Tag Archive | boom

Knowing Doomsday, a drabble of Boom/Cynara/BoomTown

After:
Unrepentant
Eriko
Revenge

Cya was not used to people not knowing her.

She was used to people not knowing her name went with her face – not here, not in Cynopolis/Boom Town/Her City. It was, after all, her city. But she was not used to people not knowing that her name went with her reputation. Not anymore.

There were a few, of course. Boom were big, but they weren’t actually the biggest crew in the world, and they weren’t the only crew of fae out there, doing things.

But they were loud – explosive, even – and that meant that most people, at least in this corner of what had once been the United States, had heard of Boom. They hadn’t always heard of Cynara, Red Doomsday. But when she said, “Cya, of Boom,” most people knew who she was.

Dysmas was an odd case – Dysmas, and, now that she had her in a box, Eriko. They knew Cynara. They knew that her face – which had, after all, not changed in fifty years – went with the name Cynara, although they were more likely to put cy’Drake with it than Doomsday.

It was like a loose tooth. She couldn’t help wiggling it.

Eriko was – not all that fun, not really. She was too stuck in her own little world, even now, even neck-deep in Cya’s world, to really understand to whom she was talking – or, more importantly in Cya’s way of thinking, to what.

So that left Dysmas to talk to. And she found, thus, that she kept seeking him out.

It took him a couple times to notice that she always seemed to be where he was. The third time she tracked him down – Found him, really – he was at a local market, looking over a tailor’s wares.

“You seem to have a knack for finding me.” He sounded like he was complaining. The tailor – who knew who was standing in his shop, since Cynara had Found him and offered him a place and custom – giggled nervously.

Dysmas didn’t understand. “What?”

“You were joking, yes, sir?” Dysmas carried himself like one of the Returned Gods, like he expected tribute. The tailor – Sania, his name was, John Sania – must have assumed, thus, that he was a friend of Cya’s. “She’s Doomsday. Of course she can find you.”

“Yes, of course.” Dysmas was not very good at hiding it when he was confused. “She’s… Cya, what is he talking about?”

She noticed the way the tailor found a way to be behind his counter, just then. She didn’t blame him. She coughed, politely. “I’m Doomsday,” she said, trying not to giggle. “I find things.”

This entry was originally posted at http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/753230.html. You can comment here or there.

Revenge? a continuation of Boom/Cynara (For @inventrix)

After Eriko


It was tempting to some small, vindictive part of Cynara to leave Eriko down there.

The cells she had built were two stories underground, encased in solid rock and paneled in thick enough hawthorn to make any Workings pretty much impossible. They were connected to the city’s grid – there was electricity, and water, and air – but they were, rather than under her house, under a warehouse in a completely different sector of the city. If she wanted to, she could close the outside door, seal the earth over it, and pretend there had never been anyone there at all, and nobody except her and Eriko would ever know the difference.

They – Boom – were, however, theoretically the good guys. It would take a fae a long time to starve to death – very long, if the things Cya had learned were any indication – and it was a horrible way to die. Not among the worse, but certainly not among the easiest ways Cya knew.

Thus, she had one of the City employees detailed to sending food down three times a day, and once a week, she visited the bitch herself.

“I brought you some books.” She slid them through the door slot. “I remember you liked foreign studies, back then. There’s some modern pieces from France and Germany, Italy and Russia – or, I mean, where they used to be.”

“How did you get these?” It had been three weeks, and those were the first words Eriko had said to her.

“I’m a Finder.” Dysmas hadn’t even known who Boom were. It was possible that Eriko didn’t know the third-most famous thing about Cynara.

“What, you find lost keychains?” The woman was locked in a hawthorn box and she still managed to sound like she was sneering.

“I find everything.” She knew she sounded cocky; when it came to her Finding, she was cocky. “I found you. I found these books.”

“Yeah, great, Nancy Drew. But these books – they’re from another continent. How did you get there?”

