|  The First-ever ArgoForg Story 
 By (take a wild stab)
 Author’s Notes and Assorted Ramblings: 
I have taken a smidgen of creative 
liberty in my descriptions and dialogue of the people contained herein. I’ve 
tried to keep them as close to their normal behavior as I could and still have 
them fit into the story, but I have only a third-person viewpoint to gauge them. 
So if these are a little bit off-base from the actual descriptions or 
personalities of the personae who regularly appear in #asfr, I apologize, 
and you can feel free to write my characters wrong in one of your stories, if it 
makes you feel better. And lest I forget, a huge truckload o’ thanks goes to the 
people who crafted the characters you’ll be reading about besides my own. It’s 
imaginations like yours that make me remember that my generation hasn’t 
completely sold off the power of creative thought to Micro$oft… at least, 
not yet. 
 Also, there is quite a bit of 
mythology in here that contradicts, or at least is way off base from, known myth 
and legend. I didn’t have time to bone up completely on every culture’s idea of 
the Feyfolk before beginning this, and for that matter, very few cultures say 
what the Feyfolk call themselves. Consider it artistic license. 
 One last thing... I have 
purposefully written this in 10 point type to hold it at about twelve pages 
rather than forty when I print it out to make edits.  I apologize if this 
makes it a bit hard to read, but then again, for the benefit those of you who 
can compose HTML via Micro$oft Front Page or Netscape Gold/Composer, you can do 
a simple Select All, then change your font size to 12.  That should make it 
pretty readable.  And I'll try to curb my talkativeness in the 
future. 
 I.     A Chance Meeting 
     The room was lit, not menacingly so, but 
brightly enough that the young man entering it had to squint for a few moments 
to gather his bearings. The forests were nothing like this, he thought wryly. 
There you grew used to the darkness; it was a friend, an ally, a means of escape 
from that which was inescapable. Under the bright lights cast by the glass 
globes and tubes far above, the man felt exposed and vulnerable. He hefted his 
knapsack over one shoulder, grunting quietly under its weight. He took a few tentative steps into the room, looking 
around himself in awe. The room was larger than it had looked on the outside; in 
fact, now that he could see the far wall and gauge it, he would have sworn it 
stretched out in front of him for a mile or more. He blinked and knuckled 
his eyes, thinking it a trick of the mind, or at least an optical illusion, but 
no, when he looked up, there it was. He shook his head and quit trying to 
formulate where the far wall was, and instead focused on making it to the 
nearest one. The decor he saw there was strange, to say the least: an eccentric 
mix of the classical Romanesque style of marble and columns, fitted right next 
to glass display cases, patches of silvery metal and exposed wires. Tables and 
chairs sat at various places in the room, their styles as vastly different as 
the decor of the walls. A large wooden seat that could have easily been called a 
throne sat next to an intricately carved stone table. A long, cushioned divan 
rested next to a glass-topped end table.
 He shivered, not from the blasts of cool air from the 
grates in the ceiling, but from a genuine feeling of… of something, 
something he couldn’t quite place his finger on. This place just didn’t feel… 
what was it? His brow furrowed. It just didn’t feel right. He couldn’t 
explain it more explicitly than that. He had the feeling of a stag in a bedroom, 
completely out of place, not sure why in fact he was here, but unsure whether he 
should leave or stay.
 He chalked his 
unease to the dials and metal and wiring on the walls. In the Feylands, even in 
Avalon itself, such things were never seen. Granted, his knowledge of what the 
Humanae called technology was, at best, limited, but to be bluntly 
honest, if the panels and buttons and knobs he saw on the walls were any 
indication, his mother’s stories of how frighteningly different that 
technology could be were understated.
 For that matter, how his father— he winced at the 
very thought of the man— could come to have fond memories of such a cold, 
sterile place was quite beyond him. There was a dead feeling to the place, as 
far as he was concerned; it was horribly unlike the tranquil beauty of the 
forest, where everything around you for miles lived and breathed, so that the 
whole area felt infused with the magick of life to those who could feel 
it.
 Magick. That was what felt so 
odd about this place.  He sniffed the air, let his aura feel out the area 
around him, probing, searching…
 Nothing. Or at least, compared to Faerie, there was nothing here.  Feeling 
for ambient magick in the air in the Humanae realm was like searching for 
a grain of sand among the grasses in the Fields of Elroth.
 He sighed audibly. That would actually explain quite 
a lot of his unease. While in the realm of Faerie, or for that matter, on the 
edges of Faerie, he was a more than competent magus. He could transform living 
and unliving matter at a thought, could conjure creatures from his 
imagination...  he actually had very few limits. If he could envision it, 
he could cause it to happen. Possibility magick, his father had once called it. 
If the possibility could be considered, it could be enacted. At least magick 
was one thing he had the courage to stick with through everything.  
The young man allowed himself a wry smile at that thought, a smile that just 
as quickly faded.
 Here he was, in a 
land of frightening technology and strange customs, filled with the 
Humanae and their odd customs, and bereft of his most powerful magicks— 
even with the tome contained snugly in his pack. He sagged at the thought, 
feeling even more defenseless than he had just a few seconds ago.  
Father, if ever I find you, I will kill you for even mentioning this place to 
me.
 "Argo! How nice to see you 
again!"
 The young man whirled, a 
defensive spell at the forefront of his mind and his fingers curling into arcane 
gestures before he even remembered the futility of the pose. In the end, it was 
unlikely he would have even gotten a spell off; his tongue seemed to disconnect 
itself from his mind as he looked at the stunning piece of technology 
that smiled back at him.
 She— he 
could only assume it was a she based on a guess— was clad, head to toe, in a 
highly polished silvery metal. She had hair, but it was silver and metallic 
looking as well, as if it was covered, or contained within, that same silver 
sheath. She stood easily half a head taller than him, and despite the pleasant 
look on her face, there was a feeling of nondescript power about her that made 
him unconsciously stumble backward a step. She was beautiful, but in a way that 
was completely foreign to him and therefore frightened him all the more. She 
appeared to be a Humanae, but he wouldn’t have laid odds on 
it.
 "What’s the matter, Argo?" She 
asked, a hint of confusion coming to her pupil-less eyes. "You look as though 
you’ve seen a ghost!"
 He backed up 
another half step, dropped his knapsack. He reminded himself he was a magus, 
that he had seen wonders no man could ever claim to, that he had nothing to 
fear. He then called upon his entire force of will to respond.
 "Errrr…."
 The silver-woman looked across the room. "Someone help me here. I think 
something’s wrong with Argo."
 Recognition finally dawned as to what she called him. It was like an uppercut to 
follow the jab of her appearance. His jaw dropped. She thinks I’m— I’m 
him? Of course, there was bound to be some family resemblance, but 
even so…
 "I— I’m sorry, madam," he 
finally managed, eyeing her carefully, "but I believe you have me confused with 
someone else."
 "What? Argo, do you 
always kid like…" Her eyes slowly focused on him, searching. "Wait, you’re 
not Argo… but you bear a striking resemblance to him. Are you a different 
model?"
 "A different model?" He 
tried to get the context of the wording; it must have been some Humanae 
phrase. He remembered his father using that word in respect to a person who was 
fairly handsome, but that was mostly in reference to females, and usually was 
followed by how much he wished to turn them to stone. "Thank you, but no. Who 
are you?"
