This post is technically not everything I wrote this week, but the half-page I didn't type up is the start of a new series of events with Devon and I don't like posting a mid-episode cliffhanger.
Enjoy!
Alexander took a pull from his mug. HE and Gwen had returned from their mission to Life support just in time for Gwen to retouch her makeup and get erady for the opening of the bar. Alexander’s relationship with the bartender didn’t get him free drinks – the inn wasn’t quite successful enough for that. Isaac had only opened a year and a half ago, and while he did well enough, there wasn’t yet consistent custom. Alexander still drank exclusively at Life Support – what better benefit was there to living above a bar?
He looked at Isaac, who was smiling broadly at one of his customers, and thought maybe there was one larger benefit.
Isaac, done with the customer – who looked oddly familiar – slid down to Alexander. “Need anything, honey?” he asked.
Alexander shook his head. “I’m good for now. I’ll let you know if I need…anything.” He winked at Isaac, making a face he thought was dangerous and sexy.
Isaac burst into merry laughter, collapsing onto the stool he kept behind the bar. Alexander joined in, though it was the awkward laughter o someone who wasn’t sure if he was being laughed with, or at.
“Oh, Alex, I’m sorry, just…that face!” Isaac wheezed. He lifted his apron, a classy black number, and wiped his eyes. Alexander’s laughter relaxed a little, now that he knew what was going on.
The storm had broken over Zydobe, and Alexander felt completely blinded. He couldn’t hear anyone’s truthfulness, his vision and hearing were reduced, and he could barely conjure enough light to read. The lights he’d constructed in his apartment were heavy-duty, sturdy complexes of power. They would survive a storm for two days; if it lasted longer he’d be forced to recreate them. It was worth the cost of lantern oil, or candles, not to mention the risk of fire.
Isaac got control over himself and headed off to check on other customers. As he left, someone slid onto the stool next to Alexander. He didn’t plan on engaging with his new neighbor, so he was startled when she began speaking to him.
“Well, Mr. Cartwright,” she said. Alexander turned, shocked to see the Lady Nave. “I trust that display was to conclude your investigation?”
Alexander nodded, thinking quickly. Other times he’d used this particular strategy, he’d had time to prepare for meeting his client. “Lady Nave, your partner is not abusing your trust,” he said, choosing his words very carefully. “I chose the avenue of investigation I did to bolster your public image.”
Lady Nave’s eyebrows rose. She leaned on the counter, her gray dress crinkling. “That is very magnanimous of you, Mr. Cartwright,” she said. “Is the case closed, then?”
“Unless your partner knows how to lie to a Tranquilus on a calm day, it is,” Alexander replied. After a pause, he added, “It was calm at the time.”
Lady Nave laughed, a delightful laugh. It was like tinkling bells. “I’m glad you are so sure of your discovery, Mr. Cartwright. Here is your payment.” She dropped a bag on the counter that clnked heavily. “I appreciate your…alacrity. If I need investigative services, I know on whom I should call.”
With that, she rose and departed, a vision of grace in gray silk gliding through the incongruous setting of the bar. Alexander waited for her to leave before opening the bag and checking how much was in it. His eyebrows shot up; the amount was in excess of what they’d agreed. He pulled out four silver coins, and signaled Gwen. The redhead, her cheeks flushed from exertion, glided over to his stool.
“Can I help you, sir?” she drawled. Alexander smiled and reached out his hand, carrying the coins. Gwen deftly swiped the coins, tucking them into a pocket hidden somewhere ein her dress. She winked and swept away.
Alexander took a copper coin from the pouch and laid it on the counter, then got up to walk around. He pushed through the crowd, fighting his way outside. Once clear of the building, he stood under the awning Isaac had put up over the street side of the inn. The rain outside was pouring down, and lightning crawled across the sky. The storm was unusually strong; the rainy season wasn’t due for at least a month. Maybe the Atmos priests had done some sort of working that stirred up the storms.
He felt a twinge of guilt. He hadn’t been to the Temple of Atmos in months. Anyone with a blessing was technically an acolyte, and as expected to participate in a service regularly. There was no actual punishment for skipping, other than the condemnation from anyone who knew about it. Isaac was occasionally one to scold Alexander for missing, though he rarely thought about it.