“I didn’t.” Not that it hadn’t occurred to her to try – but that was a long, long time to be away from her crew. “I found the books.” She decided to spell it out, just in case Eriko really was that stupid. “It’s my innate, Eriko.”

“You didn’t have that when you were in school.”

“Not so much my first year. And what I had, I didn’t have much call to use.” She had always known where Zita and Howard and Leo were. It was just that she couldn’t do anything about it. “But you know, powers develop over time.”

“Mine didn’t.”

“You have to work it, like a muscle – not that I’d recommend trying, in there. It’ll give you a hell of a headache to even try.”

“You know this is going to drive me insane, right? It’ll drive anyone insane – any fae – if you leave them in here.”

Cya tapped the door. “I’m rather counting on it. It’s the only fair punishment I can come up with.”

~

“I brought you some puzzles.”

“Why?”

Eriko had been in there for three weeks. Cya hadn’t done mind Workings – couldn’t do mind Workings through the hawthorn and rowan – but she had enough experience with insanity to recognize signs without magic.

“Because human beings aren’t meant to be alone, and being alone without stimulation is likely to drive you crazy.”

“We’re not human.”

“I’m not human. I’m not so sure about you.”

“What’s that supposed to me?”

“Look at yourself for a moment. Look in a mirror.”

“I don’t want to.”

“And why not?” Cya kept her voice calm.

“I don’t want to, that’s all.”

“Your Mask is down.”

“Of course it is. In here…”

“In there, it would take constant, endless effort to maintain a Mask. Easier to just not look in the mirror.”

“What would you know about it? What would you know about being human? You haven’t changed, you haven’t aged…”

“And neither have you. But that’s not what you want to believe, and it’s not what you want the world to believe.” Cya pushed the puzzles through the food slot. “You want to be human. And humans – and fae – do badly in isolation.”

“You put me here. You locked me in this box. I thought you wanted me to go insane.”

“I did.” Cya chewed on her lip for a moment. “I put you in there to punish you. To hurt you.”

“For doing the same goddamned thing as everyone else did, back then. For doing the same thing as was done to me. For hurting your precious Leo, when I’m sure he went and hurt someone else in his time.”

“You know what the worst of it was?” Cya tried not to think about Leo and Gabi, about Gabrielle’s broken belief that he’d ruined everything. “For all of us? It was watching our friends be broken, be hurt, be lost and confused, and not being able to do anything about it.” It was being told we weren’t supposed to care. It was being helpless to do anything.”

Eriko scoffed. “Tell me another one about how bad you had it. Tell me another story about how your lives sucked so bad.”

Cynara stood up. “I think I’ll wait until you can tell me yourself.”

“Wait!”

Cya left.

~

“I brought you some magazines.”

“Magazines, seriously? Where do you – no, don’t tell me. You Find things. Some somehow, you found magazines. Because you’re fucking Wonder Woman.”

“Give me your word.” It wasn’t planned, this time; the words were out of her mouth and then Cynara wondered what she meant.

She had just enough time to think about it before Eriko asked.

“Excuse me?”

“Give me your word that if I open this door, you won’t try to escape.”

“Why? And don’t give me that shit that humans aren’t made for isolation yadda, yadda. Why?”

“Because I want to talk to you.”

“You’re talking just fine.”

“You’re saying you don’t want to see another face?”

“I’m saying you’re cy’Drake and you don’t do anything without a nice complicated reason and seventeen loopholes.”

The laugh surprised Cya. When was the last time she’d laughed like that? When her grandson’s youngest had spit up on her shirt, that was when – and the whole family had been a little confused about that.

“What?” The woman on the other side of the wall was suddenly cautious.

“It’s just…” Cya pulled herself back together. “It’s nice to hear. I’m going to open the door. Don’t try to escape.”

“I’m… you’re insane, you know that?”

Cya muttered a set of Workings under her breath, hanging them on her like weapons, and swung the door open. She found she was grinning until her cheeks hurt. “Insane?”

