Cassandra Pendragon
I abandoned all attempts at secrecy, slammed a bunch of my wings through the enchantments on one of the windows and followed it up with a heavy book I threw right after. Without the support of the crumbled magic the tome smashed right through and with the clear sound of breaking crystal and a shower of sparkling shards I flung myself through the hole and into the night.
Within the tower I had been protected from the raging elements outside but now I had to withstand the full fury of a storm. Winds, smelling of decay and rotten cherries pummelled my body and drove me off course, blossoms and leafs obscured my vision and I could feel small twigs and stones graze my skin. The noise was terrific and I couldn’t hear a thing except for the eerie howling of the wind, laced with distorted voices. Without the protection of the tower I could feel them attacking my mind, whittling away at my sanity but I shrugged it off. Dangerous as it might be, I didn’t fear the magic, I was mostly occupied with not smashing head first into a wall. A small part of my mind worried how the other had fared, first bombarded with a life stealing curse and now surrounded by an unnatural storm that attacked their minds. I wanted to use the communication crystal but I feared I’d drop it as soon as I fumbled it out of my clothes and I didn’t expect my dad to have time for a little chat anyways. I’d find out sound enough either way.
I couldn’t fly, the storm was much too strong, all I managed was a controlled fall all the while the debris, flung through the air, battered my body. Once I touched down, it became a little better, the winds didn’t have as much power close to the ground. My injuries were superficial, some light cuts and bruises but nothing major. I gritted my teeth and sprinted towards Boseiju’s trunk. My plan was to reach the stairs on foot, collect Ahri, Greta and Mordred and somehow reach Boseiju’s roots as fast as possible. I knew perfectly well that it most likely wouldn’t play out like that, but I simply couldn’t come up with a better idea on the spot and I had to know if my friends and family were still alive and in control of their own minds.
Ahri’s blast had destroyed the soul runes on the inner walls and I ran through the burned garden and left the palace grounds without a problem. Once outside, the storm’s fury grew even more and a bone chilling cold settled over me. My breath turned into white vapour, the clouds blown away as soon as they left my mouth. Rime started to cover my fur and the tips of my hair, it clung to the buildings and made the road slippery, but still nothing blocked my path. I had to use my wings for stability to maintain my speed and even managed to a accelerate further, splitting the air before me and pushing against the ground. While I raced along the branch, I realised the ever present flickering glow of the last hours from the fires in the garden had finally vanished, either there was nothing left to burn of the storm had blown out the flames. I really hoped it was the latter.
As I neared the outer wall which separated the branch from Boseiju’s trunk I encountered the first group of turned kitsune. 12 of them, probably those that had been in charge of guarding the entrance lumbered about close to the gate. They didn’t seem coordinated, their movements were sluggish and without purpose but that changed as soon as I closed the distance to about 50 meters. Like puppets on a string, their heads shot up and they turned to face me. Hunger shone from their eyes in red and purple colours, strong enough that I could see it, even from the distance. Their weapons were left untouched but they charged never the less with a blood freezing, animalistic howl that cured me of all lingering ideas they might still be saved, of “them” there was nothing left. I faced soulless abominations, bound to life through a vile curse.
I had three options. I could try to push through, trusting in my agility, speed and wings to somehow get me past them. I could try to challenge the storm again to hold my course and fly straight over the wall and towards the trunk or I could jump off the branch. As insane as it might sound, I thought it’d be my best shot. Whatever the reason, the storm formed a whirlwind around Boseiju, blowing clockwise all around the tree. I had no chance of fighting against it, the short experience outside the tower had made that plenty clear, but maybe I could use it. If I managed to ride the air currents, they would take me directly to the stairs, all I had to do was drop down on one of the platforms around it once I was close enough. And not get blown into a branch or collide with something heavier then me on the way. Compared to fighting 12 adult kitsune or trying to overpower the whirlwind, I thought it was slightly less insane but I couldn’t say that I was thrilled.
Spouting colourful curses in the demonic language that rolled off my tongue far easier than any other attempt before I veered to the left, turned around and allowed the winds to catch my wings from the front. My back groaned and I was catapulted backwards and up. I shot like a stone from a sling through the air and out over the garden. It seemed like I had made a tiny mistake. Forget fighting it, I couldn’t even control my direction or hight, I was a leaf on a river, subjected to its whims without mercy. For as long as I kept my wings extend I would follow the airstreams wherever they were headed.
