Helkey 34 — The Battle of Sunken Crag, Darkest Pit, Brightest Light

My eyes lock on the flailing red serpent in Rarhquick’s mouth as he approaches. My Vortex, taken from a defeated horde of devils, vibrates underneath me as I angle it toward the big Plumacat. The weird unicycle sprouting a half-dozen pipes roars like the loudest Harley I’ve ever encountered. This engine noise combines with a pained, banshee-wail of a damnable worb at its angry heart. Its exhaust is a constant coal roll. The worb — being one of those nasty soul-torture devices that devils use to power both their machines and their magic.

The red serpent, the Uktena, is lashing about trying to bite Rarhquick. Fangs extend, drip some kind of venom. To no avail. The big Plumacat has him by a horn. So the devil snake can’t turn his head enough to deliver a bite. I look down at Zaya. She’s standing on my lap, staring. Rage lights in her eyes. She’s got her mouth clamped, keeping back angry words. Yeah. I understand why she’s pissed. That horned flying snake devil is one of many who’ve hunted her kind to near extinction. An Uktena scout for the army of devils who’re still trying to kill or enslave us all. I don’t like the little genocidal jerk either. I drive up to the devil-snake.

“What’s your name, Mr jackass Devil Snake?” I ask him, not even trying to keep the anger and sarcasm out of my voice. I’m using omnis scientia and interpretor to translate into Minosian. I can talk devil. But I don’t want to right now. I’ve got about a thousand things on my mind. Besides, it’d feel like a defilement to my mouth and the last time I had an opportunity to brush teeth was nearly two days ago. My magic horologium watch says it’s 7:01 AM Hell time. So my two day anniversary in this hot, stinking, out to kill me and take my soul joint’s about eight hours from now. Joyous cause for celebration — not! “Got anything to say before I have Rarhquick put you in the sack?” I extend one of the bags I looted off the devils in Poacher’s Cave. It’s this weird sack made out of some kind of skin from some poor creature. Typical devil regalia. Barf!

The Uktena bobs toward me. I can tell it’s having trouble seeing. Welts and burns cover its body. Yeah, my Urdrake buddies blasted the shit out of it. Good fucking job! It hisses as it recognizes me. “The mage!” it exclaims. “You will be a slave! You know you cannot escape Regina! Surrender to me now and…”

“Got it!” I interrupt. “Completely understood! Your name’s Hassle! Good to know!” and with that I shoot my arm out toward Rarhquick, plop the bag over the Uktena’s head as the big cat releases, then close it over his writhing body. I hear it shout in protest as I tighten the bag down. “Now I’ll check back with you after I’m done destroying more of this Regina’s army. Thanks for the name! I’ll expect you to give me a full report on her when I do!” I thump the bag for emphasis. After a few more muffled shouts and hisses, the bag grows quiet. I can practically feel the sullen seeping up through it. Serves the little fucker right.

Rarhquick and I rejoin the Vortexes as we race toward the ailing scorpions. A small group of devils on Vortexes runs away from us, kicking up rooster tails of dirt and crud. About ten in all. They’re halfway to the jagged bridge crossing Sunken Crag’s black and swarming pit. In the distance, a larger group of devils spills over that bridge. A hundred-or-so riding more of these damn Vortex Hell cycles. They’re running ahead of a huge main group coming from Overseer that’s about three times as big. I can’t see much of Regina’s main army. Dust and haze covers most of it. But I guess that main force hosts about three hundred fracking devils and will reach Sunken Crag in a little less than ten minutes. By then, that lead group of a hundred devils will be closing in. Off to my left, Zorfang and his Urdrake are moving steadily northward near the hills. Grimjaw’s scouts are running up behind me. A glance back tells me they’ll link up with me in about five minutes.

Regina. So she’s the chief asshole in these parts. It’s an oddly normal name. Hell’s history has been tangled with Earth’s for ages and ages now. So I shouldn’t be surprised. It’s just weird. Like I have an evil aunt named Regina hurling armies of devils at me from a tower built on the backs of thousands of enslaved souls. Yeah. Totally fracking normal.

Position of Rebel and Devil Forces During Battle of Sunken Crag, Darkest Pit, Brightest Light

Shapes of Vortex-mounted devils emerging from the bridge over Sunken Crag and hurtling toward us are starting to resolve in the early daylight. I can just make out little glints of light reflecting off the metal bikes in this most recent swarm. I glance at our thirty three bikes. Sure, many of us doubled up. But even Regina’s forerunner force has us outnumbered. And a total of more than four hundred fucking devils are bearing down. So fucking outnumbered. Always outnumbered. That damn Hell sun is rising. Hurling its heat as it lifts. Sweltering night becomes boiling day. The air itself feels like a second sun as it seems to capture and redouble the Hell sun’s rays. Sweat dribbles down my neck. Mottle shudders on my back as he works to cool me. His concern seeps through his touch. He’s worried about me. Always. The Plumacat spit compress over the hole in my torso itches. I’m tired. So goddamn tired after the never-ending fighting, the constant live-wire of magic burning through me, my wound, and Hell’s fucking goddamn hot and stink always, always beating me down.

We shoot over a rise, run through a low spot, rise again and then we are there — in amongst the scorpions. Close up, I can see little streamers of smoke rising off the three that are still functional. A fourth is collapsed and burning. I’m pretty sure it crashed after Zorfang blinded its crew. Its tail ruptured and sparks from its vats are igniting more flames. “That one!” I shout to Featherstar. “Get those big vats away from the flames! They’ve got wisps in there!”

A group of Plumacats and Urdrake approach. The ‘cats hang back as the Urdrake lumber in. Their tough bodies seem resilient to the fires. Hell, they look like walking tanks… turtles… Godzilla things. Their big claws do swift work. With a shriek, the first vat is ripped free. Then another. Soon all six are piled up. I’m watching this from a hill as I’m considering the other three scorpions. Featherstar returns. I point to them. “I don’t have time for captives. So get the devils that are still alive, tie them up with whatever cord or rope you can find and leave them on that hill.” I point to the small rise behind me. I’ll worry about them if we effing live. “Then I want you to stop those scorps from moving. I’m going to want all the vats.”

With a growl of affirmation, Featherstar bounds off. I look down at Zaya. “How are ya feeling?” I ask.

“How’re aya feelin’?” She replies, doing her best to mimic me. Man, my girl has some spunk.

“Like I’ve been chewed up by a T-Rex, gone through the bowels, then shat out the other end.” It’s the goddamn truth.

Zaya’s looking at me like I’m crazy.

“You know what a shark is but you don’t know a T-Rex?”

Zaya’s look doesn’t change. She still think’s I’m full of crazy. I guess they have sharks in Hell but never knew a T-Rex. That settles it. Sharks are fucking everywhere.

“Right, you probably don’t know about a T-Rex. So what I meant to ask is — are you good to do another big wisp transformation so soon?”

Zaya cracks a grin. “Sure. I did it all with your magic the last time.” Her expression grows serious. “You’re brimming with it now. I could probably shape a Bowflit or four along with many others.” She pauses again, strokes my chin, looks down at my wound. “You’re the worry. Can you handle another shaping?”

Yeah. I’m pretty fucked up. But I gotta do this. Otherwise, we’re all goners. I shove aside her worry. “A Bowflit? You spoke of them before. What the Hell are they?”

“Enormous flying beauties. Special horns from their heads. Their tails make rainbow spines twice as long as you — which they fling.” She spreads her arms wide like wings. “Bowflits!” she shouts. As if a gesture were an explanation. She’s getting really excited about it. I gotta admit I’m intrigue by the notion of ‘giant flying beauties.’

I gun the Vortex over to the pile of scorpion vats, summon my moonshadow blade. Magic courses through me. My energetic vessel — again more than half full and rising fast. Fat sparks fall in a stream from my name curse. I’m a goddamn giant walking sparkler. It feels like my flesh is just a tattered vessel for my magic now. Like my body’s fraying and the energy of me, of all the souls I keep safe, is my real being. Not my failing, wheezing, bleeding, Hell-battered flesh. I jump off, kick the nasty, wailing, stinking Hell-bike aside and stand over the vat. “Sounds fucking glorious! Let’s form up some Bowflits!”

Zaya flies over to me as I slice the vats. That nasty liquid devils use to stun souls gushes out. Belabored wisps spill to the ground. I turn to my Vortex, carve its awful worb to bits. Souls emerge from the terrible, toothy thing. The light around me grows. Grimjaw flies up onto a rise. He blinks down at me. His Mottle flares behind him as his companion scouts fly up. Wisp light reflects in their proud eyes.

“Now, everyone! Abandon the Hell-bikes! We use them no more! Strike the worbs! Liberate the souls! Free the captives!”

In a chorus of growls, the Plumacats, Urdrake, and Mottles dismount. They turn their fangs, bodies, and claws on the devil bikes. They rip through stinking engine compartments. Hell’s fuels spill to the ground in black gushes. The burrowing claws reach the worbs binding souls to terrible engines. Torture devices made to squeeze more power out of those black drops of devils’ juice. They rip, gnash, tear. Around us all, souls spill out. Their light grows. The swarm around me composes scores. But I am not done. “Featherstar! The vats! Slash them open!”

Featherstar’s group flocks atop the captured scorpions. The Hell machines are now idle, scattered across an area roughly the size of two football fields. Devil captives trail away, led by Urdrake and Plumacats toward a hill. Featherstar hears my command. She lets out a loud yowl in reply. Urdrake and Pumacats atop the scorpions bite and claw the vats open. Loud shrieks fill Hell’s morning air. The light of souls grows yet again. Hundreds swirl about me like a field full of giant fireflies — each light the size of a basketball.

“Zaya! Call them!”

She rises up on gossamer wings. Her voice rings out through the scorched air. She sings! The souls rise. Sluggish, they respond to her. The pull of her voice is like a tide, drawing them closer, closer. Zaya’s song fills my ears. The wisp energy within me responds, spills out. Sparks shoot from my name curse to streak through the wisps. “Fuck! It’s gorgeous!” I croak hoarsely.

Zaya floats back to me. Offers her hand. “Our glory.”

I push my hand toward her. Our palms spark as they touch. “Hell yes! We make glory here!” I shout as my magic rises, as my energetic vessel tips once more to spill its vast flow through my bond with Zaya. The flood is now frigging enormous — fueled by the bright wisps sheltering in my name curse, by the dark wisps lurking in my shadow. Hundreds now. Each pumping its own flow of magic. Zaya pulls deep from my vessel. I have so much to give her. Light rises in my flesh, it shoots through our bond. It fills her. The energy lifts us. No curse magic. We’re held up by pure magical force. Sparks fly from me. I am a goddamn Fourth of July all by myself. Zaya bursts in her own light show. The sparks around me streak through her, then leap back out. Vila’s lightning roars up from her. Each bolt, swelling wide as a river. The bolts bend up and outward, then rebound into her. They form a shape like a lotus — with Zaya and me for its center. Its lightning arcs rise hundreds of feet above and around. They enclose all the gathered wisps. We flicker together in a strobe. Then, from this lightning-flower’s center, a tower of bolts shoot up. White running up through Hell’s nasty, puke-green sky. The bolts leap thousands upon thousands of feet, blast through strands of shadowy webbing beyond the puke, then spread wide in a roof of light.

******

Devils for hundreds of miles around, dwellers of Eastern Infernia, see it. They stare in shock. Oblivious. The light travels as far as Fortress Invicti atop its smoking pits filled with lava and burning coal, retching in its oily gasses. There the white light briefly brightens the dark pollution. For a moment, the attention of its lord, Asmodeus, is pulled from his Curse Rider’s hunt. For just an instant, the dark lord ponders this odd little light. Then the light fades and his gaze returns to the Hunt for Beatrice, for Mori. To the awakening of his prophet Ivan.

******

Lightning fills the wisps. Through my bond with Zaya, I sense them all. I know their number. Each one touched by my magic, each wisp sheltering within me. Their count flares in front of my eyes in ghostly letters, formed by a pattern set into my name curse. Counting souls. Another thing I knew I could do before the memory draught blotted it from my brain. A thing I’ve been doing all along ever since I defeated Bob the Stelo Mal. I just didn’t realize it. Now, the force of my magic makes the wisp count so brilliant it is impossible for me to miss. Within the lightning Zaya made from my magic are seven hundred and seventy seven. Four hundred and two dark wisps cast their shades, three hundred and seventy five light wisps burn bright. Zaya flings the four hundred and two into my shadow. She hurls a hundred and fifty three light wisps toward the dome of my name curse. My shadow bulges to three times its normal size. Sparks burst out from my name curse, rise to my brow, then shoot off in all directions as the bright wisps arrive. I am a home, a safe haven, now to eight hundred and sixty four souls. Two hundred and thirty three bright wisps, Six hundred and thirty one dark. Their numbers dance above my brow. A sigil of safety.

Zaya pulls more of my surging magic into her. Two hundred and twenty two light wisps bulge as they develop bodies. The wet, elongating forms are now familiar. Plumacats, Udrake, Mottles take shape in nearly equal numbers. Four separate to enlarge into something new. They grow and grow, becoming immense. They stretch — sprouting wings, tails. They grow blue, yellow, and green feathers. Each feather — as long as I am tall. Their heads arise, wedge-shaped. Mouths fill with rows of dagger teeth. Forward-facing horns like those of unicorns but about eight feet long sprout outward. From between plumes on their tails emerge hedge-rows of crystalline spines. They are Bowflits! They remind me of dragons, of unicorns, of big mama versions of the frigging amazing ikran from Avatar. Each is nearly a hundred feet long. Their wings span nearly two hundred feet, forming a sheltering tent from Hell’s hot sunrise. One stoops over a scorpion. Its crystalline talons rend the Minosian metal as easily as knives cleave butter. Another tilts its head down to me, blasts me with a spray of moist air from its nostrils, then rubs a feathered wingtip over me. I’m knocked on my ass.

Zaya’s drifted back down to the ground beside me. She’s hugging me. Tears are running down her face. Two hundred and eighty five pairs of eyes stare at us. The feeling I get from them is one of pure adoration. It’s effing weird standing in the middle of a battlefield in Hell watching them all moon over us like that. I get it. We saved them. Gave them a means to fight. For now. It is so much more than they had. Stuck in vats and worbs. Ground down to serve devils in the worst sort of slavery. I can’t even fucking begin to imagine what that must’ve been like.

“Mother!” Featherstar yowls. “Father!” Grimjaw growls. A loud cheer rises up from the new-formed and the rest. They are hours, minutes, seconds old in their new bodies. Who knows how old their wisps are.

In the distance, from just behind the black and gaping pit that is Sunken Crag, twelve of those goddamn Hell balls begin a ponderous rise toward us. Oh yeah. The devils definitely saw that lightning we just made. I’m pretty sure by now they’ve figured out that it means trouble. I’m also pretty sure they don’t know how fucking much trouble they’re in right about now. But Hassle is sure kicking up one Hell of a fuss in that bag I stuck him in.

“Mottle, Zephyr! You know the drill by now! Go tell the new Mottles what’s up! Then have them tell the rest! We’ve got like two minutes to start hauling ass!” I point up to the incoming Hell balls. Mottle flies off my back. I feel the heat again. Grit my teeth against the swoon. I’m ready for it this time. I still have to lean on the Bowflit’s giant wing to stay standing. I look up to the great beast. It dips its head toward me. I dig up a name from a fantasy series I read back in Middle School. Luthiel’s Song. Beatrice gave the books to me on my twelfth birthday along with a secret smile. Told me it was “a true fantasy straight from heaven.” She’s always like that. Saying cryptic stuff. The books were written by someone who apparently knew the real history of my mother’s people from thousands of years back. Us regular earthlings called them angels and made up our own myths about them. The name I recall from the tale comes to my lips with a smirk.

“Faehorn,” I say to the Bowflit.

It gives a questioning vibration in return. The low hum travels through its horn and toward me. What a cool thing.

“That’s your new name. Faehorn.” I stretch my hands up toward the wonderful creature. “Can you lift me?” I ask.

It drops a wing down, scoops me up with a set of giant feathers that enfold me like fingers, then deposits me upon its back. My view from up here is pretty amazing. I can see all of my company… three companies now… clearly. The small group of Vortexes fleeing us are now hauling ass. The group of one hundred-ish devils that just crossed the bridge is reeling back. I bet their commander is having a gigantic ‘what the fuck?’ kind of moment. The older Mottles have done their knowledge transfer thing with the newer Mottles. Now all the Mottles flit off to share their knowledge with the new-formed.

Zaya flies up to sit on Faehorn beside me. She lays a hand on mine. “You going to make it?” she asks.

“I’m about to pass out where I sit. But yeah. I think I’ll make it. Why’s it so goddamn hot? Oh yeah. I’m in fucking Hell.”

She squeezes my hand. I pull out some Perry-fuckin-A and take a long swig. When the fuck is Mottle coming back? I’m getting fucking hot. I look up. The Hell balls are just reaching their apogee. A constellation of destruction burning above us. We gotta get fucking moving. I pat the Bowflit’s neck. Faehorn. I’m calling him Faehorn. “Can you start picking up some of the Urdrake?” I say to him. I’m not certain the enormous, glorious Bowflit understands me. But his plate-sized eyes seem to hold a deep intelligence. He lets out a roar, then his horn hums again with resonance. He begins lifting Urdrake with those amazing feathers. His motions are somehow both powerful and gentle. Glancing behind me at his wide back, I figure he might be able to carry about ten Udrake. They’re going to have to hold on tight. But Bowflit carrying Urdrake makes the most sense. Those frigging Plumacats and Mottles are fast. The lumbering Urdrake won’t get out from under such a massive Hell ball barrage. And the notion of Urdrake shooting their laser-like beams from the backs of these giant Bowflit causes a grim grin to split my face. Soon, nine Urdrake are blinking their reptilian eyes at me from atop Faehorn. “Wow! That was fast! Can you tell your buddies to go get more Urdrake? Pick ’em all up if you can. Also get Theri and Zel. They can’t run with the Plumacats.” I motion down to the pair who’re staring around. They’re looking pretty awestruck about now.

Faehorn vibrates his namesake again. The other Bowflit vibrate their horns in response. Soon they’re all picking up Urdrake. Theri and Zel are lifted together. Zel gives me a giant shit-eating grin and tilts his horns at me. It’s some kind of devil gesture. I don’t have a clue what it means. But I guess he’s thanking me or somesuch. The number on Faehorn’s back swells to fourteen. He looks pretty loaded up. I hope he can still fly. He’s frigging huge. But those Urdrake are pretty beefy as well.

Mottle returns to my back. His touch sends an empathic reassurance. His body again radiates Hell’s horrible heat away from me. My energetic vessel’s filling up fast with all the magic from my new wisps. I’m about as ready to fight as I’ll ever be given all the punishment I’ve taken. The Bowflits are bursting with Urdrake. We’ve got them all loaded onto Bowflits. Barely. The Plumacats and Mottles are linked up. No more goddamn Vortexes. Thank ever-loving Christ!

“Let’s move!” I shout to them as the roaring Hell balls grow larger on descent toward us. Fucking planet bombs every one. The twelve of them fill the fucking sky with fire and blackness. I can feel their heat. They’ll cover a huge area. It’s going to be fucking close. The Bowflits beat their wings. The Plumacats and Mottles leap-fly away. Damn! They’re so quick. Good!

We lift off and fly. I direct everyone to the left. Toward the hills. The Hell balls are coming in a staggered line. Some of them will fall ahead of us. I’m not going to lead our force into one of those effing things. The Bowflits are damn fast. Their wingbeats whip up a hurricane which blasts them skyward, then wump! wump! they shoot over the land. We streak out from beneath the Hell balls and cover about two miles in a goddamn minute. I have all the majestic beasts land on a rise. We watch the Plumacats and Mottles race away from destruction. They make it a little more than halfway to us when the Hell Balls land in a cluster. The explosion is fucking nuclear! Each fireball eats up an area that would easily cover two city blocks. Blast waves shoot out for almost a half mile from each explosion. Huge fountains of dirt and rock are hurled up and outward by the blasts. The Mottles and Plumacats just made it. Debris rains on the other side of the rise they sheltered behind. But they appear safe.

From my perch, I can see the lead force of Vortex riders coming in behind the Hell balls’ explosions. The main group of devils is just now nearing the bridge at Sunken Crag. Ponderous scorpions are gathering their Hell balls once more to fling at us. I look at the Bowflits. Maybe we have an answer for them.

“Zaya, tell me what these Hell dragons of yours can do,” I say to the little green faerie who’s again sheltering between my arms.

Zaya points back toward the tails. “Those spines. They can fling them for miles. When they hit, they explode in big balls of lightning and crystal shards.” She shifts her pointing finger to Faehorn’s head. “That horn can emit a cone of sound. For a couple hundred feet, it destroys pretty much anything. Further out, it messes up devil machines pretty bad.”

