decorous turned to face the other. Kalne looked over to them, but neither looked back at her. Eventually, Oxart spoke. “We had been planning on it. But the Palace Guard have assured us that our assistance will be called for if necessary.”

“Presumably because most of our number are owned by the nobles,” Decorous said, vaguely gesturing around him. “We cleared out the nobles’ homes here, but most were unoccupied save for caretakers and servants. Since then, we’ve been standing around feeling awfully useless.”

Glancing over to the dark armor of the palace guardsmen, Alyssa looked them over. She had spotted them once already, marching with the Black Prince on their way through the city the other night. They presented an impressive look. The black with gold trim really gave them an elite flair. Almost too much so, however. Their armor looked like it had been designed for ceremonial matters rather than combat. Given that they had been heading into battle with it the other night, it clearly wasn’t ceremonial. Or perhaps it served a dual role. In any case, they shouldn’t be dismissed even if it was ceremonial. After all, the Queen’s Guard in England wore bright red and big fuzzy hats yet carried fully operational weapons and were highly trained.

But Alyssa could count at least two dozen standing around the palace. Most centered around the main entrance, but more were dotted along the walls. Presumably, they wrapped around the entire palace or it would be pointless guarding one entrance.

Where had they been earlier? Shouldn’t the palace guard have been guarding the palace, keeping Alyssa and Kasita from sneaking in?

“Can they secure the palace on their own?” Alyssa eventually asked.

“They are skilled. But they are few in numbers comparatively.”

“Even fewer if what we suspect is true.”

Alyssa looked back to Decorous, expectantly waiting for him to continue.

He didn’t get a chance.

“They’re all dead,” Kalne blurted out, earning a glare from the other two captains.

“Possibly,” Oxart clarified, pinching the bridge of her nose. “There were no guards around the palace when we first arrived. It wasn’t until I sent a few men into the palace’s barracks that these knights came out. I believe that these men were off-duty at the time of the attack. Those on-duty…”

“Either way, fully securing the palace will take some time for them even if only a handful perished.”

“That is…” Alyssa clenched her fists and grit her teeth. “That is unacceptable.” Pulling out her phone, she checked Irulon’s timer. Six and a halfish hours. “The palace is too large. There could be people in there who need assistance. There are people who need assistance.” Irulon being one of them. “If they are sweeping through it with only a dozen people, it could be days before the palace is fully secure.”

“At least someone understands the gravity of the situation,” Decorous said. “If only the palace guard could be so easily convinced.”

“They will not budge for us.”

And if they wouldn’t allow the city guard entrance, they sure weren’t going to let Alyssa meander in. Once again, Alyssa found herself wishing she had Empty Mirror. She had never really considered invisibility to be the best or strongest super power. With all the super hero movies that had been coming out for the past decade or two, what kind of power one wanted often became a water cooler topic at work or a mealtime discussion. For instance, her brother had always thought that control over time was the ultimate power, granting several other powers almost by its very nature. However, it was such a rare power that Alyssa had trouble thinking up a single character that possessed time control.

For Alyssa, she had always thought that flying would be a fun power to have despite her mild fear of heights. If she could fly, she could catch herself if she fell, presumably nullifying the fear. Presumably because she had never actually tried it. Even shooting laser beams out of her eyes seemed like a better power than invisibility.

But being able to turn invisible at will would have solved pretty much every problem she had experienced in the past month. People breaking into her home? Turn invisible, let them steal whatever, call the police later. Worried about entering a city causing uncomfortable questions? Turn invisible and walk right past the guards. Realize that purple cloaks were indicative of nobility? Turn invisible and take it off; she never would have met Cid and Bacco. Of course, invisibility hadn’t helped all that much during her encounter with the Taker, but that was the exception rather than the rule.

Moping about what could have been wasn’t going to get her anywhere now. Alyssa shook her head and focused.

“Wh-What about the Burning Shadow?” Kalne asked. “Can we take them out? If we can prove we were useful maybe the palace guard…” Her words descended into unintelligible mumbling, but the other two didn’t look as if they disagreed.

All three looked to Alyssa, who merely shrugged. “I don’t know what more there is to do about them. The teleportation accident dropped me right next to a fairy in a cage. And before you freak out, no, I didn’t get myself mind controlled. As Oxart kindly mentioned while introducing me, I know my way around monsters.” A complete and total lie, but one that worked to her advantage. Just mentioning the fairy sent a variety of expressions across their faces. Mostly suspicion. Ipo, who she caught moving in the corner of her vision, actually shifted to put his hand on his sword. Almost unconsciously, Alyssa moved her hand to her satchel just to ensure that the fairy didn’t pop out at being mentioned. “If you are quite finished… The fairy had been captured against her will by the Society. They had been using her to control the monsters. Given the chance she would have turned against her captors in an instant. So I gave her an opportunity. She used the gaunt I had captured and—”

Decorous held up a hand. “Wait… hold on. A gaunt?”

“I believe I mentioned that in my most recent Message to Oxart.”

“You said one was attacking the palace. But capturing one? There is a limit to your credibility, Alyssa.”

“I know my way around monsters. Two of your men saw it, if you need confirmation, though I left them behind at the Waterhole. Anyway, the gaunt ate one of the Society members. I shot and killed a second, wounded a third—which I left in the care of the two guardsmen who saw me—a fourth escaped. The building they were hiding in was the Waters Street Waterhole.”

Oxart swore under her breath while Decorous’ face went entirely passive. “If true,” she said, “they’ve crossed the line this time. I’d like to see the nobles protect them from this.”

“It is true. You can confirm with the two guardsmen. I didn’t stop to chat though. Adequately explaining the presence of the gaunt would have taken far too long, so I had it drop the wounded Society member while I headed straight here, though the woman was extremely wounded. She might be dead by now.”

Decorous shook his head. “You still haven’t explained the presence of the gaunt adequately.”

Alyssa sighed. The only reason she had brought it up was because Oxart would surely find out about it later. But maybe she should have just kept silent and dealt with it when it came up. For now, Alyssa just shrugged. “I don’t really know what more you want.”

“Start with where it is now,” Oxart said, lips tight.

“Gaunts, as you might be aware, are extremely slow. So I left it behind. Presumably, it is following the fairy’s orders to seek out the one Society member who ran away, alongside whatever other monsters they brought in to the city.”

“Y-You left the fairy alive?” Kalne hissed, voice barely more than a breath of air.

“It wanted revenge against its captors. I wanted monsters to stop attacking the palace. Our goals were not mutually exclusive. If killed, the monsters in the city would have been set loose, potentially going on a rampage around the city and causing more destruction. Using a Contract spell, I ensured that it would do no more knowing harm to the city’s inhabitants. On pain of death, the only ones it can attack are the Society of the Burning Shadow.”