Blossoms, leafs and chunks of dirt tumbled all around me and restricted my vision. I closed my eyes after the first painful collisions made them water so much I couldn’t see a thing anyway. It helped, a little. My secondary vision was blurred as well, my wings were blown hither and to and I moved much too fast for my brain to generate clear images, but at least I wasn’t blinded anymore. The only silver lining was that the winds had carried me upwards and I was now at least 15 meters higher than the stairs. My altitude would allow for some leeway when I had to fall the last distance. Speaking of which, much faster than I had imagined, the platforms and extension built around the stairs came into view. At least I thought so, I couldn’t be sure because all I could see were fuzzy outlines and blurry silhouettes. I prayed to whomever would listen, angled my body as precisely as I could in the direction where I judged the largest platform to be and retracted my wings.
I lost nearly all of my air resistance in an instant but the force of the elements combined with my speed was enough to send me on a steep trajectory to where I had wanted to go. Unfortunately I lost my second vision the moment my wings vanished and I had to rely on my eyes again while I shot threw the air with a speed that was decidedly outside of a kitsune’s eye’s comfort zone. Damn it, I had no clue how I could possibly slow down. I hadn’t thought this through, if I unfurled my wings again I would be blown away in an instant, if I didn’t, I would most likely become a speck of blood and gore somewhere on the unforgiving wood. Well, it couldn’t be helped. I’d wait for the last possible moment and use my wings. Hopefully I would manage to somehow tumble onto a platform before the storm would take me away again. I didn’t even get a chance to try, though.
My eyes were still massively impaired but here is how I interpreted what I saw: a solid square of dwarfs occupied the space around the stairs but they were under heavy pressure. From the sides, through every gateway leading to the palaces, waves and waves of kitsune threw themselves against their bulwark. From below even more attacked the dwarfs and nibbled at their rear guard. Only a small part of the kitsune, those with glyphs on their bodies I imagined, used weapons, the rest fell upon the dwarfs with teeth and nail. They didn’t try to secure the stairs, they wanted to annihilate every thing that drew breath in their vicinity. Once they managed to drag a dwarf out of formation through sheer viciousness, clever spells or because the tremors that still ran along Boseiju had thrown him off balance, they would swarm the unlucky fellow and bite and tear at every exposed piece of skin they could reach, like ants attacking a carcass. The cries of the unfortunate victims reached me even through the howling winds. The dwarfs on the other hand defended themselves with a cold fervour, never breaking formation and always ready to fill in the gaps the enraged kitsune had torn open in their ranks. Their efforts weren’t in vain and I thought I saw more and more corpses with tails tumble down into the abyss. But for every fallen zombie a new one took its place and each dead dwarf thinned out their reserves more and more.
I could see Ahri in the middle of the fray, her wings a fiery beacon for her friends and impeding doom for her enemies. I had no idea how she could remain upright in the storm but the winds didn’t seem to bother her. Every time she moved a zombie burst into flames. Her whole body and the wood at her feet were black with ash, but she didn’t slow down, apparently ready to hold the position all by her lonesome if she had to. Luckily she didn’t, to her left my brother swung his sword faster than I could follow and the trails of blood that carved rivers of red into the mountains of ash all around proved his effectiveness. He didn’t bother to kill, he sliced a tendon there, opened an artery here and only moved when the incapacitated bodies started to get into his way.
On Ahri’s other side Greta proved that she had indeed been going easy on me. Her soul flame had manifested and had sealed her in a burning armour of gold. Wherever she would point, a stream of hungry flames would follow. They would cling to every soulless kitsune they touched and turn them into a walking torches, spreading the fire further along the ranks. Unfortunately the raging storm would soon consume the flames but the survivors thought twice before closing in on Greta again. A step behind them, my mother wove spell after spell, either defending the ones in front of her or attacking the enemies at range with blatant disregard for whom they might have once been. I couldn’t spot my father and had to quell a dart of panic when I realised he wasn’t with them. I couldn’t spare more time anyway, I was close to a platform and I had to act.
With a thought my wings pierced the air and I turned into a flying light show that drew the attention of nearly everyone below me. As if on command, the cursed kitsune that weren’t actively fighting someone snarled and threw spells and wads of energy my way. I had to smile, their attacks might give me a chance to actually make it. With my wings I could interact with energy in any way I desired, I could touch it, pierce it, burn it, choke it and push against it. Maybe I could anchor myself in their spells, break my momentum and land on the platform without a single broken bone.
