004.001

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Cold.

Juliana peeled her cheek off the cold floor, wincing as she did so. Her skin stuck to the black metal tiles as if she had been lying there for hours on end.

But that was impossible. She had just been in class…

Juliana pressed a hand to her forehead. Her head felt about ready to burst open. Every thought sent another needle into her brain.

Shaking her head, Juliana grit her teeth as she took stock of her situation.

It didn’t take long. The room was roughly the size of a large closet. Completely unfurnished as well. Every square inch was covered in palm-sized tiles of the same black metal. The door as well, though the door did have a small barred window. It was not big enough to fit her head through.

The only source of light was a faintly pulsing orb of white light that had been inset in the center of the ceiling. Each pulse brought with it another thump of her headache. Whether that was because of the light itself playing havoc on an already existing headache or some magical effect, Juliana couldn’t tell.

The faint pulses did reveal a second form collapsed against a wall.

“Shalise,” Juliana croaked out. She descended into a fit of coughs. Her throat was cracked and dry. Licking her lips did nothing to moisten them.

Crawling over, Juliana put a hand on her friend and tried shaking her. “Shalise,” she coughed out, “wake up.”

Shalise made no response except to slide down the wall. Before her head could hit the floor, Juliana reached out and carefully set the brown-haired girl’s head down on the ground.

She was breathing, Juliana could see that much. But another minute or two of shaking the girl did not help.

Juliana turned away. She pulled herself to two unsteady feet. Leaning against the wall for all the support it could offer, she pinched her eyes shut.

Her head was killing her.

They were clearly in a prison of some sort. Neither of her wands were around, though she still had her ring foci and Ylva’s ring along with her clothes. Attempting to activate her ferrokinesis fizzled out. The magic simply wouldn’t gather.

Which Juliana expected. Only a fool would build a prison and not ward against magic.

It was a good thing she had decided to study medieval armor towards the end of the previous school year. Had she still been relying on her ferrokinesis to provide joints, she would be utterly immobile with suppressed magic.

Opening her eyes, Juliana stumbled to the door. She had to stand on her tip-toes just to see out the window.

More cells. Identical doors to her own lined the wall opposite from her door. A narrow catwalk extended out from both her own door and the doors on the other side with a small gap between. There were at least two rows of cells above and two rows below the floor her cell was on.

She couldn’t see the rooms adjacent to her cell, but Juliana had no reason to doubt that they were cells as well.

A big prison, Juliana thought as she slumped back from the door.

Losing her balance, she fell back against the floor and only managed to keep her head from hitting the hard tiles by quickly moving her hands in the way. The weight slamming her hands into the floor still sent a needle of pain through her knuckles and into her head.

Juliana groaned as her headache redoubled its efforts to rend her mind.

She lay there. Juliana shut her eyes to keep the pulsing light out and simply lay there. She didn’t even try to think of anything until her headache receded to more manageable levels.

They were in class. History. Juliana was playing with her ferrokinesis. They had to leave in the middle because something happened. Something bad.

Remembering hurt. And wasn’t much use, if she was honest with herself.

Whatever facility she had ended up at wasn’t a small-scale hole in the wall. That meant there would be people. Guards and other prisoners. Presumably, they’d be fed at some point. Hopefully they would be given water too.

A light groan from her cell mate roused Juliana from her thoughts.

“Shalise,” Juliana said as she crawled over, “are you okay?”

“My head…” Her voice came out as a dry rasp as well. Shalise propped herself up on one elbow while she rubbed the bridge of her nose. “I feel like I’m going to throw up.”

Juliana scooted back. “Please don’t.” Their cell wasn’t large enough and it definitely lacked the necessary ventilation.

When Shalise made no heaves or gags, Juliana cautiously moved back to her side. “Do you remember how we got here?”

“Where is here?”

“We’re prisoners of some sort. I haven’t seen any writing or signs to tell more. I don’t think it is Eva’s prison.”

“P-prisoners?” Her voice came out at a high enough pitch to cause both of them to wince.

After a moment of mutual silence, Shalise scrunched up her round face in thought. “There was fighting. And you drew a circle… a summoning circle.”

In the blink of an eye–much faster than Juliana thought she could move–Shalise reached out and slapped Juliana across the cheek. Pins and needles laced through her face. Doubly so as Juliana lightly bit her tongue.

“You pulled me on top of it and now we’re prisoners? Why do you even know how to draw a summoning circle?”

Juliana reared back at the volume of Shalise’s anger.

“I stole a book from Eva.” Juliana flinched back and waited for Shalise’s slap. When none came, she continued with her head hung. “I just wanted to get stronger so that I could help out.”

A second slap–one she had been waiting for–came without delay.

“You beat students years older than us with hardly any effort. You train with your mother. Don’t complain about not being strong.”

“Not strong enough!” Juliana grit her teeth while counting backwards from ten. She didn’t open her mouth until she hit zero. “Not strong enough,” she calmly said.

“In case you forgot, I was right by your side while you were being eaten by zombies. I just stood there, frozen. There wasn’t any earth around to attack with. Even if there had been earth, I wasn’t in the right mindset to fight. I had some metal, not as much as I carry around now, but enough to fight with at least.

“You sat there, getting eaten in front of my face. It wasn’t until Arachne knocked that zombie off of you that I snapped out of it.”

Shalise went silent for a minute.

An agonizingly long minute.

Juliana’s throat was still parched. Talking loud and so much did it no favors. It was all she could do to suppress coughing in Shalise’s face.

“And you thought stealing a book from Eva would help? You didn’t even get her help learning? Now look where you landed us.”

“It wasn’t me!” The knot in Juliana’s throat tightened. She couldn’t help the coughs that erupted.

But it wasn’t her. She couldn’t even remember drawing a summoning circle. Even if she had drawn one, Juliana couldn’t see how that would wind up with them in prison. Not unless some demon hunter or mage-knight found her out. And even then, the later would likely need some specific contract about it. Unless there was a general bounty out on diabolists that she didn’t know about.

Shalise stood up, looking far more steady on her feet than Juliana had felt just a few minutes prior.

Before she could take a single step, she fell down and landed on top of Juliana.

It wasn’t her fault.

An earthquake had started.

Juliana pulled Shalise into a hug and maneuvered herself on top. Even if her ferrokinesis wasn’t active, she could still feel the plates of metal coating her body. It was much better protection than fleshy skin in the case that anything fell on them.

Walls cracked and Shalise trembled as the tremor wracked the prison. More than a few of the palm-sized plates of metal pulled loose from the walls. They crashed down against the ground with far more force than should have been possible.

The earthquake tapered out into nothingness, jiggling one last tile loose.

Juliana did not move. She kept one arm over her head and one arm over Shalise’s head.

Immediate aftershocks were no joke. There could be more of those tiles only holding on by a thread.

They stayed like that until Shalise started squirming.

Juliana carefully moved off the other girl. “Are you alright?”

“What was that?”

“An earthquake, I assume.” Juliana stood up and helped Shalise to her feet.

Oddly enough, she didn’t feel unsteady any longer. The pounding in her head had died away.

Ah, that explains it. The pulsing light at the top of the room no longer pulsed. It held a steady, faint glow. That must have been the cause of her headache.

Even her throat was feeling better. She still desperately wanted a glass of water, but some of the dryness had subsided.

Shalise walked right up to the door and looked out without going up on her tip-toes.

“What a mess.”

Juliana didn’t get a chance to ask. A deep, masculine voice boomed through their cell.

“Prisoners out of confinement. Keeper notified. Return to your cells at once or prepare for a journey to the abattoir.”

Shalise turned back, opening her mouth to ask something. Juliana could imagine a few possibilities, but neither had the opportunity to speak.

The door collapsed outwards. Its hinges pulled straight out of the wall with a crack.

Shalise gasped and threw herself to the side. She cowered in a corner, out of view from the cell’s exterior.

Juliana was quick to join her.

Demons were running along the catwalks. She couldn’t name any specific one, but what else could they be? They weren’t human, that was for sure. Wrong colored skin, glowing eyes, horns. Those were just the human shaped ones. One amorphous blob fell through the grated catwalk before Juliana hid from view.

They were in some sort of demon prison after apparently screwing up some summoning circle.

Nothing like this had been mentioned in the book.

Shalise moved her head right next to Juliana’s ear. Her words came out as mere touches of air, barely discernible from the ambient noise. “What do we do?”

Juliana bit her lip, considering her options. There were two obvious choices. “Stay here, hide from all the demons that might decide they want a snack on their way out, wait for whatever is going to come and fix the door, and hope that our imprisonment isn’t too long-lasting. Or flee. Escape. Try to get into contact with mom or Eva or someone.”

“We’re not going to get our one phone call if we stay, are we?”

“Doubt it.”

Shalise sighed. “You’re leaning towards escaping? What about all the demons?”

“Hiding, avoiding, and hoping that they’re too busy with their own escape to pay us much attention. Here,” Juliana removed one of her rings and handed it over to Shalise. “Can’t use magic in here, but maybe out there. I know you’re used to a wand,” Juliana gave a little shrug, “better than nothing.”

While Shalise fitted on the ring, Juliana took a peek around the corner.

There weren’t all that many demons, considering the amount of doors. In fact, there were only three that she could see. Given that most of the cells were still closed, Juliana didn’t quite know what she expected. All the demons who could get free had likely already fled.

The few demons who were around had the poor fortune of being far less mobile than a square-wheeled caboose.

All of them were on catwalks unconnected to her own. Glancing further around the corner revealed only one damaged door on her floor and side of the cell block. By the look of the bent in claw marks on the catwalk railing outside the door, its occupant had already fled.

“Come on,” Juliana said as she grabbed Shalise’s hand.

Neither direction on the catwalk looked any more appealing than the other. Both stretched endlessly as far as Juliana could see. However, one direction had something the other lacked.

Demons.

While there weren’t many demons visible anymore, Juliana had caught a glimpse when the door first fell down. All the demons were moving in the same direction. Presumably towards some exit.

Hopefully towards the exit.

Alongside Shalise, Juliana made haste. They weren’t sprinting, but there was no dalliance either. Running into a demon that was less interested in escaping would not help matters.

It had to have been an hour before the scenery changed. And it wasn’t all that great of a change.

They came to a crossroads. Their corridor of cells met up with another, perpendicular corridor. The catwalks criss-crossed every which-way and even wound around to the other floors.

“Up or down? And after that, which way?”

“I don’t know.”

No matter which direction she looked, there was nothing but more cells. No demons in sight.

Some of the catwalks had claw marks, and one had collapsed completely across the way. She couldn’t tell which direction the fleeing demons had run.

“Well, let’s go down first,” Shalise said. “Get on the ground floor. Maybe they will have a sign somewhere.”

Juliana doubted that. There hadn’t been any signs so far. None of the cells even had numbers on them. “What if we’re underground. Then we should be heading up.”

“Do you really think we’re underground?”

“Just pointing out the possibility,” Juliana said with a shrug. “We can go down, though we might get lost in this place. I don’t suppose you’ve got some chalk on you?”

“I don’t. Oh!” Shalise gripped the top button of her school uniform and yanked down. The button came off with a pop. She pressed the light circle of plastic against the black wall with all her might. Dragging it across the surface, Shalise drew an arrow.

It was very faint, hardly noticeable even when looking directly at it.

Better than nothing, Juliana thought with a small frown. “I don’t know that there is a good reason to relocate our cell, but at least we’ll know where we’ve been.”

Mark completed, Juliana and Shalise headed down a staircase that wrapped around the entire intersection. At the center of it, Juliana noted as they reached the bottom, was a massive elevator. There were tracks on the walls and gears to raise and lower it. No obvious means of activating it, however. No buttons, or knobs, or dials.

Shalise made a second mark at the bottom of the staircase, right on the floor.

Basing their direction on a handful of claw marks on the floor, Juliana walked with one hand on Shalise’s shoulder. So long as whatever demon made the tracks didn’t have backwards feet, they should be heading in a proper direction. They would still be traveling in a direction even if that was the case.

“This place is creepy.”

Juliana jumped half a foot in the air at Shalise’s voice. She gave a light squeeze on Shalise’s shoulder. “Don’t scare me like that.”

“Sorry. Just… Where are all the guards? Or other prisoners? After that earthquake and seeing other demons escape, I’d be at the bars watching them go. Probably shouting obscenities.”

“There was that voice saying demons had escaped. And then it mentioned ‘Keeper.'”

“I don’t know that we should–”

The floor shook as a thunk resounded down the cell block.

Juliana stumbled forward, catching herself on a combination of the wall and Shalise.

“What was that?”

“Aftershocks?” Juliana said as she pulled Shalise closer. She moved up against the wall with a safe distance between her and the cell windows on either side.

It wasn’t the best place to stand. If the aftershocks shook the catwalks loose, they could fall right on top of her. They could swing out into the middle of the hallway as well, but that was probably less likely.

Still, something made her want to press up against the wall. A little nagging in the back of her head.

Another four thunks followed the first. They came unevenly, as if it were an animal with a limp. Each one rocked the world.

Each was slightly louder than the one before.

Slightly closer.

“Those are not aftershocks,” Shalise said with her voice barely above a whisper.

Juliana didn’t dare speak that loud. She suppressed her voice to the quietest level possible. “Something walking?”

Every thunk reinforced that idea.

Juliana wanted to run. Each of the steps shook the ground enough that she had trouble just standing still while leaning against the wall.

Shalise went down on her knees and held onto Juliana’s legs.

That did not help matters.

Even if she could run, there was nowhere to go. Towards the noise or away from the noise, it was a single corridor with no alcoves aside from the closed cell doors.

And the noise was moving fast.

“What do we do?”

Juliana hushed the girl clinging to her legs. “Don’t move, maybe it won’t see us.”

“That only works on T-Rexes.”

Juliana did not dignify that with a response.

Another thunk interrupted.

At the edge of her vision in the direction from which the noise came, a metal pole appeared in the dim light.

A second pole slammed into the ground with a resounding thunk, followed by a third, fourth, and a fifth.

Following the poles upwards, Juliana had to crane her neck to see the top. Almost five stories up, a man had been impaled on top of the poles. Each arm and each leg had a thorny metal pole piercing straight through for several feet.

A fifth pole ran through his neck.

He lifted a leg, bringing up the pole with it.

His leg only moved forwards by a few inches, but the five-story pole swung out half the distance between him and Juliana.

It crashed into the ground with an ear-splitting thunk.

That broke whatever spell they had been under.

Shalise cried out.

It was all Juliana could do to clasp one hand over her mouth.

Her action came too late.

The impaled demon stopped moving. All the poles settled down before dragging themselves closer together.

It didn’t take long for Juliana to figure out why.

As the distance between the poles shrank, the human-shaped body impaled at the top moved, sliding downwards at an alarming rate.

Every inch the demon descended had it grow in perspective. Ylva towered over everyone in any given room. Arachne wasn’t far behind.

This thing would dwarf Arachne standing on Ylva’s shoulders.

The demon stopped a foot off the ground. Ignoring the pole piercing his neck, he twisted his head around, searching with milky-gray eyes.

Juliana’s own eyes were as wide as they went when his gaze met hers.

The moment lasted forever. All time and space expanded into an eternity while its eyes stared into her own.

And the demon’s head continued sweeping the area. He didn’t make any moves or acknowledgment.

Taking much smaller steps, the demon walked forwards before beginning his search again.

Blind?

It gave up searching after a few minutes. It ascending to the top of its poles was one of the most painful things Juliana had witnessed. On several levels.

With the thing right in front of them, yet no longer actively searching for them, Juliana took note of a few smaller details. The poles were not smooth shafts. Spines and barbed hooks staggered along the metal. The demon used the spines to climb the poles. Its flesh tore open, dripping black blood as it went.

Most agonizing of all was the sheer time it took to ascend. Its arm slid up, catching on a hook. Then a leg. The other arm.

By the time it reached the apex, Juliana’s arms and legs had completely locked up.

And then it started moving.

Juliana winced at the thunderous thunk. That single step took it almost to the edge of her vision. Two more and the only sign of it was the sound.

Even with the ache in her joints, Juliana did not move a single muscle until the last of the demon’s heavy thunks had quieted to murmurs.

Shalise moved far sooner than Juliana had wished. She peeled off the fingers blocking her mouth and took a deep gasp of air.

“W-what–that thing–it was enormous.”

“Y-yeah.” Juliana closed her eyes and took a few calming breaths. Her words were not as steady as she wanted. As she needed. It was her responsibility to get Shalise through whatever mess they had gotten themselves into. Especially if it was her fault they were here in the first place. “P-please don’t scream again.”

“I-I’ll try.”

Juliana took a step in the direction the impaled demon had gone.

Shalise didn’t move except to grip Juliana’s arm. “We’re f-following it?”

“It’s either that or go where it came from. We might as well continue in the direction we were going. It didn’t see us, so it should be safe to come across as long as we don’t make noise.”

Shalise’s face was twisted in an expression that Juliana wasn’t sure what to make of. Instead of puzzling it out, Juliana wrapped her arms around Shalise.

“We’ll get out. We’ll be fine. We’ll get back to mom and Eva and Zoe and we’ll have a great story to tell. Adventure, danger, and all that. We could even write a book and sell it!”

Probably not. Telling people they interacted with demons wouldn’t go over well, not if what she’d heard about demon hunters had any grain of truth.

Maybe anonymously? But how would royalties be received? Any competent tracker could follow the money trail.

Perhaps a work of fiction pretending to be real. That might work.

Shalise sniffled, interrupting Juliana’s thoughts.

Juliana moved back, giving her some space. She kept her fingers interlaced with Shalise’s as reassurance.

She just hoped she believed her own words.

Keeping their hands together, Juliana started off after the demon.

It took half an hour of walking–at a decent pace, no less–before the scenery changed again.

Changed might be an understatement, Juliana thought as she glanced around.

The cold cell corridors changed into a series of much larger, open-front cells. Each one had a glowing red barrier capping the open end.

Juliana stopped at the first one and looked in. A gasp came from Shalise at her side.

It was easy to see why.

Ylva was one thing. Regal, tall–a giant, even–and radiated an air of power.

Arachne was another thing. Violent, twisted, and had an eightfold glare.

Neither of them quite measured up to what Juliana would have identified as a demon before actually meeting one for real. And, in fact, very few of the demons she had summoned resembled classical demons. Perhaps the imp. But things like the marionette theater-demon? Not a chance.

The creature chained to the back of the cell was a demon in every sense of the word.

Red skin, hoofed feet, curled horns sprouting from his forehead. His–and it was a he without a doubt–legs were the size of tree trunks and his arms weren’t much smaller. The demon’s stomach looked like it had been chiseled out of a mountain.

A very buff and well-toned mountain that Juliana found difficult to tear her eyes away from.

He looked on with glowing red eyes, somewhat reminiscent of Eva’s own. Surprise turned to curiosity turned to mirth.

A deep laugh reverberated in Juliana’s chest.

When he spoke, his voice rumbled in a deep baritone. Borderline bass.

“Mortals. Free me.”

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003.027

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“Has she woken up yet?”

Shelby stirred at the soft voice. She pulled herself out of the puddle of drool that had gathered on her sister’s bed. Wiping off her cheek, she looked towards the doorway.

“I don’t think so. What–” An involuntary yawn drowned out her words. “What time is it?”

“Ten o’clock in the morning,” Jordan said as he pulled up a chair. “I was just talking with Nurse East. He said that she should be waking up anytime now.”

“That would be nice,” Shelby said as she looked back down to her sleeping twin.

For the first time in weeks, Irene lacked the furrowed brow. She wasn’t smiling. She wasn’t frowning either. She seemed… peaceful.

“She’s going to be alright, right?”

“He said it was just a concussion. A bad one, but nothing that couldn’t be fixed with a few potions.”

“She’s not going to be like, possessed, is she?”

“Those weren’t demons,” Jordan said. His features darkened, looking like he wanted to spit. A look of pure disgust. “Just parts of them.”

His voice lacked all the inquisitive excitement usually present within.

Shelby shook her head. “And you knew about that Ylva girl? And Professor Za–”

A finger pressed to her lips. She felt her face heat up even as Jordan shook his head.

“Don’t say his name. There are ways to find out if someone talks about oneself. I don’t know if he is doing that, but I’d rather not give any excuses to draw his attention.”

He sighed, pulling his finger away as he glanced off towards Irene. “I knew about Ylva. She wasn’t doing a very good job of hiding herself. When you’ve got a family like mine, you notice things like that.”

“A family like yours,” Shelby said with a half-suppressed yawn. She didn’t know what time she had finally fallen asleep the night before, but it was clearly too late.

As she thought over what he said, Shelby slowly put her head back down on her sister’s bed. She had to wiggle a little in her chair to avoid the damp patch of her own drool. “You’re like Eva then? All into demons or something?”

“Well,” he said. His voice had an audible smile in it. “I like to think I can keep a secret much better than she can.”

Shelby snorted into the blankets. “I’ve known you my whole life. I’ve only known Eva for a year and a half. It’s clear who the secret keeping winner is.”

That got a small laugh from Jordan. “But my family values knowledge and an open mind, I guess you could say.”

“Irene knew, didn’t she. That’s why she freaked out about Eva last year and kept her at an arm’s length since then. She asked you, or you just told her.”

Jordan took in and let out a deep breath. “She stumbled upon me in a fairly compromising position a few years ago.”

Shelby snorted again. It came out slightly pained. Her heart just wasn’t in it.

“Not like that,” he said. “She just walked in on me manipulating shadows like I did yesterday. My family Swore her to secrecy. That’s Swore with a capital ‘S’ otherwise we would have told you too.”

“That doesn’t seem like something Mr. Anderson would do.” Shelby frowned as a though occurred to her. “Are you going to do the same to me?”

“We’re older now. I’ll have to tell my parents, of course, but that was mostly so that Irene couldn’t talk about it. Kids are known to talk about things they shouldn’t, after all.

“I actually wrote to them last night about Eva, all the demon-things, and Juliana and Shalise. I completely forgot to mention you.”

Shelby reached out and jabbed him in the stomach, eliciting a small grunt. That had to be one of the most offensive things she’d ever heard.

“Don’t worry,” he said, “you can tell my dad yourself. I got a call this morning. He said five words: ‘I am on my way.’ I don’t think he is very happy.”

“That’s not the point, Jordan Anderson. You’re not supposed to forget about your gi–” Shelby cut herself off with a barely disguised cough, “–your childhood friend.”

They weren’t officially going out. They hadn’t even been on a date. He didn’t pay extra attention to her. Their entire relationship felt entirely one-sided.

It was entirely one-sided. They were friends and nothing more.

Shelby sighed. He’d probably prefer going out with someone like Eva anyway.

“I couldn’t help it. So much went on yesterday. I decided to e-mail it instead of texting it because it was so long.”

“That’s just–”

Shelby froze as a light groan came from the sleeping patient.

“Wha–”

Irene didn’t get any further than that before Shelby wrapped her arms around her. Carefully, of course–Irene wasn’t supposed to move or be moved much until the nurse signed her off.

“I’m so glad you’re okay,” Shelby said when she finally pulled herself away. She had to wipe something away from her eyes. Her vision had gone all blurry. It certainly wasn’t tears.

“What happened?”

“Long story,” Jordan said. He stood up and headed towards the door. “I’ll go let Nurse East know you’re awake.”