With a storm this wild, even someone like Alexander could exert a little Ventus power. He turned to face the west, cardinal direction of Ventus, and emitted a pulse of energy. The wind around him flared crazily, and he lifted an inch or so into the air. He closed his eyes and floated out into the storm.
Flight was a gift to the powerfully Ventus-blessed, but hovering was within Alexander’s grasp with a storm like this powering him. Atmos blessings depended on conditions as much as Terros blessings depended on materials.
“Watch out, idiot!”
Alexander’s eyes snapped open and his concentration shattered. He dropped half a foot to the ground; apparently the storm had magnified his hovering more than the thought. He stumbled and collapsed backward, which was fortunate. A horsedrawn cart clattered past, the driver bellowing obscenities at Alexander, who was soaked by the water the cart kicked up. Being blessed by Algidus protected him to an extent from cold, but being wet was still miserable. He stood up, wishing that a blessing granted control over water.
He began to shiver and turned to go into Life Support. The door burst open of its own accord as he approached, another handy little trick. He sighed happily as the warmth inside hit him, and slid through the crowd toward his usual stool.
His course took him to the bar, but he ended several seats too far to the right. As he started to walk to his seat, Isaac stopped him.
“Alexander! You’re soaked!” Isaac gasped. He whipped off his apron and ran around the bar, pushing customers out of his way. He got to Alexander and immediately checked his temperature.
“You’re freezing! You can’t just rely on your blessing to keep you healthy all the time!” Isaac scolded, turning Alexander around and shooing him toward the door. “This is why you always get sick, you just assume your blessing will handle everything. Just because you don’t feel the cold doesn’t mean you aren’t cold, stupid!” As they exited, Isaac kept his harangue going. Alexander was shivering too much to really listen, and just let himself be pushed along.
Isaac turned to go up the staircase when a whistling shriek ripped through the air. Alexander spun toward the source of the sound, but he couldn’t see anything through the driving rain.
“Alexander, what are you – Eye and Needle, shaking sand!” Isaac swore. Alexander saw what had set Isaac off: an enormous, massive ship flying through the air, aimed straight at them.
Alexander closed his eyes and inhaled. He would regret what was about to happen, but he didn’t seem to have much choice.
He turned to face south, into Life Support. He inhaled again, this time with specific intent. Energy flooded into him, and his body seemed to freeze. His bones were surely cracking, his marrow expanding in bloody ice crystals. His blood was slowing, congealing, his saliva becoming icicles in his mouth.
He screamed, and spun back to the plummeting sky ship, pointing both palms at it. A blast of pure force ripped out of his palms, emanating from two ice blue Algidus glyphs that had appeared on his skin. Hot air billowed from his body, a reaction to his working.
The blast of force wasn’t like one a Thermas blessing could conjure. Thermas force was blunt and uncontrollable, good for discouraging footpads and thieves but bad at picking up a teapot. Algidus let Alexander move objects with his mind, and all he wanted was to move the airship far enough that it wouldn’t crush him.
Blue light burst from the ground beneath his feet, and an enormous glyph traced itself around him. Blue lines of light streamed from the air, flickering up through the air and weaving together, forming a net above their heads.
The falling skyship lurched as the net of light slammed into it. Alexander felt the impact as a flare of heat in his skin. The blue light blazing around him grew brighter, and with a final yell Alexander shoved the ship with all his might.
The ship lurched and groaned, but shifted to the right. It crashed to the ground, but it didn’t hit Life Support. Alexander had time to hear yelling begin before he fell to his knees, then onto his hands, and finally rolled onto his side. As he passed out, the blue light around him swirled into a single spark that flew off to the northwest.
A rainbow of colors rippled across the backs of Alexander’s eyelids. He gasped, and opened his eyes. Standing over him was a woman with very short, dark blonde hair holding a round medallion inlaid with mother of pearl strips set in gold. The mother of pearl was blazing as the woman – the woman from inside the inn, he realized – called upon it to heal him.
Waves of sensation ripped through him. They weren’t good or bad sensations. It was more like something was pulling on his insides, a very strong, very odd feeling.
The medallion winked out. Alexander jerked, arching his back involuntarily, then fell limp. The girl got to her feet, towering over him.
“That’s the last of it,” she said to someone behind him. “If I use the medallion any more, it’ll shatter.”
“As long as he’s okay,” the person, apparently Isaac, replied. Alexander considered rolling over, but decided lying there was much better.
