James Wylder, Writer

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      • 10,000 Dawns Christmas 2018
      • Lady Aesc
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  • Buy Books
    • Buy 10,000 Dawns
    • Buy Cascade!
    • Buy An Eloquence of Time and Space
    • Buy God Save the Pres.!
    • Buy Cryptos
    • Buy One-Act Septology
    • Buy The Dark and Splendid Diary of Danielle Simpson and Other Tales
    • Buy Blackalope
    • Buy That Towering Blue
  • Explore!
    • Tales by the Blue Light
    • Eloquence (Doctor Who) >
      • Example Poems
      • Eloquence Art
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    • A Less Holy Grail
    • That Towering Blue
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  • WARS
    • The Lost Legacy of Dogman Gale

10,000 Dawns Christmas Special: White Canvas, by James Wylder

12/25/2018

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Merry Christmas and happy holidays everyone! Today, we're giving you a FULL novella. For free. Yep, and more than that, this novella is licensed crossover between the 10,000 Dawns, and characters from the universes of Doctor Who and Faction Paradox!

More than that, if you enjoy this Novella (which stands by itself) characters from it appear in the new book, "Faction Paradox: The Book of the Peace" from Obverse books, and acts as something of a prequel to a few of the stories in it. You can find that book here:
https://obversebooks.co.uk/product/faction-paradox-the-book-of-the-peace/
​If you want more free holiday tales, we have 7 short stories from some great writers, an ebook collection of all of them, and links to the John Boss and 12DA Christmas specials right here:
http://www.jameswylder.com/10000-dawns-christmas-2018.html

White Canvas
A novella by James Wylder

           
White Canvas
by James Wylder

Featuring characters and concepts created by and used with permission from: Jacob Black, Nate Bumber, Niki Haringsma, Simon Bucher-Jones, Lance Parkin, Alan Bednar, Elizabeth Tock, David Koon, and Jo Smiley. Special thanks to Stuart Douglas. This story is Copyright 2018, Arcbeatle Press.


Chapter 1: Art Therapy
The white canvas was taunting her, because after three hours it was still a white canvas. Miss Auteur had left the room to get them lunch, and told Graelyn to put her feelings on the canvas while she was out after two hours of waiting. She’d been gone an hour, and Graelyn still couldn’t make it happen. She had to get something done, so she dipped her paint brush in the blue acrylic paint, and started coloring in the sky. Not that the sky was blue, but she dreamed it was blue sometimes. Dreams that felt so real it was like they were memories. Still, they were just silly.
    She looked down at her toy Mammoth, sitting next to her, wearing it’s own paint smock Miss Auteur had made herself, “What do you think Taranis? Is it too fantastical?”
    The toy sat silently.
    “Yeah, I thought so too. Miss Auteur won’t be pleased about it. But I’ve already started haven’t I?” Miss Auteur would be mad she was still talking to Taranis too, she was ten years old after all. She continued painting the sky in, and was about to paint the sun in, but decided that was probably a step too far, so she painted the silver Diosca Eitilte that hung above the city in the sky instead. She decided to keep painting her dream, but didn’t get that much farther before Miss Auteur came back in, carrying a bag of sandwiches in one hand, drinks in the other, and two cookies by their plastic wrappers with her teeth.
    She dropped it all on her desk, and turned back to Graelyn, plastering a big grin on her face, framed by her red hair in a lulu cut, “There, we have lunch. And I see someone made a breakthrough while I was gone!”
    Graelyn gave a faint smile back, “I’m sorry it took me so long, Miss Auteur.”
    Her art therapist put a hand on her shoulder, “You have nothing to apologize for Graelyn. Now how about you take a break, and you tell me about your painting while we eat? I’m starving honestly.” She took off the big metal gauntlet she always wore on one hand, and sat down in her big leather chair while Graelyn pulled up a smaller one to the front of her desk.
    “Desolation makes the best club sandwiches in the city, don’t you agree?”
    Graelyn nodded, “They’re very good. Is there another sandwich shop, though? Mister Desolation doesn’t have a lot of competition.”
    Auteur shrugged, “Well, they’re still very good. Oh, I got crisps too.”
    Graelyn took a bag, and popped them open, “You know, it’s silly, but I’ve always called them chips. Like potato chips.”
    Miss Auteur laughed, “Imagine that, where’d you get that from?”
    Graelyn shrugged. “My imagination I guess.”
    “The same place you got that blue sky?”
    Graelyn nodded, and Auteur leaned in.
    “That’s from your dream, isn’t it?”
    Graelyn nodded.
    “Who else is in the picture with you?”
    Graelyn blushed. “Oh, that’s…Archimedes from the movies. The cyborg hero. I really like him.”
    Auteur raised an eyebrow. “You’re blushing.”
    “Not like that!” Graelyn said too loudly. “I just mean...I mean I feel like he’d be a good friend.”
    “Better than just a stuffed Mammoth?”
    “None of the kids here want to hang out with me. I’ve...” she looked to the side, “I tried, like you asked me to. They just laughed at me.”
    “Why do you think that is?”
    Graelyn looked at Auteur’s bookshelf. All sorts of classics. Les Miserables, The Phantom of the Opera, Head of State, Dracula…
    “Graelyn, why do you think that is?”
    “Cause I don’t have a mask!” Graelyn spat out.
    Auteur’s eyes went wide behind her own mask, and she stuttered, stumbling over her own words in surprise till she came up with, “Maybe your mother and father could get one for you?”
    And then she realized her mistake.
    “I...don’t have a mother and father,” Graelyn replied.
    She tried not to grimace too hard, and shifted it to another question: “Doesn’t it ever bother you you don’t have a mother or father?”
    “No, no one I know has a mother or father after all.” She cocked her head to the side, “do you, Miss Auteur?”
    She stumbled over her words for moment before getting out, “well, no, I suppose I don’t either.”
    “Why do so many books have mothers and fathers? So many don’t seem to be fantasies, but then they pretend the world doesn’t end when you leave the city.”
    “Fantasy is a popular genre.”
    “I was thinking of writing a poem about the end of the city, where the white starts.”
    “You’re no good at poetry Graelyn, we tried that remember?”
    She nodded hard, her glasses jostling on her face. “I know miss Auteur, but I’d still like to try.”
    Auteur slumped in her chair dramatically and gave a flourish of her hand. “Oh fine, but I actually have another idea. You’ve had a lot of interesting dreams the last few weeks haven’t you, Graelyn?”
    She nodded. “Yes Miss Auteur. I didn’t used to dream like this.”
    “No you didn’t, and I’m worried about it. I’d like you to start keeping a dream journal. Do you think you can do that for me? I want you to write down what you dream, and we’ll review it at our next session. How does that sound.”
    “I can do that, sure,” she replied, taking a sip from her tea.
    “Great,” Auteur said, “now, I’d say we’re done for the day. You can stop by later to walk F.I.D.O if you want.”
    Her eyes lit up, “Thank you miss Auteur!”
    She gave a dismissive wave, “Just make sure you keep up your journals.”