At first I felt elated, I slammed one of my wings into each spell I could reach and managed to slow down considerably while the wads of energy sped off into the night. A second later my elation died away while I had to focus on a game of whack-a-mole. Many more than 33 attacks had been flung my way and I had to retract my wings from the ones I had already steered off course to deflect the next one. Once again I was thankful for the countless hours I had spent in Greta’s cavern, dodging things and judging their speed and direction. I was fast enough to brave the wave of spells and get through unscathed, well, almost. A couple of shots took me right in the stomach and while the spells didn’t activate, it still felt like I had been hit with a stone, thrown at full force. My muscles seized for a moment and I was really glad my stomach was already empty. I had to pay dearly for my lapse of concentration, though, as another badge of projectiles hit my side and nearly propelled me around.
But then I was through and I had slowed down sufficiently to fully see what was before me and to take control of my fall without tearing my back apart. I anchored half of my wings to the edges of the platform. For a moment the full fury of the storm tried to wrestle away my hold and fling me off again but I clung on and managed to steer myself away from the horde of bloodthirsty zombies and towards the battalion of dwarfs.
I could now see that the dwarfs had cleared the area around the stairs. Decayed wood and burned patches showed where the enchanted seals had been broken. The platforms along the paths to the different palaces where flooded with enslaved kitsune, their glowing, hungry eyes blurred together into a sea of red and purple specks in the darkness and made me feel like a rabbit in front of a wolf pack. Shivers ran down my spine but honestly, I was long past the point where I had still given a damn.
The kitsune tried to push their way through the five gateways and onto the main platform but the dwarfs held tight while my friends defended one of the gates all by their lonesome. From below some 30 kitsune still fought to climb up the stairs but they were stuck between a rock and a hard place because another formation of dwarfs, at least 30 strong, came up right behind them. They were slowly ground to dust between the dwarfs at the top of the stairs and the ones pushing them into their brethren’s waiting axes. This close I could feel the beat of the black drum reverberating in my bones, each clap accompanied by a volley of bolts that culled the kitsune mercilessly.
My wings tethered me to one of the platforms the kitsune were gathered on but I used my remaining momentum to swing around and head directly for the middle of the dwarven battalion. My wings were to short to bridge the gap between the platforms so I let go at the highest point, retracted my wings and tumbled downwards into a thicket of mithril weapons and armour with a lot of pointy ends sticking up. Luckily the dwarfs weren’t easily fazed and reacted quickly. They scattered and left a clear place for me to crash onto which I proceeded to do most stunningly.
I came down faster than I had thought so I didn’t have the time to use my wings again. I tucked my arms and legs close to my body and tried to roll off the momentum but the scant 2 meters they had cleared weren’t enough by far to come to a halt. Like a living canon ball I covered the remaining distance in a heartbeat and slammed into a silvery mountain. It might also have been the back of a dwarf but the effect was pretty much the same. I stopped abruptly and all my kinetic energy went into deforming bones and ligaments. Unfortunately it weren’t those of the dwarf.
I didn’t lose consciousness, but the ringing in my ears and the burning sensation from pretty much all over my body made me wish I had.
It took me several moments to spit out the blood from when I had bitten my tongue during my crash landing and to persuade my sense to convey anything other than gibberish. I opened my eyes to stare into my mum’s, her defeated expression and the deep lines of grieve all over her face prevented me from asking any questions. I silently got up and hugged her tightly. I tried to convey much, my love for her, my hope that we’d see another sunrise despite everything, my pride that she was still up and fighting but above all my anger and my promise that I wouldn’t back down, no matter what the emperor still held in store for us.