 "Sorry," she said, 
raising herself to full height. "I am Vengeance, a former human female who was 
chosen to become a nanitical polymorphic chromelike metallic android."
 He blinked at her, completely lost. The 
name evoked a couple dim memories, things that his father told him at one time 
or another, but he couldn’t place them. "A what?"
 "That’s just Venge. Think of her that way and it’s a 
lot easier."
 He finally managed to 
pull his gaze from the silvery female and to the speaker. He was almost sorry he 
did. Standing off to his left was a silver-haired, snickering demoness— replete 
with reddish skin, bat wings and a barbed tail— whose skintight clothes barely 
stretched over the taboo sections of her body. He wasn’t entirely sure, from 
looking at her, whether he should run or merely blush. But she smiled at him, 
extended a hand in what appeared to be a gesture of friendship. Again he was 
struck by a feeling that she was very beautiful, but in a way that he couldn’t 
quite begin to understand and could not quite relate to. A sort of standoffish 
beauty, for lack of a better word; Beauty unattainable by mere mortals.
 "I’m Silvera. A succubus. Hmmm… with the 
exception of the eyes, you do look a lot like Argo."
 He took the proffered hand, mentally preparing a 
spell of banishment in case the need should arise. He had no idea if he could 
banish a demon from this realm; in fact, he quite doubted he could— such a spell 
was fairly complex, even in Faerie. But he had a feeling that these beings 
wouldn’t harm him, and again, the name the succubus used sounded vaguely 
familiar.
 "I’m, uhm… sure there’s a 
reason for that," he hedged.
 She 
dropped one hand down to a hip, a look that was playful and sensual and at the 
same time hinted at a dominating nature. "And that would be?"
 He sighed, met her gaze evenly. "Because the 
Humanae I imagine you’re talking about is my father."
 He never noticed the third member of the trio until 
she placed a slender hand on his shoulder and turned him to face her. "Your 
what?" She demanded.
 "I said, 
‘I’m—’"
 His breath caught in his 
throat. A Humanae woman stood before him, a mane of reddish-orange hair 
cascading down past her waist, arms folded across her breasts as if to ensure he 
looked into her violet eyes. She needn’t have bothered; if he knew he was going 
to die, he would have asked for those eyes to be the last thing he ever saw. Her 
skin was tanned, smooth, flawless. She wore a red and white formfitting outfit 
that reflected the light from above and— although it was as strange to him than 
Vengeance’s silvery form— mesmerized him like a golden medallion. She was 
beautiful as well, but unlike the other two, this beauty he could relate to, at 
least by sight. This was human perfection, given form.
 "— your eternal servant," he finished fervently, or 
at least he would have sounded fervent if he could have raised his voice a step 
above a croak. His mouth seemed to have suddenly lost any moisture whatsoever; 
his tongue suddenly felt large and sluggish, unable even to say words in the 
rough and unmelodic Humanae language.
 She blinked at him, and slowly shook her head, a 
motion that caused her orange bangs to fall over one eye. "Time for that later. 
Did you say you were Argo’s son? Argo is your father?"
 The name boiled through his daydream-like 
haze, and he turned from her gaze, shrugged his arm away from her touch. His 
voice chilled noticeably as he responded. "Yes, to the small extent that he ever 
followed through with anything, he sired me. Don’t give it airs and make it 
sound as if we have a perfect family unity."
 She nodded, allowed it to sink in, then offered her 
slender hand to him. "I understand. What is your name?"
 He took it gratefully, his anger evaporating at the 
very idea of touching her. "Paris."
 She cocked her head cutely, smiled. "Paris Forgeuzev?"
 "No. Surnames are a Humanae invention. Among 
the Faerie, we only have one name."
 "Very well. My name is Nova-Phoenix, but you can call me Nova."
 "No…" he breathed. Nova? Oh, no, no, gods of 
Faerie and Earth, no! Paris blanched, squeezed his eyes shut. Damn you, 
father, are you fated to always find a way to intrude upon my life?
 "Paris?" Nova stared at him, her violet 
eyes wide with concern. "Are you all right?"
 "Fine," he lied. I’ve just found the woman of my 
dreams, and she happens to be the very same woman who my father told me he cared 
so much about? And an… android… at that? Wonderful. Quite possibly the 
most beautiful woman I’ve ever seen, completely made of metal… and me, a 
Faerie-kin who can be killed by the touch of cold iron. What sort of cruel joke 
is this? "I’ve… uhm, heard of you, that’s all. My father used to tell 
me about you."
 "About you all, 
actually," he amended, looking at Silvera and Vengeance, who were watching the 
conversation with interest. But his eyes strayed back to the flame-haired 
android. "That’s one reason I came here when I was sent out of Faerie. It seemed 
like a place I could belong, considering what he and I have in common."
 "That’s the second time you’ve mentioned 
Faerie," Silvera said as the three ushered him over toward a nearby divan. He 
sat down, not realizing how tired he was. "So is that where Argo is now?"
 "I really don’t know. Nor do I care," Paris 
grated.
 "But," Vengeance 
interrupted, taken aback for a moment as his glare swung to her. "I mean, he’s 
your father, isn’t he?"
 "He’s a 
Humanae who came into the Faerie realm and supposedly fell in love with 
my mother. He stayed with her for a time and then left with no word where he was 
going. I’ll never forgive him for that."
 Nova gave a small gasp, and as Paris looked at her, 
her eyes shimmered, liquid-like. Her voice sounded as though she was speaking 
from a great distance. "He… he fell in love? He just left us, and never came 
back here."
 Memories of the stories 
Argo had told him began to come back in waves, he tried to sift through and 
remember the ones he mentioned about Nova. There was always the unspoken 
insinuation that the two of them might have been lovers, and his stories about 
her always made Paris’ mother ill at ease, but through it all Paris had figured 
her just a good friend to him and vice-versa. Now, he could see there must have 
been something else there, and the very idea made his heart sink.
 "Are you all right, Nova?" He asked her, 
thinking perhaps he should just as soon ask himself.
 "I suppose." She didn’t sound altogether sure of it. 
"I should be used to it. Everyone I care about leaves me."
 He left her. Like he left Mother. Dear gods, she 
cares for him still? The thought was a momentary one, and for that moment, a 
small part of him was insanely jealous.
 "I won’t," he responded instantly, and he meant it. 
But immediately upon saying it, he realized how foolish it must have sounded, 
and colored fiercely.
 She smiled; 
her violet eyes softened with gratitude. Paris felt his color deepen further, if 
such a thing was possible. He already felt sure he was as red as ripe autumn 
apples.
 "So he left here, and ended 
up in Faerie?" A voice behind him asked thoughtfully.
 It took Paris a moment to kick his mind into motion, 
realize a question had even been raised. He blinked, realized his eyes hadn’t 
left Nova’s for some time.
 "What?" 
He asked, turning to Silvera, who voiced the question.
 "When he left here," Silvera commented, "he must have 
ended up in Faerie. Strange, he had been there before…"
 Vengeance nodded succinctly. "When he first tried to 
use that book."
 Paris opened his 
knapsack, pulled out the heavy leather tome he always carried with him, his only 
birthright. "The Tempora Arcanum," he said. "That’s right. It’s the same 
book he gave to me."