* * *

Graelyn walked up to the counter, and rung the bell. When no one sprung immediately to her service, she dinged it again, and then a few times more in rapid succession.
    “Alright, alright. Hold your proverbial horses I’m coming,” the shopkeep came out of the back, tying his apron around his waist and smiled under the cut of his mask.
    “Graelyn, what can I do for you today?”
    Graelyn looked down at her list, and carefully read off the two items on it.
    “I need… a notebook, and a mask.”
    The shopkeep frowned, “I can get you the notebook, but why do you want a mask? You’ve never wanted one before.”
    She leaned in, scrunching her shoulders close, “Mister Shopkeep, everyone has a mask. All the other kids have them. All the grownups too. I’m the only person without one. You have to have some here, you run the store.”
    He nodded. “I do run the store, but we don’t have any masks in stock. No one has asked for one before.”
    “Then where do people get their masks!?! They don’t just...come with them.”
    He bit his lip, pulling the skin back tight over his lower teeth. “Right...well...I can get you the notebook now, but I’ll have to see if I can get you a mask somewhere.”
    She smiled back at him. “Thank you mister shopkeep.”
    She walked out of the store, notebook in her bag. She passed the playground, where the other kids were playing. There weren’t that many kids in the town, or at least it felt like there weren’t. This was the town, it was the whole world, and it felt like there should be more. There were a lot of younger ones, but more people closer to her age had moved in over the years. This was the primary thing that made Graelyn think adults were lying to her, naturally. You didn’t just spin children out of looms, there were organic bodily processes for these things. They couldn't just spring up here. And she heard them talk, usually behind her back, but often when they thought she wasn’t listening they spoke of places they’d lived before. Places from storybooks. She’d asked about it one day in class.
    The Teacher, the only teacher, answered her raised hand. “Sir, where is London?”
    The class didn’t snicker, they looked scared.
    “London, uh, well it’s a storybook place.”
    “But Sir, your coat says it was made in London.”
    All eyes fell on her, and after a deeply uncomfortable pause, “Don’t ask silly questions. Now we’ll be covering how to make your own summoning circle today.”
    Today as she walked past the playground, the other kids did snicker though. Most of them anyways. She took note of the ones who weren’t there.
    Arriving home, Graelyn went straight to her bed, pulled Taranis from her bag, and threw herself down, shutting her eyes and squeezing the plush Mammoth tight. Sometimes it felt like the world was made for her to be alone. She couldn’t stay in bed forever though, she was hungry. She reached for her satchel, and pulled out her clutch, sifting through the money inside. She only had twelve abominations and fifty-seven horror left, which meant that if she wanted to still see the new Archimedes movie, she’d need to cook her own dinner tonight. Groaning, she got up, carrying Taranis with her, and set him on the countertop as she sifted through the fridge.
Graelyn sometimes dreamed of a world where nearly no one cooked, where food just came out of machines that built it for you from base parts. But that was a fantasy. She got out her purple whisk, and began to whisk together some eggs. She probably shouldn’t use a whisk, all the recipe books seemed to think it was only good for some things, but Graelyn found she could do most things in the kitchen with it, recipe books be damned. She just liked whisking things, maybe.
    She sat across from the stuffed toy, and ate her omelette. The Diosca Eitilte above gave the daily call of, “Uh, hello citizens. I guess it’s going to get dark in a few hours. Unless you need a little more light? Or hours? You know, just call me if you need that. Maybe talk for a bit. No pressure or anything.” Graelyn had only met Cinnabar a few times, he wasn’t allowed to leave the Diosca Eitilte often, but she felt a kindred spirit with him. Not that she had time to talk to him tonight, F.I.D.O needed walkies.

