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Pacific NorthWitch 21

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Lemuria started to sprout in the South Lake Union area about five years before, spreading down from its castle on a hill into the forgotten industrial playground that had once been eyed for a public space to rival Central Park. Lemuria grew like mushrooms, thriving on the decay on a once-industrial city. Soon, it began to consume its surroundings, until the land between I-5 and Highway 99 was solidly part of its urban continent.

You know Lemuria. You got all your Christmas presents from Lemuria last year. Half of all websites you read are hosted on Lemuria servers. Lemuria created the digital assistant that sits on your counter top. You last asked her to play Abba. You said, Lem, play “Mamma Mia,” and she said, Okay, playing “Mamma Mia,” here we go again. She’s so funny.

You probably bought this book from Lemuria. You know Lemuria.

Right Determination watched the rise of Lemuria, at first with curiosity, then with slow, building dread. She knew a tyrant when she saw one. Once, she was happy to indulge in the novelty of ordering books from the Internet — the Internet itself was a novelty she never would have dreamed of when she and her group first set foot on the land of the People of the Inside. Now, she saw Lemuria for what it was: a dangerous kingdom lead by a smiling thief, a nightmare that sought to keep its victims asleep forever, where it could thrive.

The sky over the Olympics turned a nice bright gray, the sun in the east finally peeking over the Cascades. If gray could be warm, it would be that kind of gray. Right Determination watched out the window of her apartment for a moment, watching a ferry dock at its terminal. She prepared coffee in the coffee maker, one she rarely ever used for more than a cup or two. She filled the pot this time, having a hunch that Elliot would be able to take whatever else she didn’t. And for a moment, she was at peace with the world, the towers of Lemuria to the north aside.

Elliot had fallen asleep a few hours before. She slumped over on the couch, and Right Determination covered her in a blanket, letting her have her sleep. And while Right Determination was enjoying the company immensely, she also enjoyed the solitary still hours of the early morning.

This was not how Right Determination had intended to end their date. Her apartment hadn’t entered into it at all, unless they had been too tired to stay out, and even then, returning to Cassie’s charming coffee shop would their first option. Right Determination had a feeling that Cassie wouldn’t care if the two of them had fallen asleep on one of her couches. But her own apartment, that was something else entirely. The last thing she wanted was to scare her new companion away.

Elliot stirred on the couch. She sat up, looking around wearily, squinting in the low light.

“Good morning,” Right Determination said.

“Hi,” Elliot said. Her headfur fell in front of her eyes, and she brushed it away, kind of. “What time is it?”

“A little after six,” the demon said. She hadn’t bothered to put her disguise back on, and after a moment she realized Elliot was staring.

“In the morning?”

“In the morning,” Right Determination said, amused.

Elliot struggled to stand, sleepily finding her footing. “Sorry. I should go.”

“Why are you sorry?” The demon said. “Stay, I made coffee.”

Elliot stumbled to the kitchen. Right Determination handed her a mug. Elliot inhaled the scent of the coffee deeply, and let out a long sigh. “Thank you.”

“I thought you’d want some.”

Elliot nodded and began to drink. She watched Right Determination move to a window, sipping her coffee and watching the world outside. Elliot’s ears twitched.

“I fell asleep, huh?” She asked.

The demon smiled. “You did. It was cute.”

Elliot looked away, letting her eyes wander the open loft. She started at he sloped walls, and noticed they kept going up, rising a few floors up to a flat ceiling. She looked out the window, looking at downtown Seattle, the Columbia Tower to her right. Right Determination watched, quietly sipping her coffee. Elliot turned back to the demon.

“I always wondered who lived up here,” she said.

“Surprise,” the demon said.

Elliot looked down to her coffee. “Are you mad at me? Should I go?”

“Oh! No! I am not mad, I was just…” Right Determination hesitated.

Elliot approached carefully, watching the demon closely. “This was too early.”

“It was. That portal trick is programed to go back to one place…”

The raccoon got closer, but kept her distance. “It’s nice. Honestly? I expected something like this.”

“You did?”

“Yeah, like… you’re sophisticated and smart and you’ve seen a lot of history. And like, your shop is really fancy too. You like charcuterie. I bet you could spell charcuterie.”

Right Determination laughed a little. “Well, I suppose I’m glad I set expectations well.”

Elliot got closer, trying to look out the window the demon stood by. It was a straight shot down Second, looking at the International District, and directly at King Street Station. Elliot followed Ardy’s gaze, watching a commuter train come in from the south.