I nod. I like what I’m hearing. I really like what I’m hearing.

********

Dressler watches in disgust as Slevelth squirms on the ground. His clawed finger points to the enormous flood of white lightning filling the sky. The first bolts had stunned the Dark Psychic. He’d careened off his Vortex and landed with a loud plop onto the ground. His squibble vat shattered — its contents writhing and ruined. Now Dressler tries to lift him back onto his Vortex.

“Get hold of yourself!” He snaps.

Slevelth points a finger toward the lighting. “Blaspheemer!!” He shouts as spittle flies from his mouth. Some of it impacts on Dressler. The overseer pulls his clawed hand back and delivers a firm smack to Slevelth’s plump face. The impact sets off a series of jiggles but mercifully pulls the Dark Pyschic’s eyes away from the debacle ahead. “It is … HORROR!!” The Psychic wheezes.

“Yes. A catastrophe. It appears Regina was right after all,” Dressler says, the frog-like eyes of Slevelth with his to prevent him from looking away. Out of the corner of his eye, Dressler can already see the great tower of lightning beginning to flicker out. Vila’s lightning. A thrill of ancient terror crawls up his spine. He, who’d faced the forbidden forms so long ago, knew more than most devils what it meant. But he’d never seen a single source of Vila lightning grow to such immense size. And erupting from near the derelict scorpions and their hundreds of wisps! Could this Vila and mage have already doubled their force? Could they have done more?”

“No time!” He shouts to Slevelth as the Dark Psychic begins to descend into blithering once more. He bodily hauls the great, toadish bloat of a body back onto the Vortex, sets the Psychic’s feet in the stirrups, rights the machine. “I need you to drive! I need you to send to the scorpions to fire on that lightning! I need you to send to Regina! Tell her to make arrangements to flee if she hasn’t already!”

“Blaspheme… It is… It is gone…” The Dark Psychic is choking on his words. At least his pace of breathing is slowing down.

Dressler looks back over his shoulder and sees the lightning’s flickered out. “By Asmodeus, Slevelth! Send to the scorpions! Fire all devastation orbs!” It’s useless. Slevelth is still useless. Dressler leaps up onto his Vortex. He lifts his hand to the nearest scorpion crew. “Devastation orbs on that lightning! Now! Converging spread! All scorpions FIRE!!” His shout reaches the scorpion crew. A crew member loads a red flare into his gun and fires to signal the other crews. Then, in quick succession, each massive machine bends back its tail and hurls its enormous devastation orb into the sky.

Dressler doesn’t pause to watch. He spins back to Slevelth. The Dark Psychic, at last, is settled. Dressler grasps his arm, then turns to his Century. “To the bridge!” He shouts. His Century, along with the two flanking Centuries, resume their advance toward Sunken Crag. They’d halted in shock at the calamity in the sky. Now springing back into motion. Vortexes rev and fling bits of blasted ground as they advance at a scorpion’s pace.

“We… must… kill… her…,” Sleveth says in even tones. His fat lips form a snarl. His eyes glint with rage.

“You forget yourself, Slevelth,” Dressler replies. “The mage is Asmodeus’s prize now.” At least Slevelth is saying something half-sensible. Dressler was beginning to wonder if the Dark Psychic would ever recover from his shock.

“If we don’t kill her, we’re all dead,” Slevelth says.

“You always struck me as… more practical than your fellows,” Dressler says as their forward ranks roll toward the bridge. They run down the land-fall toward Sunken Crag. It gapes wide beneath them. Scrabber webs glitter in the morning light. Plumes of sulfur fume rise up from those dark recesses. Insectoid and reptilian eyes seem to stare up at them from the shadows. Probably an imagining. The Vila’s lightning had set him more on edge than he was willing to admit. “It is one reason I chose you for my Dark Psychic.” Dressler pauses, considering his next question. “Did you see something that led you to this conclusion?”

Slevelth’s eyes roll about as his head bobs back and forth. For a moment, Dressler thinks he’ll have to catch the Dark Psychic again. Then Slevelth rights himself. “I will send to Regina as you asked.” The toadish Psychic mutters.

“Excellent,” Dressler replies, biting back a retort. He is used to having his commands obeyed and his questions answered. But Slevelth is clearly struggling with his recent experience. Dressler, flicks his spear in frustration, looks up toward the devastation orbs. They’re beginning to fall toward their target. So many over such a wide spread! Slevelth may get his wish. Then, in the distance he sees large forms lift off the ground and fly toward the hills. Other smaller forms race away beneath. To his trained eyes, the flying forms are unmistakable.

“Bowflit!” The word expels from his mouth like a curse.

“Overseer Dressler,” Slevelth belches the word. He’s almost back to his usual disgusting self. “Regina has already prepared to flee and advises that we do the same.”

Regina. Fleeing. Advising him to flee. Dressler feels a sick shift in the pit of his stomach. “No. Regia does not flee. She merely withdraws. We do not flee. We conquer.” The words feel hollow in his mouth.

“Overseer. This is a catastrophe! It is… unlike anything a local Hell Lord has dealt with in hundreds of years! It requires the response of a regional council, perhaps of Asmodeus himself.” Slevelth drools.

Dressler’s shock turns to anger. No matter how many made forms that be-taken-by-Asmodeus mage has, it still can’t be enough to match the full might of his combined army. He had repelled Lanthver’s incursions for decades, had fought on the great battlefield of Avernum on countless occasions, had fought in the ancient struggles of Asmodeus’s ascent to Fortress Invicti. “No. We do not flee. Our Lady is merely concerned for… our well being. Tell her we shall capture this mage. At all costs.”

Dressler shudders. In the distance, the devastation orbs explode into blinding balls of fire then fling a great cloud of dirt, rock and smoke into the sky where minutes ago, white lightning defiled it. Though the explosion is large, Dressler doubts it has caught much of the mage’s force, if any. She’d survived barrages of devastation orbs before. She knew how to move fast when she needed to. Now, with the Bowflits, she had even more mobility.

His Vortex winds down the familiar path to Sunken Crag. Dressler turns to Slevelth. “We shall capture her,” he repeats the words like an incantation. “She shall be a prize for Asmodeus. Regina will not know disgrace. Now, send to my Centuries! Tell them we are to cross that bridge with haste! Once we enter the Wisp Fields, tell them to spread out!” Dressler points to the massive stone span sprouting fortifications and towers running five hundred feet across that great and gaping crag. He will not have his force mass only to be picked off by Bowflits.

********

I shout to Faehorn, point toward the huddled Plumacats just beyond the Hell balls’ explosive blast. My ears pop in acceleration. I grip tight to Faehorn’s feathers through the explosive burst of speed. In four great sweeps of his wings, we are above Featherstar. The other Bowflits whirl through the air to follow. Spirals of feather, crystal talons, great whirling horns. They are tornados of color and motion. Each wing flap — a goddamn sonic boom. They vibrate their horns in response to Faehorn as their leader. They respond quick. But for what I’m going to do next, I’ll need almost instant communication with them and with the Urdrake they carry.

“Mottle, touch Faehorn. Call three of your friends up from Featherstar.” Mottle quivers in response. He drops his tail onto the amazing flying behemoth beneath me. My bond with Mottle now extends to the Bowflit. Mottle vibrates, shouting out to his fellows. Three rise to the circling Bowflits. They attach, clinging to the broad backs with their hook-like claws. My thoughts whirl as my senses extend to them through my connection with Mottle. I signal to the other Bowflits through Mottle. Mottle transfers my thoughts to them. They’re close enough together for this near-telepathy to work out. We fly a racetrack circle around Featherstar. Massive wings kick up a roaring wind over everyone. Out on the Wisp Fields, the large group of Vortexes has merged with the fleeing group. They’re racing toward Featherstar. Though still two miles out, they’ll catch up to my Mottles and Plumacats in minutes. I drag my hand through omnis scientia.

“Zorfang! That lead group of Vortexes is closing in! Light em up!”

“Yes father!” Zorfang harooms. His response — oddly cheerful considering we’re still fighting for our lives. I suppose he has a lot to be happy about. He just survived an almost continuous barrage of those damn Hell balls.

“Mottle! Send to Zephyr. Have him tell Featherstar to run out and attack the Vortexes below. If they get close, the devils won’t be able to rain Hell balls without hitting their own!”

Mottle vibrates again, letting out a trill of what I guess is ultrasound Mottle talk. Featherstar and Grimjaw leap forward with a yowl. They eagerly fly down the rise and toward the hundred-odd devils racing in. Near the hills, Zorfang and his Urkdrake rain their white laser-lights down on the devils. Vortexes smoke and careen off from the main group as the first barrage lands — blinding devils, ruining Hell cycles.

“Last message for Zephyr!” I shout as we take a final turn. “Tell Featherstar we are going ahead to meet the enemy!”

Mottle vibrates as we swoop low. Zephyr transfer’s Mottle’s call directly to Featherstar.

“Now Faehorn, Bowflits!” I shout as I point forward. “To the bridge!”

Mottle vibrates to transfer my command again. As one, the four Bowflits turn. Together their wings BOOM! BOOM! BOOM! BOOM! in the Hell-sky. We are a hurricane on wings. In moments we are racing above devils in the Wisp Fields.

“Mottle! The Urdrake! Have them fire as we pass!” Mottle vibrates, then slaps his tail on a nearby Urdrake. On each Bowflit, other Mottles do the same. They send my command to the Urdrake. These then haroom back to their companions. Shells pivot. Crystal-tipped heads point. More than fifty nine blasts of white light rain down on the Vortexes below. Zel and Theri add to the assault. Each launch a fireball round down onto the devils from their rifles. At least twenty Vortexes explode from the sudden barrage. Errant fireball rounds and bullets whiz past or bloom around us. Some shots land on the Bowflits. Those great feathers covering the beasts shed bullets as if they are no more than raindrops. The fireballs fall short. Too ponderous to reach the Bowflits in their raging flight. “Fucking A!” I shout in celebration. They’ve been seriously softened up for Featherstar now. Between her Mottles and Plumacats, she’s got those devils outnumbered by two to one. Zorfang is also beating the Hell out of them even as Featherstar rushes in.

I turn toward Sunken Crag. Our furious flight has brought us within five miles. The bridge is swarming with devils. About half the main devil force is on it now. The remainder gather behind the bridge or spill out onto the Wisp Fields. Twelve scorpions fling their Hell balls toward us. They fill huge sections of sky. But the ponderous things almost make me laugh. They are no match for the Bowflits’ insane speed. Their sinuous, feathered bodies flow through the air with surprising nimbleness. Like the very whirling winds their wings whip up. I’ve increased our elevation beyond the reach of the devils’ guns or fireball rounds. Upon the back of Faehorn, I stoop in the sky.

A point of red light blossoms up from the Bridge over Sunken Crag. It shoots directly at me. Devil magic! “Clypeus!” I shout. My energetic vessel explodes. Sparks fan into a shield large enough to cover Faehorn’s front. The red beam hits my shield, then splinters in all directions. I point down at the bridge, at the place where the red beam rose. Through omnis scientia, I see a tall, thin devil riding a frigging gilded Vortex. I’m reminded of Ivan’s stupid golden toilet. “There! I want all tail spines aimed at that point!”

Myra Strikes the Bridge at Sunken Crag

Mottle vibrates, Faehorn thrums. As one, the Bowflits lift into the sky. Their tails swing behind. From each sprouts a sheaf of four crystalline spines. They gleam like rainbows as they extend. The Bowflits fill with light. It starts at the tip of their horns and flows down into their heads. From the heads it runs through their spines. I can feel the force of it passing beneath me. By the time it reaches their tails, the light is intense, white. Brighter than that ugly Hell sun squatting behind us. Bolts of electricity leap from spine to spine as they ready. Then, the tails shoot forward and beneath the Bowflits’ bodies. The spines launch. Light spills from them as they separate. Bolts jump from one spine to the next as they fly. I’m reminded of a Tesla coil’s lightning watching the energy run from one spine to the next as all sixteen fall down in fury on that bridge above the black chasm. Upon that one devil lifting his glowing spear while riding his stupid golden Vortex.

The explosion covers the devil. It flings bodies and Vortexes high. It forms a wave of stone that ripples out from impact and across the bridge. Shattered stone flies in all directions. A tower near the explosion leans, groans, and then in a sound of ripping stone and rent metal falls into Sunken Crag. As the dust clears, I see a great crack opening in the bridge center. As it grows it devours devils by the score. More cracks radiate out. The bridge sways. It buckles. One side rises up, the other side lowers. This corkscrew is too much. A new series of cracks emerge. Rent into three pieces — the bridge falls. At least a hundred and fifty devils go with it. Falling down, down into that black pit. Some are caught in the webs beneath. Others simply fall and fall. Suddenly the pit swarms. Giant spider crab things the size of cars leap out to seize the falling devils. Great devil lizards, Stelo Mal like Bob from Mottle’s Grotto, lunge to return with more devils in their mouths. The monsters of the crag, awakened and finding their hunger, surge up from the pit. They take wounded and ready devil alike. The enmity between Stelo Mal and Scrabber — forgotten as they swarm together in a ravenous tide. They overwhelm the devils near Sunken Crag. The remaining devils flee — some back toward Overseer Tower, some out into the Wisp Fields where Featherstar is just now starting to pounce.

Elation swells within me. I hug Zaya. I raise my arm into the air. “Victory!!” I shout. “Victory!!” The Urdrake haroom. The Bowflits vibrate their horns. Our cries echo out over the battlefield. Then the Bowflits drop down upon the fleeing devils and join in the feasting on our foes among the Wisp Fields.

I can’t fucking believe it! We just kicked the shit out of Overseer Tower’s army!!

(New to the Helkey multiverse? Haven’t yet read the first chapter? You can find it here: Helkey 1 — The Memory Draught.)

(Looking for another chapter? Find it in the Helkey Table of Contents.)

(Enjoying the story? Want to help support the continuance of this tale? Please like, share and subscribe.)

Helkey 28 — Curse Rider on a Kaiju Storm

Gibbons Crane howls in diabolical fury. White-hot sparks rain over his body. His human form, a gift of Asmodeus’s court, is tatters. His devil flesh — now naked for all to see. Not that any regular human wretches are nearby. The angel-mage, Beatrice, guided them away to safety before she and her companions trapped him here. The train stationary. Angelic magic locking him in, pummeling him with curses. His prey more distant with each passing minute. He can still see her. Beatrice Lushael — arrayed in glorious light. Rapier held before her like a dare. Her delicious wisp fluttering — delicate as butterfly wings. How could he not rush her? Claim her wisp for his own? A crown jewel among all his enslaved prizes.

It was a trap! So obvious! So irresistible! He, the great hunter, render of mages’ souls, Asmodeus’s own hand on Earth, played for a mere pawn! Now held in a cunning bottle.

Gibbons takes a breath. The air around him is super-heated by his wrath. By the destruction raining down on his devil’s form. Chairs burn. Plastic and metal melts. Windows crack. His eyes flick up and down the cursed caboose. The solar train itself is an insult. An impossible fantasy. Yet here it exists. No Blood of Earth sacrifice to Asmodeus fuels it. His Nightmare cannot possess it. Not enough delicious harm for his demon steed to latch onto. To take control. They chose this sacred ground to counter him, to mount their own attacks. It worked. He tips his hat, still whole on his head between his devil’s horns, to the mages who concocted this trap. Worthy prey. He should’ve sensed this was holy ground. The quarry, Beatrice, Mori, Ivan the Wolf, were all too distracting. The prizes too great. Their abilities — surprising.

“It’s been a little while,” he drawls to himself, reflecting on the last time prey put up such a fight. “More than a Century.” His Curse Rides are mostly straight-forward affairs. His diabolical might reaping souls like so many sheaves of wheat in a thresher. “Now I’m checked.” He says the word with amusement and rage combined. He does not lightly suffer delay. Defeat is unacceptable. Yet he must admit his setback. This holy train will never serve his Nightmare. The fate of its passengers — a distraction. There’s no victory to be had here. His true prey — long-gone.

But there may be a way to escape. To return to his hunt. Gibbons tilts his devil’s eyes toward melting plastic dribbling down onto the floor like so much slime. He reaches a clawed hand down, scoops some up, holds it up. The plastic gobbet ignites. Petroleum inside it burning off in red-blue flames. Blood of Earth. A delicious bit of corruption in this otherwise evil-free train. He conjures his wisps, flipping his lash until ten enslaved souls leap to his command. Each rising in a rictus of pain. He bleeds the wisps into the oozing plastic. They animate it, causing it to rear up in a promontory of burning plastic slime. Shifting his focus to the praesidia bottle confining him, he drives the wisps forward, lifts his right-hand six-shooter, then fires his third black bullet into the trap. Its black orb bows out, splashing over praesidia causing it to flicker in momentary darkness.

“Now!” He shouts, lifting his left hand to claw the air, lashing wisps to rush forward. Wrapped in Blood of Earth plastic, they rise. Confronting disrupted praesidia, they flow through its barrier. The plastic then splots onto the train’s wall. It touches the spirit of his Nightmare demon-steed. The Nightmare howls in victory, latches onto the familiar substance. Takes molten plastic for its new form. The wisps pop out, then flow back to his worb. His Nightmare, now given form, rips a hole in praesidia. Sending out pseudopods, it tears off a train window, then flings it into a nearby field. Gibbons springs. A whirl of sparks and flames surrounds him as he emerges. He lands on his feet — one hand holding his hat, the other holstering his pistol. He is free!

The Nightmare plops down from the train’s window. It flows over the ground, rising up in a swell of slime beside him. A nearby police officer sees them, then flees. Tabbing his radio, he sends a frantic call for help. Gibbons smirks at his terror. A delicious thrill — refreshing to his diabolical spirit. Free from the continuous barrage of macto curses, his mock-human flesh drinks up the fear and begins to reform. It slowly re-covers his devil flesh. His clothes also reweave and repair.

A cluster of police officers rushes around the train. Lifting weapons, they shout for Gibbons to raise his hands. Gibbons laughs, gives a tip of his hat to the officers, then bounds off toward the burning trees. Each leap covers twenty feet. A few stray bullets snap around him. If any hit, he doesn’t care. His Nightmare flows along beside him. Too small to ride, he allows it to keep its plastic form. Screams of fear from passengers, eyes glued to windows as the Nightmare’s burning blob flows beside his half-devil, half-human form, buoy him. Their terror — too delicious a banquet to pass up.

He angles away from the holy train. Its presence recedes to his right. He leaves its field of influence, running a bit more crooked, feeling a little stronger in his wickedness. Then, he’s plunging through the burning wood. Hot fires surround his body. Choking smoke enters his lungs. It almost feels like home. Almost. About ten more bounds and he’s through the flames. He emerges onto a back-road. Cutting past the fires, he finds one of his thralls. A Berserker who laughs maniacally as he hurls another Molotov Cocktail into the inferno. Seeing Gibbons, he grins, then gives a Nazi salute. “Mein fuhrer,” he says with relish.

Gibbons grins back, tips his cowboy hat. “Hey, buddy,” he says, “I need your mount.” He points to the motorcycle parked by the dirt path. It doesn’t matter if his words are English. His connection to the Beserkers is strong enough for telepathic communication. His thrall hears the words in his native tongue.

“Ja!” he says with a slavish smile of devotion. Walking over to the bike, he kicks the stand, then presents it to Gibbons. “Es ware mir eine Ehre,” the biker replies, waving his hand with a flourish. His eyes spark with delight as Gibbons mounts the bike.

“Hey, thanks,” Gibbons replies. “Now go on,” he says to his Nightmare. The horror sluffs off its burning plastic form, then inhabits the rumbling motorcycle with a purr of demonic delight. The bike grows as the Nightmare’s possession takes hold. New tail pipes form. Black smoke belches. Ghostly flames flicker along its flanks. It lurches, gives an eager growl — headlight blinking like a monstrous eye.

“Heil dir im Siegerkranz!” the Berserker shouts as Gibbons drives off in a shower of dirt and smoke — flames belching from massive tail pipes. He lifts his black cowboy hat, waves a salute, then guns it down the path and toward the Brons. A stiff wind meets him. Scent of storm in the air among the forest fire smoke. The sky grumbles its malcontent. Evening shadows lengthen as a dark bank of cloud runs in overhead. A wall of titanic columns pushing up and up, spreading wide at the top. Their bases appear to grip the horizon with trailing talons. Gibbons grins. It’s his kind of weather — pumped up by the hot breath of foul fuels as they rise from millions upon millions of infernal engines ranging the Earth. Each a supplicant to Asmodeus’s dark power. They feed a great miasma of Hell’s heat riding Earth’s winds. This storm gobbled the heat greedily — growing from a gentle shower into the great monster above him. Gibbons lets go of the handle bars, allows his Nightmare to drive, and embraces the storm’s hellish winds. What a wonderful servant of destruction! No devil-stifling solar train. But a hellish storm gorging on fiendish fires. This is something he can work with.

