Authors: Andrew Ball
possible. "But my preference has not altered
your decision."
"Eleanor." She forced herself to look at
him. "We’re holding against the sieges in
New York without much struggle, but the
Vorid are closing in from less populated
areas, town by town. Boston is the northern
shield of the east coast. We cannot lose it."
"…I understand."
"Rachel will attend you, of course."
Eleanor nodded. "What are the
arrangements?"
"You’ll enroll at Northeastern
University."
She frowned. "Not Harvard?"
Henry smiled in a way that told Eleanor
he knew something she didn’t. It was an
expression she knew well, and one she found
exceptionally distressing. "There are many
kinds of education. Northeastern is a fine
school."
"I acquiesce to your judgment."
"Good," he said. "I expect excellent
grades."
"I doubt the curriculum will be very
challenging."
"Don’t look down on mundanes. Without
them, we’d still be living in the dark ages."
Eleanor stood. "If you’ll excuse me, I
want to make Rachel aware of our plans."
"Then I’ll meet you in the atrium."
Eleanor gathered her white dress in her
hands, curtsied, and left the room. She didn’t
notice the flowering wallpaper and the
chandeliers that dotted the halls. Opulence
was her standard state of existence. Even the
rainbow-refractions of crystal lighting grew
boring the thousandth time.
The door to Rachel’s room was ajar.
Eleanor slipped inside.
Rachel was seated on the edge of her
bed, idly kicking her legs. The short redhead
was one of the strongest from their branch
family, and Eleanor’s second cousin. For
that, and for being about the same age, she’d
been raised as Eleanor’s attendant and
bodyguard. She also held the higher honor of
being Eleanor’s best friend.
Rachel worked a needle into and out of
a small doll. Various breeds of stuffed
animals lined shelves around the room, or
were piled with pillows; the droppings of
her hobby. She was so intent on her work
that she didn’t notice Eleanor come in.
"Rachel."
Rachel stiffened, then sighed. "One of
these days you’ll freak me into stabbing my
finger." She set the doll to the side. "Don’t do that."
"What, and lose all that fun?" Eleanor
eyed her dress. "That outfit looks terrible on
you. I hate green."
"…I thought it was nice."
"Well, I don’t."
Rachel looked away, then back. "I
thought you were waiting with the
President."
"I came to tell you about our new
posting. We’re moving to Boston."
Rachel nodded slowly. "It’s a bit safer
there."
"Safer?" Eleanor began to pace the
room, her nose stuck in the air. "I don’t want
safe. New York is my home. I love the city.
There’s a dozen colleges I could attend just
in Manhattan."
"Boston will give us plenty of action."
Rachel sighed. "I guess the queen bee is
driven to brandish her stinger."
"What’s that supposed to mean?"
Rachel hopped off the bed and
flourished her sewing needle like a rapier. "I
am Eleanor Astor, defender of earth! Behold
my mighty powers!"
"Very amusing."
"En garde!" Rachel danced forward and
struck at an invisible enemy. "I’ll fence all
the Vorid to death! I’ll take their king one on
one! The amazing Eleanor is here to save the
day!"
"Stop already!"
Rachel burst into laughter and stuck the
needle in the doll. "
Stooop alreeeady
."
"I do not sound like that."
"You’re right. You sound a lot bitchier."
They locked glares for an instant, then
started giggling. They fell side-by-side on
Rachel’s bed. For that brief moment, her
anxiety had flown away, but now it was
rushing back. "I’m just worried about him,"
Eleanor said. "He’s not as young as he used
to be."
Rachel propped herself up on an arm.
Her long red hair fell past her neck. "Your
father," she began, "is the President of the Ivory Dawn. He’s probably the strongest
magician on earth. The last thing he needs is
his little princess worrying about him."
"America doesn’t have princesses."
"Not officially." Rachel sat back. "So.
What are we doing in Boston?"
"Attending Northeastern University."
"That’s surprisingly normal."
"Yes," Eleanor said. "He seemed
particularly pleased with himself about that."
"Getting out of the manor will do us
some good, right?"
"I suppose."
"You’re so high-maintenance. Besides."
Rachel raised her eyebrows. "College means
parties. And boys."
"We don’t have the time or the luxury
for that nonsense."
"Elly. This isn’t the 15th century. Let
your hair down a little. Literally and
figuratively."
Eleanor self-consciously patted her bun.
"I like it where it is."
"Whatever. More for me."
"Slut."
"Stuck-up bitch."
Eleanor snorted. "But seriously," she
said. "We have our duties. It wouldn’t be fair
for the other person in the relationship."
"…a little normality," Rachel said. "It might be good."
"I’ll need you by my side," Eleanor said.
Rachel didn’t respond. Eleanor sighed and
leaned up off the bed. "I should get back."
"Good luck."
Eleanor paused at the door. "How long
are you going to cling to these things?"
Rachel tucked her doll into her lap, as if
protecting it from Eleanor’s stare. "…is it a
problem?"
"Are you making it one?" Eleanor asked.
Rachel lowered her face. Eleanor
couldn’t quite make out her expression. "It’s
my hobby, ok?"
"Yes. A childish hobby."
"What does it matter?"
"You’re my attendant. Your actions
reflect on me. I shouldn’t have to lecture you
about this." Eleanor scratched under her ear.
"Is everything alright?"
Rachel sighed. She put a hand on her
forehead. "Just…forget it."
Eleanor left the room feeling somehow
less comforted than when she’d gone in. But
then, Rachel would see things her way
eventually. She always did.
