Devon strode into the Brakket Academy main lobby area with two demons in tow. Once upon a time, doing something so brazen would have gotten him killed without a doubt. Who in their right mind would ever allow a demon summoner and demons into a school?
How times had changed.
His weren’t even the only demons he had spotted around the school. He had spotted a capra demon disguised as a student turning one of the many enigmas into minced meat just outside the entrance to the school. A few nearby human guards hadn’t even batted an eye as Devon passed by. Apparently, so long as he wasn’t a tentacled monster, he was perfectly welcome. Either that or Eva had told them that he would be coming.
The guards hadn’t batted an eye at the capra demon either, so they must have been at least somewhat attuned to the idea of demons running around. Though their faces might have looked a little green when they glanced towards the ground up remains of the enigma. Devon didn’t know what kind of weak stomached guards this school was hiring, but he had thought that they would be able to manage a little viscera.
They would never have survived at Devon’s old school.
Literally.
Tenebris Artes would have eaten them up and spat them out as nothing more than bones. The students—who, around Brakket, were all hiding indoors save for one or two that had worked up the courage to help fight enigmas—as well. In fact, Tenebris Artes had closed down after only a year of him attending.
Something that had absolutely nothing to do with Devon whatsoever.
Times changed. Society became more comfortable for the inhabitants with every passing year. More comfort meant less daily hardships to whip the kids into shape. They would go on to join proper society and hopefully get whipped into shape. But the ever increasing comfort would just mean that one day—maybe not this generation, maybe not even the next, but one day, the pampered children would be the real world.
Then who would be around to save the day?
Fate always had a trial or two up her sleeve. When would the trial become too much for the ignorant masses. There wouldn’t always be a curmudgeonous old demonologist around to save the day.
In fact, he wouldn’t have been around to save the day were it not for that blasted research subject of his. Maybe next time Fate would just leave him alone.
Ah well. Saving the world one last time wasn’t so bad. At least this time he hadn’t been attacked by anything other than enigmas. Those could be summarily dealt with by his demons with him hardly lifting a finger. The waxy ruax handled almost every one. He only had to blast one with infernal flames once, and that was only because the ruax had been distracted by a good six or seven of the beasts.
Unfortunately, he wasn’t sure exactly where to go. Glass windows separated a secretary’s desk and the main offices from the rest of the open lobby. The hallway went left and right with only room numbers listed in each direction. Straight ahead, the large glass windows opened up into that disaster waiting to happen of an expanded space ward.
No sign for the school’s infirmary.
“Come with me,” he said, more for the benefit of the carnivean than the ruax. One was under his direct control. The other only should be.
Leaving behind the lobby, he headed towards the offices. There had to be someone there and someone there had to know the way to the infirmary.
He walked right up to the vacant secretary’s desk and peered over at an all too tiny building map hanging up behind it. It took him five minutes of searching before he realized that he was standing right next to the infirmary. The room had two doors, one in the hallway just around the corner and one in the office itself.
Naturally, Devon headed to the nearer door.
He slid it open to find a gaggle of people running every which way. Adults ran around between the makeshift beds. In their arms, they carried trays filled with a haphazard arrangement of potions, surgical implements, common medicine products, and clean cloth bandages. Both adults and children filled the floorspace of nearly the entire room, lying on blankets and pads. Most of the beds’ occupants were injured in some manner or other. A band of bandages wrapped around one man’s eye and head, one woman was missing an arm, someone else looked like he had a bite taken out of his leg. A few people were working on that last one, performing some sort of surgery.
In other words, a typical medical facility during an emergency. Nothing notable to see.
He took one step into the room only to find his path blocked by a young girl with an eye patch and a red eye. A few scars tugged at her lips as she started speaking.
“Are you injured?”
Devon leaned slightly closer to the woman. Nurse Post, her name tag said with a little heart in place of the ‘o’. The blood smeared over it and much of her white outfit did not help play up the kind and welcoming school nurse that she had been trying to go for.
Red eyes were not a common human trait, though they did happen on occasion. Usually a faint red accompanied by albinism. Her hair wasn’t the normal white, but she must have dyed it. He couldn’t detect any sign of her being a demon.
Her eyes flicked to the two demons behind him. Neither of which she reacted to in the slightest before turning her gaze back to Devon.
“Sir?”
“No,” Devon said, leaning back. “I’m looking–”
“I’m going to have to ask you to leave, sir. If you aren’t here to help and are not injured, you’ll only be in the way. If you’re looking for a patient, the office across the hall has a list of everyone who was brought in as of an hour ago,” she said, gesturing directly behind Devon.