“You like trains, huh?” Elliot asked.

“I like that trains go somewhere,” Ardy said. “I like the journey, and at the end of the line there’s somewhere else completely different.”

“That’s really nice,” Elliot said. They stood next to each other now. “I came here on the train. Just from Spokane, but…”

“Did you do your trick and hide from them?”

“They never knew I was there,” Elliot said.

“It’s very impressive.” Ardy thought for a moment. She very slowly reached out and put her hand on the small of Elliot’s back. Elliot’s ears perked, but she leaned ever so slightly into Ardy.

“Uhm…” Elliot said. She didn’t dare look at the demon. “I had a really good time.”

“I glad. I did too.”

They stood together for a moment, just watching the world go by, the people below unaware of the people watching them from Smith Tower.

“So…” Elliot started. “What… happened in the tunnel last night?”

Ardy considered this quietly. “I do believe that was your friend.”

“He’s…” Elliot stopped, her ears flattening on her head. She narrowed her eyes. “That was The Nerd. What was he doing there?”

“And who was with him?”

Ardy felt Elliot tense.

“Are you okay?”

Elliot stumbled over her words before saying, “Wizards. There’s more wizards. I didn’t know there were witches two weeks ago and now we know there’s at least three or four wizards and they were doing SOMETHING in the tunnel, and one of them is the jerk that keeps following me.”

“Don’t forget about demons,” Ardy said.

Elliot swayed a little, and Ardy steadied her. “I’m… scared? I think? Like, I feel like this means something, but I don’t know what it is. I know so much less than I did two weeks ago.”

“Your world got bigger,” Ardy said.

“It did.” She watched out the window, and sighed heavily. She scrubbed her face with her free hand. “I’m so tired of being afraid.”

Ardy slipped her hand up to Elliot’s shoulder and pulled her into a side hug. “That’s a good place to start,” she said. “We can figure out a way to make you not afraid.”

Elliot leaned into the hug, her eyes closed. She didn’t say anything, and they let the silence hold the conversation for a moment.

“Well,” Ardy started, suddenly cheerful. “I think it’s time we found some breakfast.”

“Aren’t you tired?” Elliot asked. Ardy understood the question.

“You will have to try much harder to wear out your welcome.” She turned and strode to the kitchen to set down her coffee. Elliot watched, approaching carefully. Ardy too her cup too. “The coffee shop downstairs has a wonderful breakfast.”

Elliot smiled a little. She didn’t know what to say, except, “That sounds nice.”

“Good,” Ardy said. She put a jacket on, somehow looking more put together than she did the night before. She straightened her hair in a mirror, and in an instant she looked like a human again. She smiled at Elliot. “I have so much more to learn about you.”

“I can’t even imagine what part of me would be interesting to you.”

“Nonsense.”

“Like, the most exciting thing in my life is that I found a working Nintendo 64 at Goodwill for twenty bucks.”

“With Mario Kart?”

“No, but I got that later,” she said. “Did… do you play video games?”

“I never gave my attention to this Nin-ten-do 64,” Ardy said. “In this house we honor Sega, thank you.”

“What?” Elliot laughed and joined her at the top of the steps. “You’re so much more of a nerd than I thought.”

“You will never know the joy of seeing an arcade-perfect conversion of Space Harrier on a home console,” Ardy said.

“You’re so old!” Elliot blurted. She slapped her hands over her mouth. “Sorry sorry sorry.”

Ardy only beamed at her.

“I desperately want to know about 1980s Ardy.”

“Do you want to see pictures of my perm?”

“YES.”

“I’ll show you after breakfast.” She held her hand out for Elliot. Giggling, Elliot took it, and Ardy pulled her closer. She put her arm around Elliot’s back, holding her hand as if they were dancing. Elliot gasped, blushing. Ardy leaned in and carefully kissed Elliot on the cheek.

She felt Elliot tense again, freezing in her arms.

“I’m sorry, I didn’t think-”

“N-no, it’s fine.” Elliot pulled away. “It’s okay. I should go, though.”

“Do you not want breakfast?”

“I’m okay!” Elliot said. She stepped back. “I’ll be okay. Thank you, though.” She retreated down the steps, and Ardy heard her fumble with her door lock, and speedily exited. The door closed with a clack.

Ardy sighed, dropping her arms to her side. She went back to the coffee she had left on the counter, which was slowly getting cold. Still, it was coffee. She knew she shouldn’t feel bad. How many dates had she been on that ended badly? This wasn’t even that bad, all things considered. And she knew that she had had so many promising relationships end after date two. This was nothing new.

