• 8FOLD: Pulse War Special # 4, "The Midnight Peace"

    From Amabel Holland@21:1/5 to All on Sun Oct 1 16:22:01 2023
    This is the song of Belden's betrayal:
    This is how we lost a thousand earths.

    - Ezra Hunter (2891 - 2929)

    EIGHTFOLD PRESENTS
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    THE MIDNIGHT PEACE
    BY AMABEL HOLLAND

    DRAMATIS PERSONAE

    KATE MORGAN, age 30, she/her.
    The Queen of Cups.

    CLAIRE BELDEN, age 30, she/her.
    The Betrayer.

    TRINITY TRAN, age 35, she/her.
    The Mother.

    MAILE AKAKA, age 20, she/her.
    The Fighter.

    BETHANY CLAYTON, age 32, she/her.
    The Paradox Heart.


    At some point, Kate's eyes turned green. They were hazel before, brown
    in this light and green in that one, and maybe that's what made it
    difficult to detect the color shifting. But now, they are wholly,
    certainly, and undeniably green. A darker green, green like her
    costume, green like Claire's costume, Claire's green.

    As she studies her eyes in her bedroom's reflecting pool, Kate
    wonders why her eyes turned green. Is it a Queen of Cups thing, some
    ancient magic pulsing in her veins? Is it something Claire left behind
    when the two of them were mixed together? (Are they still mixed
    together? Will there always be traces of Claire lingering in Kate, and
    traces of Kate in Claire?)

    "I think so," says Claire. Kate finds her sitting on the corner of
    the bed. "Green suits you, anyway."

    "It suits your image of me," says Kate icily.

    Claire winces, then changes the subject. "Is this the part where
    you ask me how I got into your room, why I'm here, so on and so
    forth?"

    "We can skip all that," says Kate. "Anyway, I know why you're here.
    You told me you'd be back on the solstice. And, here we are. The
    solstice."

    "No questions, then? We're going to skip the little game where you
    pretend you don't trust me? That you don't know me. That I don't know
    you."

    "Do you?"

    "We've been inside each other, Kate." Claire reaches with her
    gloved hand, touching Kate's cheek. "Tangled up, so it's hard to see
    where one starts and the other ends. And even once we got untangled,
    pieces of one another linger. So of course we know each other better
    than anyone else ever has, or ever will."

    Kate gently grabs hold of Claire's wrist, and pulls the hand away.
    But she doesn't let it go. "I understand you better now, sure. Which
    is exactly why I don't trust you."

    "But you trust me enough to know I'm not the villain. That I
    haven't hatched some mad, evil scheme or that I'm going to doom us
    all."

    Kate nods.

    "I'm going to tell you something I admire about you, Kate. You
    always do the right thing, no matter what it costs you. And I always
    do what needs to be done, even when it isn't right. That used to be
    easier for me. Before you got inside. A conscience is a damn
    inconvenient thing."

    "So, which are we doing today?"

    "What needs doing," says Claire. "It's a terrible thing, but it's necessary."

    "Sacrificing lives for the greater good. I can't be part of that."

    "Oh, I didn't say that, Kate. I said it was terrible. And it is.
    But nobody dies this time. Well. Except for me, that is."

    ()

    Trinity tests the pool with a single toe, and finds it warm and
    inviting. She nods to Gail. The teenager helps her remove the gown and carefully lowers her into the water.

    Then, she begins to lay her wards around the birthing pool. Gail is unhurried and studious, but there's a nervousness under the surface.

    Trinity grits her teeth through the next contraction before
    speaking. "Are you scared of me, Gail?"

    The girl smiles in flushed embarrassment, at first unsure of what
    to say. "Of course I am, Miss Tran."

    It's a good answer. Even the expected one. When Trinity herself
    began working at The Company, it's how she would have answered if an
    executive asked. It's the sort of answer they would have relished. A
    perverse pleasure.

    It's one she catches herself enjoying now. That should mean
    something, shouldn't it? That should disturb her. There should be a
    shock of conscience, a discomfort.

    But instead, there's only the wicked pleasure of the girl's fear,
    undiluted by guilt or morality. Trinity luxuriates in it while staring
    at her swollen belly.

    "The wards are done," says Gail.

    "Good." She watches the girl's face. Gail clearly expects to be
    dismissed. She's waiting for it. When it doesn't come, confusion sets
    in: should she just go? Or is Trinity waiting for her to ask?