Cassandra Pendragon At first we stood silently on an island of quiet in the surrounding chaos. I felt my mom tense up and without any warning she started snivelling and shuddering in my arms, breaking me out of my stupor. The cacophony of sounds around us assaulted my ears again and I could feel blood dripping down my nose. My right side was burned where I had skittered over the platform and every movement resulted in an ominous crack from my thigh. At least my appearance matched my mental state. For the moment the dwarfs and kitsune were locked in a stalemate and even though I dreaded her answered I had to know and whispered into her ear: “What happened? Where is my father?” She went rigid and even her breath stilled. Her reaction told me everything she couldn’t put into words and I felt tears stinging in my eyes. I pulled her closer until she finally took a shuddering breath and started to cry in earnest. It took every ounce of self control I had left for me to not join her but I
Cassandra PendragonThe return trip went decidedly smoother which allowed me to survey the scene from above for the first time. Greta’s weight slowed me down but it wasn’t enough to seriously impair my speed or agility. Harsh winds circled around Boseiju and tore leafs, blossoms and smaller branches away. The air was full of debris and I knew a constant, maddening howl assaulted anyone who wasn’t protected even though I couldn’t hear it at that moment, thanks to Greta’s shield. I saw the dwarfs and my friends slowly climb down the stairs, the kitsune from the different palaces yapping at their heels but a steadfast rearguard held them off efficiently. The large platform, from where I had taken off a couple of seconds ago, was already flooded with zombies and only the smallest patch around the stairs was still held by the dwarfs. I could see a small group of 5 in the middle who shrugged out of their armour and into a strange looking suit with several lengths of material hanging from th
Cassandra PendragonMy head hurt and I felt dizzy while the world spun around me. Streaks of colour whirled up and down, left and right and only came to a stop when I crashed on the frozen and unforgiving ground. Specks of light danced before my eyes and the sound of the sea drowned out every other noise. Blind, deaf and disorientated I tried to move, to get back on my feet but my legs gave out and I fell back down. My breath rushed in and out of my lungs, much too fast I might add, and fear quickly evolved into panic while the seconds ticked on. I didn’t know where I was or how long it’d take the cursed to reach me. I could imagine vividly what would happen if they found me prone on the ground.I focused on my wings and luckily I was still able to control them, if not fluently. I closed my eyes and focused on my inner world, willing the darkness to recede and illuminate my surroundings in the shades of silver I was starting to get used to. My second sight was fuzzy but I still manage
Cassandra PendragonI was taken aback by the toll she had to pay for her spell. I felt great and was glad she had healed me but I couldn’t begin to imagine how a simple piece of magic could extract such a price. Still somewhat groggy I realigned my sprawling limbs and climb to my feet. I had to use the table for support but once I was up I felt pretty steady.“Thanks, I’m okay now. But what happened to you? I’ve never seen you in such a state before. Did something go wrong?” She wanted to reply but a dry cough drowned out her answer. She choked and swayed, all I could do was pat her back gently and keep her steady while she fought against the fit. It went on and on, long enough for me to seriously start worrying if she was going to die on me right then and there. Luckily it didn’t get that far and after a minute or two the coughs subsided. Bloody traces of spit marred the corners of her mouth and she was struggling to remain upright. With a perceivable effort she wiped her face, her l
Cassandra PendragonI was exhausted, empty, it was a struggle to even muster the strength to turn around. Greta appeared peaceful, somehow she had come to rest in an almost natural position, her legs angled and her arms buried beneath her torso she laid on her side. My gaze traveled over the familiar shape of her face and I shuddered when I saw her eyes. Where cataract filled orbs should have been, gaping black holes, smouldering at the edges were all that remained. Her eyes had been burned away, the only visible sign of what she had been through. I scrambled to my knees and reached for her, I wanted to pick her up and get out of here as fast as possible but I was thrown back on the floor when the crackling noise outside subsided for a moment, only to return even stronger, accompanied by a rushing sound and a tremor that shook the very foundations of the tower I was in. Whatever Greta had done, it had worked and I had to hurry.I gritted my teeth and stood up when the room had stopped
Cassandra Pendragon“It all began about 100 years ago,” he continued his explanation. “An old friend of mine, Airu, a star whale, was killed. I could feel his death from afar and I simply couldn’t believe it. Star whales are peaceful creatures but also powerful, they are tough and unbelievably hard to kill. I couldn’t understand why anyone would even bother to try.” He sighed heavily and resumed his story in a much quieter voice:“One of my brothers, Michael, came to me with an explanation. An advanced society that had begun to conquer space stumble across Airu by sheer chance, he said. Their curiosity and greed got the better of them, fascinated as they were with a living being larger than their biggest space ships and they tried to capture him. In the ensuing fight my friend was killed. Michael claimed that he had long since expected something like that to happen. Their society was supposed to be a twisted thing where might ruled and progress was the only thing of value. He whispere