Still, she sighed. She liked that witch.

She moved back to the window, slowly sipping her coffee, watching the trains come in.

Ardy’s phone vibrated on her kitchen counter. She picked it up and opened her texts.

“I don’t know how to get out”

Ardy laughed. She took a second to compose herself and went to go rescue Elliot.

[g]

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Pacific NorthWitch 20

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Back to Part 19Chapter Index

Ardy presented the door to Elliot as if gifting her an exotic gem from a far off land. She stood next to the nondescript industrial door, her hands behind her back. They stood outside, south of the waterfront, out of the way of the meager foot traffic, whoever was out this late.

Elliot held a cup of coffee from Cassie’s. She stood in front of the door, where Ardy had positioned her. She bit her tongue. Ardy looked so proud, and the climax of all of this was so… not there. Her instinct was to mock, to say something sarcastic and defensive. Elliot didn’t want to spurn her new companion.

“I… I don’t get it?” Elliot said slowly, her ears dropping on her head. “It’s a door.”

“It’s a door!” Ardy said. “But you forget that doors go somewhere.”

“Generally, yeah…” Crap. Get it together, dude.

“So there is another part to this.” Ardy pulled a key card from her pocket. “Never mind how I got this. But this will open that door.”

Elliot took the key and held it in her hand. It said STP on one side in a boring corporate typeface. Where had she heard that before? She flipped it over, as if to reveal its secrets, but it taught her nothing.

“So… I just…?” Elliot asked.

“Are you not curious?” Ardy said. She tilted her head just a little. “Do you not want to know what’s inside?”

Elliot’s ears dropped on her head. “Like, if I go in, am I going to come out? Is it… is it a door to Hell?”

Ardy laughed. “I promise you will not be hurt.”

“Okay, but how do I know that?”

“Because I’m here,” Ardy said.

Elliot clenched her jaw. She reached out to the sensor next to the door and tapped the card on it. The light on the sensor flashed green, and the door clicked open. Ardy grabbed the handle and pushed it open, just a little, sensing Elliot’s hesitation. Elliot looked to Ardy, and then the door. She reached out and pushed the door open. Ardy ushered her in and the door closed behind them.

Beyond the door was a corridor, sparse and concrete. Utility pipes ran along the side, and lights were arranged in a line along the ceiling. On the wall, green exit signs pointed back towards the door. Ahead, the corridor began to slope downwards.

Ardy watched Elliot expectantly, her hands behind her back.

“We’re in the Exit Corridor,” Elliot said softly.

“We are in the Exit Corridor,” Ardy said, nearly beaming.

Elliot felt her face flushing. She looked down the corridor, taking a few steps forward. She had had dreams about this, about what Mitchell Locke had seen before he disappeared. As in any other dream, it was always so detailed, and when she woke up, always so formless and distant. And now, here she was. She pulled out her phone.

“It’s probably not the best idea to document your trespassing,” Ardy said.

“Yeah, but…” She turned back to the demon. Ardy kept her human disguise, but she was now dressed in proper work clothes. She wore a pair of tough looking pants, work boots, a flannel shirt, over which she wore a safety orange reflective vest, and a hardhat with STP on it. Seattle Tunnel Partners, Elliot thought. Of course.

“Should I have a disguise?” Elliot asked. “When did you change? What the hell?”

Ardy started forward. “You can make people not see you. I will have to make do with this.”

Elliot trotted to keep up with Ardy. She wanted to take everything in, but she knew every minute they were in the tunnel was a minute they were being watched, or discovered, or arrested. Again. Though, idly, Elliot wondered what that experience would be like with Ardy by her side.

As they went deeper into the tunnels, Elliot could hear road noise from the tunnel, just ten feet away, a wall between them and the road. Every so often, they passed an emergency door, but not THE door. They were marked, little signs next to the doors, and Elliot was counting, trying to remember the door number closest to Locke. 33? 32? They were still at 9.

“Are you still with me back there?” Ardy asked. She slowed so that Elliot could catch up, and when they were side by side, she looped her arm through Elliot’s. Elliot smiled a little.

“Sorry, I’m trying to take in everything.” She looked around. “I want to make sure I don’t miss anything, but I don’t know what I’m looking for.”

Ardy nodded. “When this has been picked over with a fine-tooth comb like you all have, what else is there?”

“Yeah,” Elliot said. “That’s the question, isn’t it?”

“But, there must be something.”