* * *

    F.I.D.O was already bounding up to the gate by the time she got there, metal legs whirring, his tail making a squeaking sound as it battered back and forth.
    Graelyn unlatched the gate, and slipped inside. “F.I.D.O, your tail needs some oil. Has Miss Auteur not been doing maintenance on you?”
    She knelt down and scratched behind the two ear-shaped microphones on his head.
    “Mistress Auteur does many things, wondrous things, dark things, and secret things. I am but content to sit at her feet,” the robot dog said.
    “You are a good boy!” she said, and rubbed her hands over his smooth head.
    “Incorrect. I am a bad boy, Mistress Graelyn.”
    “Is that why you wear sunglasses everywhere? Because you’re a bad boy?”
    “Correct. Mistress Auteur thought the leather jacket was too much, which I have deemed an unfortunate appraisal.”
    Graelyn nodded, and went over to the shed, grabbed the oil, and lubricated F.I.D.O’s joints, “Better?”
    “You have done me a great service. Long shall it be remembered.”
    “Wanna go for a...”
    His head turned to the side, one ear perking up.
    “WALK?!?”
    F.I.D.O lept ten feet vertically in joy, “WALK. WALK. WALK. MISTRESS IS TAKING F.I.D.O FOR WALKIES. EXCITEMENT TANGIBLE.”
    She waited for him to calm down, and snapped the leash to his collar. The leash wasn’t made of normal material, it was dark and nearly see through, its edges cloudy. Still, it let her hold onto Miss Auteur’s dog despite his strength, so she didn’t question it much. He still tugged hard as they left Miss Auteur’s back yard, heading down the street. The residents of the town were going about their usual business: a young couple was on a date doing a blood sacrifice over a storm drain (“Not for dogs!” Graelyn said, pulling F.I.D.O away), the bakers commune was having a debate about working hours in the shop, while one of the members lackadaisically pulled memories from the group to put into tomorrow’s bread (the memories had to chill in the fridge overnight, after all). A group of parents were fussing over their children, the family’s three fathers and two mothers trying to get the ice cream off their kid’s faces, none of whom appeared to be cleanly eaters.
    This was her town, and she wondered if it would ever let her go, and if it did, where she could go from here. As Graelyn and F.I.D.O reached the end of main street, she kept going. F.I.D.O wasn’t going to complain about a longer walk, so he might not catch on to what she was thinking. He mostly wanted to talk about Foucault anyway.
    “So Foucault wrote that madness, in the 18th Century AD, and I refuse to use CE mind you we have to have some continuity of tradition in our naming conventions, where was I? Right, madness was often used to stigmatize those who were unwanted by society. Poor, sick, and those whose own thoughts fell outside the social norms,” F.I.D.O ran a laser scanner over a flower, and a screen on his backside displayed a full chemical analysis, which he was very pleased about, “so knowledge in itself isn’t a pure virtue, because knowledge is shaped by the existing powers who control it to gain more p—Mistress?”
    Graelyn was running towards the edge of the town, towards the sea of white. Her high-tops pushed off the pavement, her arms pumped, her eyes kept on the prize. If it was a prize. If it was anything. She grabbed a stone as she passed it, and chucked it ahead. It landed on the white.
    “MISTRESS! HALT!”
    She plunged on, and her foot left the crumbling edge of the pavement, and dropped down onto…something soft. She ran on it, leaning down and letting her fingers glide across it. It felt like silk, soft to the touch but firm enough to hold her. She kept running, kept straight. She had to maintain the same direction, or she’d get lost. And what did that mean here? She ran. And ran. And there was nothing. She stopped, panting, and looked back. She couldn’t see the town. Had there been a slope? She didn’t know. She turned around, and ran till she tired, then walked. There was only white. Only nothing. She crossed her arms and hunched her shoulders. A mistake, certainly. She should have laid a string behind her, in hindsight. She uncrossed her arms, and went to reach into her back, but her hand slipped right through it. She held them up: they were vanishing.
    She stumbled, her feet sinking into the white, merging with it.
    “F.I.D.O!” she yelled, “F.I.D.O! Help!”
    Her feet were now part of the white. No matter how hard she tried to pull up, they kept sinking, her ankles, her calves. She lost her knees next, and decided this experiment was in fact a failure and did not meet her standards for proper experimentation. She thrashed, her glasses falling off onto the white.
    Mother would be so disappointed in me, she thought, which was a weird thought for someone without parents.
    Her chest began sinking in, and with a breath out, resigned herself to the end. It wasn’t so bad. There were so many worse things than death. A grey blur appeared.
    “Mistress!” she heard the blur say, “grab onto me.” She flailed her arms out, and found F.I.D.O’s metal hide, grabbing hold of him. He pulled. His gears ground, and his motors revved.
    “I’m not moving.”
    “Hold tight, Mistress.”
    F.I.D.O’s leg’s crouched, and she heard his pore core charge, then he sprung. She was yanked out of the white, into the air, the metal dog soaring a hundred feet into the air. She prepared for the rough landing, but from F.I.D.O’s back two glider winds sprung, and they coasted to the ground, the real ground at the edge of town. Graelyn collapsed, her heart pounding. She tried to slow her breathing, and get her heart rate under control.
    “Good...Dog...F.I.D.O,” she rasped.
    “Correct. I have Mistress Graelyn’s glasses.”
    She managed to sit up, and saw that F.I.D.O was holding her glasses in his mouth. She pulled them out, careful to avoid his razor-blade teeth, and put them back on.
    “You saved my life, F.I.D.O. Thank you.”
    “Mistress Graelyn, you knew very well that the empty lands are forbidden.”
    “I needed to know what was beyond them.”
    “Now you know,” he replied, “nothing exists beyond them, and nothing can exist in them.”
    She nodded, and looked back out at it. “You won’t till Miss Auteur, will you?”
    F.I.D.O examined her for a moment. “I shall keep your secret, young one. But I won’t save you again if you venture outside the town.”
    She nodded. “I understand.”
    “Now,” F.I.D.O continued, “What was I saying about Foucault?”

