26. Lucas

I don’t know how long I wandered. It could have been five minutes – it could have been fifty. I remember slipping into an alcove, a divot in the rock face, and finding myself on my hands and knees being violently ill. I closed my eyes and heaved until there was nothing left in my stomach. I wanted to lay down and sleep, but the smell was awful, so I shifted away and continued down the passage.

I found a chamber with more cocoons and a small pool of water. I collapsed next to the blessedly cool water and shoved my face into it – it smelled earthy and tasted like rock. I faintly wondered if it would make me sick, and then realized I didn’t care. I may have passed out momentarily.


I woke when I felt my body moving – something was dragging me, pulling me along by the hem of my shirt, pulling my face out of the water. I gasped, coughing on the water that threatened to fill my lungs, and pushed away from the edge. I wiped the wetness from my face. Feeling finally clear headed, I looked to see what had been pulling me.

Another spider. Fuzzy, striped like a tabby cat and about the size of a large dog, with two large front eyes that regarded me, its head tilting almost curiously. It seemed to be mostly legs and face. I screamed, and it jumped, back and up, landing on the ceiling far above and shifting out of sight behind a stalactite.

Some of the water I had inhaled wasn’t fully out of my system and the scream cut off into a coughing fit. I pulled myself back against the cavern wall, looking around at my surroundings. How had I gotten here? My mind traced back over recent events and I kept a wary eye on the stalactite the spider was hiding behind.

I could remember the attack on the camp. I had been bitten. I lifted my shirt and looked at the bite. In doing so, I remembered that I had also looked at the bite quite recently. It didn’t look as inflamed anymore. I poked one of the holes – it was sore, and I winced. I thought about when I had looked at it last. Lyre had cut me out of the cocoon I had been wrapped in.

Lyre! I dropped the shirt and looked around. He had helped me, and was trying to lead me to safety and I had wondered away in a haze. “Stupid, stupid,” I muttered to myself. “Damn it all,” I stood, wincing at the tenderness in my abdomen. How long had I wandered through these caves? How far had Lyre gotten before he realized I wasn’t following? Would he have come back for me, or continued to get the others and lead them back to help?

And what about the spiders? I glanced up at the ceiling again – the one that had dragged me out of the water had been poking its head out further, and dipped back into hiding as I turned toward it. It looked different than the ones that had attacked the camp – those had looked almost like wolf spiders, bristly and lean, with smaller eyes. This one had a broader face and larger eyes, and was fuzzier. I remembered the leap it had taken to reach the ceiling, and realized it was a jumping spider. A giant one. I shuddered in revulsion.

I hated spiders. My first serious girlfriend in college had raised jumping spiders, and I could acknowledge that they were cuter looking than most arachnids, but the instant chill of terror I had whenever there wasn’t any glass separating it from me was uncontrollable. She had built a terrarium for it, and had special ordered one that was quite colorful and large. But the moment she would pull the thing out of its enclosure so she could personally handle it, I would leave. She eventually dumped me for being, and I quote, “a pussy.”

I looked around the cave, and spied the opening I had originally come through. If I backtracked that way, maybe I could find Lyre? Or the way out? I drank some of the water one last time, and splashed some on my face and on my wound, the cold water a relief against the inflamed skin. Then I started out of the cavern. I glanced up at the ceiling where the jumping spider had continued to move, shifting out of my range of vision. I hoped it wouldn’t pursue me.

It was very dark just several steps into the passage. Turning back toward the cavern, I realized there was some lighting from within it, and my head swiveled, trying to locate the source. I finally figured out that the spider webbing glowed faintly. I gently ran my hand along a strand of it, and realized my fingertips tingled and numbed at the touch. I pulled my hand back quickly, wondering if the venom from the bite had caused my lapse in lucidity or the webbing itself.

Still, I needed the light source if I wanted to make my way out of this place. Feeling incredibly jealous of everyone else’s magical ability again, I poked one of the cocoons open very carefully with the toe of my boot, and found a longer piece of bone. I wondered what kind of creature it had belonged to. I wrapped one end in webbing, carefully, doing my best not to touch any of it with my bare skin. The entire time, I also carefully watched for any movement along the ceiling.

It was very dim light, but it was better than nothing. I started down the passage again. I vaguely remembered puking at some point along the way, and I kept the light low to the ground, looking for this sign of my previous passage. I walked quite far before I found it – maybe about thirty minutes away from the cavern with the pool. I sighed in distress as I kicked some dirt over it. So I had been wandering these caves for quite awhile.

I heard something skitter in the darkness, and felt my bowels twist in terror. “Please don’t shit yourself,” I said quietly to myself, lifting my dim torch up to try to locate the source of the sound. In the direction I was planning to go, the passage looked to be covered with many small glittering facets. I did not like it.

They moved toward me all at once, and as my eyes adjusted to the shapes around them, I realized they were the smaller cat-sized spiders I had seen before. I screamed – they were fast – and on me more quickly than I had anticipated. I slammed one off with the bone fragment, kicked another away from my feet. I felt something sharp pierce my hip, the flaring pain of the venom making me scream again as I batted the offending party off me. I slammed myself into the nearby wall, heard skittering and small screams and the disgustingly audible squishing noise some of them made as they died under my mad flailing.

Suddenly a loud hissing noise seemed to whoosh over my head, faintly ruffling my hair, and something larger than my attackers rolled into the fray. As I smashed another of the kitten sized ones under my boot with a squelch, I raised my light to see what was happening.

The jumping spider was attacking the other spiders. Several of them had turned to flee at its assault, and some of the others had decided to attack it instead. There was a mad scuffle, the smaller spiders making outright screaming noises as they fought – I watched the jumping spider rip one in half with its mandibles, and easily push the crushed remains of the body into its mouth. I shuddered and returned to smashing any that were near me.

It wasn’t long until I found myself twisting, trying to find any of the remaining little fucks to destroy, and realized they were all either dead or escaping. I could hear the jumping spider shifting in the dark behind me. I turned to see what it was doing. It was in the middle of eating some of the remains when my dim light fell on it, and it paused, turning to regard me carefully. I froze also, feeling the familiar tingle along the base of my neck, my unmitigated terror made physical. Something in the way my breathing hitched seemed to startle the spider, and it scooped up a few of the remaining bodies and jumped quickly out of sight.

It was so fast that I wasn’t certain if it had jumped back over me the way we had come or further back the way I wanted to go. I stared into the dark, feeling rooted to the spot. Everything about this was the worst waking nightmare I had ever faced.

After several long moments, I forced myself to move my feet, continuing along the passage. I had to get out of here.


I found the cavern where Lyre had freed me. The webbing covering it provided some degree of light, and I could see the cocoon that I had been freed from, slightly sunken in now that it didn’t hold a body. I stared at it for a moment, before moving on in the direction Lyre had been walking. I wasn’t sure how Lyre had chosen the direction, but I had an especially bad feeling as I continued. My makeshift light source was slowly becoming unnecessary, I realized, because the walls were more regularly coated in the webs.

The passage continued along a path, but opened on one side out into a small room. I realized the room was full of more cocoons, and what looked to be egg sacs. The chittering sounds of spiders echoed through the entire area. Everything seemed to be screaming that I was only walking further into the spider’s den. I stopped to investigate a couple of the cocoons, but nothing was really person shaped, and everything close enough in size was too desiccated to be alive still.

Now, more spaces opened here and there on both sides. It was almost actually bright. I continued to poke along, hoping to find Lyre. And then the passage ended.

It opened out onto a large cavern. I moved forward, bending low to the ground like that would hide me to whatever eyes existed in the cavern. Sounds echoed throughout – the space seemed vast. I moved quietly along the edge of the cavern, but could see a particularly bright spot out towards the center of the cavern – a whole concentrated nest of webbing.