“I know there must be.” Elliot watched one of the exit doors as they passed, a lull in traffic bringing silence to the tunnel. It was well after midnight, and traffic was sparse at best. She sniffed the air. Just a hint of exhaust and… something else she couldn’t quite put her finger on. Sandalwood?

Down the tunnel, a metallic clank rang out. Elliot’s ears perked, her tail poofing out. A second later, she went unseen. Ardy squared her shoulders, focusing on the corridor ahead. She started forward again, Elliot following.

Distant voices seemed to be arguing, or at least chastising. Another clang, and more arguing. Elliot strained to hear what they were saying. Ardy pressed forward, like she was on the job. They walked until they could start making out individual voices. There were three or four. They spoke sharply, three voices against one.

As they moved forward, the air in the tunnel changed. It felt thicker, harder to breathe, almost like they could slice it up with a knife. That smell was there too: sandalwood for sure, but also a mix of spices Elliot couldn’t quite put her fingers on.

And out of the corner of her eye, she saw it. She stopped, turning her head a few times, making sure she had seen what she had seen. Ardy stopped too, turning to look back. She tilted her head quizzically.

“Lines,” Elliot said as quietly as she could. “They start back there,” she pointed to a spot ten feet behind them, “and the go all the way down.”

“Lines?” Ardy asked.

“I’ve seen them before. On the body Meryl showed me, on Locke’s car. I think…” She stopped because it felt silly. “I think it’s a deception spell.”

“To keep us from… what?” Ardy looked around.

Elliot pointed down the corridor, down to where the voices were coming from.

Ardy watched Elliot carefully. “Do you want to go back?”

Elliot bit her lip. She looked down the corridor. “Yes,” she said. “But when will we get to do this again?”

Ardy nodded. “As soon as you want to turn back, you tell me.”

They pressed further into the corridor, moving further down into the Earth. The voices had stopped. It sounded like someone was carefully working, but there was no more discussion. They must have settled their argument.

Where the corridor flattened out, a figure emerged. Elliot hesitated. Could they see her? They must have been able to see Ardy. Elliot grabbed Ardy’s arm and pulled her back. She could hear the figure talk, and another figure rushed forward. Was that…?

The figure at the end of the of the corridor waved their hand in the air, drawing a triangle out. It glowed bright, and one by one, the lights in the corridor went out, the darkness rushing at them.

“Shit,” Ardy said. She started back, pulling Elliot with her. Elliot held her hand low, feeling like Meryl had taught her, letting magic pool in her palm.

There was movement after them, rushing up the corridor. Elliot thought about what she wanted to magic in her hand to be, and she threw the ball roughly in the direction she thought was the most down the corridor. It bounced off a wall but toward their pursuer enough, throwing off sparks like an angry bottle rocket. The pursuer deflected the magic like swatting a fly away.

In the flash of light, Elliot caught a glimpse of the figure. Dog, glasses, wearing a coat, with a bandana around his neck. Of course, Elliot though. Of course it was. Who the fuck else would it be?

Suddenly, the Nerd was almost behind them, covering hundreds of feet in a second. Elliot cried out. The Nerd drew another figure in the air.

“You need to get out of here!” He pushed the spell forward, and Elliot and Ardy tumbled forward, thrown another hundred feet away. The Nerd slowed, drawing out another spell. Elliot caught his expression in the glow of his own magic, and she mentally stumbled. He watched them not with anger or malice, but with fear, concern.

“Hang on tight!” Ardy said. Elliot looked back. Ardy’s disguise was gone, and she stared hard at the Nerd, her eyes glowing red. She said something in an ancient, unknowable language, and suddenly Elliot was falling.

The world around her changed so quickly that for a moment, everything was just… red. They were still falling. Elliot slowly focused, and the red gave way to a horizon, a division of a field of dark maroon grain, a rust colored sky. There was a river of lava, and stone bridges that crossed it like it was any other river. She could see people, they must have been people, but they were so far away. They moved across the bridges, going about their day. The bridges carried roads, and the roads wandered to a walled city in the distance, surrounding stone towers and buildings, red and black and silver and white.

Ardy shifted her weight turning to fall head first. Elliot went with her, and suddenly they were slowing, until they plunged through another hole in the fabric of the universe. They rose up, the weight of gravity returning, and Ardy gracefully put her foot down on solid floor. She steadied Elliot on the floor, and the hole sealed itself, the sound of paper being torn back together.

Ardy looked Elliot over. “Are you-”

Elliot let out the scream she had been holding in.

[g]

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