This was one of those things. One lie leads to a bigger lie which rapidly spirals out of control into bigger and bigger lies. Alyssa pressed her lips together. The best way to not tell larger lies was to simply tell them nothing more at all. If they had a problem with what she had told them, she would simply shrug and say that the lie was simply the way things were.

“That does explain why the assassins suddenly stopped moving,” Oxart grumbled, glancing to the pile of corpses. “But I cannot approve of leaving a fairy alive within the city. It could do more harm than the Tenebrael-damned gaunt.”

“What are the termination conditions on the Contract?”

Alyssa hesitated. That wasn’t a question she could simply shrug her shoulders at. Biting back a frown, she said, “The exact words were: Do no harm to the inhabitants of this city while hunting the remaining members of the Society of the Burning Shadow within Lyria.”

Decorous took only a second to process the words. “Which means that she can harm anyone after getting her fingers on the Society’s throat—metaphorically.” He clicked his tongue in annoyance. “We need to find one and keep them safe until the fairy can be dealt with.”

“Kalne,” Oxart said, turning. “Take your men to Waters Street. See if you can’t find and eliminate this fairy. Ascertain the truth of Alyssa’s words as well, if possible. Should you come across this wounded Society member left in the care of my men, protect them at all costs. Send a Message with your results. Can you handle that?”

The woman’s eyebrows furrowed. “I-I’m not an invalid, Captain.”

“Good. Then you should have no trouble. Eliminate any monsters you come across. They cannot harm you so long as the Contract remains in effect. Best to clean them up now.”

“What about the g-g-gaunt?”

Oxart pressed her lips together, giving Decorous time to answer first.

“Ignore it. According to testimony, it just fed. Released from the fairy’s control, it will go into dormancy. We can locate and move it at a later date.” Decorous clasped his hands together behind his back. “Well? What are you waiting for, Acting Captain?”

“Right. Yes sir.” Kalne gave a slight salute before turning and moving to someone standing a short distance away from the captains’ table. “Adjutant, gather the central garrison soldiers. We are moving.”

Both Oxart and Decorous watched for a moment until the acting captain had moved far enough away. Only then did they turn to one another and share a sigh.

“Shame about Captain Snopkin.”

“Indeed. Though she has potential. I can understand her nerves however. Snopkin’s body… not the most pleasant of corpses.”

“Are any?”

“You have a point, Oxart. But we have work to do.”

Oxart turned back to Alyssa. “We need to locate at least one member of the Society of the Burning Shadow.”

“I don’t know how much I can help with that. The one disappeared well before I even realized that they were using the Waterhole for their base of operations. The Black Prince captured one last week, but I imagine he was freed early tonight. The only other one I know about… Morgan. A woman I captured. Last I saw her, she was high up in the palace, just a few floors below the top. A food storage room. It hasn’t been too long, though she might have escaped.”

“For which we would need to gain entry to the palace,” Oxart said with a scowl.

“I need to get in regardless. Irulon needs assistance.” Alyssa smiled as a thought occurred to her. “These palace guards… they would listen to someone from the royal family, would they not? That’s their job, right?”

“Your point?”

“All we have to do is get a noble to tell them that we are allowed access. Brakkt wasn’t answering my Messages earlier. And I was actually told that he had died along with the First and Third princes, but Irulon doesn’t believe that to be the case… Still…” Alyssa pulled a deck of cards from her pocket. She wasn’t sure if it was Morgan’s deck or the woman who Alyssa had shot, but either way, it should have what she needed. “Message,” she said, holding up a card. “Kasita. Sorry for not messaging you earlier. I am alright and just outside the palace. But I am being barred entrance by the palace guards. It would be helpful if Irulon could come down here and tell them to let me in.”

Nothing happened. But nothing had happened any of the other times Alyssa had messaged someone. Yet both Irulon and Oxart had clearly received her messages. So hopefully this message had gone through properly.

Decorous nodded his head, clearly pleased with potentially being allowed access to the palace. Oxart, on the other hand, put on a deep scowl.

“I thought you said that Irulon was injured.”

Alyssa suppressed a grimace. Right. She had sent out messages after reaching Irulon. That was how Oxart had known about the gaunt. What had she said then… had she mentioned the stasis? She didn’t think so. “That is why I need to get in to the palace. And why I Messaged Kasita. She can help Irulon get down here.”

“Your sister.”

Ugh. The hospital. That stupid mimic and her stupid stunt. If she changed forms at all anywhere near Oxart, she would surely be found out. If Alyssa slipped up and called the ‘wrong person’ Kasita, she would be found out. If Irulon showed up at the front entrance of the palace perfectly whole and started ordering around the guards while she was supposed to be fatally injured, Oxart was smart enough to be suspicious, at the very least.

“She’s a smart girl. She’ll figure something out.” I hope. “We’ll just have to trust her. Unless you two want to storm the gates and fight off the palace guards to get in.”

“We’d be drawn and quartered for treason before dawn.”

“Then let’s give Kasita ten minutes. If she hasn’t figured out a way to get us access by then, she probably won’t ever and we’ll have to find other solutions.”

Oxart narrowed her eyes, making Alyssa swallow a mouthful of saliva. Decorous came to her rescue.

“Our only other option is searching the entirety of the city for one… possibly two people that might have already escaped. Even if we mobilized every guardsman in the city, the task could be impossible. Waiting is agreeable.”

Alyssa let out a small sigh as Oxart nodded her head. Now, all she had to do was wait and hope that Kasita didn’t screw everything up.


<– Back | Index | Next –>

016.005

<– Back | Index | Next –>


Murphy

Lightshow


Alyssa hoped she would run into the Taker on her way out. Seeing his face when she walked into a room with a gaunt at her side would be worth everything that had happened tonight… Or maybe it wouldn’t. While capable of small bursts of speed that had Alyssa keeping her distance from the monster, the sad fact was that the gaunt moved too slow to be a threat to someone like the Taker. He would either dance around it or simply keep his distance and use his knives, probably killing both Alyssa and the fairy as he did so. So maybe she actually hoped that she wouldn’t encounter him.

Unless, of course, he was still injured. Kasita’s description of him had not been a healthy one. If he hadn’t been able to get his hands on anything that could heal him, he might even be dead right now. Given what she had seen at the hospital, Alyssa had a feeling that even mild injuries would be lethal without magical intervention. In that case, whether she hoped to meet him or avoid him was an entirely conditional hope based on his current health.

A rash and irrational part of Alyssa wanted to go searching for him. A more logical part of her wanted to get out as soon as possible. Looking down the long hall that led to Svotty’s former office, Alyssa had to go with the logical side. There were too many doors. Too many unknowns. What was this Society of the Burning Shadow doing here? Were they allied with Waters Street? In charge of them? This could very well be what Octavia had been talking about when she implied that there would be a coup against the rest of her family.