Cassandra PendragonI expected to be thrown into another memory, but I was wrong. The next thing I knew was the soft embrace of a fluffy blanket, the sounds of a moving airship and the smell of seasoned wood and hastily prepared food. I was in a small cabin, similar to the one where I had found Ahri in. The sky behind the one small window was black but I could see one star or the other blinking at me uncaringly. As soon as I opened my eyes everything I… we had been through came rushing back and despair, grief and rage welled up once again. The emotions hit me like a truck after the blessed silence I had experienced during my talk with Lucifer. For a moment I was literally stunned, tears leaked out of my eyes while I laid on my cot motionless. Images of burning trees, mutilated kitsune and Greta’s empty eyes rose within my mind and I couldn’t shove them away. I started to cry in earnest, my body trembled with every heartfelt sob. The memories were much too strong and I even forgot whe
Cassandra PendragonI felt powerful. My wings burned behind me and the half lit cabin was illuminated as if under a midday sun. Every movement of my wings distorted the air and I could feel them slicing through space itself, phasing in and out of reality according to my whims. It was exhilarating. If only I had been able to access my core before. So much of what had happened could have been prevented. Uninvited memories rose up as I saw the faces of the dead before me again and smelled the burning garden and the decayed stench of the curse. From one second to the next I was reduced from an angel to a quivering mess of tears once again as the shadows of the past day held me prisoner. I couldn’t escape and fell to the floor, withering in imagined pain. I was insensible to my surroundings while the fit lasted but I had to endure every moment of it wide awake. I saw the grotesque sacrifices below the ritual chamber, I had to walk among the cursed kitsune and Greta’s burned out eyes appear
Cassandra PendragonHer eight eyes followed me wearily while I rose ever higher into the air, my wings slithering around the statue like the coils of a hunting serpent. I could feel the enchantments and spells the dark granite had been imbued with give way without offering any resistance and slowly the inner working of the statue became visible to my second sight. Most of the magic wasn’t actually in the legs, they had been crafted as conductors and to inflict pain but the truly ingenious parts were hidden in the torso and head, both of them ablaze with the energy that flowed through them. The way I saw it, everything Shassa could offer, from her life force to her soul, could be torn from her and channeled through the legs towards the centre of the statue. What I thought to be the seed would then start to fill with power and once it had accumulated enough, a purified pulse of what I suspected would be transcendent energy, was going to be sent towards the head. An intricate array of e
Cassandra PendragonUnbelievably, the body was still moving, faint twitches and the occasional shudder made it obvious just how much pain she was in. Crap, I could already feel the urge to help her, to free her of her binds without any form or reassurance or gain on my part. Pity was a damned nuisance.“Great, now what?” I mumbled.“Don’t be daft, I know you can cut through spells. Go ahead, you’ve done it before, haven’t you?” “And then? Do I shake you until you wake up?” She rolled her eyes and that was quite the spectacle, like a wave that ran across her face.“Heal me enough to communicate but not more than that or you might come to regret it. You can do that, can you not?”“I hope so, probably… maybe? Uh, won’t there be two versions of me, anyways?”“No, the path you’re trying to reach hasn’t been walked yet, it’s just a dream of the universe in a way. It’ll become reality once you cross over, there won’t be two versions of you but I’m not sure where you’ll end up. You could also
Cassandra PendragonOne might ask why I had said eight legged monster, there hadn’t been much to see after all, images don’t usually linger on the edge of dreams but the longer I communicated with Shassa, the more real everything appeared to me. From exchanged memories lived through between two fluttering thoughts the scene around had developed into the grey of the mind scape, a place I was starting to get familiar with. I had a body and sensory impressions but there was nothing there except for a hazy silhouette, still hidden behind a veil of fuzzy thoughts. With every contact, every exchange she had become clearer until I saw her for the first time and the disembodied memories flowed together to show me whom I was dealing with. Her body was that of a huge spider, bloated and black with red markings in the shape of a reversed cross on her back. Eight bowed, chitinous legs held her upright, each one of them at least 2 metres long with a sharp, deadly claw at its end. Her torso ended