 Silvera looked 
at the leather-bound book, interested. "I remember that. He came back and was 
possessed by Auberon for a bit, too."
 Nova shook her head, clearly confused. "This makes no 
sense to me. Argo went to the land of Faerie and was possessed by Auberon? When 
did this happen?"
 Vengeance’s eyes 
flickered momentarily. "It was a while back, and everything happened in a 
relatively short time, Nova. I believe you were in your sanctuary, shut 
off."
 She accepted this as true, and 
turned back to Paris. "So what happened to him? I mean, when he went back to 
Faerie? Can you tell us?"
 "I… could, 
I suppose. But keep in mind that these are mostly second- and third-hand 
accounts, and with the time-differential in Faerie, we’re talking about over a 
couple hundred years of stories."
 "Just skip to the highlights," Silvera suggested.
 "The what?" Paris looked at her, an eyebrow 
raised.
 "The points of most 
significance," Vengeance offered helpfully.
 "Oh." Paris looked at Nova, who was regarding him 
intently. Ereselimon and E’li, but she is beautiful, came an unbidden 
thought, one he mentally chastised himself for even thinking. He reminded 
himself that she was only really interested in what happened to his 
father.
 He knew that he should in no 
way have felt envious of his father, but somehow that didn’t stop the feeling 
from surfacing. Paris had seen this sort of thing happen with his mother once 
Argo had left: the denial that he was truly gone, the grief that he wasn’t 
returning, the constant questions of where he could have gone. And then, rather 
than anger at his abrupt and ignoble departure, eventually she too had resigned 
herself to happy memories, just like Nova was apparently content to do. Paris 
felt himself get hot at the very idea that Argo could somehow twist people’s 
perceptions of him and think him a hero when he did nothing more than walk out 
on people and leave them with an absence where he had once been. And one, and 
most probably two, of them had been in love with him.
 He shook it off, looked down at the faded cover of 
the Tempora Arcanum, the one thing besides a void that Argo Veseyez 
Forgeuzev had ever left him. "Well, the story’s kind of muddled, because I’ve 
heard both sides of it, but this is how it started…"
 
  II.     Realms Apart 
 The 
world shattered into a portal of sheer white light, blinding even through his 
eyelids, the sound of it rushing past him was like a thousand waves crashing all 
at once in his ears, overlapping almost to the point of becoming nothing more 
than white noise.
 Argo Veseyez Forgeuzev screamed his lungs 
out.
 Not 
quite surprisingly, he couldn’t even hear his own voice over the tumult, nor 
could he control his flight. If there was one thing Argo had learned while using 
magick, it was that more often than not, he tended not to be in control. That 
was the case now, as he spiraled out of control along a hallway made completely 
of eldritch energy, careening toward the far end, where a doorway of 
multicolored light awaited, looming larger and larger, until…
 Colors exploded before his 
eyes as he crashed through the rainbow-hued doorway and landed face-first in 
cold water. The breath left his lungs in a whoosh, and he inhaled a noseful of 
water before he could push himself up to find himself in the middle of a clear 
stream. He flopped around for a moment, thrashing at the water, and finally 
found a foothold to allow him to stand up, coughing and sputtering. Luckily, the 
water was barely three feet deep and even in the heavy, sopping robes that he 
wore, he could still walk.
 "Well, that was unexpected," Argo murmured when he 
could finally talk. Looking around at the water, he came to the realization that 
the stream was nearly twenty feet wide, walled by thick trees on either side. He 
waded toward the shore and dragged himself onto the bank, then shook his head as 
he looked at his bedraggled clothes. Hooded woolen robes might have been nice 
for a magus’ appearance, he reflected as he wrung the water out of his own, but 
in water they were as much of a detriment as trying to swim while carrying a 
bowling ball. He was glad his knapsack— with his book of spells tucked inside— 
was safely waterproofed.
 Of course, he’d had no intention of winding up in the 
middle of a creek, either. How the devil had that happened, anyway? The 
last time he’d used the Tempora Arcanum to transport himself to Faerie, 
the spell had dropped him right into the palace in Avalon. Perhaps he had 
misread one of the sigils? That didn’t seem right. After all, from what the 
elven magi had taught him, a single misspoken syllable or misplaced accent would 
disrupt the spell, rendering it inert. No, if he had misread the spell, he would 
have more than likely still been standing in his room, poring over the 
Tempora again to figure out why he was still in his 
room.
 He 
pulled off the cassock and hood, and then his robe, and set them all in a neat 
pile at the roots of a great oak, sitting down next to them in his 
underclothes.
 He looked upwards, trying to find the sun, without 
success. Argo wasn’t particularly surprised. Ever since the accident in the ASFR 
room, which had fused the glass from a pair of aptly named "Medusa Shades" to 
his eyes, he had a hard time gauging light sources accurately. That was one of 
the few drawbacks of his onyx-colored eyes. He could see fine in remarkably 
bright light, and true to their name, the Medusa Shades had conferred the 
ability for him to will anyone who met his gaze to turn to stone. A body could 
have asked for worse fates, he figured. Of course, the last time he was in 
Faerie his eyes hadn’t much helped him. After being fairly unceremoniously 
dropped into the middle of Auberon’s Great Hall, his enhanced eyes had turned a 
number of courtiers into garden statuary, including two of Auberon’s daughters. 
Needless to say, the Faerie King had not been pleased, and after making sure 
that Argo had returned everyone to their normal state, he had forced the young 
man to remain in Faerie to receive strict tutoring for his magickal powers as a 
sort of punishment.
 Argo scowled. Judging by the amount of sunlight he 
could determine was making its way through the dense dome of leaves and branches 
above, however, he figured his clothes might dry out in about a week. At least 
by themselves. But then again, he was in Faerie, wasn’t he? He didn’t need to 
wait a week.
 He whispered an enchantment into the air, like blowing a soap bubble, to warm 
and dry himself and his clothes. The warm rush of magick coursed through his 
body, seeming to tingle every nerve as he felt its power wash over him. He’d 
forgotten how wonderful it was to cast magicks in Faerie; even for a simple 
spell like this one, the ecstasy he felt during the spellcrafting was unreal, 
almost like a heightened sense of sexual bliss. He felt as though every cell in 
his body was aglow with energy, like he could feel every hair on his body 
bristle with life. He saw through half-lidded eyes as a yellowish glow spread 
over his clothes, and instinctively knew the same glow was covering to his body 
as well. But it was over far too quickly. The magick slowly crept away from him, 
leaving him hollow, spent, and he sagged with release.
 He shook it off without much effort. 
Post-magickal lethargy was nothing new to him, since he’d been casting spells 
longer than many humans had been around. Plus, he was too excited to feel 
despondent for long. He was back in Faerie. He could feel it. As much as any 
place he had ever been, he felt as though he was home. There was a 
contentment there almost akin to what he had felt upon first finding the ASFR 
room. A feeling of belonging.
 He quirked a wan smile and picked up his robes. They 
were warm to the touch. Just like out of the dryer, he mused. He knew he would 
grow to miss amenities like washers and dryers, computers, and CD players while 
he was here, but what he gained from his time here— training in his magick, the 
beauty of undisturbed nature— was more than worth it.