Shelby watched Jordan’s backside as he walked out of the room. She shook her head and looked back to her sister. “What do you remember?”

“I was–” Irene’s half-lidded eyes burst wide open. Her face heated up to the point where Shelby was wondering if some of the old Irish blood wasn’t showing itself.

“Are you okay?”

“Nothing!” Irene squeaked. She shook her head and immediately winced. “I was just in the hot springs with Eva.”

Shelby frowned and quirked her head to one side. “We don’t have bathing suits.”

Irene’s already red face turned roughly the color of an overripe tomato.

“Oh,” Shelby said with a nod. “I won’t tell anyone.”

“That’s not–It wasn’t–” Irene devolved into sputtering while Shelby tried to keep her face straight. “There were monsters! I was running and then… I don’t know. What happened?”

“Nurse East said one of the security force people brought you in. You’d have to get the full story from them, but I guess Eva was fending off the monsters until the security guard got to you.”

“Oh.” Irene went silent for a moment. “Where is she?”

“The security guard–”

“Eva.”

“I don’t know. I heard Professor Baxter herself say that Eva had been stabbed with a cursed knife, but I haven’t seen her. It’s only been a day.” Shelby paused, but decided to add, “Juliana and Shalise are missing.”

She’d been told in no uncertain terms not to reveal where they went missing. Juliana’s mother was a scary woman and Shelby wasn’t about to disobey, even to her sister.

“One of the school nurses died. A different security guard is in critical condition, I guess.”

“Start at the beginning.”

Shelby shifted to be more comfortable in her chair before speaking. It could take a while.

— — —

The amount of paperwork involved with the recent incident was beyond staggering. Every form that Martina filled out and filed was replaced by three new ones. Catherine just kept digging out more.

While she wasn’t about to complain about her secretary’s new-found work ethic, Martina couldn’t help but think that it was yet another method of getting under her skin. Half the forms were only tangentially relevant. Half of the remainder were so out of date, Martina couldn’t see how they applied to the modern school.

Still, Martina filled them out. The attack was a large incident that had occurred on Brakket property. She wasn’t going to get herself fired over a misplaced RF-Two-Three-Three form.

It helped matters that Gregory had finally delivered his personal report over the incident. Martina Turner set the report down on her desk. It wasn’t everything she had hoped it might be.

While unexpected, the incident proved to be an effective test. Only Daenir, the elf, had been injured among the security team. Gregory’s claim that the addition of several unaffiliated allies had ‘saved the day’ was unneeded.

She’d be sure to leave that bit out when the time came to make a report to the administrators and whatever they ended up telling the public.

The specialists performed their task most admirably. Neither had been on either end of a friendly-fire ‘accident’ which, if Martina was being entirely honest with herself, was a concern she had had. Lucy even dragged that delinquent that had skipped class to an infirmary.

Without eating her. That was a success all on its own.

If it hadn’t been for that nurse, the day would have been almost perfect.

That was the biggest disappointment of all. If only Lisa Naranga had found a proper place to hide or simply escaped…

Nothing to do about it now. Catherine had already notified the next of kin.

The door to Martina’s office burst open, slamming into the wall.

A man wrapped in a black winter coat walked in. He stood in the doorway, taking in the room with a slow sweep of his head from one side to the other. Every inch his head moved only served to deepen the man’s frown.

Martina caught sight of Catherine. The succubus was in the middle of filing her nails into sharp points. As if feeling eyes on her, Catherine looked up and threw a glance in Martina’s direction with a nasty smile. The secretary’s eyes flashed red for a brief instant before the closing door cut off Martina’s view.

“Governor Anderson,” Martina said. She kept a scowl off her face and even managed to turn it into something of a mournful smile. “You should have sent word that you were coming, I would have arranged–”

“Spare me your pleasantries,” he snapped. “The administrators did not put you in charge so that you could run Brakket’s name further into the ground.”

Martina felt her smile slip. “I’m not sure what you’re implying,” she said slowly. “The new security team I assembled defended the academy against an overwhelming force with only one loss and no major student injuries.”

Governor Anderson shook his head. He folded his hands behind his back. “Have you done a headcount on your students?”

“Not as such,” she said with narrowed eyes. “I know that there are three students not currently at Brakket Academy. All three are known to… disappear at times.”

“Irresponsible. After an incident such as this, the first action you should have taken was to ascertain the location of all students. I don’t care where you think they are. If a student took a week off to visit relatives in Europe, you find out for sure that that student is actually there.”

Martina thought for a moment about calling in Zoe Baxter. That woman would have information about the girls. She stopped before her hand had even twitched towards the phone.

Something was wrong about the whole situation. A member of the board of administrators doesn’t just show up and start talking about missing students after a hundred hostile monsters show up on the school’s front porch. Perhaps the conversation would lead there, but he immediately went into the students.

“I take it you know something.”

“Two of those students are no longer on the mortal plane.”

Martina nodded. “One of those students is only human by the loosest definitions. It is somewhat alarming that she left our plane of existence, more so in that she took a friend with her. Their actions are not the business of Brakket Academy.”

Governor Anderson’s eyes turned dark. “I backed your plan. Convinced the others that there was merit in broadening the scope of magical curriculum. You assured me that you could keep your minions in line.”

“I’m not–”

“Find Zagan. Ask him about your missing students.” He turned on his heel and opened the door. It slammed into the wall with as much force as he had entered with.

Catherine did not look the slightest bit perturbed as he stalked by with his shadow curling up the wall. Rather, she looked interested. Her eyes turned a unique shade of red before she reined herself in.

“Find Zagan,” Martina repeated to herself as the outer door to the offices slammed shut with Governor Anderson on the other side.

“Ah,” Catherine said. She stood from her desk, grabbed a sheet of paper off the top, and tottered over through Martina’s open door. “Zagan stopped by last night, wanting you to have this. Slipped my mind until now.”

“A leave of absence?”

“He is taking a few days off, citing the traumatic incident as the cause.”

Martina tore the sheet of paper in two. She tore it again and again before scattering the pieces in Catherine’s face.

“Find him. And find all residents of Rickenbacker three-one-three.”

The lascivious grin on Catherine’s face died. “Is that an order?”

“Don’t try my patience.” Something had gone on. Something that the governor knew about despite not even living within Brakket city.

Something that involved a king of hell.

— — —

“If the immediate family would gather around for the final prayer and rites.”

A husband, a father, a mother, two older brothers, and a little sister all stood from their seats and approached the closed casket. Before a single word could be spoken, the mother broke down into sobs. The father pulled her into a tight hug while the eldest brother placed a comforting hand on her shoulder.

The other brother stood off to one side with an unreadable expression. Boredom? Perhaps shock. The reality of the situation might not have hit yet.

The sister stood back with her brother. Her face was twisted in an expression of confusion as she watched her mother. She had to be in elementary school. Probably too young to understand everything that was going on.

Especially since the casket had been kept closed. The body was in no state to be displayed. Only the parents and the husband had been allowed to look.

The husband stood apart from the family. Silent tears streamed down his face as he waited patiently for everyone to collect themselves.

Zoe Baxter watched the proceedings from the back of the room. She hadn’t gone up an introduced herself. None of Lisa’s family knew her and she’d only met Lisa’s husband once at their marriage nearly six years ago.

She’d considered pleading to Ylva. What about, she wasn’t certain. Restoring her to life or a last chance to talk, maybe. In the end, she decided against it. Even if Ylva could do something–and Zoe wasn’t sure she could–it didn’t feel right.

Lisa and her family were highly religious. Even if it could return her to life, Zoe doubted that they would accept it if it came through a bargain with a demon. Would Lisa herself accept it?

Zoe shook her head. She couldn’t get caught in that loop of thinking again. There was nothing to be done about death.

The family prayer had gone on while Zoe was distracted with her thoughts. She only realized that fact when the undertaker and pallbearers started taking the casket out to the hearse. The family followed and soon after, so did the rest of the congregation of Lisa’s friends.

Zoe remained in her seat until the last person had filed out of the funeral home. She pulled out her dagger.

Dirt and grime coated the blade. Normally, it would have easily caught and reflected the dim light in the funeral home. She hadn’t had the time to clean it after everything.

Or rather, she forgot. There was so much going on.

Still so much going on.

Zoe ran her thumb over the flat of the blade. Most of the dust was crusted onto the blade. It would need the full works when she found the time.

She took a deep breath, wincing at the jolt of pain in her side. Break over.

Rising to her feet, Zoe picked up her cane. She wouldn’t need it in a few weeks–she barely needed it now–but it was nice to have something to lean on during long hours of standing. The nun’s lightning was problematic to heal.

It actively undid any magical attempts to heal the affected area. The magic simply fell apart. Trying to remove the lingering magic from it had suffered similar failures.

Devon had said it would disperse on its own after a week or two and then magic-assisted healing could begin. He spoke from personal experience, apparently.

The effect was something that she’d normally be overjoyed to experience, in a manner of speaking. Figuring out how such a spell worked, especially given that it wasn’t thaumaturgical in nature, would have made an excellent project.

She’d only had time to do a cursory analysis. A theory had almost immediately popped into her head about how to replicate the effect using thaumaturgical chaos magic, but not without also unraveling the spell itself. She had yet to even write down her theories let alone solve the issue.

With a sigh, Zoe teleported through between to the prison.

The place still looked like a battlefield. Half-scorched body parts were still scattered around. All belonged to the minions of the ‘Lord of Slaves’ that no one had bothered to pick up. No one cared, not with their other worries.

Zoe shuddered as her thoughts drifted to that particular demon.

Ylva and Arachne were one thing. Arachne was a psychopath, plain and simple. Plenty of humans were psychopaths, and plenty more were worse than she was. Ylva was more of an enigma. While she did somewhat enslave Nel, it wasn’t the same thing.

The very concept of the Lord of Slaves was fundamentally disgusting. She would be all too happy if Devon never felt the need to summon such a creature again.

A shout echoing through the empty compound pulled her attention away from her thoughts.

“Why can’t you send me?”

Zoe turned and stalked off in the direction of the noise. She tried not to look like she was hobbling, an endeavor she wasn’t sure was entirely successful. Every step sent pain up her leg and around her chest.

Teleporting was, unfortunately, not an option. Genoa had been on a hair-trigger temper since she had been informed about her daughter’s status. Teleporting around her was liable to result in injury at best.

Both Devon and Ylva had advised them not to confront Zagan or Martina over the matter, or even let on that they knew. Not until they could recover the girls.

That irked Zoe more than anything. She was once again considering resigning in protest. And once again coming up with a lack of results that resigning would achieve.

Zagan would have to go.

Later. And with a lot of planning.

Zoe rounded the corner of Devon’s cell house. Genoa, Devon, and Carlos all stood outside. The latter was in the process of trying to calm the two down.

Carlos was looking thinner than normal. He looked far more weary behind his coke bottle glasses. An older look. The lines on his face were pronounced and deep.

It had only been a few days and he was already looking ill.

Her daughter’s absence took a different sort of toll on Genoa. In addition to her hair-trigger temper, she’d become irritated with everyone at the prison. She was eating healthy and took proper care of herself, all in the name of mounting some kind of rescue mission.

Even when the attitude turned in her direction, Zoe couldn’t fault the woman. They weren’t her children, but they were her students. Leaving them in Hell was not an option.

Zoe at least possessed the ability to acknowledge that she was so far out of her element that she wouldn’t be much use. She was willing to heed the advice of Devon and Ylva.

“I didn’t say can’t, woman, I said won’t.” He thrust a sheet of paper at her. The drawing, or a copy, of the transference circle Zoe had taken a picture of. “Draw it yourself if you’re so desperate. But you’re throwing yourself away.”

Genoa snatched the paper from his hands. “I won’t abandon my child.”

“You’ll be abandoning them no matter what you do. You might as well use the connection in Ylva’s domain. That circle has no destination sigil. You could wind up anywhere. Hell is a big damn place. The odds that you’d wind up with your kid are astronomical.

“Then we have to figure out how to get you back, potentially delaying the rescue of your daughter. What a pain. Damn Ylva and its damn payment. I don’t have the time for this shit. It was going to save Eva anyway, I could tell.” Devon devolved into muttering under his breath.

Zoe stepped forwards, ensuring that Genoa saw her before she spoke. She didn’t want to wind up attacked on accident again. “Is Ylva still gone?”

Both Devon and Genoa turned to glare at Zoe. Carlos was the one to finally respond. “Still gone. Is she really going to help get our daughter back?”

“I think so,” Zoe said. And she honestly believed it. Ylva had been protective of her ‘things’ if nothing else. “How is Eva?”

“Unchanged.”

“No one is watching over her?”

“Arachne was with her when we left.”

No one responsible then, Zoe thought with a small sigh.

Genoa crumpled the paper into a ball and turned away. Without a word, she stalked off towards Ylva’s building.

Carlos started after her, but paused and looked back. “I-I better keep her from doing anything rash.”

“Is that true? About the destination thing,” Zoe said as soon as Carlos and Genoa were safely out of earshot.

“I consider myself an expert in these kinds of things. Demons and such. Frankly, that circle shouldn’t work. It’s like a mirror of a proper summoning circle. But if it does work, it will work the way I said it does.”

“You haven’t tested it?”

“Of course not. I don’t want to tip anything off and I definitely do not want to have anything to do with any of the seventy-two. I warned Eva.” He descended once again into mumbling complaints about seemingly everything he could think of as he turned and walked away.

Zoe stood there in the prison courtyard, leaning on her cane, wondering just what she could be doing to help her students.

— — —

Des sat in her chair without moving. She didn’t have much choice in the matter, but struggling would only make things worse.

She did glance over towards Hugo. Unlike Des, he wasn’t strapped down. He even had clothes on. Hugo simply sat and stared with his usual vacant look.

A second chair sat in the room, though it was facing the wrong way. The back was tall enough that she couldn’t see anyone, but it was probably there for a reason. A new test subject for her father, perhaps.

“You disappoint me, Des.”

Her father was smiling. Not at her and not because he was happy. In fact, that was one of the worst smiles she’d seen.

“Don’t worry, we can fix that. But first, let’s discuss why you disappoint me.”

Everything had gone so wrong. Des couldn’t even point out where things failed. Eva wasn’t supposed to have gotten away. She wasn’t supposed to have been an enemy in the first place.

Des was willing to admit that she had let her anger get the best of her. But it wasn’t her fault. If Eva had just played nice, none of this would have happened.

They were supposed to have been friends. Two outcasts joining together against mutual enemies.

That was what her father had said anyway.

“You took our little friends, Des, and got all of them killed. You didn’t tell me first. There was no plan.” Sawyer hung his head in mock sadness. “Worst of all, you ran. You got scared. They were held off by six people and a demon or two because no one was controlling them.”

His voice was soft. Calm. Completely unlike what happened when other people got mad. That was the fifth scariest part of the whole situation.

“That was the whole point in making them. Demons have far too much agency, but they’re strong. With us controlling our demon-golems…” he trailed off with another shake of his head.

“And Hugo helped you.”

Hugo blinked and glanced up to Sawyer. His eyes focused for a brief moment.

Her father snapped his fingers.

Hugo slumped forwards, falling out of his seat. He collapsed to the floor without attempting to catch himself.

Des tried to scream out. She struggled against the chair’s restraints.

They didn’t budge.

“Don’t worry, honey. We’ll build you a new toy. A better one!

“But that is the price he had to pay. Don’t disappoint me again, Des.”

The restraints didn’t even allow Des to slump back in her chair. She didn’t want a new toy. Hugo was hers.

“Not all was lost. I noticed your errant actions fast enough to act myself. I caught us a little souvenir.”

He spun the spare chair around.

There was a woman sitting in it with wide eyes and short, messy hair. Milky white eyes were inset in her body everywhere Des could see. At least, between the straps. Some of the spots shouldn’t even be possible. There was definitely not enough meat on her wrist to support an eye and have a functional bone structure.

A small spot on her other arm had dried blood crusted over a hole that might have held an eye at one point in time.

“I’m going to have to change my original plan. There were unexpected complications, but all will be well. We might have to move quickly over the next few days until I figure out how to hide us from the other nuns. Their inquisitorial squad is reeling from losing half the members and one other augur, but they’ll be back.”

As she tore her eyes from the woman’s eyes, Des noticed one odd thing. When her father strapped in subjects, he stripped them to ensure they had no hidden items on their person.

The woman had a choker around her neck. A small, obsidian black skull dangled from the front end. It was highly detailed. For all Des knew, it was fashioned from a real skull. A real tiny skull, but a real one nonetheless. All the teeth were perfectly detailed, the cheekbones had all the proper shapes, and the eyes…

It drew her eyes in. She couldn’t look away even if she tried.

And she tried. She wanted nothing more than to not have to look at the necklace.

Two tiny white pricks were set so far back in the eye sockets that they could be on the opposite end of the universe.

Two tiny white stars, fueling their burning with sheer anger.

>>Author’s Note 003<<

<– Back | Index | Next –>

003.026

<– Back | Index | Next –>

“What does it mean?”

Neither of them had dared to speak for the longest time. Her voice felt dry and hoarse–though not simply because of the time. What they watched drained all the moisture from her mouth. Most of it had gathered on the palms of her hands.

Jordan shook his head as the shadows around them faded back into the background. He’d waited long enough. It had been several minutes since anyone walked by.

“The professor is a demon of some sort,” Jordan said. “I’m certain of that. Not as friendly as Eva and Arachne, by the looks of it. I don’t even want to say his name. He might notice us.”

Shelby shuddered.

Eva was one thing. She kept Arachne out of sight and out of mind. Her own physical changes were easily overlooked simply because Shelby had known her for a year and a half.

But Professor Zagan was a demon too? And Professor Baxter knew about it? Not only that, but she looked about ready to attack him too.

Shelby walked up to the classroom door. There was a solid wall of air keeping her from even opening it, but it didn’t stop her from peeking in the window.

Just as Professor Baxter said, there was a magic circle in the room. A ‘transference circle’ according to Professor Zagan. Desks had been shoved aside to make way. A broken bit of chalk lay just outside the circle.

A book bag rested on top of one of the desks. Juliana’s bag?

“They’re not in there,” Shelby said.

“Of course not.”

Jordan paced up and down in front of the door, looking scary. Terrifying even. While the shadows that had been hiding them in the alcove of another classroom had receded, he still had shadows curling off of him.

This must be one of the things my sister was always talking about.

“Professor Baxter asked where they were. If they were in there, she’d know. Didn’t you hear how he dodged her question? He claimed not to remember their names.

“No.” Jordan stopped pacing. “He couldn’t be bothered remembering ordinary mortal names. That might be true, but he remembers our names. He says them in class often. He said it himself. A lie of omission.”

“Then, where are they?”

“Transference circle. Sends things to Hell. He answered that as well.”

“They’re in Hell.” The last word came out as little better than a choked up whisper.

Jordan reached out and gripped Shelby’s hand. “We don’t want to get caught around here.”

Under normal circumstances, Shelby might have enjoyed having her hand held. Now, her hand was cold and clammy. All thoughts of affection had been replaced by fear.

“We need to find Professor Baxter.”

“What about Irene?” Her sister was the whole reason they’d followed after Juliana and Shalise in the first place.

“Her too,” Jordan said as he led them through the halls in the same direction Professor Baxter had gone several minutes earlier. “Though she wasn’t with Shalise and Juliana. She’s probably not in Hell.”

That was only a small relief. Shelby had seen the army outside. If her sister had gotten mixed up in that…

She didn’t know what she’d tell mom.

“I still don’t know why she skipped class. It isn’t like her.”

“She has been on edge lately,” Shelby said. “Every day seems worse. I was hoping she was finally going to make up with Eva, or just relax, but now this. I can’t help but wonder if it was all a lie.”

“I doubt Eva had anything to do with this,” Jordan said, giving her hand a small squeeze. “Not unless I severely misread her personality.”

Shelby smiled at the reassurance. She wasn’t about to decide either way until she heard it straight from the horse’s mouth, but Jordan knew plenty she didn’t. More than that, Shelby trusted him to give a straight answer. Especially about serious issues.

“Come on, out there.”

“Out there?” All the faint happiness died with those four words. Jordan was looking straight out at the army. “We can’t go out there. Even if you can keep your shadow thing–”

“The little girl, the one from Professor Baxter’s class, is a demon too.”

“Another one? Then we definitely–”

Jordan shook his head. Shelby barely registered him pulling her close and putting an arm around her shoulders. “Arachne is out there too. They’re helping fight. And the fight looks almost over.”

Shelby’s vision went black before she could protest.

When her vision returned, it was accompanied by the cool outside air.

A black-nailed hand stopped moving just an inch from her face.

Shelby stumbled backwards with all the reaction time of a sloth. A drunk sloth. She fell to the ground, dragging Jordan down on top of her.

“You are students.”

The owner of the black-nailed hand stared down at the two of them with cold, dead eyes. Despite the fact that the eyes were sitting on the face of a ten-year-old, Shelby felt herself being weighed and measured.

If she was found wanting, she knew without a shadow of a doubt that she would not survive.

“We are. We need–” Jordan cut himself off with a glance to one side. After a brief moment, he nodded and looked back towards the demon.

“I apologize for intruding on your shadow.” He bowed his head until he was looking straight down at the ground. “We have information we felt should be delivered with haste.”

Shelby held her breath as the weighing continued. After what felt like an eon and then some, the demon–Ylva, Zoe had introduced her as–lowered her arm.

“We will receive your information.”

Jordan glanced up with a faint smile on his face. “The male professor that is also a demon–”

“Zagan.”

Jordan flinched at the demon’s word, but nodded. “We watched him follow Juliana and Shalise into a room with a transference circle. He left. They disappeared from the room. He then failed to mention either of them when Professor Baxter asked. We knew you were associated with Professor Baxter and Eva. Not knowing where they are, we sought you out.”

Silence grew as they waited for her to respond. Every second that passed brought along a slightly colder wind. Shelby didn’t have her jacket with her and the cold quickly leeched away the warmth from being indoors.

Out of the corner of Shelby’s eye, she noted the black carapace of Arachne run towards one of the few remaining creatures that made up the army. She tore off the creature’s arms, then legs. Shelby pointedly turned away when she started pulling the thing’s insides out.

“We understand your implications. You wish to be rewarded for this information?”

“No. Nev–”

“Yes,” Shelby cut Jordan off. He looked at her with wide eyes and slowly shook his head. Shelby ignored him. “My sister, Irene. She’s been missing since the start of this. The last time we saw her was with Eva at lunch.”

“We own a clairvoyant. She spotted Eva with a companion when this began, according to Arachne,” the demon said with a slight glance off to the side.

Shelby sagged in relief, not even caring that her own eyes had drifted to the other demon and the target that was being disemboweled.

Her relief ground to a halt with Ylva’s next words.

“Eva’s whereabouts are unknown. As are those of her companion.”

“But… that–”

Jordan squeezed Shelby’s hand once again. “Doesn’t mean any harm has come to either of them.”

“I just want to find her.”

“And we–”

Professor Baxter appeared before them, a single step behind Ylva.

At least, she thought it was the professor. Shelby’s eyes widened as she took in the state of the woman.

Most of her suit was covered in dirt. Half of it had been burned clear away. Whatever hit her suit hadn’t stopped there. A massive spot of charred flesh lay just beneath her right breast. Several boils and burns spread out from the burnt circle.

Her mud covered face was twisted into a tight grimace. She had her lips pressed into a thin line and Shelby could tell that her teeth were clenched tightly behind.