    Chapter 2: Dreams
   
    Graelyn presented the dream journal to Auteur, who had never seen Graelyn in this kind of mood before.
    “Graelyn, you’re very on edge, excited, nervous, it’s hard to tell.”
    She gave Auteur a bad attempt at a smile, “I just had very interesting dreams last night.”
    Raising an eyebrow, Auteur adjusted her white robe, the light from the Diosca Eitilte making the red and gold edging and designs on them stand out pleasingly, and opened Graelyn’s journal.

Dream Journal Entry 1:

    Graelyn stirred the coffee,

Auteur’s Office

    “That’s your opening?” Auteur snapped. “That’s barely a first line.”
    Graelyn frowned. “I thought you said you wouldn’t be judging my dream journals on their artistic merit.”
    Auteur forced a smile. “Yes, of course. But uh, give me a moment. Auteur took Graelyn’s journal back to her desk, and spent the next hour rewriting it on a notepad while Graelyn sat awkwardly and watched.
    “There, now I think that’s ready for us to read together. You didn’t even need the whole opening, set up is overrated. Come sit with me on the couch Graelyn.”
    Graelyn squirmed. “Um, Miss Auteur if we’re supposed to be analyzing my dreams, does it really help if you rewrote them?”
    She scoffed. “Nonsense. I just massively improved the quality of the prose. Well, maybe added a few embellishments. Have you ever read “The Dark Tower”?”
    Graelyn shook her head.
    “Oh great. Then you’re going to love this first line.”

Dream Journal, Entry 1

The green robed man fled across the rooftops, and Archimedes followed. Arch’s mechanical legs, mechanical like most of their body, were making it a certainty they'd overtake the green robed man given enough time. He leapt off a rooftop, the city rushing beneath him, and as he landed he could hear the pistons of his pursuer. The man looked back, stumbling on a piece of grating, and then panicked as he realized the roof was running out. He'd lost his momentum, and he couldn't make the next leap. He hesitated, just a moment, but that was enough. Large hands grasped him under the armpits, lifting him up like a child. Then, he really felt fear: the hands threw him up into the air in a corkscrew, and he came down back into those hands, only facing the other direction.
    "Hi," Archimedes said, "did you realize you're in a lot of trouble or am I the first one to inform you of that?"
    The green robed man looked down into the near-blank mask that Archimedes had for a face, with only one eye on it's right hand side. It was made of some sort of very tough screen that could display images, and the whole rest of his body was coated in it as well, though some of it was covered by a long trench coat and a blue Fez that said "Centro Children's Hospital Fun Gang!" on it.
    "I know," he replied.
    Arch sighed, and looked at the man's left arm, which was covered up to the elbow in an elaborate bejeweled golden gauntlet. They'd seen a lot of gauntlets, the Knights of Sky used them all the time after all in order to channel energy from other realities or something like that, but this one was different. Usually the gauntlets had a slapped together look, with different parts being added on whenever the owner realized it needed one. This was sleek, bespoke, and more than a bit gaudy. Arch sighed a second time.
    "Put down the gauntlet, please. I'm not in the mood to deal with this today."
    The green robed man was sweating up a storm. He glanced at the gauntlet.
    "I know what it does, and don't you dare. My reaction times are miles beyond you."
    There were three labored breaths, and the gauntlet slid off and clattered to the ground, just as the access door to the roof swung open, revealing Arch's comrade, Graelyn Scythes, who pointed at the captive man, began to speak, then hunched over, hand on her knees panting.
    "You alright, Grae?" Arch asked.
    She nodded, and raised one hand to point as she heaved in breaths, "Got...you!"
    "You can really take your time, we're not in a-"
    "-Dawn...is here...to-" she heaved in several deep breaths.
    "Breathe in slow, out fast."
    "You guys had to do the whole parkour on rooftops thing? Really?"
    "Parkour?" Arch asked.
    "It's French for jumping off rooftops like you're in a holoflick." Grae replied, straightening her back and regaining her composure like nothing weird had ever happened to her, ever. "As I was saying, Mr. Knight of Sky, we know you took the...oh, it's on the ground."
    "Yeah, I got that," Arch replied.
    "Could you please set me down?" the man replied.
    Graelyn picked up the gauntlet, and after fiddling with it for a moment, slid it on her own arm as Arch tried to say, "I don't think that's a good idea."
    "It fits!"
    "It fits everyone," the man replied.
    "What's it do?" Graelyn asked.
    "No idea," Arch replied, setting the man down, whose face instantly reddened.
    "You said you knew what it did!"
    Arch shrugged, "What's your name?"
    "Artillo Brinzo."
    "So what's it do? We know you stole it."
    Artillo scoffed, "How could you know that?"

    * * *

    3 Hours Earlier.

    Kinan Jans, leader of Dawn walked towards where Arch and Graelyn were reading "Fun knitting patterns" and "Clique Mechanics" respectively.
    "Hi, this is a Emissary from an alternate reality Firmament, some guy from The Knights of Sky stole their gauntlet."
    "We'd like it back," the robed figure with a funny collar said. Then after a pause, "Please."
   