Thunder rumbles from across the North Sea. His quarry moves amongst its towering waves. Destination uncertain. He senses them like a hunger in motion. No sight. Just a tension pulling away from him. Drawing him taut. He lowers his hands to the grips, angles his bike onto a main road, guns it up the ramp and onto Route 11. Turning north, he buzzes an angry motorist, smiling maniacally into the flipped bird, then ignites the throttle. Raucous acceleration blasts him up to 120 miles per hour. At this rate, he’s just six minutes away from his destination. The Oil Vessel Trold and its helicopter pad in Esjberg’s port. The Vulcanlundre corporation tends to its massive North Sea oil platform — Trekke Pa — with this vessel. Gibbons remembers it well. A gigantic, squat platform with its drill piercing sea bottom, pumps sucking up devilish fuels. Its tender ships mooring at Esjberg on the shrinking Dutch coastline. In his mind’s eye, he can see it along with the location of every oil facility dotting Europe’s lands and beyond. He knows them far better than most Catholic priests know their churches. Well he should. They’re shrines to Asmodeus’s presence here.

His quarry’s flight across the North Sea pointed almost directly at Vulcanlundre’s Trekke Pa oil platform. Its ship, the Trold, kept a helicopter on its landing pad. Just the kind of machine his Nightmare could easily inhabit. Once Gibbons took the ‘copter, he could then take the platform. No. This hunt was far from finished. In fact, he was about to kick things up a notch.

Gibbons cuts onto the off-ramp. Barreling through a red light, he jumps a barricade, then slams down onto Esjberg’s streets. Sidewalks are disappointingly empty. He rides in along a walkway, hoping to run over a stray pedestrian. Everyone’s inside. Huddling against the storm’s raging approach. Rain begins to fall. To Gibbons it tastes good. Just like wet cigarette butts. Turning down a side-street, he emerges into an industrial center. At the road’s end is a chain-link fence. Its padlocked shut. He ignores the barrier. His Nightmare blasts through the fence like a footrace winner crossing the tape. Metal shrieks. A twisted wreckage is left behind. Gibbons turns, tires squealing, fire blasting from tail pipes, water flying, across the parking lot. Shipping containers, cranes, and trucks blur by. In front of him the blue-hulled Trold bobs in the waves. Its red deck rocking. Fat, white helicopter squatting on a green pad like an overfed seagull. Beside the ship is a large pile of gravel. Gibbons races toward the gravel, shoots flames out the back of his Nightmare motorcycle, then explodes into the air. Trailing black smoke, he flies fifty feet, then lands with a squeal of tires on the helicopter pad. Rain pounds down. Smoke swirls up from his Nightmare. Back in the ship terminal, onlookers shout in surprise, then fear, as the smoke rises up into the shape of a skull, its eyes seeming to momentarily spark with ball lightning.

Gibbons senses, more than hears, their cries. Grins. For a moment indulging in this new feast of troubles. Then, cracking his knuckles, arching his back, he turns to the helicopter. With a snap from his whip, he channels diabolical energy out of his worb. The wisps trapped there scream in delicious pain as the worb’s cruel structure grinds them down. The Nightmare melts out of his motorcycle. The cycle shrinks down — looking odd and derelict sitting on the pad. A ghost shape rises up from it, taking on a horse-like form outlined in orange-red fire. In a flash, it jumps the ten feet to the helicopter. Gorging on petroleum fuel, it bulges through the craft, granting diabolical aspects. The rotor transforms into a shape like a bat wing. Hooked talons sprout to grasp the landing wheels. Long fangs grow from the vehicle’s nose. Its tail rotor takes the shape of a horn. Cockpit glass ignites into two flaming eyes. Its sliding door opens like a mouth — rimmed with serrated teeth.

The cries of those in the terminal fall into shocked silence.

Gibbons whipsaws himself through the open door, slams it shut behind him, then sits down in the cockpit. Grasping the throttle, placing his feet on the pedals, tweaking the collective, he naturally connects to his mount. No flight expertise necessary. The Nightmare-possessed vehicle is simply his to command. He engages the throttle. Batlike rotor blades turn, cutting through rain and storm. The Nightmare wails through the helicopter engine as its combustion engine revs up. It blasts out a ring of fire that neatly cuts the safety lines.

“Won’t need those,” Gibbons grunts as he pulls back. His new beast springs up in a whirl of smoke, flinging fire into the rain. Behind, the platform is left rent — ruined by the Nightmare’s talons. They rise to meet the storm. It seems to stoop to swallow them. The Nightmare shudders in delight as rings of cloud form around them. The diabolical storm enfolds the Nightmare — speeds its passage by generating a tunnel of air. Within this cavity, the Nightmare grows to still greater monstrosity. Taking on aspects of storm. Its spirit bulges beyond the helicopter. It drinks up the flying rain, clothes itself in howling gusts. A shape like a great black dragon grows out of it and into the sky. The helicopter becomes its head. Giant wings of turbulence thrust out. A trailing tail dips to the ranging ocean surface to become a waterspout. A Home Guard helicopter, sent to intercept the hi-jacked bird from Trold, Esjberg is buffeted by one great sweep of the Nightmare’s ghost-storm wings. Control lost, the Defense helicopter careens into the monster’s swinging tail. There it spins in three loops before being ejected — slamming into a towering wave face that swallows it whole.

The Nightmare rages through the furious storm. Joining with it, the Hell-beast becomes its most intense feature. A demon from a ruined world steadily entangling the Earth, the Nightmare roars over miles upon miles of towering waves. It slams the sea surface with wings of howling winds. It thrashes its waterspout tail. Observers on ships and planes marvel in terror. A teen posts a clip of the Nightmare dragon-cloud with lightning eyes onto Instagram. The huge frontal storm striking most of Europe with hurricane force, causing hundreds of billions in damage, gains a new name that explodes onto social media — Storm Kaiju.

At last Gibbons and his Nightmare emerge above the Trekke Pa oil platform. His monster stoops above. The platform tosses through towering seas below. The Nightmare seems to take the platform in its jaws. The helicopter head drops down on a neck of storm. It a swirl of fire and a howl of winds, it lands. The mouth-door swings open. Sirens blare as the watch triggers a security alarm. Gibbons grins, opens his arms to the oil workers watching him through a nearby window. Then, he activates his whip. The worb grinds its wisps. Their shrieks of pain spur his Nightmare. It leaps from the helicopter in a gout of rain and fire, rises in an arc in the storm’s mouth of darkness above the oil platform, then it plunges down into the massive structure with a spectral cry. One of the oil workers, hearing its banshee’s howl, is reminded of the Nazgul’s cries from Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings. Then, the great platform groans as it begins to take on a monstrous aspect beyond any of the oil workers’ worst imaginings…

(New to the Helkey multiverse? Haven’t yet read the first chapter? You can find it here: Helkey 1 — The Memory Draught.)

(Looking for another chapter? Find it in the Helkey Table of Contents.)

(Enjoying the story? Want to help support the continuance of this tale? Please like, share and subscribe.)

Helkey 27 — Into the North Sea’s Jagged Teeth

The zodiac’s motor whirs. A gust flings spray off the Brons — splashing Beatrice’s face. Smoke stench from the fires fades as they speed toward flooded marshlands. Swells grow. The zodiac bobs and rolls. She huddles close to her companions — Mori, Sadie, dour Ivan, a surprisingly chipper Finn — in the bobbing boat. Above and ahead are towering masses of cloud. Fingers of lightning flicker at their dark bases. She can’t yet make out the North Sea. It’s blocked by low islands covered in grasses and scrubby trees. The marsh churns in chop and foam.

A wave bumps her face into her hand as the boat skips into the marsh. The soft scent of horse upon her skin — a momentary comfort. Ivan thought her calming the gentle creatures was curse magic. Only the craft of long years spent observing, learning their subtle gestures, how to cant her body and voice to project compassion. To earn their trust. It came easy. For she loved them in all their beauty and innocence. She had decades and decades more experience at it than any human. A practice in empathy. No curses required.

The zodiac plows into the marsh, lifting and dipping through swells and chop. It handles rough water surprisingly well, lifted up on a wave formed by its forward motion. Nonetheless, spray splashes in. Soon they’re all wet. Mori has a mad grin on his face. It makes her laugh. She’s pretty sure he’s trying to bleed off tension.

Finn points to an outlet emerging before them. The water broadens. It roils with chop and rising waves. A tumultuous confluence opening to an angry North Sea. Out there, massive rollers drop tails of white spray as they tumble before the storm. Jagged gray and white teeth pointing toward an angry cloud deck above. “There she is!” he shouts into the rising gale. “Our good Sun Shepherd.”

Beatrice follows the line of his finger. Tossed about in the confluence is a vessel about 100 feet long and covered from stem-to-stern in glistening solar panels.

Mori turns to her. Excitement flicks across his wet face. He’s such a geek for these things. “Badass! It’s one of those new electric boats. Skateboard battery laid through the keel. Super-efficient motors. Covered in solar panels, it’s got a practically unlimited range.” She grins back at him. His excitement is infectious.

“Wonderful! Can it handle the storm?” Beatrice asks as the zodiac flies over a large swell, catches air for a moment, then slams down into the trough. Spray flies everywhere. They’re all double-drenched now. The little craft is powering out through the choppy confluence. Her teeth clack together as they slam into another swell. Her hands, white-knuckled cling to a rope looped along the gunnel. Beatrice feels like she’s riding a child’s toy boat getting tossed around in a bathtub by a capricious toddler. Sadie’s holding on, gritting her teeth, closing her eyes against the spray. Ivan’s curled up in the zodiac’s bottom. His face taking on an unhealthy, green tint.

“Our little Sun Shepherd’s a fast one,” Finn says in answer. He’s stooped down on his knees. One hand on the motor handle, another gripping a cleat. “Her top speed’s a hundred and twenty! She won’t be so fast in this mess. But she’ll get us to Wind-Sun Isle in about a couple hours.” He points out toward a dark base of cloud rushing toward them. “We should miss the worst of it. Though I think we’ll take that gust-front head-on.”

The zodiac flies through the air, lands, then pitches. A breaker barrels over the little craft, flooding it in about four inches of water. Pumps kick in — spitting spray out behind the small boat as it barrels toward a majestic Sun Shepherd. Coming up alongside it, Beatrice takes stock of its size. At twenty-two feet wide and a hundred feet long, she dwarfs their zodiac. Massive waves, looming like hills behind, made her look surprisingly vulnerable as the larger vessel turns to shelter them from the onslaught churning out of the North Sea. Two crewmen toss lines overboard. Mori catches one. They haul the boat in, then swing a boom over the side to fasten the craft. Finn points to a ladder. One-by-one they clamber up — emerging onto a pitching deck with all the dignity of soaked cats. Beatrice times the swell, springs, shoots past the ladder and lands gracefully on the deck amidst a rain of spray. She blows her wet hair aside, relieved to be free of the tiny zodiac.

“Show-off,” Mori quips as he staggers up beside her, clutching his briefcase in one hand, gripping a hand-hold with the other. Every surface on the sleek vessel except for a narrow wooden walkway is covered in solar panels or solar film. It makes Beatrice think of a great black whale. Ivan is leaning over the railing, making foul noises. Sadie sways as she clenches a crew member’s offered hand. Finn scampers down to the first well deck at the vessel’s rear, he motions for them to follow. Beatrice lets a crewman — Karl — guide her companions back to the well as she assists another crew member — Franz — in attaching the zodiac to a pair of ropes, then hoisting it up using metal booms. With her help, it takes only a minute.

“You do ship work?” Franz asks in halting English, not aware she has omnis scientia drifting close by for translation.

“Yes. Back home,” Beatrice says simply. What she doesn’t say is her home world, Merrin, is almost entirely covered by water. Ships there are far different from those plying Earth’s own increasingly dangerous seas. Some principles of seacraft, though, are universal.

Franz makes a sound that could be an impressed grunt as they fasten the zodiac to a berth on Sun Shepherd’s roof. The noise is drowned out by the roaring sea. He pops a panel, then motions for her to help him fold a hard shell over the boat. She works with him to pull the sections out, fighting gusts as Sun Shepherd turns her nose into the waves. The shell comes in three parts. Each is covered with solar film. They snap sections together, attach electrical plugs to some internal wiring, and then are drenched by spray as the bow cleaves through what must be a fifteen foot wave. The wave’s force momentarily hurls them into the air. Beatrice turns instinctively, grabs a cleat, then with her trailing hand snags Franz by the hood of his rain slicker. They slam back down onto the deck. Franz scrambles up. Blinks at her in surprise and gratitude. Then gives a matter of fact nod. “Good!” He shouts. “Now best get below!” The roar of waves and wind nearly drowns out his voice.

Beatrice smiles at his affirmation. She nods toward the well, indicating he should go first. Franz curses something about how he should be helping her. She flicks his prideful outburst away with a glance, then watches on protectively as he struggles to reach the well across a pitching deck. She comes to her feet. In little bounds, she springs behind, riding the deck like a surfboard. Franz doesn’t look back. But Beatrice can see Mori keeping eyes on her through the bridge’s glass. He, Sadie, and a young woman are watching her escort Franz back to the well. The young woman — she must be Glenda Goodfuture — is staring with naked awe as the harsh elements force the large and muscled Franz to lurch and stagger even as Beatrice rides through it all with the grace of dancer.

At last, they reach the well. Franz lunges toward the door as Sun Shepherd pitches through a massive roller. Walls of foam surge on either side. He lurches through, nearly falling, still managing to hold the door open for her. She waits for the wave to pitch the stern upward, then uses its momentum to leap through, flying past him. Her boots squishing on a dry cockpit floor — the only sound she makes.

She’s greeted immediately by a beaming Glenda Goodfuture. “Bravo! Excellent!” she exclaims as she claps, then hands her a towel. “I was scared for you. But you make fighting through a storm look like body art.” She puts out her hand. “I’m Glenda.”

Now it’s Beatrice’s turn to be impressed. Here before her was the pint-sized climate activist who’d taken the world by storm — forcing so many to reconsider their place on Earth and what they were doing to protect it for future generations. She nods a gracious thank you for the towel, then extends her hand. “Honored to finally meet you,” she says.

Glenda takes her hand, pumping it with a surprisingly firm grip for one so small. Beatrice at 5′ 4″ looks down at 5′ tall Glenda. She’s thin, early twenties, long sandy-blonde hair pulled back into a pony tail. Her T-shirt reads the now widespread youth climate message — #ClimateStrike #FridaysForFuture. A tiny form for quite a force. “Given your outfit, I figured you must be Erroll Flynn’s girlfriend. But he says you’re married.” She gives Mori, who looks every part the drowned crow, a disapproving frown.

Mori staggers forward, propelled back and forth by the Shepherd pitching as it struggles through the seas, hugs Beatrice, clears his throat awkwardly. “I definitely got the better end of that bargain.”

“Yee-ah,” Glenda says with an eye roll, then turns toward her father, her mouth scrunched up into a pensive frown. Ivan’s finally recovered. He looks green. His expression hang-dog. The bruises on his head are turning into ugly shiners. His burned hand is wrapped up in a gauze someone must’ve scrounged up while Beatrice was on deck securing the zodiac.

“Valyria, should’ve never left,” Ivan says to her in Russian. Omnis scientia, trailing behind Beatrice and patterned with interpretor, dutifully translates. “Your home was forsaken.”

Glenda drops Beatrice’s hand, giving it a pat as she releases it, then turns in anger toward her father. “Nonsense! I had to!” Glenda shouts in English, her brows lowered in sudden fury. “You! You left! You! Too selfish to do what’s right! You tried to force me! To be like you!” Glenda’s face is red at her brief but intense outburst. “I did what I must! What you wouldn’t!”

Ivan’s face flushes. Her use of English in front of everyone is like a slap in the face. “Valyria…” Ivan starts, his mouth working. “To be an adult…” he continues in Russian.

“Is not easy?” she interrupts in English. “You always say that. I did the harder thing. I took responsibility. That makes me the adult!”

Ivan clamps his mouth shut. His eyes cut side-to-side. Everyone on the bridge is silent. Mori’s stupid grin is back. Outside the waves rage higher. The wind howls. Lightning strikes a wave-top about a half mile away. “I missed you…” He says lamely through the roaring thunder.

“And I you. Ever since you went to work for that stupid bank. Ever since age 12 when I lost my father!” Glenda shouts, her face red, she hops on her toes, tears of rage fall from her eyes. “This!” She points at the mages, at the raging storm, at the Sun Shepherd. “This is the result! Devils! Terrorists! You’re a fucking shapechanger!” She glances at Sadie, but does not relent. “A devil’s fish hook’s in your heart! This is my intervention. Your last fucking chance to be a fucking human!”

On the bridge consul, a red light begins to flash and an alarm sounds. Finn, who’d taken the helm as soon as he entered the bridge picks up a hand mike, keys the tab. “Attention! Crew and passengers! Brace! Brace! Brace! Large wave inbound!”

Beatrice, spins, flicks omnis scientia out the front window. Ahead, a massive blue and white wall rises — easily towering forty feet above the sea surface. Its top rolls. She grabs hold of a handle. The others scramble to brace themselves. Glenda is caught unawares. Ivan freezes. Finn guns the engine — pushing Sun Shepherd up the wave face and toward its axe-shaped peak. Beatrice makes a decision. “Hit the deck!” she shouts, then jumps from her place of safety, grabbing both Glenda and Ivan, she pushes them to the floor. The wave crashes. The outer deck roils under a wall of whitewater. It slams over the window. For a moment, the bridge is submerged. Blue water swirls around omnis scientia where it hovers just over the deck. Behind them, windows reveal a maelstrom of white. Beatrice, Ivan and Glenda are lifted bodily, then flung in a tangle onto a nearby couch. The Sea Shepherd gathers itself beneath the wave, powerful electric engines making a space-ship sound. Then, with a rush and an explosion of spray, the vessel bursts through the wave’s back — resurfacing like a submarine.

Sea Shepherd bobs for a few seconds behind the wave, rights itself, then swiftly plows onward. Electric drives pushing a tail of water behind. Finn turns around. “Everyone OK? Thumbs up! Let me see them.” he shouts over the roaring wind and sea. They managed to brace. All except Beatrice, Glenda and Ivan who’re busy untangling themselves. Everyone gives the thumbs up. “Good!” Finn says. “Now, better buckle in. This monster storm has quite the bite!”

Beatrice helps Glenda fasten a seatbelt in the couch, then makes sure Ivan’s buckled in beside her. Whatever else she may think of Ivan, he’s still Glenda’s father. Despite everything, Glenda clearly still loves him. Beatrice, at last satisfied both he and Glenda are safe, begins to snap her own buckle.

“Not you,” Finn says back to her. “You’ve got the best sea legs I’ve ever seen. And Sadie told me… Well, I know about your talent. You have your special sight active?”

“It’s called omnis scientia. And yes. It’s floating just above the deck near the prow.”

“I may need you to use it to help navigate this mess. Up here!” He pats a co-pilot’s seat next to him. Beatrice springs up to it. In one smooth motion, she buckles in. She scans the array of indicators and screens. Depth finders, wave height measures, level of battery charge (eighty three percent), various outside cameras mostly blurred out by rain and waves, lidar and radar, the red collision warning light that just blinked out.

She turns and gives a little two-figured salute to Finn. “Aye, captain!” she replies, then flicks omnis scientia on ahead. It lifts off the prow, flits over raging wave-tops. “I’ve moved omnis scientia out to 300 feet in front of the vessel.”

“Good! Let me know if there’s another large wave coming. Something about double the size of regular swells.” He hesitates, takes in the raging sea-state. “Or larger… Describe it to me. That –” he points to the red collision warning indicator, now dim, “is just a dummy light.”

Beatrice gives the thumbs up.

“The rest of you, pipe down,” Finn continues. “We’re in for a rough ride out to Wind-Sun. You can settle your differences when you get there. Let’s make sure you do!”

(New to the Helkey multiverse? Haven’t yet read the first chapter? You can find it here: Helkey 1 — The Memory Draught.)

(Looking for another chapter? Find it in the Helkey Table of Contents.)

(Enjoying the story? Want to help support the continuance of this tale? Please like, share and subscribe.)

Helkey 25 — Mobile Holy Ground

“The Nightmare’s in the frigging train!” Mori shouts.

Beatrice spins, facing front. There’s a lurch, a shriek of wheels. The train contorts, jumping on its tracks, throwing passengers back and forth. Ghostly light strobes along the walls. People crouch and cower near her. Terrified murmurs surround her. What do I do? My energetic vessel’s almost empty. The Curse Rider’s arrival in terrible glory has left her stunned. Breathless. Fear threads through her — trying to freeze her to the floor. She spins, leaps up beside Mori.