He could see that they were in his apartment. The black walls were lit by a blazing gem on his table. His lights had fallen apart in the face of the brutal storm. It occurred to him his coldbox might have been damaged by his working.
“He’s just exhausted. He’ll be haunted from that working, though.”
Alexander blinked, his mind working slowly. He opened his mouth to ask a question.
His mouth didn’t move.
“There’s no way I can get to the Temple through the wreckage and the storm!” Isaac said. “Can’t you cleanse him?”
The woman shook her head. “I’m sorry, Isaac, but only Atmos priest healers can cleanse an Atmos haunting. He’ll be able to move in a day or so.”
Alexander felt a spike of panic. Hauntings happened when someone used so much power in a working they caught the attention of Atmos, goddess of the skies, or Terros, god of the earth. Hauntings were the price of enacting a powerful effect, and paralyzed a blessing until a priest could cleanse the poor afflicted individual.
If Alexander was haunted so strongly he was physically paralyzed, he must have really pissed Atmos off. He closed his eyes – the one part of his body he could move – and tried to relax.
“Jenay, can you help me get him to the Temple?” Isaac asked.
“I can’t, I have to go help the other casualties. I’ll see if I can send someone to help, Isaac.” Her voice was curiously intimate, like she and Isaac were old friends. Alexander opened his eyes.
Except they didn’t move either.
Alexander would have really started to panic, except his breathing was completely out of his control. It was surprisingly difficult to succumb to terror when one couldn’t breathe too quickly or break into a cold sweat.
“All right, Jenay. Do your best.” He heard flesh touch flesh and assumed they shook hands. He heard footsteps leaving, and felt a hand touch his face. Isaac spoke, but Alexander could tell it wasn’t for him.
“This haunting had better get cleansed, and fast.”
*****
Devon woke in his bed, his muscles sore from the day before. He let himself lie still, enjoying the feel of his blanket against his bare skin.
His moment of peace was shattered by a soft but insistent whine. His speaking medallion was going off. He groaned and rolled over, reaching up to take it from the peg on the wall against which his bed was pressed.
He held the medallion in his right hand, and pointed south with his left. A tiny trickle of energy flickered through him, the most Kosmima he could muster. The whine coming from the medallion shut off, and a voice began to speak. It was a deep voice, a voice used to public speaking.
“Devon Knowles, I am Chancellor Aron Mark. I am interested in your services this afternoon. Please come by between the hours of noon and three.”
The voice message ended, and another immediately started.
“Devon Knowles, I am Gregory Nami. I am a clerk for Judge Hanover. We request your service this afternoon. Please call at your convenience.”
Another voice message immediately started.
“Devon Knowles, I am speaking for the House of Acuity. We would appreciate the use of your service. Please come as soon as you can.”
By this time, Devon was wide awake and getting dressed. A chancellor, a very powerful judge, and one of the largest centers of business in the city, all calling on him? It was going to be a good day. He threw on an outfit of black slacks and a dark red shirt, slipped his shoes on, and grabbed his messenger bag. He started to jump out of his window, his standard exit, but realized that was likely an unsafe choice after such a power expenditure yesterday. He took the door.
Walking through his apartment building was an experience. Most people that lived there were very poor, and smelled like it. Devon hurried down the stairs and into the street, headed for the transit tower.
As he walked by the church, a voice called out to him. “Ho there, stranger!”
Devon considered stopping for a moment, but quickly dismissed the idea. He’d done a service a few weeks ago; he wasn’t due to participate in another for at least two more. Talking to priests, or just churchmen in general, was always an exercise in futility.
“Excuse me!” the voice called again. “Could you spare a moment to help me?”
Devon stopped, sighing a heavy sigh, and turned. He could at least hear the man out.
“Thank you!” the man said. It was a man about Devon’s age, and cute. He wore a simple robe of yellow cloth, which didn’t hide his attractive body shape. He was blond, with light freckles and pale blue eyes.
“My roses aren’t doing well, and I need someone with a Fytevo blessing to take a look at them,” the man explained. “I can tell you’re blessed by the Earth God. Have you any affinity with plants?”
Devon sighed again, then looked at the roses growing on the wall of the church. He walked up to them, noting a number of black spots on the leaves.