She pulled up a chair, blocking the exit, and pulled up a second for Eriko. They were down here, in case she wanted to do this.

“Yeah. Insane. Certifiable.”

She found she was trying to stretch the grin further. “Nobody left to certify me. You’re showing your age.”

She sat, cautiously, just inside the door of her cell. “I’m old. Why are you laughing?”

“Because.” Cya snorted again. “Because it’s funny.”

“That I’m old?”

“Oh, that’s hilarious.” She giggled, relishing the sound of it, the feel of it in her mouth. “You’re old. No. No, it’s funny that you see it and you don’t even know what you’re seeing.”

“You’re nuts. Insane.”

“Yes.” Cya giggled again. “Yes, yes I am.”

This entry was originally posted at http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/751289.html. You can comment here or there.

Eriko, a story of Boom/Cynara/Boomtown for @inventrix

After Unrepentant. Also and unconnectedly after Fish Gotta Swim


“And your crew? How are they, now?”

“Gone, I suppose. Eriko passed into humanity…”

It sat in Cynara’s mind as the days creaked on. Dysmas was in her city. That was bad enough; he was here, walking around, free to do to anyone what he’d done to her…

…to try, at least. Boom Town looked badly on that sort of thing.

And that made her want to chew on nails and spit out bullets, as her father had been fond of saying, once upon a time. But his presence, his physical existence still on the same plane of being as her… that woke up other memories.

Zita’s Keepers – well, Eris had just been crazy, and Shiva was Gone. Howard’s Magnolia, they all knew where she was. Leo had Kept Gabi; they couldn’t lay that mess at anyone’s feet but their own.

Dysmas and Eriko were different, and now they knew where Dysmas was.

It didn’t take her long to Find the scent. It was what she did, and she’d honed her power on far trickier Finds than this (things like find me a plumber who can lay pipe for a whole city, will work for what I can pay, and is willing to move out here to do so). It took her a little longer to decide to follow the scent, and a little bit longer to actually get in the car and drive.

(She still had a car. It still ran, too, although what it burned for fuel was best not asked after.)

She went alone. She didn’t have a Kept right now, and she didn’t want Boom asking what she was doing until she was sure that she, at least, knew what to tell them. She wouldn’t trouble any of the other men in her life with this one, either – because, at the core of things, it was Boom business. And so she went alone, driving well over what had once been a speed limit down roads she Repaired as she went.

(It had not gone unremarked that roads to Boom Town, Cynapolis, were all in better shape than any road even pre-war. But since Boom was expected it to be “out there,” the remarks stayed quiet. All but the most virulently fae-hating fae-haters were wise enough to not take on that particular target.)

She drove east, which did not surprise her, and north, a day and another day. She drove just past the edges of the Web-Watcher’s Den, but did not stop in: They had worked together on occasion, but they never did so comfortably, and if she could avoid Aviv, she would.

The drive took her past the walls of a small town where she’d never been. Not in the town, then – at least, probably not, and even less likely to be in the WebWatcher’s reach. Good. She didn’t want to have to explain what she was doing to anyone, whether they’d been there or not. People had such narrow-minded viewpoints sometimes.

When she Found that she was stopping, it was at a small cottage, set up on the side of a hill. It would be hard to attack – if she was planning on attacking.

Cya wasn’t the take-things-on-headfirst member of Boom. She parked the car and murmured workings before she even set up the car’s wards, checked her weapons and her Mask twice each, even though the wards and workings would hide one and supersede the other, and leaned back to wait.

She didn’t, exactly, have a plan. It occurred to her, as she leaned the car seat back and sipped on something that resembled coffee, that possibly she might have wanted one.

She didn’t have a plan.

She let that sink in as she watched the pathway and as she let the small sense of Finding hold on to Eriko’s location. She had driven here – driven well over a day’s drive, without telling anyone in her crew or her city – without much more than a strong gut feeling.