Whimpering softly to myself, I moved toward it, and tripped. As I looked to see what I had tripped on, I found myself face to face with the jumping spider. I gasped and pulled away as it gestured frantically at me, and then I stood to run. As I got close to the more concentrated webbing, I could see a cocoon, half sliced open on the ground, a slouched figure sitting just within, eyes closed. I recognized Lexie.

For a moment forgetting my terror, I rushed forward and began pulling her the rest of the way out of the cocoon. Glancing around as I did so, keeping an eye out for any movement, I could see a rapier abandoned on the ground. Looking up, I saw another person shaped cocoon dangling above, attached to the side of a towering stalagmite. It shifted slightly.

Whatever inside was alive. Lyre, I realized. As I finished pulling Lexie from the cocoon and slung her over my shoulder, I heard the chittering grow loud around me. I reached for the rapier, standing to turn and look around. I watched as the shapes emerged from the darkness, the many eyes, the many legs. I felt my mouth gape open. There were so many of them! How had I even come this far without seeing any of them until now?

I could see the faint glow of webbing unfurling from the ceiling as some descended around me.  They all stayed a respectful distance away. I turned, intending to take the chance to look for a way to cut Lyre down, when from within the heart of the concentrated webbing, something huge shifted.

Massive. Larger than the ones that had attacked the camp and brought me back to this cursed place. Larger than an elephant. I boggled, wondering if it was even able to leave the cave system, or if the smaller spiders just brought it offerings. It looked as if it had been folded in tight at the heart of its lair, and had simply unfolded into a massive shadow. I stared into eyes the size of car tires and felt myself gulp, almost comically loud.

Just as it loomed over me, the familiar hissing of the jumping spider sounded. It jumped onto the back of its head, snapping at the large eyes. The massive spider let out a scream that shook the room, and everything got cacophonous as all the creatures around us screamed in response.

I turned back to the stalagmite, climbing up it just enough to reach Lyre’s cocoon. I swiped up with the blade madly, hoping I wouldn’t injure him. The cut was too shallow. Just at my feet, a spider the size of a mountain lion rammed into the rock below me, snapping at my boots. I kicked at it, screaming. It snapped again, and I timed jumping down onto its head with one of its forward lunges. The lunge carried me up, and I took a second desperate swipe at the cocoon in front of me.

Lyre tumbled out. I tossed the rapier, suddenly terrified of any of us landing on the blade in the fall, and Lyre, Lexie and I tumbled into a heap on top of the attacking spider. Several smaller spiders came rushing in, and I rolled, squashing as many as I could as I flailed.

All of the violent movement must have been enough to wake Lexie, who sat up, blinking groggily for a moment. As she took in her surroundings, her eyes widened in terror and surprise, and the glow of magic instantly surrounded her. “Yes!” I shouted happily as a burst of fire erupted, scorching the webs around us and sending spiders scattering and screaming. Then I realized the fireburst was large – too close, too out of control. I shouted, ducking away and shutting my eyes closed, waiting to feel the painful rush of the fire over my skin.

When it didn’t happen, I opened my eyes to see that the flames were crawling up the sides of some sort of glowing barrier. Glancing over, I could see that Lyre was standing over Lexie’s shoulder, his hand outstretched, and he was chanting, his voice resonant. As the flames died down, Lyre grabbed Lexie’s shoulder and said, “We need to go. Now!”

I nodded dumbly, starting to follow. But the scream of the massive spider caught my attention, and I turned to look – the jumping spider was almost impossible to see, it moved quickly, dodging the massive legs and mandibles, nipping at its larger opponent, and then jumping again. It was caught with the swipe of a massive limb mid-jump, and the massive spider moved to pin it where it landed. I watched the massive spider move forward to devour it.

The jumping spider hissed viciously, if ineffectually, in its enemy’s face. The thing had saved me a few separate times. It looked piteously small pinned under the legs of the terrifying visage that was moving in on it. Time seemed to slow for a moment as I stared, feeling an overwhelming surge of sympathy for the poor thing. I’m not even sure if I shouted words or just a random wordless cry, but I flung my hand out.

The light of magic sprung up around me. A strange sensation, a sense of power, swirled through me, filling me with a strangely euphoric feeling – it had been there all along, I realized vaguely, before I became engrossed with the effect.

Vines surged forth from the rocky cavern floors, a burst of unexpected greenery striking at the giant spider, eviscerating it. It screamed as it died on the ends of the plants, which continued to grow and carry it up bodily away from the floor of the cavern, spearing it into the ceiling above. Rocks crashed around us and sunlight flooded in from above, and as the sunlight fell on the vines flowers suddenly budded and bloomed all over.

I pushed forward, afraid for a moment at how much damage I had caused, but strangely there was one undisturbed portion of the ground. The jumping spider was surrounded by vines, but unharmed, standing in the middle of that spot. It twisted, first one way, then the other, waving its proboscis in the air as if in celebration. It tilted its head when it saw me, almost like a puppy. And then it jumped away, up through one of the openings, out of the caved in cavern and into the sunlight above.

I stared for a long moment, blinking against the bright light. I could still hear the skittering and screams of other spiders, but none of them seemed to be attacking. They were retreating, either further into the caves or out into the world above.

I felt suddenly and completely drained. I turned to see Lexie and Lyre climbing over some of the vines, looking around in awe. “You finally cast, Lucas!” Lexie said when she saw me. She looked pale, almost gray-toned. I nodded dumbly. And then I passed out.

25. Lucas

Raella had us cast the compass spell immediately. The image appeared, strangely small for the first time in many days, and more southerly in the circle. Cassandra was laying down, either asleep or passed out – she was bleeding from the head, but it was hard to tell how badly she was wounded. The pale elf tensed visibly. “She’s hurt,” he said, his voice choking on the words with a surprising amount of anguish. I studied him curiously, wondering what kind of relationship they had formed in the brief time we had been here.

Raella let out an angry hiss. “How did she get so far?” she said. “There’s no way the river took her that far that quickly.”

We stood for several moments, staring at the glowing image on the ground. With a sigh, Chase finally broke the spell. “We should continue on,” she said resolutely. Then smiling, she turned toward the three elves we had just met. “If you want to come with us, I believe introductions are in order. My name is Chase Glenn. I am a student of the Imperial University.” She curtsied, dipping her head courteously.

The three looked at each other, then the larger elf with brown hair cautiously nodded. “My name is Silden Vi’Aphil. This is Larina Eth’Adiol,” he took the hand of the female elf, who had bright blue eyes and short red hair. She smiled timidly at us, gripping his hand tight in return. “And that is Lyre Ik’Abalin,” he gestured to the pale elf, who tilted his head forward politely at his name, regarding us with pale gray eyes.

“Slave names,” Zolambi noted. “I am Zolambi Demn.” The pale elf – Lyre – gave Zolambi an appraising look, perhaps also recognizing a fellow former slave by name. I wondered what distinguished the names as slave names, but the introductions were continuing.

Chase gestured to Peyton, Lexie and me. “These humans are like your friend… Peyton Hobbs, Lexie Saint, and Lucas Kearney.”

“They’re from her world?” Larina asked, and she and Silden studied us in awed fascination.

Chase glanced over at Raella, obviously surprised that they knew Cassandra wasn’t from this world, then nodded. “She… Cassandra told you where she was from?”

“Not initially. She was very cautious, and claimed to have amnesia when we met her,” Lyre said. He looked back down at the river far below us again, a slight frown on his face.

“I am Greyjon Pellort,” Greyjon said simply into the following silence.

“You fight well,” Silden said. “Thank you again for helping us.”  Greyjon smiled at him in acknowledgment.

“And I am Raella Harn, Professor of Ancient Divinity at the Imperial University,” Raella said. She looked around at us impatiently. “And I think anything else we can learn from you can be shared as we travel.”

“I agree,” Lyre said, finally looking back to the group. “Let’s be on our way.”