 Argo’s ears perked at a sound in the 
distance. Splashing, further up the stream. He pulled his robes on quickly, 
shrugging the sound aside. He wondered if he should abandon good sense and 
venture in that direction; after all, if the splashing was indeed one of the 
Feyfolk, perhaps he could find out exactly where he was. He had a long-standing 
invitation to return to Avalon for further training in the magickal arts, but he 
wasn’t sure that invitation held true to everywhere in the realm of Faerie. Even 
in the Feylands, Auberon’s reach was only so long.
 Suddenly, from where the splashing 
had come from, a shriek pierced the air. Argo looked in that direction, found 
his vision cut off by the screen of trees, and cursed. It had been a shriek, 
almost definitely a feminine one, quite possibly an elven one. Argo was not in 
the habit of passing by a woman, human or elven, in danger.
 But in Faerie, especially 
if one didn’t know whether he was near Avalon or on the fringes of the Feylands, 
rushing out to save a supposed damsel in distress could very easily be fatal. 
There were creatures out there— drakes, wyrms, faernae, and other creatures most 
humans would deem ‘mythological’— which could laugh off the magicks of even the 
most powerful magus. Faerie was most definitely not a place for the timid of 
heart.
 But 
something— Argo would have liked to believe an innate sense of chivalry— 
wouldn’t let him just ignore that sound. He made his way along the bank of the 
stream, following along the trees. He felt the ground soften beneath his feet as 
he hurried along, and noticed that the trees were becoming more sparse, replaced 
in growth by tall reeds along the bank. The splashing was much nearer now, yet 
there had been no other screams. A few steps more. Even closer, perhaps behind 
the curtain of reeds.
 He parted the reeds and gazed upon the source of the 
splashing. His heart stopped beating.
 Three elven maidens were wading in the clear, 
thigh-deep water. Two smiled and frolicked, their lithe bodies blissfully nude, 
their light golden hair streaming behind them as they splashed the third. The 
third, whose damp hair was bound into a neat ponytail and was a little darker 
than the others’ golden curls— her hair was almost the color of honey— looked 
from her drenched frock dress to them with an expression that was less than 
appreciative.
 Sestrey’llania, they were called in their 
tongue— most others called them the High Elves, a phrase most often used 
sarcastically. Anyone who believed that the Feyfolk were basically the same all 
around had never been to Faerie. And anyone in Faerie who said something to that 
effect was either a first-time visitor, ignorant, or a half-wit. Humans, by and 
large, would take great offense to being told that there was no difference 
between nations, creeds, beliefs, or races, but wouldn’t think twice about 
calling all fey beings ‘elves’. Argo himself found this to be a bit strange, 
considering the obvious differences between the elven races as compared to human 
races, which were mostly differentiated by cultural distinctions and skin color. 
Compared to humans, fey beings were much more diverse. The Sestrey’llania, 
for instance, were almost humanlike in appearance, reputed to be the elves 
from which the line of Auberon himself came. By contrast, the Tatuni, or 
Little Wings, were smaller fey folk who looked like tiny humans with butterfly 
wings, who gave rise to human folk tales about spriggans and sprites. And that 
wasn’t counting all manner of Fey in between, from what the Humanae had 
come to know as dryads to sylphs to annis hags to brownies.
 Argo’s jaw nearly dropped 
to the water as the two golden-haired ones strayed nearer to the reeds. Their 
every move was graceful, even impeded by the water, and although they were doing 
little more than splashing the third, they moved like dancers. Watching their 
lithe, nude bodies, their exotically bare pubis, Argo felt himself get excited 
even as he blushed.
 The third chastised the other two in the 
Sestrey’llania tongue. "Sisters! You two are in so much 
trouble."
 "Did you see her squeal, Failina?" One of the golden haired ones asked the 
other, apparently ignoring the third.
 Failina laughed in response. "And how she did! Like a 
frightened fox! Auerenelle, if you could have seen yourself jump!"
 "We are supposed to draw 
water for your father," the one named Auerenelle remarked, looking askance at a 
discarded bucket on the opposite bank, where two dresses not too dissimilar from 
Auerenelle’s also lay. "But you and Kaylia seem to think this is some sort of 
cause for tomfoolery, and then dump water all over me."
 That was it then, he realized 
hazily. The sisters had dumped water on the one named Auerenelle and she had 
shrieked. He decided he should probably slink back into the woods and find 
someone else to tell him where he was. But he couldn’t. He was transfixed, 
staring at the three elf-women with wide, unblinking eyes. If he’d had pen and 
paper, he could have written volumes about the way the sunlight played off 
Failina’s bared shoulders, or the way Auerenelle’s wet dress clung to her 
slender hips. He could have spent the rest of his life describing the way 
Kaylia’s golden hair cascaded down her back, or the poetic grace with which the 
two sisters moved in the water.
 Humans tend to speak blithely of beauty as it relates 
to them, without really understanding that for the most part, beauty is 
subjective. There was no subjectivity in the beauty Argo saw before him, 
however. Faerie beauty is an empyreal thing; it is innocence and sensuality, 
youthfulness and timelessness, undeniable allure in form and unattainable grace 
in movement. In short, it is human perfection in a non-human cast. And that was 
why Argo could not force himself to move or even to look away. No music could 
match the harmony he heard when he heard their voices, no picture could hope to 
compete with the visual perfection he saw.
 "Come on, sister. The day is warm, 
and father surely wouldn’t mind us enjoying the water while we’re here. You 
worry too much." Kaylia looked at Auerenelle, laughed brightly. Her voice was 
melodic.
 "So 
true," Failina said, making her way around the sisters and grinning at 
Auerenelle. "It’s a wonder your face doesn’t crack; you’re always so 
serious."
 Failina brushed up against the reeds within a step of Argo, and he could only 
gape at her in awe and longing. Sestrey’llania, like most Faerie-kin, had 
an undeniable aura of seductiveness, and their power over humans was well known. 
Argo knew it; he had spent quite some time in Avalon among the 
Sestrey’llania when he had first come to Faerie. There he had quickly 
learned the power that the exotic beauty of the Sestrey’llania had over 
mere mortals, learned how to steel himself against it. But even as he reminded 
himself of that, even as he knew he needed to at least make it less 
obvious he was watching them, he couldn’t bring himself to tear his eyes away 
from the trio.
 That turned out to be his downfall. Kaylia, who had 
been watching Failina, suddenly noticed the movement of the reeds to her side 
and the onyx eyes peering out. She shrieked, pointed.
 Failina turned and gasped, backing 
up a step as Kaylia’s scream finally registered to Argo. He stumbled to his 
feet, holding out a palm to Failina. "Wait… I mean, I…"
 "A Humanae!" Auerenelle 
breathed. "What right have you to be here?"
 "I…" Argo stammered, unable to take 
his eyes from Failina, a few feet away from him. She blushed, attempted to cover 
both her breasts and pubis in some semblance of modesty, and watched him with 
wide, luminous blue eyes. Her pose only further fanned his desire and the 
thought came unbidden to him: How beautiful she is… I would pay good money to 
see her—
 He stopped as he felt a reaction stir in his groin at the very thought. It was 
then he realized there was another reaction occurring at that thought, one that 
was no less embarrassing, but even more unexpected. A tingling started in his 
eyes, like a pins-and-needles feeling, and grew in intensity. He gasped 
inwardly, thought, What the hell? He was afraid he knew what was 
happening, and yet even then he still couldn’t pull his eyes away from 
her.