She had a moment to wonder if this was what being sane felt like. Then her power sent alarms through her, and she slipped out of the car, no longer worrying about such trivial things as sanity.

The Workings on the car and on her kept her looking non-threatening, not-out-of-the-usual (the Workings for the car had gotten progressively stronger over the years, as cars became more and more of an unusual item). Cya leaned heavily on those Workings, murmuring repeats of the Words as she approached her target. Nothing to see here. Nobody unusual. This is normal. No threats here. No threats here.

The Workings felt like a comfortable old coat on her shoulders, well-used and well-known. They’d protected her before, on Finds far less personal than this one. This time…

This time, they served her as a tiger’s stripes. She was in front of Eriko – between the woman and her front gate – before her quarry even knew she was there.

Eriko had aged, had, probably, allowed herself to age. She looked like a woman in her late forties now, or maybe her late fifties – not that bad, when they both had children who were past that mark themselves, but noticeable, when Cya herself looked maybe twenty-five.

She’d liked twenty-five. It had been a good year.

If her power hadn’t been pushing at her, little alarm bells and Found It! signs blinking in her mind, Cya might have had trouble recognizing Eriko. The expression was the same, but with her Mask up, with the wrinkles and the grey in her hair, Eriko looked like so many other survivors of the war – she looked tired, she looked dirty, and she looked haggard.

Cya looked none of those things. She knew it; she had a mirror – she looked clean, almost too clean. She looked young, just young enough that some might still think she was prey until they actually tried it. She looked well-rested, the sign of affluence and strong, tall walls in this day and age. She looked, she knew, like a relic from a safer time.

Of course, for her, the world had never gotten all that dangerous. She’d considered feeling guilty about that, a time or two, but she knew the price that had been paid for that safety.

It still took Eriko a minute – even after she registered Cya’s presence – to recognize her. And then, she seemed to doubt it. “It can’t be. Dysmas’s girl?”

Cya bit back a snarl and smiled instead, but Eriko was still talking. “No. Maybe one of her children.”

“Only ever had sons, and they don’t look like this.” Cya shifted one hip. “And their daughters don’t particularly look like me, either, though one of my grandsons sort of does. Eriko. It’s been a while.”

“It is you.” Eriko’s wrinkled lips twisted in a frown. “I thought your little group settled in Wyoming.”

“We did. I’m on a field trip.”

“How nice. Enjoy yourself.” She shrugged one hip and one shoulder in clear dismissal. How much of her lack of concern was due to Cya’s Workings – and how much was just her own dismissal of a younger student, even if they were both long past student age?

“I plan to. That your property over there?” Cya gestured at the gate behind her.

“What? Yeah, that’s my house, and my yard. The gate is tougher than it… oh.” Eriko started spitting Workings the minute she noticed Cya’s lips moving, but by then it was too late. Cya threw a shield up to deflect the worst of the damage, sent some of it right back through the older woman, and in a moment had tossed her easiest sedation Working at her target.

Two more Workings followed close after, because you couldn’t trust a Working that was effective on 20-year-old boys to work properly on an 80-year-old adult fae. And then three more, because Cynara knew what protective Workings she had on, and assumed that any adult Fae living alone had at least that many, and maybe twice that.

When she was done, Eriko fell limply to the ground, entirely unconscious, not even dreaming, and completely paralyzed. It if were Cya, that would hold for maybe five minutes.

She worked even faster, then, adding the hawthorn bindings she and Magnolia had come up with, the absolutely nasty gag that stopped nine/tenths of fae they’d encountered from even thinking about doing Workings, and some good old fashioned rope, just in case.

She got the unconscious and very-well-trussed-up Eriko into the hawthorn-and-rowan box in the trunk before she stirred, locked the box twice, and was on the way before anyone noticed she’d been there (if her mind Workings checking the area were any indication).