Zoe looked like she was only standing though sheer force of will.

“Professor Baxter,” Jordan said, “we–”

“I’m sorry. No time.”

Professor Baxter twitched the dagger in her hand. Her voice boomed out over the battlefield.

“ARACHNE!”

— — —

Genoa narrowed her eyes. “Which side is the enemy?”

“The nuns,” Zoe said. “Eva did not part on good terms with them. Though I’m not sure who or what the peasants are. They could be just as hostile.”

“Everyone then.”

Genoa had a look in her eye. One that Zoe had never seen before. It was a dangerous look, something she’d expect to see on Arachne. The only difference was that Arachne got the look for no reason, while Genoa had reason enough.

The rage of a mother was a scary sight to behold.

Noticing the look Zoe gave her, Genoa pressed her sunglasses up on her face, obscuring her eyes.

“We’re wasting time.”

Zoe gripped her dagger. With a deep breath, she glanced at her friend. “Right.”

In the blink of an eye, Genoa vanished.

A dust storm erupted over the combatants. Only Zoe’s enhanced sight allowed her to see the vague outlines of the nearest group.

She moved out while the dust had everyone occupied.

There wasn’t much cover in the prison aside from the walls of buildings. It was designed that way on purpose. Letting prisoners hide from guards would have led to ambushes and escapes.

Zoe walked out in the open. Room to dodge was more important than hiding behind the handful of sagebrush that had grown since the prison last saw proper maintenance.

Repeated slashes of her dagger sent razor-thin blades of wind through the air.

The black-cloaked mage didn’t even acknowledge the wind. A shield flickered up around her, tanking the hits. She didn’t even turn towards Zoe, choosing instead to incinerate one of the peasants with white fire.

For all Zoe knew, the mage didn’t notice. The wind was invisible and Wayne had said that their shields were ridiculously strong.

Zoe sent a light gust of air. Nothing big, nothing sharp. Air had to be getting through their shields or they would asphyxiate.

She was pleased to note the billowing of the mage’s cloak. Some things could get through.

Evacuating all the air was a possibility, but Zoe didn’t want to kill if she could help it.

Zoe set the wind around the mage’s feet to compress. More and more air pulled in beneath the mage.

There had to be a threshold between wind and attack. She’d love to run a few tests, but now was not the time. Finding a way around their shield was more important.

The mage noticed something. It must have been the wind moving strangely, though she did not look down. Had she noticed the sphere of compressed air at her feet, she would have moved.

After incinerating one more peasant, she turned to face Zoe. One hand raised up.

Lightning, probably, Zoe thought as she tensed her legs. Dodging lightning might seem impossible to a layperson, but Zoe knew lightning and she knew magic. The Elysium Order might use slightly different magic, but it had the same principles.

Probably.

The instant Zoe’s enhanced eyes noticed a slight change in the mage’s arm, she threw herself to the ground.

Lightning careened through the spot where she had stood.

Not giving the mage a second chance, Zoe released her control over the compressed air.

The shock wave was like a little bubble expanding outwards. Zoe could see it coming. She pinched her eyes shut just as it rocked over her prone form.

A thundering boom came an instant later.

She tried to pop her ears, but nothing made the high-pitched ringing go away.

Looking up, Zoe found the mage knocked a good twenty feet away, slumped against the wall. Not moving.

Too much force? She deliberately kept it small, relatively speaking. Was it still too much in the end?

Zoe shook her head.

No time to check on her.

The cloud of dust had partially cleared away thanks to the blast, revealing another three mages. All turned to look at Zoe.

“Shit.”

Zoe rolled away as spot she occupied quickly turned into a black scorch mark.

With a flick of her hand, a shield sprung up in front of Zoe.

It fractured and shattered as the mages released two lightning bolts.

The first mage had gotten to her feet.

She reached out, aiming her hand.

With wide eyes, Zoe saw white fire forming at her fingertips.

Buildings, mages, even the sky itself fell as the cool white of between replaced everything.

The opposite end of the prison compound rebuilt itself around Zoe. Far from any nuns.

Adrenaline gave her the strength to stand. That same adrenaline had her hands violently shaking. Zoe tried to wipe the thick layer of sweat coating her hands onto her pants and wound up with a thick layer of damp dirt.

Zoe knew that Genoa was still out there. Fighting. Winning, in all likelihood.

She slumped against whatever building she had teleported against. Devon’s, probably.

Their cloaks hid their faces. All features were obscured save for the brilliant white glow of their eyes. That first and last nun, staring into those eyes as she prepared to incinerate Zoe as she had to those peasants…

A fear-infused shudder ran through her body.

Breathe in, Zoe thought. And out.

A short laugh followed her exhale. To think she’d been worried about using too much force in that compressed air blast.

She should have used more.

Zoe slapped her cheeks, regretting the action immediately. Dirt ground into her sweat-covered cheeks.

Situations like these were exactly why Zoe never went farther in the guild than the initial trials. She liked research. Developing, discovering, and rediscovering secrets of magic were her passions.

Applying those passions to combat did not interest her in the least.

Zoe slapped her cheeks again. This time, she ignored the extra mud her slap smeared around her face. She had to get into the right mindset. The mindset she’d had to adopt when going through the guild’s trials.

The Elysium Order did not play nice. They acted with excessive force and violence.

Zoe let out a small laugh as she ran her fingers through her hair.

With a flick of her dagger, between enveloped the world.

Before the battlefield finished reassembling itself around her, Zoe raised her dagger. She fired off a lightning bolt at the nearest nun.

As expected, it collided with a shield about three inches from the nun’s face.

That was something she could work with.

Without waiting for any kind of retaliation, Zoe teleported.

She couldn’t do the rapid blinking that Genoa was capable of–something she was regretting never taking the time to learn–only the long-range teleportation that Wayne had taught her. Her way took more energy, concentration, and time. Only a few seconds but a few seconds was an eternity in combat.

Zoe reappeared in front of another nun.

The nun was in the process of incinerating another peasant. One who had a hatchet buried in his back.

Hatchets weren’t a weapon used by the order as far as she knew. Zoe didn’t have time to frown.

As the peasant collapsed into a pile of ashes–without a single cry of pain–the nun looked to Zoe.

Who had already been preparing her attack. With the flick of her wrist, a sphere of compressed air exploded. Zoe kept the air shaped so that most of the force would aim towards the nun.

It wasn’t large. She lacked the time to create one as large as earlier. It made up for it by being placed an inch and a half from the nun’s forehead.

The nun’s head snapped back, though no sound of cracking bones reached Zoe’s enhanced ears. The rest of her body staggered for a moment before she fell backwards against the ground. White glow faded from her eyes as she landed.

There was no time to check on the results of her attack. Zoe teleported away just as the lightning from one of the downed nun’s comrades crackled through the spot she had been standing on.

She reappeared just behind the attacking nun and immediately started compressing air next to her head.

As soon as the nun turned to fire, Zoe let the compressed air loose.

The nun’s shield flickered in around her head, only half an inch away.

“Shit.”

Zoe cried out even as the world fell apart around her. She held on to her dagger for dear life. Wayne had warned her about losing control while teleporting. She had no desire to suffer that fate.

When the far side of the compound asserted itself in front of her, Zoe collapsed into the side of the building. Her shoulder slammed into the rough, sandstone bricks.

Her dagger-less hand gripped her side. Zoe winced and immediately let go.

The side of her suit had been burned clean through. A black circle the size of her fist lay just under her right breast. From it, red lines reminiscent of natural lightning snaked down through the side of her body to some point beneath her clothes. Boils and blisters had already started forming.

Zoe took a few deep breaths. She tried not to expand her chest as she did so. Every movement caused pain.

She couldn’t sit idle. Gritting her teeth, Zoe teleported again.

Reappearing at the battlefield, she prepared to evacuate as much air as she could around the first nun she saw.

Blinking, Zoe saw not a single nun apart from the prone nun she had hit a few moments earlier.

The dust settled, flattening against the ground in an instant. A few of the peasants stood around, looking somewhat lost.

Standing where the thickest parts of the dust cloud had been was Genoa. Two nuns, or their remains, lay around her. Genoa glanced around, looking none the worse for wear.

“Tough bitches.”

Zoe didn’t feel up to much besides nodding.

“You’re injured.”

Zoe nodded a second time. She could feel the adrenaline draining out of her. It was making her somewhat tired, though every jolt of pain kept her from falling unconscious on her feet. “Where did they go?” Zoe finally asked.

“Just up and vanished. Teleported away leaving that icy air you leave behind. Cutting their losses, maybe?”

“That one,” Zoe said with a nod towards the one she had hopefully just concussed, “might not be dead. Restrain her in Ylva’s domain. Teleportation doesn’t work inside, so she won’t be able to escape. Unless we want to let her go?”

Genoa walked over and slung the nun over her shoulder, fireman’s carry. She didn’t look at all bothered by the weight of a human body.

“Let’s find Nel and…”

One of the peasants ran over, waving its arms wildly. It stopped a few feet from them, just in time for Genoa to not turn it into paste.

Outside the heat of battle, Zoe noticed a few things. His clothes were definitely made from some type of burlap. There were rope burns around both of his wrists. Most notably, he was missing his entire jaw, though he didn’t appear to be bleeding.

The peasant outstretched one arm, pointing down between the cell houses. A second peasant was in the distance, pointing perpendicular from the first peasant.

“They want us to follow?” Genoa asked.

The first peasant stomped his feet and took off at a run. Genoa was quick to follow despite the nun over her shoulder.

Zoe simply flicked her dagger and teleported. Running would hurt.

From the second peasant, she could easily see what he was pointing at.

“Eva,” Zoe said softly. She teleported again to her student’s side with Genoa running up not far behind.

Eva was lying face down, wrapped in one of the security specialists’ trench coats. A gash had been torn in one side and through it, Zoe could see the inside of her student. Nestled within appeared to be one of her bloodstones.

A bone white dagger lay to one side, half sheathed in blood.

Zoe started to reach for it. A collection of blood appearing in front of her face stopped her.

NƠ̸̻̫̝̝͘͞ TOUCH

CURSED

“Eva? You’re alive?”

OBVIOUS̷̘̘͍̟͇̩LY

“Damn,” a voice behind them called out. “Damn.”

Devon ran up beside them, almost shoving Zoe out of the way. Two things, demons likely, followed him.

Genoa dropped into a combat stance. Something of an odd sight with the nun still over her shoulders. She seemed to recognize Devon just in time.

“What are those?” she said with a gesture towards the demons.

“Don’t shake hands and headache,” he mumbled as he stopped above Eva. “You couldn’t do one thing right, girl?”

The blood in front of Devon swirled around into a frowning face.

Devon didn’t seem to notice. He hunched over the dagger, pointedly not touching it.

“Where’s Juliana?” Genoa asked. “Alternatively, Nel?”

J NOT S̷̢͝͠Ị̸͓̪̹̝̼͈͠NCE LUNCH

NEL KIDNAPPED

“Kidnapped?” Genoa said with a growl. “Who?”

Before Eva could write out a response, Devon jammed both fingers into the hole in her back.

She spasmed twice. The mass of blood above her had a similar spasm. It formed into a spiked ball before splaying out a few droplets. A few landed on Devon’s face, causing him to pull his fingers out.

STOP

FIGH̵̨͇͎͕̬̘͘͟͞TING CURSE

BLO̧͈̮̲̭͇̹͇O̶DSTONE CRACKED

WILL BREAK

NEED DAĢ̸͙͓̭͈̰̳̖͞GER

“Arachne has it,” Zoe said.

NEẸ̢̡͓̼̰͘͟͠ͅD͉̯̝̰̜̰̖̤̤͞

LOSING FIG̸͓̺̖̙̫̬̕͡H̢̫̫̩̮̗͉̩͝T͉̜͓͔̻̀

NEED HELP

“Damnit. I can’t fix this on my own.”

Zoe was already readying herself to teleport to Arachne when Devon turned to face her.

“Grab the dagger and bring Ylva with you.”

“Ylva?”

“This is a necromancer’s work. If anyone can fix it, she can.” He turned back to Eva, mumbling under his breath. “Going to cost me an arm and a leg.”

“Necromancer,” Zoe said softly.

She saw one word written in blood before the world fell into between.

S̺̭͈͓̥̝͈̖̹̬̱̕͢͝Ḁ̧̛̞̝̩̘͉̝͈̗̠̞͉̦̳̞̳̗̀̀͟W̡͓̼̯̹͉͉̜̱͎͚̥̥͖͘͜͟͢Y̴̸̧̞̫̝̫̘̰͎̰͜͠Ẹ̼̳̯̩̮̲̞̞̩̝̼̼̝͎͉́̀̀̕͡ͅR̶̴̺͈̣̣̦̯͚̪͘̕͡

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003.025

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Nel huddled in the corner of Devon’s cell house while the two argued out a plan.

A seizure ran through her body. Nel avoided collapsing thanks solely to her already being crouched down. She tried hard to keep her eyes off of all of the demons they had summoned. It wasn’t easy. Her eyes wanted to look.

It’d be worse if she connected to the source. As it was without being connected, she retained some control.

The female was the easiest to look at. Although whatever she was made from was inhuman, nothing about her triggered any sort of negative response. Nel tried to avoid her anyway. From the vague explanation of that demon’s power, it would be nearly impossible to avoid her eyes.

A hazy figure moving through Nel gave her a start. She cupped her hand over her mouth, not wanting to make another noise. The first time it had happened was understandable. To Nel at least, not so much to the others. Shouting out again would only garner more strange looks.

It wasn’t a ghost. It was too real to be a ghost. Her regular eyes couldn’t see a thing, but it was there all the same. The false-ghost moved up to stand next to the masked demon. A few stood around him and several more were scattered around the room.

As far as Nel could tell, neither Eva nor Devon noticed even when the ghosts moved through them.

A small seizure racked Nel’s body again. Just thinking about the first two had her subconsciously send her eyes to look at the third. That one was where all her problems started.

She could see–through her normal eyes no less–a fang filled maw, hard skin coated with black tar, leathery wings, a tail tipped with spikes, lizard-like legs, its beating heart, lungs, the insides of its stomach, and plenty more.

It wasn’t transparent. Nel could simply see the entire thing, inside and outside, at once. And any time an eye that wasn’t on her face saw it, something broke in her mind.

The demons were on her side–until Eva and Devon deemed her not worth the trouble–but that gave her no solace. She didn’t need them to be killing her. Her augur condition felt like it was actively trying to drive her insane.

“Alright,” Devon said.

Finally.

“Demons are covering us. We get the nun to Ylva’s domain. Once she is safe, we can move to rout the inquisition.”

That was a good plan. Amazing even. It would have been a better plan if she’d never have had to leave, but Nel valued her spine’s current location enough to not complain about that.

“The Lord of Slaves will put itself between us and the Elysium Order. His minions will be our escort.”

At his words, the masked demon reached out and tapped the nearest three ghosts on their shoulders. The wispy forms solidified into people from the point of contact.

One looked like the stereotypical knight in shining armor–if such stereotypical knights wore rusted iron that had been battered out of shape.

The second wouldn’t have looked out of place in a civil war reenactment troupe. He carried an old-fashioned rifle and had a slightly curved sword attached to his side. His uniform was marred by several holes that were still bleeding.

The final ghost wore burlap clothing and a straw hat. His hand gripped a flaming torch that gave off no smoke and no light. Blood dripped from one of his temples.

Devon didn’t react to the sudden materialization of the ghosts. He simply looked them over before giving a reluctant nod.

Eva launched herself away from the ghosts. The two orbs of blood darted around wildly as if she were trying to decide which to attack. Only when none of them made any movement did she calm down.

“You need to stop springing things on me. Something is going to end up dead that we don’t want dead.”

Devon gave her an almost mocking smile. “In addition to not shaking its hand, don’t die around a Lord of Slaves. You’re less useful, but bodies can still serve.” His smile slipped into a frown. “Though, I suppose if you died, you might not care what happens to your body.”

“I’ll keep that in mind.”

The three slaves moved as one towards the exit to Devon’s cell house. Nel watched as they walked past, carefully keeping her eyes on them and them alone.

They appeared undead. How much good they would do against any members of the Elysium Order was somewhat suspect. The order’s primary abilities were tailored specifically to fight undead. But there was something odd about them. They might be more akin to golems or some other construct.

Connecting to the source would tell her, but she wasn’t that curious. Her eyes would undoubtedly be drawn to the other demons in the room. Not to mention that giving the source time and information to formulate a plan would help their enemy.

The knight exited first, moving with his shield up and his head low. The other two followed behind him. Nel started to follow, but stopped as she realized she was alone.

No one else moved. Not the demons, nor Devon and Eva.

Nel shifted her weight from foot to foot and back again. Why aren’t we going back yet? They were just standing there while the ghosts got further away.

Neither had glassy eyes or any other sign of mental manipulation. At least no sign that Nel was aware of.

“Shouldn’t we be moving?”

“The slaves are moving to engage and distract. Eva’s wards are still active. With their interference, they may just stay up.”

Nel frowned. There were thirty members of the inquisitorial team. What were three ghosts supposed to do?

“But shouldn’t we be running to Ylva’s domain while they’re distracting? They have augur support. They know we’re hiding here.”

“After they engage, more will appear to escort us. We don’t want to be caught outside if her wards fail. This building is far more defensible than open courtyards.”

“Why just three? He has a whole army of ghosts!”

“And they’ll be used later. The marksman–”

A high-pitched whine interrupted Devon. It was a somewhat familiar noise. Nel couldn’t quite place it.

It grew louder and louder as he, Eva, and the demons all looked around for the source of the noise. A blackish-red shield sprung up around the two of them.

Nel was too far away, being much closer to the door than they were.

A mounting horror grew in the pit of her stomach as Nel realized what the noise was.

“Oh no.”

Nel threw herself to the ground as far from the open door as she could reach in a single leap.

White light scarred several eyes that had stubbornly refused to shut. Her eardrums rattled in her skull as a piercing shriek tore through the air. The eyes that had remained open were crying tears of pain. And those were slowly blinking away the white spots.

Dragging herself to her feet–wobbling all the while–Nel patted herself down. Nothing was missing. Ylva’s robes weren’t even burnt. The cell house hadn’t collapsed either–they probably thought the prison was too sturdy to fall.

Their plan was probably to trap her inside this building, away from the one the augurs couldn’t pierce.

Not wasting her good fortune, Nel ran straight for Eva and Devon. The former let her shield down long enough for Nel to get inside.

“…said: what the hell was that?”

His voice sounded like a television’s white noise grinding on brillo pads. It took another minute and his hand gripping the front of her robes for Nel to realize that voice was directed at her.

“Th-they cracked the sky!”

“That means nothing to me,” he shouted. “What is it and how do we stop it.”

Nel pushed away from Devon. Being so close that the unkempt whiskers of his beard were touching her face was not something she wanted to experience anytime soon. He let her go without the expected fuss. As such, Nel bumped her head on the shield.

She winced, rubbing the spot as she answered him. “They fell to their knees before an idol, beseeching the Lord Himself to smite their foes. Us! They got authorization to crack the sky to get at us.” Nel started chewing on a thumbnail. Through her glove.

Devon let out a soft snort. “Got bad news for ya girl, your ‘Lord’ doesn’t give a damn about what happens around here.”

He rubbed his forehead before shaking his head. “No. This idol, it is a legendary artifact, isn’t it. Maybe a grimoire? Channel magic into it and get laser beams from the sky. Sounds familiar, but can’t quite remember. But, we blow it up and it stops. It has a range, what is it?”

Nel blinked. He wasn’t wrong, at least about the last part. “It’ll be nearby. Protected near the rest of the inquisitors… probably.”

“Don’t just stand there. Find out where.”

Nel was about to protest about the lack of frankincense on hand, but he immediately turned to Eva. He wouldn’t listen anyway. Nel closed her eyes.

Glimpses of the surrounding area flickered through her mind. Maintaining any one vision was impossible without frankincense, but quick flashes were within reach.

Starting where she last saw the inquisitors, Nel flickered her vision around. Four of the inquisitors, low rankers by the single bar of gold on their shoulder, held their hands outstretched towards the walls of the prison. Red-black particles of magic siphoned into their hands.

Ward breakers.

Nel made a note of their location, but moved on. The command tent was easy to locate–it was the only tent for miles. They had a map inside along with another augur. A red dot lay exactly where Nel herself was. A few other-colored dots surrounded her.

An altar had been set up behind the command tent. A statue of a man made from petrified wood rested on top of a velvet cloth. His arms were thrown to the sky as tears ran down his face. Four nuns prostrated themselves before it.

Nel stumbled as she ceased the rapid fire glimpses. She rested one hand against the shield wall, glad that it was both solid and not disintegrating her. The last time she overtaxed her glimpses, she had passed out for three days.

She had been heavily injured then. Hopefully her passing out was due more to that than abusing her augur abilities.

“That way,” Nel said, only moving her hand a small fraction. She didn’t want to tip-off any watching augurs that she was pointing out a direction. “Beyond the prison wall, there’s a tent a half-mile out. Behind it an altar has been set up. The idol is there.”

Devon rubbed his hands together as a small grin spread across his face. “Excellent.”

“You better hurry,” Eva said with a small stumble of her own. She had her eyes shut and her face in a grimace. “I can feel my wards unraveling. It isn’t pleasant.”

“There are ward breakers, four of them. I don’t want to point. It might tip-off the augurs. They’re south of the tent near the wall.”

“We’ll worry about them after we get rid of the bigger threat. The wards going down is not the end of the world. Them deciding to hammer the building over and over again with that sky-beam could be..”

The Lord of Slaves reached out and touched another handful of specters. As they materialized in the mortal realm, the large, fractal demon started moving towards the exit. Three slaves ran out ahead of it.

They simply stood outside. Waiting.

Nothing happened.

Nel caught a quick glimpse of their command tent. All the little dots on the map had moved around. “They see you moving the big demon. Probably waiting for it to come out before they crack the sky.”

“Good.”

The map updated in real-time, though Nel kept her glimpses spaced apart. Small dots representing the three slaves moved out in all directions. Another few dots joined the first three in spreading throughout the paths in the prison. All were heading towards the wall closest to the order’s camp.

One of the leaders moved out of the tent. Nel increased the frequency of her glimpses. He spoke to the prostrated nuns before placing his hand on the idol’s head.

“They’re going to crack the sky.”

“Where at?”

Nel opened her eyes to give Devon a glare. “I don’t know that.”

“Whatever. Keep watching.”

Nel shook her head and immediately regretted the action. It made her queasy. She pushed it down and alternated glimpses between the idol and the augur with the map.

A bright light shot off from the idol’s hands, aiming straight into the sky. A high-pitched whine started once again, but far fainter this time. With a screech, four dots disappeared from the map.

“They just fired.”

“I know,” Devon said right as a large black dot sped out of their cell house.

Nel opened her eyes to find the fractal demon was, thankfully, gone. She caught it in a glimpse. Rather than the expected seizure, Nel felt the tiniest tingle of something being wrong. Despite the lack of pain, she chose to go back to the map rather than risk collapsing.

The large dot representing the fractal demon circled around once, picking up a few of the smaller, slave dots on the way.

Both the augur and the high inquisitor started moving with haste not present in their earlier actions. The inquisitor all but ran out to the idol once again. Nel noted that all four nuns had more than a little sweat building on their faces. Some had small patches showing through their habits.

