《A Witchstone Cursed (A Dark Portal Fantasy)》Chapter 46
Advertisement
The familiar portal was how I'd planned to steal Geist's witchstones.
I’d planned to have Silvy open one between his shop and my apartment. Then we could just throw witchstones through the hole and they would end up back at my place in Nightsbridge. Not the most elegant plan, but it would’ve worked.
Now I was using the familiar portal to save myself. I was using it to send all of us to a place where the Covington blood would ensure that I survived.
I wasn't exactly sure what was going to happen to the other two though.
As we fell through the portal, I immediately realized we were in a different part of the Shadow Vaile than I’d previously seen, or maybe it was the same part, but with light.
Does the Shadow Vaile have sunrises and sunsets?
There was a dim, green glow that bathed every surface, but I couldn't tell where the source of light was. Geist slowed in his descent and then simply floated in the air. Farther away from both of us, Flin was spinning in circles, screaming, gurgling for help.
“Son,” Geist called out across the abyss that separated them. “Stay calm. We have to keep our heads about us.”
“That's going to be near impossible,” Silvy said, still tiny as she floated up between Geist and me. “How do you expect to keep your own head, when I can't keep mine?”
Her head separated from her body like a real-life version of the Cheshire Cat.
Floating away, her head spun loop-the-loops around Geist's own. He swatted at her but never got close. Her head floated back to her body and reattached itself.
Silvy lazed on her back and swam away, moving closer towards Flin. I squinted my eyes, noticing I could make out several strange shapes below us. I could only see a few at first, but gradually these few turned into many and went for as far as the eye could see.
Below us was an infinite sea of obelisks that would’ve put the Washington monument to shame. Looking down at them, seeing all their black spires pointed up at us, I saw a wave ripple through them. In one section, they lifted up and then relaxed back down as though there was something breathing underneath, almost as if the obelisk landscape was the skin of some giant beast.
Flin floated down towards the obelisks, screaming still, but continuing to spin. His spin slowed and then he was looking back at Geist and me, a look of sheer terror plain on his face.
Silvy's voice spoke into my ear as if she was right next to me as opposed to where she actually was, slowly orbiting Flin's sinking body. I glanced over at Geist and could see that he’d heard her voice as well.
“He should be screaming so much more right now,” she purred.
Flin shook his head and his words came out mostly garbled, but still understandable.
“No. Please. Please don't.”
Advertisement
Flin drifted closer to the obelisks. Only four feet away now.
What’s going to happen?
Silvy paused in her orbit around his body for just a second to ask in return, “Please don't what?”
Two feet.
Flin opened his mouth to answer, but realized he had no idea what she planned to do. He didn't know what the obelisks were, didn’t know anything about this strange landscape.
Mere inches.
“Please,” Geist begged for his son. “Just please don't.”
Flin had barely touched the tip of an obelisk when Silvy shot back towards us and away from him.
As Geist and I watched, the obelisks near Flin suddenly snapped shut around him and he disappeared into a puckered seam on the landscape. There was a low rumbling that made my head vibrate, made my horns feel like they were on fire, but then the rumbling stopped, and the landscape stilled. The little seam where all the obelisks had collapsed in on themselves flattened, and all you could see now was that some of the obelisks had blood dripping down them.
There was no body. No bones. No gore. Just blood.
Silvy floated to one of the bloody obelisks and perched there, licking at its surface. She looked up at us and smiled, her teeth glowing in the strange light.
“Still tastes like a liar,” she said, letting out a titter of laughter before returning to her feast. Geist turned to look at me, tears in his eyes.
“I'm sorry,” he said. “I'm sorry for all of this.”
I stared at him blankly.
I knew exactly why he was sorry. He was sorry Flin had died. He was sorry he'd been caught. He was sorry the tables had turned. But he wasn’t sorry for what he had done to me. Up until the moment we fell through the familiar portal, he’d been all too willing to hand me over to the Austerium for an inquisition based on something he’d set me up for.
“Are you?” I asked.
Geist stared back at me blankly. “Am I what?”
How soon he forgets.
“Sorry,” I said. “Are you sorry?”
“Yes,” he said, nodding his head vigorously. “Oh yes. Deeply sorry.”
I was about to respond when his left eye, seemingly of its own volition, moved to the side, looking toward his ear even though his right eye stayed firmly on me.
The wayward eye snapped back to its original position and focused on me, almost as though realizing it had been caught wandering.
Geist cleared his throat and shook his head with confusion. “Sorry. You were saying?”
I frowned, wondering if this was some sort of magick I didn’t know about.
“Silvy?” I called over to her, somewhat worried that Geist might be a threat even in this place.
Silvy glanced up at me, the fur around her mouth shiny with blood, before glancing at Geist. She then went right back to lapping the blood off the obelisk’s surface.
Advertisement
Okay. You’re on your own.