Workings wouldn’t hold for long in the box, but, then again, in the box, they didn’t need to. Cya drove straight and fast, glad, once again, that speed traps and traffic cops were a thing of the past. (There weren’t many institutions from her childhood and early adulthood that she was glad to give up, but she and police had never really gotten along properly).

It wasn’t her plan – inasmuch as she had a plan – to kill the woman, so she stopped after six hours. By then, Eriko was awake, pissed, and, from the burn marks around her mouth, had discovered exactly what she was gagged with and why trying to do Workings was a bad idea.

“Water, food, stretch, pee, back in the car. Try anything at all remotely funny, and there won’t be another break until we get where we’re going.” Some part of Cya wished that she didn’t have this speech memorized. But they’d dealt with unsavory characters before.

“Why…?” Eriko asked the moment the gag was out, and then slammed her mouth shut, as if fearing that was too much.

“I’m cleaning up old scores, that’s all.” Cya passed her the water bottle.

“That was fifty years ago.

“What can I say? Some wounds take a long time to heal.”

She took the water away, put the gag back in – Eriko barely fought; Cya thought she was in shock – and unwound enough of the restraints that Eriko could use the ancient gas station bathroom and stretch a little.

When she retrieved the woman – Cya would have tried to run, so there were precautions against that, but none of those had been triggered at all – she was waiting quietly, staring at the crumbled remains of a news paper.

The next rest stop was even quieter. Eriko asked no questions. It wasn’t until the fourth stop, home so close that Cya contemplated not stopping at all, that she showed any spark at all.

“I never did anything to you at all, you know. Not like it could have been. Not like it should have been. You were Kept, you got treated like a Kept, and I never understood why you couldn’t just accept that.”

“Why don’t I put a collar around your neck and see how you handle it?” The words snapped out from some old place, some wounded place that Cya had long forgotten about. “Why don’t I treat you like a non-being and see what you do with it? Why don’t I destroy your friends and see how you cope?”

“Do you think I wasn’t collared? Do you think your stupid Dysmas wasn’t collared? Do you think he didn’t suffer, under the collar, when his Change came in? You and your fluffy little friends had it easy.

For a moment, for a brief moment, Cynara had begun to doubt her course of action.

The sneer on Eriko’s face as she spat out easy wiped that doubt away.

“Easy?” Cya shoved the gag back in place, headless of the way it banged against teeth. Teeth could be regrown. “Easy? I’ve got a ten by ten hawthorn cell to show you easy, bitch. We’ll see how long you last. We’ll see if you come out of it sane, when you’re done.”

The other woman made stifled noises against the gag, but Cya was done talking. “Easy.” The word tasted nasty in her mouth – not as nasty as the hawthorn gag probably tasted in Eriko’s, but sour with the residue of a lifetime of memories. “Easy.” She shoved her captive back in the box and slammed the lid and the trunk. “Easy.”

She found she was still muttering the word when she made it into her city. Easy. Decades of watching her friends, never quite knowing if Leo would come back from this hunting trip, never quite knowing if he’d remember a conversation the next day. Easy. Leo talking to Yoshi about Tethys, and the way his face just sort of shifted. Easy. Year after year after year after… She did not break the steering wheel, but it was a close thing.

Cya had built this city – Boom Town, Doom Town, Cynopolis, it didn’t have a name so much as a handwave and a “that place” – she had built it and thus it was prepared for nearly every eventuality. “People who used to collar us” wasn’t even a hard one – not in terms of planning, at least. For Eriko, Cya had a box.

You could have put Dysmas in a box.

It wasn’t Cynara’s way to second-guess herself… but there were times even she acted out of character.

“I could have.” There was nobody in her backroom garage to hear her except the woman in the box. “I could have put him in a box. I sill could.”

If her crew didn’t deal with him.

She took a couple long breaths.

She could have put Dysmas in a box.

She hadn’t put DYsmas in a box.

Maybe she’d sit down and have a long talk with someone about this… later.

Right now, she had a bitch in a coffin and a cell in the basement.