    Gail looks up at her boss, that last question in her frightened
    eyes, and the only response is a sly smile. It takes a moment for Gail
    to work up the courage. "May I go, Miss Tran?"

    "Dismissed. Return just after noon. I should be done by then." She
    watches the girl leave, relishing the way she wants to run but doesn't
    dare. Trinity will have to send her some little thing after. The fear
    has a certain thrill to it and she's certain she'll enjoy indulging
    now and then, but as a corporate culture it breeds disloyalty and
    insecurity.

    That's not the future she wants. Not the future she's fought and schemed for.

    "Not the future I will give to you," she says to her belly.

    ()

    Kate remembers leaving her room but doesn't remember how. She
    remembers talking to Claire while they travelled, but doesn't remember
    what it was about. This sort of thing used to bother her quite a bit.
    She can't say it's something she's ever gotten acclimated to. It'd be
    like getting used to someone habitually slipping a knife between your
    ribs. And it hasn't really gotten less disorienting, but she's come to
    expect disorienting, and that makes some kind of difference she can't
    quite explain.

    Before them is a collection of delicate towers and spirals, a
    structure of translucent blue glass rising from ice and snow.

    "The teardrop palace," remembers Kate, though the memory isn't
    hers. That's not the first time that's happened, and she knows it
    won't be the last. Quite suddenly she finds herself resenting that.
    Resenting the magic in her veins. Resenting Claire. "I'll never
    forgive you."

    "I know," says Claire. "I'll never ask you to, either."

    "Will you tell me why?"

    Claire points to the palace. "This is why. Here and now."

    "You need me to do something."

    "I need the Queen of Cups to do something," says Claire. "And for
    that there needed to be a Queen of Cups."

    "So you locked me in a mirror for years, so I could teach myself magic."

    "So you'd be a good candidate if a new queen was needed. Then, I
    made sure one was needed."

    "By opening the mouths of hell."

    Claire actually seems apologetic. "It was the easiest apocalyptic
    threat I could think of. I'm confident you'll be able to handle it."

    "Thank you," says Kate with a withering glare.

    Claire looks wounded. "I mean that, Kate," she says quietly. "I
    hold you in very high regard. I thought that much would be obvious by
    now."

    Kate nods, eager to avoid the conversation Claire wants to have. By
    the time she finishes the nod, she realizes they're right in front of
    the palace, close enough to reach out and touch it. She doesn't
    remember walking closer. "So, why are we here?"

    "To end the midnight war. The war with the Pulse, too, if we're lucky."

    The midnight war. In time before time, the first Queen of Cups
    sealed dread Venus with a mystical lullaby, and since then, three
    factions have fought in secret.

    The circle, to end the threat of Venus, and with it, the gift of magic.

    The Company, to break the lullaby and bring about the destruction
    of the earth.

    The blue lady, who seeks to keep the other two equally opposed,
    because as long as the midnight war rages, magic exists.

    The Company has had the upper hand as of late. They've broken the
    lullaby, though Venus itself has been slow to fully waken.

    All this floods into Kate, a mix of memories: some are hers, things
    she's learned; some are Claire's, lingering; some are something else,
    an ancient magic that has made its home in her veins.

    "End it, for which side? Not The Company."

    "No. We're here to save the world, not doom it."

    Kate intuits something. "But not the circle, either."

    "The world needs magic. There are other threats only a spell can counter."

    "So, the blue lady."

    "I doubt she'll see it that way," says Claire. "Her power comes
    from the stalemate. But sooner or later one of them would win, and
    either we'd lose magic or we'd lose the world. It's unsustainable."

    Kate sighs. Claire loves riddles and cryptic clues too much. Her
    own fault for playing along. "Alright. So tell me how you save the
    world, and magic."

    "We're going to steal fire from the heavens." Claire grins, and in
    her hands appear two swords: the twin Thirteens. "And to our larceny,
    we'll add a little deicide."

    "You're just never going to give me a straight answer, will you?"

    "There are two things that have ever really threatened Venus. One
    is this sword. This swords? These swords."

    "One's from the future."

    "One's from the future, yes, so now I have two of them."

    "What's the other thing?"

    "The necromancer."

    Kate nods. While she was busy with her own mystical destiny
    nonsense, the circle and The Company had joined forces to defeat an
    ancient evil that had been lurking in the memories of Claire's dead
    father. (God, give her pure simple superhero nonsense any day! It has
    to be better than this magic stuff.) "Which you killed."