    * * *

    "Okay so maybe I stole it, but I didn't steal it by myself, I was hired by-"
    There was a flash, and a statue of a painted warrior was there, it's stone arm around Artillo's neck, and then both of them disappeared.
    Graelyn and Arch stared at the air.
    "Agreed that that wasn't good?" she said.
    "Yep," they replied.
    "Can you trace him?"
    A flood of question marks filled the screen of Arch's face, "How...do you think I could do that?"
    "You're a cyborg?"
    "What does that mean?"
    "I mean you're constantly revealing you have new gizmos in your body that do neat things. Like the kitten holder."
    "Kittens need to be comfy."
    "And the missile launcher."
    "To be fair, I didn't know that was there myself."
    "So can you track him?"
    Arch shook his head. "Afraid not. I've never seen a teleporting painted statue before."
    Graelyn flexed her hand, "I do wonder what this does, though." She snapped her fingers. Nothing happened.
    "We can figure that out later, after we report back to Kinan. This is..." In front of them on the rooftop was another painted statue of a warrior, it's noble jaw pointed in defiance.
    "Uh," Graelyn said, "That wasn't there before?"
    "Maybe they can only move when we're not looking at them?" Arch posited.
    "That's ridiculous!" Graelyn replied, "But then again teleporting statues are ridiculous..." she squinted, "How do they work?" They stared at them. They didn't move.
    "Alright, so, maybe we should test this theory. We close our eyes, er, you turn off your cameras on the count of three and then we open them. Right?"
    Arch nodded. "That sounds dangerous and stupid, but I'm in."
    She grinned. "I love field research. Three, two, one.."
    There was a moment of darkness, and then there was a painted statue, closer, face filled with rage, sword drawn, charging at them.
    "Alright cool, so, how about we get out of here then?" Graelyn said.
    "Any suggestions on how to do that without death?"
    Graelyn nudged him, "Trust fall. Huh, yeah?"
    "Stop having fun."
    "Sorry."
    "But yeah, that works."
    They backed up to the edge of the building, keeping their eyes on the statue, and then leaned backward. They tumbled off, Graelyn reaching into her side-bag and pulling out a handful of Crystal dust with her gauntleted hand. The gauntlet hummed with energy upon contact, and Graelyn threw the dust down in a curve, the sparkling crystals forming into a circle of white light, and then a disk, and they fell into it as the disk closed.

Auteur’s Office

    Auteur paused, looking down at the ending to the journal’s story as though she hadn’t read it already and rewritten it personally. “Well that is a curious dream.”
    “I liked the part with Archimedes at the Children’s hospital you cut out. He was giving the kids candy and toys, it’s was really kind and cute.”
    Auteur scoffed. “It was just fluff. You should always trim down your stories to just what you need. Every line should serve the narrative.”
    Graelyn frowned. “But I always like the details, I like when stories explore things.”
    “A waste of the reader’s time, so I fixed it. But I think this story says a lot about you. You put my gauntlet into it, didn’t you, Graelyn?”
    She nodded, “I did, I don’t know what that means.”
    “I think it means you’re searching for something. You are searching for something, aren’t you?”
    Graelyn looked at her feet, “Maybe.”
    “You can tell me, it’s okay.”
    Graelyn turned her head away, “...I...I still don’t have any friends. Not one.” Her voice choked up, “I’ve tried, Miss Auteur, but they all hate me. They think I’m stupid, or they yell at me and blame me.”
    Auteur closed the journal, and pulled a loose strand of red hair behind her ear. “What on Earth could they blame you for?”
    “What’s Earth?”
    “Nevermind, what do they blame you for, Graelyn?”
    “Tyraniss said his mom and mom wouldn’t be here if it wasn’t for me.”
    Auteur shook her head, “He’s being a bully.”
    “But there’s nowhere to go! You can’t go beyond the white.”
    “Of course you can’t. He meant his parents don’t work on the Diosca Eitilte anymore, they used to. Cinnabar wasn’t always the voice up there, do you remember that?”
    Graelyn’s face scrunched up, “Sort of.”
    “It was a long time ago. Now Graelyn, you’re a smart girl with a keen curious mind. You excel in most of your classes--”
    “Not blood magic.”
    “Yes, well, nobody is perfect. But you can make friends,” she gave the girl a smile. “Maybe you’re just going about it the wrong way. But I’m afraid we’re out of time. I’ve got another appointment. So we’ll pick this up next session. Alright?”
    The girl nodded, and grabbed her satchel, “See you next time, Miss Auteur.”
    “Don’t forget to walk F.I.D.O!”
    She smiled, a real smile this time, “I won’t, promise.”

* * *

Holding a silver cane, and dressed in a suit so fine it made the rest of the room look underdressed, Gideon entered. Auteur rose to meet him, and the pair shook hands, then hugged.
    “I’m so glad to see you Gideon, running this whole town for another year has been misery.”
    They sat down in plush chairs, usually meant for her sessions, and she poured each of them a glass of bourbon. “Misery it may be, but you’ve been at this a long time. How long is the girl now?”
    “Ten,” Auteur answered, “just last month. She had a birthday party all alone. I watched it from the nanny cam. Set up her little stuffed Mammoth and blew out the candles with him.”
    “Terribly sad.”
    “Oh don’t look at me like that, of course I stopped by and gave her a present. Some science book I kept falling asleep to. She loved it though,” Auteur rolled her eyes hard. “I’ve been letting her walk F.I.D.O as well. I think she’s more of a cat person, but it’s working out.”
    Gideon nodded, “And how close are you to making a breakthrough with her?”
    Auteur gave a faint smile, “I’ve been making small breakthroughs in our therapy sessions.”
    Gideon took a sip of the bourbon, “This is fantastic,” he took a second sip, “faint memories of...did we kill the distiller?”
    “Yes, a bit of a mistake. He really made the best bourbon.” She took her mask off, so gideon could see her whole face, the clean white features with artful freckles, her green eyes staring into him, “so I’m taking my time on this one. I’m not going to make that kind of mistake again.”