“What now?” He says, his jaw line clenching in tension.

“We figure out some way to fight him,” She replies. To her ears, she sounds far more confident than she feels. “To exorcise the Nightmare.”

Sadie stands up. Puts a hand on Beatrice’s arm. “Wait. We’ve chosen our ground well. Look carefully.”

Beatrice lifts her eyes to the wall, watches the Nightmare’s ghostly spirit rushing back and forth through the train. Metal shudders. Plastic smolders. Wheels squeal and grind. But the train’s form does not change. There is no diabolical transformation.

“You see now? We picked a solar train for good reason. They don’t call it fueled by Heaven for nothing.” Then, Sadie lifts her hand, touches the train’s wall and incants “Ligamen Malum!” Blue-white light pulses out. A series of white rings expands from her point of contact. The rings ripple through the train — creating an interlocking chain of binding circles. The Nightmare spirit shrieks, fades, then melts back in silence. Smooth forward motion resumes. Beatrice’s eyes swirl with magical detection. The Nightmare thrashes. But it cannot escape from Sadie’s binding. Stuck in a substance anathema to its nature. Bound by a chain of celestial magic drawing strength from the solar train’s innate benevolence. For now, the demon is locked down, unable to move.

“You trapped it!” Beatrice exclaims in surprise and relief. “You chose the train for this reason didn’t you? You knew.”

Sadie taps the train’s deck with her foot, a sheepish grin spreading over her face. “What does Myra call this sort of conveyance? I heard her say it once?”

“Mobile holy ground, Highlander!” Mori says. “Damn, what a move! I saw you touch the wall and concentrate earlier. Didn’t know it was to work a heavy-weight curse!”

Beatrice wipes away a tear that forms, unbidden, at mention of her daughter. “The idea to set this trap came from something Myra said?”

“That’s as crazy as it is cool,” Mori actually laughs.

“No time to celebrate,” Sadie says. “We’ve knocked out one of his main weapons. But we still have a Curse Rider to deal with.”

“What’s the plan?” Beatrice asks.

“I’m drawing a blank too,” Mori says. He shares a glance with Beatrice, worry plain in his expression. “We’re both about tapped out.”

Ivan groans, clutches his belly, then barfs on the floor. Sadie grabs his collar, hoists him up. “We know what the Curse Rider wants.” She motions to Ivan. “Don’t we? For certainty, he hunts you to take your wisps. But he’s also here for Ivan. And as complicated as our Russian friend here makes things for us, he’s also splitting the Curse Rider’s focus.” Sadie pats Ivan on the back, then starts guiding him to the rear of the car.

“It’s a delay tactic,” Mori says.

Beatrice nods. “We move the quarries. Keep him guessing.” Flicking her sense through omnis scientia, she can see the Curse Rider raging on the train’s roof. His Nightmare trapped, his once-cool demeanor is now melting into a rictus of ugly rage. His eyes follow the magical lines running from the sensor back to Beatrice and Mori. With great leaps that seem impossible for such a whip-thin body, he begins bounding toward them. Where his feet touch the sanctified train, angry sparks lash out at him, burning him. He pays no mind as boots and cloths are blasted away. As human flesh sears to black and red scales, his feet taking on the shape of talons. “He’s coming! Let’s move!”

As they stand, Officer Winkler finally recovers from her shock at the madness caused by what she thinks is a mass phone hacking. She’s close, overhearing their conversation. Though some of it’s not processing for her, the magical parts mostly, she grasps the gist of their plan. Then, her police radio blares with a confusing report of a helicopter landing on the roof and depositing a likely hijacker. She stands, pulls her firearm. “Good idea! Get to the train’s rear! We’ll do what we can to protect your dignitary!” Winkler rushes into the next car, joins two other officers, then uses the emergency access to get to the roof.

Beatrice lifts a hand, then incants praesidia! The blue light of her protection curse shoots toward the officers, enveloping them in a momentary flare. She ties off the energy, watching sparks trail them as they climb onto the roof. It’ll last about ten minutes. Hopefully enough. Probing her energetic vessel she finds she’s got maybe one strong curse left. She doesn’t regret it. Those officers are good people going into a situation they don’t understand. One where they’re completely outclassed.

The Curse Rider is ten cars back and coming on fast. They turn and rush headlong toward the train’s rear. Running itself isn’t a strategy. It buys them time. And not much. Cunning Sadie must have another trick card in her deck.

Sadie grabs her by the shirt. “I know you’re almost out! Save your last magic until I tell you to use it! Going to need your special talent!”

Beatrice nods back, mouth forming a grim line. “Aye, my captain!” she replies, then rushes onward, checking her speed to make sure her companions can keep up. Most mages have specializations. Sadie’s are healing, binding, protection and traps. Mori’s involve information gathering, detection, stealth, obfuscation, and weapon-enhanced ranged combat. She has a few areas of magical specialization, but she bets Sadie will draw something from her wide-ranging, mobility-enabling quiver.

They pass through one train car. Another. Passengers stare in obvious shock from the phone disturbance, the jolting train, the diabolical light show. Warnings about a possible unauthorized boarder blare through the speakers. Ivan stumbles. Mori hit him pretty hard. Can’t say I blame him. Asmodeus’s Prophet is also cradling a burned hand, suffers from many bruises. The wound in his back and wisp from the Pride-Eater’s talon clearly troubles him as he lurches back and forth in a daze of pain. Beatrice hooks a hand under his arm, helping Sadie propel him onward.

Through omnis scientia, Beatrice watches as the officers climb onto the train’s roof. They shout, pointing at the Curse Rider who’s now become a horrific mash of devil and cowboy — running on taloned feet as divine energy sparks angrily around him. White light flares, rising from Sadie’s chain of binding circles. A Macto effect Sadie layered into her spell’s structure. The sparks are ripping holes in his human flesh. A superficial garment, some of it sags off in tatters — revealing more of the mottled black and red scales. A baleful black eye with a white pin-prick for its pupil scans them as the devil cowboy rushes forward, holding its black hat to its head with one hand.

“Halt!” the officers shout, weapons drawn. The interpretation from German ringing in her ears through the shared sensor.

Quicker than a cobra-strike, the devil cowboy draws his firearm. A massive six-shooter leaps into his hand. He fires. A black round erupts. It seems to expand, devouring light as it races toward its targets. The officers, pistols already out, return fire. A few bullets strike the Curse Rider. May as well be stinging gnats for all the damage they inflict. The black round shoots between the officers, contracts with a ‘wump!’ then explodes in a dark shockwave. Darkness tinged with fire bursts out, engulfing the officers and tearing a hole in the train roof. Blue light ripples, protecting them from the impact. Still, the officers are flung off like toys in warped bubbles. Two tumble away to the left. One to the right. Beatrice sees Winkler fall into bushes along the train tracks, blue light still shielding her. Safe if shook-up. The other two officers hurtle out of sight. The Curse Rider takes one leap, jumps through the hole opened by his black bullet, lands in a flare of sparks among screaming passengers, then continues his onrush from within the train.

Beatrice looks over her shoulder. She can’t see him yet. But she does see passengers cowering, diving under seats, or pressing themselves against walls. In the distance, through a series of doors, she can see material swirling around like confetti. “He’s in the train!” she shouts.

Sadie looks back at her, catches her eye. “Good,” she says.

Beatrice turns, facing the train’s rear. They sprint — slamming through doors and jumping over passengers, Ivan in tow. From behind them, the sounds of screams and crashes grows louder. Beatrice feels panic rise into her throat. Pricks run up her spine. She feels she’ll be snatched away and rent to pieces at any instant. They’re moving too fast now to look back. But the noise behind grows louder and louder.

Finally, they come to the caboose car’s entrance. Sadie lifts a hand. Beatrice spins to a halt. Mori stops, takes a knee. Ivan collapses. Toward the engine, not three cars away, the Curse Rider strides through a shower of sparks carrying Macto curses that blast into him in gory staccato. Bits of his human shell fly off — spraying over cowering and screaming passengers. He ignores them. Clawed feet hammer as he rushes toward them. Legs pistoning with terrible force that evokes both the machine and the reptilian. Eyes — twin white lights in orbs of darkness — fix on them like gun sights. His flesh and clothes are now tatters. Most of what made him look human is ripped away. His diabolical features — mottled black and bood-red scales, twin horns sprouting from his skull, long claws replacing toes and finger nails — take on most of his form now. Beatrice draws breath, in awe of what Sadie’s done with her magic. She turned the train into a gauntlet of destruction for the Curse Rider. It’s still no-where near enough. The thing she sees stands strong, barely phased by the terrible punishment coming in from all sides. The devil cowboy — it still wears its ridiculous hat — explodes into a dividing doorway. The door is thrown off its hinges with a shriek of steel. The Curse Rider bursts through. Now just two cars away.

“I hope you know what you’re doing!” Mori shouts to Sadie.

“He sees us! Good!” She shouts. “Now run! To the end of the train!”

They rush headlong. It’s a real race now and they’re losing fast. Beatrice has no idea what Sadie has in mind. But it better be good. They’re at the train’s end. All that stands between them and rushing tracks — a door of steel and glass. About a hundred feet away and opposite the door, the Curse Rider hurtles toward them. They’re trapped. Out of options.

“Mori! Shoot out the door!” Sadie shouts.

Mori, who was busy sighting down the Curse Rider, swings his weapon around, ejects the Macto magazine into his hand, switches it swiftly with a black magazine from his pocket, then aims at the door. Beatrice’s eyes widen as she recognizes the ammo. These are tungsten anti-material rounds! Mori shoots four times in succession, blasting away the hinges. The door flies off into space behind the train — tumbling like a leaf.

Sadie waves to the few passengers clustering near the caboose’s rear. “Too dangerous here! Run to the front now!” The passengers stand, scamper toward the car’s front. “Now hide! Something bad’s coming!” Sadie’s voice is laden with suggero spurring them to move despite their terror.

Not missing a beat, Sadie turns to Beatrice. “We’re going up top. Draw your sword. Use your defenses. Get its attention. Then follow my lead.” Sadie grabs Mori and Ivan. “Salire!” she incants. Together, they leap up — propelled in a swooping arc by Sadie’s curse magic. Then they’re on the roof, scampering toward the car’s front. Beatrice is now alone. She draws her curse-patterned rapier. Sparks fall from its tip. The tattoos on her feet and hands flare with magic as she prepares what remains in her energetic vessel. With her thumb, she taps the blue-white gem in her rapier’s pommel. A patterned praesidia curse triggers — enveloping her blade in a bubble of protective light. She’s deliberately bleeding a heavy amount of patterned lux into her name curse. Showing off both her nature as an angel and as a mage. A combination any devil worth its worb would lust for. In front of her, the door rips off — pinning two passengers as the Curse Rider tears it like a sheet of paper from a notebook, then casually casts it aside. She crouches. The Curse Rider’s white laser eyes in swirling darkness fall on her. She aims her sword at them. The Curse Rider hesitates for a moment, seems surprised she’s alone, glances about for her companions. The pause is only momentary. Her angelic, magical form, its vital wisp-energy fluttering within, is too spectacular a pull for a devil to resist. It tips its hat in seeming salute, lowers a hand toward the pistol on its belt, then leaps toward her.

Sadie!!!” Beatrice shouts.

“Una!” Sadie replies. “Una!” she hears Mori speak in turn as he bridges the link between Sadie, Beatrice, himself, and Ivan. Una forms a bridge that flows like a river of magic between them. It then extends in a blue-green arc over the train, connecting them to their magical sensor — omnis scientia — hundreds of feet ahead. Beatrice’s senses are transported along the bridge to the sensor’s far-off focus. Its view is just above the hole created by the Curse Rider’s first black bullet when it exploded among the police officers minutes before.

In her real sight, she can see the Curse Rider tearing through the train’s floor with its clawed feet. “When I cast my curse use lanuae on the sensor!” Sadie shouts. The Curse Rider’s six shooter whips up. Beatrice’s sense of time dilates. The barrel seems to slowly rise. “QAUE MALA!” Sadie incants, using the binding circle curse to seal the caboose with a ward against evil.

Beatrice spins her rapier. The gun’s barrel lines up. Sparks swirl in the air. She can see the barrel through her circle of sparks like a gaping maw. The five black bullets still housed in its cylinder — each a bulge of devil’s magic waiting for launch. She grabs one spark. The gun’s hammer falls. She hurls the spark. It disappears as it passes into the magical link made by una and flares swiftly through the blue-green bridge above the train. The black bullet hurtles toward her, shadow tendrils swarm out from it. Her rapier blazes. The light of a star briefly blossoms in the caboose as praesidia forms its bubble around her. Shadow tendrils coil and swell from the black bullet. Around Beatrice, seats are ripped off their mountings and thrown from the train, windows shatter, metal bulges and cracks.

Beatrice is ejected out behind the train in this clash of forces. Tendrils blooming around the swelling black bullet core through her protective light. If they touch her, they will tear her wisp away. The black bullet will then capture it for the Curse Rider to enslave. Hundreds of feet ahead, in the train that is now leaving her behind, her spark finally crosses una’s bridge and shoots out of the magical sensor. It lands in the train roof’s hole. The black bullet begins to engulf her. Tendrils just inches away as she dips toward impact on the tracks. Tucking into a ball, she shouts “LANUAE!” The explosive magic of teleportation enfolds her — lighting up three more times to engulf her companions on the train car roof ahead and above. The black bullet cores through the explosion where she hung in mid-air a moment before.

Beatrice emerges along with Sadie, Mori, and Ivan. Each leaping up out of their own explosive spark-shower. They fall about 8 feet, then land in a chorus of thumps in the ruined train car. A few hundred feet away, within the caboose, the Curse Rider howls in rage. Sadie’s magic has formed an iridescent field around the damaged car. Reinforced by the train’s holy ground, it contains the Curse Rider even as he vents his fury. Pounding and shooting the magical containment in furious effort to find release. The remaining passengers, not similarly bound by Sadie’s magic and gathered near the exit forward, flee to safety in the next train car. For the moment, the Curse Rider is too distracted by his capture to pay them mind. He aims his might at breaking the bottle, he deforms the magical containment — causing the caboose to jump. Its walls are quickly tattered with dents and cracks. But, for now, the mighty Curse Rider is held even as Macto curses continue to rain down on it.

Beatrice slumps to the floor, still shaking from the intensity of a few moments before. “Whew!” she says. “Well, Sadie, you did it. Trapped a Curse Rider. But I don’t know for how long. I’ll take my miracles.”

“It’s bought us time. Hopefully enough to get where we need to go,” Sadie replies.

“Tonder?” Mori asks.

“Brons,” Sadie replies. “I’ve arranged a boat. We jump train there. If all goes as planned. Glenda will be on board.”

Beatrice looks at them, puts her shaking hand on her head. “Are you both going to let me know what you’ve cooked up? Do I have to guess at your charades? I did just… What would Myra call it? I think the term is tank. Yes. I did just tank that Curse Rider for you guys. A little explanation as gratitude would be appreciated.”

“Sweetheart,” Mori replies, catching her up in a reassuring embrace. “You tanked beautifully! And yes, I suppose we both missed a lot of Sadie’s subtlety here. So to fill you in, we’re going to jump off the train at Brons, then take a boat down the Brons River and out to our Heaven’s gate in the North Sea. Providence willing, the cage Sadie made for our Curse Rider will hold until then and for some time after.”

“Glorious!” Beatrice says in an outburst, trying to blow her shakes off into the word. “How much longer ’til Brons?”

“About fifty minutes,” Mori says.

“Seems like a long time given present circumstances.”

“It seems like forever.”

Ivan whimpers.

Beatrice stands, assesses her blessings. She’s still breathing — thanks in no small part to Sadie. This whole affair is too desperate. But she didn’t know what else to do. With Myra in Hell, they’re committed to this crazy path. And that was that.

(New to the Helkey multiverse? Haven’t yet read the first chapter? You can find it here: Helkey 1 — The Memory Draught.)

(Looking for another chapter? Find it in the Helkey Table of Contents.)

(Enjoying the story? Want to help support the continuance of this tale? Please like, share and subscribe.)

Helkey 16 — Glenda Goodfuture and the Solar Train to Denmark

Mori suppresses the urge to cuff Ivan. The racist bastard snuck off, went on a binge, started bullying a black pro football player, then literally almost got transformed into a fucking demon-wolf when Hell dialed him in. The Hell dialing part is weird. Something he can’t quite figure out. The Ivan being a pure 100 percent dick part is as easy to get as it is infuriating.

They lead Ivan the jackass back toward Marienkirche. Beatrice is keeping to the shadows, feeding ignarus more curse energy, her luminous eyes scanning for hiding places, head on a swivel. The shadows won’t hide them from actual demons or devils. But demons can mostly only manifest as spirits on Earth and it is very rare for devils to take form here. The main concern will be humans who are taken in by Hellish and demonic influence. Unless… He doesn’t want to think too much about the worst possibility right now. He takes Beatrice’s hint and starts to mirror her actions. Stay alert, stay alive. Especially when you’re escorting Asmodeus’ prophet.

St Mary’s Church and Mio Bar

“Care to explain what happened with the phone call?” Beatrice asks Ivan as they cross a street, then enter a park to the east of St Mary’s Church. They’re cutting through the park and along a hedge row that leads toward the church. This gives them a screen from any possible prying eyes.

Ivan purses his lips. “Why should I tell?” He looks like he’s about to mutter an expletive at Beatrice, then glances back to Mori who’s glaring at him, and takes another tact. “You attack me again. No reason to talk.”

“Whatever called to you triggered your pride-wound,” Beatrice replies. “You experienced a partial transformation and were about to bite Jonas Herrington’s arm off. I defended both him and you.” She takes point, leading them in her silent way to the end of the hedge row. She gives him the side-eye, then continues on her way.

“You keep hitting me with sword.” Ivan is playing the victim again. He’s still got his hand on his head. It sports another bruise. Serves the bastard right. His other hand keeps reaching for his back. He pulls it away, but it keeps drifting toward the black scar. Mori bets the real pain is coming from the wound those Soul Eaters gave him. He’s not saying much about that. Reflects too much on his own guilt. He’s just whining and deflecting from their questions about the phone call.

“Hey jackass, Beatrice uses her sword for healing and protection as well as for fighting. As a last friggin’ resort. She’s never used its sharp bits on you. She could have. With justification. You owe Beatrice about a thousand apologies for going all murder hobo. Twice.” Mori climbs the stairs and they file into the church. “She kept you from turning into a monster at major risk to herself. Again. You should thank her. You don’t want to turn into a monster, do you?”

Ivan goes quiet again. The church is dark and silent. It’s about 4 AM. Mori’s tired, but Beatrice looks bright-eyed. His girl has never needed much sleep. Angel’s badass physiology and all that jazz. But he’s hoping to get at least another two hours of shut-eye. Whatever Sadie has planned for tomorrow is going to need him at 120 percent.

“Come-on Ivan. It’s back upstairs for you. Let’s sleep off the devil-spiked booze. Hopefully, it won’t give you too much of a hangover.”

Ivan grunts in reply. Beatrice closes and locks the door behind them. Then they’re climbing up the stairs, entering Sadie’s office. Beatrice settles herself down on a stool next to the window. Mori flops down onto his chair. Ivan rolls onto his cot. Bleeding curse energy into omnis scienta, Mori sets the magical sensor to keep watch over Ivan and the door again. Then, with a relieved sigh he lets his eyes shut. He’s reassured Beatrice is back to her good ol’ self. Not like he doubted once he got her into Sadie’s hands. She’s sitting over by the window. His little badass angel. Keeping watch.

As soon as his eyes close, he’s out. Sleep is precious. His work often makes it scarce. This particular job is bound to get more hectic. More dangerous.

After what seems like just a moment of sleep, the smell of coffee wafts into his nostrils and he’s greeted by the rich, sing-song voice of Sadie Dextera. “Wakie, wakie, eggs and bakie!” she says as she plops a plate on his lap. He groans and rubs his eyes. “Yes mom, what time is it?” he looks down at his food groggily. It’s in one of those nice, brown recyclable containers. Clearly ordered in. Some kind of tofu, potatoes, and veggie bacon scramble. Yum! He lifts his fork as Beatrice hands him a coffee, then digs in.

“What time is it?” he asks between mouthfuls.

“It’s 7:30 sleepy-head,” Beatrice replies with a smile. “You slept late. And the only thing going bump in the night was your snore.”

“Tell me about it, girl,” Sadie says when Beatrice mentions his snoring. Apparently, it’s one of his many famous traits. Not like he would know. They could be making it all up. Mori scans the room, finds Ivan sipping his coffee by the window. He’s dressed now. Jeans, a button down flannel, and a Godzilla T-shirt. The T-shirt looks familiar.

“Aw, no more Ivan the priest?” he says, between scarfing mouthfuls. “I was getting to like the vibe. But where’d he get the new duds?”