If this was truly a coup, there had to be more than just the half-dozen Society members Alyssa had encountered so far. Even if they planned on using Waters Street for a bulk of their activities, they had to have more backup waiting in the wings. Where those wings were, Alyssa couldn’t say. She didn’t want to stick around in case they were inside the Waterhole. Not even for a quick jaunt down to the office to plunder another bag of money.

The gaunt kept a step ahead of her as they headed toward the stairs leading out of the basement, ready to use its implacable body to shield Alyssa and the fairy if necessary. The woman it carried might be a casualty of that, but Alyssa found herself struggling to care. At least the woman had ceased her struggles. The fairy mesmered her into wanting to be carried away, so she wasn’t trying to scream or escape.

When Alyssa had first left the room, a full dozen people had been obstructing the hallway, possibly alerted by the Society member who had run away. A spell had flown past her as she ducked back into the room, some kind of violet-hued butterfly that caused the ground space behind it to momentarily warp and twist. But as soon as Alyssa had sent the gaunt out, the men scattered, fleeing back up the hall with nothing more than a few token spells in its direction. The woman hadn’t been hit by any of them thanks to the gaunt catching a fireball and a violet orb on its outstretched hand.

Alyssa was perfectly satisfied with the people having run away. The less she had to fight, the better. Still, she kept her eyes on the many doors to the sides of the hall. With her fair distance to the gaunt, someone could easily try to ambush her. And if they were even half as good as the Taker, they might succeed in injuring or killing her before she could do anything.

“Can’t the gaunt move any faster?” The hall shouldn’t have taken longer than a minute to walk through from end to end, and that was assuming a snail’s pace. Able-bodied humans shouldn’t take longer than thirty seconds. And yet, it felt like they had been walking for five minutes now.

~I’ve made it want to move as fast as it can, so I assume not. But I don’t know if it is really listening to me.~

“Great. That doesn’t make me nervous in the slightest,” Alyssa said, shaking her head. “I—”

Alyssa’s breath hitched as she heard the hinges of a door squeak open behind her. She turned, raised her pistol, and grit her teeth. A man poked his head out. Gruff, bearded, and muscular. No one Alyssa recognized.

She fired without hesitation. A wooden plank above the door split apart, raining splinters down on the man. He flinched back at the noise, but didn’t retreat into the room until after he looked down the hall at her. Or at the gaunt. Either way, the door slammed shut a second later.

~Why the ceiling?~

Letting out a slight sigh, Alyssa started back down the hall, turning every few seconds to make sure no one else popped out of a door.

~Human? Why spare the other human? You didn’t try to aim at him.~

“This is the Waterhole, run by Waters Street, a gang I’ve tangled with before. One of them figured out the weakness of my weapons. If any of them have a specific spell on, I’ll wind up killing myself instead of them. It’s a question of whether or not they realize what they need to do. Of whether or not the Taker told them my weakness. I don’t want to take that chance.”

~You killed the other humans with that weapon.~

“That was before I realized where we are.” Though it might have been a foolish move anyway. It had worked out, true, but if one of them had Projectile Reflection active, Alyssa would have been dead before she knew what had gone wrong. At this rate, it wouldn’t be long before everyone started walking around with Projectile Reflection permanently active. She should really avoid killing humans with her pistols if at all possible. Monsters like the shadow assassins were fair game, unless a human put Projectile Reflection on them. Maybe I should just find the local equivalent of Avada Kedavra.

Ugh, or maybe I should stop getting myself into situations where I have to kill people, Alyssa thought with an internal scoff. Was this how actual medieval society lived? With people constantly trying to kill each other? Alyssa honestly didn’t know how much was Tenebrael’s fault, because monsters existed, because magic existed, or a combination of the three. Though it really made her wonder how humanity had managed to survive to the modern era if this was even a shadow of a reflection of Earth’s past.

The gaunt started up the stairs. Alyssa moved just a little closer to it to keep from getting too separated. The gaunt itself was almost a void of sound, as if it were sucking in the vibrations in the air. The utter silence was enough to make Alyssa hear every thump of her own heart. Not knowing what might be up on the main floor was making her nervous. Worse, she knew that at least one person was behind her. The Society member who had fled away surely wouldn’t just let her walk out. She had to be gathering resources or support. Maybe something that could give the gaunt pause in some form or another.

There wasn’t time to decide on a proper course of action. The gaunt reached the top of the stairs. It went right through the closed door at the top. It didn’t open the door. Without a single change in the gait it had used to march down the hallway, it walked into the door, breaking apart the sturdy wood as if it were made of paper.

A brief moment of silence passed before the screams started up.

Alyssa jumped, fearing a room full of enemies. But… it wasn’t. Apparently, the Waterhole had resumed normal operations. Even with the Society of the Burning Shadow lurking in their basement, they were acting again as a brothel and drug den.

People fled in droves before the gaunt, leaving Alyssa confused about why they were there in the first place; had those who had been in the basement not fled through this room? The bouncer at the door tried to keep order, insisting that people couldn’t all leave at once or they would attract too much attention. That only lasted until the gaunt turned the holes in its head to face him. He was the first out after that, shoving some poor girl to the side to flee faster. By the time the gaunt made it a quarter of the way across the main floor, it was entirely vacant. Only Alyssa, the fairy, the gaunt, and the quasi-conscious woman that the gaunt carried remained.

The empty room had Alyssa scowling. “I don’t suppose you can detect invisible people and creatures?” she asked of the fairy, wishing that Kasita was with her.

~I can sense minds, but only if they’re near me unless I’ve seen them before.~

An arcanist wouldn’t need to be nearby to do harm. The one who escaped could be on the opposite side of the room beneath a shroud of invisibility, readying a spell. And Alyssa wouldn’t know until she shouted out what that spell was. That would give her a moment to react, but that might not mean much. Any kind of area-effecting spell couldn’t be dodged by throwing herself to the ground. If there was something like Napalm Strike, the whole building would go up in sticky tar-like flames.

But nothing happened. Alyssa and the gaunt made it to the door without a single spell slung toward her. That only served to fuel her paranoia.

“Where did the last one go?” she mumbled, looking out on Waters Street—the actual street, not the gang. There were a few people lingering around, though that didn’t stay the same once they realized that the gaunt had followed them out. A few ran off in silence, but more ran while screaming for guards about monsters inside the walls.

~I don’t know.~ The fairy had apparently taken her rhetorical question as one directed toward her. ~I tried to get into their heads, but every time I tried, they used that smoke. It made me cough, and dizzy, and sick, and was just bad. It made me want to listen to them.~

“Couldn’t you have done it while they weren’t in the room?”

The fairy shook her tiny head. ~My magic only works if they’re right next to me. Eye contact helps.~

“But you’ve been controlling monsters all over the city.”