I took a deep breath and looked back at Geist.
“Listen,” he said. “Just get me out of here, take me back to my shop, and I'll give you the theatre. I'll give you everything.”
I raised an eyebrow at this, considering.
The theatre was the one thing I wanted more than anything else.
The theatre was the one key to get me to do just about anything.
And Geist knew that.
“You give me the theatre?” I asked. “No strings attached?”
“No charge.” He licked at his lips. “I'll even forgive you for killing my son.”
I sighed. Forgive me for killing his son. Amazing.
“That's wild,” I said, all big eyes now. “How did we end up here again?”
“You opened a portal, you trapped us here, and you killed my son!” He shook his head viciously, seeming to come back to himself. “I'm sorry. Sorry. Look, I'm sorry.”
His left eye slowly twisted to the side again and then snapped back to center. He didn’t acknowledge it at all.
“And how did we end up in your shop?” I asked.
“You were trying to steal from me.”
I shook my head and stared at him.
He’s not going to understand. He’ll never see what actually happened and take responsibility.
“Right,” I said. “I did all this.”
Geist nodded. “You did all this, and Flin had so much of his life before him. He was going to finish up his studies at Bristlebloom, go on to lead his own battalion of adepts. Maybe even cross plaines. My son, a plainestraveler. All that potential… everything he could have been is gone now, all gone, wasted, because of you!” He screamed the last few words and shook his head. “Sorry. I'm sorry. Sorry. Sorry.”
His left eye twisted to the side again.
I raised an eyebrow.
“So, what?” I asked. “I was just supposed to let him do whatever he wanted to do to me so he could live out his potential?”
“It's not like that. That's not what I said.”
I nodded. “No, but it's the underlying truth of what you were saying.”
“Twisting my words,” Geist said. “You stupid bitch. You’re twisting my words.”
I took a sharp breath in through my nose and nodded.
“Stupid bitch?” I asked. I placed the fingertips of my right hand to my chest. “Stupid bitch?”
“Look,” Geist said. “Please. I'll give you the theatre. I'll forgive you. I won't say a word to the Austerium. I won’t say a word to anyone. I'll even…”
He gestured for me to come closer, as though I could control my movement then at all, in any way. I stayed exactly where I was and Geist gave a weird grunt of frustration, trying to swim through the air, but going nowhere, held in place exactly where he was.
While he was trying his little swimming move, I noticed something.
We’re descending. Almost too slow to notice, but we are.
The obelisks had cleared out below us and there was a fairly large, clear witchstone circle below us. It was surrounded by those black obelisks, though. They hadn’t disappeared.
I had a feeling the witchstone center was fine, unless it was a mouth, unless it just ate us outright whenever we hit it. It was probably safe, but those obelisks were worrisome.
“What else?” I asked.
“What do you mean what else?” Geist asked me back.
“What else will you give me?”
“Isn't the theatre enough?”
I shook my head. “You destroyed Blackhart's storefront in the Night Market. I'd say the theatre is only the beginning. What else?”
“Money?” He raised an eyebrow.
“Okay,” I said. “And how would I get that money. How would I deposit it, where would I go?”
“I would go with you, obviously.”
I'd been hoping he had some little hidden place where he had a bank account number written down, a routing number, a password.
My impromptu plan had been to leave the Shadow Vaile without Geist or Flin.
So, it looks like me getting rich off this whole thing is out.
If I left and took Geist with me, I could have the theatre, but Geist would always be out there. If I was honest with myself, I didn't really believe he was going to let go of the fact that his son had died here. He was going to hold onto that little nugget, polishing that rage and hate and blame to a sharp edge until he decided that maybe I didn’t deserve to live.
You’ll get the theatre, but you’ll be placing all your trust in someone else. Do you really want to do that?
If I did, it would be like going back to my old ways, falling back into my past missteps.
And you’ve already come so far.
I looked at Geist, really looked at him, and realized he was a symbol for everything I was trying to change. Relying on him would be relying on fate would be relying on anyone other than myself.
Frowning, I shook my head. “No.”
“No?” Geist asked. “Bitch! Sorry. I'm sorry. Sorry.”
“You heard me,” I said. “No. I don't want your help. Keep the theatre. Burn it.”
Geist's nostrils flared as he realized I wasn't going to give in to him. Every single bit of power he'd held in the magick world was gone now, stripped away. This little stick girl floating in front of him, with her annoying familiar and her horns and her oversized parka, stood between him and the rest of his life.
Geist slipped his hand into his pocket, pulled out a witchstone, and slipped it into his mouth.
I glanced over at Silvy, who was still licking blood and completely ignoring the fact that Geist was about to kill me.