“Easy.” She dropped the box in the lift and cranked the lift into the sub-basement. “Have you ever seen the shattered remains of the mind you left behind? Easy.

She took the stairs down – much easier than the jolting trip down the lift – and pulled the gun out before she opened the box. Bullets might not kill an Ellehemaei – not lead bullets, at least – but they hurt like hell and slowed anything down.

Cya remembered what that felt like. Some mornings she still woke up twitching in remembered pain.

Hopefully, Eriko had learned the same lesson. She opened the box with one hand, the gun aimed steadily with the other. “Out of the box and I’ll take the bindings off.”

The other woman moved stiffly, but she moved. Cya unbound her – gag first, that thing was inhumane, and then the rest – one-handed, watching as the room sank in. “It’s hawthorn.” Eriko licked her lips. “You panelled a room in hawthorn.”

“Several rooms, actually. I call it the box, but it’s more of a small apartment. Bedroom, this room, bathroom. You won’t starve, you won’t die.”

“I’ll go mad. Surrounded by this much poison…” For the first time, she really sounded scared. “It would drive anyone nuts.”

Cya found her lips curling upwards. “That was generally the idea, yes. But no hunger, no threats, no cold – it should be an easy life.”

This entry was originally posted at http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/739688.html. You can comment here or there.

Repentance teaser 3!

This is another teaser, in the same story as this one.

“…this isn’t the face I wear at home, and I’m surprised you wear your public face out.”

“It helps smooth things. Or… run them over.”

“Knowing you have a Bulldozer behind you will do that, yes.”

Cya couldn’t help but laugh. She cut it off quickly, though; she could feel the press of her power in the back of her mind. “I’m here on a find.”

This entry was originally posted at http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/731482.html. You can comment here or there.

Repentance – teaser, a fragment of Boom

This is another teaser, in the same story as this one. The story took a left turn and now it’s going to have to be twice as long!

It took less than a half hour for a carriage to ride up to her. The vehicle – you had to call it carriage because horse-drawn pickup truck just sounded wrong – was pulled by two of the biggest horses Cynara had ever seen, and piloted by a lean, grizzled man wielding a shotgun. Cya stopped on the side of the road and made sure he could see her clearly.

This entry was originally posted at http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/730408.html. You can comment here or there.

Repentance – teaser, a fragment of Boom

This comes after Unrepentant, and is just a teaser, as I need to write more on it before it’s a proper story.

But I included a dollie of Cynara!


“And your crew? How are they, now?”

“Gone, I suppose. Eriko passed into humanity…”

It sat in Cynara’s mind as the days creaked on. Dysmas was in her city. That was bad enough; he was here, walking around, free to do to anyone what he’d done to her…

…to try, at least. Boom Town looked badly at that sort of thing.

And that made her want to chew on nails and spit out bullets, as her father had been fond of saying, once upon a time. But his presence, his physical existence still on the same plane of being as her… that woke up other memories.

This entry was originally posted at http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/727077.html. You can comment here or there.

Unrepentant, a fragment of Boom (@inventrix)

I asked for fun Addergoole-related prompts here; this is from @Inventrix’s prompt although it rather went sideways.

Late in current timeline, after So, I have this school, set in Doomsday Academy Town. Boom-Town?

The smart money said you didn’t ask Cynara Doomsday about her Keeping. Of course, the same could be said for all of her crew, but Cya was not normally as… explosive… as the rest of Boom. Except on that topic. Even approaching it sideways had borne bad results in the past – so, you Keep someone every year. Ever been on the other side?.

She would wax poetically angry about Leofric’s collaring – when he wasn’t in earshot – a bit wistful about Howard – when Magnolia, who had Kept him, wasn’t around – and more than a bit confused about Zita’s first and second collarings (and sometimes about her long-term Kept/Keeper relationship with Leo). She’d talk about her own Kept – by this point, there were generations of them, in some cases literally – but on the topic of her year under Dysmas’ collar, she remained resolutely mum.