~Once I know the shape of their minds, sending another command is simple. I can make them want to do things from here to the walls of your city. It’s just the actual mesmering that requires them to be close.~

Alyssa nodded. It made enough sense for her. Alyssa opened her mouth to ask how many monsters the fairy had under her control and to maybe send them off in search of the missing Society member. A shout coming from down the street made her hesitate.

Two armored men, both wearing the beige surcoat of the Lyria city guard, had frozen upon rounding the corner of the winding street. The gaunt turned its head and took one step toward them.

“No! Not them. Not the city guard.”

The gaunt hesitated, turning still as a statue. It made Alyssa sigh in relief that the fairy was actually going along with what she said. Or maybe the gaunt was acting on its own initiative, given what the fairy had said earlier about it not really listening to her direction. Either way, Alyssa did not want an incident with the guards.

Under other circumstances, Alyssa might have gone up to them to try to explain what was going on. But they were almost certainly part of the Northgate Guard given the Waterhole’s proximity. Oxart should have told them what was happening. They would be on the lookout for monsters. Walking up to them with a gaunt at her side and a fairy in her pocket would not only be suspicious, but it would take a great deal of explaining. That was assuming that they didn’t just flee before the gaunt.

Rather than run up to them, Alyssa turned and ran away. She knew exactly where she was and exactly where she wanted to go. Waiting for the gaunt would be far too slow. It would take three days to get back to the palace at its pace. Someone must have magicked it into the city—or it had already been here—before this attack. Either that or this attack had been in planning for potentially years.

“Have the gaunt set down the woman,” Alyssa said as she ran. She tried to hold on to the bag to keep it from jolting the fairy around too much, but it wasn’t that easy with her hands full of cards and guns. Well, one gun. Many cards though. It might have been wise to sheathe her pistol at the very least, but Alyssa wasn’t going to take the chance that nothing would need shooting anytime soon. Later, when things calmed down, she would have to remember to apologize to the poor fairy. For now… “If possible, have it scratch words into the ground. Enemy, traitor, or something like that. Also, if you can, have the woman want to confess to the guards.”

Alyssa wanted to interrogate the woman on what she saw of Tenebrael, but the gaunt was just too slow. If the woman surrendered herself, it might be possible to seek out Oxart later and ask to see the prisoner. Or maybe get Irulon to allow her access if Oxart wouldn’t do it on her own. For the latter plan, Irulon had to survive.

The fairy didn’t acknowledge in any way. Her tiny little fingers clutched tightly to the open edge of the bag as she tried her best not to be thrown from the satchel. It was probably a good thing that she didn’t speak. She would have bitten her tongue right off.

Or wait, no she wouldn’t have. She had been speaking telepathically. No tongue required.

Ah well. Alyssa didn’t stop running. She sprinted down the winding Waters Street, down an alley, past a cross-street, and didn’t stop until she reached Tzheitza’s potion shop. The large glass windows and colorful carboys were a welcome sight. The main shop floor was empty, but, after entering, Alyssa heard voices coming from the half-closed door to the back room. An unfamiliar low baritone had Alyssa pausing with her breath hitching in her throat.

“Hold friends, someone just entered the shop.”

“Please tell me you didn’t invite more rabble to join us,” a woman said with a scoff, voice aristocratic and haughty. She had only spoken a single sentence and Alyssa already expected her to have ten butlers waiting on her every whim at all hours of the day. Not even Irulon sounded like that.

Alyssa took a step back, regretting having barged into the potion shop under the assumption that it would be safe. A man stepped into view, opening the door fully. He was bald with a large nose and a bushy mustache, though Alyssa’s attention only lingered on his face for a moment. The weapon in his hands was a long metal shaft topped with a ball covered in spikes. The tips caught the light at odd angles, making them look like they were glowing a whole rainbow of shifting colors. Or maybe they actually were glowing in a similar manner to the Black Prince’s sword. He held it in armored gauntlets, a part of his plate armor.

He took a step forward, weight thumping against the ground as he did so.

Which only made Alyssa take another step back. “I uh… think I got the wrong place. Sorry for disturbing you.” Turning, she just about sprinted back out of the potion shop when a familiar voice made her pause and glance back.

“Alyssa? Is that you?” Oz peeked his red-maned head around the frame of the door. Upon confirming the answer to his question, he smiled. “It is! Is Tzhei with you?”

Breathing out a small sigh, Alyssa shook her head. “Is this… a friend of yours?” she said, eying the armored man. Or, more specifically, she eyed the sharp points of his mace. If that thing came anywhere near her, she would probably die. Especially because the more she looked at it, the less it seemed the glowing points were just a trick of the light. This weapon had to be something similar to the Black Prince’s sword. Enchanted, or whatever they might call it in this world.

“Ah, yeah. Catal is an old friend of mine from the guild. Lumen is as well.” Oz partially turned to look into the back room.

“Friend?” the haughty woman spoke again with a scoff. “Don’t flatter yourself. You’ve—”

“She’s got a fairy with her,” Catal said in alarm, narrowing his eyes as his fingers tightened on his mace.

Alyssa, wide-eyed, glanced down to her satchel. The little fairy looked green in the face and not entirely stable as she clutched at the side of the bag. She must have fallen back into it during the run over and only now clambered her way into visibility.

“Wait! I can explain!” Alyssa said, taking a step back again. One more step would have her back to the door. Honestly, she had half a mind to run away—if only she didn’t need a healing potion. There was one somewhere in the palace, according to Irulon, but Alyssa knew where one was here and now. Best to take the known potion rather than risk that someone in the palace hadn’t used or stolen that one.

Catal looked positively murderous and even Oz didn’t look too friendly at the moment. A third person, presumably this Lumen, stepped into view behind Oz. She wore an elegant green outfit that literally glowed along the hems and seams. Six spell cards floated in the air, rotating around her raised hand.

“She’s under its thrall. We need to kill it. Lumen?”

“Bad angle. I could kill it, but she might not survive with a missing leg.”

Oz put a hand on Catal’s shoulder and drew him back. “Might have to try,” he said, voice hard. “If we get close, it’ll enslave us. There are potions here that can help with injuries.”

The rotating cards stopped with one card pointed directly at her. It had a circle-square-circle-square pattern that Alyssa had never seen before. She didn’t want to find out what it did with it aimed at her either. Opening her mouth, Lumen started to speak.

But Alyssa was faster. She didn’t need to bog herself down with words. The second the thought crossed her mind, her spells cast.

Spectral Chains wrapped around all three of the people in the room. Oz fell flat on his face when the chains pulled his legs together, but Catal managed to keep his stance wide enough to remain stable. Lumen’s arms pressed tight against her body, but the cards remained floating in the air as she fell on top of Oz.

Alyssa’s eyes widened. She twisted to the side just as Lumen finished vocalizing her spell.

