Cassandra Pendragon
“I… I don’t… Give me a moment,” Erya said, talking more to herself than us. The image started to shift, rotating through multiple viewpoint fast enough to make the scenes hazy. It finally settled on a perspective that showed the crater and its surroundings to the north. The damned pirates had retreated, their ships were quite a distance away from the volcano and I could barely discern the movements of the crew on board. What I could see quite clearly was an intimidating warrior, clad in black scale armour that stood at the helm of the larger ship, a throng of people surrounded him in a respectful distance. Just looking at him again made my heart beat rise and I had to suppress the urge to run, to fly. Galathon had arrived.
“What are they doing?” I whispered.
“More importantly, can you blast them out of the sky?” Barzuk asked Erya pragmatically. She shook her head and her flowing hair danced across her back.
“No, they are too far away. They might appear close but I’d say they are more than 10 kilometres away from us. I can’t even listen in, we are quite lucky we can even see them.” She moved her fingers in a complicated series of gestures and a faint reddish line streaked across the image, somewhere in the middle between the volcano and the ships. “That’s the limit of most of the enchantments,” Erya explained. “As soon as they cross over I can start messing with them but if they remain out of reach… they don’t seem to be in a hurry, we should have some time.” She turned away from the curtain of magma but didn’t cancel her spell. “Maybe it’d be for the best if you could tell me what’s going on with a little more detail than: we are hunted by a big bad dragon and en evil wizard.” Again Viyara’s consciousness brushed against mine and linked us together. Her musical voice together with Erya’s presence, which felt like a part of nature, soothed the anxiety that Galathon’s sight had instilled in me. Even the indiscernible grumbling from Barzuk made me feel a little better. This time around I wouldn’t have to face him alone.
“You already know my family has been slaughtered by a Black, the one you see on the ship.” Viyara’s head jerked towards the curtain of magma. “Or do you? My father didn’t use you, now that I come to think of it. Did he speak to you before the end?”
“No, that’s one of the reasons I decided to help you. During the festivities my magic was working just fine and suddenly I lost contact with everything. My prison sealed before I felt the death of my slaver. Didn’t you realise the enchantments had ceased to work?”
“They hadn’t. Everything was just as always until… How is it even possible? Who could seal you other than my father? And kept the spells running on top of it without your help?”
“I fear you’re underestimating the emperor’s power,” I said, worrying if I had made the same mistake. From what Erya had said, he had been involved in her family’s death from the beginning, preventing the fey from helping the dragons and probably also hiding Galathon from her and the others until it had been too late. The more I heard, the more I came to realise he had already sunk his claws deep into the southern parts of our continent, subjugating pirates and dealing with dragons. How? When? My tails curled up when I asked myself a simple question: How had we come to believe that Mordred had been the only or even the first one to set foot on the cursed island? Had there been more? And if so, how many? By the Great Fox, what if his plans on Boseiju had only been a small part of what he was trying to accomplish? Curse his name, I had been so naive! Divide et impere, it goes both ways, you never put all your eggs in one basket.
“Maybe I should start with telling Erya how we came to meet on an airship in the middle of nowhere…” I quickly went over my story, emphasising the feats of magic I had seen the emperor accomplish and his connection to the local pirates. “… considering what you just told us I don’t think it’s much of a stretch to assume the emperor helped Galathon in his attack. I assume he provided the dragon with artefacts to seal you off and keep the spells running as to not alarm your family, Viyara. In exchange he was promised the hoard, or, more accurately, you, Erya. I’d wager one of my tails that the ruby I’m sitting on is the most enchanted artefact around and it stands to reason he’s after it. Don’t ask me why he wants it, maybe it’s just greed, maybe he can use you and your realm to construct another pathway to his citadel or maybe it’s for an entirely different reason but it doesn’t matter right now anyways.” Viyara and Erya were silent, incoherent thoughts filled with worry brushed against my mind and an acidic smell, like lemons, overlaid Erya’s presence.
“Damn straight, what matters is how we can blast them before they can accomplish whatever they’re trying to do and for that we need to know what they’re planning.” If he hadn’t been such a sourpuss I would have really liked Barzuk. As it was he was just a little too … orcish with his broody stretches of silence. He gestured towards the image.
“Can you get us a little closer? I can lip read, if I see their mouths I might be able to figure out what’s going on.” Erya’s presence drew away while she shrugged: “I’ll see what I can do. Do you even know what language their are talking in?”
“The Trade Tongue,” Viyara replied, “at least that’s what they used when they caught me.” Most races and even kingdoms had their own languages, derived form what they had spoken before the cataclysm. Since air ships had made trade possible, a common tongue had developed that most people could speak at least to a certain degree. We had been conversing in the same language, when we weren’t talking mind to mind, as I neither spoke orc nor draconian and had no idea what the native tongue of the fey could possibly be. I spoke the language of the kitsune, elvish and the Trade Tongue fluently and I had picked up some chunks of dwarvish here and there. My abstract knowledge helped a lot but I simply hadn’t had the need nor the time to learn more.