We continued along from the cliff above, walking along the edge of the ravine. There weren’t enough horses for all of us to ride, so we walked, talking as we went. Raella wanted the slaves (or former slaves) to tell her everything they had experienced with Cassandra from the moment they met her. Lyre had been closest to her, so he spoke the most, though it was Larina that initially described the beam of light that delivered Cassandra into what she called the Cursed Sea.

I walked behind Lyre, studying him as he spoke, and tried to imagine what it must have been like for Cassandra, to literally wake up in this world lost at sea and try to make the best of it. She had been lucky to find people that she had grown close to at least – people that apparently cared for her.

Raella listened very carefully, asking a few pointed questions throughout the telling. Early on, when Lyre described casting a translation spell for Cassandra, she said, “She wasn’t speaking Blest?”

Lyre shook his head. “No. I gave her language lessons so she has a decent grasp of it now, but she spoke another language at first. She called it English.” Peyton drifted closer to walk next to me, absorbed in what was being said. “I also taught her to read.” He glanced back at us, frowning. “Did you not have to do the same?”

I shook my head.

Lyre squinted, like he was trying to remember something. “Hello. My name is Lyre,” he said, forming the words slowly, carefully enunciating. Raella’s eyes boggled as she looked at him, like maybe he had grown an eye stalk from the middle of his head.

“Yes, I know,” I said, feeling like I ended the statement with a question mark.

“Were you speaking English just then?” Peyton asked, catching on more quickly than I had. He nodded. “It doesn’t distinguish for us. It all sounds like English, whether you speak normally or not.”

“So that is what an otherworlder language sounds like,” Raella said thoughtfully.

“What if I speak in the elven tongue?” Lyre asked, and he did – the language rolled off his tongue smoothly, sounding nearly as perfect as Zolambi did when he spoke in Primordial.

I shook my head this time. “No, Primordial doesn’t translate for us.”

“Primordial,” Lyre repeated.

Now Zolambi piped up from behind us. “Yes, friend. Our tongue is called Primordial in the Empire.”

Lyre nodded thoughtfully. “I’m sure there’s going to be a lot for us to learn as well,” he said. He continued, telling us about Cassandra’s deal with the ship captain, and how she had begun working to earn her passage. He described the moment that Cassandra had first cast, and the magic lessons he had given her afterward at her request, the escape from the ship, and their trek to and across the desert. “On occasion, she would instinctually cast a new spell. The spell that saved her when she fell off the cliff earlier was one, as well as a true healing spell and a sleep spell.”

“True healing?” Raella asked.

“Yes. She can knit broken bones and close wounded flesh, and we have seen her clear an infection,” Lyre responded. He raised and clenched his hands, which were glossy from a gel that Chase had spread across the wounds he had received in his earlier fight. “She would easily be able to heal these burns if she were here.”

“I see. A truly divine spell,” Raella said, sounding impressed for once. “Then the head wound she sustained should be no trouble at least.”

Lyre let his hands drop back to his side, frowning. “She can’t heal herself.”

Raella hmm’ed, pursing her lips. “That is unfortunate.”

Mostly, their escape to the Empire was a desperate bid to safety, but it was also a journey to find out why Cassandra may have come to this world. “If you were looking for her, then you must know her purpose here?” Lyre tentatively asked.

“You’ve never heard any stories regarding this?” Raella asked, frowning.

“Some. Vague fairy tales about otherworldly beings sealing away monsters,” Lyre said.

Raella nodded. “That’s close enough to true.” And she disclosed everything she had told us about our mission in their world, keeping it rather succinct. As she finished, she asked, “This is very important. The being we wish to seal has been known to reach out to the Graces when they arrive in our world. Has Cassandra mentioned hearing voices at all?”

Lyre shook his head. He had a thoughtful look on his face for a moment, but he simply said, “Never.”


When we stopped to rest and have a luncheon in the afternoon, we cast the compass spell again. Cassandra appeared to be awake now, and was sitting cross legged, a cloak wrapped around her. The head wound must not have been as serious as we thought, the blood having been wiped away. She looked to be lost in thought. “That is a very useful spell,” Lyre said as it was dropped. “Can you find anyone with it?”

Raella glanced at us briefly as she responded. “Not just anyone. It is a spell specifically to find someone from their world.”

Lyre nodded thoughtfully, taking note of Raella’s nervousness. He changed the subject, glancing over at Larina and Silden to say, “Was that the Hunter’s cloak?”

Larina shrugged, but Silden nodded. “It looked like it. Maybe he’s helping us now? He did fight off some of the hounds.” Lyre frowned more deeply, seeming disturbed. Seeing his expression, Silden said, “I’m sure she is safe.”

“You seem very concerned for her,” Peyton noted gently.

“I am,” Lyre said, but didn’t elaborate. We continued after eating.

Lexie spent her time walking very close to the edge of the cliff, which made me a bit nervous. It must have bothered Zolambi as well, because he trailed just behind her, seemingly coincidentally, or at least a lot less obvious than I would have been. As the afternoon gave way to evening, she gestured down below. “What is that?” she asked. I stepped closer to look, as did some of our other companions. Some sort of white string was spread across the cliff face. Even further down amongst the trees and the rock formations closer to the river, there were whole clumps of the stuff. There was only one thing I could think of as soon as I saw it, and it sent a shiver up my spine.

“Webbing?” Peyton asked.

“It’s a spider den,” Raella said. “Though I don’t see the spiders.”

We stared in silence, trying to spot any movement from below. “We should probably move further along before we make camp,” Greyjon said. “We don’t want to be nearby if they come out to hunt at night.” I shuddered at the thought.

“How big do they get?” Peyton asked.

“Judging by the nest below… Big,” Greyjon said, and left it at that.


It started to get dark an hour later, so we stopped to make camp, hoping that it would be far enough away from the webbed lair. Greyjon decided to take the first watch, and accepted Silden’s offer to help. The compass spell was cast, and we were thankfully closer to Cassandra now. She was still sitting, staring thoughtfully into the middle distance with the cloak wrapped around her. From the size of her image, I guessed it would only be a day or two of travel to find her.

We settled in for the evening, eating and setting up our bedrolls. It was decided if a few of us each took a turn at watch, the bedrolls could be shared with our new guests. As I lay down to sleep, I turned on my side and stared at the crackling fire, and tried not to think about an entire den of giant spiders existing just north of us. Every strange noise in the night made me shiver, even if it was obviously unspiderlike.

I was finally starting to snooze when a strange chittering sound from out in the dark got my attention. My eyes flashed open and I stared at the fire. That, I thought, was definitely spiderlike.

I could hear Silden whisper something to Greyjon in the dark, though I couldn’t hear what he said. I heard the soft whisper of Greyjon’s sword leaving its sheath. I turned over to look toward where they were sitting – both were surrounded by the light of magic. I sat up to stare into the dark. More chittering – louder this time. From multiple spots around the camp.

Greyjon waved a hand up, a bright spot of light appearing above him, lighting the darkness around us suddenly and exposing the nearby landscape. I watched in horror as kitten-sized eight-legged shadows skittered away. And then I screamed as I saw something with too many legs shift forward quickly – something massive, maybe slightly larger than a bear. Its many eyes glittered in the light.

There was movement all around the camp as at least three more massive spiders moved forward as well. The rest of the group woke at my screams – several lights flared around me as everyone else reached for their magic. Whatever else they were doing was lost to me, because one of the spiders was barreling straight at me, attracted to my screaming. I instinctively propelled myself back, almost directly into the fire, and screamed again as I felt the flames lick my palms and back.

Panicked, worried that I had caught fire, I rolled on the dirt away from the flames (stop, drop, and roll, the mantra ingrained from elementary school, drifted through my head). Unfortunately, the roll brought me back into the spider’s grasp. I punched up as the legs surrounded me, my fists connecting with the bristly, leathery skin of the thing, and realized I was screaming, “No no nonononONONO!” as I struggled against it.