****
Over the course of ten minutes, the
delegations filed backed into their seats.
After the footsteps and shifting dulled,
Eleanor’s father again took a spot on the dais
at the front of the meeting chamber. "Those in
favor of renegotiating the treaty and
establishing the familiar system, vote green.
Those against, red. Please vote now."
Eleanor braced herself as bubbles of
light appeared over each group.
She sighed. The True Flame, the
witches, and the Wu all voted in favor. They
wouldn’t even have to count—only a few red
orbs dotted a field of green.
"The vote is cast in favor. My daughter
will perform the spell. I will negotiate on
our behalf, unless there is a dissenting
opinion?" No one spoke. "So it is." Henry glanced back at Eleanor.
Eleanor drifted into the center of the
room. She felt the eyes taking her in,
measuring up the likely future president of
the Ivory Dawn. Technically the president
was elected, but the Astors had ruled for
over five generations. What Rachel said
about her being a princess wasn’t far from
the truth—she was more or less next in line.
She concentrated on her soul core. Her
inner power rose up to meet her, filled her
hands with warmth. She spread it out over
the floor, molding a complex summoning
sigil of blue light that she had memorized
over the past few weeks. Accurate mental
construction was critical. Demons were as
unpredictable as they were conniving. She
had to be sure to have firm control over its
presence.
The completed sigil was a pentagram
covered in hieroglyphics. She felt the strain
as she clenched it tight. It was like holding a
plastic bag with too much in it, weight
digging into your fingers. The spell dug
across her soul, the lines constricted about
her power, dragging her down. She resisted
the urge to drop it.
A cylinder of blue light grew from the
floor. It was so bright she had to struggle not
to wince. She hadn’t moved, but her lungs
were burning. She breathed deeply.
The light died. Standing on the sigil was
Beelzebub.
It was roughly humanoid, but its skin
was blood red. Its fingers ended in black
claws. Two white horns curled up above its
skull. It wore a black shirt and black slacks,
no buttons, zippers, or pockets.
There was no question it could beat any
of them in a physical contest, but the real
threat was its sheer magic power. The
ancient demon commanded vast legions
within the depths of Hell. There, its word
was as good as law, and that was saying
something.
Shiny black eyes turned on her. "Eleanor
Caroline Astor. A worthy summoning."
Smoke drifted from its mouth as it spoke.
"Amazing, Henry. All these fools under one
roof and they haven’t torn each other to
pieces? You weren’t exaggerating."
Henry cleared his throat. "My proposal
has been accepted. We would like to
renegotiate the treaty."
"Yes." Beelzebub folded his arms. Or
its arms. The dusty tomes Eleanor had
studied hadn’t been clear if the warlord had
a gender. They hadn’t used a summoning
spell in hundreds of years; their sole contact
was through her father’s communication
spell. "What would you like, Astor?"
"We want to reestablish the familiar
system."
The demon rumbled a thick, fiery laugh.
"Interesting. Normally I’d want something in
exchange…but." It paused. Its eyes studied
the gathered faces. "They haven’t yet entered
our universe. I suspect it’s only a matter of
time. We might as well fight the war on land
that doesn’t belong to us."
Henry nodded. "Have you felt the effects
of the energy loss? Is the prison sound?"
"A few light knocks on a foundation
larger than your puny earth," Beelzebub said.
"But the lack of death is having its impact.
The wheels grind hard when the Vorid steal
the energy away for themselves." It grinned.
"It might please you to know that the other
undesirables are still having plenty of fun."
"Not particularly."
The demon laughed again. "I forget you
humans don’t take as much pleasure in
misfortune. Least of all when you don’t know
them personally. You’re all too apathetic.
You need more passion."
It waved a hand. Another sigil appeared
in the air and expanded rapidly, a massive,
floating construction of burning purple lights.
Parts of the magical treaty were actually
moving, shifting as they watched. It made
Eleanor’s spell look like a child’s toy.
"The familiar system?"
"That is all I dare ask."
"Good that you know your place."
Beelzebub jabbed his finger forward. Some
cosmic key turned, and lines and lights
flashed. Purple spheres danced to and fro.
Part of the treaty sigil rewrote itself. It went
still again, then, and vanished. "It is done."
"Thank you, Beelzebub."
"Anything for you, Astor." It made a
lopsided grin. "Remember not to summon
more than you can handle. Bad things might
happen. I can’t police them all the time, you
know."
"Of course."
Black eyes locked onto Eleanor.
"Release your summons before I break it. I
was with my harem."
Ah. Probably male, then
. Eleanor let the
bag drop from her fingers. The spell slid off
her power, relinquishing its grip. Blue light
glowed around the edges of Beelzebub’s
form, and it faded back into Hell. The
tension in her shoulders faded, but the
meeting was far from over.
"I will now call the Klide diplomat, and
we will address him with our grievances."
Her father withdrew a stone from his robe, a
small, turquoise oval. Unlike with the
demon, there was no special preparation
needed. He simply squeezed its surface.
The ambassador simply wasn’t there
one moment, and there the next. She had no
idea how it could hide its magic like that.
Not even Beelzebub was capable of such a
feat.
Its clothing had changed from the putrid
multicolored pinstripes to something much
more conservative—a simple black suit—
but it didn’t belie the sense of unease the
large red eyes gave her. A frog’s head
perched on that thin body was undeniably
creepy.
It bowed. "Mr. President. Delegates.
How may I be of assistance?"
"Our meeting this day, Xikanthus,"
Henry began, "is due in no small part to your