LIMANI-1

2023 Words
LIMANIThe voice kept its promise. Victory returned to the barren ruins of Nacostina, Toria at her side. From the perspective of her daywalker Mikelos, they had been gone for a single day. However, Victory had been trapped in the past, in a city on the verge of destruction for almost a week. Her adopted daughter Toria had lived there for six months, unsure whether she’d ever make it home again and terrified every action might destroy the future she’d come from. Victory had never found such a stark landscape so welcoming. They had no reason to stick around, now. Toria declared the mission complete once she wrapped the time-travel artifact in multiple layers with their winter coats, useless now in the summer warmth. They left Nacostina and the Wasteland behind, returning to Limani. Entering the city-state’s territory had no physical effect, but it seemed to Victory as if her home embraced her soul, welcoming her return to her proper time and place. Toria insisted on bringing the artifact straight to the Mercenary Guildhall before she and Kane returned to the mage school. Though she acted cheery, the dark bags under Toria’s eyes belied the truth. Her daughter needed to be home, and home was no longer at Victory’s house. An anxious hum pulsed under Victory’s skin as she approached her own house. Though she’d shared the important details of her experience with Mikelos—traveling to the past, reuniting with Toria, and making their way home with the artifact—Victory needed to talk to someone else. He would either confirm she was going insane, or worse, agree something more was going on. She left Mikelos with the bags in the foyer and sprinted to the basement apartment. She stopped in front of the couch where Asaron sprawled with a book and planted her hands on her hips. Her sire lifted his chin in greeting, not bothering to glance from his book. “You weren’t gone long. How did it go?” Victory had a million possible answers to that question, ranging from “Holy s**t, time travel is real,” to “I saw Jarimis again and I need a hug,” and ending with “I beat the crap out of my past self, so I need you to tell me I didn’t f**k up the timeline.” Instead: “I’m seeing strange shadows, and I think I spoke to them.” Asaron lurched at her words, fumbling his book. “You what?” Victory collapsed next to him on the couch. She reclined against the cushions, shielding herself from any disdain her sire might show at how insane she sounded. “I thought I was imagining things for a long time. That I was going crazy.” She had expected Asaron’s silence, but when it dragged on for longer than she could stand, his pain-wrenched expression shocked her. “We thought it was just us.” “Just who? What are you talking about?” “The shadows. The darkness that shouldn’t exist, leeching into our world.” Victory grit her teeth. If it wasn’t a problem limited to her own mind, then it was something real, something tangible. Something that could be measured. Could be reasoned with. Could be defeated. “Tell me everything you know.” Asaron retrieved his book from where it had fallen between the couch cushions and set it on the coffee table, square to the corner. Victory held herself still. He’d draw in if she pushed further, and then getting any information would be like wringing water from stone. “There’s not much we know.” Asaron propped his elbows on his knees. “I’ve seen the shadows, off and on, for a few years now.” “Ever since the kids arrived home from Parisii the first time, right?” “Exactly right.” “But who’s ‘we’?” Victory asked. “If it’s more than you and I, this isn’t limited to Limani’s vampires.” Who consisted of she and Asaron, and no one else. “Daniel and Kahina.” Two vampire Masters of the City in the southern Roman colonies. “Daniel approached me first, though I’d assumed it was just me before that. I made an oblique comment to Kahina the next time I passed through Fort Caroline. She latched on quick, grateful for confirmation she wasn’t losing her mind.” “But you didn’t talk to me?” A tiny hurt jabbed her, despite how she hadn’t confided in her sire either. “The three of us are over a thousand years old. I assumed it was age-related.” Fair assessment. Three unofficial milestones existed in a vampire’s life after death: one year, one hundred years, and one thousand years. Victory needed close to two more centuries before she crossed the final threshold. Asaron sometimes joked he’d stopped counting once he’d hit a thousand, a time long before he turned Victory. “But I’ve seen them, too,” Victory said. “Daniel and Kahina are the only ones you’ve discussed it with?” “If not age, perhaps location. We all live on the New Continent. Proximity to the Wasteland?” Asaron liked to play the grunt, but a man didn’t live to his age without a few tricks up his sleeve. However, she found a flaw in his theory right away. “Except the first time I saw them was south in Jiang Yi Yue. Thought it was the kitsune harrying us on our way out of the city, but it kept happening once I came home.” She paused, her brain running through the last crazy week. “I really did think I was going insane. But then they spoke to me.” Asaron pointed at Victory. “Full report, now.” Victory rose from the couch to pace the room. She did an about-face at Asaron’s storage chest and crossed her arms over her chest in a primal urge at defense. She did not want to have this conversation, but it was an integral part of the story. “The artifact in Nacostina the kids were hired to find sent us back in time. Toria was there for close to six months. I was there for a week. We escaped before the Qin bombed the city.” It sounded like a fairy tale, or pure insanity, and Victory braced herself for Asaron’s reaction. “On our way back, I was stuck in a sort of in-between place. I saw visions out of the past, and a voice told me it wasn’t time for me to be there yet. In the real world, I appeared next to Toria, but she doesn’t remember anything from the trip either way.” Silence from her sire again. “Visions?” “Moments with you and Jarimis and Fatima.” Victory picked up a crude clay pot, crafted by Toria in grammar school, and traced the purple whorls etched in its surface. “Even you, right after you turned me.” “Interesting. And something talked to you?” “Around me. Words in a weird speech pattern, as