I was pinned. Its head dipped so close to me that I was looking directly into at least three of its large, glimmering eyes. I felt large fangs puncture my abdomen, and suddenly it was like my entire body was on fire, like the flames I had almost fallen into had seeped into my very blood. I screamed even louder than I thought I knew how to, until suddenly my tongue grew numb and my limbs grew heavy and my head felt fuzzy. This quick, I thought. I die this quick.

I heard screams and explosions in the camp, and more chittering. I could hear my name being shouted. I felt myself being lifted and carried, like floating in a dream. Names, I realized. I could hear multiple names being shouted, not just mine. Lexie?


I woke cocooned in sticky silk. My first instinct was to begin screaming again. Something slapped me – hard – across the face, and I stopped mid-shout, dumbfounded. “Stop making so much noise,” I heard a voice whisper, very close to me. I recognized it as Lyre.

Despite myself, I moaned and began to mumble a whole slew of absurdities, trying to shift to rip myself out of the webbing. It was hard to break through. “Spider web is some of the toughest material,” I muttered, and laughed a little manically.

The point of a rapier slipped through the web, nearly piercing me. I quieted immediately, holding very still. After a moment, Lyre said, “I… didn’t just kill you, did I?”

“Oh. No. Please get me out.”

“Okay, hold still.”

“I mean… I was. For that purpose. Hurry.” He obliged, quickly slicing through. Once there was a large enough opening, it was easy to slide out. I felt nauseous and my entire body felt heavy and fuzzy at once, like I existed in a deep fog. I pulled up my shirt to look at the bite – there were two large spots on my abdomen, both red and very inflamed, but nothing looked necrotic, nothing was turning white or black.

Lyre was still holding the rapier a little awkwardly. He looked paler than normal, like a ghost, probably owing to the similar bite wound on his shoulder. “We should get out of here,” he said.

I nodded fervently, but the motion sent my head spinning, and I winced. We were in a cave of some sort, and I could hear chittering echoing from within. Everything was covered with webbing, and there were other cocoons in the chamber. I wanted desperately to be anywhere but here. Lyre chose a direction to walk in, and I followed, hoping that he knew where we were going. But I took three steps before I remembered that I had heard a voice – Peyton’s voice – shouting my name when I had been carried away. And not just my name. “What about Lexie?” I asked groggily.

Lyre must not have heard me. He continued walking ahead of me.

I felt myself shaking my head, almost like in a distant dream, and the world blurred with the motion, shifting uncomfortably. I had always hated spiders, but I couldn’t just leave a little girl to be devoured by them. I mumbled as much out loud, then I shifted away from Lyre, moving in the opposite direction, sure that he would agree and follow.

24. Lucas

If anyone knew about Peyton and I taking a stroll that evening, no one said a thing. We hadn’t stayed in a place large enough for us to make the attempt again, and we didn’t openly discuss it. I had long suspected that the compass spell needed our presence to work, so that meant that once we found our fourth person, we might all be able to escape together. That option gave me some peace of mind.

The routine for the next couple of days remained the same as it had been the entire trip so far. In the morning, we would cast the compass spell. We would spend the day traveling, listening to Raella’s history lessons, and then find an inn to stop in for the evening. Sometimes we trained a bit with our weapons. Sometimes Chase and Zolambi spent entire evenings trying to get me to tap into my magical ability. There had been no luck with that so far.

They would also cast the compass spell again before we settled down to relax, and discuss our route for the next day. “She must be crossing the desert,” Zolambi said as her course began to take us further south.

Greyjon frowned, studying a map that he had laid out on one of the common room tables of the inn we were staying at. “That’s a dangerous route. She must be incredibly powerful already to have survived this far.”

“Or she has powerful companions. It’s not an unusual route to take for certain slaves. I crossed the mountains myself, but it was summer and the passes weren’t snowed in. The border further north is more heavily patrolled though.” Zolambi absently rubbed at the rough skin of his scar. “If she does cross the desert, she’ll make it to the ravine. There’s a small walled town called Watter close to there. That will be our last inhabited stop, I think.”

“And if she does arrive with escaped slaves in tow?” Raella asked. “We weren’t planning on having many extra people with us.”

“Well, we can’t leave them behind, Raella,” Chase said with some exasperation.

Zolambi nodded. “We can travel back to Watter. They’ve got an organization that helps take in escaped slaves, and acclimate them to the Empire. Most of the border towns do.”

Raella stared at the map, and pointed to a town even further south. “Then certainly Veinwell will have that as well. Then we don’t have to make the trek back. We’ll be looping to the southeast after we find her anyway.”

I looked curiously at the map, seeing what was to the southeast of where we were going. I spotted the familiar name of Glyss along the southern border of the Empire, and remembered that Raella had mentioned that the ruler there had helped open up a friendly relationship with the dwarves. Unfortunately, the map didn’t extend beyond the current borders of the Empire, so I couldn’t see any specifics about the dwarven lands.

We traveled within sight of the mountains that Zolambi had mentioned and then began to take a more southerly course. The Elves called them the Elder mountains, and they terminated just above the desert, trailing off into the human kingdom that bordered there. Zolambi explained that further north, the range became truly massive in scale. Even though it was still autumn, I could see that the mountains were covered in snow. The grasslands gave way to the sparser vegetation of the desert, and the weather was a bit warmer than where we had started.

Watter was a small town, just as Zolambi had described, and not even large enough to merit walls. The inn had only two rooms, so we split them by gender. Lexie groaned about this. “Raella is going to drone all night,” she muttered angrily as she poked at her dinner. “I just know it.”

“Maybe we’ll ask Chase for some pointers on casting as soon as we get to the room,” Peyton suggested.

Lexie didn’t look fully convinced. She was already powerful magically, and picked up on spells easily. As soon as she was shown something, she seemed to understand how to do it. But she completely lacked fine control – if she summoned flames, it was always in a large burst. She couldn’t control the temperature of summoned water, and when she tried to move items through the air, they wobbled and on occasion slammed toward their destination with too much force. “I think Raella believes that’s a lost cause,” the girl said morosely.

Peyton shrugged. “We could say that we want to try to help Lucas again.” I felt the same swirling nervousness in my gut that I always felt when my lack of magical ability was mentioned.

Glancing up, I could see that they were both giving me sympathetic looks. I sighed. “Sure, I can be your excuse,” I said, feeling like there wasn’t much point to trying. I caught Peyton looking between Lexie and me, the hint of a smile pulling at the corner of her lips as we both pouted at our particular weaknesses.

“Well, maybe instead of any of it, we go to bed early. Tonight will really be our last night in a decent bed,” Peyton noted. We sat for a moment in silence as we considered that. We hadn’t known what to expect when we initially left the University, and I think the paved roads and inns had been a nice surprise. Now we were going to travel out into actual wilderness.

With a sigh, Lexie stood up. “You’re right. I’m going to see if I can pretend to be asleep before Raella gets to the room. Goodnight Lucas, night Peyton.” She quickly walked off to where the rooms were. I considered excusing myself as well, but Peyton beat me to it. She had already been done eating at that point and had just been sitting with us companionably, studying the décor of the room.

She stood and said goodnight, and followed the girl back to their shared room. I pushed the remainder of the food around on my plate, wondering if I’d actually be able to sleep tonight.


The next morning, Raella made arrangements for the wagon with our supplies to be taken to Veinwell, where we planned to go after our trek into the ravine. We traveled alongside the wagon most of the day. It was being driven by the innkeeper’s son, who seemed to be happy to get out of Watter for a time. In the middle of the afternoon, we said goodbye to the boy and left the road. I glanced back several times as the wagon grew smaller in the distance, heading further south as we began to make our way west and away from any signs of civilization.