Cynara could Find anything, anyone, anywhere. It did not escape the notice of those closest to her that there were two people she never looked for – her father and her Former Keeper.

The people who would notice were smart enough to not ask why, too.

She never looked for Dysmas – but she had no skill in making people stay away from her, and she was, after all, building a city and a school. It is likely she shouldn’t have been surprised when the guards at the gates cued her in on the presence of a vampire asking for her by her given name and her former cy’ree.

Indeed, when she met him in the small holding room outside of her gates, she did not look surprised. If anything, she looked annoyed.

“Dysmas.”

“Cynara.” He wasn’t actually taller than her, but he stood and endeavored to look down on her. “Quite a place you’ve got here.”

“You don’t know the half of it.” Her voice was so level as to sound unreal. He raised aristocratic eyebrows.

“If I didn’t know better, I’d say you don’t want me here. And here I thought your guards were simply unfriendly.”

“I don’t want you here.” She pushed one hand away from her in a clearly dismissive gesture. “But this place is open to those who will fit in here, so here I am.”

“We had a good time, back then.”

“You Kept me.” She settled into a chair. “You tricked me into a collar you could have gotten on me willingly, and you treated me like property for a year. You let your crew boss me around, and you willingly let Eriko destroy my friend’s mind. When I complained, you punished me.”

“Yes.” He shrugged. “Of course.”

“And you wonder why I won’t allow you into my home?”

“It was a long time ago, it was Addergoole, and I was Keeping you. They were my crew. Of course they were more important.”

Her lips tightened. “Of course. How are they, now?”

A hand flapped negligently. “Gone, I suppose. Eriko passed into humanity and I don’t know what happened to the rest. What about your little friends?”

“I’m surprised you have to ask.” Nothing about her voice or her body suggested surprise. “Most people have heard of Boom by now. We’re loud enough.”

It was interesting. His pale complexion – he was a vampire, after all – did not get any paler. But the smugness fell off his face. “Boom.”

“That would be us.” She leaned forward, elbows on the narrow table. “Tell me, was Delaney any kinder to you?”

“Kinder?” His shoulders twitched again. “She Kept me. Like I Kept Rowan, and Nydia, and you. It’s the way things happened. What were you saying about Boom?”

She stood up, pushing her chair backwards with a long screech. “I don’t think they’d like you here.”

This entry was originally posted at http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/709807.html. You can comment here or there.

Tower, a story of post-apoc Ag for the OrigFic Bingo

This is to @inventrix and Sky’s twitter prompts to my December OrigFic card; this fills the “Tower” square.

It is set in post-apoc Addergoole-world, not in the school, sometime around year 50 of the school, with new characters.

“What do I do, what do I do?”

Leontyne was in the habit of talking to herself. It wasn’t a particularly good habit, but it wasn’t her worst habit by far, and her children were fond of it, as, they said, it telegraphed her pretty darn well.

Her children. Addergoole had gotten the first two, because that’s what happened. And it wasn’t as if Leontyne’s experiences there had been horrible. But now her third child was coming of age, the first two still in Addergoole – and her third, Jerome, had been born outside of the auspices and breeding programs of her alma mater.

“What to do, what to do?” She had very little faith in the Tarot, not like the woman who’d raised her had; she wasn’t a precog, as far as she could tell, wasn’t a seer of any sort. But she used it the way she used the dice and sometimes even the Bible, as a randomizer for decision-making. She tapped the edge of the deck on her small table. “Where to go. Where to go.”

“Mom, you’re doing it again.” Jerome poured her a cup of tea. He was a good boy, when he wasn’t getting into trouble – so, for about fifteen minutes awake, and then when he was asleep, much like her older two. He’d be a hell-raiser in Addergoole or anywhere else. “What to do about what?” He lifted the Tarot deck from her unresisting hand and pushed a scone in front of her.

“You.” She sipped the tea; once they’d got the hang of growing it, they’d been in business. “This is the new – what?”