“All Shall Burn!”

Alyssa cried out in pain. A beam of fiery light pierced the spot where she had just been standing. It didn’t actually touch her, but it didn’t need to. The heat radiating off it scalded her skin. The beam itself struck the wooden door, turning a fist-sized chunk to ash while setting the rest aflame.

The cards hovering in the air didn’t stop after that one. They spun around again until one faced her with three circles touching one another and several more circles and squares within each. “Disintegration Ray!”

Before Lumen opened her mouth, Alyssa had started sprinting around the room. A purplish-black beam chased her as she moved, slicing through anything it touched as if everything were made from butter. Carboys shattered, spilling their contents. The window fell to pieces. The door and walls didn’t hold up for a second. The beam only stopped when Alyssa put the rotating cards between herself and Catal’s armored body.

“Will you stop!” Alyssa shouted, hoping that the insane woman wasn’t about to kill one of her own companions in an attempt at getting the fairy. “I’m not being mind controlled!”

“I actually agree with her,” Oz said, voice slightly squeaky.

“Oh lovely,” Lumen snarled. “It has him too.”

“No. I just don’t want Tzhei to kill me when she sees her shop.”

“Rather be dead at her hands than a slave to that monster,” Catal grumbled. He purposefully threw himself forward, falling to the floor. The four remaining cards ceased their rotation once again, aiming another spell in Alyssa’s direction.

Alyssa didn’t bother trying to identify the spell. It had a number of circles, but more importantly, it had a fireball flying straight toward it from her own deck of cards. The moment she had seen Catal start to fall, she had cast the spell. All four of the cards in the air turned to dust as the fireball flew through them, entirely unhindered by their presence. It hit the wooden ceiling, setting fire to it, but the fire didn’t stay for long. It quickly diminished and shrank until it was entirely extinguished. Only a small scorch mark remained as evidence.

Which made sense. This was a potion brewery. It would be surprising if there weren’t some fire protections in place. A quick glance at the door showed that its fire had also vanished, though the hole remained behind.

“Lovely,” Lumen said, glaring at Alyssa from her spot on top of Oz. She struggled against her chains, but made no headway. “I should have just tried to kill her instead of playing nice. Any other bright ideas?”

That was playing nice? Alyssa turned back to the three with a scowl. She wasn’t worried about them getting loose in the slightest. If that gaunt couldn’t do it, what hope did they have. “I don’t want to hurt you but if I see one corner of a spell card aimed in my direction, I will defend myself far more lethally than I have just done. Ask Oz. He knows what my weapons are capable of.” She was far more worried about more floating cards.

“She turned a goblin’s head into minced meat in half a second without using a spell. And… I don’t know about you two, but I didn’t hear her cast these chains.”

“She cast three Spectral Chains at the exact same time. What kind of monster have you been consorting with, Oz?”

“I’m not a monster! Ugh, why does everyone keep saying that!” Alyssa shook her head. “And I’m not being mind controlled. And if you,” she paused to glare down at the fairy, “try to mind control them, we are going to have a problem. Do you understand me?”

The little fairy glared, but nodded her tiny head.

“Good.”

“Alyssa,” Oz said. His voice was slightly muffled with how one side of his face was smashed against the floor. With Lumen on top of him, he couldn’t even try to shift around to a more comfortable position. “If you really aren’t its thrall, you should kill it. That thing isn’t like your mimic. It plants insidious little thoughts in your mind that make you want to do things. That make you think—”

“That I came up with the ideas myself? Yeah. I know. She tried and failed to work her magic on me. If I was being mind controlled, I doubt we would be here. She would force me to take her out of the city. Which I told her I would help with, but not until after I save Irulon. Speaking of which, you three remain right where you are and don’t move a muscle.”

Alyssa strode across the potion shop, returning the glare at Lumen. She had half a mind to take the woman’s deck of cards—they seemed like far better spells than Irulon’s esoteric nonsense or the relatively low level cards that the Society of the Burning Shadow used—but decided against it. Not only would she not know what any of the cards did, but she didn’t want to take the risk that Lumen could activate them remotely as she had done with the ones floating in the air. Suddenly finding her hips blasted off because of a card in her pocket sounded like a bad way to go.

By that logic, she also shouldn’t pick up any other decks of cards, but she hadn’t known such a thing was possible before just now. Given that she hadn’t had any problems so far, she wasn’t too inclined to discard the deck she had stolen. Especially not with how useful Spectral Chains was turning out to be.

All three of the people on the floor tensed as Alyssa neared, but nothing happened as far as she could tell. Not even as she stepped over their bodies and into the back room.

“So, Catal. I’ve never been mesmered before. How do we know if that fairy put a spell on us?”

“You won’t. You’ll just suddenly want to start doing things. The worst is when those are things you already want to do. It helps to cement its hold over us.” Alyssa did not miss the way his head jerked in her direction. “For example, did you ask me that of your own free will? Or because the fairy wanted you to ask it?”

“Ah. Well, I still want to kill the fairy. Would the fairy want that?”

“It knows you can’t right now, so possibly.”

~I didn’t do anything to them.~

Alyssa rolled her eyes. There was being paranoid, then there was being absurd. While under the fairy’s spell, she recalled a distinct feeling of overwhelming happiness associated with pretty much anything that she did. Just getting angry had been a chore. These people were definitely not under some spell.

Knowing where Tzheitza kept the completed products meant that it only took her a few moments to rummage through them and find the blue healing potion. She double-checked that it had a screw-on cap and wasn’t cold to the touch before nodding her head. Though, looking around as she slipped it into the satchel behind the fairy, Alyssa couldn’t help but frown.

“Where did Tzheitza go?”

Oz, at least, answered her. He tried to turn his head so that he could look into the back room, but it didn’t quite work. All three of them were still facing the shop’s entrance. “Don’t know. Haven’t seen her all night.”

“I hope she’s alright,” Alyssa said as she stepped back over them. “Last time I saw her was this afternoon. She was running off to deal with a potential plague containment failure.”

“Plague?” Lumen said, a bit of panic entered her haughty tone.

“Over in the shopping district on the east side of the palace. Near the Observatorium.” Stopping at the half of a door that was still standing—the upper half had fallen outside the building because of the various laser beams—Alyssa turned to face the three hoping that the building wasn’t going to collapse. It hadn’t so far, but wasn’t one of these wood pillars load bearing? They had been sliced clean through. Even the ground outside had a long gash in it from that purple laser.

“Anyway, I’m going to leave you people here. When the chains disappear, don’t chase after me please, I won’t appreciate it. Palace is under attack and Irulon is injured. No time to explain or fight you again.” Slipping her phone out of her pocket, she checked Irulon’s countdown. Still more than seven hours left. Plenty of time, even if she both explained and leisurely walked to the palace. But she didn’t want to risk anything. The sooner Irulon was back on her feet, the better. Everything could be explained then.