That evening as we stopped to make camp, we called up the compass spell. The image was larger every day, especially as we had gotten closer to the mountains and the ravine that was south of them. It was easier to see what she looked like now, even though we didn’t know anything specific about her still.

Colors were hard to make out, because the image was made of light, so I had no idea if she had brown hair or blonde hair – but it came down to about her shoulders and was slightly curly. She looked disheveled and tired. She was dressed in the same breeches she had worn the entire time, and a tank top underneath a billowy shirt that looked like it belonged to a pirate. Another shirt was wrapped around her head with the sleeves pulled around her neck to hold it in place, probably to protect from the sun. She also carried a pack loosely over her back.

At the moment, she was in the process of testing an improvised crutch, walking back and forth on the ground with it. I could hear Chase gasp lightly from behind me when she saw what she was doing, and could see the frowns on everyone else’s faces. “So she’s been injured,” Raella noted impassively.

They kept the image up for several minutes longer than usual as we observed her. I could see where the pants had a rip high on her thigh, and that was the leg that she seemed to have trouble putting weight on. After testing the crutch, she set it aside and sat down to rest. Then she cupped her hands and brought them up to her face, appearing to drink from them. I paused, confused at what she was doing because she didn’t have any sort of canteen, until I realized that she must have summoned water directly into her hands. I couldn’t see the glow of magic because she was just represented here as a glowing form of light itself.

“Oh, she has learned to cast!” Chase said, sounding excited.

Even without any direct instruction, she had managed to learn to use her magic. I felt even more worthless for a moment, and a little embarrassed. What was I doing so wrong?


The bedrolls weren’t as comfortable as a modern sleeping bag, but were still better than sleeping on the ground. Zolambi, Chase and Greyjon each took a turn at watch. I offered to help at one point, but was told to rest instead. In the morning, the compass spell revealed that the other Grace was moving again. We continued our own journey, leaving the mountains behind.

The next day of travel wasn’t so bad either. We had eased into traveling through the previous days, thanks to the frequent stops and the wagon. A full day of riding still left me sore and a bit stiff, but I wasn’t as uncomfortable as I had initially worried. The increased exercise likely helped as well. That evening when we stopped, Greyjon provided some instruction with the staves again. He tossed them to us, as he traditionally did, and as usual, Lexie missed catching hers. She grumbled about it as she chased after the stick, which had rolled away a few feet. “Statistically, you’d think you’d catch it once by accident,” I said.

She used her staff and a gust of air to trip me before I was technically ready to start sparring. “No magic in these lessons,” Greyjon said, doing his best to hide a smile. “Though that is a good combination to keep in mind if you ever get into an actual fight.”

The day after that we reached the ravine. We traveled along it for awhile as we attempted to find a way down, eventually finding a trail of sorts. “It reminds me of the Grand Canyon,” Lexie said, marveling at the scale of it.

“Same process probably made it. A river and thousands of years,” I said, staring down at the river far below.

“I’ve never been to the Grand Canyon,” Peyton said thoughtfully. “I guess I’ll never get to see it.”

“Well, it’s kind of like this,” Lexie waved an arm to gesture at the view. Peyton chuckled. After a few moments, Lexie added, “I’ve never seen the pyramids. I always wanted to go.”

“Well, they’re not like this,” Peyton said. “But maybe this world has something similar to offer.”

We made camp when we reached the bottom. When we checked that evening, the other Grace was already sleeping. “She stopped early tonight,” Raella noted. The image was almost to scale, I realized. We were close. “Tomorrow we’ll travel further south along the river.”

We stayed in the gorge the entire next day, stopping often to check our course. She was close now. We’d be meeting her soon. Raella didn’t want to travel too far south if we could help it, and casting the spell again and again seemed to be taking its toll on them. We stopped earlier in the evening after finding a place that provided a reasonable path up toward the desert side of the gorge, and we camped for the night.


The next morning, we woke early to the echoey sounds of barking, and people screaming and shouting from somewhere above. I wasn’t sure if we were close – the canyons could have been amplifying the sounds for all I knew. And we couldn’t see what was going on towards the top of the canyons. We hastily packed our items and began to follow what passed for a precarious trail up. It took us several minutes to be halfway up – we were going fast enough, but it felt dreadfully slow hearing the shouts from above.

At one point as we neared the top, Lexie gasped and waved her hands, pointing toward a cliff face slightly south of us. We all turned to look, could just barely make out figures along the edge of the cliff. There were five individuals, four of which glowed from magic use. What looked to be several darting balls of fire weaved around the figures.

We reached the top of the cliffs, and Greyjon quickly mounted his horse, racing ahead to reach the figures – Peyton was immediately behind him, followed quickly by Chase and Zolambi. Raella lingered near Lexie and I, waiting as we mounted our own horses, not being as quick or practiced as our other companions.

As we approached, I watched a pair of figures and a smaller figure, what looked to be a dog, move dangerously close to the edge. I gasped as they tangled and then tumbled over the side of the cliff, and could hear Lexie scream something from not far behind me. I stopped my approach and moved to where I could see what happened to them, Lexie following my lead. Initially, the figures drifted apart in the fall, but then one of the people reached out and grabbed the other. The glow of magic sprang up around them, and their fall slowed dramatically as the dog hit the cliff face below them. They drifted off toward the river far below.

“Oh. That’s a really useful spell,” Lexie said thoughtfully, watching until they were out of sight in the water. I glanced up to see that Raella was staring down as well, watching them drift away. Her mouth was pursed as though she had tasted something sour. Our eyes met, then she gestured with her head and led the way toward where our group had joined the fray.

The fireballs were flaming dogs. A lot of them were dead – some frozen in ice, or disemboweled. By the time I arrived, the remainders of the pack were already yipping as they ran away. One of the strangers, an elven man with very pale features, was standing near the edge of the cliff, staring at the river below. He bent to pick up a discarded pack that was laying on the ground near him, and turned to face us. Raella quickly looked at each of the three figures, her brow furrowing deeper at every set of pointed ears she saw.

A tall, burly elf with brown hair was giving Greyjon and Peyton appraising looks. “Thank you for your help, strangers,” he said as Raella climbed down from her horse. Greyjon nodded in acknowledgement to him, wiping his sword off before sheathing it. Frowning at the gore on her own blade, Peyton followed his example.

“Was it a human woman that went over the cliff? A human that can cast,” Raella said bluntly, ignoring the thanks.

The pale elf frowned at her sharply. “Yes,” he said. He was looking at our group carefully, and I could see that he recognized that Peyton, Lexie and I were all human. “Her name is Cassandra.”

Cassandra. After all our time here, we finally had a name for our lost Grace.

23. Lucas

We weren’t exactly roughing it.

We stayed to the roads, stopping at inns nightly along the way. We mostly visited smaller towns, some with massive walls and some without. I was under the impression that we were avoiding larger cities. Every time we stayed in one of these places, Raella had a quiet talk with the innkeeper, during which there was an exchange of letters or a bag of coins, and then we had the inn to ourselves the entire night. Even the inns that had bars and served food turned their normal paying customers away.

“Is it to keep us a secret?” Lexie asked quietly on the third night, as we sat together at a table in a barren common room. The barkeep eyed us curiously as she wiped the counter again. Our presence had made for a slow night, but the innkeeper hadn’t dismissed her for the evening. She had cooked a meal for our entire party and now occupied herself with cleaning and tending the bar in case we had any other needs.

Peyton sipped her ale as she leaned back comfortably, one arm over the back of the chair, watching the hushed conversation at the door where another patron was turned away. “This draws too much attention to be a secret,” she said. I glanced up from where I was nursing my own drink, hunched over at the table. I suspected Peyton thought the same thing I did – she was too observant not to.  

We weren’t the secret. The secret was being kept from us.

Not wanting to stare too obviously, I shifted my gaze to the fireplace, watching the low fire that crackled in the hearth.