Nel smiled in spite of herself, glad she’d never wear one of the stuffy outfits again. “They’re preparing to crack the sky again.”

“Damn,” Devon said through grit teeth. “I’d hoped it had a longer refractory period.”

“If you can get it close enough to their camp, they won’t risk–”

“Nope. Not going to make it.”

All four of the smaller dots dropped off the larger dot before it zoomed straight ahead. The dot vanished from the map a split-second after.

Nel staggered back against the shield wall as Devon fell on top of her. Eva’s claws gripped his shoulder as both girls helped him get steady on his feet.

“Are you alright, master?”

Devon brushed her off. “It’s still alive.”

“They removed the dot from the map.”

“There isn’t much left,” he said. He shook his head at himself as both the Lord of Slaves and the waxy demon moved up to the cell house exit. “I don’t want to experience that again. I almost lost control.”

“Please don’t,” Eva said. “I can’t dominate these demons. And the wards are slipping more and more. I’d bet they could actually enter the prison now and only experience discomfort.”

“I’m concentrating on getting rid of the idol before that happens.”

Nel cut in to their conversation. “They’re moving out to dispatch the four slaves you dropped. On foot, not cracking the sky.”

“Let them come. If they move past where the demon is rebuilding itself, all the better.”

“The muskets won’t have an effect on our shields, nor can they catch the nuns by surprise so long as they’re connected to the source.”

“Doesn’t matter.”

Nel frowned. He was sending those men to their deaths. Though they were already dead. And they might not be real men.

Leaning back against the shield, Nel took one last glimpse of the map before starting a brief rest. It would be a minute or two before the nuns reached the slaves. Two dots representing slaves were moving along the walls, looking for the ward breaker nuns, most likely.

They’d only be a momentary distraction, unless Nel was grossly underestimating their abilities.

Constant glimpsing had her feeling more dizzy than she’d felt in a long time. She decided to carry spare frankincense pellets and find some sort of portable incense burner in the future.

Neither Devon nor Eva were moving much. A quick glimpse showed the slaves moving about, so he had to be managing that somehow.

Eva, on the other hand, looked to be both sick and deep in concentration. Her wards were blood based, using a combination of Arachne’s blood and her own. Nel wasn’t certain on the specifics, but the wards must be tied to her far deeper than any standard thaumaturgical ward scheme. She had never heard of standard wards causing discomfort when taken down.

Taking a deep breath and letting it out as a slow sigh, Nel started up her rapid glimpsing once again.

First the map. It was largely unchanged from her previous glimpse. The few ghosts near the wall had vanished and the nuns were nearing the four undead outside their camp.

Nel switched her view to the soon to be ensuing battle.

Two of the undead were knight types. One wielded a mace while the other carried a massive sword in both hands. The other two carried guns. One looked fairly new, perhaps as late as the second World War.

They crested a small hill overlooking a waiting group of inquisitorial nuns. Three of them had a single gold bar over their shoulders while the fourth had triple stripes. While that did not automatically mean that nun was more powerful than the others, it did mean she had a good deal of experience.

The slaves seemed close enough to vampire slaves that her experience was probably not going to waste.

Nel shook her head and focused.

The nuns wasted no time opening up with lightning. To Nel’s surprise, and the surprise of the nuns, the lightning did nothing. The armored knights continued their forward march without any reaction. Both soldiers did stop walking, but they didn’t appear any more injured than the knights. The only real difference was the smoke coming off their bodies.

Rather than continue forwards, both soldiers dropped to a knee and took aim. Nel wasn’t flickering her glimpse fast enough to spot any bullets, but she did catch the shields flaring up around the nuns. As expected, none of them looked concerned about the guns.

“Wards gone,” Eva said, interrupting Nel’s glimpsing.

Devon gave a small grunt. “Just another minute.”

Where there had been a steady stream of blood or magic or whatever the nuns were siphoning from the wards, there was now a dying trickle. Only one of the four was actually siphoning. Two stood around, watching for threats while the last one was missing completely.

Checking the command center, Nel found the missing nun. She was giving a report to one of the high inquisitors.

“We’re going to have incoming soon,” Nel squeaked out.

“Just a moment. Almost got it.”

Everyone inside the command center stumbled forwards. They recovered in short order and all save for the augur sprinted outside. The poor augur was in the midst of a seizure that looked far more intense than what Nel had suffered.

Again, Nel was glad she hadn’t connected to the source.

The fractal demon stood where the altar once was. Or what was left of it. Both legs and one wing were missing entirely, much of the rest of it was in scraps. And somewhere, Nel couldn’t pinpoint the exact location, it held a statue made of petrified wood between a set of teeth.

Nel watched with a small hint of sadness as the idol turned to dust.

“Unless they have other surprises, we should be clear. I’ve released the demon, so they should be distracted for a few minutes at least. Both of you get to Ylva’s domain.”

“And you?”

“I can’t enter, but between the abdoth and the ruax, and any other demons I summon, I should be fine.”

Eva gave Devon a dubious look, but nodded anyway. She gripped Nel’s hand tight enough that, under other circumstances, Nel might have been worried her bones would snap. Together, they started running towards the door. The shield turned back into a few balls of blood as they left.

Actually moving, Nel discovered, was troublesome. The first several steps were less steps and more stumbles. Eva actually wrapped one of Nel’s arms over her shoulders for support. Every step seemed to bring a pounding headache. Nel would have suspected the headache demon, but it wasn’t even facing them.

It was simply from overusing her ability.

A good number of slaves materialized around them and escorted them out.

It wasn’t far to cell house two, but the nuns weren’t going to stand by and watch as Nel made her escape. The inquisition’s augur had to be watching them, unless she had perished due to the fractal demon. Even if she had, a contingent would catch up to them with the poor rate at which they were moving.

Eight black-robed inquisitors teleported in just as the thought crossed Nel’s mind. They raised their arms and fired lightning with a speed only matched by Eva reforming the shield around the two of them.

Nel’s eyes widened as the black orb in front of Eva shrank noticeably. Their shield was hanging on by a thread by the time the slaves engaged with the nuns. That, at least, stopped the lightning. For the moment. For every body that turned to ash in white flames, another slave ran in to close range.

Without a single word, Eva dropped the shield and did not recover any orbs of blood. If Nel thought she was being rough before, that was nothing compared to now. She dragged Nel around the corner of Devon’s cell house.

The door to Ylva’s domain was in sight.

Nel’s laugh of stress and joy twisted into a cry of pain. Eva’s claw squeezed and dug into her shoulder.

The pressure vanished while the pain remained. Eva released her shoulder to fall straight forwards against the ground. She didn’t even try to bring her hands out to catch herself.

A bone jutted out of the girl’s back. It was sharpened into a serrated blade part way down before the rest disappeared into Eva.

Nel felt gravity take hold of her. Unable to balance herself properly, Nel raised her hands to cushion her impact.

A pair of hands caught onto her and pulled her back upright.

“Thanks,” Nel mumbled as she looked back.

A skeletally thin man smiled back as he moved his hands firmly on her shoulder. “Oh,” he said with a small chuckle, “don’t mention it.”

Eva gave a small wheeze. “You…”

“Yes! Me! Happy to see me again?” He gave another short laugh that sent the hairs on Nel’s neck to standing at full attention. “I’ll say, your eyes fetched four times the price I would have thought. My buyer was very interested. Some unique property or another.”

“Those golems… I knew it…” Eva’s breath rasped as she tried to push herself up. She didn’t even manage an inch off the ground.

“My work, not my plan,” he spoke with a hint of disappointment, but never lost a fraction of his smile. “And you should be more careful. I know the capabilities of your healing. Let’s just say you can keep that dagger. Call it my gift to you, if you survive.

“I’d love to stay and chit-chat, or even invite you back to my place. Sadly, I’ve only time for one. Getting caught up in the order’s inquisition is not a priority.”

Despite the raging headache and the slight dizziness, Nel connected to the source. She wasn’t a good fighter. Information from the source overwhelmed her in combat. She could still fill this guy with enough lightning that he would–

“Ah-ah, none of that.”

Nel felt a prick at her neck and everything went dark.

<– Back | Index | Next –>

003.024

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“…a whole army outside the front doors!”

“At least a thousand of them.”

“I bet it has something to do with the girl with the eyes.”

“She isn’t even here!”

“Exactly.”

Zoe shot a silencing glare at the group of students in her class. It wouldn’t help at all, but she at least made the effort to keep her charges under control. Rumors were already spreading from the students who had caught a glimpse outside to the ones who hadn’t.

Like all rumors, they were slowly being blown out of proportion.

Zoe doubted that there were more than a hundred of the creatures, exactly zero of them were the size of the school building, and ‘that little girl from Professor Baxter’s class’ most certainly did not rush out and suplex one.

As amusing as that might be.

The rumor about Eva being involved was far harder to dismiss.

Zoe didn’t believe the girl to be responsible. She had taken steps to prevent the school from being involved in the nun riot at the end of the previous semester. No one had even been hurt there. Turning around and dropping an army of monsters on Brakket’s front porch just didn’t seem like her style.

Involved was another matter entirely.

The lack of her presence was somewhat damning enough on its own. Zoe might have suspected her of doing something even if she had been present. Eva had promised to inform Zoe of any major plans and Zoe was going to trust that she would until she proved otherwise. That was the only reason she was leaning towards Eva having nothing to do with the day’s events.

Zoe didn’t know what to make of Miss Coggins’ absence. To the best of her knowledge, she had never missed a single class. While Zoe had seen her around Eva’s little group, Irene was always more of an outlier–a hanger-on.

She didn’t know enough about Miss Coggins to make an accurate guess as to what would have caused her to miss class. That was a failure of her own. There would always be students she interacted with more often than others, but Irene was often quiet and rarely spoke up on her own.

Both girls missing at once had troublesome implications. The thought that more students than just Eva had ended up involved with anything that Eva touched was more than a little concerning.

Zoe took her eyes off her class for a moment as she scanned the rest of the room. It was far too crowded to pick out any individuals. The professors were relatively easy to pick out even among the older students. All save for Bradley and Franklin wore suits of some type.

Few of her colleagues were having the same success as Zoe at keeping their students quiet. The Brakket gymnasium was a veritable roar of panicked students and a handful of panicked teachers. Poor Yuria looked like she was on the verge of a nervous breakdown.

One voice stood out over the rabble of the crowd.

“Six of my students are missing.”

With a frown, Zoe turned to the squeak of a voice. Her eyes narrowed as she caught sight of the culprit.

Alari. Of course.

She’d been too busy with keeping all of her own students together to pay attention to the other woman’s class. It came as no surprise that the rest of Rickenbacker three-thirteen disappeared to wherever Eva was. She put far too much faith in the other woman’s ability to keep the class together.

The older witch touched the tips of her fingernails together over and over again as she spoke to one of the security personnel. Her normal confidence in the face of everything was gone–dashed by Zoe’s own students.

She was only aware of four students missing. Irene and Zoe’s girls. Who were the other two missing?

Zoe glanced over to the other professor’s class. It didn’t take long to notice the lack of Miss Coggins’ other half and Mr. Anderson.

“I’m sorry,” the guard said. “Orders are to stay here. I’ll send out a notification to the others, but I haven’t heard from them since they went outside.”

His voice was far more subdued than Alari’s nervous voice. He was young, but projected a serious air around him. Between the roar of the students and his subtle voice, he may as well have been whispering. Only through carefully enhancing her sense of hearing did the volume become a non-issue for Zoe.

Zoe turned and walked up to Alari. “Watch my class. I’ll find them.”

The security guard turned towards Zoe. “Ma’am, I’m not suppose–”

She didn’t have the time to argue with an uninformed guard. Zoe twitched her dagger. The walls of the gym fell apart into the featureless white of between. All the people disappeared along with the rest of reality.

The hallway leading to the gym built up around Zoe. Immediately, she set off down the hall. She gave a cursory glance into each room, just in case there were other students that had been left behind.

Checking the entire school was not a viable option. It was doubtful that any of her girls were inside. They’d be out where all the action was.

Zoe was already regretting allowing Shalise and Juliana out of her sight. Juliana managed to be a skilled combatant at the very least. Zoe only barely scraped by in their duels during the summer seminars–that was entirely thanks to Zoe stacking the deck in her favor.

It was a fair tactic. Fights in real life were rarely even.

But dragging along Shalise… That was plain irresponsible. Even if she had the rune gloves to help her with attacks, she wasn’t ready for a fight. She didn’t have the mindset for it.

Neither of the Coggins sisters were ready for any kind of combat. While Mr. Anderson may have learned a few tricks from his family, Zoe very much doubted that he was combat ready either. None of them attended her seminar. The only location where Zoe had an opportunity to observe their fighting was in the mage-knight club. Needless to say, those performances left much to be desired.

Zoe ceased her forward march through the hallway. Something had caught her eye in that last classroom. She took two steps backwards and looked in. There were no students in the room.

There was a ritual circle right in the center of the room. One of the desks had been shoved aside to make room. It wasn’t overly large, but still needed a good amount of floorspace.

As Zoe stared at the circle, her frown deepened. It wasn’t a ritual circle. While she had never practiced anything she read in Eva’s books, she had memorized the insignias and sigils associated with infernal summoning circles.

What the circle on the floor before her was for, Zoe couldn’t say. There were several different types of summoning circles. Some for summoning specific demons, some for summoning a specific species, and some for summoning a wide variety of demons. She’d have to drag Eva or Devon over to look at it to know for sure. Possibly Ylva as well.

One thing was certain, it did not belong in a classroom.

She thought about sketching it for later study. That would have taken too long. A photo on her cellphone would have to do.

Just in case the real circle held secrets that her phone did not, Zoe stepped out of the room and locked the door. She scrawled a quick note and stuck it to the front before erecting a barrier of hardened air over the doorway. It would take an air mage all of two seconds to tear down, but she didn’t have the time to put up proper wards. The barrier would keep people from accidentally walking in for the time being.

Zoe turned and took one step down the hallway.

And hit the barrel chest of a man.

She hopped backwards, one hand rubbing her nose while the other readied her dagger.

Even after recognizing the man, she did not lower her weapon.

“Zagan,” she hissed.

“Zoe.” His golden eyes glinted for an instant. “A pleasure as always. You avoid me so much these days, have I offended you somehow?”

“You lied to me. I let you into my home.”

He tilted his head to one side before shaking his head. “I can’t recall a single lie I’ve told anyone. Unless you’re talking about lies of omission. Those hardly count. You’ve done so plenty of times, yeah?”

Zoe frowned. Omitting knowledge of Eva was the primary cause of her and Wayne’s little argument last semester. Still, that was different. Zagan was a legitimate monster. “You licked that nun’s face.”

“She tasted good.”

“That’s disgusting.”

Zagan just shrugged.

Zoe shifted her weight to her other foot as Zagan stared. When he didn’t make any move to give a proper response, Zoe said, “is that summoning circle your doing?”

“Summoning circle?” Zagan said with a blink.

Zoe blinked as well. Surprise was not what she expected.

He slipped around Zoe and opened the door, completely ignoring the barrier of wind in the process. After a moment, he shut the door with a chuckle.

“You had me worried for a moment there. I’ll forgive your ignorance this one time.” At the blank look Zoe gave him, Zagan continued. “That is a transference circle. It sends things to Hell. Not strong enough to bring things here from Hell.”

At least the school won’t be overrun from within, Zoe thought with a sigh. “Why is it here?”

“As I said, it is used to send things to Hell.” Zagan’s voice turned a few notches more menacing. His eyes flashed bright gold. Zoe actually took a few steps backwards. “Presumably, someone wanted something sent to Hell. In a very literal manner. Don’t make me repeat myself.” All the hostility vanished in an instant. “Don’t feel bad, I don’t tolerate my students’ inattention either.”

Zoe licked the edges of her lips with a suddenly dry tongue. She cleared her throat twice before she could form words. “Right.” It took one more clearing of her throat before Zoe felt up to forming a full sentence. “Shouldn’t you be outside fighting?”

“Please. Nothing out there is strong enough to be interesting.”

“So you skulk about in the hallways.”

He put on a goofy, disarming grin. “A demon of my caliber never skulks.”

That had Zoe on edge more than anything. One moment, he looked ready to murder her for making him repeat himself, the next and he looked nothing more than a particularly handsome man. After a borderline insult, no less.

“No, my contract only dictates that I keep this place safe. So long as I patrol the hallways and keep everything out, I am fulfilling my assignment.”

Zoe shook her head and focused. She couldn’t allow herself to be distracted by the antics of a mad demon. “Have you seen Eva in the past hour or two?”

“Can’t say that I have.”

“Juliana? Or Irene? Shalise maybe?”

“You’re expecting me to remember the names of several mortals that are inconsequential, at best.”

Zoe frowned. He wasn’t about to offer up anything else. “Fine,” she said as she turned on her heel. She kept her enhanced senses trained on him as she walked away. Not a single footstep reached her ears. She glanced back before she turned the corner.

There was nobody in the hallway.

With a shudder, Zoe continued to the main entrance.

The defending force was not performing well. The elf was lying on the ground, unmoving. Over him stood the older security guard. One of his arms swung limply as he tossed around an impressive amount of water and ice.

Tiny Ylva was in the thick of things, surrounded by black ash. All of the creatures seemed to be actively avoiding her.

As Zoe was watching, one creature flew out of the air, crashing into Ylva. For a moment, the beetle-like monster sat on top of where Ylva had been standing. Zoe almost ran out to get the thing off of her.

Her worries were unfounded.

Black veins spread across the beetle’s carapace. Smoke poured from the veins for a minute before the entire beetle exploded into more of the black ash. Ylva stood in the center of the settling remains.

Zoe would have liked to say she was unscathed, but her skin had several dark blotches on it. Bruises?

Following the arc the beetle took, Zoe found a mass of tentacles attached to an innocently smiling woman. One of the security specialists. Like Ylva, she was being given a wide berth. It mattered a lot less to the tentacle demon, however. Her appendages stretched out and grasped anything in their reach.

A massive wall of stone had been built around the entrance to the Rickenbacker. Genoa’s work most likely. She must have been looking for her daughter as well.

There was no Eva, nor any sign of the other missing students. Zoe opened the door and walked outside anyway, heading towards Ylva. The hel would likely be concerned about Juliana and might even know where she was.

For a moment, Zoe entertained the idea of teleporting straight to Ylva. As another creature turned to dust in her grasp, Zoe discarded the thought. Surprising the demon and winding up added to the pile of ash was not a current goal.

There weren’t many creatures between her and Ylva, but enough that she wasn’t willing to risk attempting to run through.

Zoe enhanced her vision to the point where she could pick out the individual strands of the stitchings holding the creatures together. She doubted a lightning bolt would do much good. Most of the creatures fighting the security guards had enough icicles buried in them to fill a large freezer.

Their stitches were a far more obvious weak point.

Taking it slow and steady, Zoe sent out precise blades of compressed wind. Each one neatly bisected the stitching. The insides of the creatures at the point where demon contacted human were… odd.

There were tubes filled with blood, heavy metal clamps at the joints, and more than a few wires. The clamps were drastically more difficult to cut, but it didn’t seem to matter much. Without the wires and tubes, the limbs ceased moving.

Zoe focused most of her blades on their legs. Stopping their movement was more important that actually killing the things. They could be put down at leisure later.

With only three creatures disabled, Zoe had a clear shot at Ylva.

Zoe cut her dagger through the air in front of her. The wind moved, curling around and under her–lessening her weight. Zoe took off at a full sprint.

With the wind twisted as it was, Zoe had a strong gale against her back. Her feet barely skimmed against the ground as she moved forwards. An inexperienced observer might have thought she was flying. She thought the same the first time the technique was demonstrated to her.

Ash and dust kicked up around Zoe as she sprinted through the remains of Ylva’s enemies. A twist of her wrist and the gale ceased. She manipulated the wind into curling away from her, especially her eyes and mouth. Zoe didn’t like the idea of breathing in the remains of corpses.

Cold bit through Zoe’s relatively thin suit. It wasn’t that cold of a day, but the air around Ylva’s little ash field sent Zoe into light shivers.

“You should stay inside. It is unsafe.”

“Unless you’ve seen the mastermind behind all this, at your side is probably the safest place.”

“We have seen nothing but minions.” Ylva paused as another landed right next to her.

The creature lashed out at Zoe, but she was far enough away that it didn’t matter. Charcoal colored veins raced across the creature’s skin.

Zoe shivered again. The air temperature dropped several degrees as the creature turned to dust.

“This army will soon be obliterated. It cannot be stopped. A waste of resources. We fail to comprehend the motivations behind this attack.”

“Eva, Juliana, Shalise, and a few other students are missing.”

“A distraction?”

“I saw Juliana and Shalise just after the attack began. I think they ran off to find Eva, who apparently skipped class today with another student.”

Ylva made a small noise of acknowledgment. Even in her tiny form, surrounded on all sides by combat, Ylva managed to project an aura of superiority. She kept her head high as her gaze swept over the remaining demons.

Just her looking at them sent the creatures backing away.

“This travesty will not go unanswered. The Keeper will be interested in the creator of these abominations.”

“Keeper?”

“A direct entity of Void. He punishes those who break His rules.”

“Creating these creatures is against the rules?” Zoe frowned as a thought occurred. “What about Eva’s hands?”

“Given willingly. It is doubtful that so many demons would contract to mutilate themselves in creation of these abominations. Many likely perished. We would not offer Ourself for such a fate.”

“Not many would,” Zoe said as she glanced around. Aside from simple limbs, many of the creatures had more important parts of demons attached to the human parts. Heads and torsos, for the most part. Those demons had died without question.

“We believe false contract–”

The giant wall around the Rickenbacker exploded outwards. Huge chunks of earth pasted a good number of the creatures.

Zoe’s eyes went wide as one boulder careened in their direction. Fueled purely by adrenaline, she created a miniature tornado in an instant to deflect it away.

She winced as the adrenaline settled down. Might have hurt something with that, Zoe thought as her dagger arm slumped to her side.

Genoa and a blood-covered Arachne stood at the entrance to the Rickenbacker. Neither looked happy. Understandable in Genoa’s case, but Zoe would have expected Arachne to be happier about dripping with blood.

It didn’t take them long to notice the ash filled clearing. Without regard to collateral damage, the two started moving.

Zoe couldn’t even see Genoa moving her dagger or glancing around herself as creatures were skewered by spikes erupting from the ground, crushed between slabs of earth, or otherwise decimated.

Arachne was much the same, though creatures actually had to come near her. She only had one leg sprouted from her back and even that one was looking battered and broken. Still, it lashed out and skewered anything that approached either of them.

Working together, they made quick work as they waded through the army.

“Where’s my daughter?” “Where’s my Eva?”

The two glanced at each other before returning their glares to Zoe.

“Eva skipped class along with another student. I’ve not seen them since. Juliana and Shalise disappeared shortly after the attack started. Presumably to find and assist Eva.”

“Juliana wasn’t with Eva?” Oddly enough, Genoa’s glare was aimed at Arachne.

“I only said she was with someone. I didn’t ask for their name.”

Genoa turned and punched Arachne in the face. A crack spread through her carapace from her mouth to her nose.

The spider-demon clenched her fists. For a moment, Zoe thought she was going to return the favor, but her fingers unclenched. She merely smiled. A smile with far too many sharp teeth. Black blood leaked over her white teeth from the part of her mouth that was cracked.