Besides, if she canceled the Spectral Chains, she would probably just end up fighting again. These people did not like fairies. Understandable, given the fairy’s ability to take their free will if they couldn’t resist as Alyssa had, but still tedious when trying to be marginally allied with the fairy.

So she left and started running—eliciting a few complaints from the fairy, but Alyssa ignored her. The Spectral Chains were extensible, but they had their limits. Said limits were roughly two buildings away. Not far at all. She could have chosen to drag Oz and his friends along behind her, but had a feeling that wouldn’t be pleasant for her or for them. Not without another levitation spell. So she let the chains disappear.

As soon as they did, Alyssa turned down the nearest alley and hoped that none of the three had spotted her before she disappeared.

Next stop: The Royal Palace.


<– Back | Index | Next –>


 

016.004

<– Back | Index | Next –>


Murphy

The Society and The Gaunt


The gaunt lumbered forward, unhindered by any spells coming its way, but using none of the speed it had used when grabbing the first guy. If Alyssa was one of those hooded people, she would have run away by now. Gaunts were apparently not dangerous at all if they didn’t get close. Which meant that the biggest worry with them was surprise, an aspect helped by their utter silence in their movements.

And what is with all the hoods anyway? Every single member of that organization wore a hood. Bercilak, Morgan, that other goon that had been blasted off the overlook, the guy who wound up eaten, and all three of the people in the room the gaunt was marching into. Was it some uniform? Did it increase their magical powers? It all just seemed inconvenient to Alyssa with how it blocked peripheral vision.

Something Alyssa was hoping to exploit. The gaunt was far enough into the room now that the spells weren’t coming directly at the door anymore. It gave Alyssa another chance to lean around the frame and check the room. She had learned her lesson with the Taker. No standing in doorways staring out. Just a quick peek then back to cover.

Still three people. None were trying to hide, just standing out in the open behind a table shouting spell after spell, firing all manner of effects at the gaunt. Or… two of them were firing spells. One had pressed up against the side wall and was slowly inching his way over, using the other two to distract the gaunt. There was only one exit to the larger room. It was set directly behind the two arcanists, so the third person wasn’t trying to escape.

And he had a familiar canister in his hands. One leaking a trail of misty smoke from its nozzle.

~What are you waiting for! Just go!~

Alyssa glanced down at the reason the hooded people weren’t running away. The little fairy struggled against the bars as if she would be able to get loose now when she hadn’t been able to on her own. If that smoke got near her, she might lose control of the gaunt. Worse, depending on just how that smoke worked, she might start listening to their orders and ignoring Alyssa.

“One second,” Alyssa said in a whisper, setting the cage down on the ground.

~Don’t leave me here!~

Ignoring the fairy rattling the bars of her cage, Alyssa gripped her pistol with both hands. Fighting off a sudden sick sensation in her stomach, she pivoted around the door’s frame and raised the gun. She squeezed the trigger three times. Three copper-coated lead slugs struck the man square in the chest. He staggered, wobbling. The smoke canister fell from his fingertips as his back hit the wall. He slid to the side, leaving three distinct red streaks as he collapsed to the floor.

All spell casting stopped. The loud cracks from the pistol silenced the two others. Though the silence lasted only a moment.

“Subjugation!”

A wave of fiery orange light lashed out from one of the casters’ fingertips. It rippled through the gaunt, aiming straight for Alyssa.

She tried to throw herself out of the way, but the light struck her in the gut, being too wide a wave to dodge. Alyssa’s knees slammed into the ground. Some invisible force against her back pressed her forward. She used her hands to catch herself, but it didn’t help. She bent further and further until her face pressed against the ground. Only then did it stop. Lifting her head only resulted in that force slamming her back against the ground, keeping her locked into her bow.

The shadow of the gaunt moved across the floor, standing directly between Alyssa and her attackers. Head forced to the ground, she could only barely see its long fingers grab at a chair. The chair vanished from her sight. Half a second later, the sound of something heavy hit a wall and one of the casters shouted out in pain.

Alyssa could move again.

She wasted no time grabbing her pistol as she stood. She fired at the first human she saw.

A woman screamed as two of the three slugs hit her around the stomach area.

This time, Alyssa didn’t wait around watching to see what happened to the woman, she ducked back into the fairy’s room.

Something slammed into the wall just as she made it in, buckling the wood and sending splinters exploding around her head. She hadn’t even heard someone cast a spell. Not wanting to be on the receiving end of anything that could pierce the wood, Alyssa grabbed the fairy’s cage and backed away from the opening, moving closer to the side wall.

“One down, but not dead yet.” Tenebrael hadn’t poofed into the room, but she probably would before long. “I hit another one, don’t know what her status is.”

~The spells have stopped.~

Alyssa listened for a moment to find that the fairy was right. No one was shouting anything and no whooshes of fireballs or anything else hit the walls. Biting her lip, she moved back to the doorway and peeked around as fast as she could.

The man she had first shot was lying on the ground, not moving. The door on the other side of the room, which had been closed, was open now. One of the arcanists was missing. The other was sitting on the floor against the wall, hunched forward with the gaunt standing over her. Its long, needle-like fingers kept her pressed down while it slowly lowered its face toward hers. The woman had her hood off, revealing straight black hair and crying eyes. Her breaths came short and sharp, each barely the start of a gasp as she stared up at the gaunt.

“Stop the gaunt!” Alyssa shouted. “Don’t let it eat her!”

~What? Wh—~

“Stop it! Quickly!” Dropping the cage, Alyssa moved just barely into the room. When that spell had hit her, she had wound up dropping all the cards, including the Spectral Chains. She fumbled around with the mess on the floor until she finally found it. Grasping the card in her hands, Alyssa stood and aimed it right at the gaunt.

And sighed in relief. It had stopped. Mere inches from the shaking woman, but it was stopped nonetheless. The woman’s eyes rolled back in her head and she slumped forward, held up only thanks to the gaunt’s fingers pressing her against the wall. But even with her head tipping forward, the gaunt didn’t close the short distance to touch her. It stayed dead still.

“Fairy, move the gaunt to the doorway and have it ready to attack anyone coming toward us,” Alyssa said. She quickly added on a simple, “Please.” The word cost her nothing and would hopefully differentiate her from the fairy’s captors. As soon as the gaunt started toward the door and not toward Alyssa, something she had been mildly worried about, Alyssa offered the fairy a quick, “Thanks.”

~Why did you stop it? Because it is a human?~ the fairy spat. Which was a weird way of thinking about her voice. She hadn’t actually opened her mouth this entire time. Her voice came through inside Alyssa’s head, resounding between her ears. It wasn’t unpleasant, but Alyssa still didn’t like it. Her head was her own and no one else’s. And she liked it that way.