           
Chapter 3: Popcorn

    Graelyn knew she still had another growth spurt in her, or she’d better have one, because she still felt too short at the movie theatre counter. Not peering-over-on-her-tiptoes anymore at least, but still. This wasn’t the way she wanted to spend the rest of her life.
    “One ticket for ‘Archimedes: Skymetal’ please?”
    “Would you... like any popcorn, candy, drinks, or the dying... gasps of unloved birds?” the attendant, a hulking thing of machine and clay they called “Hole”, asked.
    “I’ll do the popcorn and drink combo please.”
Hole filled the bag, and turned some of its eyeholes back to her, slowly, jerking like stop-motion animation. Tiny flecks of clay fell amidst the popcorn. “Buttery T-Topping?” it asked her.
    “No thank you!”
    “E-Enjoy the show, Theater 8, to... your left,” Hole said, a limb jerking left and right in windshield-wiper-like wave.

    Graelyn balanced the bag of popcorn and the drink, which were supposedly ‘small’ but did not seem small at all, and meandered her way towards Theater 8, when she heard a few things from around the corner. So naturally, she stopped to listen, back flat against the wall, and peeking around cautiously.
    “Just tell her how you feel,” a woman said to her friend. He shook his head.
    “You know she won’t understand! It’s not going to go well.” He banged his head against the wall, “I just want one reminder of home, that’s all.”
    “And that’s not too much to ask, is it?”
    He let out a breath, and shook his head.
    “So, the next time you see her...you’ll...”
    “I’ll ask her.”
    She grinned, “Fantastic. Now come on, don’t want to miss the previews.”
    Curious, certainly, but also Graelyn had no context for the conversation. Still, she filed it away. She slipped into the theater, found her seat, and waited for the lights to go down. She was wearing her Archimedes T-Shirt, which had the cyborg hero sitting crosslegged, covered in kittens, arms in the air in acceptance of the situation.
    Arch was the best.
    The previews were mostly movies Graelyn was already planning to see: Songbird 3: The Fall of Kings, Coloth Adventures 4: The Patron of Doom, Aladdin: Kid Hacker!, and a few that didn’t really interest her like a drama about how some fictional space admiral uncovered a secret plot to start a war while sitting in a desk job. She munched on her popcorn, and watched the theatre fill up. The other kids from school were here for the premiere, actually, all the kids in her class, filtering in in bursts. She avoided most of the other kids eyes, but noticed Citizen 176 was sitting alone near the back. At least Graelyn wasn’t the only kid here alone.
    Finally, the previews ended, and the movie began.
    Like all Archimedes movies, it began with the usual intro, where a whole ton of images from the Archimedes cinematic universe flashed, and the camera panned out to reveal the images were being projected on his screen-like chest all along. Then, the adventure began.

Scene: It’s supposed to be a science-fiction setting, but we can tell they just shot it on an ordinary spacestation. They’ve added things over the ordinary bits, and tried to give the holograms and displays a bit more of a “Futuristic” look. But really, you can tell that the ocean outside the windows isn’t really there and is just CGI over the vastness of space. Sure, we’ll all be living in underwater cities in the future, but you’d think with how big the budget is they’d do better. We see a man in robes, setting a bomb on a bulkhead. Skidding around the corner, come ARCHIMEDES VON AHNERABE, played under the heavy armor costume and coat by Brad Pitt, and his assistant, his trusted companion for so many years, CELESTE ROTH, played by Pheobe Waller-Bridge, who has long brown hair to match the character. She’s got a bit of a punk vibe, but nothing that would deter families from going to see this PG-13 rated flick.

ARCHIMEDES
Hi, I noticed you’re trying to blow up this underwater city, would you like some help with that?”

The figure turns, he is a member of THE FIRMAMENT the evil cult! Pulling his hood down, he points at Archimedes, and reveals he is played by Brendan Frasier, an amazing piece of miscasting that is instantly obvious because we all kinda like the villain.

FIRMAMENT
Did you really think you could stop us?

CELESTE
We already did, actually.

FLASHBACK: We see the earlier scene where the Firmament shoved Celeste off the bridge (only for her to fix her rocket-boots mid fall and survive). She pulls a bit from the bomb as she drops, we cut back to the present. The bomb has a convenient screen that says: ERROR.

FIRMAMENT
Why did I put that screen there anyways?

CELESTE
We don’t want to hurt you, so go on then, give yourself up and tell us--

“DOWN IN FRONT!” someone yelled.
    The Hollow Childe had risen into the air, blocking the screen partially, the walls began to whisper secrets not heard since the first being dared to pull itself from the ocean on a weak and daring limb, and Hole came lumbering in with the sound of rusting gears, and hurled the lasso the theater had for these occasions up, nabbing her ankle, and pulling her from the theater like a balloon. Theater goers hurled popcorn at her as she was escorted out, this wasn’t the first time. Graelyn slid down in her seat, as though they’d notice her too.
    “I can’t believe we’re stuck here with these brats,” the same voice said quieter, but not quiet enough.
    “Keep it down,” their friend said, then said something too quiet for Graelyn to hear.

SCENE: Archimedes and Celeste have managed to get onto the surf boards, and are sliding down the lava flow, now that the volcano has erupted (natch).

CELESTE
Arch, the kittens!

She’s right, the transparent orb with the kittens is bouncing down the side of the volcano above the lava flow...HEADING RIGHT TOWARDS IT! Arch turns his surfboard, an arc of lava splashing up towards the camera (in 3-D), and angles right for the orb.

CLOSE UP: the kittens, they are babies, and very cute. They are making little mewing noises, and walking all over each other in the bubble. Arch gets his surfboard parallel with the rolling ball.

ARCHIMEDES
Come on little guys, I got you…

The ball rolls off, it looks like it’s going towards Arch’s hands—but it hits a bump and the angle changes. and Archimedes catches it!