Ivan turns toward him, gives a poker-face, then returns to gazing out the window into early-morning Berlin.

“You should recognize the T-shirt,” Beatrice replies. “It’s from Myra’s luggage. Awful ugly thing. Don’t know why she ever liked it. The rest is from the church donations box. We found a few things that fit him. Though the jeans are a little baggy and he needed a belt.”

“You dressed him up in our daughter’s clothes?” Mori gives a crow-cackle laugh. “You know, she’d actually find that funny.”

He can feel Ivan’s gaze return. Threatening. Mori looks straight back at him. “Godzilla T? I change my mind. It fits. You should thank my daughter for her charity.” He’s not going to let Ivan the Wolf look at him like that without reply. Besides, the Russian doesn’t know shit about Myra. And that’s for the best.

Ivan seems to soften a bit at the word daughter, his face showing some actual emotion. “Godzilla? My daughter likes too. Never understood why she calls it cute. Ugly beast.”

“Well count me among the amazed,” Beatrice says. “Ivan and I can agree on one of the most important subjects of our time.”

“The ugliness level of Godzilla?” Mori quips.

“Indeed,” Beatrice replies.

“Well count me out. To my eye, the big, green kaiju strikes a handsome pose.”

Sadie has made her way over to Ivan through the banter. “You sure you don’t want any breakfast, hon?” She motions to the neglected food container beside Ivan.

“Don’t eat bird food,” Ivan replies.

Mori scoops it up. “Don’t mind if I do,” he says, then shovels a heaping forkful of Ivan’s grub into his mouth. “Man, I’m surprised you don’t want some of these delicious hashbrowns.”

Ivan snatches the food container from Mori’s hands, then looks accusingly at Sadie. “Wi.. didn’t mention hashbrowns.” He picks up the fried potatoes with his fingers, eating them daintily. But the jocular mood is broken. The word Ivan had almost uttered is witch. Among mages, particularly those like Sadie and Beatrice, this is a vulgar slur. Ivan must’ve keyed in on their reactions as the word almost escaped his mouth — biting it off at the last instant.

Everything gets quiet for a few minutes. Mori’s appetite is gone. He puts the container back down, then walks away. For a moment, Ivan seemed almost human.

At last Sadie puts her hands together. “So, I suppose I should tell you what we have planned for you Ivan. How we plan to ferry you off to Heaven. But first things first, Beatrice informs me we had a late-night relapse of your devil-wolf?”

Ivan coughs in reply.

Sadie just stares at him. “I’m sorry. I didn’t understand you.”

“Yes,” Ivan says, actually having the grace to look ashamed.

“I see,” she glances at Beatrice, then Mori. Mori turns to Beatrice. She raises her eyebrow in a way that says yes, I filled Sadie in while you were snoring your brains out. Except Beatrice would use more refined words. “So I need to be very clear with you, Ivan,” Sadie continues. “No more wolf relapses. We simply cannot have you transforming into…” she motions at his Godzilla T-shirt. “It would defeat everything we are trying to do to help you.”

Beatrice is standing beside Mori now. As Sadie speaks she grabs his arm. “Sadie knows she’s playing with fire,” she whispers into his ear. “The dreams of Heaven haven’t known a true nightmare in ages.” Mori puts his hand over hers. Though not a native of Heaven, he recalls a bit about the nature of its worlds. Enough to know that strong dreams can be made real there — the same was once true for nightmares.

Ivan’s not watching them. He’s absorbed by Sadie. His poker face is back. But Mori is pretty sure he can see the racist dislike for Sadie glinting in Ivan’s beady little eyes. His nostrils flare a little. “Apologize,” his voice is quiet. His tongue rolls off it like the word is disgusting to him. “Won’t let happen again.”

Sadie’s eyes are dark pools — drawing him in. “Very well. But I must extract this pledge from you. No more phone calls until we get to Heaven.”

Ivan waves his hand dismissively. “Da. No more phone.”

Sadie catches his hand. “Then, to hold you to your word…” she jabs a finger into his palm and incants “confractus telefari.” Mori watches as a whirl of curse energy imbeds in Ivan’s palm. It’s a curse set to disrupt phone signals coming to Ivan. Sadie feeds the curse a bit more, then cuts it off. It’s got enough magical juice to last for days. Pretty darn clever.

Ivan might’ve caught a glimpse of the curse firing off. He’s staring at his hand in amazement.

“Now, let’s talk about how we’re bringing you to Heaven. There’s a magical gateway just off Denmark in the North Sea. Since you’re a bit of risk, I’m not telling you exactly where at the moment. But we will be meeting your daughter Glenda along the way. I believe she can help you in ways I cannot. She’s agreed.”

Mori turns to Beatrice in surprise. “Glenda?” he whispers. She shrugs her reply. Mori recalls his brief shared vision with Ivan — of his daughter holding his hand in Siberia.

Ivan appears stunned. “Glenda?” A hundred emotions ripple across his face. “Not real name. It’s Valeriya.”

“I know she changed her name when she left Russia in protest. When she came to Europe and took on the surname Goodfuture.”

“Holy shit! Glenda Goodfuture, the famous climate activist, is your daughter?” Mori exclaims to Ivan.

At the same time Beatrice shouts to Sadie — “You’re working with Glenda Goodfuture!?”

Ivan scowls and Sadie gives a cat-ate-the-canary grin.

“Valeriya. Valeriya Volkov,” he insists. “I… she agreed to see me?”

“Yes. Yes she has. Indeed. She asked me to see you when I told her I planned to bring you to Heaven. In fact, she offered to help.”

Clever, clever Sadie, Mori thinks as he leans back to digest this new bit of info. He’d heard of the world-renown Glenda Goodfuture. A teenage climate activist who’d left Russia in protest over its continued use of fossil fuels as a tool for economic warfare against its neighbors and in its reticence to shift away from their burning — so obviously fueling climate Hell on Earth. He just didn’t know Glenda was Ivan’s prodigal daughter. She was able to secure independence through a Go-Fund-Me at the age of 19 when she left Russia. The media was always vague about her family — calling them ‘wealthy oil and gas oligarchs.’ Odd discretion.

“So Glenda — she’s a mage?” Mori asks Sadie.

“Not exactly,” Sadie replies. “Let’s just say Glenda-Valeriya made some good friends. One of them being myself.”

Beatrice is standing with her arms crossed, an impressed look on her face. Ivan’s expression is a mash-up of hope, surprise, and a little anger. He looks accusingly at Sadie. Takes a breath. Seems to struggle with his words for a moment.

“You interfere with Valeriya. Take her away,” Ivan says, finally spitting out his accusation.

“I merely helped Glenda when she asked. Her decisions are her own,” Sadie replies. “You should be proud. She is a fine person. A passionate advocate for all our futures. I think, perhaps, you could learn something from her example.”

Ivan purses his lips. The mask falls back into place. Mori is pretty sure he can still see sparks of rage in his eyes.

After giving Ivan a moment to reply, Sadie steeples her hands, takes a breath and continues. “Well, now that you know your daughter wants to meet you in Denmark, I suppose we should get going. No time to waste!”

Mori looks down at his rumpled clothes. Good thing he and Beatrice left some bags here with Sadie. “If we’re getting ready to head out, you mind if I take a quick shower?”

“Please do.” This quick quip from Sadie earns a little laugh from Beatrice. Funny-ha-ha. Yeah, Mori knew he needed a bath. He glances around. Everyone else looks pretty shiny. He supposes they grabbed a shower while he was still snoozing. He snatches his bag, then bee-lines it for the shower. After a quick wash, Mori emerges feeling mostly human again. They’ve gathered in the hall, waiting for him.

“Snap to!” Sadie commands. “Train’s at 9:15.”

Mori follows them as they shuffle off toward the stairs. “Train?” he asks.

“Yes,” Beatrice says, her eyes sparking with excitement. “Sadie filled us in while you were making yourself presentable. We’re taking the Solar Train to Denmark!”

“Cool.”

They emerge from the church. Their Uber — already waiting. Telsa Model X making its almost sub-audial space-ship noise with its X-wing doors open to admit them. Mori swings around the front, his special briefcase and go bag in hand, opens the passenger door, then plops down shotgun next to Stefan. Beatrice, Ivan, and Sadie each grab a comfortable seat in the back. Beatrice sits behind Mori, reaching an arm over his chair to grab his shoulder.

“I checked up on Mirror-Spectre,” she whispers to him as the Tesla’s X-Wing doors lower. “Myra made it safely to Infernia. No other word.”

Mori pats her hand. “We’ll know more by evening,” he whispers back. He glances at Ivan in the rear view mirror. They’ll have to find a private place away from him if they want to talk openly about Myra or receive the magical reports coming from Mirror-Specter. The Tesla’s doors finish closing and they blast off through Berlin’s early morning streets. Already, haze, heat, and the smell of smoke from wildfires dominate the weather picture. Hot and lung-wrecking stinky with a 30 percent chance of pyrocumulus thunderstorms, Mori thinks to himself. Yet another nasty day on climate-wracked Earth. Though nothing like what Myra’s experiencing now. Mori stares out the window, tries to imagine, then figures it’s better to just leave that thread of thought. Beatrice is scared sick for their girl. If he’s honest with himself, he’s scared too. Dwelling on Myra’s plight ain’t gonna make things any better for her.

Stefan has turned on the Tesla’s streaming local news. Someone — Sadie or Beatrice — set up an interpretor curse. So he’s hearing it in English. They’re still talking about the Furze Bank incident. Though investigators seem to be stumped. Berlin’s chief of police is giving tight-lipped news updates. So nothing new there. The news switches to coverage of a horrific plane crash at Berlin-Brandenburg Airport early that morning. Scores of souls lost as the plane slammed into the runway. Survivor accounts are mad and delirious — some claim the plane was taken over by ghosts. Authorities suspect hijacking. But no known terrorist groups are claiming responsibility. News commentators speculate that the Furze Bank incident and plane crash are somehow linked. Mori taps his ear and glances back to Beatrice. Her face is tensed with concern, her eyebrows raised as they share a knowing look. Yeah, babe, I’m with you. This plane crash smacks of something nasty this way comes. Over her shoulder, Mori can see a smoke plume rising up in the direction of Brandenburg where wreckage still burns. Whew, things are starting to get real.

Berlin Hauptbahnhof or Central Station isn’t far from St Mary’s. Maybe a 15 minute hop. It’s not long before Mori can see its glass palace structure glittering in the hazy morning sunlight. Train lines snake into the hub — each accompanied by its own gleaming racks of solar panels. The racks give off a reflective glow to the lines as they wind off into the distance. Panels feeding energy to electric train engines and battery cars directly through the platform. They’d made the conversion only recently. To Mori, it all looks pretty darn badass. A palace of light sending out its glowing vehicular emissaries. Its brilliant clean energy glory lifts his mood, turning his attention away from last night’s weirdness.

The Tesla whooshes to a halt. X-Wing doors open. Mori gives a thumbs-up to Stephan before gathering his rifle-briefcase and go-bag, then hopping out into the steaming-smoking morning. They make their way through the entry gates. Sadie scans their tickets. Ivan stands, hands in pockets, looking non-plussed. The long, white train is a beautiful conveyance. Marked on its side is the word Sleipnir stenciled in silver. Sleipnir as in Odin’s mythical steed from Norse mythology. Somehow, Mori’s not sure the old Asgardians were quite so forward-looking. Although the Marvel Comics version would probably approve. Mori glances over to another track to see a second Sleipnir train. He guesses this is what they’re calling the brand. They’re hulking white beasts covered in solar panels along their roofs. The windows also feature new transparent thin-film solar pads — visible as slightly darker cut-out shading. Near the train’s middle, the transparent solar film makes a lightning bolt emblem. It’s a pretty badass touch. Mori’s liking this solar train to Denmark.

They board. Mori instinctively extends his hand to Beatrice. As if she needs my help. I’ve seen her do a 12 foot vertical leap. She takes it, returning a warm smile. The interior is just as fancy as the exterior. Comfy cushion seats. Nice spacing that doesn’t cram everyone together. Even sets of facing seats bordering small tables. They sit down around one of these tables. Sadie beside Ivan. Beatrice and Mori right next to each other. The conductor is checking to make sure everyone has tickets, masks, and a vaccine card. Pretty standard for today’s travel.

There’s a refreshment car. Mori hops over, grabs some snacks and drinks. Returns to distribute them just in time to sit down before the engine engages. There’s a ‘ding’ and the ‘remain seated’ sign lights up. Beatrice puts her hand out and Mori takes it. They share a grin. The train glides forward in smooth acceleration that pushes them back into their seats or makes them want to put hands on the table to steady themselves.

“Whoosh!” Beatrice whispers to Mori as the train shoots out from the glass palace structure with hardly any noise. Mori grins back at her. He’s still crazy about that girl. Her easy sense of wonder and simple joy — even during a tough time — make life so damn fun. Mori can feel the serious force of propulsion beneath him. The trains are huge — weighing about 5,000 tons. But the electric-driven motors make the Sleipner’s motion seem effortless. They’re slurping down all that sweet sun-juice to put out some serious motive force. The train swiftly accelerates, reaching its cruising speed of 200 kilometers per hour. Buildings and foliage blur by giving Mori a sense of Star Trek-like warp speed.

Mori looks at their tickets. Next stop is Hamburg in a little less than two hours. Then on to their destination of Esberj, Denmark in another two hour hop. If all goes well, they’ll arrive by 2:15 PM — giving them time to meet up with Glenda Goodfuture for an early dinner. The notion of a tasty sit-down meal makes him smile. Mori glances at Ivan. He’s playing a crossword he nabbed from the refreshments car. Now that’s going to be an interesting reunion.

(New to the Helkey multiverse? Haven’t yet read the first chapter? You can find it here: Helkey 1 — The Memory Draught.)

(Looking for another chapter? Find it in the Helkey Table of Contents.)

Helkey 14 — Liberator of Souls

I’ve pushed too hard. An easy thing to do in Hell’s combined toxic air and crazy heat. I’m dizzy, seeing double, feeling sick in my stomach. My heartbeat hammers in my ears.

Mottle is next to me. I feel a prick on my wrist as he does the weird IV bite. I cool off a little as nutrient and fluid from him flows into my veins. The stuff is cooler than my body temperature.  My heartbeat slows down. My vision returns. I feel less queasy. Mottle withdraws. I lever myself up to standing position. Whew. Hell really sucks. Human beings can’t manage it for squat. I’m not even 24 hours in – I’ve got all the support of my magic, a nearly endless water bottle, Mottle is cooling blanket plus emergency food and fluid source – and I’m still falling apart.

Speaking of water bottle… I feel something wet on my side. I look down to find that Perrier is laced with web-like cracks. Shattered but not yet broken. That fireball bullet shot from the devil’s pistol must’ve cracked it. Thing’s leaking through my flannel shirt pocket and down my leg. Duplici exemplari is still refilling it. But it’s pretty fucked up. “Shit!” I exclaim.

I steady myself on the wall and look down at the Poachers. Both are red-skinned devils — decked out in what might be useful gear. I crouch down next to Norg. He’s got a knife, his fireball pistol, and various items hung from his belt. Fuck yeah! There are two metal flasks. I pick up one, open it. Smell of fermentation wafts out. I dump it. Might be fun or interesting to try back home. Out here experimenting with exotic Hell alcohol is a health hazard. I gently pull out the Perrier bottle and pour a bit of the sparkling water into the flask. It fizzes. I use this as rinse, swirling it around, then dumping it. I then upend all the fluid from the Perrier bottle into the metal container. Duplici is acting on the water after all. So I should be good. I take a swig. Yep. Same Perrier. This time with a little hint of taste like liquorish. Must be a remnant of Norg’s booze. I’ll take it.

I remove the Perrier bottle and put it on the ground. The action is almost gentle. It’s a memento of my world – Earth. One that saved my ass. Sure, I’m feeling nostalgic about a friggin glass bottle. “Rest well, Perrier, your heroism will never be forgotten,” I say to the bottle as I give it a mock salute. Stooping, I gather the rest of the devils’ gear. The hell rifle goes over one shoulder, the equipment belts and bullet baldrics over the other. I’m careful to make sure knives and pistol are secure. Mori gave me firearms training in prep for my journey to Hell. Looks like it might come in handy. Though guns aren’t really my thing. I kinda have a fear relationship with them. Too easy to kill something by pulling a trigger. With curses, at least you have to go through the intentional and mentally strenuous exercise of casting a spell first.

I can hear Mori talking in my head now. “People on Earth have said that war is Hell. Well, Hell is war. You’re going into Hell Myra. Best be ready to fight.” Hey, something got past the Memory Draught! Cool deal. Yeah. I remember this cute little Mori aphorism along with his firearms instruction all-right. I lug the guns and gear up to Mottle who is doing his wall-hanging thing. “Where to now?”

As answer, Mottle flaps further into the cave, waiting for me to follow. The passage winds down some natural stairs, around through rock columns, finally coming to a larger chamber. It’s blessedly cooler down here. Water bubbles up from a nearby spring. Doesn’t smell too sulfurous. Might be an actual drinkable source. Will test it later. Right now, I’m looking at a horror of pelts, prepared bones, racks of various smoked flesh, and a table stacked with worbs. Beside this shit-show are cages made of bone. Inside are three devils with blue skin. I remember from my earlier training these blue devils are the devil slave class. Well, there are all kinds of slaves in Hell. But blue devils make up the more numerous subsets of actual devil society. They don’t have any rights and other devils can pretty much do with them as they please. The three blue devils hover about in their cage, looking at us with various curious and plaintiff expressions. Beside their cage is a bloody whipping post whose purpose requires no explanation.

Poacher’s Cave and surrounding environs

A separate cage contains a green-skinned humanoid creature with insect-like wings and yellow orb eyes. It’s about two and a half feet tall. Looks like a faerie of some sort. Mottle extends his tail. I accept the contact. Vila. Blue devils. His matter-of-fact thoughts identify the creatures. I’m drawing a blank on the Vila.

“What’s a Vila?” I ask.

Tree spirit. Almost extinct. Mottle replies. Rare. Exotic. Valuable to Poachers for trade or body parts. These thoughts make me sick. If I have any lingering doubts taking down the poachers was justified, they’re erased by the spectacle of exploitation before me.

The blue devils are chattering among themselves. They notice I’m carrying the Poacher’s gear. I hear the word “human” uttered a few times in hushed tones. One of them steps forward, extends a hand toward me. “Therivelle,” she says as she pats her chest. She moves with a limp. I can see her back is mostly flayed raw from whipping. “We will serve. Help in exchange for food.” She makes slow hand motions as she talks. I’m pretty sure she thinks I can’t understand what she’s saying.

The whole scene makes me furious. Throwing away caution, I step forward. Opening my left hand, I draw my still active moon-shadow blade from the air. The devils let out cries of anguish. I bring the sword down on the chain holding the bone door to the cage shut. Sparks fly as the chain parts. I kick the door open. “You’re free. Get out.” I say to them in Hell’s tongue – Minosian. In two more steps, I’m beside the Vila’s cage. It has no obvious door. In two slashes, I destroy a wall of the bone cage. “You’re free too Vila.” I say this in Minosian and then in English. Not sure if the Vila can understand either. Mottle hangs back through the whole exchange. He’s not doing anything to stop me. I suppose I’m being careless. I don’t give a shit. This stuff is all just wrong.

The blue devils rush out. One runs past us, pauses for a moment near a rock column, then sprints on toward the entrance. Mottle touches my cheek. Might go warn devils. High reward for human mage. Even for blue devil. Right now, I don’t care. I know it’s stupid-reckless. Sure, the twisted little devil living in Hell since forever is probably going to do me a bad turn. I just can’t bring myself to harm the poor wretch over a mere almost-certitude. The other two devils watch their companion run. Instead of following, they walk over to the drying flesh stretched out on racks and begin devouring chunks of it. I don’t typically eat meat. I have no idea what poor creature the poachers killed for it. My empty stomach grumbles nonetheless. Pretty sure I’m going to end up lowering my standards to survive here. I look at Mottle. Maybe. I hold off for now.

The Vila is hovering in a high corner near the cavern’s rear after a short flight to put space between her and the rest of us. Can’t say I blame her. She doesn’t know me for squat and, if Mottle’s right, her precious parts are a valuable commodity to the devils I just freed. She’s looking down on us – eyes flitting from me to the devils gulping down mouthfuls. I feel a pang of sympathy at their hunger even as I worry over what threats they might pose. No take-backs now. I let them out all-right. Probably going to regret that. Keeping my eyes on them, I move over to the table and start slicing up the worbs. Sparks and wisps fly. Another seventeen — five light, twelve dark — are sheltered behind my protective spiritual enclosures. Forty five souls now. Sixteen light wisps, twenty-nine dark. The energy they’re giving me back is quickly refilling my name curse. I’m up to a third already after being next to empty fifteen minutes ago.