Devon’s lip curled into a scowl. He stepped straight to the other side of the woman and continued walking, leaving her momentarily confused.
“Sir,” she said once she realized that he had got behind her. “You’re wasting valuable time that we could be using to save these people.”
“Yes, and I’m trying to save the entire world,” he grumbled, reaching the center of the room. It must have been magically expanded as well. He had walked far more than what it would have taken to go around to the opposite door.
More people were staring at him now. Lots of doctors or nurses that should be doing their job. He didn’t think he was all that special looking. His beard may be unkempt and his trench coat a little dusty, but his arm was safely hidden away in the sleeve.
Then again, most people in the room were not accompanied by two obviously inhuman demons. Maybe their stares were more directed towards the tentacle-headed thing and the animated wax statue that were following behind him.
“I didn’t ask you to follow me around,” he said in a low tone of voice. “Go about whatever it is you think is right.” Before she could protest further, he raised his voice to be heard above all the moaning and whining of the injured around him. “Which one of you is Genoa?”
Devon stared around the room, waiting and expecting someone to at least raise their hands if not come all the way up to him.
Nobody did.
“Sir–”
“Wait.”
The nurse tried to say something, but a second voice interrupted. Devon turned to find some woman walking up to him with frazzled hair, several bandaged wounds on every bit of bare skin, and an entirely missing arm. He stared at it for a moment before looking back to the woman’s face.
“You’re Genoa?”
“What? No… You can’t have– Never mind,” she said with a shake of her head. “It isn’t important right now, Devon.”
Ah, he thought. Apparently I know her.
“What is important is that Eva is out at the ritual circle–”
“Yeah, I know. It’s part of the plan to fix everything.”
“There’s a plan?” The woman let out a long sigh. She placed her one hand to her chest, though Devon couldn’t actually see the hand. Enough bandages covered it to make it look like a mummy’s mitten. “Oh thank goodness. But what do you need Genoa for?”
“Eva recommended her as a ritual construction specialist. Though,” Devon raised his voice slightly, “I’ll accept any able-bodied mage capable of large-scale earth manipulation.”
He looked around at all the bandaged people lying in beds or bleeding out or whatever injured people were wont to do with a slowly deepening scowl on his face. What was with these people? Not a single one looked like they could hold a wand let alone cast a few spells. What kind of mages got injured fighting these enigmas, let alone allowed the injures to send them to the medimagi. At least the woman in front of him was on her feet, if not clenching her wand between her teeth to fight back.
Though that kid in the corner looked to be just about the right age for experimentation. If he was dying, nobody would miss–
“Devon!” the woman hissed at him, bringing his attention back to the woman. “You are despicable.”
“I get that on occasion,” Devon grunted. “Where can I find an earth mage?”
“Genoa is out trying to clear away enigmas. She should have her cellphone with her. Hand me your phone and I’ll–” She cut herself off as she realized that she was holding out the stump of her arm. With a half-muttered curse, she swapped to her other hand only to realize her bandage predicament.
“Why don’t you tell me the number and I’ll make the call instead,” he said, pulling out his phone.
— — —
Eva lowered her arms as she stared up at the sky. Not at the eyeball, which was still looking down at the Earth and still crying those magmatic meteors that were probably filled with enigmas. She stared at the design for a new treatment circle. One for the demonic enigma and the chunk of brain.
It wasn’t that large. Certainly not as big as the circle that had been used to summon the two avatars. Perhaps as big as a large room. Even that size was only by necessity. The brain avatar was much too large for anything smaller.
The ritual was based on Devon’s work—and she definitely wondered how he would react to finding out that Void used his research—it should be just enough to get what she needed done. At least, that was what Void had said while the designs were being burned into her mind. Satisfied that everything in the design above her head had been copied into the real world correctly, Eva moved on to the next step.
Forming a long tube of blood, she jammed one end into the brain and one into the formerly furry arm of the enigma. This time, she did not stand in between the two subjects of the ritual. A second tube of crystallized blood led out from the other side of the brain, ready to drain into a large vase once the ritual got under way.
The succubus had been watching patiently and staring at the ritual circle that Eva had constructed. Only when she switched to the tubing did Catherine walk up to her.
“You’re doing it again?”
“Not quite,” Eva said as she turned back to Catherine. “Apparently, we overdid it earlier. Shoving the entirety of Void’s Avatar into this thing was not only unnecessary, but overly harmful to the Powers’ ecosystem of… power.”
“So diluting it then?”
“That’s a good way to put it.” Eva glared down at the demonic enigma. “We put some of that in and take some of the avatar out.” And some of Arachne as well. After taking a few steps back, Eva motioned for Catherine to do the same.