He touched the closest rosebud, sending a pulse of power into it. The rosebud unfurled, and a smattering of golden sparkles flew from its petals.
“There’s some kind of insect chewing on them,” he explained. “That’s all I can tell you.”
“Bless you for your help, brother,” the churchman said, drawing on the air with his index finger. Devon felt a shiver, like the hair on his arms was standing up.
“I’ve cleansed you. You won’t need to attend a service for at least a month,” the churchman said, smiling. “Come see me next time you’re due.”
With that cryptic command, the churchman ambled away. Devon stared after him, completely nonplussed. After a moment, he shrugged and turned, walking briskly into the transit tower.
He showed his membership card to the clerk, a pleasant old man named Gerald. He started to walk away when Gerald called him back.
“Devon, I hate to be the one to tell you this, but there’s been a shortening of the durations on memberships. You’ll need to renew in two months.”
“What?” Devon asked, shocked. “I paid three hundred gold crescents for this membership!”
Gerald winced. “Prices are going up. Something going on in Aranda. Above my pay grade.”
Devon snarled and stalked over to the transit departure circle. The day had started so well. He revised his plans, opting to go to The Laughing Maid instead of heading straight to the government buildings to stake out these new employers.
Devon made it a habit to always know something about the people for whom he delivered. It helped prevent messy situations. He stepped into the transit circle when it was his turn, and felt himself tensing up, expecting another bad trip.
But this transit was as vanilla as all the other city jumps he’d made. No strange sensation, no startlingly vivid visions. Just a white flash and a new transit tower.
He strode out of the tower, calling a greeting to the clerk he passed. He headed straight for The Laughing Maid, walking purposefully but not hurriedly. Never hurry unless you’re running a message, and then never hurry and be seen. As a motto, it lacked class, but it had worked well for him.
The flowers startled him; they’d changed to a brilliant red. A moment of dread slowed his step; if Sarah had put out new flowers by herself, she’d be in a horrible mood. As he approached the door of the inn, he didn’t feel the usual sense of calm wash over him. That couldn’t be good.
As he entered, the sheer number of people in the common room startled him. For the hour, at least two hours before noon, even three people would be abnormal. There had to be at least twenty, all talking and laughing and eating.
That explained the unusually tense atmosphere. Sarah always maintained an aura of happiness and relaxation in her common room, but when Devon caught a glimpse of her behind the bar, hair askew and stains on her apron, frantically making drinks, he understood why it was missing. She didn’t serve alcohol before about three in the afternoon, but this crowd was happy to drink her cider and juice.
Devon took a stool at the bar and waited for Sarah to notice him. He subtly began broadcasting feelings of serenity. He wasn’t nearly as good at this as Sarah, but he could make a difference in her mood, at least.
“Hey, flounder boy,” a loud voice behind him said.
Devon turned to see Amber, wearing a black vest over a shiny eggplant shirt and black pants. “Flounder? Where did you get that?” he asked.
“I just thought it was funny,” she said. “And you look like a flounder.” With a cheeky grin she melted into the crowd.
Devon frowned. He did not look like a flounder. He had a very handsome face. His sister told him that all the time.
“What do you want, Devon?” Sarah asked, finally getting to him. Had he not been distracted by Amber’s bizarre comment, he would have noticed she was standing straighter, the wrinkles on her face were disappearing and her eyes were less maddened.
“Tell me I’m handsome,” he said plaintively. Sarah’s jaw dropped right before she slapped him.
Devon squawked. “By the Eye, Sarah!” he said, rubbing his face. “Was that necessary?”
“I didn’t hit you that hard. Stop whining. Now what do you want?”
Devon stopped emitting pulses of calm and focused on his cheek. A cool tingle replaced the stinging, and he felt the redness start to fade. Panida was nothing for major healing, but tiny things like a slap he could fix.
“I came to tell you I have three jobs from the government today,” he said, resuming the serenity aura. Maybe Sarah would eventually start helping him out; she knew this place well enough to divert the emotional atmosphere with a thought.
“That’s wonderful!” Sarah said, and Devon finally felt another aura bolster his own. Apparently, her mood was as important as her attention.
“Ashleigh!” Sarah bellowed. After a moment, the now-redheaded waitress swished over, wearing a short pink skirt, tight black top, two belts, and black leather boots. Devon wondered if she had a Fytevo blessing; her hair changed color enough that buying dye would be incredibly expensive.