Blue devils pause from their food devouring to watch. Their pink eyes widen in surprise. The boy spouts an infernal curse. Theri — I mentally drop the velle part — drifts forward and looks at my arm dripping sparks. “You keep wisps?” She asks.

“It’s part of my magic. Makes them safe. They help me in turn.” I can tell she’s scared of me. Feeling is fucking mutual. The look she’s giving me is one of open disbelief.

“You don’t enslave them for power? Don’t devour them?” The way she says it sounds like an accusation. Like she’s saying I’m lying with a question.

In answer, I lift my arm, then turn my body so she can see my shadow. “Revelare,” I incant. My name curse and shadow briefly remove their protective shroud — showing the light and dark wisps within. They swarm in my shadow, flicker and dance with the sparks in my name curse. More vital and alive since their removal from Hell’s spiritually caustic environment. For a normal human, this might look like a parlor trick. But devil eyes are specially adapted to see wisps. The entire race has preyed upon and hunted them for thousands of years. Before that… Why can’t I remember what they did before? Oh yeah, damn Memory Draught took it out. But I assume they did something less obnoxious with wisps before Asmodeus took over all those thousands of years ago.

Theri hisses in surprise and disbelief. The other blue devil steps forward, clutching at Theri’s arm. “She’s not lying,” he says to her softly.

She puts her hand over his. “Zel, how can it be real?”

“It’s what you always said, Theri. Try to find another way. Maybe it found us?”

I close my hand, allowing Ignarus’ protective shroud to fall again. My wisps are growing agitated even at the brief Hell contact. The soft, dare I say compassionate, exchange between Zel and Theri gives me a glimmer of hope. I’m conflicted. You’re not supposed to feel hope in Hell. But if not, then why am I here? Seeing how I still don’t know shit about my mission, I decide to improvise. Worked with Mottle after all.

“Look. I can’t even begin to imagine your life here. What you’ve been through. And, yeah, I’m a human mage. So you’re probably looking at me like I’m some combo between fish out of water and big sack of gold. Maybe if you hand me over, you can win what passes for devil freedom here. I’ve an alternate proposition. Join up with me and I’ll show you what real freedom looks like.” I’m totally playing this by ear. Some of what I’m saying I’m sure is pretty much pure bullshit. But if I pull the thread of everything that’s happened, of Mottle and my name curse, I must not be too far off. If I can chip souls out of the typical hell cycle of exploitation. If I can get Mottle out of that harmful loop, then why not the dregs of devil society who’ve been shit on for millennia? Maybe I could help them out? Gods I must be frigging nuts.

Theri and Zel are staring at me. Zel gives a toothy grin as smile. “Well, I didn’t expect to live for more than a few days anyway. Here’s to giving the big stiff middle finger to the man,” Zel replies. I’m translating a bit liberally here. What he really said was more like “give the man the big pointy horn.” But you get the picture. Anyway, it seems my little speech and show of protection for wisps has won them over. At least for now.

There’s a flutter of wings as the Vila flits down closer. Her green face is covered in tears. She touches her chest. “Zaya,” she says. “I’m Zaya. You’ve taken my tree’s wisp. Given it real light and good earth.” She points to my name curse. A green-tinted wisp rises to just below the curse’s whorls as Zaya flutters closer, lifting a hand to touch me. I let her. The hand is tiny, smaller than a child’s but perfectly formed like an adult’s. She’s a frigging faerie. In Hell. “You… I feel… alive again. Can I come? Will you take my wisp if I die? I promise to help you.”

My name curse sparks at her pledge. It seems her good intention and sincere ask for aid has forged a bond with it. “There’s your answer,” I reply softly.

Zaya exhales in relief. She keeps her hand on my name curse. It seems to comfort, so I let her.

The devils’ soul-sensitive eyes see the bond form. Mystified, they watch the sparks fall. Zel tentatively extends a hand.

“It’s OK. Go ahead,” I say.

Zel puts his much larger hand on top of Zaya’s. Theri looks at him. He nods. She places her hand on top of Zel’s.

“Give my wisp your protection and I will help you.” Theri says.

“Me too,” Zel says. His skin becomes kind of purple. It’s a blue devil blush. “I trust you with my spirit.”

Sparks spill out of my name curse beneath their touch. A fountain of lights casting shadows throughout the cave. I feel like a roman candle without the burn. Three lights separate from the rest. Lifting up, they hover before each of my new companions in turn, then slowly descend to alight upon their chests. The sparks melt into them. Zaya giggles. Zel gasps. Theri smiles and says “It’s warm and it tickles.” I’m just as surprised. It’s the most unlikely of scenes I’d ever have imagined taking place in Hell. But here I am in a Poacher’s larder, forming a holy bond of friendship with liberated blue devils and what is probably one of the last remaining Vila in all of this blasted and burned world.

Mottle puts his tail on my shoulder. A spark floats off for him as well. My, my, aren’t we the odd quintet?

(Haven’t yet read the first chapter? You can find it here: Helkey 1 — The Memory Draught.)

(Looking for another chapter? Find it in the Helkey Table of Contents.)

Helkey 13 — Devil Poachers

Hell’s sun rises as I do the Mottle walk-glide thing up and down a desert expanse of dunes.

It’s arduous and thrilling in one go. First, we slog up the side of a dune, clambering to its top. Climbing over sand isn’t easy anywhere. But this is Hell. So of course it’s much worse. I feel the sweltering ground through my boots. Scorching sand finds its way into cracks. The sulfur stink is never-ending. Mottle’s heat-bleeding form and strong musculature is a literal life-saver. He cuts my effort in half. The air swelters and I’m sweaty as all hell. But Mottle somehow cools my skin surface like a refreshing breeze. This keeps me from overheating. I’m still drinking craploads of Perrier. Without the Mottle living suit assist, I’m sure I’d be dead, dead, dead in maybe an hour tops from combined heat and exertion. Pretty sure even those slick Fremen desert survival suits from Frank Herbert’s Dune wouldn’t handle this environment. Yep. I’m a sci-fi geek. You should know this by now.

When we get to the dune-tops we pause. Mottle flaps his carpet body wide to catch the hot wind – tail trailing behind to balance. This arrangement requires me to support his full bulk as I run. But I don’t need to go far before the weight comes off. Mottle’s body attached to my back becomes a freaking powered hang glider. He flaps, cups the air. For maybe a minute, I’m air-born – skimming between ten and fifty feet over hot, sulfurous ground. We fly down the slope and then on for another couple hundred yards. I whoop in thrill despite myself — basking in nostalgic memory of hang gliding off Jockey’s Ridge in Kill Devil Hills. A place named after rum supposedly strong enough to kill the devil. I could sure use some of that now! Those glider tours were a blast for me as a kid. Hell, the whole of the Outer Banks was – what with the surfing and camping and crazy-good pizza. Damn, I could really go for some of that Nino’s pizza about now. Mom and Dad would tell stupid stories of how one of their first camping dates got rained on and they ended up in the Sea Oatel. Get it? Sea Oatel? Funny haha. That was before the rising Atlantic spit out a barrage of seriously beefy hurricanes — slicing the Outer Banks to ribbons. One of the first and smaller ones, took out the Sea Oatel. Godzilla-type hurricanes followed. They must have rebuilt the damn causeway three times before giving up. Now OBX is a string of shrinking islands. If you want to get there these days, you take a ferry. Another one of my kid happy places ate up by those Blood of Earth fuels the likes of Furze Bank keeps shoving down people’s throats back home.

Feet touch down. My landing is cushioned by Mottle’s ample musculature. I tuck the precious, ever-refilling Perrier bottle under arm like a football to protect it. Jogging slows to a walk and we begin the next climb. The sunrise is a purple-blue bruise of a thing. Another reminder, as if I need more, I’m not on an admittedly ailing Earth but in a worst place gone well off the rails long, long ago. Those sunrise colors quickly shift, turning green as the white sun-orb advances through cloudless firmament. There’s a weird web of black crud — not clouds, the crud is too high up — spreading over large sections. The not-cloud-black-crud offers some shade, but little true protection. If I weren’t covered by Mottle, I’m certain the burn would be both fierce and nearly instant. My various bits are already red and itchy after yesterday’s brief exposure. Mottle’s full body covering and fuzzy head as hat provides lots of natural sun block. That low-hanging orb is not yet at full furious burn. Still, I’m getting hot and doing my best to avoid it. Looking up at the black crud webbing in the sky, I wonder if Hell has much of an ozone layer. Probably not given all the sulfur stuff blowing up into its atmosphere from the death-soup ocean.

Tip of Knife Lake and Surrounding Lands

We continue our walk and glide journey through these dune-lands. Dead things lay in various stricken poses along eroding cliff faces or near stinking water holes. Razor plants of the kind Mottle devoured and other more dangerous-looking varieties cluster around these putrescent sources. We avoid them. Mirror-me said they’re poisonous. Mottle agrees. Even his resilient metabolism doesn’t manage the toxic gas coming off them in sulfurous wafts. Mottle and I stick to the high ground well away from these pockets of poison air.

We crest a tall dune rising above the rest. In the morning light I get a good view of the lands spreading before me. Dunes ripple out like still waves for miles. Beyond them is the front edge of a long, purple lake. It fades into the distance. Above it looms a smoking tower. Blue flames and wicked lights spiral up its length. Must be at least 40 miles away. But it is large enough to dominate the surrounding lands. Looks to me like someone took the tower from The Dark Crystal and lit it on fire – turning it into a kind of macabre candelabra. On the south side of the lake, the lands spark with occasional ethereal glows. From this distance, they look like fireflies.

Knife Lake. Wisp fields. Mottle thinks to me in his terse, matter of fact, way.

“OK. Thanks for the info, Mr. Hell tour guide. So that’s where the spirits of the damned pop up. Why do they?”

Not just there. All over Infernia. From Mottle, I get the impression this part of Hell is called Infernia. Pretty geographically smart for a bat-thing. But he’s been here for a decent spell and he was once human. Still keeps his human-level intelligence and awareness. Most beasties here do. Come to think of it, Bob the lizard acted like a bully I once knew as a kid. The notion that many creatures in Hell were once human but are now forced to live in various monstrous forms makes the place somehow more horrific. For some reason this is even scarier than possessed dolls or evil clowns. And both of those are damn freaking scary.

“All of Infernia, hmm? I guess Infernia is a big place.”

Big. It’s Mottle’s one-word answer. For follow-on, I get an image from him of endless hot and storm-wracked lands. Of vales where wisps emerge. Of various devils hunting the wisps. To the north is a great smoking land of calderas, naked-to-air coal fields, and volcanos. The Burning Lands. Mottle assigns a name as he thinks this image to me. He didn’t go there. Another Mottle gave him the image. Handy trick — this thought-sharing among Mottles.

“What’s that?” I point to the burning tower.

Overseer is Mottle’s new one-word answer.

“Overseer what? Overseer Tower? Overseer HQ? What?”

Overseer. Stronghold for Drivers, Poachers, worse. Make worbs. Take wisps. Enslave. Wisp slave trade outpost. Mottle is notably terse with thought on the subject of Overseer. All I get from him is the sharp edge of fear. I look back over my shoulder at the near-ocean lands we just departed. Sand dunes filled with skeletons. Huge poisonous purple ocean prone to spitting up storms violent enough to flay flesh from bone in an instant. A deadly land far enough away from the wisp fields to offer some deterrent to the slave masters of Overseer Tower. Yeah. I’m taking a little name liberty here. So what? I’m kinda a Hell pioneer. Deal with it. I look back over the purple lake to that burning twisted metal finger. They’d be more occupied in the richer wisp fields near the lake. Clever Mottle.

“Outpost? It’s bigger than fucking Minas Ithil!”

Mottle draws a blank.

“What, you didn’t read Tolkien? For shame!” I chide. But I’m not too serious. True Tolkien geeks are hard to come by. “What I mean to say is that’s a pretty damn big tower. I’m surprised, seeing how we are in the fucking bad, bad lands.”

All Hell bad. Wisp trade Hell’s greatest industry, Mottle sends back.

“Well, that makes sense, I guess.” I know the devils cynically ruined Hell for viable living by other means a long time ago. Preying on wisps was their way of surviving and advancing – if you could call the ever-greater development of violent and dominating powers ‘advancing.’

Best go. Time.

Mottle’s right. Sun’s getting higher. I’m getting even hotter. I gulp my Perrier down to almost empty – careful not to drink it all lest I remove the reproducing agent. It’s hot as the sweltering air. No matter. I need fluid. “How much further?” I ask.

Halfway down. Old burrow. Should be unoccupied. Mottle guides my senses down to about twenty dunes away. So a few more miles. He spreads his wings. I give it a good run. He flaps with effort and we fly fast and far – shooting over the top of a smaller dune below, catching an updraft from the heating land, and making it almost halfway up the next rise. I’m thankful for it. If I took the Mottle head as hat off, I’m sure I’d see a column of heat rising off my head. The longer glide gives me about a minute to think. I don’t like the sound of ‘should be unoccupied.’ Too uncertain. Mottle responds to my worry with his own prickles of anxiety.

Knife Lake grows in size along with my discomfort. Its purple waters pointing at me in a very rude manner. First rule of knife and gun etiquette – don’t point it at someone unless you intend to use it against them. Well, maybe Knife Lake had just such an intent. It sure did look mean in a violent kind of way. We pass one last land rise and begin a long descent toward the lake’s lowlands. Air around me is literally starting to sizzle — rippling with heat mirages. Little putrid pools turn into stinking patches from super-fast evaporation. Gotta be about 120 degrees outside and still fracking morning. It’s tough to conceptualize, but being near the ocean was actually cooler. I’m gonna need to come up with like a hundred new words for ‘hot’ if I’m gonna be here for an entire fucking year.

One last rise and Mottle begins a slow glide down the backside of a rocky dune. Sand is steadily giving way to scree and hard-packed clay. Up ahead, is a crevice. Mottle dives in. In an instant we are out of the sun’s scorching rays. Cooler air blows up from below. Cooler is like 95 degrees. I’ll take it. Mottle drifts down for a while, then aims for a ledge. I brace my legs for impact. Mottle helps with his own legs and tail, hooking the crevice wall at the last instant with a couple of the gripping claws on my left shoulder. It takes a few moments for my eyes to adjust to the shadowy crevice. About a hundred feet ahead is a cave mouth. Beside it is a spikey metal contraption. It looks like a metal hedgehog extending a single arm studded with glass bulbs. At the end of the arm is a blue light. It takes me a moment to realize this is a worb.

“What the hell is that?” I whisper. Seems like the right thing to do. That spikey oddity looks dangerous.

Scorpion. Poacher gear.

Well, it doesn’t look like a scorpion insect thing. But who am I to judge? Mottle sends on an image of the scorpion hurling its spines at anything that gets too close. Great. “What do you mean, Poacher? There’s a devil in there?”

Two. Hunt in pairs. Took cave for hunt base.

“OK. Makes sense. Poachers hunt. What do they poach?”

Wisps. Rarer is better. Mage wisp is best. Hunt creatures too. Sell for slaves, food, skins. Or just kill and take wisps.

“Fuck. Sound like some seriously nasty customers.”

As I say this the hedgehog scorpion thing gives a little ‘bleep-bleep!’ then shoots what looks like a green hornet made of metal into the air. The hornet begins to do a clover-leaf type flight pattern. Two of the glass bulbs on it have lit up with a red light which flashes over our location. The green metal hornet gives an angry buzz and shoots toward us with frightening velocity. The hedgehog makes a chunk-chunk sound and two of the spines fly toward us. They fall short, impacting into the crevice wall about ten feet below us. The hedgehog whirs as it adjusts its aim.

Sees us. That needs no explanation. Looks like it’s time for me to do something. I glance at my name curse. Nearly full now. Good. I extend my arm, level my hand in a knife-like gesture, pointing all my fingers in the direction of both scorpion and green hornet — shouting “Vexare! Verberare!Five white-glowing missiles streak out. Two explode upon the hornet, knocking it to the ground. The other three riddle the hedgehog. One shatters its little glass eyes. Two pierce its spikey body, then explode. The combined force causes it to launch all missiles wildly. They riddle the crevice. But none hit.

The hornet is down but not out. It lurches as it rises, long stinger dripping some kind of yellow fluid. Movements are slow — still recovering from the shock of my explosive bolts. “Lunen Svert Umbra!” I summon my moon-shadow blade into hand and, without a moment’s hesitation, leap down. Mottle launches me with his strong tail and feet. We descent upon the slowing-rising hornet. It tries to bob to one side. I slice it neatly in two. It gushes yellow fluid. I dodge the expulsion and land beside its oozing fragments, damn glad both mom and dad made for excellent mage-type sparring partners. The whole encounter is over in about twelve violent seconds. My heart is pounding in my chest with combined fear and elation.

The trouble isn’t over. I hear talking emerge from the cave. It’s in devil-speak. I know it. My parents started drilling the infernal tongue into my head at age 7.

“Stupid scorpion goin’ off again. You set it too sensitive, Croak.”

“Didna. Scorp saved our hide o’re hundred times, Norg.”

“Done kilt our sleep jus as much.”

We rush up to a large bolder for cover as Norg blows a raspberry. I look out, point my moon-shadow blade at the cave opening, and ready another Vexare Verberare barrage.  

A devil’s head emerges. Red-skin, pointy ears, yellow eyes. Its body clothed in some kind of black scale leather. Tall boots of the same. Big brass belt buckle. A pair of short horns rise out of stringy black hair. Bulging worb on his left shoulder. In one hand is a long-barreled, magazine-fed hunting rifle. It’s a wicked, angular thing. Stock etched with the pentagonal upside-down A standing for Asmodeus. On Earth, it might be over-looked as an exotic piece of military hardware. His devil’s eyes bulge with surprise as he notices the destroyed scorpion.

“Shit!” He shouts as he starts to lunge back into the cave, fumbling with his weapon.

I curse and point at him. “Fuck,” I say as the devil scrambles back. He hasn’t seen me yet, thank the freaking gods. I wanted to catch both of the evil bastards further out from the opening. I take the shot anyway. “Vexare Verberare!” Five more missiles form from sparks in my name curse, grow into white bulges of energy, and shoot down the length of my light and shadow blade toward the devil. He scrambles around the corner. The missiles make the turn after him as he dives. Two explode upon his worb. The first cracks it, the second scatters the pieces. The rest leave scorch marks across his torso.

“Croak! Croak!” Norg is shouting from inside the cave mouth. I am pretty sure Croak has croaked.

Mottle vibrates, emitting an ultra-sound pulse. It pings down into the cave, then bounces back. Only two. One is dead. Many captives. More victims.  He thinks to me, letting me know there aren’t any more of the damn Poachers. I file the other info for later. There’s still a fuckin devil down there. I scramble away from the boulder, checking my name curse. Not enough energy for another Vexare barrage. The stuff is taxing but crazy lethal. So I’m down below half right now.

The cave opening flashes with light. Wisps whirl and rise out from it — caught in the tide of my name curse. They rush toward me in ethereal flows. Mottle lifts away from my back. My foot-falls scramble over loose scree. His cloak-like body flies above me. He flits into the cave entrance, edge-on, and quickly blends with shadow. I can see Norg now. He is shouting as he lifts a revolver. He presses some kind of button on the weapon’s side. I can see a bullet head start to glow red down the frigging barrel. It is pointed right at me. I jump and doge. The hammer falls. A mini-fireball streaks toward me. The fireball hits the ground beside me and explodes.

Clypeus!” I shout as I jump. My name curse sparks. A brief field of force envelops me, redirecting most of the explosion. It still lifts me off my feet, hurling me to one side. I land and roll. Scuffing my elbows, but not much worse for wear. Damn, that was fucking close!

Mottle is on him, wrapping him up with his muscular body. I roll to my feet. The poacher is drawing a knife. My wisp energy is low now. I have maybe a curse or two left. I scramble to my feet. “Salire!” I shout. The jumping curse propels me through the air in a long leap. Beatrice can do this without even thinking. But I am no damn angel. Well, maybe half angel. She is my mom after all. Point is, I can’t leap 20 feet like her without a bit of magical assistance. I bound through the air, shoot into the entrance, do an unintentional flip as the force of my magic carries me in. I land, bringing my shadow blade down on the Poacher’s neck. It slices clean through. The knife he drew falls with a clatter. Mottle is safe.

Mottle unfurls from him, flapping onto the cave wall. Wisps are rising up from sundered worb and devil bodies. The dark of my shadow grows as seven more slither in to join Bob. Four lighter wisps spark and crackle as they enter my name curse. Croak’s worb is empty. All are now within the strange haven my curse makes for them. Nine light wisps, eight dark ones. For a moment, I wonder how Asmodeus became so good at ensnaring the non-malign in a Hell that originally only drew in darker souls. I file this thought for later.