    "With this sword," says Claire, hoisting the one in her left.

    "This swords," says Kate, pointing to the other. "You killed it
    with the one from our time, so you also killed it with the one from
    the future? Is that how time travel works?"

    "It does when I'm borrowing time magic from Pam Bierce."

    "You have the two things that can kill the gods of Venus in one,"
    realizes Kate. "Twice over."

    "Should be more than enough," says Claire.

    There's a sudden rush, like dominoes falling. "And the Pulse."

    "Yes, the Pulse."

    "They want Earth because it lets them cross over to other universes."

    "And the walls between realities are only so porous because of Venus."

    "You kill the gods."

    "The walls close," says Claire. "We then have nothing the Pulse wants."

    There's a question in Kate's brain. Something queasy and urgent.
    But then she realizes that they're inside the palace now. The question
    slips away like a dream upon waking. It's replaced with another
    thought. "You couldn't have planned all this."

    "No," says Claire. "Six months ago, there weren't two Thirteens.
    That changed everything. Taking down Anders Cradle, giving you magic,
    bringing back the necromancer so we could kill him? None of that was
    on my radar last year. I didn't really have a plan until, oh, early
    January I suppose? What a strange handful of months it's been."

    Kate remembers something. "You said you were going to die."

    "Oh, yes! This will be extremely fatal." She seems almost pleased
    about it. Then she gets quiet and soft. "Don't pretend you're going to
    miss me, Kate." Claire looks at her expectantly.

    "What do you want from me? Do you want me to argue with you? 'Oh,
    no, Claire, you've got it all wrong, I will miss you.' Or do you want
    me to agree with you? Tell you how much I hate you?"

    Claire looks pained. Embarrassed. "Either of those. Both of those?
    Love me or hate me, love me and hate me. Just. You meant something to
    me. You have to know that. I want to have meant something to you."

    "Why, Claire? Why do I mean something to you?"

    "We've been through a lot."

    "You put us through a lot," corrects Kate. "But even when we first
    met, you were," she stops, searching for the word. All the ones that
    come to mind are too clumsy.

    But Claire knows what she means, and nods. "I was, yes. I felt this
    pull. The gravity of you. And right from the start, you were," she
    searches for the word, and finds it. "Repulsed. Everyone else, you let
    them into your orbit. But not me."

    Kate affirms this with a sympathetic shrug. "You felt wrong.
    Dangerous." It feels cruel to say it. She tries something kinder. "And
    you were sad." In retrospect, this is even crueler. And then, in that
    moment, a thought occurs to her, something too terrible to say aloud.

    Claire sees the impulse in the corner of Kate's eyes. "Go ahead,"
    she says, trembling and soft. "You won't have another chance."

    "My mother was like that. Dangerous and sad."

    "So you kept me out?"

    Kate shakes her head. "We both know it's not as simple as that.
    That people aren't as simple as that. Cause and effect. This therefore
    that. But maybe that was part of it."

    "You loved your mom?"

    "I wanted to," says Kate. "I reached out to her. I tried. And every
    time I paid for it. I think even the day she tried to drown me, part
    of me would have let her do it, if that meant she would love me back."
    Annoying little tears starts to well up in the corners of her eyes.
    She gently slaps them away with her palm. "Even after she died, I kept
    trying to love her, and it just left me twisted up and raw inside.
    Sometimes I tried to hate her, but I couldn't do it."

    "And one day," says Claire, "you decided to feel sorry for her,
    instead." Claire closes her eyes, bringing into focus Kate's lingering memories. "And it was a decision. You remember it clearly. You
    remember saying the words to yourself. That you were going to pity her
    from now on.
    "
    "It made her bearable," says Kate. "Reduced her to something I
    could understand. Something that couldn't keep hurting me."

    "Pity is a kinder sort of hate."

    "I suppose it is," says Kate. That's when she realizes that, more
    than anything, she feels sorry for Claire.

    Claire realizes it too. Without saying another word, she starts
    drawing symbols in the air with her fingertips. Kate is about to ask
    what she should be doing to help, but finds there's no need; she
    already knows, is already activating glyphs and breaking seals,
    instinctively, intuitively.

    And that's a thing she tries not to think about, how easy this is.
    Because nothing ever comes easy to Kate. Everything she's learned,
    it's always been brute force. Nothing has ever felt "right", it's all
    been learned and memorized. And yet, here she is shifting the mystical equivalent of tectonic plates like it's air in her lungs or blood in
    her veins.