Srey had hardly moved from his initial position near the avatar until Eva physically dragged him away. Eva wasn’t sure what was up with him. Had he actually struck up some sort of friendship with Vektul and was in shock over what happened?
She supposed it didn’t really matter. So long as he didn’t screw with anything important, he could sit around in his vacuous state for all Eva cared.
“Alright. This shouldn’t take long,” Eva said as she pressed her magic into the hovering ritual circle of blood.
The effect started immediately. A faint glow emanated from the lines. The demonic enigma remained unconscious, but started writhing as blood started flowing through the tube. Or whatever filled enigmas’ veins. It didn’t work well with Eva’s blood magic and Devon had mentioned something about it only being superficially similar.
Clasping her hands behind her back, Eva started stalking around the circle. The avatar was as inert as it had been since she had finished the initial ritual. She needed to keep an eye on it. With her at least marginally reversing the process of corrupting it, it might become a little more active. But that wouldn’t be for at least a short amount of time.
No, Eva barely glanced at the large mass of the avatar as she walked past. She stopped in front of the little jar that she had set up to collect the excess essence that the ritual was now removing. The previous ritual hadn’t had the disposal tank despite all of Eva’s treatments requiring it. She was somewhat surprised that the avatar hadn’t exploded after realizing that she had forgotten that little detail. Devon had always warned her to not let him forget about it or she might explode.
Then again, that was Devon. He had probably just been grumping about it for the sake of having something to grumble about.
Everything looked like it was working properly. Black particles of dust and smoke trickled out of the tube and into the crystalline pot. The smoke, looking just like the smoke that made up Void’s avatar, didn’t settle into the bottom of the pot, choosing to swirl around in dark clouds.
Which had Eva wondering if she shouldn’t have put a proper top on it. Nothing was spilling out yet, so she wouldn’t do anything that might potentially interfere with the ritual until something actually went wrong.
“Now,” Eva said, “while this finishes, we need to prepare to send this hunk of flesh back to its master.”
“Another ritual?”
“Actually no.”
“No?” Catherine blinked, genuinely surprised. “You’re not going to toss it up there,” she said, pointing towards the portals overhead.
“My arms are a little stretchy at the moment.” As demonstration, she enlarged her hand until the fingers could wrap around her entire waist. “However, I think those portals are a bit higher than I could reach.”
“I’m sure we could work out some magical propulsion to launch it up there.”
“As amusing as a brain rocket ship would be, there’s already a plan in place. Something that should seal the deal and ensure that Life cannot recover. At least not anytime soon.”
“And is sealing the deal also going to seal the portals overhead?”
“Nope! Devon has actually been working on that. Though he’s supposed to be waiting for me to get rid of this avatar. If I finish, you might need to go tell him that he can start should he not clue in. I directed him to the infirmary.”
“Devon? I didn’t bring the ritual up with him after he dismissed it. You told him more? I thought he wanted no part of any of this,” she paused, frowning towards Eva for a moment. “Or perhaps I figured that he would tie you down in the solitary confinement building if he heard you were actually working on the ritual.”
“I’m sure he would have. Had he known.” Eva shot her a quick grin before double-checking on the status of the ritual. As she ensured that the swirling clouds of black smoke within the pot were not spilling out, she continued speaking. “Devon saw what was going on and developed a solution. All within the last few hours.” Or so Void had said before releasing Eva so that she could use her beacon to get back to Earth.
It took Catherine a few moments to respond. Her eyebrows knitted into a scowl as she thought. “Without knowing anything about what was going on?”
“Nothing more than what you told him and what he observed from the prison.”
Which only sent Catherine’s scowl deeper into fury. Eva had to wonder whether Catherine could have done the same. Probably. In the same amount of time? Maybe. Judging by her furrowed brow, she was rapidly trying to put together her own solution to sealing the portals overhead.
Eva left the jar for a moment, moving back around to the opposite side. The demonic enigma was actually shriveling up. Its skin looked more like that of a raisin than a proper living being. Not even old people on their deathbeds looked quite so bad.
Was it because of all the organs she had stuffed inside without care or order? Or was it because it was an enigma and, while it wouldn’t die, it had far slower regeneration than demons did. How much blood had Arachne lost during Eva’s treatments? She must have regenerated at a rapid rate to keep from dying and being sucked into a Hell portal.
At the same time, she could still see blood traveling through the tube and into the avatar. Until it ran completely dry, Eva would try not to worry too much. Besides, the ritual was actually nearly finished. The demonic enigma still had a decent amount of blood left. It should be enough for another few minutes.
“Do you need me here?”