Arachne held a dagger in one of her hands. A light-eating dagger adorned with gems–with bloodstones. She noticed Zoe’s gaze and held the dagger up. “Eva wouldn’t have left this behind. It is… concerning.”

Zoe opened her mouth to respond, but Genoa stepped forwards and cut her off.

“Take me to Nel. Now.”

Out of the corner of her eye, she could see Ylva give the faintest of nods.

Zoe reached out, taking Genoa’s hand in her own. With a twitch of her dagger, the two were gone.

The walls of the women’s ward appeared around the two women. Genoa took one look around before she glared at Zoe.

“Why here?” she said through grit teeth.

“I can’t teleport into Ylva’s domain. Let’s hurry.”

Before Genoa could argue or complain, Zoe moved out the front doors. She stopped just at the edge of the inner women’s ward wall as a sound reached her enhanced ears. Carefully, she motioned for Genoa to glance around the corner.

Two groups fought in the pathways between cell blocks. One side was a random assortment of peasants from various eras. Every now and again, Zoe caught the glimpse of more knightly members of that faction. They wore armor and wielded swords as opposed to the peasants’ pitchforks and torches.

The other consisted of black-cloaked mages wielding the white magic of the Elysium Order.

Genoa narrowed her eyes. “Which side is the enemy?”

<– Back | Index | Next –>

003.023

<– Back | Index | Next –>

Eva took a moment to relax. On Ylva’s throne. It wasn’t easy.

The throne was carved out of the same black marble the rest of the throne platform was made from. It had no cushions, no curvature, and it was far too large. Eva couldn’t sit with her back against the throne’s back without her calves hitting the relatively sharp edge of the seat.

The hel was a skeleton while sitting on the throne. Maybe her nerves didn’t function in that form. Maybe they didn’t function anyway; she was barely better than a corpse while she had skin on.

All in all, it wasn’t relaxing at all. How Ylva managed was beyond her.

A whimper at her side had Eva rubbing her temples once again.

Nel’s self-loathing didn’t help Eva’s relaxation. Not in the slightest.

“I don’t know why you’re worried,” Eva said with a sigh. “Even if they tear down my blood wards and trash the prison, it isn’t like they can get in here. Devon just walks into the real cell house when he tries to open the door. I can’t imagine the nuns will be able to enter.”

“It’s not that–though I wouldn’t put it past them to find a way in; our magic can do fairly strange things under the right circumstances–it’s that they noticed me in the first place. I’m a rogue augur. They aren’t going to let me go.”

“And you’re sure they noticed?”

“I used my own blood to seek out the vial set away in the vaults. Another augur was doing the reverse. With a priest and two prioresses hovering over her shoulder. I could tell they lost track of me, but,” Nel slumped in on herself, burying her head in her hands, “there’s no doubt they saw me.”

Eva nodded. She jumped to her feet. Her blood-covered bloodstone lazily orbited her as she paced. Getting comfortable on the throne was simply impossible.

“How soon could they mobilize against you?”

“Depends. If they send an inquisitorial chapter after me, it could be within the hour. All of them are capable of long-range teleportation. They might decide on a chapter of nuns which would take significantly longer. Maybe even pull Charon Chapter for the job.”

Eva froze. “They could be here in minutes and you’re not watching them?”

“They’ve gone dark! They’re not going to be drawing up battle plans with me hovering over their shoulders.”

“And Sister Cross?”

“Also missing. She did that from time to time, so it might not be related.”

Eva scoffed. “Fat chance of that. They probably pulled her in to find out everything she knew.”

Which included Arachne and herself. Eva pinched the bridge of her nose hard enough to draw blood from her claws. She healed it with a stray thought. Hopefully Zagan would act as an adequate deterrent until the mess at Brakket gets cleaned up.

Nel gave a terse nod, but didn’t comment.

“Keep an eye on the prison’s perimeter. I need to speak with Devon. If anything comes within ten miles of this place, I want to know about it immediately.”

“You want me to leave if they show up?” Nel’s eyes went wide as her head twisted to make eye contact with Eva. She flinched away almost immediately.

Eva neither smiled nor laughed at her discomfort. She kept her voice as deadly serious as her fourteen-year-old self could. “Immediately.”

“B-but–”

“If I get hit by a lightning bolt from a teleporting nun that is after you, and you fail to warn me, I swear I will personally tear out your spine. Understand?”

Nel nodded. A shallow, pitiful nod, but a nod nonetheless.

“Good.” Eva smiled. “Don’t worry. I’m sure everything will be fine.”

“Y-yeah.”

“Get to watching. I’ll be back shortly.” Eva turned and left Nel behind without another word.

She walked straight across the pit without even a glance down the vast chasm.

Outside Ylva’s domain was… normal. The sun was out, though not incredibly bright. Cold wind tossed Eva’s long hair up and around her. Clouds hung over the land in the direction of Brakket. Ylva’s doing no doubt.

Although there were pockmarks everywhere from whatever battle Arachne and Genoa had had, nothing in her prison was on fire. Yet.

That was always a positive.

Eva stepped. While it had yet to snow, the late November air was not the warmest thing Eva had felt and she did not want to spend longer than necessary outside. There was a wind that constantly blew through some of the buildings around her prison.

She still hadn’t gotten around to heating the entire prison with a rune system. So much to do, so many distractions.

It took four short steps to reach the front of Devon’s cell house.

A few more steps had her at the top of the stairs, right in front of Devon’s revamped penthouse. She opened the door and walked right in.

Devon was leaning back on the hind legs of his chair with a notebook and pen in his hands. His feet were resting atop a desk he had procured for himself.

The moment Eva opened the door, he started to tip backwards. Eva grinned in anticipation of the crash.

An empty chair clattered to the floor.

A cold blade pressed itself against her throat.

“Eva?”

“I might actually have to start knocking,” Eva said. She closed her chitinous fingers around the blade and gently pushed it away.

“As if,” Devon said with a scoff. “Shouldn’t you be in school.”

“Something came…” Eva trailed off as she noticed what was holding Devon’s knife. It curled around the handle three times, denting the handle at one part. “Is that–”

“One of the carnivean’s tentacles. One of the larger, more powerful ones. Yes.”

“You replaced your arm with a tentacle?”

Devon raised an eyebrow. “You replaced both hands and both legs with Arachne’s crap and you took the carnivean’s eyes. I don’t want to hear any judgment from you.”

“Yeah, but you’re kind of weird about the whole demon thing. I expected you to find the most human-like arm possible.”

“Too expensive. Not prices I’m willing to pay.” He gave a small shrug. “Besides, I can always chop it off if something better comes along.”

“Fair enough.”

As Devon tried to sheathe the knife, it slipped from his tentacle and clattered to the floor. “Still adapting to it,” he mumbled as he bent to pick it up with his other hand.

“Takes a while, doesn’t it?”

“Arachne’s limbs are analogous to human hands. This is completely different. I can’t even describe what goes through my mind when I try to use it.” He idly scratched at his goatee with his tentacle. “And trust me, I’ve tried.”

Eva glanced down and flexed her own hand. She couldn’t say that she ever thought much about it. There were extra joints, but none of it felt foreign. Then again, it had been a whole year. She had ample opportunity to get used to it.

“So? What are you ditching school for?”

Before Eva could get a word in, Devon held up his hand. With a frown on his face, he said, “wait. Wrong question. What did you screw up this time?”

“Nothing!” Eva mirrored his frown and crossed her arms. “Why would you even think such a thing? I haven’t screwed anything up.”

Devon gave her a cold-eyed glare.

“I’m pretty sure, anyway. I was skipping class, but that’s not a good reason for an army of demon-golems to attack me.”

“What.”

Eva leaned up against her master’s desk as she told an increasingly agitated Devon the events of the past hour.

“And you just gave this Irene girl to a demon?”

“I didn’t give anything. I ordered Lucy to take her to a nurse. Carefully. No contracts, no barters.”

“That’s not a whole lot better.”

“Well I wasn’t in much of a position to do it. I came here for reinforcements only to find the reinforcements had already been sent.”

“And now we’re defenseless against this nun strike force,” he mumbled to himself. “Alright. We’re leaving.”

“What? We can’t leave. All my books and supplies are here. Nel too, I guess. Surely you don’t want to leave all your research.”

Devon slid open the bottom drawer of his desk and wrapped his tentacle around a backpack. “You’ll learn to pack light after a couple of these kind of things. Besides,” he hefted the bag up, “I last copied these notebooks just a week ago after your treatment. I can recover if I lose them.”

“That doesn’t help me! Let’s at least move my books into Ylva’s domain. They should be safe there.”

“You said they’d be here soon. I don’t want to be caught in the middle. Actually,” he rolled his head to one side with a crack before continuing, “we could just give them the girl, right?”

Eva frowned. “The thought did cross my mind,” she admitted. “The biggest problem is that she belongs to Ylva. She would vehemently disagree with that decision. I’m not too interested in turning her into an enemy, are you?”

A light grunt was all that answered her.

“I didn’t think so. That’s another reason we shouldn’t leave. Fleeing and leaving Nel to deal with whatever is after her won’t… turn out well with Ylva I’d say.” Despite her initial hostility at the woman who had been her monitor for Sister Cross, Eva didn’t actually hate her. At least not anymore.

That said, Nel wasn’t a friend and Eva wasn’t about to die or even get seriously injured for her. She did, however, make a decent excuse not to leave Eva’s books.

“I’ve been thinking,” Devon said after a minute, “with Ylva being gone, this would be an excellent opportunity to disrupt its domain’s connection to reality. Without its domain for support, it shouldn’t be too troublesome to banish it.”

“What?” Eva ceased her leaning on the desk. “Why would we do that? Ylva’s been helping us–protecting our friends and the like. That’s just… betrayal.”

“It has been doing what it wants and nothing more. It isn’t beholden to us or to human morality. We can’t hope to understand the motivations of something like that.” He paused to scratch at his neck before looking back to Eva. “And I don’t like it hovering over us during your treatments. I’m telling you, girl, that thing is bad news.”

“You’re paranoid.” Eva sighed.

Her master had far more experience. A year or so ago, she would have deferred to his advice reflexively. Now, Eva wasn’t so sure. Watching him interact with all the demons around was unsettling. He never referred to demons as anything other than ‘it’ and that never sat right with Eva.

After her final treatment, would she become nothing more than an ‘it’ to be loathed and treated with distrust?

Eva shook her head. She couldn’t perform the treatment herself. There might be needed changes to the circle or timing of the treatment that she simply lacked the knowledge to alter. There wasn’t much to do about his problem aside from convincing him otherwise.

For that, Eva wanted Ylva to stay. Unlike the admittedly psychopathic Arachne, Ylva was calm and collected. She treated Nel with benevolence. Zoe and Juliana as well. If Devon could see that, maybe he’d change his tune.

“But this isn’t the time,” Eva said. “Instead of wasting time talking, we should be moving and preparing.”

Devon sighed and dropped his pack back into his desk. With a twitch of his fingers, the drawer slammed shut.

Eva took a few steps away. She could feel whatever wards he enacted around it.

“So what’s the plan? I can’t enter Ylva’s domain, so barricading ourselves in there isn’t an option.”

“If you open it, it leads to the cell house. What if I open it?”

“Might work.” His thumb slid down his beard as he thought. After a moment, he shook his head. “If we aren’t banishing it, I’d rather not try. Ylva forbade me from entering, violating that could be unpleasant.”

“We could toss you into solitary. If found, you could claim you were our prisoner.”

Her master pursed his lips and gave her a look.

“No?”

“We’re not fleeing or hiding. Despite having backups, I’ll not destroy my research and it will not fall into anyone else’s hands. We’re fighting.”

Devon wandered over to a filing cabinet. He pulled open the drawer for enticements with his tentacle.

Eva watched with interest, wondering what he might pull out. Her master so rarely summoned demons that it was like a special occasion.

He first snatched up a set of handcuffs. They were old and rusted, maybe something that he found around the prison and decided would be useful. Whatever the case, their presence caused one of Eva’s eyebrows to raise. She had no idea what demon associated itself with handcuffs.

A bag filled with what appeared to be oily black tar had Eva’s other eyebrow up. Devon rubbed his fingers over the bag, squeezing the tar. He apparently found whatever he was looking for; with a nod, Devon dropped the bag into a pocket and went back to looking through the enticement drawer.

Eva frowned as her master looked over the third item. “We are summoning demons, right?”

“What do you think we’re doing, girl?” Devon slipped whatever the black cone was into his pocket and turned to face Eva. “Having a tea party?”

“I have no idea,” Eva said honestly. “I don’t recognize any of those as enticements.”

Devon flicked her forehead with his tentacle. Eva rubbed the spot, glad his appendage wasn’t covered in some kind of slime.

“Just goes to show that you don’t know anything.”

Eva grumbled to herself as they made their way out of his penthouse.

He had his own summoning circle set up on the ground floor of his cell house. The shackles around it were some of the strongest Eva had ever seen. She kept well away from them. Every treatment left her feeling less inclined to test the boundaries.

Devon started with the cone–a candle, Eva discovered as he lit it with green fire. He set it down in the center of the circle. As soon as he stepped outside the shackles, the summoning circle activated. The rotation of the symbols picked up speed as the entirety of the candle went up in flames.

In the blink of an eye, the wax expanded outwards. It grew to roughly Eva’s size. A sphere formed at the peak of the cone. Two columns stretched downwards from the base of the cone and two more cylinders stretched out near the top. As its growth slowed, it started shaping itself. The sphere formed into a face, the cylinders into arms and legs.

A waxy, dress wearing girl with green flames for hair stood in the center of the circle.

Eva always wondered how demons like that worked. Most demons ate or otherwise consumed their enticement. Did she have a body in her domain? Was she just a consciousness or perhaps a pile of disembodied limbs?

Devon whipped out his human hand the moment she finished forming. Her eyes snapped open, glowing a bright red as they did so.

The moment Eva made eye contact, a freight train ran into Eva’s brain. She clutched her forehead and fell to her knees. Her claws were poking through her skin and she didn’t care.

It hurt.

A lot.

A small part of her mind screamed at her to stop. If she pressed further, her fingers would pierce her skull. Eva couldn’t think. It didn’t matter if the pain–

The pain ceased. Completely and totally.

Slowly, Eva unclenched her eyes.

Devon stood, barely, with his arm pointing towards the demon. His feet were spread apart and he was wobbling. He took a few gasping breaths–that Eva mimicked–before steadying himself.

“What was that?” Eva said as she pulled herself to her feet. She intended to shout, but her voice came out as more of a whisper. Her wards didn’t extend into Devon’s cell house. The wax-woman wouldn’t have succumbed to them after a few seconds. Had she passed out, she would have been entirely at its mercy.

That was a problem she hadn’t thought of. They’d all need to be added to the wards before they could wander freely around the facility. Not an appealing prospect in the slightest–if Devon lost control for whatever reason, they’d have plenty of time to react. If she concentrated hard enough, she might be able to manipulate the wards around the demons. Then, if they did break free, pain like that would disrupt her concentration and the wards would collapse on top of them.

Eva had never done something like that before, but it was something to try before adding their blood to the wards.

“A ruax. It can induce headaches in people who meet its eyes.”

“That was a headache?” That word seemed far too benign for what she had felt. “I thought my head was going to explode.”

“Yeah. Should be fun to set on our enemies.” Devon went up and broke the shackles. The demon moved out of the circle to stand at his side.

Eva gave an experimental glance in her direction. The flames making up her hair were the only indication that she wasn’t a wax statue. Her eyes lost their glow and she stood stock-still. Eva couldn’t see any blood moving within her. Had she been missing her eyes, the demon would be completely invisible.

“You dominated her?”

“Ruax are chronic backstabbers and love poorly worded contracts,” he said with a flat glare. “Their favorite method is to wait until their summoner is in combat and then start up a headache. Just a little one, you’d barely notice. At the most crucial point in combat, it ramps the headache up to the debilitating effects you just felt.”

Eva frowned. It sounded reasonable. She certainly did not wish to feel that headache again. Watching the ruax stand unmoving at Devon’s side still sent chills down her spine.

Devon wasted no time in repairing the shackles and moving on. He unceremoniously tossed the handcuffs onto the summoning circle and started the process again.

“Any surprises I should know this time?”

“An abdoth. Lord of Slaves. Nothing like the ruax, but don’t shake its hand.”

“What happens if you shake its hand?”

At the glance her master gave her, Eva immediately regretted asking.

“Its called the Lord of Slaves. I’m sure you’re not that stupid.”

Like Ylva’s summoning, the Lord of Slaves grasped his enticement before walking out of the summoning circle. No pomp and circumstance. He wore an iron mask that seemed to be attached to the back of his head beneath a wild mane of gray hair. His hands were bound within a set of wooden shackles.

Apart from the shackles and the mask, the abdoth wasn’t wearing much else. Eva could easily see his ribcage. His arms were little more than bones with skin stretched tightly across. Given that the mask had no mouth hole, he probably hadn’t eaten in an eternity.

Then again, Arachne never ate and Eva skipped half of her meals. That had to be his natural form.

He didn’t look particularly strong, but Devon dominated him all the same.

Devon moved just close enough to the summoning circle to open the bag of tar inside the shackles. The tar jumped out of its bag and latched onto Devon’s hand.

Eva started forward. If something happened to him, she’d have to deal with two demons. Two demons that likely wouldn’t be too happy at their recent domination.

Her master didn’t seem particularly concerned. He just pulled back his hand. The tar tried to hold on, but the shackles peeled it off as he withdrew.

The thing thrashed around on the ground, trying to escape. It ceased moving once Devon started up the summoning process.

More tar bubbled up out of the circle, forming up into a deep pool of the muck.

Eva tore her eyes away from the summoning circle. She could hear a faint beating of wings.

No matter where she looked, she couldn’t discern the source.

It was everywhere.

Or all in her mind.

She shook her head just as a smell reached her nose. And that was all it was. A smell.

It wasn’t pleasant. It wasn’t unpleasant.

Eva glanced back towards the summoning circle.

What are those things?

Eva took five steps back. She forced herself not to flee from the room entirely.

Every time she thought she pinned down exactly what she was seeing inside the summoning circle, the thought escaped and it changed. It twisted in on itself, outside becoming inside before becoming the outside again.

Looking at it hurt. Not the same headache as the ruax.

It hurt because it couldn’t be. Eva could see parts of it that she was certain were covered up by other parts. She wasn’t seeing through it, simply following the contours of the body led to points hidden behind itself.

Eva turned away. Her master let out a soft chuckle.

“W-what is it?”

“You don’t want to know.”

Eva frowned. She considered protesting. With a shake of her head, she decided her master was right. She didn’t want to know.

Devon raised his arm to start dominating the… the thing.

It slammed into the shackles. A flickering wall of transparent green sprouted at the primary shackle line.

The wall of green shattered.

Eva gasped as the thing bounded into a second shackle wall. Both vials of Arachne’s blood shattered as she got the blood ready for her claw attack.

Just as she started to plunge her hands into the wireframe ball of blood, the creature ceased moving. It turned towards Devon and just waited.

Eva held her hands right at the edge of the ball, waiting.

Devon broke the shackles and stepped right next to the thing. With his bare hand, he scooped some of the stuff black tar that dripped from it into the bag and sealed it shut with a twitch of his rings.

Eva wanted to look away, but she couldn’t. The thing broke through shackles. She couldn’t let it out of her sight. “Is it safe?”

“Safe enough. I’ll be sending it back in half an hour. The other two can stay.”

“Half an hour? The nuns might not be here for hours or days. Maybe even weeks.”

Devon looked over with a frown on his face.

“Don’t frown at me,” Eva said with crossed arms. “I clearly stated so as I was explain–”

“They’re here!”

Eva turned to find Nel standing in the doorway. She almost thrust her claw into the wire ball of blood on pure reflex.

It turns out, she needed to do nothing at all. Nel collapsed on the floor, clutching her forehead. Eva caught a glimpse of a glowing-white eye on her neck pinch itself shut and squirm beneath her robes.

“Oh. Right.” Devon had a deep frown on his face. All the demons, save for the waxy ruax, had moved towards Nel. “I told them that anyone in robes was an enemy. Should be fixed now.”

Eva shook her head as she walked over to the former nun.

“Wh-wha–”

“Don’t worry. They’re here to help protect you.” Hopefully.

Nel glanced up, but winced away. The glow in her eyes died out and she tried again. “That’s not any better.”

“No, it isn’t.”

“Forget all that,” Devon said as he walked up. He at least had the good sense to leave the demons behind. “They’re here?”

“Thirty members of the inquisition alongside two high-inquisitors. There might be more coming. I left to tell Eva because I didn’t want my spine taken out.”

Devon glanced down. Eva gave him a shrug.

“Where at, girl?”

“South side of the prison, on the other side of the wall next to the big building. They’re trying to break the wards.”

“How long can your wards hold up?”

Eva gave another shrug. “Never had anyone attack them before.”

“Let’s assume about thirty seconds then.”

Giving a short harrumph, Eva crossed her arms. She didn’t disagree, however. That was something she should have talked about with Genoa.

“So,” Eva said, “what’s the plan?”

<– Back | Index | Next –>

003.022

<– Back | Index | Next –>

A burning sensation ached within Arachne’s legs.

It was an odd feeling. A foreign feeling. She couldn’t remember the last time she had any ache at all. It was a testament to how hard she was pushing herself.

Allowing herself out of Eva’s sight while there were troublesome events afoot was a horrible idea in hindsight. But she couldn’t help it.

Genoa was just so fun.

She never got to go all out against anything these days. At least not without also worrying over potential collateral damage. Even the zombies from last year had been target practice for Eva.

And Genoa could take it. Getting within range was a somewhat distressingly rare occurrence, but they were the best part. Arachne had nearly torn out Genoa’s throat on one occasion.

The woman just kept on fighting. She wrapped some earth around her throat and downed a potion without breaking her stride. Half the potion spilled out and she didn’t even blink.

Arachne had lost five legs and a good chunk of her abdomen before Genoa finally passed out.

Eva’s professor had teleported the two friends after Arachne failed to pick up Eva that day. Eva teleported herself. Upon finding out what had happened, Eva sat a lethargic Genoa and Arachne down for a long rant about acceptable damage during spars.

Being slightly more careful did not lower the intensity of their fights at all. It proved somewhat enlightening for Arachne. A problem of forcing a ranged opponent to submit without causing excessive physical harm. An interesting thought experiment, though not something Arachne intended to use outside their little spars.

Genoa had altered tactics in an attempt at finding a way to contain Arachne without allowing escape. A deep enough pit with slick walls and a hardened lid might have worked, but Arachne had been getting very good at avoiding sudden pitfalls. Thus far, Genoa had failed.

As successful as Arachne had been as of late, their current battle was not going in her favor thus far.

Her legs pounded into the ground, leaving minor craters with every step. The leg picked up before the dust reached its peak and continued to move like a mechanical piston. Again and again. Brush and weeds disintegrated upon contacting her body.

Arachne ran at top speed yet Genoa was still ahead of her.

Genoa had something of a head start–she blinked out of the prison the moment Nel mentioned an army at Brakket–but she was slowly increasing the distance between the two. It didn’t help that she could blink to the top of a hill whereas Arachne had to use her legs.

It was infuriating. Arachne had no idea how to increase her own speed. Every leg was pumping at maximum capacity.