Lexie stared between the two of us, attempting to read our expressions. Finally with a sigh she decided to change the conversation. “What do you think the dwarves are like?”

“Raella said they don’t live underground,” I said, trying not to sound too mopey.

Peyton chuckled as Lexie nodded sympathetically at my statement. “They’re miners still, at least.”

I hmm’ed in response, taking a drink from my tankard. Then I stood and stretched. “Think I’m gonna turn in.”

“It’s too early,” Lexie griped as Peyton downed the remainder of her drink and stood up as well. She carried her cup to the bar, and I followed suit. The woman smiled at us appreciatively and thanked us with a nod. We then proceeded up the stairs to our rooms for the evening.

This inn had enough rooms available that Lexie, Peyton and I each had our privacy for the night. Raella and Chase also had their own rooms, and only Zolambi and Greyjon had to share. The previous nights we had stayed in inns so small that most of us were sharing rooms, so this was my first night to myself. As soon as I entered the room, I walked over to the window and opened it, and leaned my head out to look around.

The window opened onto the roof of the first floor’s kitchens, which gave me a generous edge to crawl out onto. From there, it was a short drop into an alleyway. I slipped out a bit awkwardly, not really having the teenage experience of sneaking out of a house before, and sat near the edge of the roof, staring down at the drop. I couldn’t see a way back up, and that caused me to hesitate.

“I was wondering what you were up to,” I heard a familiar voice say right at my side. I hadn’t heard anyone approach, and I almost slipped down the shingles in surprise, and felt a hand grab my shoulder to steady me. Turning, I saw that Peyton had exited her own room, which was right next to mine. Her window was wide open, the curtains billowing in a slight breeze.

“Damn, you’re quiet,” I grumbled, returning to looking into the alley below, still trying to find some way to climb back up. The familiar nervousness of being so close to someone ridiculously beautiful and famous returned.

She pulled her knees close to her body and wrapped her arms around them as she watched me, a slight frown creasing her brow between her eyes. “You’re not going to run away from all of this and leave Lexie and me behind, are you?”

I shook my head. “I just wanted to see how closely watched we are. If it would be easy to sneak out and go for a stroll, or if they’d spot us and bring us back immediately.” I sighed and sat back from the ledge. “See if it’d be easy or hard to escape in the future if we need to.” There was no way back up that I could see. Peyton moved beside me, slipping over the edge of the roof and dropping down quietly. “What are you doing?” I hissed at her.

“Going for a walk,” she said, her voice a loud whisper.

“There’s no way back up here!” She shrugged, not concerned in the slightest, and started to make her way down to the alley entrance.

Annoyed, I slipped over the edge of the roof, carefully dropping to the ground. I hurried to catch up to her.


Whenever we rode with Raella in the wagon, we were given long lectures on the history of the Empire, starting with Lexie’s first ride immediately after leaving the University campus. Afterwards, Lexie made more of an effort at riding her horse.

Raella had a very no-nonsense and straightforward way of speaking, her voice an almost monotone as she relayed the details of their world. Antiquity was hard to pin down – over the course of thousands of years, so many documents and structures and items had deteriorated and no longer existed. The stories that did exist were as much myth as history. Because of the Primordial language, Raella and many other scholars had deduced that Elves had once been the sole inhabitants of the world before the gods arrived. Their stories say that when the gods came, they saw a beautiful and lush world with a thriving magical civilization, but decided to introduce their own creations anyway. The gods also brought the gift of divine magic – any person they favored, elf or otherwise, was given immensely powerful and rare magic as a sign of that favor and were called the Chosen. The gods also had personal Champions to represent them, individuals that were physically enhanced and had some degree of divine magic and protection, if not the same raw energy that a Chosen one had. Collectively, to be favored by a god was to be one of the Graces.

“So clerics and paladins,” I heard Peyton say at one point when she was riding near Raella’s side of the wagon. Raella gave her a curious look, obviously not understanding the reference, but said nothing to the statement. “Though… do the gods grant their powers to very many?”

“No. It was always a very rare thing, to be a Chosen or Champion of a god. Usually, the Graced were called in times of divine need.”

One of those instances of divine need rose many years ago, when an elven man had pushed his mortal magic to its very limits, and managed to raise himself to something very like divinity. The gods were offended by this, and several gave their favorites a mission: to destroy this individual. Unfortunately, he had become too strong, so all they could manage was sealing him away.

“And we’re here to reseal him?” I interrupted when I was hearing this lecture.

“Yes,” Raella answered simply.

“What was he like?” I asked.

She was silent for a long moment. “That was nearly 5000 years ago. No one really knows for sure. But from our understanding, he was a particularly vain and cruel individual. We suspect that he intended to challenge the gods themselves with his newfound power, to carve out his own domain amongst them.”

“Has anyone ever tried to free him instead of resealing him?”

Raella gave me a very sharp look. “Has he been speaking to you?” I shook my head. “Good. He will make promises to get you to release him. Do not trust them.” Then she continued with her lecture without answering my question.

Shortly after the threat was sealed, the gods stepped away from the world and no longer had a direct influence on it. Their favorites dwindled and disappeared until divine magic became a rarity. Their temples fell into disrepair as people realized the gods had abandoned them, and worship decreased until barely anyone could remember the names or domains of the divine.

Shortly after that time, the Elven empire began its conquest. First, they spread into the southern continent, the region where the dwarves lived, because of the vast mineral wealth of that area.

“Do the dwarves live in underground cities?” I had asked absently when Raella first mentioned them.

She had paused, glancing back at me from where she sat up next to Chase. “Lexie asked the very same thing. Where does that silly idea come from?”

“So they don’t,” I said. Strangely, I felt a little sad. The second I had heard about dwarves, I had immediately pictured massive underground structures hewn from the very Earth itself.

Raella shook her head. “No. They have expansive mining organizations, but they live above ground like everyone else. The only things that live underground… well. You won’t want to meet them.”

The Elves then spread across the western continent, where the humans lived in various tribes or smaller warring kingdoms. The entire conquest took nearly a thousand years to complete, the obsessive quest of a single family line intent on completing what the first Emperor had set out to do. The Empire was relatively peaceful for the next 2000 years, facing only the occasional rebellion or quelling the raids of remaining barbarian tribes that had resisted rule.

But then the first cracks of the Fracture had started. It began with individuals that had been cast out from the mainland Empire for their questionable magic practices and studies. Many were heavily judged for the ethics of their experiments, and moved out to the fringes of the Empire to continue their studies in peace. And since humans and dwarves were second class citizens in the Empire, they were targeted and used inhumanely in these experiments. “There was one mage that had turned an entire human village into a ravenous horde of undead. Another, not many years later, that specifically kidnapped human children. When the authorities finally listened to the appeals of their parents, they found that the children had been twisted into amorphous, acid spitting monsters. Other similar horrors were visited upon humans and dwarves alike, because the authorities were slow to take the concerns of those citizens seriously.”

The line of Emperors and Empresses had also become increasingly erratic over time. Some were obsessed with the building of great monuments, monuments that went unfinished whenever the Emperor that had started it died. Others were obsessed with further conquest, sometimes personally leading armadas across the sea, never to return. Some were bent on impossible missions, or were unreasonably cruel, or invested in the strange ethically questionable experiments of the fringe mages. A lot of them were assassinated or deposed, replaced with the next in line for succession.

The last Elven Emperor had been relatively harmless. He left the running of the Empire in more capable hands and spent his days wiving, whoring, and enjoying his wealth and influence. As a result, by the time of his death, he had several true born heirs and many bastards besides. When he died, there was a war of succession as his children each attempted to lay claim to the throne. And not just his children – other magistrates and nobles also made claims, if not for the entire Empire then for one small piece of it. “And that’s the Fracture,” I stated, remembering what I had heard about it before.