The audience roars their applause, and Graelyn takes a big sip from her pop. These movies were great. The finale had maybe a bit too much CGI, but that was okay. As she left the theater Graelyn was already daydreaming about the adventures of Arch, and how to build a surfboard that could ride a lava flow (realistically, the lava flow would be too slow for that, but hypothetically anyway). She was almost at the door to start the trip home, when she remembered she got free popcorn refills with her membership card, and headed back to the counter.
    On most days, this would have been a completely innocuous action (after how expensive the popcorn was, who wouldn’t get the refill?) but today, it put Graelyn in the position of hearing part 2 of the conversation she’d overheard earlier. During the course of it, Graelyn would go from the counter, to the wall, to covering her mouth against the wall with her eyes wide. You can insert these motions into the below dialogue at moments you feel appropriate.
    “Mayor Auteur!” the man yelled.
    She sighed, “I’m not the mayor. Don’t...I’m...don’t call me that!”
    “But you’re in charge?” the woman replied.
    She sighed, “Fine, what is it?”
    “We were wondering if we could have a simple request? You know, with the holidays coming up and all.”
    Auteur grimaced, and crossed her arms.
    “...We were wondering if you could show my favorite movie here at the movie theater?”
    “Your favorite movie?”
    “Yes!”
    “You do understand why we’re all here, right? Why this town is here?”
    The woman coughed, “It has been a bit of time...”
    “Fine, what’s the movie?”
    The man smiled, and his posture loosened, “Oh, it’s a perfect movie for the winter: Ice Age 2!”
    Auteur stared at him, “You can’t be serious.”
    The woman looked back and forth between them nervously, “It’s just a fun fi-”
    “It’s an artistic travesty! The first Ice Age movie was bad enough, but then they had the nerve to cash in on a sequel?”
    “...there are a few sequels actually and--”
    “And that god-forsaken squirrel! Who thought that was a good idea!”
    “...I love the squirrel.”
    “And most of all,” she bared her teeth, “It has Manny the Mammoth. And you know that pisses me off, so how about you show one lick or artistic taste. I mean, it’s commercial tripe but at least something by Pixar! Ice Age 2, I mean--” she threw her arm with the gauntlet out, and they looked at something Graelyn couldn’t see. They stared at it, “Oh uh, well. That’s awkward.”
    The man and woman backed away from Auteur.
    “So uh, I’ll go clean that up, and you go get some artistic taste. Sound good?”
    They stuttered out a, “Yes, Auteur,” before scrambling away.

    When Graelyn returned home she whisked her dinner together, and looked at Tiranis who watched her from the counter, “Well we should both be glad I didn’t name you Manny, huh?”
    The plush toy didn’t respond, but Graelyn pointed with the whisk like he had anyway, “Yeah, so count your blessings.”

Dream Journal Entry 2

    The pair popped out of a different white disk, tumbling out onto green grass under a blue sky where the clouds were floating bubbles of water. Their home, the home of Dawn: Spiral. They didn’t stop to rest however, Graelyn and Arch got to their feet and started sprinting toward their leader, Kinan Jans, a lanky person in a long gray coat, the left side of their head shaved so their blond hair fell on the other. They were chatting with the Emissary from the other reality. “What’s wrong?” Kinan said in her slurred monotone.
    “Big problems, actually! A painted stone statue showed up, and kidnapped our target!” Graelyn ejaculated.
    The Emissary looked down at her arm, “You retrieved the gauntlet however, and that was our main concern. We can chase criminals forever, but if that fell into the wrong hands, there could be horrible consequences.”
    “Great, but, really, why is a painted stone statue kidnapping anyone? It’s a statue.”
    Kinan cocked her head to the side, “I don’t know of anything from the 10,000 Dawns that does that. Are you sure it was a real statue?”
    “Yes,” she replied.
    “And it teleports,” Arch said.
    All eyes turned the emissary, “That sounds like it could be a few things from where I’m from. I can’t be sure though without traveling all the way back homeward. I can’t be sure without looking.”
    Kinan turned to her, “I hate to impose, but if you can assist us.”
    The emissary scratched her face, “Well, I suppose I could...no, no I’m afraid I can’t. My orders were very clear to go straight back when I’d acquired the artifact. Could I have it back, please?”
    Graelyn moved to take it off her arm, but didn’t budge. “Uh. Sorry, a bit stuck.” She pulled on it more, and then felt around for a latch, “Arch, it came off the green guy so easily...”
    Arch tried to tug it off, but it didn’t budge.
    The Emissary stepped up, and examined the gauntlet, “It looks like I don’t have a choice in staying, the artifact has initiated a danger lock. Whatever those statues are, it thinks they’re a big enough threat to your universes that it won’t detach till the situation is resolved.” She rubbed the bridge of her nose, “Alright, let’s go back and investigate.”
    Kinan raised an arm, and opened a portal up, and the four walked through the swirling white light.

    They arrived in Times Square New York, to absolute silence. The streets were empty, aside from a few automated cars that were going to their predetermined destinations.
    “Did you choose a weird year? Maybe there’s a reason for this,” Arch asked.
    “No,” Kinan replied, “this is Christmas Eve 2460. The streets should be packed.”
    Graelyn spun around looking for something out of the ordinary, till her eyes landed on a painted statue. “Kinan, Arch, Emissary, look.”
    They did, and the Emissary cursed, “That’s a Painted Warrior. I’m not entirely familiar with them, but they’re servants of our enemies.”
   