 His 
worst fears— and most ardent desires— were confirmed as her exotically shaped 
eyes widened further. The look on her face was a mixture of fear and 
incomprehension. Argo could see her attempt to budge her feet, even turn and 
flee, to no avail.
 "What…" She said, obviously making great effort even 
to speak, "what are you… doing to… me?"
 That last word stretched out as her voice raised in 
pitch to that of a scream, and they died away suddenly. Her lips froze in that 
surprised and horrified curl, draining of color even as the last echoes of her 
voice faded. Her slim body made one last reflexive quiver and locked into place, 
hands still clasped over her stark form in ladylike mortification, legs 
suspended in a last aborted half-step away from him. Her skin was already paling 
from its creamy tone to a still whiter color, and her golden locks were fading 
to the same hue.
 "Failina!" Auerenelle screamed, but it was too late. 
Failina turned chalky white, her hair hardened into a solid alabaster-like mass. 
Greyish streaks and off-white imperfections appeared on her flawless body; a 
minute crack trailed along the underside of one pert breast, another curled 
around one slender calf. Her pupils drained of color and became lost in the 
whites of her eyes. Within a few moments that seem to crawl on forever before 
him, Argo watched as the young elfwoman changed completely from flesh and blood 
to pristine white marble. The tingling left his eyes; he stared at the stony 
maiden, awestruck.
 She stood there, picturesque, in a pose of eternal 
beauty and eternal tragedy, and if the situation wasn’t so utterly unexpected, 
Argo would have found himself hard-pressed not to fall to his knees and just 
worship her sculptured form. As it was, other things were on his 
mind.
 "I— I 
didn’t mean—" he gasped, finding himself caught between being appalled and 
intensely aroused by the turn of events.
 He looked to where the other two 
elven women stood in the water. The one called Auerenelle stood protectively in 
front of Kaylia, who peeked from behind her sister’s dress, gazing at the her 
sister’s statue in disbelief. Auerenelle was speaking to him, her head bowed 
slightly, honey-colored hair dipping down in front of her eyes. She was speaking 
softly; he couldn’t make out the words, couldn’t understand the language. He 
stepped forward into the water, making his way past the statue of Failina, 
toward the other two.
 "It was a mistake," he explained, cursing himself for 
not remembering better how to speak the Sestrey’llania language. His 
tongue felt large and cumbersome. "My eyes have this strange power and 
somehow—"
 He 
stopped as Auerenelle’s melodic voice resonated, the words a stream of 
gibberish. She raised a hand before her face; he saw it begin to arc with 
blue-white sparks. Her eyes glowed with the same sort of eldritch power. Arcane 
power, he realized with a start, just as she pointed at him and spoke the final 
words of the spell. Her finger glowed dazzlingly white and a bolt of blue-white 
energy erupted forth, careening through the air as though bouncing through an 
invisible tunnel as it plowed headlong for him.
 "Christ!" He swore, then called 
forth a spell of his own. He had barely finished when the arcing blast of energy 
struck, flashing as it hit the magickal shield he had just called into existence 
around himself before it forked sharply off and exploded. The very force of the 
impact still threw him back a step, however, and he slipped and fell backwards, 
cracking his head on Failina’s unmoving and very solid marble derrière. He 
floundered in the water before he could find his feet again.
 "Shitshitshitshitshitshit." Argo raised his head from the water and 
grimaced as rubbed at the knot. It was Avalon all over again; only this time he 
had the feeling he’d angered someone with a lot less self-control than Auberon. 
"Someday I’m gonna have to learn to quit doing 
that."
 He looked up muzzily at the elfwomen just in time to see Auerenelle chanting and 
gesturing again. Tongues of magickal flame danced across the water toward him at 
her behest, licked at him as they surrounded him. The shield around him sparked 
and sputtered, beginning to crack. He could feel the heat through his wet 
robes.
 Argo 
fought to maintain control, both of the shield and of the mental calmness 
necessary to cast his magicks. The spell of shielding had been a reflexive 
action, something he’d learned to do with almost no preparation only after years 
of studying magick. But his head was throbbing, and it had been years since he 
fought any sort of magickal duel— let alone one where he was not intending to 
harm his adversary. Spells and arcane formulae tugged at the corners of his 
memory, but they stubbornly slipped out of his grasp as he tried to call them to 
the forefront of his mind.
 "Damn it, I don’t want to fight you!" He yelled, 
feeling the shield crumble under her magick. She showed no signs of relenting, 
or even hearing. He cursed, closed his eyes. Find the center of calm, let the 
possibilities enact themselves, he told himself. He was one of the few he’d 
ever known who could use one of the most unexplored and potentially powerful of 
magicks, the magick of possibility. If he could force himself to envision a 
possibility and then force his will to enact it, he could bend reality to suit 
the possibility he’d envisioned. But accessing such powerful magick was not at 
all easy, even under normal circumstances, and this surely didn’t qualify as 
normal.
 He 
closed his mind to the outside world and forced himself to forget the pain in 
his head, the fire, the statue of Failina, the elfwomen and his buckling shield. 
He sought the blackness below his surface thoughts and focused on expanding that 
blackness until it was all encompassing. Possiblities began to unfold before his 
mind’s eye, each one involving a minute change in reality. He searched for a 
fairly simple one. There was a possibility there in the blackness; he could see 
it— a possibility that the flames were no longer there. Without hesitation, he 
grasped at it.
 He opened his eyes slowly. The fire surrounding him 
extinguished itself as if it were never there.
 Auerenelle gasped, blinking as if 
she couldn’t believe such a thing was possible. Argo himself was stunned at the 
relative ease of the casting, but he recovered faster and rushed to close the 
distance between him and the elfwoman.
 Behind her, Kaylia screamed, shaking her from her 
astonishment. Auerenelle began to cast again, stretching her arms out before her 
and splaying her fingers in another arcane gesture. She rapidly chanted off the 
final few syllables, her voice rising and falling on the appropriate syllables, 
and recited her way through the coda while Argo was still a couple short steps 
away.
 Argo 
saw the telltale glow emanate from one of the elfwoman’s outstretched hands and 
did the only thing he could think to do. He leapt to her and, in one swift 
movement, grasped her wrist and pushed it upward.
 She gasped as her spell discharged; 
bolts of lightning crackled from her fingertips and veered harmlessly skyward, 
far away from her intended target. Her eyes narrowed at him, he could tell she 
was seething. Her lips thinned.
 "Do you have the same thing planned for us, monster?" 
She asked through clenched teeth, her tone one of cold contempt.
 Argo looked at her for a 
moment in bewilderment, then slowly shook his head. "If you would listen to me 
for a moment, I’m sure I won’t. What happened there was a mistake. I heard your 
scream and came here, thinking there was something wrong. When your sister made 
eye contact with me, well… my eyes have magickal properties that I sometimes 
forget about. Now, if I can have your word you won’t try to cast a spell on me, 
I’ll let your hand go and I’ll change her back, no problem. Then we can both be 
on our merry way and forget this ever happened, all right?"
 The light in her 
blue-green eyes flickered, almost imperceptibly. Her hand twitched in his grasp, 
testing his hold on her. He held her fast as she glared at him, tried to forget 
the warmth of her skin and her natural, woodsy smell.