“I would prefer some help here. If something goes wrong, I’d like second opinions,” Eva said, turning towards Catherine. She paused as her line of sight passed by Srey who was facing Eva’s direction with his head bowed. Not really in respect. He kept rubbing his forehead like he had a headache. “I don’t think Srey would be up to helping much.”
She finished turning to Catherine and put on a wide grin. “You’ll just have to restrain your curiosity as to what Devon came up with. Don’t worry, I’m sure he’ll show you. Unless, of course, he thinks that this is all your mess since you were the one to show him the ritual.”
Catherine, straightening her back and looking down on Eva with half-lidded eyes, put on an evil smile. “I am not above throwing you under the bus, so to speak.”
“Do as you will,” Eva said, walking back to the jar. When the ritual finished, she wanted to watch and ensure that nothing went wrong on that front. “I don’t think Devon will get too upset with me. Not unless he decides that his experiment has transformed too much from his original plans.” As she said so, she glanced down at her hands. They weren’t so different from Arachne’s limbs. In fact, they were probably better. No outside demonic influence to mess with Devon’s plans. Just blood magic.
Demonic blood magic rather than bloodstone-based, but it functioned nearly the same as far as Eva could tell.
Magic draining from the circle pulled her attention back to the jar. The ritual was winding down. Only a little left. The avatar still hadn’t moved, so she didn’t even need to worry about that.
She watched the jar until the very last trickles of avatar essence dripped out from her blood tube. The moment the dripping finished and the ritual shut off, a Hell portal opened beneath the jar. The entire thing, essence and all, disappeared within.
A small sigh escaped her lips. Hopefully that was enough.
“What was that?”
“Oh nothing. More importantly, time to get rid of this thing.”
As she walked up to the avatar, she coated the demonic enigma with blood, ensuring that it couldn’t move in the slightest. She didn’t detonate the shriveled husk just yet. It might still have uses. If only for Lynn’s research. She just crystallized the blood around it.
“Alright,” Eva said, turning her hands into long blades twice the length of her arms. “So long as everything goes well, make sure that Devon starts his ritual.”
“What about you?”
Eva turned her head over her shoulder to grin at Catherine as she built up magic inside her for a teleport. “Well, I’ll stop by if I can.”
Without any further delay, she plunged her arms into the avatar.
“Was that supposed to do something?” Catherine asked after a moment of absolutely nothing happening.
“Just… hold on a second. This thing is gigantic. I’ve never teleported with something so big. Usually only another person-sized thing.” As she spoke, she felt her magic hit the threshold. Without any chance to resolve the moment of awkwardness, Eva and the avatar vanished into the infernal teleportation.
Just as usual, the tunnel of flesh and screams surrounded Eva, squeezing her and the avatar ever closer to the prison gate.
But this time, Eva did something a little different.
She let go. She pulled her hands back to her sides, separating her from the avatar. With a slight kick of her foot, she sent the egg-shaped blob of meat off into the walls of flesh. It tumbled, falling into pieces from the force of their speed until it finally vanished beneath and into the walls.
Unfortunately, Newton’s laws apparently worked within the semi-alternate dimension of the teleport tunnel. Eva spread the blood of her limbs out into wide parasols in an attempt to slow her steady glide in the opposite direction. It must have worked a little, but not enough. She barely got to watch the avatar be torn to shreds before she crashed into the opposite wall.
Thanks for the chapter!
Damn universal laws being laws in other universes.
were all hiding indoors save for one or two that worked up the courage to help fight enigmas
–
+had worked
without him hardly lifting a finger
“without” and “hardly” both seems wrong, kind of double negative
someone else looked like they had a bite taken out of his leg
like he had (given “his leg”)
The blood smearing over it and much of her white outfit
smeared
did not help to play up
-to
walked far more than what would have taken to go around
what +it would
several bandaged wound
wounds
Devon couldn’t actually see the hand. Enough bandages covered her hand
–
covered it
bleeding out or whatever injured people were want to do
wont to do
when while the designs were being burned
-when / -while
we over did it earlier
overdid
if her heard you were actually working
he
restrain your curiosity as to what Devon had come up with
Devon came up with / Devon has come up with
Not unless he decides that his experiment had transformed too much from his original plans.
–
has transformed
Unfortunately, Newton’s laws apparently worked within the semi-alternate dimension of the teleport tunnel. Only thanks to her smaller size did Eva get to watch the avatar be torn to shreds before she crashed into the opposite wall.
–
Due to Eva’s smaller weight, the separating force should have sent her moving faster. So unless she was much farther away from the wall in the direction she moved in, she should have crashed first. Why would smaller size make her crash later?