    Sooner than she expected, they've finished. The palace is awash in
    a thousand strands of light, carefully knotted together to form
    circles within circles, circles across circles, points of light
    gathered like stars circling the center: and in that center, Claire
    stands holding both swords, both aglow. Everything gets brighter for
    the briefest of moments. Incredibly bright, blinding.

    In that whiteness, Kate sees flashes of red and of green, sees
    hints of eyes and teeth, claws and vines. In a fraction of a second,
    she witnesses the genocide of the old gods. She was expecting it to be something astonishing, something incredible, but instead it is
    something small and sad. As with Claire, Kate feels sorry for them.

    Now the light is gone, and Claire is laying on the ground, still
    clutching the two swords. Kate rushes to her. She cradles Claire's
    head in her hand.

    Claire looks up, but Kate can't tell if she's looking at her or
    past her. "I'm sorry," says Claire.

    "You did it," says Kate.

    Claire groans. "No," she says as she closes her eyes. "I'm sorry
    about Simon."

    And now Kate remembers the thing that had been bothering her. The
    thing that she now knows that Claire had made her forget until now.
    Until after they had killed the gods of Venus and permanently locked
    the door between our Earth and others: Kate's brother was on the other
    side.

    She wants to yell and scream, but it's no use. Claire is dead.

    ()

    Trinity's son cries out, angry and red-wrinkled, furious and scared.
    "Just like your father," she says before naming the child after him.

    She kisses David's forehead, than hands the baby off to Gail. The
    girl wants to ask, don't you want to hold him? Trinity can read the
    question in the awkwardness of her lower lip, the anxious trembling of
    her shoulders.

    "There's another," Trinity says flatly. And in the space of a few
    minutes, she has given birth to a daughter. The baby doesn't cry, and
    Trinity worries that something has gone wrong.

    But the baby is very much alive. She is breathing. Her eyes are
    open. She looks at Trinity intensely, quietly, as if trying to figure
    out what she is, and while she stares, her hazel eyes slowly and
    surely become a deep, dark green.

    "Hello, Claire."

    ()

    Two weeks later. Cal Morgan turns eighteen. Kate attends her sibling's
    party at the Lighthouse, flanked on one side by her partner, Jonah,
    and on the other by her Knight of Cups, Bassina Bootblack.

    "A lot of people," says Jonah. He's right. Besides the members of
    Cal's team, there's a number of other long underwear types, friends
    Cal has made during various adventures. "She makes friends easily."

    "They," corrects Kate. She does it immediately, without thinking.
    There was a time when she wouldn't have bothered. Hell, there were
    times when she slipped herself. "They make friends easily."

    And Kate takes a moment to marvel at that. Because it was never
    true before. Kate and Simon were always the socialites. With Cal,
    everything was so awkward. Always pushing people away.

    And now, Kate looks at them, and sees them smiling, sees them
    beaming, sees the connections they've made. As if to highlight the
    point, she spots Maile Akaka across the room. Cal was the one that
    brought the circle and the Daylighters together in the first place.

    Kate greets Maile with a gentle hug. "How's the recovery?"

    "Going well enough. I'll be back to my chipper self in a few weeks, I think."

    "Good thing the midnight war is over, then."

    "I guess," says Maile. "The last time I saw Trini Tran, few days
    before the solstice, she warned me to keep what's left of the circle
    off their radar, then they won't come looking for us. Elder gods might
    be dead, maybe the world isn't ending. But I'm not expecting The
    Company to turn over a new leaf, are you?"

    Kate thinks for a moment. Remembers for a moment. In a sort of a
    sideways way, she knows that Trinity Tran was Claire's right hand, and
    that the two of them spent the last several months consolidating power
    within The Company. Power Tran intends to use. "Be careful."

    Maile smirks. "Not really my style, but I'll try."

    ()

    Kate finds Bethany high up in the gallery, looking out across the
    lake. It's so strange, seeing her in costume but without her gauntlet.
    She doesn't look weaker. Bethany's strength never came from the
    gadget. But she doesn't look right. Even the way she carries her body,
    the way she leans against the railing, looks apprehensive.

    "How are you doing?"

    Bethany looks at her: big eyes, bitter smile. "I'm doing."

    "Do you want to talk about it?"

    "Which it? The glove?" Bethany holds up her bare arm. "No,
    absolutely not. The, um." She taps her chest. "The paradox heart?
    Turns out I'm the big end of the world broken future threat we've been
    scared of this entire time? Not a chance."