Times like these made Arachne wish she knew magic.

Nothing to do about it now. They’d be entering the city soon enough. Due to her little one-sided race, she’d almost halved the time it usually took to travel.

She could already see the smoke.

Genoa blinked up to the rooftop of the nearest building.

With a spring of her legs, Arachne joined her. It didn’t take more than a few leaps and blinks before the two stood overlooking the plaza between the Rickenbacker and the Gillet.

Her grin widened all on its own as she stared at the assembled group.

“Huh.”

“I guess she wasn’t joking about an army. What are they?”

“You’re asking me?” Genoa glanced to her side. “I figured you would be more informed.”

“They’re not any demons I’ve ever seen and they don’t quite smell like it. Parts of them are? Not sure.”

“We don’t need them alive, do we?”

“I wasn’t planning on it. In fact, I believe that would be detrimental to everyone.”

“Excellent,” Genoa said. She was trying to suppress herself, but Arachne could see the beginnings of a grin mirroring her own. “I’ll take the left fifty, you take the right fifty?”

It was tempting. Arachne wanted nothing more than to jump right in the center of the horde. She would rend all without remorse. It took some effort, but she managed to shake her head. “Nel said that Eva was inside the Rickenbacker dormitory. I can see a good number of the things filing into the front doors.”

The burgeoning grin on Genoa’s face slipped into a frown. “Where’s Juliana?”

“Didn’t ask,” Arachne said as her own smile widened. “You shouldn’t have run off so soon.”

“Hmph.” Genoa crossed her arms. “She’s probably with Eva.”

Arachne just shrugged.

“Fine. We’ll go in. Clear out the dormitory.”

“If we hurry, there may be some of the army left outside.” Arachne pointed a sharp finger off towards the academy building. “Ylva’s making quick work of the ones that get too close, but they seem to be learning that.”

A monster’s limb turned to dust, revealing the pristine form of Ylva as the debris settled. A second monster forced Ylva to back up and sidestep a spray of poison. Or acid. Some caustic liquid that caused steam and boiling asphalt. Red beams swept across the area, forcing another back-step from Ylva.

“Let’s get moving then. Wouldn’t want to keep our kids waiting in this mess.”

Arachne was about to protest the inaccuracy of that statement, but Genoa had already blinked away.

After running and jumping to the roof of the Rickenbacker, Arachne positioned herself straight above the main entrance. A few steps forwards and Arachne was in a complete free fall.

She let out a laugh as she felt the satisfying snap of bones, squish of flesh, and more as two things were crushed beneath her bulbous weight. Arachne wasted no time in drawing herself to her full height and assisting Genoa in the clearing of the entryway.

One creature had the tentacles of a carnivean. The coils tightened around one of Arachne’s legs. She almost lashed out. It wouldn’t do to become injured so early. Especially not with Genoa watching.

The creature didn’t have half the strength of a real carnivean. It wasn’t something to laugh at, but a real carnivean would have had her leg twisted off before she could react.

Arachne tugged and pulled the tangled leg. The human body it was attached to lost balance and stumbled right into Arachne’s waiting legs. An audible squelch as her legs sunk into its chest sent feelings of euphoria throughout Arachne.

She immediately turned on the next closest creature. One behind her went flying as she turned. Arachne paid it no mind as it bowled through a group.

The one closest to her looked fun. The human corpse attached to it was bloated beyond compare, but the demonic limbs were easily recognizable to any denizen of Hell. One of the living dolls. A relative of the iron maiden. Not a true demon, but one of Keeper’s creations.

Two nail-studded arms ended in sharp, metallic claws. Two heavy springs anchored the arms to the bloated chest. Getting caught between the arms would easily end Arachne.

Arachne circled around.

It followed. The thing’s waist was something like a turntable. It staggered forwards on mechanical imitations of Arachne’s spider legs. Poor imitations, but she wasn’t about to tell Keeper that.

Why did someone take the doll off and put a human in its place? It wouldn’t be staggering if it wasn’t for the bloated human.

Arachne jumped. High. If it leaned back and snapped its arms shut around her in the right spot, she could easily lose her entire abdomen.

Unable to spin in mid-air, Arachne lashed out with one of her rear legs the moment she landed.

The sound of metal scraping on itself was followed by a sharp sense of pain.

Her leg was off. Again.

She intended to pierce its skull. That had failed. Arachne spun in place–something that was always more difficult when lacking limbs.

Her leg stuck to the nails jutting out of one arm. The thing was already cranking its arms back out to reset the trap.

It shouldn’t have been able to rotate that fast. Something to do with the human torso?

Nothing to do about it now. Arachne wasn’t going to give it the chance to reset.

Arachne charged forwards, gripping the two extended claws with her own before they could spread far enough apart. Keeping them pressed together would have been an exercise in futility had it still had the doll body. As it was now, it was still a strain.

There was a delightful crunch from somewhere inside the bloated torso. A gear tore out the back of the human and went flying through the air. All tension in the arms disappeared as the springs snapped them back together again.

Arachne reached forwards and crushed the human skull without resistance. It slumped as the mechanical legs gave out.

Behind the Keeper’s doll, another creature had crumpled to the ground. A gear stuck out of its head like a circular saw blade. Arachne took a moment to admire the good luck before she heard a cry.

“Arachne!”

Checking for unseen attackers before turning towards Genoa, Arachne was pleased to find herself given a wide berth.

Genoa stood in the entryway to the Rickenbacker. Two creatures had been impaled by massive spikes made out of the brickwork.

“I’m sealing the door whether or not you’re inside.”

Arachne frowned at the two skewered creatures. Had she not landed on one or two, she would be tied with Genoa. That was simply unacceptable.

Pushing down her ire, Arachne ran towards the dormitory. She shrunk down into her humanoid form as she did so. Walking with only seven legs was somewhat irksome. Still, she left all her remaining legs fully extended and ready for anything.

The moment she crossed the threshold into the Rickenbacker, a heavy wall extended straight into the sky. It stopped just shy of the roof.

At Arachne’s glance, Genoa gave a shrug. “It will keep us from getting surrounded,” she said. “We can clear everything ahead of us and not have to worry about things slipping around our back.”

“Fair enough,” Arachne said. Her grin widened as she spotted her first prey.

The last month or two had really been fun.

— — —

As soon as all natural light vanished from the lobby, Genoa sprinted towards the staircase.

“Where are you going?”

Genoa stopped and turned back to the source of the modulated voice. It didn’t sound real. Like the demon was trying to mimic proper tones and inflections she had heard from humans. Unsuccessfully.

No one else ever mentioned it. Nobody jumped when the demon spoke or when she turned eight red eyes in their direction. Even the twitching limbs jutting out of her backside would have gone ignored by everyone else. They had all gotten used to her.

To tell the truth, Genoa was starting to get used to it as well. She seemed less like a demon and more like a person with every passing day. Only through conscious effort was she able to acknowledge Arachne’s unnaturalness. It wasn’t something Genoa ever planned to forget.

Still, they were allies for now. “Up to their room.”

The number of visible sharp teeth doubled. “Again, you should have stuck around for Nel’s explanation.”

Genoa moved to adjust her sunglasses. She froze halfway and dropped her arms to her side. A nervous tick and one she was trying to get out of the habit of doing. They were perfectly set on her face anyway.

Instead, Genoa shifted her weight from one foot to the other. She loosened her grip on her knife and waited for an explanation.

Arachne took the hint. She raised one of her spindly fingers and pointed down a hallway opposite from the staircase. “Eva is inside one of the hot springs. They’re on the bottom floor.”

“Alright, where to?”

“Follow the trail of broken furniture and ruined floor.”

That was good enough for Genoa. She blinked ahead of Arachne, eliciting a low growl from the demon. It didn’t matter. Juliana was somewhere in the middle of all this mess. She blinked again, straight to the end of the hallway.

One direction was clear, clean, and undisturbed. The other had two of the monsters slowly making their way down the hall. They paid no attention to their stray limbs bumping into and splintering a picture frame here or knocking over a potted plant there.

If there was any doubt that the creatures were being directed, it evaporated with that sight. At least one should have wandered off down the other hall, but there was not a trace.

Genoa almost blinked straight past them. Arachne would be able to take them without issue. Now that she was inside, Genoa would have to conjure the earth she used–much more taxing than simply tossing it about–or potentially destabilize and destroy the dorms by pulling it out from underneath the floor.

Blinking past could cut off a path to retreat if the hallways ahead were filled with even more of the creatures.

Frowning, Genoa raised her knife. Both had their backs turned towards her. Perfect. An iron rod through each of their skulls before they had the opportunity to react would be best.

Two rods, each the size of Genoa’s arm, formed with an exertion of her magic. They started the size of her pinky finger, but every pass of her magic added one layer after another.

Arachne barreled past with a mad cackle. It was somewhat disconcerting that the most human-like aspect of the demon was a murderous laugh.

Both creatures turned at all the noise. “Damn it.”

Arachne vaulted over one creature. Her claws dug into the shoulders. As soon as her feet hit the ground on the opposite side of the creature, Arachne pulled. One of her legs exploded out of the creature’s chest while its head and neck separated.

The other creature did not stand idle while its companion was dismembered. Slits along its arms opened up. Spines exploded out without any aiming.

It didn’t matter. There were enough to hit everything.

Genoa manipulated the two iron rods into a single sheet in front of her. It was too small to cover her entire body. She had to crouch behind it.

The spines hit an instant after. Some embedded themselves deep into the metal. More than a few poked out the other side.

Genoa stood once the last spine hit her wall. She reformed the iron into a single lance. Spines still poked out from various places. With a flick of her knife, the lance rocketed away from her, embedding itself into the creature’s chest.

She ran up as the thing slumped to the ground. Arachne shoved off the corpse of the first creature. Half of her chest was looking a lot more like a porcupine than any sort of arachnid.

“I could have dispatched them without any trouble.”

“That’s no fun,” she said as she started plucking spines out of her carapace.

“We’re not here for fun. We’re here to rescue our kids.”

“Eva is not my child. Sister might be more accurate.”

Genoa blinked, but shook her head. “Doesn’t matter. We need to get to them.”

“I agree.”

They took off again. Together, this time. If Arachne was going to charge around without care for tact or subtlety, it wouldn’t do much good to blink around. Instead, Genoa focused her efforts on conjuring up more iron.

An arm reached out from one of the side rooms. It crossed Genoa’s vision as it arced towards her.

She flicked her eyes to the side. Another creature. Another human torso with its arms replaced.

Genoa started to duck. The arm came fast. Too fast. She didn’t have a second to blink.

Claws raked across her face. Only her enhanced durability kept her from losing it entirely.

The force from the blow made Genoa take an involuntary step backwards to maintain her balance.

A second set of claws used her stagger to scrape against her calves.

Another one?

She could feel it. That drop in her stomach when gravity reasserted control. Genoa teetered backwards even as she thrust out her knife.

The steel blade found a new sheath inside the first creature’s skull.

That didn’t slow her fall into the waiting arms of the other creature.

Genoa twisted in mid-air, gripping her backup knife as she turned.

Magic coursed through the blade of her new focus. At her command, one partially formed iron rod dropped out of the air. The tiled floor beneath the second creature cracked under the impact. Partially coagulated blood stained the walls and ceiling tiles.

Genoa’s back hit the unmoving remains without injury. She let out a short laugh. “Take that, you bastards!”

In the blink of an eye, eight glowing red eyes appeared above Genoa.

Her smile vanished in an instant. The slowly receding adrenaline in her body jolted into full production. Sweat formed on her hand as her grip on her knife tightened.

Arachne’s fingers twitched. Her spare legs twitched. Not a sudden twitch, but a constant, nervous twitch.

An effect of whatever the spider had in place of adrenaline? It didn’t matter. Genoa had no intentions of winding up on the receiving end of those fingers ever again.

They stared at one another. Watching. Waiting for one to make a move.

Blood dripped into Genoa’s mouth. Her own blood. The four gashes across her face had started to sting.

And she did nothing about it. She didn’t even blink as part of her vision went red with a trickle of blood over one eye. Genoa was not about to lose their little stare down. She couldn’t afford to.

The first one to blink might wind up with the other’s weapon through their skull.

Still, the strain added up. Genoa could feel her own fingers getting itchy. If this was it, she wasn’t going to let Arachne get the first shot in.

Just as she was about to repurpose the iron rod that had jammed into the tiles, Arachne’s grin widened. Her hand reached out to one side and gripped Genoa’s primary knife.

She wrenched it from the skull of the creature, flipped it in the air, and caught it by the blade. Slowly, she lowered her hand, offering it to Genoa hilt first.

Genoa grit her teeth as she accepted the knife and didn’t unclench her jaw to speak. “Thanks.”

“I figured you needed help,” Arachne said. She kept her arm out, waiting for Genoa to reach forwards and accept her assistance.

Genoa swatted it away and blinked to her feet. She sheathed her backup dagger as soon as she double-checked her primary for any damage.

“You were just sitting there, not getting up. I thou–”

A scream echoed down the hallways. Not a scream of fright or surprise. No. Genoa knew that sound well enough. She made similar noises often enough in her earlier days of mage-knighting.

It was the fingers-on-chalkboard cry of a human in pain.

Both of their heads whipped down the hall as a second cry lasted the full length of someone’s lungs and then some.

“That wasn’t Eva.”

“I don’t think it was Juliana.” She hoped it wasn’t, but there was a chance. Genoa had never heard her daughter cry out in absolute pain. That was something she hoped to never hear.

“Good. Let’s proceed with our objective then.”

“We can’t just leave her.”

“Watch me.” Arachne turned on the sharp spike that made up her heel. The tile cracked as she stalked forwards.

Genoa wiped away a good amount of blood from her face as she sprinted after Arachne.

“I thought you were going to save the worthless human?”

“The scream came from this direction.” If the creatures had jumped into a side room for the purpose of ambushing the two of them, they may have found someone hiding. Someone they might have ignored had she not entered the building.

It wouldn’t be the first unrelated person’s blood on her hands. That didn’t make it right. That didn’t mean she could ignore it.

Genoa checked every room as they made their way down the hall. Most were study rooms.

One wasn’t.

Arachne marched on, only sparing a glance into the room.

Genoa froze. It was an infirmary. Not a large one. Not big enough for more than two or three patients.

Mage-knights were not an innocent sort. The guild made sure of that before anyone received their pin. Retiring from the guild tended to leave people as shells of their former selves.

A good number didn’t have to worry about that. They never made it to retirement.

Carlos and Juliana helped Genoa avert that fate. Having a sort of callous regard for death, especially towards those Genoa didn’t know, didn’t hurt. While she had retired after only twenty years, Genoa considered herself a veteran–an elite among the elites of the guild. She knew for a fact that others considered her an elite as well.

As such, Genoa had seen things best forgotten at the bottom of a bottle.

That experience all led up to Genoa knowing one thing with absolute certainty.

She needed a drink.

A young-looking woman wearing the standard Brakket nurse uniform lay spread out on the floor.

Very spread out.

Her chest had been torn open. Several organs were arranged in neat piles to one side. Neither leg was attached to her body.

Another of the creatures stood over her. It had three demonic arms; one arm replaced one of its legs and it had a taloned foot in place of the other leg. Several tentacles extended out of the creature’s stomach cavity.

Genoa’s eyes turned back to the corpse on the ground. They drifted up to the face.

It was… familiar. One of Zoe’s friends, if she remembered correctly. They had dinner together once. Not even that long ago. It was shortly before Juliana started school.

Adrenaline fueled rage flowed through Genoa’s veins. She could see her daughter’s face on the corpse. She could see Zoe’s face.

Her face twisted into a snarl as she let out a shout.

Then it was gone.

Genoa lifted her knife with an unnatural calm. She channeled magic straight into the earth beneath the academy as she prepared her attack.

The impassive dissociation she relied on during her mage-knight days resurfaced.

Two massive slabs erupted from the ground. Before the creature could comprehend what happened, the slabs slammed into each other.

Red and black oozed from between the slabs.

Genoa turned from the doorway and stalked down the hallway after Arachne.

That could have been her daughter.

Her daughter was not safe.

<– Back | Index | Next –>

003.021

<– Back | Index | Next –>

Eva vanished. Irene vanished. Worst of all, she was in history class.

Easily the most boring class at Brakket. Juliana found most of the practical classes to be fairly dull except on the odd occasion that they let her cast magic at her level instead of the class’ level. Zagan’s class turned out to be one of the better classes in that regard.

Zoe’s class was actually her favorite. She often challenged Juliana to think in new and unusual ways.

History tended to be the exact opposite.

Professor Carr wasn’t a bad person or a bad teacher. She made jokes every now and again, she spoke well, and she was very enthusiastic about history.

The biggest problem was that Juliana wasn’t.

She loved her mother’s tales of her mage-knight adventures. They were fascinating. Part of that was simple respect and love for her mother. The rest was sheer awe at what she’d accomplished. How much she’d survived.

In the end, Juliana just didn’t care about some Orrian vizier and how he doomed himself and his home due to messing with things he simply didn’t understand.

It happened while Egyptians were still building the pyramids. She couldn’t quantify something so old. It didn’t affect her and just wasn’t something that applied in her daily life.

Juliana tended to spend the class fine tuning her ferrokinesis control out of sight from Professor Carr. It wasn’t like she couldn’t pay attention at the same time. Splitting her concentration might even be handy practice for distractions in combat.

“The vizier was eventually destroyed,” Professor Carr said. “A large force of mages managed to stir the dormant volcano he made his home. The nearby village of Pompeii was entirely destroyed and covered in ash. Given the difficulty in eliminating those touched by the Corrupter, this was seen as a necessary cost.”

Juliana formed fine etchings into her metallic gloves. Each ran around her wrist into fine curls leading up to her shoulder. Only a handful of the words the professor spoke actually made it to her ears.

As Professor Carr got into her own lecture, she started pacing back and forth with large hand gestures. “Of course, not everyone thought he died. Even today some people still believe he managed to survive. One theory states that he has spent the last two thousand years rebuilding himself from a single cell. It isn’t widely believed; many think two thousand years is far too long. He should have rebuilt himself long before now.”

Each curl ended with a tiny snowflake. Forming the six-sided fractal took a lot more concentration than simple curls. They would only just be visible without looking right up close, but they would be detailed.

“Others theorize that he is merely trapped on another plane of existence and unable–”

Juliana jumped in her seat as the overhead loudspeaker crackled to life. It took a moment for her to realize what it was; it hadn’t been used as far as she could recall.

The voice of the dean’s secretary cleared her throat twice before she spoke in a bored tone of voice.

“The dean has issued a warning code seven. All professors are to move their students to the gymnasium and remain there. At no point is any student to leave the main building. Security groups two and three are to ready and report to the guard-room for further orders. Security group one is to ready and standby in the gymnasium.”

There was a light sigh from the intercom. The voice continued, though it sounded far away from the microphone. Juliana had to strain to hear her speak.

“Do I really have to repeat it?” A brief pause. “Fine.” She moved back next to the microphone and repeated the message.

With every word in the repeated message, Professor Carr turned paler and paler. She looked back to the class with wide eyes as soon as the loudspeaker crackled off. “Don’t panic,” she said, “I’m sure it is just a drill. Gather up and let’s get to the gym.”

“What is a code seven?” Jordan asked.

“Large force of potential hostiles near the school.”

“Oh.”

The rest of the class started fidgeting.

“Like I said, I’m sure it is just a drill,” Professor Carr said in a tone that made Juliana think it was anything but. “Let’s gather up. Is anyone in the restroom?”

“Irene and Eva aren’t here,” Shelby said. “They were here at lunch until Irene dragged Eva off. I don’t know where they are now.”

“Oh dear. Do they have cellphones?” At the shake of Shelby’s head, Professor Carr pulled out a smart phone and started tapping away at it. “I’ve alerted the security team leader. He’s sending one of his people to search.”

Shelby nodded, though she looked somewhat sick.

Juliana wasn’t that worried. Eva could take care of herself.

“Alright,” Professor Carr said, “when we get to the gym, stay together. Don’t mingle with the other classes. We need to know where you are and if you run off, we have to send someone looking for you even if you’re just over with some friends.”

With that said, the professor grouped them together and started ushering everyone down the halls. Other classes moved through in a similar manner. None of the students broke away to meet with other classmates.

Which wasn’t all that surprising. Juliana’s year consisted of twenty-something students and they were already all together. Few people likely interacted with those in higher or lower years on a regular basis.

Juliana might even be ahead of the curve at that. She had talked with older students on occasion. Usually when delivering new anti-scrying packets. The discussions never lasted long and she wouldn’t call herself friends with anyone, but she was fairly amicable with most students.

As they turned the corner into a hallway with a front-facing window, Juliana bumped right into Shalise.

“What did you stop for?” Juliana asked as she rubbed the bump out of her nose.

Shalise didn’t say anything. She simply stared out the window.

Following her gaze, Juliana searched for what drew her attention. It was dark. Far darker than it had been on the way to school. Dark enough with the heavy storm clouds that it took a moment to comprehend what she was seeing. Juliana let out a quiet, “oh.”

Something moved right in front of her face, prompting a small start. It took a second to realize what it was. She had activated her ferrokinesis and failed to notice until the helmet molded itself around her head.

“Oh,” Shalise repeated.

Two members of the security force stood between the academy building and a group of monsters. A large group. Juliana stopped counting at twenty and that was only a fraction. It didn’t help that it was difficult to tell where some of them ended and the next ones began.

A number of the monsters looked to be swarming into one of the dorm buildings. Her dorm building.

Both of the security members only attacked when one of the creatures got too close. A massive wall of water formed up and swept a creature off its feet before freezing the creature to the ground. Icicles formed in the middle of the air and dropped straight down.

A short distance away, creatures just seemed to die. The two water mages didn’t have anything to do with it. Like an invisible line that would decapitate anything that crossed.

“I think there is someone else there,” Shalise mumbled to herself. “Every time a thing dies, there’s a little humanoid flicker.”

Juliana squinted, but couldn’t make anything out. She did see one of the creatures shrug off the wall of water and the following ice spikes.

Both security guards started backing up as water pooled around its legs and started to freeze.

That did nothing to slow its gradual charge.

A thick arm reached out and gripped one guard around the chest. Icicle after icicle impacted the arm until it froze and shattered. The guard fell to the ground and started crawling away on his hands and knees.

The still-standing guard had to run back and help drag the first to his feet. Still supporting him, they turned back and renewed their attacks against the tide of creatures.

They both were alive, but they lost a good chunk of ground. Worse, their attacks did not seem to be on the same level they were before the creature. The one who had been partially crushed got slower and slower in his casting until he stopped completely.

It was only a matter of time until another creature shrugged off the attacks.

“We need to get out there and help out.”

“You will do nothing of the sort Miss Rivas.”

Juliana turned to face a furious Zoe. She had her own horde of concerned children at her back.

“But Eva’s out there!”

She wasn’t certain, but if Juliana were Eva, she would be out there. It was a pretty good bet.

Zoe agreed if her narrowed eyes and pursed lips were any indicator. “Of course she is. Miss Eva cannot help but involve herself in every trouble in this city. You will not follow her lead.”

“The security force is being beaten back already! Even if Eva and Arachne are out there, they’re still outnumbered a-lot-to-one.”

“Ylva is already moving out there.”