“Me?” He had the lost-kitten look all of her sons learned from birth (no surprise there). “What did I… hunh.” A card had fallen from his hand onto the table: the Tower.

It wasn’t a card Leontyne could remember seeing before; it wasn’t one from her deck. A tall edifice twisted into the sky, three-sided, surrounded by interlocking circles of walls.

She’d seen that before, in a brochure left by a travelling salesman.

“Doomsday Academy.” The card sat on the table, making change and transformation and chaos. She quirked her lips up and smiled at her most chaotic of sons. “Think they’re ready for you?”

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The Cup, Part IX


After The Cup and The Cup, Part II, and The Cup Part III, and The Cup, Part IV, and The Cup, Part V, The Cup, Part VI, and
The Cup, Part VII, and The Cup, Part VII, in that Order

Cynara was… walking straight up a vertical road.

Pellinore stared at his former Keeper for a moment. This was impossible.

Part of his brain kicked the rest of it. He was looking at a woman who could bend minds and bodies, in a world where gods had destroyed almost everything. Impossible had really lost a great deal of meaning somewhere along the way, and all mere mortals could do was hold on for improbable.

“This is improbable.” JohnWayne had grabbed his hand, though, and he was being dragged onto the strange road along with the two of them.

“So’re you.” His son spared him an exasperated glance. “You complain a lot.”

“It’s my lot in life.” Stepping onto the road felt like getting off a carnival ride; his sinuses tried to fall out of his body for a moment, and then the new gravity of the road asserted itself.

It wasn’t a long walk, as such things went, and it was fine until you looked down. Pellinore caught Cya doing it first, twisting to look and then freezing, her face turning ashen, until she could force her feet to move again. Then JohnWayne. Pellinore held off as long as he could, but when he did, the world was a long, long way down.

“Can we survive that? If we fell?” JohnWayne’s voice was rather small.

“Yes.” Cya’s was clipped, and pitched to carry without her having to turn around again. Pellinore just nodded, though neither of them could see him. “But in that ‘that’s going to suck for a couple centuries’ sort of way. Less chit-chat now. We’re almost there.”

“There,” it appeared, was a cottage a mile above the ground, where the road bent back to “flat” to serve as a driveway.

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The Cup, Part VIII


After The Cup and The Cup, Part II, and The Cup Part III, and The Cup, Part IV, and The Cup, Part V, The Cup, Part VI, and
The Cup, Part VII, in that Order

“This is the way up?”

JohnWayne looked at his Keeper, then back at the road, then back at Cynara, then back at the road. The road bent at a ninety degree angle, straight up into the air. The road they were now standing behind, staring up at.

“No offense, but are your sure your power’s working?”

“You let him talk like that?”

“Oh, thanks.” He glared at his… at Pellinore, who was glaring right back at him.

“Boys.” Cynara sounded mostly amused. Good. JohnWayne wasn’t really fond of her angry. “Yes, Pellinore. He’s never tried to blow up anything of mine.”

“You kidnapped me.”

“Dude.” Was this guy for real? “She kidnaps everyone.

“Not everyone, JohnWayne.”

“Enough people. A guy a year for how long…?”

“And when I accosted your father, the world had not yet ended. I didn’t particularly have a reputation for kidnapping people, outside of my own pack. And he was angry.”

“…I suppose. But why wouldn’t you let me question you?”

“I’m also not in my mid-twenties anymore. We all grow up.” She aimed a pointed look at Pellinore. JohnWayne almost pitied his father. Almost. “Most of us, at least. Now. This way.” She began walking forward, as if she was going to walk herself right into the road/wall.

“Cya…!” JohnWayne reached for her. She caught his hand and kept walking towards the underside of the road. “Cya, this isn’t funny, please don’t hurt your… oh.” Her body leaned backwards, first at a 45-degree angle to the ground, and then, as she stepped onto the road, at a 90-degree angle. “Oh.”

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