“So they’re probably from different islands,” Barzuk mused. “Interesting, I wonder if some of them might have been pressed into service. Lady Viyara, could your telepathy reach one of them?”
Lucky Pete
Right now I hated my life. Fly with us, they had said, you’ll see the world, they had said. Riches, women, freedom, just sign on the dotted line, they had said. By all the gods, I had been an idiot.
At first the life of a pirate had been a dream come true, especially for a hopeless street rat in the gutters of Free Land. As much food as I wanted and a place to sleep were more than I had thought possible. Sure the occasional killing and pillaging had been unpleasant but I had had to knife another child at the tender age of 5, fighting over bread crumbs so I hadn’t minded overly much. Do or die was the motto I lived by. But I hadn’t signed up for the weird shit that was going on now. The last two years had been one fucked up mess after the other. Ever since Captain Sinclair had returned from the last council, his pockets stuffed with gold and shimmering new artefacts around his wrists we had started kidnapping children, torching villages and carrying strange acolytes on board with pale skin and red markings all over their bodies. Well, it hadn’t been rosy but I would have managed but then we had sailed so far up shit creek that I hadn’t even known where to look for land. A couple of days ago the bosun had collected me from a well earned trip through the harbour pubs in Free Land, yammering on about an important run we had to undertake. I had already known how hard the dude could hit so I hadn’t dawdle and followed after him.
A few hours later we had been on our way to an island none of us had ever heard about. Nothing new there, the weird acolytes often guided us to strange places. We had arrived at a smoking volcano and I had nearly sullied my pants when I had seen the ravaged carcass of a huge golden dragon far below us. Cries of wonder had issued from the crew but the Captain had told us that it wasn’t any of our concern and had underlined his words with a straight jab into the face of the first one who had dared to speak up. We hurried on into the volcano’s crater where two other ships had already been waiting. The Queen Anne’s Revenge under Captain Teach was well known and feared, the atrocities committed by her crew legendary amongst the pirates. The other ship was a bit of a mystery but I had seen the blood red sails before, mostly when we had been about to do something particularly distasteful. Our Captain had even sometimes received orders from the peacock that commanded her.
A few message had been exchanged between our acolytes and those that had supposedly been on board of the other ships and all of them had gathered on the deck of the unnamed ship. I hadn’t had any ideas what they had been up to but whatever it had been, they had been rudely interrupted when another dragon, much smaller and of a different shape but with the same golden hue to its scales had neatly flown into the crater.
The next few minutes had been pure chaos while we struggled to follow a barrage of orders. I hadn’t been able to take my eyes of the spectacle when massive harpoons had been launched to capture the creature which had earned me quite a few sharp slaps from the bosun. Her cries, I had been pretty sure it had been a female, had made me shiver and I hadn’t been able to stop thinking: what the fuck have I gotten into now? She had been hauled on deck, some form of magic dancing along her body. I had truly felt sorry for her, captured above the corpse of what I had assumed must be a relative, but that’s life. When you’re down it’s going to punch you one more time for good measure. And it had struck again not minute later.
While greedy smiles had formed on my comrade’s faces in anticipation of the bounty, lightning had flashed underneath the blood red sails. A figure had appeared, I hadn’t been able to see her face across the distance but the torrents of silvery blue energy that played around her form and slithered across the ship had been more than remarkable. Combined with the halo of silvery tails I had thought a goddess had descended to punish us mortals for our transgression and when the dragon had broken loose from her chains the next moment and the glowing apparition had neatly beheaded the Captain and another one of the officers I had felt certain that judgement had arrived. I wasn’t the most religious guy, honestly, there were so many to chose form, how would you know which one was right? The one with greatest benefits? The one you were born in? But the display on the other ship had had me trembling in my boots. Dragons and winged creatures of energy, I had been so far out of my depth that I had almost tumbled over the railing when a thunderous explosion had torn the other ship apart.
Hot air had flown over us, pushing us back and small debris had peppered the deck, slicing our sails and hurting quite a few of the crew. Luckily I had come away unscathed, huddled against the railing as I had been. Half dazed I had seen a bright light appear over the crater’s edge and a musical voice laced with loathing and anger had reached me loud and clear: “Fly, you fools!” Then she had disappeared again.