 "All right. I agree," she 
grated.
 He 
gauged the fire in her eyes, shook his head again. "Not yet. Give me the Oath of 
the Worldtree that you won’t seek to harm me."
 The heavy lashes flew up, he heard 
her sharp intake of breath. Probably thought he was just another stupid 
Humanae. Not many humans knew of the Sestrey’llania’s most sacred 
oath.
 "Very 
well," she said, sounding stunned. "I swear by the Worldtree, by the very 
connection between Faerie and Earth, that I shall not harm you as you restore my 
sister. May the Worldtree steal my life back into its branches if I am 
lying."
 Argo 
nodded and turned back toward the marble statue that was Failina. She pressed. 
"How do you know about the oath of the Worldtree?"
 "I’ve spent eighty years 
in Faerie," he said matter-of-factly. "Hard to stay here that long and not learn 
something."
 "Eighty—?" She stopped, stared, then touched a 
slender finger to her lips, considering. "Argo Veseyez Forgeuzev?"
 He nodded, placed his 
hands on Failina’s shoulders and closed his eyes. "I take it not many humans 
stay around Faerie for eighty years?"
 "And have eyes blacker than midnight, capable of 
turning most of Auberon’s court to stone. Forgive me, in the heat of the moment, 
I’d forgotten about the tales… But you have been gone for so long, I’d thought 
them merely fanciful stories."
 He shrugged. "I went back to the Humanae 
realm. The Earth realm. Time goes along a different speed, follows a different 
master, there. What is a year here is… is about the span of a breath there. A 
year there may be a lifetime here, even for the fey-children. I returned only 
moments before I found you."
 She paused, digesting that, and he began to find the 
center of calm, prepared to cast his magick. Then she interjected again. "One 
last thing. That was no counterspell… How did you disrupt my fire 
magick?"
 Argo opened his eyes and smirked at Auerenelle, somewhat surprised— and, 
truthfully, a bit embarrassed— to find his smile returned.
 "Quantum Physics," he 
quipped.
 
  III.     An 
Offer 
 "Careful, now," Argo said, steadying 
Falina as the transformation reversed itself, and her skin began to flush with 
color. Her lips lost the stony white tint, the miniscule cracks along her cheek 
reformed, healed and became flawless white skin again. She gasped, first as 
breath returned to her, then again as she realized he had a hold of her bare 
shoulders. And the recollection that her shoulders weren’t the only spot on her 
body that was bare.
 "You—" she began, blushing. It was a remarkable 
contrast to the alabaster she had been just a moment before.
 "Me." He released her 
shoulders immediately and forced himself to look away. Merely seeing an 
elfmaiden at such close quarters was intoxicating; touching her nearly made his 
heart forget how to beat. "I apologize for that. You know how we humans can’t 
keep our base thoughts to ourselves. Are you all right?"
 "I... I think so," she said, quite 
unsure from the sound of her voice. "What happened?"
 "I’m sure your sisters can 
fill you in. I should be going." Before I do anything else I would be sorry 
for.
 He 
turned away, allowing the two sisters decency as they splashed to the other bank 
of the creek to retrieve their clothes. He saw his own backpack on the nearer 
shore, past the reeds, and started for it.
 "Wait. Please." The silken voice 
stopped him. He felt a hand on his shoulder, turned to find Auerenelle staring 
at him with those exotically-shaped, wide, blue-green eyes. A curl of 
honey-colored hair dropped in front of her eyes, she brushed it away gracefully, 
and again Argo could not help but marvel at her beauty. He blinked and quickly 
dropped his gaze his shoetops before he could start the whole petrifying 
scenario again.
 "This may well be forward of me, Master Forgeuzev," 
she continued in the cultured Sestrey’llania tongue, "but I wonder if I 
might prevail upon you for a favor."
 "A… favor." He rolled the word of his tongue 
smoothly, but it was a human sort of smoothness, doubtlessly he still sounded 
clumsy and barbaric to the Sestrey’llania. "What sort of favor do you 
have in mind?"
 Auerenelle suddenly seemed to fight to phrase words; 
she bit her lower lip like an eighth grade girl with a crush. "You… have just 
returned to Faerie… have you yet made arrangements to stay in the Hall of the 
Magi? Does Auberon know of your coming?"
 Argo shrugged again. "I had an open 
invitation, is all. I was told that I could return and continue my studies 
whenever I found time. I hadn’t really made arrangements for where to stay or 
anything like that."
 "That being the case, then… may I propose an offer to 
you?" She looked very vulnerable at that point. It seemed her bashfulness was 
increasing from the moment he shrugged. "I have a home of my own… not far from 
here, a small place… As you’ve seen, I myself know… quite a bit, actually… about 
the art of magick in Faerie. I would be honored to help you continue your 
studies."
 Argo stopped, floored, and raised an eyebrow at her. "Say 
what?"
 She flushed, and could not meet his gaze. She began 
toying with her hands, as if she couldn’t figure out exactly where to keep them. 
"I would be willing to offer what I do know... if you would teach me a little 
about this... ‘quantum physics.’ If you haven’t any prior plans, I 
mean."
 Argo 
cleared his throat "I... uhm... no I haven’t planned anything priorly... er, 
made any prior plans... but... jeez... that would be compromising to you. I 
really appreciate the offer, but—"
 She shook her head emphatically, interrupting. "No, 
really, it’s not compromising. Not at all."
 "But wouldn’t it be a bit... ah... 
disconcerting to have a Humanae staying in your very 
house?"
 "You 
are Argo Veseyez Forgeuzev; you’ve stayed in the Halls of Auberon. If he is good 
enough to have a Humanae within the walls of his home, I suppose I can... 
demean myself." She smiled; the words were spoken with a playful tone that made 
it impossible for him to take offense.
 Argo considered. The thought was actually intriguing. 
If she was half the magus she claimed to be, she could easily teach him how to 
better himself in casting the longer, more formulaic Faerie magicks. And 
although he really wasn’t quite advanced enough to be considered a qualified 
teacher of possibility magick, the basics of it were simple enough for most 
people to grasp. Then, too, the idea of learning from an attractive elfwoman in 
the natural surroundings of the fields and trees was infinitely more desirable 
than sitting in a large hall surrounded by musty books and lorded over by a 
didactic elder magus who was probably just waiting for the stupid 
Humanae to make his first blunder. Looking at it that way, there really 
wasn’t a whole lot of choice to the matter, not as far as Argo was 
concerned.
 He rubbed at his goatee, relaxed into a smile. "M’lady, you have yourself a 
deal."
 
 IV.    An Ending, A Beginning... 
     The wine glass was just about empty. 
Paris smiled wanly as he set the crystal 
goblet down on the nearby foot-table. That story was one his father had told him 
often, and even if he didn’t much care for his father, the story was one Paris 
was sure he’d never tire of telling.
 Nova’s violet eyes softened, crinkling around the edges. Her smile was bright, 
warm. "You’re right, Paris. That was so..."
 "Contrived?" Silvera ventured.
 Vengeance giggled, her silvery curves reflecting 
macabre images of Paris’ angular face back at him. He flushed.
 Nova saw Paris redden, reached out a hand to touch 
his. "No, I was going to say, that was so... so much like him. Going into 
a situation half-cocked, unaware of what he might have been walking 
into..."