    "We can always talk about your crush on Julie."

    The smile cracks like a sidewalk. "You need to stop teasing me
    about that, okay?"

    "Okay," says Kate softly.

    "I talked to Regina White."

    "Remind me who that is again?"

    "Space espionage, for the war. She in turn has talked to the high mucky-mucks. About the solstice. By the way, she liked your report.
    Said your prose was excellent."

    This was the first time in a long time that Kate had written it
    herself. Usually Simon helped her punch it up.

    "So, what's the word? Peace talks?"

    Bethany's face turns sour. She shakes her head. "No, we keep fighting."

    "But they have nothing to fight us for anymore," says Kate. "Gates
    are closed. Surely, the Pulse will give in."

    "Probably would," says Bethany. "We've squeezing enough
    chokepoints. Their empire is suffocating. Starving. There are
    uprisings. Political instability. They'd jump at the chance to end the
    pain, especially now that there's nothing for them on the other side
    of all this. But."

    Kate puts her hand on Bethany's and waits.

    "But," she continues. "We're not really the ones doing the
    fighting, are we? There's ninety other armies from ninety other earths
    out in space doing the fighting for us. To protect their homes. Their
    families. And now they're never going to see those families again. We
    locked the door behind them. What do you think they're going to do to
    us if they find out?"

    "If? That's a when."

    Bethany nods grimly. "We're supposed to keep it a secret until the
    war is over. The story's going to be that the Pulse did it. A
    desperate last act as the walls were closing in. They won't forgive
    the Pulse for it. Lot of anger. Lot of soft targets. You can probably
    fill in the rest."

    Kate covers her mouth. A sickness swells in her belly.

    "I hate it," says Bethany. "I hate it. Hate it with my whole heart.
    With everything that I am." She clenches the railing, and the air
    around her glows black and furious. "But it'll be us if it isn't
    them." She unclenches and looks at her friend. "I'm so tired, Kate. I
    feel so hollow."

    Kate nods, hugging her quietly.

    ()

    One day, twenty years from now, Simon's daughter will ask him if he
    missed the place where he was born. And he'll have to think about it
    before telling her that no, not really. Oh, there are people who he
    misses.

    Kate, the sister who raised him. Cal, the sibling he never quite
    understood. Melody, who he loved, though he knew she didn't quite love
    him back, and that was okay, then: that was enough. (He won't tell his
    daughter all that, though.)

    But the place itself? No. He doesn't miss the parade of apocalyptic catastrophes, alien invasions, and villainous plots, all narrowly
    thwarted. It takes a toll, always waiting for some new crisis, always
    wondering if this will be the one that swallows everything up. Simon
    didn't realize how much of a toll it was until he crossed over with
    the other volunteers. Suddenly the only thing that mattered was
    building shelters, cleaning up the wreckage from the floods, making
    sure people had food. Those were big things, sure, but it's a change
    of pace from a world that was always threatening to end. That threat
    always felt more immediate, and he felt more powerless, because
    practically everyone he knew was always pulling last-minute rabbits
    out of eleventh-hour hats.

    They always did find that rabbit, though. And so when she asks her
    father if he worries about the people he left behind, he can honestly
    answer: no, not especially, not more than he worries about her and her
    mother.

    "Probably they're worried about me, though," he tells her. "Even if
    I could, I'd never go back. You're too important to me." He kisses her forehead. "But I wish there was a way to tell them I'm okay. I'd like
    to see Kate one more time."

    They will meet again, once and only once. He'll be a grandfather by
    then. The meeting will be brief, and he will tell her a secret. She'll
    wish she had heard it before. It would have made so many things so
    much easier.

    But that's a story for another time.

    COPYRIGHT 2023 AMABEL HOLLAND

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  • From Drew Nilium@21:1/5 to Amabel Holland on Sun Oct 1 20:14:25 2023
    On 10/1/23 12:22 PM, Amabel Holland wrote:
    <snip>
    They will meet again, once and only once. He'll be a grandfather by
    then. The meeting will be brief, and he will tell her a secret. She'll
    wish she had heard it before. It would have made so many things so
    much easier.

    But that's a story for another time.

    COPYRIGHT 2023 AMABEL HOLLAND

    An intense, powerful cycle of stories, and I'm looking forward to more. :>

    Drew "catch up now, fans!" Nilium

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