Screams, curses and hectic activity had filled the next minutes. No one had even thought about trying to dive deeper into the volcano to look for survivors. There had simply been no way for anyone to live through a face dive into a crater and honestly, most of us hadn’t given two pence for the lives of those onboard. Good riddance, especially for the acolytes, as far as I had been concerned. We had put out the small fires that had started to eat away at our rigging and the Captains Teach and Sinclair had been shouting across the distance, the magical means of communications had probably been burned to ash with the acolytes. The golden dragon had long since been gone and I had started to hope that we’d just turn back with a bloody nose but otherwise intact when the quarter moon that had risen in the east suddenly turned dark.
A buzzing that had been heard even above the hisses of gas from below and the moaning of our ships had become louder and louder until a swarm of the ugliest bugs I had ever seen had come flying into the crater. A putrid stench had emanated form the cloud of whistling wings and squirming legs and the chill of death had crept across our bones. It had felt like a devil incarnate had come for us. Most of the crew had dropped to their knees, eyes rolling madly and Egbert and Drux had even taken the easy way out and had hurled themselves over board, their screams slowly fading into oblivion. A mad laughter had thundered through the volcano and the swarm had stilled, darkness engulfing the insects one by one. It had disappeared after a moment to reveal a nightmare.
Black scales, horns, a tail, wings and even his glowing weapon had paled in comparison to the hideous mask that had been staring down on us. A closed helmet formed like a dragon couldn’t hide the malice of the slitted eyes that glared down on us hungrily. In all it’s terrifying glory the warrior landed on our ship with a heavy thump and a cold, cruel voice rang out:
“I saw what happened and I have need of you again. Turn this ship around and leave the crater, we have much to do and only little time. Who is in charge of you pitiful lot?”
Now we were over 10 kilometres away from the island, the officers from both ships engaged in conversation with the newcomer while his aura of fear held the crew in its grip. I had overheard that he was a dragon as well by the name of Galathon and the one who had slain the Gold we had seen on the slope. He was asking for the acolytes and when Captain Sinclair told him what had happened to them he howled with rage. His clawed hand shot out, ripping the beating heart right out of the captain’s chest. He squeezed the blood from it while the captain’s body crumbled to the deck, wide eyed but still alive. “What a pity, than I guess I’ll need all of you to compensate for the loss. I need some volunteers. We have to contact the Pirate King. If he wants his ruby, he’ll have to shut down the cursed fey once again. I can already feel her eyes on us, the hatchling has activated some of daddy’s toys. Get me 5 of your people, preferably useless ones.”
It was just enough. Silently I crawled out of sight and hid myself between a mast and a stack of sail cloth. My legs trembled and tears flowed from my eyes. I was supposed to die for this monstrosity? Never! So help me, I knew I had been headed down a gruesome path but that was just too much. I wanted out, I wanted to leave behind all thoughts of dragons and my fear, I wanted to breathe freely again. But I was stuck on an airship in the middle of nowhere, what could I possible do?
A soft touch slithered across my mind and I heard a sweet voice whisper deep in my thoughts: “why do you cry?”
Cassandra PendragonI had wanted to ask Barzuk what he had been on about but the scene on the magma screen shut me up. Galathon had been in conversation with one of the pirates, a burly man with a dark tricorne on his head. Suddenly he erupted with a howl I thought I could actually hear and his hand cracked the poor bloke’s rib cage. A fountain of blood gushed from the wound and when Galathon pulled back, his claw-like fingers encircled a still pulsing hunk of flesh. We weren’t close enough to see many details and thankfully smells weren’t conveyed through Erya’s magic but the look of poor horror on the mutilated man’s face, his rolling eyes and the frantically working mouth made my stomach churn. What a terrible way to go. Whatever he had done, nobody deserved to end like that. His agonised and desperate expression reminded me of the fallen and turned kitsune I had seen on Boseiju, his panic and pain palpable even through the spell.To distract myself from the rising nausea I focused
Cassandra PendragonIt was still warm and shone with a pristine silvery glow again but something was off. The face depicted as a sun was still bleary, the features distorted and somewhat … damaged? I glanced around surreptitiously and cautiously whispered: “Mephisto?” The emblem lit up and I dropped it with a curse, crouching down and bringing my wings together in front of me to from a glittering wall. My pulse raced and my tails curled up as I studied the nightmarish figure that materialised before me.The first thing that hit me was the cold. Ice was spreading from beneath the creature in an ever growing circle, gold coins and gems were frozen solid and lost their lustre wherever they came in contact with the wave. When it reached me, the sweat on my skin froze solid and crystals formed over my lashes. I felt a faint tug, as if something was trying to pull energy from me, but it didn’t happen. The air shuddered when heat and magic were drawn towards what I assumed was Mephisto and a