I would guess she was closer to the end of the tunnel and would be sent backward such that she would be moved further away from the exploding cancerous brain tumor? Otherwise yes you would be correct newtons laws would indeed make the smaller projectile (i.e. Eva have the higher velocity given that momentum is mass times velocity and force is the change in momentum(which in the limit of constant mass reduces to the classic F=ma=m*dv/dt as otherwise it would be F=dp/dt=dm/dt*v+mdv/dt)
Thanks!
And altered the final paragraph to ‘angle’ rather than size. Does that make more sense? I tried to draw a picture in Paint but… uhh… it didn’t turn out very well. If that doesn’t work, I could further modify that bit.
Well assuming they’re originally in the center of a straight tunnel and not moving sideways, no angle of pushing against the avatar would explain Eva taking longer to hit a wall. Any push would result in the avatar and Eva moving in opposite directions, with Eva moving as many times faster as the avatar is heavier. If the tunnel is straight, the component along the tunnel (one moving faster forward and one slower or backward) shouldn’t matter. If they’re originally at about the center of the tunnel, the distance to the walls is the same for any direction and its opposite, so any particular direction of jumping off the avatar wouldn’t explain things.
Alright, altered again. Should be better now I think.
WOW those chain-revisions are funny to watch real time.
Remember, you have an out in your back pocket at all times; Eva is the unreliable narrator and SHE doesn’t know physics. With a reasonable amount of Author denial, many errors can become delicious Canon Content. Example;4.22
[“Together, then?”
There was a moment of hesitation before Zoe nodded. She held out her hand.
Wayne took it.
“On three?”
“Works for me,” Zoe said with a nod. She started counting and Wayne started thinking.
…
….As soon as Zoe said three, both ducked down beneath the waves.]
Before the X correct it used to be Zoe counted to 5. Even if it is an error, use it to your advantage! It was character development all along! Character development just to please hattrick21! xD
Narcissism aside, somethin’ to think about.
The original intention was actually more along the lines of what TMP suggested in the comment… uhh, not sure if it’s above or below this one. However, that would likely mean that Eva would only have a bare instant to watch the show so I think I like the current version better.
But yeah, chain revisions. If this version didn’t fly, I had a few more up my sleeve. For example, perhaps Eva was completely wrong and physics don’t work at all in warp tunnels!
Thinking about it for some time I think I understand what you might have been going for and it makes some sense. As in, if a tunnel is 2m wide, the “brain” is 1.99m wide and Eva is 60 cm wide and both are in the middle, the “brain” in front of her. She has to travel 70cm to reach the wall while the “brain” only has to travel 1cm. Pushing the brain sideways means it hits the wall earlier because it only has 1cm to travel instead of 70cm, even if Eva would move twice as fast because she weighs less.
Was that what you were attempting to describe?
That was the original intention. However, as explained in the other comment I just posted, I think I do like the current version better.
Alternately it would have been safe to say that Eva is heavier than she looks at this point. Since she got shorter after using her blood to fight the hunter it seems she has a pool of blood on her that is compressed through some sort of magic demon shenanigans. If she has enough blood she could easily have more mass than the brain making her hit the wall second after just kicking off. Though if she only generates it on demand the current version works.
Magic demon shenanigans are my favorite. Especially shenanigans that are cheeky and fun!
I think Devon is a great character. He has that special kind of amorality while still being mostly harmless. Sure, he kidnaps babies to make demonic experiments with them, but he… ok, there’s no way to make that not sound bad. 😀
He does try to minimize the damage he does (picking a dying one instead of a healthy one) and is rather a “run” than “fight and kill” kind of guy without a lot of ambition – other than surviving and researching.
The scene in the infirmary shows the chaos for the “normal” people/mages we’ve been missing, there’s a lot more going on than just a random enigma here and there, like the one Eva dispatched on her way to the circle. Or the point is rather, that “just” and enigma is enough to be very dangerous or deadly for those people.
Moving on to the second part: Oh Eva, I don’t think Srey is connected to Vektul with some great friendship. Being watched by Life with hostile intent (?) might distract him. Or being completely out of his depth, he isn’t exactly a very powerful demon. I think both he and Cathrine stayed out of the fight with the hunter because they thought the fight was completely out of their league.
A good thing that the dilution at least worked without a hitch, but I still wonder what went wrong originally. They had some ideas back then, but it’s entirely clear if that was true or if they really did a mistake while creating the circle or some other problem. But the transportation right now of course has to run into trouble again, like nothing can ever work right. Though I don’t quite get the last paragraph, why being smaller would allow her to hit the wall later. Shouldn’t it be the opposite way?