 "...usually causing more 
trouble once he actually got into the situation..." Vengeance supplied 
helpfully.
 Nova nodded morosely, 
withdrawing her hand back to her lap.
 The four fell quiet, lost to introspection for a few 
moments. Paris let his gaze fall on the wine glass, watched the light refract 
and reflect from the sheer surface. He closed his eyes, slowly felt the warmth 
fade from his hand where she had touched him. He shook his head, wishing to 
forget the feeling of her touch but at the same time longing to feel it 
again.
 Vengeance broke the silence. 
"Well, as much as I’d like to stay, I have other things I must attend to. Nice 
to meet you, Paris. See you all later."
 With that, she leaned over and kissed each of them in 
turn, starting with Paris. He felt an almost electric sensation jolt through his 
body as her lips touched his, a surge of pleasure that made every hair on his 
body stand on end. He could only gasp and nod as she made her way to the other 
two, kissing them as well. She then waved her hand demonstratively and seemingly 
called a portal of bright white light into being. The vortex before her swirled 
and flowed and crackled around the edges, like a distraught stormcloud, and 
then, as she stepped inside, it vanished. Just like that, she was gone.
 "Venge has the right idea, I think," 
Silvera commented, and then, at Paris’ wide-eyed glance, "Don’t worry, Paris. I 
don’t give electric kisses."
 He 
exhaled noticeably.
 "I bite necks," 
she smirked.
 It wasn’t until Nova 
began to giggle that he realized she was just kidding him. He joined, 
uncomfortably, in the laughter.
 "I’m 
off to bed. Goodnight, Nova, Paris. See you soon."
 She waved to them, and then, in a puff of smoke that 
smelled vaguely of brimstone, she too disappeared.
 Paris inclined his head toward Nova, surprised to 
find himself fighting back a yawn himself. He covered it by picking up the 
goblet and holding it to his lips. "And you?"
 She brushed a strand of flame-red hair from her eyes. 
"I hardly ever need to ‘power myself down,’ so to speak, in the manner people do 
when they sleep. I do recharge every so often, but I am not in need of it at 
this time."
 He nodded, drank the 
last swallow of wine in the glass.
 She blinked once, looked back at him. "Or are you just trying to get me into 
bed?"
 Paris sputtered, coughed. 
Droplets of the burgundy trickled from his nose like a theatrical nosebleed. 
"What? " He finally croaked when he could finally talk.
 She watched his reaction with interest, frowned 
prettily. "I believe your reaction would indicate I have told another joke 
badly. Perhaps I misinterpreted the correct inflection."
 Paris stared.
 "Or are you just trying to get me into 
bed?"
 "Uhm... Nova?"
 "Or are you just trying to get me 
into bed?"
 "...No, I mean—"
 "Or are you just trying to get me into 
bed?"
 "—the inflection was 
fine, just—"
 "Or are you just trying 
to get me into bed?"
 Paris 
leaned over and clapped a hand over her mouth, watched her eyes go wide. 
"Really, it’s fine. I was just unprepared, that’s all."
 He uncovered her mouth. Her eyes narrowed 
slightly.
 "The human ideal of humor 
is obviously a concept I need to study in much more detail."
 "I wouldn’t argue that," he remarked.
 "And please don’t do that again. If I 
hadn’t overridden my default programming, I very likely would have broken your 
hand in twelve places."
 Paris 
carefully pulled his hands away from her, set them on his lap and crossed them. 
"I... understand. I’m sorry."
 "It’s 
all right, this once. So, you cast magicks, like Argo?"
 "Hmm?" He followed her change of topics slowly, and 
was embarrassed to find himself fight back another yawn.
 "Never mind," she smiled. "You’ve had a long trip, 
haven’t you?"
 "Kind of long," he 
conceded, nodding tiredly.
 "Here. 
Rest yourself," she said, scooting next to him on the couch and beginning to 
massage his shoulders.
 At first, 
Paris nearly resisted; the last thing he wanted was her touch, setting his skin 
on fire and making him long to touch her in return. But in the end, he was too 
slow and far too fatigued to do much to stop her.
 But now her touch was not incendiary, only soothing. 
Her hands were delicate yet firm, and tension that Paris hadn’t even realized 
he’d had began to ebb from him as she kneaded. The tiredness from casting the 
spell which brought him across dimensions to here began to take hold of him and 
stubbornly refused to let go. That combined with the post-adrenal lethargy after 
first meeting some of the occupants of this ASFR room and the ministrating touch 
of the flame-haired android sapped his will to resist. His head almost 
immediately began to loll.
 "D’nwanna… fall’sleep," he murmured, shaking his head weakly. "Needafyna… 
placet’stay."
 "Shhh," Nova 
whispered. "You can stay here for the night. A lot of people do."
 She gently pulled him toward her, rested 
his head in her lap. He didn’t resist her at all. She sat there quietly, softly 
humming an unfamiliar— yet soothing— tune, and running a gentle finger along the 
sleeve of his tunic.
 Paris peeked 
one eye open and looked up at her, awash in wonder as his conscious mind began 
to stray toward rest. She smiled at him, perfect white teeth beneath slender 
upturned lips. Strands of fiery red hair dropping down to mask her soft violet 
eyes. Skin so flawless it might have been elven. He made a mental portait from 
the vision, closed his eyes.
 And 
then Paris drifted off to sleep. And somewhere, in his dreams, she was there as 
well, running through the fields of Faerie in billowing white linen, calling him 
along, red-orange hair streaming behind her.
 Nova looked down at the young elf-man and saw he had 
fallen asleep. She let the hand drop from his shoulder, and touched his cheek 
lightly. There were a lot of similarities there, between him and his father. She 
could see Argo’s jawline, the way his eyes crinkled when he smiled. She could 
almost envision Paris with the same mustache and goatee Argo wore, even though 
if what she heard about faerie-kin was true, he would never be able to grow 
one.
 She sighed, inwardly. A lot of 
this felt familiar. She had been here when Argo Veseyez Forgeuzev first walked 
into the ASFR room, finding a strange agglomeration of robot and statue lovers, 
a place far different from anywhere he had ever been. She had helped him become 
more comfortable with everyone, tried to make him feel like he had a home here. 
And now, here she was with his son, in the very same position. She wondered if 
this would be what humans would consider a ‘sign.’
 But she shrugged the thought off, and decided to 
power herself down into standby mode. Her face slackened as she shunted the 
proper command through to her neural pathways, and waited a few nanoseconds as 
the command was processed and carried out. Her eyes lost their focus and stared 
blankly ahead, and her motions stopped completely. She remained there the rest 
of the night, waiting for input from an outside source to return her from the 
standby state. And on her lap, Paris rested his head, fast asleep, his lips 
curling into the barest of smiles.
 
  V.     
Epilogue ***
 Somewhere else…
 Blackness surrounded him, taunted at him, tried to 
invade him and chill him to the very core of his being. But he fought at it, 
straining toward the single pinprick of light he saw off in the distance. He 
chanted a few words to himself, a mantra, and sped onward toward it. The light 
grew as he neared it, getting brighter and brighter as he flew toward it. It was 
now as bright as a matchstick. Now a candle. A lantern. A bonfire. The 
sun…
 He screamed, and as he did 
the light enveloped him, drawing him in like a lover. It burned his eyes away, 
sheared through his skin. He had a mental image of himself passing through the 
Hand of God, and then he hit the floor hard, sprawling. The breath exploded from 
his lungs, he gasped as though he’d just run forever.