“She’s just one person,” Juliana said without thinking. She bit her lip. Ylva was powerful. She had forced both herself and Zoe to their knees with a single word. But that was inside her domain. Juliana had learned a great deal since then.

Domains twisted themselves and reality within to suit the whims of the owner. It took a great deal of willpower to override the subconscious wish-fulfillment, but even then, the subconscious was still there. A word that forced everyone to kneel likely wasn’t troublesome for someone like Ylva.

Outside the domain, Ylva’s power lessened by orders of magnitude. Juliana had no idea to what degree, but it wouldn’t be insignificant. Surely she wouldn’t object to assistance.

“The little girl?” Someone said, breaking Juliana from her thoughts.

“There she is!”

“She’s all alone. What is she doing?”

Juliana moved right next to the window along with several other students, all shouting about Ylva.

Ylva walked slowly, almost casually, past the two security guards. One shouted something at her. She ignored them.

Someone to her side let out a loud scream–causing Juliana to jump a few feet–as an ogre of some sort swung a club at Ylva.

She sidestepped. The club crushed the concrete and nothing else.

Ylva moved up and placed one hand on the ogre’s wrist. Charcoal black veins spread outwards from her touch.

The ogre jumped backwards, leaving its club and part of its arm behind.

Someone broke the silence. “What was that?”

“Nothing to concern yourselves over,” Zoe said with a note of finality. “Keep away from the windows. It isn’t safe. And keep moving.”

With the help of Professor Carr and another teacher that showed up, Zoe got the students moving again, if slowly. Some backed away immediately upon hearing that it was unsafe. Most tried to stare out the window as much as possible before they went out of view.

Juliana was one of those in the latter group. She languished behind alongside Shalise. Zoe and the other professor led the students while Professor Carr kept up the rear.

The moment they turned a corner, Juliana gripped Shalise’s arm and mouth before she pulled her companion into a classroom. It had already been evacuated. Holding her breath, and hoping Shalise was doing the same, Juliana waited for the last few students to walk past.

She let out a light sigh when no one called her out.

“What are we doing?” Shalise shout-whispered the moment Juliana took her hand off her face.

“Ylva is just one person,” Juliana whispered as she shut the door. “She can be attacked from behind, she can be hurt. Eva’s out there somewhere, she has to be. And Irene too. We can’t just not help them!”

“That thing almost crushed that poor elf. I don’t know how he kept standing. All the ribs in his chest had to have been crushed. We can’t go out there.”

“I never said we were.” Juliana rummaged through her bag and pulled out a stick of chalk. “We’re going to get some help and then go to the gym. No one will even notice we were missing. Help me move these desks around.”

Shalise went silent as Juliana got to work. She waited until Juliana finished clearing the floor, finished the circle, and started the far more complex diagrams that went within the circle before speaking. “What do you mean by that?”

Juliana froze her hand where it was. “Exactly what it sounds like. They’re outnumbered. We are going to help even that number.”

She started moving her hand again, trying to remember exactly where each mark went. This would be a lot easier with the book, Juliana thought. She’d done it a million times and only used the book as an occasional reference after a while.

But this was different. There were pressures. Juliana wasn’t in her safe room. She didn’t have the book to double-check everything. A teacher could walk in at any time.

And a giant army.

Juliana had to stop and take a few calming breaths. Her hand was shaking. Shaking enough that she worried the shackles or the summoning circle itself would fail completely.

“We shouldn’t do this. I’m sure they have it under control. They would have said something if they didn’t.”

“Did you see the same thing I saw? There were like a hundred of them. And you said it yourself, one of those defenders is already all but out of the fight. How long will it take for the others to fall. There’s only four of them, including Eva if she’s out there. All it would take is a lucky strike and there goes another.”

“Why don’t we get Arachne and your mother? The two of them could probably take them all on at once.”

That gave her pause. Juliana had just started marking out more of the shackles. She pulled back and put her hands in her lap as she thought.

“That may be,” Juliana eventually said, “but I’m not so deluded into thinking my mom is immortal. All her scars are testament to that. I’d rather throw away things I don’t care about than put my mother in the middle of all that.” She leaned forwards to continue drawing lines. “Besides, I don’t have a good way to get to the prison.”

“I’m sure Zoe would take us.”

Juliana paused once again before shaking her head. “No. They’re after our rings. What if the prison is under attack and we teleport right in the middle of the enemy? It isn’t like we can teleport directly into Ylva’s domain. They could be waiting for us.”

Shalise frowned, but Juliana paid her no mind. The circle and shackles were nearing completion.

“Just keep an eye on my back for a minute and we can get back to everyone else.”

“Fine,” Shalise muttered.

Juliana watched as she moved between the summoning circle and the door. She had half a mind to send the other girl out of the room, but that might draw attention if another class passed by on their way to the gym. Watching out the window in the door would have to suffice.

After making the last few marks, Juliana reached into her bag and started searching. At the very bottom, in a small pouch that Juliana had sewn herself, she found the object she was looking for.

A small eye made of glass.

He said he wouldn’t come unless Zagan was gone, but surely they’d be working together.

Juliana set the blue eye down in the center of the summoning circle and took a few steps back, almost bumping into Shalise in the process.

“And what do we have here?”

Juliana felt her heart lurch out of her chest as she jumped to her feet. Her grip tightened, crushing the bit of chalk between her metal-lined fingers.

Shalise fared no better. She let out a soft squeak before stuttering out, “P-Professor Zagan.”

“I thought you were watching,” Juliana hissed as she looked at the intruder. Both golden eyes danced with a sort of amusement that put her nerves into shock.

Slowly, Juliana dragged Shalise back onto the summoning circle. It wasn’t active yet and the shackles should keep demons out. A traitorous thought crossed Juliana’s mind. Not a demon of that caliber. He could walk over the shackles without even noticing their presence.

“I-I was. He just appeared.”

“My, my. Children missing from the gym? And here I find them setting demons loose to terrorize their peers.” He shook his head in mock sadness before he ran fingers through his wavy, brown hair. “Where did I go so wrong that my own students became such malefactors.”

“No!” Juliana shouted. “We were trying to help.”

“Help bolster the enemy forces? You’ll never get away with such deviance!” Zagan sighed. A long, drawn out, fake sigh. “Then again, you did skip out on your other punishment. Perhaps we’ll have to go with something harsher than mere detention, yeah?”

Juliana blinked. It took a moment to jog her memory enough to realize what he was talking about. “That was the first week! Zoe got attacked. I had a lot on my mind.” She took a breath and added, “you should have said something the week after, not now.”

“I let it slide because I thought you were normally a good student. Now I find you here and you don’t even try to deny bolstering the enemy?”

“I’m no–”

“And what about this mess?” He gestured towards Juliana’s feet.

With a flash, he was standing right in front of her, just outside the shackles. He flashed again and he moved around the circle, towards Juliana’s one o’clock. He moved to two with another flash. It was like watching someone dancing in a strobe light.

Shalise huddled in right next to Juliana. Her shivers could be felt through the thick layer of metal covering her arm.

“Shoddy work,” Zagan said with a tut. “I’d have expected Eva to be far better a teacher than this.”

“I learned it from a book.”

“I’m surprised you managed to get anything out of this. Without killing yourself,” he added.

Juliana felt her face heat up. She was mostly sure this circle was no different from the other ones she’d used. “I’ll have you know that I’ve summoned plenty of things. Without killing myself.”

He laughed. Laughed. “So I see. Still, far too dangerous for an uneducated student. I think Martina plans to do something about that, but it will come too late for you, I’m afraid.” He flashed in front of Juliana with his lips curled into a grin.

If he hadn’t already got the hairs on the back of Juliana’s neck to stand on end, that grin would have done it. Shalise actually let out a small whimper.

“And you,” Zagan said as his golden eyes flicked to Shalise. “What’s your role in this treachery.”

“N-nothing. We weren’t doing anything.”

“The circle you’re standing on begs to differ.”

Juliana took half a step forwards. Not enough to move off the circle, but enough to get slightly in Zagan’s face. “Is this really the time? The school is under attack! If you’re half as powerful as Eva thinks you are, you could stop everyone with less effort than a snap of your fingers.”

He took a step back, looking far more affronted than he had any right to be. “I’m but a humble teacher. We hired the security guards to protect the school. As a teacher, my job stops at instructing students and correcting mistakes.

“Ah, and it seems you’ve made a mistake.”

A chill ran through Juliana’s spine as she broke eye contact with the demon. Following his pointed finger, she glanced down at the light glow beneath her feet. The summoning circle started rotating.

It wasn’t the circle she drew. The lines were all wrong. Arrows turned the wrong way. Crosses became circles. A curve to the left became a curve to the right. She couldn’t have messed it up that badly.

A cold sweat dripped down Juliana’s back as she turned her eyes towards Zagan. His golden eyes spread a faint glow through the suddenly dark room.

“That isn’t a summoning circle,” he said. “That’s a transference circle.”

“Wha–”

“Don’t worry, there will be plenty of time for you to make up your detention.”

Juliana’s stomach dropped. The ground no longer supported her weight. The classroom shrank to a tiny dot in the all-encompassing darkness.

Gripping Shalise’s arm, both fell screaming into the void.

<– Back | Index | Next –>

003.020

<– Back | Index | Next –>

Eva hummed a soft tune to herself. She had never been one for music. Unlike most of the students at her old school, Eva never owned any sort of music player. At her old school, nearly everyone had one. They’d listen to them in the halls, during lunch, and in the classroom if the teacher permitted. She had seen a handful of people with headphones around Brakket, but they were far less prevalent here.

As such, her tune was just a formless rhythm. It didn’t have any purpose or meaning beyond filling the silence.

And what a silence it was.

Irene hadn’t said a word in half an hour.

Once they had arrived at the changing room, she just stood around while Eva shed her clothes. Eva had left her behind with a wave and crossed the fake, snowy mountain to one of the slightly more secluded springs. She fully expected to get out five minutes later to find that Irene had run off.

When Irene walked out, trying and failing to cover herself with her hands, Eva had let some surprise show on her face. Irene had stood outside the pool, blushing furiously. She had only slipped into the water after Eva let out a short cough.

Since then, her heart rate increased with every passing second. Irene’s eyes darted between the door and Eva, as if expecting someone to barge in and assign detention. If Eva was feeling somewhat guilty about skipping Zoe’s class, Irene must be freaking out at the thought of missing two whole classes.

Eva was beginning to think her stress relief retreat had backfired.

“If I am bothering you so much,” Eva said without opening her eyes, “you can go. I don’t want you to feel like you have to stay on my account.”

“N-no. I’m just…”

“I’m not going to eat you or anything.”

Irene hugged her knees to her chest. “How did I let myself get talked into this?”

“You didn’t. I dragged you out here.”

Eva’s words fell on deaf ears.

“Mom is going to have that disappointed look on her face. And Shelby,” Irene let out a soft groan, “is going to be insufferable.”

“She’s skipped plenty of times in the past.”

“But I haven’t.”

“There’s a first time for everything.”

“That’s not the point.” Irene’s voice turned soft, just barely loud enough for Eva to hear. “She’s going to make fun of me.”

Eva frowned and actually opened her eyes to look at the girl. “Your twin bullies you?”

“Not really. But this might warrant extra attention,” Irene said with a sigh. “I can see it already. She’ll ask me where I was and ‘who was the lucky guy’ that I was with. When I say that we were here, she’ll gasp and put her hands over her mouth like it is such a scandal before breaking down in laughter. Maybe even asking if your,” her eyes flicked up to Eva for a second before they turned back to the door, “if your pet was part of our activities.”

Eva’s frown deepened. That didn’t sound as bad as she had been expecting, but it was clearly bothering Irene. “Well, you don’t have to worry about Arachne joining in. She found a new toy to play with and I just haven’t the heart to pull her away from it. She won’t be around until the end of school to pick us up.”

Irene shot a glare at Eva. The glare withered as Eva stared back. “Now you’re doing it,” Irene mumbled.

“Just play it up. Square your shoulders and say ‘it’ was great. Relish the surprise on her face when you turn her little tease around on her.”

Irene sputtered in the water for a moment before she said, “I couldn’t do something like that.”

“When she asks exactly what ‘it’ was, just smile. If it really is so bothersome, tell her you were just relaxing in the hot spring and nothing else.”

A small splash rippled the water as Irene dunked her head beneath the water.

Eva leaned back, shutting her eyes once again. The conversation managed to lower Irene’s heart rate by a small bit. That was a win in her eyes.

Another splash signaled Irene popping her head back above the surface.

Her scream split the silence.

Eva jumped to full alert. Before she even turned, she saw it through her sense of blood.

It was like someone had taken a flesh golem and strapped on the arms of a bear. It had a human head and a mostly human torso, but the thing became a snake from the waist down, ending in a second fanged head.

As Eva’s head turned to fully observe the creature, she realized those were not bear arms. They were the paws of a dog. A dog that left smoking trails of brimstone anywhere it stepped.

The paws of a cerberus.

“Wha–”

Eva wasted no time. She gripped Irene around the waist and used her powerful legs to vault out of the hot spring in a single bound.

“Come on,” Eva said as they landed. “We have to get out of here.” She firmly gripped Irene around the wrist and started pulling her off towards the men’s changing room on the opposite end of the room.

She’d probably have bruises in the morning.

To her credit, Irene had yet to scream a second time. Her heart was racing. If Eva thought it was beating hard earlier, it jumped into potentially dangerous territory now.

Eva’s own heart was hammering in her chest. She couldn’t help it. Her blood vials and dagger were both back in the girl’s changing room.

With a thought, the blood–pretouched by her dagger–burst out of its vials. She was almost out of preservative vials, they kept breaking or needed breaking. But this was an emergency. She tried to wrap the dagger in blood and move it the way she had with the bloodstones in Hell, but the dagger was too heavy and failed to budge.

Cursing under her breath, Eva left the dagger where it was. She’d double back as soon as she got out of the boy’s changing room.

Eva skidded to a halt at the threshold of the changing room. Her sharp feet dug into the ground in an effort to gain more traction. She threw both herself and Irene to the ground, shielding the two of them from a harsh impact with one fist.

Another creature burst through the wall just as Eva dived out of the way.

It had a human head once again, but it turned into a patchwork mess of parts below the neck. The legs looked more crustacean than anything else and the arms terminated in crystalline spears.

There were at least two more things inside the changing room and another outside.

The crab thing started skittering towards the two girls. Unlike the first, which slithered slow and steady, this thing was fast.

Eva pulled all of Arachne’s blood to her. It formed into five marbles orbiting the two.

One marble split off, forming a ring around one of the crab-legged creature’s legs. With a clap of her hands, the blood detonated. The creature let out an inhuman screech as it lost balance and collapsed.

Eva scrambled to her feet, dragging Irene up with her. There had to be an emergency exit or something. This was definitely an emergency.

“Maintenance room,” Irene said with a gesture towards one wall.

Or something it is then.

They started running again. Eva took care to dig her feet into the ground. Slipping wouldn’t end with just a scrape. Together, they hit the unmoving door.

It was locked.

Eva wasn’t in the mood. Not wanting to waste blood, Eva opted for a strong kick.

Splinters of wood exploded as her chitinous foot connected. It wouldn’t shut properly, but the one creature burst through a wall. Eva doubted an intact door would have helped in the first place.

“Any exits?” Eva said as she entered the room.

Pipes and valves littered one wall. Far less magical than should be allowed at a magic academy. Then again, connecting all the pipes from the obviously space expanded pool room to regular space had to be a headache all on its own.

A small window, barely big enough to fit either of their bodies, rested high in the wall opposite from the pipes. Eva sent one orb of her blood to stretch around the glass. With a clap of her hands, the glass came out in a single pane. It fell outwards and a moment later came the sound of glass shattering against the ground outside.

A sob from behind her stopped Eva’s brisk walk towards the window.

Whatever adrenaline had been holding Irene together evidentially took its leave. She collapsed to her hands and knees. Tear streaks ran down her face. Eva hadn’t noticed until now, but her tears had probably been going on since she first caught sight of the snake-cerberus thing.

Eva placed her hands underneath Irene’s arms and tried to lift her back to her feet. “Can’t stop now. That door didn’t keep me out. It being all broken isn’t going to keep them out.”

Irene shrugged Eva off. “What is this?” Her voice edged with hysteria. “It’s always you. Why is it always you? Jordan manages to not upset everything, why can’t you? Why do you have to be such a freak?”

Frowning, Eva clamped her hands around the girl once again. This time she gripped with far less care. A little blood was surely preferable to whatever those things had in mind. “Questions to ask after we are safe. I’m going to help you up to the window. Be careful with the glass around the edges and on the ground outside.”

For extra safety, Eva sent two orbs of blood up to harden over some of the glass. The blood wouldn’t be half as sharp and could stand up to pressure so long as Eva kept it under her control.

“…don’t have clothes,” Irene mumbled. At least she was getting to her feet.

Once Irene was steady, Eva moved over below the window and clasped her hands together. “Ready to boost you up. And you better hurry.” The snake-cerberus thing was approaching the door. Something else behind it crawled closer as well.

Irene stood frozen until a noise in the other room startled her into action. She might have made a few gymnasts envious with how she jumped from Eva’s hand onto the window sill. It was good that blood covered the glass, as she gripped the edges hard.

Eva kept track of the slithering snake as she helped shove Irene through the small window. “Is there anything out there?” Eva asked. She knew the answer, at least within about fifty feet, but having confirmation might set her own heart at ease.

“Nothing.”

A stunted response. Eva shook her head. She’d deal with that later. “Good. Watch your feet.”

Eva sent her last orb of blood through the crack in the door. It splattered against the human face of the snake-cerberus creature–it was getting far too close for comfort. The moment Irene’s foot left Eva’s hands, Eva clapped.

The head exploded. Absolutely and completely. Through her blood sense, Eva could see all the bits of viscera that flew around the room. The main body dropped like a puppet with its strings cut. Only the snake head writhed around. Without the rest of the body holding itself up, the snake didn’t have enough strength to move.

What a waste, Eva thought. She should have split the orb in half. The human face was mushy enough. Then she could have used the rest on the other creature.

It trampled right over the top of the snake-cerberus without a moment’s hesitation. If the thing wasn’t dead before, it was now. The thing was partially an elephant. At least, it was large enough to be one.

Eva had half a mind to run back into the room and slip over into the girl’s changing room for her dagger. Two things stopped her. She didn’t want to leave Irene when there could be more creatures outside and she didn’t want to run back into the hot springs when she could see another three things behind the elephant.

Hoisting herself up, Eva climbed out the window. She had to kick in footholds to get the proper traction.

Irene was already running away, holding herself awkwardly in an attempt at covering herself. She headed towards the corner of the building that went towards the front.

That was a mistake.

“Irene! Stop!” Eva ran. Each of her legs cracked the cement around the building as she sprinted.

Irene had too much of a head start.

Eva wouldn’t make it.

A creature barreled into Irene as soon as she reached the corner. While the creature merely stumbled, Irene went flying. She hit the ground five feet away and tumbled and rolled another few feet.

It turned its taloned wings towards Irene and stalked forwards on bird-like legs.

Eva leaped high into the air. Her claws ignited.

She wasn’t the best at thaumaturgy. It and her claws were all she had.

The creature let out a squawk as Eva’s weight sent it to the ground.

Eva blinked and failed to move for a second. The creature had stitching keeping its limbs on. The muscle structure had been altered and several organs were completely missing.

It was a flesh golem with demon parts sewn on.

Eva shook her head. She wasted no time digging her flaming claws into the base of its neck.

Her claws did not make it very far.

The thing’s wing batted Eva into the wall of the building.

Pain lanced up her side. Her skin was unbroken, but something hurt. A broken rib perhaps.

Nothing to worry about now; Nurse Naranga could put her back together. The creature was already getting up.

Forcing down the pain, Eva brought her hands together. She channeled magic into the largest fireball she’d ever created. It took a moment, but she did it.

Mostly. Zagan’s class provided ample opportunity to practice and she had been getting better. The fireball was still unstable. It bubbled and twisted like a boiling pot of water rather than any sort of proper fire. Holding it too long would wind up with it splashing all over Eva.

So she projected it forwards.

The bird-golem shrieked as its feathers went up in flames.

Eva did not waste her opportunity. Ignoring the heat, she jumped onto the flaming bird and dug her claws into its throat.

She didn’t stop until it did.

The heart in its chest was not a human heart. Eva almost started to convert it to a bloodstone despite that. It wouldn’t be hard; she even had actual fingers now instead of fumbling around with her elbow. Unfortunately, it already ceased beating.

Eva pulled herself off the creature and ran over to Irene. She hadn’t moved since she fell, but her heart was beating. Her eyes were shut and her breathing somewhat shallow. Eva knelt and gently smacked her across the face. “Don’t be unconscious. We need to move.”

Irene failed to respond.

A crash and crumbling of walls brought Eva’s attention to the window they had escaped from.

A six-legged elephant stumbled through a hole in the wall. She could see an almost full human body somewhere in the center of its mass. Only the head poked out. It turned until it found Eva–it twisted almost fully around, facing directly backwards. Without turning back, the thing started charging.

Eva scooped up Irene into her arms. Ignoring the pain accompanying a grinding in her side, Eva started running. If it wasn’t for Arachne’s legs, she’d have collapsed in five steps. Irene was not light. The strain on Eva’s arms and back was unsustainable.

Worse, the six-legged elephant was not slow. With its target in sight, it was gaining. Every step Eva took brought the elephant three steps closer.

If she ditched Irene, Eva doubted she would have a problem outrunning it. But if she was willing to do that, she would have simply teleported away through an infernal walk.

Eva took a hard right back towards the dorm building, hoping the elephant would be unable to stop moving forwards.

Her hopes did not hold out.

The elephant stopped on a dime and angled towards Eva. Its charge started up an instant later.

Eva set down Irene as gently as she could without taking more than a second or two. She turned on the demon and started her own charge.

Her hands ignited in thaumaturgical fire. Against the feathers, fire did well. The tough looking hide of the elephant might be resistant, but it didn’t hurt to try.

Eva took the full brunt of its charge with her claws out. She couldn’t risk jumping over and having it not follow. Its current course would take it right over Irene otherwise.

The leg Eva hit was nearly her size. And it was sticky.

The impact was not what Eva had expected. Rather than flying off or being trampled, Eva stuck to the leg like glue. It stilled completely, once again stopping instantly.

No, not stuck to it. The flesh around her arms split apart and started pulling her into the beast.

Eva struggled backwards. It didn’t give an inch back, slowly drawing her claws further inside.

Lifting her foot, Eva tried to kick off her arm. Arachne would be happy to donate another one, Eva was certain.

A sudden lurch by the elephant got Eva’s leg stuck inside the thing.

Eva could feel panic settling in the back of her mind. She could handle being trampled or tossed, so long as her head and chest wasn’t crushed.

Even using the strength in her hands to crush the flesh did no good. All the surrounding flesh still drew her further in.

Eva ceased all her struggles. Maybe it is one of those things where the more you resist, the harder it gets.

She breathed a sigh of relief as her hand stopped slipping further into the elephant. It wasn’t coming out, but at least she wasn’t going to be swallowed up.

The elephant pressed its leg forwards, into the ground.

Eva took a brief gasp of air before her face pressed against the leg.

Fine, Eva thought while trying very hard not to panic. You want me inside? That’s perfect.

The resistance slipped away as Eva actively pressed into the elephant. She clawed and squirmed, trying to get further and further inside.