But no time to complain about that now. Alyssa ran over to the woman and started rifling through the robe’s sleeves. Everyone else pulled their cards from their sleeves and she was pleased to note that this person followed tradition. She also took the dagger from the woman’s waist. Less because she wanted to keep it and more because she didn’t want the woman to have any weapons should she wake up. Though Alyssa wasn’t sure how likely that was. The woman was breathing still, but she had two holes in her chest, one upper right side and another near her stomach area.

Alyssa turned to relieve the man of his weapons and spell cards only to pause.

Black feathers fluttered through the air. A flurry of them exploded outward to reveal everyone else’s favorite angel.

Tenebrael quickly brushed her wings over the corpse and ate his soul before turning to Alyssa with a wide smile. One that Alyssa inversely mirrored. “And how is my little reaper doing tonight? Decent offering, I’ll grant you that. Though the task I’ve given you is still ticking away while you’re out here killing for me? I hope you aren’t ignoring it.”

“Oh, not ignoring it at all!” Alyssa shouted at the angel. “In fact, I’m seriously considering killing her myself! ‘Oh no Alyssa, nothing can go wrong with my spell. I made it myself. I’m such an infallible genius.’ What a load of bull. I knew this would happen. Oh, I’m going to have the biggest ‘I told you so’ for her when I get back.”

~Wh—~

“Not talking to you, fairy,” Alyssa snapped, not breaking eye contact with Tenebrael. The angel tended to disappear when Alyssa wasn’t looking.

But she didn’t make any move to disappear, she just closed her lips and hummed, still smiling. “Aw, Irulon just wants to impress you with her extensive magical knowledge. It isn’t her fault that you are you.”

“Ha!” Alyssa put as much sarcasm as possible into that single syllable. “What she wants is a good kick in the pants.”

“I see you’re as motivated as ever. I’ll just leave you to it th—”

“Don’t you dare disappear on me. Irulon isn’t the only one I’ve got a bone to pick with.”

“Now Alyssa, I already told you that I wouldn’t be helping you to save the princess. Begging is unbecoming.”

Scowling, Alyssa ground her teeth together. Despite her words, she didn’t actually want Irulon to die. The woman was insufferable, yes, but she was also kind, in a twisted sort of way. She had helped Alyssa out more than once. Though she had probably caused just as many problems as she had helped solve, that was more because of Alyssa’s odd interactions with magic than any intentional deceit on the princess’ part.

But she had holes in her chest. Some had to have gone through her lungs. Maybe even her heart as well. The only thing that Alyssa could even imagine saving her would be Tzheitza’s blue potion. Though maybe she didn’t need Tenebrael’s help with that. Depending on where she had ended up, it might be possible to run to the potion shop and dig one orb out of storage. In that respect, ending up out here might have actually worked to Irulon’s benefit.

The thought of which just had Alyssa scowling harder. If she found out that the Irulons had done this intentionally, she just might actually kill her.

“What’s with these people?” Alyssa asked instead, gesturing to the unconscious woman. She might as well learn something out of all this. “Why do they hate you enough to constantly attack your worshipers?”

“Them?” Tenebrael raised an eyebrow, sending the tattoos on her face out of alignment. “When I first became a Dominion, I followed the plan. Willingly, I suppose I should add. Because of that, there has been some paraphernalia related to the Throne strewn about. When I decided to actively try to subvert the plan, the Juno Federation—as I believe they call themselves now—got it into their heads that I was some kind of demon. Haha. If you can believe that.”

“Easily.”

Tenebrael frowned. But shrugged it off. “Anyway, they are a collection of city-states under a theocracy, bound together by their vows to vanquish me, or some such nonsense. These specific people are part of a government group known as the Society of the Burning Shadow. A recent initiative, most of whom are ostracized because of their ability to use magic and interactions with monsters. Quite effective by the looks of things as well. Their one weakness seems to be a little girl, lost in a world not her own.”

“This little girl seems to find herself set against them an awful lot. Both times were your doing. Something you want to tell me, Tenebrael? Feel a little threatened, are you? Using your plan-ignoring pawn to take care of dirty business that you can’t handle on your own? Maybe I should go join them.”

Despite the barbs in Alyssa’s tone of voice, Tenebrael laughed. A raucous, boisterous laughter. “Oh, you are a fun one, Alyssa. You cannot imagine the doldrums I went through before you arrived. I was so apathetic. Nothing felt like it mattered at all. Now I can interact with the world in a way I never could have done before. This man, for example,” Tenebrael’s wings brushed against the man’s body, though no milky white soul poured from him this time. “He wasn’t supposed to die tonight. He was supposed to live on to a ripe old age of sixty-three, killing no less than one hundred and seven people over the course of his life. Which is also why you won’t join them. You don’t have the heart for it, Alyssa. Evil is subjective—they all think they are in the right, and maybe they are in a wrong sort of way—but their ruthlessness is quite objective.”

Alyssa glared, but Tenebrael was right. These people started wars with the city for no good reason. That wasn’t something Alyssa wanted to be a part of. Which Alyssa had known before, but she had just been feeling spiteful. She was still ticked off at just about everything. Irulon, this society, the fairy, the city guard, the Black Prince, monsters in general, shadow assassins and gaunts specifically. Plenty more as well. Tenebrael currently ranked highest on that list even if she wasn’t technically the cause for any of the evening’s events; she was a perfect target for Alyssa’s ire.

The angel looked over to the wall, staring at it for a moment before sighing. “Someone just perished. The soul curdles like rotten milk if left in a dead body for too long, so I’m going to cut our conversation short here.” Her glowing white eyes returned to Alyssa, looking over her for a moment. “Your agency is your most valuable trait, Alyssa. If you want to join the Burning Shadow, I will not stop you.”

“I’m not—”

Alyssa covered her eyes with her arm, shielding herself from the torrent of feathers that swirled around Tenebrael. It only lasted a moment. Naturally, the room was void of angels when Alyssa put her arm down.

“Bitch,” she mumbled, spitting out a feather. How does that angel have any left on her wings when she molts that much? Magic, presumably. Alyssa brushed herself off, taking a quick stock of the room as she did so. The fairy was still in her cage, staring outside with wide eyes, the gaunt stood unmoving outside the door, and the woman had woken up again, also staring with wide eyes. With a snort, Alyssa picked up one of the feathers littering the floor around her. Most in the room had vanished, but per her tests with Bacco and Tzheitza, other people could see the ones that she had touched and they didn’t disappear either. “Do you know who this feather belongs to? I’ll give you a hint,” Alyssa said, kneeling while spinning the feather in her fingers. “You know her well. She just came to collect the soul of your companion over there.”