“Cover the bar for me for a moment,” Sarah said. Ashleigh sighed, but came behind the bar and started refilling drinks.
“So what kinds of jobs?” Sarah asked, leaning over the counter.
“Don’t know yet,” Devon replied. “I’ll find out this afternoon. They all want to be picked up after noon.”
Sarah nodded. “Who is it?”
Devon told her about the messages, explaining what he knew of the clients. Aron Mark was the chancellor of the harbor, in charge of maintaining records of all the ships and goods that passed through it. Judge Hanover presided over a naval merchant’s court, and the House of Acuity was the site of a huge daily market.
Sarah frowned. “That sounds kind of fishy,” she remarked.
“What do you mean?” Devon asked. He noticed he was drawing a thread of power out of the ground, all he could get through the wooden floor. He shut down his aura and stopped the draw; if his body was defensively drawing strength to bolster his blessing, he’d pushed too far.
“Well, you’ve got jobs from two officials that basically control business coming in from the sea, and one of the biggest selling areas in the city,” she said, frowning and playing with a strand of hair. “I’m not saying you’re delivering something that will destroy the city economy or anything, but be careful. That’s all.”
Devon nodded. “Thank you, Sarah. I’ll be fine. I can take care of myself. You know that.”
Sarah smiled a little sadly. “I do, Devon. I do.” She cleared her throat and Devon felt a powerful wash of cheer flow from her. He gave her a wry look, and she shrugged, winked, and began cleaning glasses that had begun to stack up on the counter.
“So when was the last time you went out on a date?” Sarah asked, very obviously not looking at Devon at all. Devon rolled his eyes.
“You’re just a cornucopia of subtlety today, aren’t you?” he asked. “Ashleigh. Get me some cider!”
“Right away, flounder boy!” Ashleigh called back. Devon slammed his hand down on the counter, which only made Ashleigh laugh and Sarah give him a murderous look.
“So?” she asked, returning to her glass.
“The last time I went on a date…” Devon mused. The sailor he’d run into popped into his head. “I guess it was that guy from your friend’s inn you forced me to dance with.”
Sarah gasped. “That was months ago! This is an emergency!”
“It was two weeks ago, Sarah, calm down,” Devon said drily. “I’m not so lonely I need to be going out and having sex every night.”
“But you are lonely!” Sarah whined. “You come here every day and flirt with my waitresses! Honey, you need someone in your life.”
Devon looked up at the clock. An hour to noon. He could go to the House of Acuity, since they wanted him whenever he could get there.
“Just leave, I see you looking at my clock,” Sarah said, pretending to be hurt. “I hope I never see you again!”
Devon grinned impishly at her, then got off his stool and started sliding through the crowd, which was finally thinning. The last thing he heard was a loud voice scream as he exited the inn.
“I just finished your cider, you jerk!”
Devon continued to smile as he walked jauntily down the street, whistling cheerily. He strolled to the central transit tower, taking his time and watching people bustle around the city.
Before he entered the tower, he stopped to lean against the heavy stone walls. He closed his eyes, and let his mind wander.
In his mind, an image formed. Just as always, he saw the Temple of Terros. Situated near the eastern edge of the city, it was a blocky building, with thick walls and few windows. Priests of Terros maintained that temple should be a place of darkness and meditation. As he pondered, golden mists spread out from the image of the Temple, and coalesced into buildings and streets.
His fingertips began to burn as the image of the city built itself in his head. He kept his mind relaxed, letting the image increase in size. The more complex and enormous the map in his head became, the more his skin burned. Just when the pain became too much to bear, there was a pop in his ears and it all went away.
He opened his eyes, and felt a reassuring sense of confidence and direction. The city changed a tiny bit every day, and the longer he went without reeducating his map lore, the more he would feel an underlying sense of confusion. His map lore wasn’t visible unless he activated it, but it still gave him a sense of direction even greater than the internal compass his blessing granted.
Renewing his map lore didn’t actually make him more confident, but taking away that atavistic sense of being lost made him simply less anxious. And it burned a few minutes.
He began to walk again, entering the tower. He showed his card to the clerk, waving down the irritating reminder that he needed to renew again sooner than he thought. He advanced through the line as quickly as he was allowed, and warped to the merchant’s district.