Lowering my moon-shadow blade, I slice through the worb on Norg’s shoulder. Eleven more wisps streak out. Nine of these are dark. My shadow again grows. My name curse again sparks. Twenty-eight wisps in total. Eleven light wisps, seventeen dark. I’m a walking community of the damned. Friggin great.

I turn to Mottle. He lifts his tail, touching my hand. “What now?” I ask.

Now free captives. Then rest.

“Rest, good idea.” I mean to pat the tail with my other hand in a kind of chummy survival celebration. Instead, I hear a noise like waves in my ears. I grow dizzy, then collapse from a standing position down onto my ass. I’m guessing that rest is not optional.

(Haven’t yet read the first chapter? You can find it here: Helkey 1 — The Memory Draught.)

(Looking for another chapter? Find it in the Helkey Table of Contents.)

Helkey 12 — Strange Dreams and Stranger Food

As safe as I imagine a body can be in freaking Hell, I rest beneath Mottle’s protective form — sleeping for gods-damn real this time.

When dreams do come, they are of floating in ocean depths. Over my face – a protective bubble of air allows easy breathing. That death beach I just escaped from must have shaken out some of my more pleasant impressions of Earth’s ocean. This water is cool and, though dark, it’s clear. No pollution. No goop. Lots of actual life. I’m reminded of a time at the beach one day surfing. Of wiping out on a giant wave and getting held under in the dark, swirling waters until my lungs screamed for release. This is like that. But peaceful and with more air.

Soft, silver light envelops me. Flickering. Far away a green blinker slowly moves in and out of the darkness. Could it be the lure of an angler fish? A great tubular body drifts nearby, mostly stationary. Some giant sperm whale. Its black eye watches but does not threaten. A school of krill rises up like bubbles all around. My name-curse sparks softly, adding to the various gentle glows in the dark deep.

I try to move, but a kind of seaweed is wrapped around my body. Great, so I’m stuck in fracking seaweed at the bottom of the ocean. If I kick lazily, I can move about a little, even if the seaweed holds me mostly in place. The whale’s black eye watches, offering little encouragement. Thanks for nothing, big guy. On the floor nearby is a round stone shape. Looks a bit like an altar. Lettering surrounds its top edge. The surface is flat, like a table top. Upon it rests a long, black box. For some reason, I’m thinking of Atlantis. Yeah, right. This is Atlantis.

I trace my hand along the box. It’s smooth with barely perceptible seams. Like a frigging puzzle box. Curious about this sea-floor artifact I’ve discovered, I start to look more closely. Electricity arcs out from the box — jabbing into my name curse. Fuck! I pull my hand back. Through the water, there is a chiming of bells. 10 Bells. Funny haha. It must be ten o’clock Berlin time. Mottle rustles, the ocean scene fades, and I wake up to a growling stomach.

Mottle folds back as I sit up, tail still lightly touching my right hand. He sends a query about the dream through our physical and mental link. A kind of – what the? I mentally shrug back at him. Just a crazy dream, I guess?

I look around. The still night of Hell filters through various cracks in the ceiling of Mottle’s little grotto. Water level in the cave has dropped. Distant flickers of lightning illuminate the cracks but the storm is long past. Must be about five o’clock A.M. Hell time. I feel around in my pockets, pulling out my phone. It’s busted and waterlogged. Now nothing more than an expensive paper weight. I think about chucking it, but pocket the thing instead. Resources here are damn sparse. Who knows when something in it might prove useful?

Thinking of resources reminds me of the water bottle. I crack open Perry-Fuckin-A and take a long series of swigs. Mottle somehow kept me cooler. But I’ve still sweat out a lot water. The guy probably saved me from fracking heat-stroke, though. Air here is just stifling. My phone’s bulk is an idle chunk in my pocket. Damn. I need a freaking clock. Meaning — time for more magic. Glancing at my name curse, I notice from the amount of silvery luminescence that my energetic vessel is already more than three-quarters full. It’s kinda like my battery for curse energy storage. It holds the stuff I naturally draw in from the multiversal spirit. Pretty cool, right? Most mages can easily get the gist of how much energy they have. It’s similar to the physical feeling of hungry or full. I get the hunger pangs and fullness part too. My name curse just gives me a more exact indicator. Almost as good as a freaking fuel gage. Well not quite. But you get the picture. This time, I have more than I should and I’m getting it faster than I typically would. A quicker recharge thanks to the five Mottle wisps peacefully humming away in the whirls and swoops of my curse. Oh, and Bob, don’t forget about frigging Bob, lurking in my shadow, who almost ate me back there at the cave entrance. Well, since I’m working with more magical energy coming in than usual, I can spare just a little for a minor permanent curse.

Map of Myra’s journey from Hell’s Beach, through Mottle’s Grotto and toward Knife Lake

Horologium!” I chant, and a semi-transparent chronometer face appears on my left wrist just below the name curse. Its characters blink in the darkness. Reminds me of those old digital watches from the 70s and 80s with the back-light you activate with a button. “Nice!” I’m probably more excited than I should be. But this is Hell, after all. Any comforts of home are damn mighty precious. “Now set,” I command my new time piece. “Time is 5 o’clock A.M.”

The magical watch flickers. An indicator flashes. “Time zone?” is the query.

“Well fuck, Hell’s Beach, I guess.” The chronometer dutifully records Hell’s Beach as time zone.

Mottle has folded himself up into a tee-pee pose beside me. His big, black eyes are watching me fiddle with Horologium. He lifts his tail and gently touches the back of my hand. Should get moving. Not safe. An image of Bob’s chameleon feet appears in my mind’s eye. Damn, Mottle, this is gonna take some getting used to. I see Bob’s feet leaving a residue as he walks. Another lizard-devil like Bob sniffs the film of goop with its flicking tongue and follows. Then another follows that one. There are many more in a burrow under the sand a mile or two off. Stelo-mal is the word that forms in my head. Bad frigging lizard.

I groan loudly. “Ugghh! They are like giant devil ants! So, Bob led the rest of them to us?”

Mottle sends an affirmative pulse up my arm. Now. Later too hot. I get an image of me passing out in the heat, laying on the sand ‘til I die, then becoming hell-vulture food. Talk about some big freaking vultures! OK, point taken.

“Yeah, yeah. I know. Frail hooman girl can’t handle Hell-hot. I get it.” I use the Bob word for human. I don’t know why, but it strikes me as funny. Bob, back there in my shadow, is silent. “Well, best get moving while mornin’s burnin.” I stand up and look around the chamber. A few crevices further up are about big enough for me to pass through. The lower water reveals more of the crack I squeezed through earlier. Not gonna risk that way again unless I must. Drinking one more swig of the Perrier, I slide it into my flannel pocket and motion for Mottle to lead the way.

Mottle unfolds his bat-carpet form, then flaps off toward one of the larger crevices. He lands beside it and waves me forward with his tail. I shrug, then clamber over boulders, find a narrow ledge, and wedge up into the hole. Mottle flaps ahead again – flying down a tunnel for about fifteen feet. With his claws, he latches himself onto the right side of an opening. Spread out like that, he looks like a hanging wall-rug. This is also funny. Oh jeez, I must be getting light-headed from lack of food.

I clamber up beside Mottle, already hot and super-sweaty from climbing in the crazy Hell-heat. I try to remind myself that the cave was cooler. My body’s not taking in the message my brain is sending it. The sulfur stink is also not helping with breathing. Chest is tight. I cough. Mottle gives me a concerned look. “Shut up,” I say to him. Not sure he understands. Maybe he does. That’s a smart bat… thing.

I look out onto a beach blasted flat by storm. All the dunes within at least a half mile of the freaking ocean are leveled. And this is on the steep rise to rocky area I sheltered in. Further down the beach to my right is a lower area that’s still flooded with stinking and goop-laden ocean water. Mottle flies ahead, lands on the ground, then waves at me with his tail. I clamber down, get my feet on the sand, and slog up to where he’s landed. Man am I seriously jealous about his ability to fly. He looks back at me with what I think is sympathy before launching off again. I let out an exasperated breath and trot after him. At least the sand is pounded firm by wind and water.

His glide down the slope is a long one. He lands about a quarter mile away, then gets busy digging at the sand. I don’t want to be alone in this place. It’s freaking surprising how I’ve already glommed onto Mottle as a kind of safety-net. But after meeting Bob, I’m more than a little paranoid about all the various monstrosities lurking about.

I’m really starting to feel seriously homesick. So I conjure up a familiar memory of paddling out into Earth’s much kinder ocean to surf alone — wondering if some predatory shark is swimming below me. Just a memory of me by my lonesome in the big-ass ocean. Easy access to any predator who may find me even a tiny bit interesting. The feeling here in Hell is similar. But a crap-ton more intense. Part of it has to do with stuff I know. Various bits that slipped by the Memory Draught are the opposite of freaking comforting. Unlike Earth’s ocean where a human interloper is oft-ignored, a human in Hell is the most sought-after prey of all. And as you’re probably catching on, fact is we’re sitting ducks in Hell’s crippling environment. So, Mottle leaving me a few hundred yards behind makes me freak out just a little.

Despite feeling weak with hunger, I put on the jets and sprint up to where Mottle is expertly ripping through sand. As I approach, I see what he’s after. It’s one of those mean-ass plants with the razor leaves, buried in the storm. Now he’s uncovered it. Careful to avoid the sharp protrusions, Mottle uses rear legs and tail to dig around and below. He shuffles deeper into the sand. Letting out a satisfied grunt, he stops for a moment. Then, he begins to thrash about. There is a ripping sound. He scrabbles forward, pulling and straining against the sand with his claws. I grab hold of him, helping him move whatever it is that he’s got hold of with his tail. There is one last rip. I fall as Mottle lunges up.

I stand, brush the sand off, turn around. Mottle has pulled a gigantic bulb out of the ground. It’s about two and a half feet across. The size of a large-ass pumpkin and covered in green and yellow splotches. Mottle starts tearing into it. I inch up to see about sharing in the feast. Doesn’t look appetizing at all. But I am really damn hungry and I’m gonna need some kind of sustenance. Especially here. I burned a lot of fuel yesterday in just a handful of hours. Mottle is gorging. Goop and pulpy stuff flies everywhere. It smells pretty foul. I reach out to grab some of the pulp. Mottle’s tail lashes out, pushing my hand away.

No. Poisonous to human. Let Mottle handle.

I flop back on my butt with a sigh of frustration. Figures it would be poisonous. “Of course, it is.” I rub at a bit of sand with the palm of my hand. To Hell’s east, the horizon is lighting up with pink and purple. The sun is coming. Though it’s at least 100 with like 70 percent humidity now, it’s about to start getting a whole lot hotter. I dig out the Perrier and take another set of gulping drinks. Gonna need it all.

Mottle has finally stopped gobbling up the plant’s bulb. Only a few stringy pieces are left. I wonder where he put it all. That thing was huge. He ripples over toward me. His blanket body coming into contact with my skin. Trust Mottle? The query flooding through me is tinged with urgency and fear. I’m not sure what to make of it. Weird.

“Yeah, I guess,” I reply. What do I really know about Mottle anyway? He helped me survive the night. He didn’t do anything to hurt me when he could have. He gave me some thoughts I assume are his memories. It could all be a ruse. But if he wanted to eat me or otherwise take me out he could’ve done it when I was sleeping. And clearly, he also just ate a crapload of food. Sure, I’m almost 100 percent certain I pretty much trust him.

Mottle pauses for a moment, then lunges forward and latches himself onto my neck. He’s lightning-quick. Catches me completely off-guard. I’m halfway through summoning my moon-shadow blade, when more thoughts flood into me. No hurt. Help. The sensation I feel from him is motherly. Like a parent to precious offspring. This is not threatening… but why?? Before I can think any more, Mottle freaking bites me. More precisely, two teeth-like things extend from his mouth area and enter my neck.

“The fuck!?” I shout as these teeth pierce me – thrusting into arteries beneath my jaw. God, I am so fucking dead! I can’t even freaking move!

How we feed young, Mottle thinks. Cool euphoria spreads out from my neck and over my body. Energy slowly fills me. There is a gland behind each tooth. It is pumping some sort of liquid food – directly into my veins. Mottle’s body made and processed it. Apparently, my body accepts it. After a few minutes, Mottle’s teeth withdraw. He flaps away. I can move again. I touch my neck. The holes ooze a tiny amount of blood. But they’ve mostly sealed. There’s a substance on them that must be coagulant.

I kick myself away from him. “Gods that was fucking weird!” He bends his head in a gesture that says he’s sorry. I feel so much better. I am not at all hungry even though my stomach is still completely empty. It oddly feels full. “No way! No fuckin’ way!” I shout this to him. Mottle offers his tail. I don’t want to take it. I can’t help myself because I’m too damn curious. When my hand touches him, his thoughts again flow into me. Myra hunger. Getting weak. No food. Mottle could give. Explain would just make scared.

“Make scared. Yeah. Did that.”

Myra feel better? Not hunger?

I have to admit, I do feel pretty frackin good. “Yeah,” I say grudgingly.

Good. Now Mottle keep Myra cool. And with that Mottle is again on my freaking back. His blanket-like body somehow sluffing the heat away. Gods, he’s quick. If he actually did want to kill me, it probably wouldn’t be hard at all in my present state. I remind myself he’s trying his best to help. And yeah, I don’t know squat about getting food here. That weird IV tooth injection thing really did the trick.

I stand up. He helps me with his tail and two hind-claws even as his foreclaws grasp my shoulders like football protective padding. His midsection spine runs down my vertebrae, lending even more support. His freaking head is on top of my own head like a helmet. Two bone teeth loop coolly over my scalp without stabbing. With the mental coordination we share, it’s like having three more legs, a rubbery protection all over me reinforced with bone, and a big furry helmet with two extra eyes looking out sideways. There’s weight to him, but his squarish, mostly wing body is all muscle. For a moment, it’s awkward. I take a step. His body springs and contracts lending force to my steps while somehow also cushioning. I take another step. Better. I take a third step and pow! we are bounding across the sand like a badass super-soldier and running-back hybrid.

This is just nuts. Like Mottle is somehow adapted to a weird human-Mottle symbiosis. I check my memory for anything about this kind of creature. Draw a blank. Huh — not like memory’s been worth a damn lately. Thanks Mom. Thanks Dad. Well, anyway, he’s clearly not a full-blown devil of the soul-sucking variety. Just some creature living in Hell who refuses to devour wisps and can somehow create this kind of natural bond with a human(oid). Also not far from the Hell-Gate. Coinkydink? I think not. This stuff has Beatrice and Mori planning written all over it. I suppose I could just be crazy-lucky. But in my experience, there’s no such thing as luck.

I notice my curse energy is a tad bit lower. “You took some of my magic, didn’t you?”

Mottle helps Myra; Myra helps Mottle.

“Hmph. Yeah. I figured.” So Mottle isn’t entirely wisp independent. But he can somehow siphon wisp energy without killing. Again, not typical devil stuff. My own wisp energy for magic comes from the multiverse at large and now also from the wisps I keep safe from Hell. Looks like Mottle has stumbled on a pretty good deal here. But I can’t complain. He is literally saving my fracking ass. “So where do you think we should go now?” I’m honestly curious. Maybe Mottle has some kind of plan for what to do with me. Until 7 o’clock Berlin time, which is probably about eight and half hours off, I don’t have a freaking clue.

Mottle doesn’t hesitate. Head toward wisp fields. Maybe walk-fly. I get a vision of walking up and gliding down hills with Mottle attached and using wings like a mix between hang glider and flying squirrel. Finish before sun’s high. Then find shade. Rest ‘til night. Journey longer in cooler dark. Then find wisps to help. Deal with Drivers, Form Makers. Mottle is a font of information. I see red devils with scaly skin, yellow eyes, and long front-sprouting horns when Mottle thinks of Drivers. I get the impression that these mean customers run around capturing wisps. For Form Makers, Mottle sends a picture of a kind of black un-wisp that shoots abyssal flux as black lightning bolts at the wisps to give them hellish forms. A lot of information and it’s all about as clear as mud. I look at my name-curse and see the wisps floating contentedly inside, safe from Hell, shining with their self-rejuvenating glow.

“Sure, Mottle. Why not. Let’s go save a few more wisps. You seem to have a stake in that. And somehow, it seems, so do I.”

(Want to read the first Chapter of Helkey? You can find it here.)

(Looking for another chapter? Find it in the Helkey Table of Contents.)

Helkey 11 — A Curse Rider Goes Forth

Eastward, The Lake of Fire realm of Hell’s Ocean burns. Bubbles of gas rise up from sea floor to surface – igniting swaths of flames across purple and green waters. Waves and currents roil with combustive spume. It is one of Hell’s terrible wonders – this expanse of burning water. Devils call it fire-paw in mockery of Earthly cat’s paw gusts rippling a far more wholesome fluid. A testament to how far into ruin the world they were entrusted to care for fell. Its once life-giving Ocean now poisonous and wracked by fire.

South and west, the Burning Lands tell their own tale of exploitation, abuse and catastrophe in their endless eruptions of black smoke. Great fields of coal up-thrust from deep below lay bare to air and fire. Fingers of lava run through it all – forming a fossil fuel caldera stretching for hundreds of miles. The lava spills out, burns the coal, reduces it to gas, liquids – much of it aflame. The busy devils of Mechanum crawl across it. Taking a hundred monstrous forms, they drive endless ranks of slaves before them to mine it, capture it, transport it from these ever-burning lands. A network of ghastly trains accepts the fruits of this dangerous toil – passing it on through crawling, flying or rolling infernal combustion engine vehicles to various globular outposts. Each engine of this vast industry possessing a mortal’s wisp. Literal mad ghosts driving terrible machines.

A lava river with flaming coal floating atop its flood winds away from those burning fields. It flickers the underbellies of clouds vomiting lightning, never rain. It flows through a land of escarpments — coiling at last around a mighty fortress before quenching its rage in The Lake of Fire.

Hell’s Fortress Invicti, Burning Lands, and Lake of Fire

If Myra were here, she’d be reminded of Ivan Volkov’s wall photo of a tar sands mining operation. Though that would seem but an essay to Hell’s complete diabolical work of destruction-as-industry spreading for hundreds of miles in every direction. But Myra is not here. The person, if he could be described as such, whose eyes behold this terrible scene is none other than the Curse Rider — Gibbens Crane. He sees it all from his perch at the fortress’s open gate with eyes long-since made insensitive. The fortress’s mountainous battlements rise behind him. Razor towers crawling with Hell’s monsters and machines stretch up and up. Electric eyes and the light of wisp energy crisscross its great bulk like backlit spider veins. Vapors lifting off it give the impression of a made volcano facing the ruin-of-nature volcanic land before it. Fortress Invicti. To him, this terror scene is typical. Two great catastrophes — one rising up from the world, the other cynically crafted — both terrors that long ago became normal.

He sits atop his Nightmare – a horse-like machine crafted of coiled metal, flaming claws in place of hooves, an enslaved wisp for a soul, a roaring engine for a heart, pipes blasting out pollution. He has heard the call of Asmodeus’ Chosen. He now knows the names of enemies who would steal this mighty prize. Beatrice Lushael. Robert Mori. In his descent, Asomdeus’s courtiers gathered ’round, entreating him to take every action to secure Ivan for the designs of Hell on Earth. In gestures of command, they lifted their vulture bodies to form the pose of wisp-rending capture, saying — take the offending mage wisps at all costs.

Gibbens Crane adjusts his black hat, tightens a bolo tie, straightens the baldric of bullets crossing his torso. He rests a hand on the polished obsidian and hell-silver handle of a long-barreled revolver. Upon his left shoulder, a triad of bulging worbs gleam with fickle blue light. A thousand wisps powers each. The third one is a recent gift from Asmodeus – given to aid his new hunt. Gibbens looks out into the distance, lashes his wisps with an electric whip-flick of his left wrist, and issues an order as they scream in agony.

“Serve the hunt and you will know relief. Show us the swiftest path through Hell and Earth to our quarry – Lushael, Mori. On Earth, they were last seen in Berlin. What is the closest concordant Hell Gate?”

Thus tasked, the wisps sacrifice spiritual energy to reach out, to create a map of active permanent and temporary Hell Gates, to note their relative locations on both Earth and Hell. In a pained shout that echoes through Gibbens’ uncaring ears, they affirm his command. Their energy dances, showing the way. A nearby Gate opens on an escarpment not a mile from here. It leads to a supposedly solemn chamber in Austin, Texas. There, a number of state leaders are pontificating over a decision. The larger number’s thrust is to make it harder for youth, black, and brown people to vote. The same majority is also pushing an attempt to stifle clean power sources that don’t come from the combustion of Earth’s blood fossil fuels. Pride Eaters and other demons have assembled to rend open this gateway. To stare with malign interest upon those entrusted to protect the people who elected them, but who are instead slicing away their rights while ensuring ever-more hellish living arrangements. Though Pride-Eater interest is fierce, the gate will last mere minutes.