“I— I— I—” The woman hiccuped between each attempt at speaking. Not actual hiccups, but her breathing was clipped and broken. Considering the bullets in her body, it was a wonder she was even conscious at all. “I saw her!” she blurted out. “God, she came for him. That monster… I— I— I—”

Alyssa froze as the woman started hyperventilating. She had been planning on interrogating the woman. Finding out what their organization was planning, how many others there were involved in the city tonight, and other such things. But now… “Did you see her? Tenebrael?”

“I— I feel… I don’t want…”

Incoherent. Absolutely incoherent. She probably was dying. But Tenebrael had said that she was cutting off the conversation. If this woman was going to die soon, that angel would probably have said that she would be back.

Or probably not. Alyssa’s momentary shock at finding someone else who had seen Tenebrael died away. What did it matter, anyway? The Society of the Burning Shadow didn’t deny Tenebrael’s existence, they just loathed it. Still, she considered making an attempt at saving the woman. The gaunt could carry her to the potion shop where Alyssa could find the blue healing potion. As long as they moved quick enough, it would be possible…

The real question: Did she want to save her? This woman was not a good person. Tenebrael had called their organization’s actions objective. Alyssa wasn’t sure she believed that, but the evidence was damning. They had marched a mind-controlled monster army onto the city just a week and a half ago. Now they were trying to assassinate the top level government? Alyssa highly doubted that Lyria was wholly innocent, but she had yet to see them do anything to provoke anyone.

How many people had this woman killed? Directly or indirectly? Probably more than Alyssa had, which was a somewhat disturbing metric to use. At least Alyssa had only killed in self-defense, something this woman could hardly say about herself. Alyssa hadn’t had a choice! It had been them or her!

But now… She had a choice.

Alyssa stared at the woman, mind reeling. Tears ran freely from the woman’s eyes. She was still having trouble breathing. One of the bullets must have hit a lung. There was no blood on the wall as there had been with the other man. No exit wound. The bullets were still inside her, which might be the thing keeping her alive. Contrary to Hollywood’s belief that removing a bullet instantly cured someone of all their ailments, tons of people walked around with bullets lodged in their bodies simply because it could do more damage pulling them out. After a fresh wound, such as this woman’s, bullets inside the body helped staunch blood flow, preventing death from blood loss. And possibly drowning, if it was keeping blood out of her lungs.

“Fairy,” Alyssa said, not taking her eyes off the woman. “It is past time we leave. Can you please have the gaunt pick up this woman? Without harming her. No eating her either. If we get into a fight, the gaunt should be free to throw her away without care.” They could make a token effort to save her life. Perhaps give her to Oxart’s fake-hospital. Make her suffer under the menders that her victims had to endure. If it became inconvenient… if it came down to her life versus the woman’s, Alyssa knew who she would pick without hesitation. Even Irulon’s life versus the woman, Alyssa would go for the former.

The fairy, still in her cage sitting on the floor next to the door, walked up to the bars and glared. ~Have I traded one human master for another?~

Alyssa whirled to face the diminutive creature. The fairy’s large eyes went wide with fear as Alyssa approached, sending her back in her cage. Bending, Alyssa gripped the cage and tore open the little door, barely pausing to unlock it.

“You’re free to go.” Alyssa waited a moment, watching as the fairy stared at her open cage. After crawling forward, she ducked under the bars and stepped out of the contraption, looking around like she couldn’t believe that she was actually outside. “But I would appreciate your help in getting out of here. I don’t care if you flee the city after that. Though please take all the shadow assassins and whatever else with you when you go.”

The fairy’s transparent wings stretched out behind her. While more intact than those of the fairy on the Brechen Overlook, they had been roughed up enough that when this fairy started trying to fly, she couldn’t get her feet off the ground. A deep despair came over her face upon realizing that fact. ~I can’t… I’ll be trampled to death. You humans won’t just let me walk out. You’re trying to trick me. This isn’t freedom at all.~

Alyssa rolled her eyes. It wasn’t that she didn’t feel some empathy for the fairy. She did. But how stupid could the fairy actually be? They had a gaunt standing guard over their room. All she had to do was sit on its shoulders and have it march out of the city. Assuming she couldn’t find a random human to mind control. But Alyssa didn’t speak a word of that. Having the fairy with her would make things easier, probably. More than that, there had been two separate fairy-controlled attacks on the city in just the short time since Alyssa had been here. Oz’s mission would probably jump in priority by morning. It was a good thing that he was planning on leaving tomorrow.

“I have things to take care of in the city. But if you help me, I will help you get out of the city. There is a small chance that I can get you all the way back to your village. But that won’t be for a while yet. So help me help you. Pick up that woman and let’s go.”

~Why should I believe you?~ the fairy said, putting her hands on her hips. ~You’re just tricking me like they did. None of you humans hold up your promises.~

“I really don’t have time to convince you.” Theoretically, Irulon still had plenty of time before her stasis failed. Practically, Alyssa wanted to give herself as much time as she possibly could. “Help me or escape on your own, those are your options.”

The fairy glared. Her glare turned to a sigh.

The gaunt turned, making Alyssa tense as she caught it in the corner of her eye. She raised her Spectral Chains card, but it didn’t end up approaching her, stopping at the woman. Who started squirming. The gaunt didn’t seem to care at all. Its long fingers and arms curled around the woman, holding her tight to its chest, slightly muffling her sudden screams.

“If you want to stay out of Tenebrael’s stomach,” Alyssa said, “be silent.”

It didn’t help at all. The woman was absolutely hysterical. What did help was the simple fact that she couldn’t scream for long. She started coughing, spitting up a bit of blood.

Alyssa hoped that the movement hadn’t aggravated her wounds. If it had, there wouldn’t be much Alyssa could do about it besides shrug and say that she had tried. Turning away to face the fairy, Alyssa frowned. “Do you need to be carried?”

The fairy’s face turned green as she pushed her lips into a pout. The green was of a pale plant-like color. Alyssa thought she had gotten sick for a moment before realizing that the fairy was blushing. Once the fairy nodded her head, Alyssa knelt down and opened the flap of her satchel. There were some spare bullets in there, a fully loaded magazine and an empty one, a flash light, matches… a few other things. Nothing that the fairy could seriously harm if she decided to. But it was the perfect size for her.

“Hop in.”

Fuming, the fairy did so without a word.

Well, tough for her. As soon as she was in, Alyssa swapped her current pistol’s magazine with the fully loaded one and readied both it and the Spectral Chains card. “Hold on tight, I’m probably going to be running a bit. Keep the gaunt following us as fast as it will possibly move.”

Following Taker protocol, Alyssa crossed and peeked out of the room as quickly as she could, staying with her head out just long enough to get a glimpse of the exterior.

And what she saw had her scowling.

“I recognize this place… It’s the damn Waterhole.”


<– Back | Index | Next –>