Advertisement
The Werewolf Cheerleader
Being a cheerleader is easier than being a werewolf. Jessica Tumbleleague is a typical teenage girl who loves being a cheerleader at Moondale High. But after an encounter with a werewolf in the woods, Jessica discovers a frightening world she never thought is real. Dangerous magic, deadly fierce spirits, and other malevolent creatures. Now Jessica must fight the forces of darkness to protect her hometown while balancing her supernatural life with her high school life. But can she control the beast within herself? Note: This is a rewrite of the original with the same name. I decided to change the third-person style to first-person because I liked Jessica's voice better. She is funny and very strong. With the story only focusing on her, I can keep the mystery suspenseful and the reader can experience what Jessica is experiencing. It is a typical YA style, but it is fun to write as your main character. There are changes, but the first and second books will be similar to the third-person chapters. Let me know what you think and I hope you will enjoy this new version of the Werewolf Cheerleader. I will post the chapters every Friday in the afternoon. P.S, there is a Werewolf Cheerleader short story published in the Tales of Dungeons, All Hallows book. Titled The Werewolf Cheerleader: Castle and Ghouls. The short is also in first-person, which made me decide to change the book series into first-person. The link is below if you want to check it out. https://www.royalroad.com/amazon/B08MCS82R5
8 279Slaying Monsters for Dummies
East coast, late 2018. A handful of people with nothing in common find themselves targeted by kidnappers. It sounds like a job for the FBI, except that the criminals are not quite human anymore, and the victims find themselves wielding strange abilities. How exactly are you supposed to explain that to the cops? You don't. You survive, fight and strive, and most importantly you prepare, for magic is coming back and there is a world to save. And a market to corner. Image by Bella Bergolts. https://www.deviantart.com/bellabergolts The story is told from the perspective of the two protagonists. I have finished writing two arcs and will upload them quickly, the upload rate will slow down after that. I welcome corrections and constructive criticism, in particular when it comes to inconsistencies.
8 202Code Name: GLITCH
Major Xiomar Haydn is a damn good soldier, and an even better mechanic, although he does have a tendency to get himself thrown into the stockades for getting on the general's bad side. To keep him busy and out of trouble, Xiomar is assigned the task of repairing an old Mech that hasn't been touched in fifteen years. He knows he can fix it--he's Chief Mechanic. What he doesn't know, however, is that GLITCH has a mind of its own. Literally. In the midst of a war between two countries, Xiomar and his newly-repaired Mech are caught in the middle. The enemy is trying to obtain GLITCH's technology... the power to give their own Mechs sentience and dominate the world. Xiomar finds himself pondering the morality of forcing a sentient being to fight on his behalf, and what that means for him as a dutiful soldier. With the future filled with uncertainty, Xiomar and GLITCH are certain of one thing--no one's going down without a fight.
8 209DYING DUNGEONS: DEAD KINGS & MAD QUEENS.
A sickness is spreading. Dungeons are dying and crumbling to dust. Monsters that had been residing in them gather in hordes and spill out in waves over the neighboring kingdoms, swallowing them whole. The last of the Heroes are dying out. For some reason, new heroes haven’t been born or summoned into this world for the last century. Oracles have no answers. They are going blind and mute: seeing no futures and telling no prophecies. And while all this is happening, the [Voice], the entity that had been guiding everyone from the very beginning of time, is silent. Leaving humans and others with no guidance to solve this problem. Is this the end of Time? Author's note: Being someone with full-time work and with a rolling schedule, I'll update whenever I have time, so no promises on a consistent schedule. *This is a slow paced story with dungeon building elements showing up later on. *In this world, a dungeon seed first needs to prove its worth and only then it gets the chance to become a dungeon core and grow. *All art is by me
8 111The Cardinal Hero of Magic
[Under Hiatus until further notice] In order to save the world from apocalyptic catastrophe, four heroes will be summoned from another world, The Sword, The Spear, The Bow, and The Shield Hero.However...should the waves surface without the aid of the heroes to combat them a fifth hero shall be called forth to protect the citizens. A hero with a staff and the power of magic. The Fifth Cardinal Hero of MagicBalthasar Black Is summoned to a alternate world to Protect the people from the Waves of Catastrophe, once there he finds himself in a village full of beings known as Demi-Humans, After the First Wave he witnesses the brutality of Melromarc towards the Demi-Humans. Balthasar makes his choice to save Demi-Humans rather than Humans[I welcome any weapon and monster Ideas]Highest Rank#1 Shieldhero[1/6/21]#1 Swordhero[5/11/20]#1 Spearhero[5/28/20]#1 Motoyasu[5/15/20]#7 Itsuki[9/11/20]#5 Raphtalia[10/23/21]#5 Filo[9/11/20]#1 Naofumi[1/14/22]#2 Bowhero[10/23/21]
8 201O porão: volume 02
O pesadelo dos irmãos Hawkins não acabou. E agora, eles precisam unir forças - e talentos peculiares - para conseguirem colocar um ponto final no pesadelo que foi iniciado no passado.
8 202