Including the others I said: “an explanation, please?”Mephisto shrugged his translucent shoulders: “it’s not as bad as you might think.” He turned to the dragon: “I’m sorry if I have riled you up, my comment was for the orc and Casandra.” He inclined his head. “My name is Mephisto and I’m honoured to make your acquaintance, albeit not under the most perfect of circumstances. You don’t have much to worry about. Basically dragons, or rather higher dragons are the only species that can handle her magic. I don’t know why for certain, there are several theories but if I had to guess I’d say it has something to do with your carbuncle and the way it can process energy. Anyway, when Casandra healed you, she formed a bond between the both of you as you undoubtedly know. A part of her is now within you. It will grow over time and grant you more and more abilities. They’re not determined, much depends on yourself and what you’re going to experience in the next couple of decades but one thing is
Cassandra PendragonTo me, magic mostly felt the same, at least if it was directed at me. I could see different patterns easily enough with my second sight but, with some exception like when Greta had cast her healing spells on me, it was nothing more than a distant pressure, stifled and muted. Not this time. When I had reached them and joined their already linked minds, I felt the connection Viyara had built with another, distant presence. At first it was fuzzy but with a mental twist Viyara drew us together, her mind acting as a gateway once again for me to reach the others. Erya I recognised immediately and the third had to be Pete. He was a strange fellow, contradictory thoughts came to the surface and vanished again, fear and desperation mixed with defiance and stubbornness, hatred paired with self loathing. The moment he realised he wasn’t alone anymore a flash of hope overshadowed the other emotions and he focused on us intently. I wasn’t sure if he knew I was there as well bu
Cassandra PendragonCold gripped my heart and it took every last ounce of willpower I could muster to not rush off immediately. I didn’t even want to think about what he meant when he had said that he’d be here soon personally as the threat to my loved ones was terrifying enough. As soon as Erya had told us what she had heard I had reached for my tattoo and tried to contact Ahri. I had been able to feel her but she had been fast asleep, probably exhausted from the backlash she had taken for me. Forcefully I pushed the image of her lying unconscious while pirates descended on her and the kids from my mind and focused on the others. The white cloaked I was wearing by now didn’t make a sound when my movements caused it to brush over the gold coins all around.“I guess after the troubles we had to face to reach Pete that there is no way for us to contact Ahri or my mom from here?” Erya and Viyara shook their heads slowly while I didn’t even bother to check Barzuk’s reaction, as capable as
Cassandra PendragonI pocketed the emblem again and joined Mephisto in searching through the mountains of treasure. Soon I realised that I was mainly there to provide a set of hands that could dig through the heaps of gold and gems. While the sounds of Viyara’s massive form slithering through the hoard became more and more distant we slowly made our way across the dais. I was nervous and itching to be off but I’d curse myself soon enough if I wasn’t going to do this properly. Admittedly the wondrous sights of sparkling metal and shining gems made it far easier to push away my anxiety but I still couldn’t fully appreciate the stroll through a dragon’s hoard. Every time I took a moment to marvel at a particularly beautiful piece my mind turned to Ahri and the others and how long it would take for a couple of airships to reach them. Never the less I somewhat enjoyed myself.Sliding down steep slopes of coins or climbing hills made of crystals was fun and my amazement grew with every ste
Cassandra Pendragon“What? How? That’s impossible! Poor creature. Can we get it out of there somehow?” Internally I was seething. If Viyara’s father hadn’t died I would have plucked each of his scales and shoved him into the deepest hole I would have been able to find. Trapped in a crystalline tomb for however long wasn’t a fate I’d wish onto my worst enemy and from the looks of it this one here was just for decoration, another oddity to spice up the hoard. My hands were shaking when I imagined the desperation and fear the little thing had had to go trough, all alone and unable to move, to breath but still alive and probably even able to think and feel. Maybe it was just my imagination but I’d have sworn that it was staring at us, its eyes full of pain and maybe a little hope.Mephisto was much more collected than me and cautiously inspected the gem.“Hmm, quite easily, actually. You could just smash the diamond but I’m afraid that’d kill it. If you want it to survive it’ll be a tad m
Cassandra Pendragon“Repository?” I asked. “Was he preparing for the world to end?”“Not quite, he was just convinced that a dragon should have a sample of every mythical creature that inhabits his lands. You know, like a collection of blue prints of sorts. He said that species die out constantly, some when their environment changed, some are hunted to extinction. As a guardian it’s a dragon’s duty to remember them and, if need be, revive them.”“Than why are you ashamed of what he did? To me that sounds like a good idea, maybe a little arrogant but who am I to judge?”“Because he, well, he thought the young were best suited for what he wanted as their bodies were still growing. To make things worse… did you know that the body changes once you die? It starts to decompose and even seconds can make a huge difference in how your organs and everything else behaves. So he… he froze them while they were still alive!” She was pawing at the cover of gold coins she stood on nervously. “Can you
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