Ahri AreteThe smell wasn’t as bad as one might imagine. The continuous scrambling and scratching was another matter. The noise produced by an army on the rise was horrific, a constant, piercing pressure against my ears that made it impossible to focus on anything but the moving assembly of spare parts and limbs before me.Mordred and I had retreated under the shadow of the statue, Reia alongside Shassa’s withered body between us. Eight stone claws pinned her to the ground and even though the wounds had dried up long ago a distinct metallic odour still lingered around her prone form. Her eyes were closed, shrivelled and blind, eight deep holes on top of her head like windows to an empty room. Reia was still and pale, her mind had fled from the sensations that were racing through their connection, from the pain that had flooded her once the spell had started working. Viyara was hovering in the air, sparks of magic running along her talons and fangs while she surveyed the amassing hord
Ahri AreteHer knees buckled, her wings vanished and she fell. I was barely fast enough to catch her before she hit the ground but with a few frantic wingbeats I managed to sling my arms around her lithe body before she could add another injury to her growing collection. I was still angry, nay, furious and maybe a little shocked but when her soft curves came to rest against my chest and her fluffy tails circled around my middle reflexively I couldn’t help it, my anger melted like snow under the midday sun and I was simply happy to hold her again, dirty and mangled as she was. She wasn’t wounded anymore, as far as I could tell but her skin had a feverish colour and heat radiated off of her as if she was still fighting for her life, spasms making her muscles twitch against me constantly. Her body was liberally coated with the remains of her rampage, but the few untarnished spots showed the same alabaster hue I had come to know so well but now there was distinct sheen of silver to it,
Cassandra PendragonNope, neither sunshine nor rainbows but at least I didn’t find myself in the middle of the ocean. When I had stepped through the portal, a brief moment of vertigo and disorientation had led me into an atrium, for want of a better word. From the corner of my eye, I saw a doorway and the first steps of a wide staircase that vanished into the earth. The walls were bare but polished stone, a reflective surface crisscrossed with lines of shimmering metal, glowing faintly in the dark. Behind me the energy of the portal still hummed reassuringly, my way back was still open. Unfortunately I couldn’t quite concentrate on my surroundings, a still bleeding corpse in the middle of the room commandeered most of my attention.There, practically at the centre of the chamber, laid a chimera, with the head of a lion, the body of a goat and the tail of a serpent. Black blood oozed from deep gashes in its hide, some clean and narrow, others wide with frayed edges. It looked like the
Cassandra PendragonCould it possibly be meant to connect to someone else rather than something else? I had always wanted to learn how to heal, after all. Mephisto had basically told me that my new body would be formed in the image of what my soul desired, without the rationalisations an active mind would use to ignore the sometimes darker nature of what I might long for. If that was true, it wouldn’t be too far fetched to imagine that I had given myself a way to restore what shouldn’t be lost. Unfortunately I didn’t how I could try it out without a Guinea pig. Right then, every time I wanted to move my energy through the wing, I encountered a resistance, a blockade that wouldn’t allow my powers to pass. It felt like knocking at the door of an empty house, in theory it was supposed to open but someone was needed to turn the key and invite you in. For now, it wouldn’t be more than a fancy streak of colour among the silvery torrents of energy.Much more confident than I had been two min
Cassandra Pendragon“You’re a bloody idiot, that’s what you are. But you got balls, at least metaphorically, I’ll give you that.” “Thanks, by now you’ve repeated yourself enough times as well that my tiny brain can retain the information.” I was long past the initial rush of gratitude I had felt when I had first regained a resemblance of consciousness in a grey world of nothingness. By now I was mainly annoyed and a little worried.Unbelievably my stunt hadn’t been the end. I should’ve been dead, my very personality obliterated in the truest sense of the word, my core clean for another spin of the wheel but… I wasn’t. No thanks to my efforts as Mephisto kept on reminding me. He had saved me, in a way. The unbound energy that had been released in the chamber prior to my temporal displacement had been more than enough to reconstruct his reservoirs and the interwoven sparks of transcendent energy had allowed him to perform a miracle, his words, not mine. He had come to when I had collap
Cassandra PendragonI was somewhere in between. I could still see the circular chamber as an afterimage of sorts while I struggled with the sensations my own body was providing me with. Every muscle and tendon connected to my wings was burning as if it had been dunked in acid and I could feel torrents of blood gush down my back, a warm stream of sticky liquid that formed a dark puddle beneath my feet. I couldn’t remain upright, spasms raced up my legs and along my back and I collapsed face first into my own blood. My wings felt like they were about to be pulled out of their sockets, a much stronger force than I had ever experienced had taken hold of them and was constantly trying to rip me a part. My ingenious manoeuvre had worked, I was in my own time stream and still anchored in the alternate version. Unfortunately that also meant that right now my wings were the only thing connecting two separate streams. In a way I was a stick thrust between two wheels. If the wheels were turning