The human body was just out of reach. Its heart, however, was not a human heart. As large as a human’s head, it stuck out of the chest.

And Eva clawed towards it.

The moment the tips of her fingers raked across the heart, she felt a tremor go through the beast. Her fingers slipped away.

Oh no you don’t. Eva knew she was being somewhat hysterical as she clawed back to the heart. You wanted me in here, you don’t get to push me out.

The pushing got stronger, but not strong enough and not fast enough. The tip of Eva’s middle finger severed one of the major arteries leading out of the heart.

The tremors got worse. Eva’s head broke out of the elephant’s leg as it collapsed onto the ground. She took a huge gasp of air. She hadn’t been under its flesh for long, but she couldn’t risk it sucking her back in.

A shudder ran through the beast and it stopped pushing Eva out.

Her arms were still stuck in the meat.

“Great,” Eva mumbled to herself. A major mistake; some viscera got into her mouth.

It tasted like ash and sawdust.

Eva struggled against the now still leg. It was hardening. That set off a whole other wave of panic.

A childlike giggle drew Eva’s attention. She craned her neck, though she also looked through her blood sense.

Another of the monsters stood just a few paces away from the hardening elephant. Each of its four limbs seemed to have originated with different creatures. One looked like another cerberus paw, one was a tentacle, or perhaps a snake, another looked like a human foot with curved talons instead of toes, and the last was a metallic spear.

Stood might be the wrong word, Eva thought mirthlessly.

Thousands of thin tentacles coiled together around the thing’s waist. Together, they squeezed and crushed until the multi-armed creature was nothing more than a bloody pulp. The tentacles all traced back into the back of a young-looking woman. More giggles poured out of her, though her mouth was shut tight.

Lalum, no. Lilith? No. “Lucy,” Eva shouted.

The tentacle-woman didn’t so much as turn to face Eva as she simply formed a second face on the side of her head. Her smile stretched all the way from the face facing the creature to the face facing Eva.

Watching it melt into only the face facing Eva was somewhat disconcerting.

A coil of tentacles stretched towards Eva before they froze just a few inches away from her head. An eyeball and a mouth formed at the end.

“Oh! You’re Zagan’s embryonic thing.”

Eva frowned. She wasn’t Zagan’s anything. “I’m Eva. I need help getting out of here,” Eva said. “Try not to hurt me.”

The eyeball turned downwards to inspect the carcass. It snapped back up to meet Eva’s eyes. “You jumped into a cutvoro?” The mouth split in two separate mouths. They started to dance around Eva on their tentacles, echoing as she spoke again. “Insane! How are you not it?”

“Don’t know. Get me out, please.”

The eye and mouths vanished as the mass of tentacles increased. They wormed their way right next to Eva’s skin as they burrowed into the elephant’s flesh.

Eva could feel the tentacles as they started pulling away from her. The elephant split apart, crumbling as it did so. The smell was rancid, but Eva was happy to be out.

“You’re all fleshy!”

Lucy had moved to right next to the elephant, all the while still churning the multi-armed creature in her tentacles across the way.

“I thought humans needed clothes?” She rubbed her fingers over the black trench-coat she wore. “Mistress Martina said never to ever take clothes off no matter how much they get in the way.”

“First,” Eva said, “humans just don’t like to be naked most of the time. Second, give me your trench coat.”

“What? I can’t!”

Eva rolled her eyes. “You have other clothes on and I have none. Don’t worry. If Martina Turner complains, tell her it was all my idea.”

Lucy seemed to mull it over for a moment. Eventually, she nodded. At the end of her nod, all of her dissolved into a pillar of tentacles. They squirmed out of one of the trench coat sleeves and reformed into Lucy a step away, still wearing the suit she had on beneath.

Eva picked up the trench coat and slipped into it. There was some slickness on the inside, but she didn’t feel sick or hallucinatory so Eva paid it no mind. The coat was too big for her, she noted with some distaste.

“Third,” Eva said as she turned back to the still prone form of Irene. “I need you to take her to one of the school nurses. Very carefully. No toxins, no squeezing too hard, just gently carry her to a nurse. Do you understand?”

“What about all the monsters?”

Eva frowned. She needed her dagger back. Without Irene, she could teleport and grab Arachne. Together they’d be able to plow through everything.

“What is the rest of the security force doing?”

“Daru is killing things. So is the old guy and the elf. The children are protecting the other children with teachers.”

“Okay, then the old guy and Daru can take care of the other monsters. Once you get her to a nurse, you can rejoin fighting.”

Again, Lucy mulled it over before nodding. She deformed and reformed with Irene in her arms.

Her suit must be part of her body. There was no way it could just float in the swarm of tentacles and put itself back perfectly.

Eva idly rubbed her fingers on the trench coat. It might be tentacles too. Just a sheet of tentacles that had been colored and detached from the mass. It probably wasn’t since Daru wore an identical one, but the possibility was there.

Maybe I’ll get a new trench coat for master, Eva thought as Lucy ran off with Irene. His got more raggedy every time she saw it.

Eva shook her head. Not the time.

She sat down in the shadow of the elephant and started to carefully channel magic into herself for an infernal walk.

Five minutes and a quick flay through Hell had Eva stumbling out of her gateway circle in the prison.

After taking another minute to collect herself, Eva grabbed her old, crystalline dagger and her spare bloodstone–the one from Weilks. Fitting, she thought with a sardonic grin. The bloodstone was still unmounted, still too large to fit, but she could cut and then touch the bloodstone to the blood.

In fact, Eva thought. She slit open her arm and coated the bloodstone in enough blood to keep it aloft on its own. Quickly healing the cut, Eva rummaged through her spare vials of blood. Her stock had not recovered from Genoa’s attack. Less due to a lack of Arachne blood and more due to the shattered vials she hadn’t replaced. She pocketed two vials–enough for one good blood-claw, a dismemberment ring, or a small shield–and marched outside.

The area still looked like a war zone. They were supposed to clean up after themselves. Maybe they decided the day wasn’t over yet and they could clean up later. Eva couldn’t hear any signs of battle, so they must be done or taking a break.

Except they hadn’t ever taken a break while she was around.

Frowning, Eva headed towards Ylva’s domain. She pulled open the door.

A curled up Nel sat in front of Ylva’s throne. Her knees were pulled up to her chest. Very reminiscent of how Irene was acting before everything went to hell.

As Eva got closer, she could hear Nel mumbling to herself.

“They’re coming for me.”

>>Extra Chapter 007<<

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003.019

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Ylva didn’t sleep.

At all.

Zoe wasn’t quite sure what she expected, but she had laid out a fairly fancy bed for the demon. She had a gigantic bed in her domain, after all. Unless that entire thing was solely for Nel.

It wasn’t until the first week had passed that Zoe got any kind of real sleep in. Her time was spent watching Ylva. Waiting for her to do something.

On the first night, Ylva had gone around and inspected seemingly every object in Zoe’s apartment. Some, she would pass by with barely a glance. Others would receive a good amount of attention.

The next night, Ylva watched the television. She didn’t watch any stations, just the television itself. As if she had heard that humans like to watch television but didn’t quite know what that meant.

Zoe tried to turn it on for her the night after that, but Ylva had lost interest.

She moved on to rummaging through the few research documents that Zoe had saved from the fire. The only surviving ring notebook was of particular interest to the demon.

Part of Zoe wanted Ylva to add her own notes to it. She didn’t even comment on them.

A combination of growing accustomed to Ylva’s nightly antics and sheer exhaustion had Zoe falling asleep without much trouble by the weekend.

All except for Halloween night, during which Ylva stood guard. It was as if she expected something to happen. Although she had slept soundly for the previous few weeks, Zoe got no sleep on Halloween.

The entire situation was all so surreal. Even though it had been two and a half months since the attack on her home, she still kept expecting to wake up back in her burning home in the arms of those two demons. Every day that passed was a fresh relief in that department.

And today is another day.

Zoe arched her back and held it in a long stretch. With a long, open-mouthed yawn, she slid out of bed and started unbuttoning her nightshirt.

“Good morning, Ylva,” she said to the little girl sitting on the end of her bed.

Ylva gave her a brief nod in return.

Undressed fully, Zoe tossed her pajamas in the dirty laundry and started towards the shower.

As soon as she touched the door handle, Zoe froze. The feeling of icy water ran down her back. She slowly glanced back to her bed where tiny Ylva sat in one of the dresses they had purchased for her.

“Is something wrong?”

Ylva had never just shown up in her room before. She always waited out on the couch.

“You were thrashing in your sleep. We observed to ensure you did not come to harm.”

“That’s… Thanks, I suppose.”

Zoe pressed her fingers to her forehead and stepped into the shower as she tried hard not to think about her casual undressing in front of Ylva.

Aside from the lingering thought about the demons attacking her home, Zoe didn’t feel very bad. Not like right after it happened. She even felt well rested. No aches or pains in her neck, back, or legs like she might find if she was tossing and turning.

Ylva might have done something, but Zoe didn’t think her abilities extended into dream management.

Zoe shut off the hot water and dried off. Moving to the mirror, she ran a comb through her hair–it would dry in her preferred style. A quick dusting of hairspray after breakfast would keep it in place for the day. She only applied the bare minimum of makeup. She could never understand her old roommates and their need to sit in front of the mirror for hours on end.

There were only twenty-four hours in a day and a third of that was spent sleeping. Spending an hour or two more on makeup was simply inconceivable.

Then again, she was the only one of her old dorm mates to still be unmarried.

“Ylva,” Zoe called out as she finished suiting up, “are you ready to head out?”

“We are prepared.”

Zoe walked out into her room to find Ylva standing beside the bed. It hadn’t been made before Zoe got in the shower, but now it was nicely smoothed out and tucked in.

One thing she couldn’t complain about was the demon’s propensity for cleanliness. Any time Zoe left something for later, she found it tidied up. Dishes, clothing, and the bed of course.

Placing her hand on Ylva’s shoulder, Zoe teleported the two of them straight to her office. Unlike Eva, Arachne, and even Zagan, Ylva was not bothered by the trip through between. Something to do with her natural affinity for cold.

At least, that would be Zoe’s best guess. She hadn’t devoted much time to researching that particular aspect of Ylva and she hadn’t asked.

The bell signaling the five-minute warning before class started for the day echoed through her office.

Today is another day, Zoe thought with a sigh as she opened up her classroom door.

— — —

Jordan’s eyes turned from his meal. He sat up straight and looked over Eva’s shoulder. His normally gray eyes lit up with burning interest. “An elf?” he all but squeaked.

Eva set down her fork and turned to follow his gaze. She wasn’t very interested in eating the breakfast burrito anyway. It wasn’t even breakfast.

Sure enough, an elf wandered into the lunchroom alongside a glasses-wearing-man. Both wore silver patches on the sides of their shirts identifying them as members of Martina Turner’s new security force. Eva had seen the glasses guy around on a few occasions over the past few days, but it was her first time seeing the rumored elf. She even had a chance to meet the two ‘specialists’ that were creeping around the halls.

He had his long platinum hair–that couldn’t hold a candle to Ylva’s own–drawn back into a ponytail. Eva couldn’t be sure from across the room, but his lips and eyebrows seemed to be drawn on. They were too smooth and held no depth.

Eva gave a small shudder. The more she looked, the more alien the elf appeared. His eyes were too wide and his nose too small. His lanky arms stretched just too long.

It was silly, she knew. Arachne had eight eyes and had plated carapace covering her instead of skin. Ylva was a giant. Neither had ever disturbed her like the elf.

“Wow,” came the soft voice of Shalise.

Eva turned to find Shelby, Juliana, and Shalise all in open-mouthed stares. They obviously did not agree with her assessment. Several students in Eva’s peripheral vision had also noticed the elf.

She met the eyes of a sighing Irene and for the barest of moments, they had an understanding. The moment was lost as she averted her eyes.

Giving a sigh of her own, Eva looked back to her other friends. “You’re gawking,” she said to nobody in particular.

“And I don’t even care,” said Shelby without breaking her stare.

Jordan had the decency to cough and look away. “I’ve never seen an elf before.”

Eva frowned. “You didn’t act half as starstruck when I told you my little secret.”

“Well, we had already seen Arachne and your hands before you said anything. The shock was dampened.”

Eva rolled her eyes. “Is an elf really all that shocking? I mean, it isn’t like humans are barred from entering their little communities.”

“True. But seeing one outside their hives? Definitely surprising. Leaving is some sort of stigma unless they were ordered to for the purpose of strengthening the hive.”

Eva glanced back over at the elf. He and the other security guard chatted quietly amongst themselves while gathering a plateful of burritos. The conversation seemed very one-sided with the elf doing most of the talking. By the time the two took their seats at a table, Eva hadn’t counted the glasses guard moving his lips more than twice.

At least they’re not hovering around the room giving me the evil eye, Eva thought as she turned back to Jordan. “And that one isn’t ordered to protect the village?”

Jordan gave Eva a flat stare. “He’s working as a security guard for a human school,” he said in a voice just as flat.

“Point taken.”

“But I suppose they aren’t all that interesting. They’ve got a basic human organ system with slightly denser bone and muscle groups, but nothing too out of the ordinary. Their inherent magical properties are interesting, but ultimately not too unique.”

“You can take a breath of air every now and again,” Eva said with a smile. “Where did you learn all this?”

“Oh,” his own smile slipped for a moment before it returned in full force. “My parents have amassed a collection of books that might rival the combined libraries of Brakket, Miskatonic, Dunholm, and Vincent. It might be impossible to read them all in my lifetime, but that’s not going to stop me from trying.”

Eva nodded. That was a respectable endeavor. She had her own pile of books she was working through.

The necromancy books she had acquired were far less interesting than she was hoping for. Eva had no real desire to kill people and bind their souls into ghosts. Zombies were even less appealing. That Ylva would likely object to most everything in those books didn’t endear her to them any further.

All in all, it was largely a waste of time. She planned on finishing the introduction to soul binding–the process of affixing spirits to items in order to create all kinds of nasty effects–and then switch back to her studies into blood magic. The rest of the books could rot in her library until she found a better use.

There were certain rituals she wanted to get into. Eva knew a few, the cleansing that she used on Shalise first and foremost. Another could be used to bolster a group’s general toughness and strength. The set up time and amount of blood required were not exactly feasible for that one. The ritual had been designed for large armies with sacrificial slaves for a boost in a coming battle. Her wards were technically considered a ritual, but it didn’t exactly act like it.

What she was really interested in was something that Sawyer had mentioned. As much as she tried not to remember, the surprise he expressed when Eva failed to simply reattach her detached toes had not escaped her. An ability to pull herself back together if she ever found herself in such a situation again would be invaluable.

Not that Eva had any intentions of allowing that to happen.

The ringing bell signaling the end of lunch broke Eva out of her thoughts.

Everyone started moving. Those who still had food left on their plates quickly ate. Eva didn’t. She tossed the remains of the burrito into a nearby trash bin. Max would have been appalled, but he had not sat with their group for a week or two.

Eva felt somewhat responsible for that. She didn’t think he had been too freaked out by her little reveal, not as much as Irene was, but maybe it just needed time to sink in. One day, Max worked on a history report with one of the other students in class. She slowly saw less and less of him until he stopped sitting with them completely.

Arachne already threatened to tear out his spine if he ever said a word. By all appearances so far, he hadn’t.

Conversely, Irene was much happier. She smiled a whole lot more–though never in Eva’s direction. The girl hadn’t missed a beat in claiming Max’s seat next to her sister. She barely acknowledged Eva’s presence, but at least she hadn’t run off.

As Eva’s thoughts drifted to the girl, so did her eyes. For the second time in an hour, Irene met her gaze. If that alone wasn’t enough cause her eyebrows to creep up her forehead, Irene cleared her throat.

“Um, can I talk to you for a second?”

“Sure,” Eva said with what was hopefully a kind smile.

Irene held her gaze for another second or two before she glanced off to some point over Eva’s shoulder. As if looking at her directly would be painful. After a moment of standing there, she gripped Eva by the upper arm and pulled her off to a corner of the room.

Eva gave Juliana a shrug as she allowed herself to be dragged off.

“What did you need?”

“Nothing, really. I just wanted to make sure you knew. The girl over there, the one with all the stitches. She’s been staring at you.”

Rather than turn her head, Eva looked through her sense of blood. The blended girl had her eyes directly on the side of Eva’s head. Her companion seemed wholly engrossed with his meal, apparently unconcerned with the bell having rung.

“That isn’t entirely unexpected,” Eva said with a nod. “I was fairly cruel to her after she… well,” Eva lifted her hand in the air.

Irene flinched back.

Eva immediately dropped her arm behind her back. “Sorry.”

“No. No. I’m fine. I just,” she slowly tuned her gaze to Eva’s other side. “It isn’t just today. She’s been staring–glaring even–for weeks. Every time I look around, her, her mismatched eyes are just there.”

She ran a hand through her hair, leaving short, brown strands out of place on the side of her head.

“Irene,” Eva said, forcibly restraining herself from reaching forwards. “Are you alright?”

“I just… You, and her, and Jordan, and regular school, and Professor Lurcher being gone, and Professor Baxter’s injuries, and–”

“Irene. Let’s go sh–swimming.” Eva almost said shopping. She managed to stop herself just in time. It was her first instinct to say, but shopping was not on the list of things she was very interested in. “Or the hot springs.”

“What?” She actually looked up straight into Eva’s eyes. Her eyes darted from left to right, looking into each of Eva’s eyes. By the fifth pass, she seemed to realize what she was looking at. Irene took a step backwards and averted her eyes again.

“You’re stressed out.” A whole lot more than Eva originally thought. “When was the last time you did anything that wasn’t schoolwork or worry about the people around you?”

“I don’t–”

“Come on.” Eva put on her kindest smile. “Just you and me. I’m not going to hurt you. We can just swim or relax in the pool. We don’t even have to talk if you don’t want to.”

“Right now?”

“If we go now, you can’t think about it. You don’t have time to worry and get stressed out about it.”

“We have class.”

“Professor Carr won’t mind if you explain that stress was getting to you. Neither will Zoe. And it isn’t even lying.”

“I don’t know…”

“I do.” Eva held out her hand.

This time, Eva did not withdraw when Irene took a step backwards. Eva did ensure the sharp tips of her fingers were all folded inwards. All the while, Irene’s eyes stayed glued to the claw.

They stayed frozen as the lunchroom cleared around them. Irene’s heart rate picked up as time wore on. Just as she started to reach her hand out, the bell rang.

They were late to class.

Rather than give Irene the opportunity to second guess herself, Eva reached out and grabbed the partially extended hand.

Irene let out a small ‘eep’ as Eva started dragging her away from their classroom.

“I-I don’t even have a swimsuit.”

Eva grinned. “Neither do I.”

— — —

Nel took a deep breath of the frankincense filled air. She much preferred the steamy air of Lady Ylva’s baths–even with the revelation that she had been spied upon since she got there–but she had a job to do.

It wasn’t even a difficult job. Quite the opposite, really. A mix between monotonous and relaxing. Nel had overworked herself to the point of passing out after the demons attacked.

Lady Ylva had been very clear afterwards that she was never to do something so foolish again. Her property was to be kept in good, working order. An unconscious augur was an unproductive augur.

Warm feelings fluttered around Nel’s stomach every time she realized that Lady Ylva actually cared. If in her own, slightly twisted way. Nel had a feeling that she would be worked as hard as or harder than Sister Cross had Eva been in charge of her.

So, Nel slowly and very relaxedly cycled through her fetters. She wasn’t even doing it every hour. Especially not while the children were at school. They were all together and Lady Ylva was right there with them.

A strand of platinum hair drifted over in front of Nel as her master crossed her mind.

Lady Ylva sat at her own table in the back of a classroom. Her head rested on an upraised fist as she slouched back in the chairs. An almost perfect recreation of the pose she had on her large throne; all except for the fact that her tiny legs didn’t quite reach the floor. They just kind of dangled in the air.

Nel wished she possessed the kind of impulsiveness required to just up and hug the little girl.

Zoe Baxter was in the same room as Ylva, teaching, so Nel skipped over that strand of hair.

Arachne and Genoa were out fighting. Again. Nel rolled her eyes. The first few days, she had been glued to watching them. Their fights were very flashy and interesting, but quickly dulled as Nel realized there wasn’t much actual danger. Neither had managed to kill each other. Nel suspected they both were holding cards in their sleeves just in case they ever had to actually fight one another.

Genoa’s daughter sat with Sister Cross’ daughter in a different class. History by the looks of the textbook.

An empty seat at Juliana’s side gave Nel pause. Her breath hitched as a long, black hair moved into position.

Nel let out a small sigh. She’d been worried for nothing. Eva looked extremely relaxed in a large pool of steaming water. Her eyes were shut and she had a faint smile on her face as she rested her head against a headrest set outside the pool.

Eva’s companion looked distinctly less relaxed. The girl, who Nel vaguely recalled seeing around Eva on occasion, had her knees to her chest and her arms wrapped around herself beneath the surface of the water. Only her head above her nose poked out. Her eyes darted between the ceiling, Eva, and the door to the room.

It was somewhat maddening. She was squandering the fairly impressive hot springs of their dorms. Not as impressive as Lady Ylva’s bath, of course.

Nel had half a mind to go and take her own bath right then and there. She restrained herself with no small amount of reluctance.

Her final fetter–a vial of blood that was heavily coagulated despite the preservative vial–drifted over in front of Nel. Eva wouldn’t be able to make use of such a decayed sample, but Nel didn’t use haemomancy.

The boy attached to the fetter was disturbing as always. He had a blank, vacant gaze that Nel normally attributed to victims of spectral possession. That Ylva had been in the same room and hadn’t obliterated the ghost was the only reason Nel second guessed herself about the boy’s condition.

That it probably wasn’t a ghost didn’t make it any less unnerving.

Nel blinked one set of eyes. He wasn’t in a classroom. Or the Brakket dorms. The floor had orange, interlocking hexagons with red hexagons in the center. Featureless white walls separated numbered doors. A hotel?

The little girl that never left the boy’s side was absent.

Nel detached her vision from the fetter and moved outside the hotel. The town didn’t appear to be Brakket. The roads were all different and it was missing the lake and Brakket Academy itself. It was not missing the mostly deserted feeling.

Back inside the hotel–and it was a hotel albeit a small one–Nel peeked into one of the rooms.

Her heart skipped three beats.

Three things sat in the room. One had sharp razors for arms. They hung in front of him like scythes. Another was a bird of some sort. At least, it had the wings and beak of one. Nel wasn’t sure it would be able to fly without a heavy dose of magic. The third looked like someone had literally stapled Arachne’s black chitin to its body.

With some morbid curiosity, Nel checked the next room. Four creatures, all similar to the first three. The next room only had two. Then six.

Nel stopped and focused back on the boy’s fetter.

He wasn’t in the hotel. The boy stood on the street between the two Brakket dorm buildings. A scowling, patchwork woman stood in front of him.

An army of monsters stood at his back.

Nel bolted, ignoring the fetters that fell out of the air. She ran out of her private clairvoratorium and around the massive hole in the throne room. Her hand froze as it touched the ornate handle leading out of Lady Ylva’s domain.

The Order was surely looking for her, at least cursory glances, if not active searches. They would not abide a rogue augur. Especially not one as ‘compromised’ as Nel.

Nel bit her lip and made her choice.

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