 He stood up slowly, shaking the haze from his head. 
Where am I? A pert young woman with bleached blond hair and dark roots 
looked up at his arrival and made her way toward him. Next to him, a woman with 
auburn hair posed with her hand out seductively and didn’t move at all. He 
peered more intently at her and saw the telltale reflection from her skin, the 
sheen of light off plastic. Not a real person, then. A mannequin. And around 
him, racks of clothes with signs and prices nearby. He looked at the tiles on 
the floor. Linoleum. Memories flooded back. A store, probably a department 
store.
 The shock hit him shortly 
after the realization did. I came here? Oh, bloody fucking wonderful. 
Of all the places is the known and unknown universe, of all dimensions, I lead 
Fithnaheyin here?!? Fucking brilliant. Maybe next time I should do 
something really intelligent while I’m at it, like teleport myself into a 
nuclear reactor.
 The imitation 
blonde rounded a rack of finery and put on a smile almost as obviously fake as 
her hair color. He saw now she was dressed in a short skirt, had a business-like 
blouse on with a nametag pinned to the breast. She couldn’t keep the disdain 
from her voice as she asked, "Can I help you or something, sir?"
 He tensed, feeling the air around him. It 
was thick, like muggy air before a summer storm. He looked at his arms, saw the 
hair beginning to move. Soon they would be standing on end. And then…
 He didn’t want to even think about what 
would happen ‘And then’.
 He whirled 
on the clerk, reached out, grabbed her shoulders. The young woman gasped, 
looking at him as if he’d grown a third eye. He didn’t have time to discuss 
things rationally with her, though.
 "Yes, you can help me. You can get the hell out of here. Leave, now, get as far 
as you can from this place. Because… if it followed me, it’ll be here 
shortly, and the only safe place is out of its path. Do you understand… Renee?" 
He looked up from the nametag into her wide eyes.
 She nodded wordlessly, gazing at him in abject 
horror.
 "Go." He let her go, watched 
as she scrambled back toward the cash register, then rushed around it, out of 
sight. Moments later, her voice erupted from the loudspeaker near him, still 
with the timbre of someone who had been frightened out of their mind.
 "We need secirity to lingerie immediately! 
Security to lingerie immediately!"
 "Christ," the man said in disgust. "I don’t have time for this."
 He began to talk to himself, mumbling a 
stream of words beneath his breath, caressing each syllable with his lips. A 
soft glow began to surround him.
 "All right, you," said a middle-aged, balding man as he came within sight. The 
man wore a bright blue collared shirt that had a shield-shaped patch with the 
legend Jennings Security running across it.
 "I think you’ve done enough here. Maybe you ought 
to—"
 The man glared at him with eyes 
blacker than midnight, finished calmly. "Sheh’henauwilamen." Then, with a 
small crackling sound and an odor of rose petals, he disappeared.
 "—leave." The balding guard blinked, then 
shook his head. "Can’t believe one actually listened."
     Renee Kellerman was having a day from 
hell. ***It had started that morning, 
when she had gotten a call from her boss telling her that idiot Janie had called 
off again for work, and that she was needed to come in and work the 
midmorning shift on her day off. Then she’d found four displays hadn’t been 
arranged the night before and had been forced to pull out another six boxes of 
lingerie to replace the display items. And then, she had to call security 
on some deranged lunatic who grabbed her and started talking 
nonsense. He probably had some sort of panty fetish, too.
 She sighed. Seven-fifty an hour wasn’t 
worth this.
 She pulled at the front 
of her blouse. And now, was the AC screwed up, too? Why was it so unbearably 
hot in here? Renee’s eyes flitted over to where she had first seen the 
crazy guy earlier today and she shivered. The image of that man was still fresh 
in her mind, but there was something particularly unsettling about him. About 
his eyes. She could have sworn they had been jet black, with no pupils at all, 
like sunglasses.
 Probably a trick of 
the light, she thought. After all, it certainly was dark over that 
directio…
 She stared. For a moment, 
it looked as though the darkness was coming together, coalescing, like a cloud. 
But that was impossible. Patently impossible.
 It was also patently impossible that the darkness 
should be forming white eyes within it and gazing at her, but it was doing that, 
as well. Renee stared at the formless darkness, transfixed.
 You will do. The words came from nowhere and 
everywhere; they seemed to imprint directly into her mind.
 "I will what?" She asked silently, then 
called, "Who’s there?"
 The darkness 
began to move toward her, gaining form as it did. It reformed itself into a 
vaguely human shape, with no visible features other than its white eyes. The 
rest of its body was a translucent inky black, with constantly moving streaks 
and threads of darker black running through it.
 Where is he? Where is the Possibility 
Magus?
 Renee flinched at the 
force of the voice in her head. "I don’t know what you mean," she 
started.
 You have seen him. I can 
see that in your mind’s eyes. Where did he—
 The dark man stopped, sensing.
 I have him. I can taste the trail of magick, foolish 
Magus. How often you forget that. He looked at Renee, 
inasmuch as he actually turned his head to encompass her general area. I have 
no more use for you.
 Renee was 
about to ask what he meant, and suddenly stopped, stock-still. Her eyes glazed 
over, her limbs locked, one hand in the middle of raising to gesture. A sheen 
covered her entire body as her skin hardened and became glossy.
 I come for you, Argo Veseyez Forgeuzev. 
And this battleground shall be our last.
 With that, the darkness dissipated, following its 
prey into the ethers of magickal transport.
     Left behind, standing behind her counter in 
a pose that would never again change, was Renee Kellerman. Twenty minutes later, 
Renee’s co-workers found her standing there, and wondered where Renee went. They 
also wondered why a mannequin was situated behind the cash register instead of 
in the display window, and why that mannequin was wearing Renee’s clothes. 
Anyone who could look past what humans know as reality could have figured out 
what happened to her quite easily, but as it was, most humans tend to err to the 
side of the scientific rather than the magickal. ***It was decided Renee had stolen a set of clothes from 
the store and made off with them. As for the mannequin, Renee had likely found 
one that looked similar to her and used it to allay suspicion until she could 
make good her escape. It sounded like a plausible story, and everyone concerned 
accepted it without argument.
 Meanwhile, the only person in the store who could have told them what really 
happened took a new position in the display window, modeling this year’s newest 
one-piece swimsuit.
     Somewhere else… To Be 
Continued...It is said there are unseen barriers separating the 
various planes of existence. Ordinarily, these barriers hold one plane’s reality 
in, keep it from leaking into the others and corrupting the natural order of 
each plane. But in one barrier, a minute crack began to appear, and a small 
dribble of reality leaked out, like a can filled with water, with a tiny pinhole 
in its side. The small dribble became a slow but steady drip, then a trickle. 
And around the trickle, possibilities began to assert themselves.
 Archivist's Note: The small print size, as referred to in the intro, made the story a bit hard to read when the page was displayed full-width on wider screens. My solution, for what it's worth, was to place the entire text inside an 800-pixel-wide table. I think it works adequately enough. --Leem, 2012 |