if I was getting a bad translation.” Victory flinched away from the memory of the invisible hands running over her body. “So, where do we go from here?” Asaron stood and plucked the clay pot from Victory’s hands. After setting it next to a pile of books on knife care and urban warfare tactics, he rested both hands on Victory’s shoulders. She met his moss-colored eyes for the split second manageable, before his age and power overwhelmed her, then let her gaze slide to his cheek. She didn’t pull away when Asaron tugged her to his chest. She settled her temple on his shoulder as the muscles in her shoulders loosened. She had needed a hug. Though his callouses caught on the fabric of her cotton shirt, Asaron’s touch on her back grounded her. “I think it’s time to talk to the experts.” Asaron’s voice rumbled through her chest. “How the hell are we supposed to find an expert in something this crazy?” “Maybe we should start with someone crazy.” The next evening, Victory sat with Asaron in the guest seats across from a battered antique desk. Notebook paper and scattered fist-sized mineral samples warred for space on its surface, but the rest of the cozy office was neat as a pin. Someone, perhaps Kane, had left a houseplant in the fireplace for the summer. Across from them, Archer Sophin reclined in his chair and propped his leather boots on his desk. Sitting across from a grizzled mercenary with years of experience and the mother of his partner did not appear to disconcert him. The master-level water mage and director of Limani’s mage school flipped a handful of dreadlocks over his shoulder. A crystalline unicorn horn spiraled out of his forehead, refracting a rainbow prism across his dark olive skin from the light of the desk lamp. Asaron waggled his fingers in front of his own face. “New fashion statement?” “No. Sorry about that.” Archer clapped his hand to his forehead. It passed through the horn, which disintegrated with a flutter of silver sparkles. “The pranksters always go nuts once they figure out the illusion charms.” Victory had many memories of the previous mage school teachers sending home note after note as Toria and Archer, and then Toria and Kane, got up to such mischief in their younger days, and she snickered at seeing the tables turned. “At least you know the worst they can manage.” “Yeah, because I’ve already done it.” Archer’s smirk lit his face more than the rainbow. “But you two didn’t drop by to relive memories or laugh at my students’ petty revenge against their difficult teacher. What can I help you with?” Victory shot Asaron a glance, but he gestured for her to speak. She was in the hot seat first. Despite Archer’s relative youth, he was a talented mage who had received the best education possible in New Angouleme’s former magical academy before taking over the local school here. If anyone, perhaps he could explain what Victory had experienced between time. “Did Toria tell you what happened to us in Nacostina?” “Up late into the night, and we talked about it again this morning.” Archer raised both hands. “I already know I’m going to need a beer for this. Either of you want one?” Both accepted the offer. Archer fetched bottles from a miniature fridge tucked in the office corner, popped the caps into his waste bin, and handed them over. When he settled in his chair, he waved for Victory to continue. “This whole thing makes my brain hurt.” “You and me both, kid.” Asaron toasted with his beer. “And we haven’t even reached the crazy part.” “That does not encourage me. I still can’t believe we’re using terms like ‘time travel’ about something other than a thought-experiment.” “If you’re both done?” Victory asked. The men fell silent at once. “On the trip home… I saw visions from my past. Which makes sense, considering the circumstances of time travel. But I also heard a voice speak to me. It told me I wasn’t supposed to be there, and that it would send me home.” Archer scratched his brow, as if reassuring himself the illusionary horn hadn’t returned. “Did you see anything other than the visions?” “At the end, I stood in a sort of empty space. Nothing there. No colors other than a lot of blank gray.” Victory tilted one shoulder. “I don’t suppose that rings any bells? Or did I imagine it all?” Archer chewed at his bottom lip. “I’d rather not insinuate that you imagined anything. Barring blunt-force trauma to the skull, we have to assume it all happened.” “I guess we’re here to find out if you know where I was,” Victory said. “Or what spoke to me. This is so far outside my realm of experience that it might as well be another world.” Which it might even be, crazy as that sounded. Making it into a joke distanced it enough for Victory to be able to talk about it. She noted Asaron’s silence. Getting Archer’s help would require telling him the full story about the shadows. Archer scratched his neck, under his scruffy goatee showing hints of gray. Even though he was a few years older than Kane, it reminded Victory that her kids were growing up whether she liked it or not. “I’m not a doctor, but maybe your brain reacted to the time travel and tried to make sense of what it was experiencing. Random neurological firings to compensate for sensory overload. Or underload.” Victory had not expected Archer to go down this path. She nudged Asaron. They had to tell the entire truth, or they would get nowhere. Proving he wasn’t the director of a school for no reason, Archer picked up her cue. “There’s something you’re both not telling me.” “You’re right.” Asaron placed his half-empty bottle on the floor next to his seat. He clasped his hands across his stomach, slouching in his chair as if this wasn’t the biggest revelation since, well, time travel. “Ever since you kids took on the elves and vampires in the Parisii Catacombs, vampires have seen shadows in the real world, too.” “And by shadows, you mean…?” Archer rolled his hand for more details. “Blurry figures at the edge of my vision. Like a person is standing where they shouldn’t be. I can’t get a good look, and when I turn, nothing is there.” Victory straightened in her chair. “But that’s not what it looks like at all! For me, it’s a sort of drifting darkness. Patches of shadow where there shouldn’t be shadow. And they move.”
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