“Yes. It was a tumultuous time, and the Empire never truly reformed. The larger cities govern themselves, and offer protection to smaller villages or towns. We still present a unified front toward outside lands, and have collectively agreed to maintain isolation. However, in recent years, some trade and deliberation has been opened with the dwarves.” She paused for a moment, seeming to consider how much to explain, before elaborating. “It will be necessary to pass through dwarven mines to reach the seal. We knew, as the time neared, that it would be important to gain access at some point. Either through peaceful negotiation or war. Luckily, Master Zern and the ruler of Glyss, the city closest to that border, managed to push for peace.”

“So the seal is buried deep underground?” I asked.

“Yes,” Raella answered.

Great. Why did everyone always want to bury shit like this away?


The street wasn’t empty. There were individuals walking along it and a small group loitering in front of our inn, a little upset at having their business turned away. Peyton took a cautious glance around, then stepped out and started walking toward the center of town. I followed, ducking my head nervously. She glanced at me, an amused look on her face. “Lucas, just act like you belong. You’ll be fine.”

“Easy for the actor to say,” I grumbled, but attempted to straighten my posture and act like this was an everyday occurrence for me. Peyton grinned. “What if they notice we don’t have pointed ears?”

“Are you in the habit of staring at other peoples’ ears?”

“When they don’t look normal, yeah.” She shrugged, brushing off my concern.

The center of town was busier. It looked like a street market had recently cleared out, with a few stalls standing empty already, and a cart being loaded up with supplies as another stall owner prepared to shut down. There were two other stalls that appeared to be open though – both selling food. There were people settled on the rim of a circular fountain at the center of the square, and others closing up shops that lined some of the nearby streets. People called farewells and greetings to each other when they recognized someone.

“I wonder what kind of food they sell,” Peyton said.

I shrugged. “I didn’t bring any money. I was just going for a walk.”

She stepped over to the one with the shorter line. I frowned as I watched her. It wasn’t just that I hadn’t brought money – I also hadn’t been given any money. Still, she produced some coins from a pocket and brought back three paper packets. She handed one to me. “No one gave me any money,” I said.

She grinned at me. “No one gave me any money either.” She continued to walk, choosing a street seemingly at random to head down. I followed her slowly, investigating what she had handed me. It was some kind of fried bread, and when I bit into it there was a sweet cream and fruity jam filling it. It was delicious. I ate slowly as I trailed behind her.

When Peyton finished eating, she folded the paper carefully and slipped it into a pocket. She appeared to be saving the third packet for later, and I wondered if she planned to give it to Lexie. She slowed her pace so that we were walking next to each other. When she glanced up at me, I looked away. “Why do you always avoid me?” she asked finally.

I shrugged, and she raised an eyebrow at the noncommittal response. With a sigh, I finally said, “I guess you make me nervous.”

She smiled. “Yes, I’ve been told I have that effect on men.” I smirked, but said nothing. We continued walking in silence.

I had mostly let her choose the path, and I was starting to wonder if we had wandered too far when I saw that we were approaching the inn from a different direction. “So how are we going to get back in?” I asked. We returned to the alley where we had left, and I began to study the roof ledge and the surrounding area. I was thinking that I could boost her up to the ledge when Peyton walked straight up to the back door where the kitchen was at and tried the knob. It was locked. I leveled an ‘I told you so’ look at her when she shocked me by knocking.

After a moment, the barkeep opened the door a sliver, looking at us in surprise. Recognizing us, she opened the door to let us in. Peyton grabbed my hand suddenly and raised a finger to her lips, smiling in a charmingly sheepish fashion. She said, “Please don’t tell anyone we snuck out. We wanted to be alone.” And then she presented the third packet to the woman. The barkeep accepted the packet gratefully and nodded, smiling conspiratorially. As I passed her, she gave me an appraising look, and I felt my face begin to burn in embarrassment. We walked back into the common room, which was blessedly empty. Lexie must have gone to her room.

Peyton still held my hand, pulling me along after her up the stairs. At the top, she glanced around. Seeing no one nearby, she finally dropped my hand. “I guess now it’s just a waiting game to see if anyone noticed our little stroll.”

I nodded. “Yeah.” There was an awkward silence as my brain tried to think of something to say. “Thanks for the snack,” I finally managed, and without looking back, I went straight to my room. I flexed the hand that she had grabbed, frowning to myself as I stepped over to shut the window.

22. Interlude

“Can anyone even remotely tell me what the fuck just happened?!” Jennifer paced behind her desk, too agitated to sit. Standing in front of it was her tech team, the three individuals assigned to attempting to trace the Stream. Manuel Huerta-Ramos and Andrea Smith both stared at her desk, refusing to look her in the eye. Andrea, already pale and blonde, was paler than usual and looked like she was on the verge of crying or puking. Manuel, on the other hand, had a slight frown, his face turning slightly red, looking like he wished he could explode. Sometimes Jennifer felt like the kids these days were too emotional, too easy to read. It irritated her.

Terry Greene, on the other hand, stood straight, staring back at her almost impassively. When she made eye contact with him, he offered the faintest eyebrow quirk. She had worked with Terry many times before, had known him for years and even loosely considered him a friend. She could see the look for what it was – the slight questioning of whether this matter warranted this much anger, or if she was the one letting herself get too emotional because it had involved Cassandra. “We don’t have the information we need to make an accurate assessment. What we can assume is that something about their location caused the Blackout,” he said.

The Blackout. The phenomena already had a name then. “And why can we assume that?” Jennifer asked, focusing solely on Terry.

Terry paused for a moment. “We think that the stone ruins once belonged to a temple or holy site of some sort.”

“How do you figure?”

“First off, it’s been established that only Elves can cast. If Asterollan can cast magic as a human, it means one of two things. Either he has Elven heritage that he hasn’t mentioned or doesn’t know about, or he is wielding the same divine magic the Graces have. If he’s a Grace as well, then the holy site of the god that favors him would likely increase his powers.”

Jennifer frowned. “If they have their gods back, why do they even need our people for their mission.” Terry shrugged and opened his mouth to respond, but she held up a hand to stop him. “I know. We don’t know enough about any of it,” she said, stifling her frustration. “Still doesn’t explain the Blackout.”

“It might. If the site is heavily protected by the divine magic of one of their deities, maybe that somehow interfered with whatever is recording our people for the Stream.”

Jennifer sat down and studied the three standing before her as she considered what Terry had said. She wondered, not for the first time, exactly how every movement and moment was being recorded for Cassandra and the others. Whatever it was, the subjects themselves couldn’t see it – no one ever reacted to the camera viewpoint at all. There were never any cuts to the video, no clear edits. It was like a continuously powered completely invisible drone camera buzzed around them, circling as needed to catch every moment.

She studied the younger members of the tech team for a moment – both were still avoiding her gaze, and seemed to feel relieved that Terry had done all the talking. “You can go,” she said curtly. Andrea practically fled from the room, probably to find a bathroom to cry in. It wasn’t the first time she had done so. Manuel flashed Jennifer a slightly menacing look, but turned quickly on his heel and left her office without a word.

Terry made no move to leave. He glanced pointedly over at the couch. It was the sort that converted into a bed by allowing the backrest to lay flat. It was in that position even now, and there were blankets and a pillow sprawled across it. Terry sat on the edge of the bed and began petting Larry, who had been snoozing there throughout the entire briefing. Jennifer watched, frowning as she thought of the Blackout.

It had happened maybe an hour ago, and she had already pulled up their own recording of it and watched it several times over. Of course, it had to be Cassandra’s stream. The Blackout had been a lapse of about 10 to 15 minutes. From the moment Cassandra descended the dark stairs with the Hunter, her own stream had gone pitch black. There had been no video or audio for her, although the other three continued to play just fine. Jennifer had played the moment back, the volume on her computer as loud as it would go to see if any sound filtered through. She had adjusted the brightness of her monitor to see if any image lay hidden in the darkness. There had been nothing.