Gibbens flicks his wrist again, releasing slave wisps from pain — for now — and kicks spurs against the Nightmare’s metal hide. Electric current arcs into the beast, it lifts its head to issue a ghostly cry of anguish, then explodes forward. A carpet of blue flame spreads beneath each clawed foot-fall as it takes flight toward the Hell-Gate. Bearing Gibbens over the molten river in a swift gallop, Its engine heart roars with effort. Black clouds of smoke spread wide behind. They blast through hot air in swift ascent, then turn toward the gathering of demons. In less than a minute, they descend toward a black vertical rift. The Nightmare lifts its head to give out another anguished wail. Demons scatter. Gibbens and Nightmare blast through.

They penetrate the outer darkness, drift toward the Arch of Time, snap through, then rise into a chamber filled with arguing legislators.

“The future needs of Texas require good energy and the kinds of jobs that matter most to Texans,” one says as he lifts a sheaf of papers. “If we wish to attract renewable factories like Tesla’s at 10,000 employed, we must stop clingin to harmful fossils which keep hurlin storms and fires at our ‘lectric grids.” He is a young man named Jeremy Seto, as indicated by the name plate on his desk.

“There is zero scientific proof, zero evidence for the representative’s taudry claims of disaster,” an older man drawls while adjusting a pair of coke-can glasses. Peter Murdlock – according to his name-plate. “Besides, our oil workers will be put out by your draconian support for expensive wind, solar, and EVs.”

“Proof? Look out the window! Look at each new report from the actual scientists of most respected agency. I don’t know what kind of science the representative refers to in his contrarian claims. But our oil workers can do good building clean geo-thermal, lithium, solar, and wind!”

Gibbens emerges in ethereal form on the debate floor. Just another evil ghost among legislators. A Pride Eater sits on Murdlock’s desk, teasing away strands of red thought with claws running through his brains. The Demon could possess him given time and enough hubris. Not yet. Gibbens is far less limited. His hundreds of enslaved wisps allow him to take form on Earth should he choose it. Just one of many dangerous traits. For the moment, he decides to remain unseen. He walks his Nightmare through the chamber, up stairs, past the security station and metal detectors, and out through the front door. A faint smell of gasoline – the only tell-tale of his passing.

Gibbens leads his Nightmare onto the sidewalk and away from the Capitol. Turning into a side-street, he flicks his left wrist in a whip-crack gesture once more. The wisps give another ghostly wail of pain as they draw forth energy to give him form. A red-orange glow passes over him – rising from the tips of boot spurs, passing up over his body before at last enfolding a black cowboy hat. When the light departs, he is fully formed. He fishes a pair of sunglasses out of a breast pocket, unfolds them, puts them on. The Austin air is a cool 105 degrees. Pleasant, compared to Hell. The orange glow leaps over to his Nightmare – shaping it into a massive black Hummer with smoke-stack exhaust pipes sprouting from the roof and huge coke-cans busting out the rear. Sides painted with streaming flames. A Confederate Flag flies from a pole near the back.

He winds up like a rattlesnake and slithers in through the already opened door. He throws it shut, revs the engine, and then roars out onto Austin’s streets. Shoving through traffic, he coal-rolls vehicles trailing behind – giving them a taste of sulfur-laden black smoke. Angry curses add to the cacophony of snarling engines. He pushes the shades up and chuckles. Griefing locals is but one of many privileges. Taking a late turn, he cuts off a whole lane of traffic, belching smoke, then guns it onto I 35 South. Honks blare behind. He flicks them a lazy bird while passing beneath a sign reading — Austin-Bergstrom International Airport – 5 miles.

(Want to read the first Chapter of Helkey? You can find it here.)

(Looking for another chapter? Find it in the Helkey Table of Contents.)

Helkey 10 — Appeals to a Wolf’s Heart and Baiting the Devil

Mori gives Beatrice a last look. She’s at ease on her cot – platinum hair spilling out behind her, dancing lights all around. Blood on her clothes tells a tale of past violence with no trace of wound remaining. Sadie puts a hand on his arm. “Let her rest,” she says, as she arranges some of Beatrice’s hair. The gesture strikes Mori as motherly. “She’s safe.”

Mori trusts Sadie. There’s no better people. But it’s tough to let go. He tenses at the thought of leaving Beatrice alone after the battle at Furze Bank. At the memory of their only daughter stepping into the great inferno. It makes him want to take Beatrice in his arms and gently rock her. Mori wonders what Myra must be going through down in that poisonous heat-well of a literal climate hell-hole teaming with all the worst monsters in all the worlds. Everything will be touch-and-go for her. We knew it when we signed up for this mad-ass caper. Mori tries to steel himself for what he knows is coming and for a thousand likely surprises. Most of their work will now aim at spoiling any response by Asmodeus – giving Myra enough time to liberate the wisps she’ll need. Meaning Mori and Beatrice will be doing their honest best to get in the frigging face of the actual Devil. To distract him with as much light and noise as possible. An insane enough project by itself. Mori looks to Sadie. The specific details of this dangerous Devil-baiting are mostly her domain. He just knows he and Beatrice will be on board to help her the whole way through. With the added wrinkle of the endeavor hinging on Ivan’s ‘cooperation.’

Sadie is heading for the door. Mori and Ivan follow. They exit. Sadie shuts the door behind them. It closes with a quiet ‘whup.’ Mori can see the ignarus curse activate the moment the latch fastens. There is a nearly imperceptible splash of light. Door and wall suggest to him politely that they blend seamlessly, thank you very much. But Mori’s mind is trained to recognize such tricks, so he’s not fooled. Ivan is staring with bewilderment at what he must imagine is a wall that just ate the door. “Where did it go?” He asks to no-one in particular.

Rendering of the chapel where Sadie healed Beatrice

“Never mind that,” Sadie says coyly. “Let’s get you some decent clothes.”

Ivan looks self-consciously at his bare legs and feet — the rest of his body covered by Mori’s leather jacket. He’d do great as one of The Village People. “Da. Please.”

“Really, Mori, you could have had some extras on hand for Ivan,” she says, mock-scolding Mori as she walks them down the hall to a closet. She opens the door. Inside are a number of black robes for the clergy. She pulls one off the rack and sizes it up. “This should do for now. Shoe size?”

Ivan is looking at the robe with pursed lips. “Nine,” he replies.

Sadie produces some black slippers to match the robe. She motions for him to enter the closet as she leaves, then closes the door behind her. “Just knock on the door when you’re done,” she calls back to him. They here a muffled “Da” from inside. Sadie’s looking directly at Mori now. “So, you got Myra into Hell without a hitch?” she asks in a whisper.

“Well, wouldn’t say without a hitch,” Mori whispers back as he scratches the side of his head self-consciously. “Ivan…” He trails off. Sadie already knows about the possession so no need to go into it now. “She got through. Her name curse worked as planned. But Ivan sent out what sure as hell sounded like a summons when he went all wolf on us. It was pretty scary.”

“You think Asmodeus heard it?” Sadie asks, eyes glittering with speculation.

“Probably. Don’t know for sure. But as you know Ivan’s been watched by him for a long time. All of us from the Council knew something was up with him. The rumors big A was grooming him for his Earthly herald seem to be true. If so, that means…” Mori pauses ominously.

“Ivan likely bird-dogged you and Beatrice for a hunt,” Sadie says what he doesn’t want to. Mori knows Terror Hounds can do it. And the call Ivan put out sounded a lot like one of them. “Well, that’s good news.”

Mori can only laugh nervously and raise his eyebrows at her poser. He sure as hell didn’t want to be the target of one of Asmodeus’s lethal and soul-stealing hunts. But that was the object of the whole distract the Devil mission after all. On the other side of the door, he can hear Ivan cursing and rustling.

“Don’t forget to put buttons-side front,” Sadie says more loudly through the door. They only hear Ivan’s exasperated exhalation as reply. Sadie drops her voice again. “No one saw Myra?” Sadie asks in a bare breath with intensity.

Mori can understand it. That part was pretty important. “A Pride-Eater saw her sparks. That was the first one I took out with Macto,” Mori whispers back.

There’s a rap on the door from Ivan. “It’s all as good as can be expected. We’ll talk more after,” she says as she opens the door to reveal an Ivan bedecked in priestly robes. Sadie looks him over. “It oddly suits you,” she says.

“Yeah, if you’re looking for a vampire priest,” Mori can’t help himself. Sadie cuffs him.

“Jacket,” Ivan says, handing Mori his coat. Out of habit, Mori makes sure Ivan didn’t drop anything untoward into one of his pockets or attach something to it. It’s clean. Why wouldn’t it be? The guy was frigging naked.

“Now, if you would please follow me, gentlemen.” Sadie glides down the hallway, returns to the stairs, and ascends. They pass up through the cathedral area, rising past a balcony with choir benches facing an organ. The organist is still playing. He gives them no notice. They continue to wind upward, ascending to a fourth floor – at last entering a long hall with office doors in rows on both sides. Sadie comes to one with her name on it. She produces keys, opens the door, waves them in. Inside is a cosey office with bookshelves covering one side, a half-moon stained-glass window for its back wall, some comfortable chairs scattered about, a green throw rug over hard wood flooring, and an old, ornate desk facing the door. On the opposite wall is a painting of a lioness padding through sun-dappled forest, reminding Mori of a female Aslan. A stack of papers on the desk is entitled Laudato Si. Beside it is a binder labeled – Interfaith Coalition for Earth Justice. Sadie flops down behind her desk and motions to the chairs. “Please, make yourselves comfortable.”

They sit down while she rummages behind the desk. In a moment, she produces a thermos, cups, and some paper-wrapped peanut butter and banana sandwiches. “I know it’s not gourmet dinner. But the PB&B and coffee will have to do.” She hands them to Mori and Ivan. Mori’s stomach rumbles gratefully. He didn’t realize he’d worked up such an appetite. He checks his watch. It’s 8:11 P.M. Beside him, Ivan is pouring himself a cup of coffee. Mori tucks into his sandwich. Ivan sips from his coffee.

“So, you have…” Ivan looks at Mori’s watch, “I give you until 8:30 to explain all the…” he seems at a loss for words for a moment “…phenomena. To convince why I don’t call police to have you both arrested.”

“For your first request – gladly,” Sadie replies. “Although, it might take more than the 20 odd minutes you’ve asked for. As for your second, no need, the police are already here.” She motions to Mori.

“Thanks for blowing my cover Sadie,” Mori grunts. He figures he’d have told Ivan soon enough anyway. Mori flips his badge out of his pocket. “Robert Hansen, Special Investigator, Climate Crimes Division, DOJ, Interpol, at your frigging service.” Ivan looks at the badge with raised eyebrows, scrutinizing its veracity. Again, the poker face settles in. He’s seen crazier stuff tonight for sure. But Mori is a little disappointed by his non-reaction.

Ivan spreads his hands out before him in a fanning gesture that is both dismissive and accepting. “Explain.”

“First, tell us what you remember of the evening’s events,” Sadie says. Her eyes glitter as she watches Ivan. Mori figures he could see the two squaring off over a high stakes game of poker.

“Da. I was in bathroom when Mr. Hansen broke in…”

“Investigator…” Mori interrupts.

“Investigator Hansen broke in on me in the bathroom,” Ivan continues. “His wife, Beatrice Hansen ran up behind him. She was shouting insanely and assaulted me with sword. Thankfully, she missed.”

“She hit you exactly how she intended,” Mori corrects him. Sadie doesn’t bat an eye. She’s watching Ivan like that lioness in the painting might watch a creature of the savanna. Ivan rubs the mark on his forehead.

“Go on, what happened next?” Sadie says.

“It is inexplicable. I saw dark ghosts. Terrible. There were three of them. They had… giant claws. One of them is cutting me with claws. There is something coming off me. The ghost is eating it.” Ivan’s face contorts with involuntary fear as he recalls the event. He points an accusing finger at Mori. “Beatrice… she drugged me.”

“With a strike from the flat of her sword? Try again,” Mori replies.

“She is witch. She cursed me.”

Mori balls his hand into a fist. “Never say that word!” he growls. Ivan lifts his hands defensively.

“She did curse you with the sword-touch, Ivan. I’ve seen her do it before. It was a helpful curse,” Sadie says calmly as she waves Mori down. “That’s what let you see them. The ghosts, as you call them, are actually Pride Eater demons. They were attracted to you because you were full of the pride they crave.”

Ivan’s heard some of this before. He seems to accept it a tiny bit more the second time. “She cursed me?”

“It’s a kind of magical spell,” Mori says. “Beatrice cast a curse upon you so you could see the demons that had gathered around you. They’ve been coming there every night you sit on that damn golden toilet.”

Ivan sits forward. “No. I can’t believe.”

“Of course you can’t. You’re a frigging moron.”

Sadie turns her eyes to Mori. “Give him time,” she says evenly.

“Sure,” But Mori’s thinking time probably won’t do squat for Ivan. Garbage brain equals garbage out.

“Now, what else did you see?” Sadie prods.

“There were the ghosts … tall demons, above me. Below me there was a circle. A glowing circle of light on the black. It pulsed with red light.” Ivan looks to Sadie and then to Mori. “What was it?”

“That, Ivan, was a Hell Gate,” Mori says turning to face Ivan, meeting his stone-faced gaze. “When the demons saw you dripping with pride from their perch in Hell, they ripped open that gate with their claws so they could come to feed on you. Since you did your little crap on the world thing pretty regularly and in the same place each day, they knew you were a sure thing. An easy hunt. But that’s not all. You didn’t just attract the eyes of the demons. Someone else caught wind of you. You see, Pride Eaters are a kind of demon that the Devil keeps on a short leash. He uses them to hunt the most prideful of mortals as they are often his best servants. When he asked them what they were doing with you, they happily told him. And that’s how the Devil became very intimate with the name of Ivan friggin Volkov.”

“Devil?” Ivan is whiter than usual which is saying something.

“Yes. The frigging Devil. Not a devil. The Devil. And his name is Asmodeus.”

“Your claim is kakashka. Preposterous.”

“It is written in your flesh now. I saw the mark on your back.”

“You shot me.”

“I shot the Pride Eater possessing you. If that was an earthly bullet, we wouldn’t be having this enlightening little chat.”

Ivan sits back, going silent. Sadie steeples her hands. “Now Ivan, tell us what you remember of the thing that happened next.” Ivan looks away. He rubs a hand over his head. His eyes glint.

“It stabbed me with long talon. Girl, Beatrice told me it was demon. I should have been protected. Was baptized.”

“Baptism doesn’t do squat for what you invite willingly,” Mori says under his breath. Ivan continues talking as if Mori hadn’t spoken.

“I felt terror, pain, rage. Power came into me like the rush of fire. I grew and changed — becoming wolf. My eyes could see far, my ears could ear heartbeats, the sound of far away voices like echoes, my tongue could taste feelings, emotions, fear, my nose could smell city, the stink of sulfur rising up through red circle. With my senses I knew your…” Ivan struggles for a moment, not wanting to say the word, “… magic. I saw and smelt your names. Mori, Lushael.” He laughs. “Not Hansens. That is alias. I felt mighty above all things – glorious and terrible. What was in me gave me strong voice. I knew I could call to others for help against you. To track you down and make you pay for your crimes against me.” A wicked glint has bloomed in Ivan’s eyes as he recounts his experience. Mori can see that the demon possession was so complete Ivan still mistakes its thoughts and desires for his own. Again, he almost feels pity for the guy as he wonders at whatever broken or crooked thing within Ivan made him so vulnerable to willing possession by evil.  “So I used my great voice to shout your names,” Ivan continues. “To mark you. My voice went out through the mighty kingdom. I am certain it found ears.”

Ivan is sweating now. He has raised his hands into the shape of claws. He is reaching for Mori’s neck. Mori’s arm shoots out and he smacks Ivan on the forehead, hitting near the mark Beatrice left there. The force causes Ivan to fall back. “Get a hold of yourself, man!” Mori shouts.

Ivan self-consciously drops his hands. “Then you shot me! Stabbed me! Pain! Death! I was dead. Dead.” He is blithering as he recalls the moment of trauma. He omits the part where he almost bit Beatrice’s leg clean off.

“We didn’t kill you, moron. We shot and stabbed the demon that possessed you. Our strikes were an exorcism. Yet you sympathize with the demon that took you in mind, body and spirit.” Mori turns to Sadie. “Please tell me you know how we can work with this guy. I am drawing a blank. He looks like wasted effort to me. The moment Asmodeus gets a demon to touch him again, he’s a complete goner.”

“Dead… How am I not dead?” Ivan says accusingly toward Mori who waves his hand at Ivan dismissively.

Sadie stands up, walks forward from behind the desk and puts a hand on Ivan’s shoulder. Her eyes glow with faetor oculorum. Mori figures she’s seeing the scar the demon left on him. She runs her hand down to his back. “You are not dead because Beatrice and Mori, in their grace, decided to save you. To give you this last chance, Ivan, not to be damned as a destroyer. Beatrice nearly died to save you. Yet you are still marked in body, mind and spirit. Asmodeus has claimed you for his own with that, still-burning, brand upon you. We will intercede. We will try to save you from him. But you have to help us. We need you to agree.”

Mori laughs harshly at this. “Sadie, the guy is a total lost cause, can’t you see it? He doesn’t even realize what he does for his vile life’s-work is the dead-wrong thing that summoned the demon he now chooses over us.”

“Then we will teach him.”

This must be a part of the ‘plan’ that Mori’s not yet fully cluing in on. He and Beatrice were mainly focused on the Myra side. Sadie had identified Ivan and his Hell Gate. Had instructed them to use the Gate and to bring Ivan to her. For Sadie, Ivan is as important as Myra. She saw him as Asmodeus’s earthly implement and wanted to, as she called it, “take Asmodeus’s rod from his hand.” But Sadie was cagey about the modus operandi part. Typical mage with her secrets. Mori can’t talk, he’s got about a hundred up his sleeve too.

“How do you intend to teach this guy? What makes you think he’ll learn a damned thing after all he’s already done?”

“We will take him to the celestial realm. Its ocean heart – Merrin.” Sadie probes at Ivan’s scar and faces him. “Does this hurt you Ivan?”

“Yes. Pain in my back. Burns… Exactly in place I can’t scratch. It maddens.”

“What if I said I could heal it fully? What if I told you – I could take you to a place where this death in your flesh could not touch you any longer? Would you come with me to Heaven? Would you open your heart?”

Ivan looks over Sadie. Mori can see the condescension and disbelief on his face. Mori can tell Ivan’s even less able to take it in because of the black-skinned, female face before him. Can tell he sees her as a lesser being. Oh man, you can’t even begin to comprehend how far beyond you she really is.

“How could someone like you show me, Heaven?” Ivan says. Mori grinds his teeth to hold back his anger. On top of everything else, this guy’s a bigot too. Mori isn’t surprised. But it still pisses him off.

“Oh, you just live in that doubt, don’t you?” Sadie says evenly, taking his insult right in the teeth then biting down hard enough to break it. “I dare you to let me show you. What you will witness, through me, will be far more spectacular and wonderful than the healing I did for Beatrice. Consider it a gift I offer you. One you do not at all deserve. But a great gift none-the-less.”

Mori is silent as Sadie plays magical Santa Claus. He shrugs his shoulders and thinks to himself Friggin special treatment. It’s the only thing that seems get through to guys like Ivan. Because they always want more.

“You can fix back? You can take to Heaven?” Ivan says as he reaches toward the scar. These words seem meek, as if from another person entirely. Mori’s magically sensitive eyes flare and he picks up Ivan’s thoughts. He has a brief vision of a snow-speckled wind blowing over Siberian forests. Of a tiny mitten in Ivan’s larger hand. A sense of love and belonging. Associations from a more wholesome past. Maybe. Mori wonders if this is the real Ivan. This frail as butterfly wings flicker of nostalgic love beneath a lifetime so dark it caught the eye of Asmodeus. He reminds himself – which one is real is up to Ivan. Mori, for his part, doesn’t hold much hope. He’s seen too many like Ivan. Too many unable to turn back.

“We can bring you there bodily at great cost. To remove you from Asmodeus’s grasp, if only for a brief while, will be worth it. The rest is up to you,” Sadie says. Mori can see a perplexing kind of joy light in her eyes.

“Da. OK. We go to Heaven.” Ivan’s face is still half-disbelieving his own words. All Mori can think is – Great, I just sent my own daughter to Hell and now this jack-ass gets to go to on a free all-expenses-paid trip to Heaven. Oh, the humanity!

(Want to read the first Chapter of Helkey? You can find it here.)

(Looking for another chapter? Find it in the Helkey Table of Contents.)

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