She had been watching when it happened, as she often did. She had sat, tensed, staring at the screen, her eyes flicking to the time constantly as she counted every passing second that she couldn’t see her daughter. Nothing like it had occurred before. The Stream did strangely respect nudity, casting a soft blurriness on the video whenever someone in the scene was naked. There were some perverts online that were working on how to sharpen the images with varying degrees of success. It wasn’t that anyone was missing much – someone bathing, or using the bathroom, or changing clothes – but that didn’t stop the idiots from trying. The shifting of colors could always be seen behind the blur and the audio was always present in the background though, and this instance had been dead silent and dark. Hence being called the Blackout.

It had resumed when Asterollan exited the cavern alone. Jennifer had feared the worst initially, feeling the bile of rage build in her throat as she wondered what this man had done to her child. She had physically reached out to grip the edges of her computer monitor, on the verge of screaming at it. But Cassandra appeared as well, stepping out of the darkness of the cavern and blinking against the light of day. Completely unharmed. Safe.

The internet was already blowing up with speculation and analysis, and no one had any better answers than her own team of professionals. “When was the last time you dropped by your apartment?” Terry asked, breaking into her silent musing. She shrugged noncommittally, almost ashamed to tell the truth. He glanced around her office. The door to her private bathroom was slightly ajar, and it was easy to see that she had her toothbrush and make up and other personal care items stored in there. Her duffel bag with her shower supplies and gym shoes sat on a cabinet next to her office door – she had started exercising nightly at a local gym, so she could shower after and return to the office to work and sleep. “Jennifer,” Terry said her name a bit severely when she didn’t answer.

“I go back to it regularly,” she said a bit defensively. Not entirely a lie. She used the apartment laundry room to wash her clothes weekly. She just didn’t set foot in the apartment itself. There was nothing wrong with it – it was a nice place. But she wanted to be here. She wanted to be working on this.

Terry sighed, reading through her lie. “Is there any point to even paying for it?” he said, but she had the feeling he had asked rhetorically so she didn’t bother with an answer this time.

“I should take Larry for his walk,” she said instead, standing to retrieve the leash. Larry perked up, immediately awake at the word ‘walk.’ He wagged his tail happily as he carefully climbed off the couch. Larry had his own bed here as well, but she had gotten used to sharing the couch with him. She had initially been concerned over whether the team would mind his presence, but they liked him quite a bit. In fact, he was gaining weight, and she suspected that most of them were giving him snacks or feeding him between his meals. She had a food bowl and a water bowl set up for him that she refreshed daily as well. The pet supplies were another sign of how lived-in her office had become.

“Jennifer,” Terry said again, his tone softer this time.

She grinned at him, a thin, forced smile. “The walk will clear my head. I was probably more pissed that it happened with Cassandra rather than anyone else. Just… Try to find out what you can.”

He sighed and shook his head. “Of course. By the way, Linda said to invite you over for dinner sometime. Tomorrow sound good?”

Jennifer hated the idea of spending time away from the office, but she also didn’t want to have this argument with Terry. She smiled and said, “Sure, that sounds great.”


Her team was massive for the moment, but they weren’t getting results. She had four people assigned to each individual stream, three of which worked in 8 hour shifts and watched every tedious second for anything that might remotely be a clue. The fourth carefully watched and re-watched relevant moments from the notes of the others. She had at least 5 individuals working phone tip lines or sifting through online content. There were a lot of Stream fans that were very observant, and any theory or analysis provided, even on an amateur level, was being considered if it merited looking into. Anything that seemed important was pushed on to the tech team. Some of the problem though was that in regards to such unknown phenomena, it was hard to narrow down what to take seriously and what to disregard as hogwash.

They also had a young man named Vincent Underwood that was studying everything about magic possible. He had screenshots of the magic circles used to summon their people to that other world. That had been so early in the Stream that she had no clue how he had even obtained them, but they were in his cluttered office, posted on his whiteboard, with notes scribbled all around them. Most of what he studied seemed to be fables and myth. He was currently fascinated with researching stories of Avalon, though she wasn’t sure how that would help.

She had a field team in case they found anything that merited physical investigation, but had to eventually loan most of them out to other assignments because she couldn’t find anything substantial for them to do besides helping with research or twiddle their thumbs. There were two individuals she kept working with the airlines and continuing the search for the plane, but it had been long enough since the disappearance at this point that hopes that they would find anything were low.

They held meetings twice a day, morning and evening. Major events in the Stream were discussed, and information that could provide hints about what they could be researching next. But whenever the floor was opened to what they could actually do, there was always an immediate and crushing silence. Everyone had theories, but no one had answers. And all they could do was watch.

So Jennifer spent her days leading meetings, and taking Larry for walks in the park across the street, and going to the gym to work out more intensely than she had in years. And between all that, she watched the Stream for as long as she could remain conscious. Sometimes Larry would whine when he heard Cassandra’s voice on the computer speakers, and she would pat him on the head and say, “Me too, buddy. Me too.”


When she wasn’t watching the Stream, she was still online, more obsessively than she had ever been in her life. The internet and its culture had always been something belonging to her daughter’s generation. She had never really been interested in it beyond its practical uses. But now it was the only connection she had to Cassandra. She watched analysis and video montages, scrolled through memes, looked at fanart. She read essays and articles and top 10 lists all centered around her daughter. She rewatched significant moments that had occurred to her daughter over the weeks that she had traveled with her new Elven friends.

When she wasn’t looking up Stream content or watching the Stream itself, she checked the Facebook community for the family members of Flight 5071. It was run by Anna Hobbs, Peyton’s mother. Anna had reached out personally to every immediate family member of the missing and had invited them to what she had termed an “online support group.” In fact, when she had initially reached out to Jennifer she had revealed that she knew that Jennifer was leading the investigation team trying to find the source of the Stream. Jennifer wasn’t sure how she had gotten the information and had been clear that she couldn’t divulge anything (not that there was anything to share) and Anna had been very understanding about that. Still, a loose friendship had formed between them.

Over the past few months, Anna had also become the public face of the families of the missing. She spoke in interviews and held press conferences and always seemed to be doing something to keep the matter firmly in the minds of the public. She had even volunteered to foster two children whose parents had both been on the Flight. They had no other close family to take them. In fact, she and the children were living in Jennifer’s house in Reno. Anna had been in the process of relocating to Reno to foster the kids, and Jennifer had been in the process of moving to Virginia to lead her team. It had worked out quite nicely, and Anna had made quite a generous offer on the house.

The Stream was very popular, but a lot of people were beginning to treat it like any other form of entertainment. It was thanks to Anna Hobbs that everyone still remembered and talked about what could have possibly happened to Flight 5071. Sometimes Jennifer had to fight off the feeling that Anna was doing more substantial work by continuing public interest in the matter. After all, as long as interest continued, the funding would keep pouring in, and that was important.

Anna also included her in a group text with Lexie’s father, Jordan Saint, who was distraught at having lost his entire family on the flight, and Leanne and Frank Kearney, Lucas’s parents. She rarely contributed, but she read every message. In a way, she felt that her life had faded into her being nothing but an observer. A position she wasn’t sure she was comfortable with.

It was interesting watching the analysis come out of the Blackout. A new thing that Jennifer learned was that apparently there were people that “shipped” her daughter with the Hunter. This meant that they thought there was a potential for a romantic relationship between them. They were vehemently opposed by people that “shipped” her daughter with the elf, Lyre. Some argued that the Blackout was perhaps due to a tryst, though Jennifer doubted it. There were no signs of physical exertion, or misadjusted clothing, or mussed hair.

Jennifer played the video back again on her computer multiple times over the next weeks, staring at the dark rectangle on her screen. It lasted exactly 13 minutes and 52 seconds. What had happened in that time? Certainly, it couldn’t have been anything significant.