    Arch took a step towards it, “Hi there, Painted Warrior, I’m Archimedes. I don’t know why you’re here, but we’d love to talk about this.”
    “Arch, I love your peace-mongering, but you’re literally talking to a statue,” Grae replied.
    “She’s right,” The Emissary said.
    “Where are the Firmament? They’re supposed to be handling something like this,” Kinan said.
    From beneath a pile of trash, a voice answered her, “The Firmament has fallen,” a woman popped up from the pile, pulling a hamburger wrapper out of her hair. Arch kept his eyes on the statue. “I’ve been trying to find anyone else who made it, who escaped,” she held up a whisk, “Thanks to the Quantum Whisk I was able to find you though, at least I think it helped me find you. Honestly it might just be a whisk.”
    “Lady Aesculapius,” Graelyn said, “you’re serious?”
    “You know her?” the Emissary asked.
    “Traveled with her for a bit,” Arch answered, staring at the statue.
    “Lady Aesc for short, and for easy spelling,” she pulled a blue slouch cap over her curly hair, and scrambled out of the trash-heap, dusting her blue pea-coat off as she ran to the group. “I’ve been trying to track down information on them, but they’ve already done quite a lot to get rid of it. Before they nicked my ride, I did notice they’d nicked something--”
    “There’s another,” Kinan noted, and indeed, there was. Her eyes focused on it.
    “-every copy of one specific book, it got marked stolen by the computers-”
    “Another one,” Graelyn said, and stared.
    “-It’s called “The Book of the Enemy”.”
    “If they scrubbed this reality, we can find it in mine! The Plume Coteries would have it!” The Emissary yelled.
    “We’re leaving, now.” Kinan said, and threw her arm out, the light swirling into a new portal. But there were more Painted Warriors appearing, whenever a gap in their sight came up. The Emissary ran through first, then Graelyn, then Lady Aesc.
    “Go,” Arch said.
    “No,” Kinan replied, and Arch ran through. And then, there were too few eyes, and Kinan Jans felt a hand on her shoulder of cold painted Marble.

Auteur shut the book, and looked at Graelyn, “That was quite the writing you did this week.”
    Graelyn smiled, faintly, “Thank you, Miss Auteur.”
    Auteur scooted her chair closer to Graelyn, “Now, Graelyn...I think it’s time we talk about some of the underlying things you keep putting into your writing. In this story, you’re friends with fictional characters. It’s a fanfic, isn’t it?”
    Graelyn blushed, “Oh, I mean, it’s a dream, just...”
    Auteur gave a calming smile, “You misunderstand me. I wrote lots of fanfiction at your age, and between us,” she winked, “I still might.”
    The girl perked up a little, “Really, Miss Auteur?”
    “Oh absolutely. But here’s the thing Graelyn, fanfic is wonderful to write, but this is you writing down your dreams. Now, dreams can just be dreams, they don’t need to be anything, but if there are patterns they can mean something. Do you follow me?”
    Graelyn nodded.
    “You’ve told me a lot of your dreams, from before we started this dream journal project, and do you know what they have in common?”
    “...They’re fanfic?”
    “Quite right. There’s no friends or family in them. No one except you and the characters you latch onto.”
    Graelyn bowed her head.
    “And I think we both know why that is?”
    “Because I don’t have any friends.”
    “Now, these characters like Archimedes, you feel like they are friends you could have had, don’t you? You feel like Archimedes and his assistant Celeste are your friends right now?”
    Graelyn shook her head, “I don’t feel that way about Celeste, she’s…I don’t feel like I’ve met her?”
    “You’ve never met Archimedes, though.”
    Graelyn shrugged, “I suppose not...”
    “But you want to be friends with him, you would if you could?”
    The girl nodded, “He’s everything I’d want in a friend. Kind, nice even, but brave and not afraid to stand up to people doing things he doesn’t think are right. And he bring joy into other people’s lives.”
    “Do you want to see those things in yourself?”
    There was a long pause, Auteur felt she was calculating the answer, before she replied, “Perhaps.”
    “Now Grae...there’s another troubling element in these stories. One of these friends of yours, Kinan, she just vanished and was pulled out of the story by these,” Auteur checked the journal theatrically, “Painted Warriors. Do you not like her?”
    “No, I think Kinan is wonderful.”
    “Then why do you think she vanished, why do you think you’re putting all your characters in danger of vanishing too?”
    “I don’t know, Miss Auteur.”
    “It’s because you’re being pushed towards a choice, Graelyn, a choice that’s been coming a long time: are you going to stay with them, or not?”
    Graelyn paused, “I can’t let go of my characters, I don’t have anyone--”
    Auteur tsked, “Of course you don’t have anyone. You only have your fictions, no one to laugh with. I know you talk to your stuffed animal when I’m not looking.”
    Graelyn hid her face.
    “You plot everything you do. You act like other people are a game you can play, and then you take your ball and go home like that makes you better than them. But it doesn’t make you better, do you know what that makes you?”
    She shook her head, collapsing in on herself.
    “It just makes you disgustingly alone!” Auteur stood up and towered over her, “Where can you even go from here, you’ve tried it all haven’t you?”
    Graelyn began to cry.
    “I bet you feel like you don’t belong here, like you’re a burden on everyone else around you don’t you?”
    Nodding, Graelyn began to sob.
    “Then make it final, write down in your journal what you want. That you want to be with your characters. Make it real with ink. Go on then. Who else do you have?”
    She shoved the journal in Graelyn’s face, and the girl uncurled, her face sloppy with tears, and she took the journal. Auteur rammed a pen in between her shaking hands.
    “It’s what you want. Write it down. You’re so alone. But you don’t have to be. It can all be okay. Just admit what you want. Who do you have that cares about you, who do you have that looks after you Graelyn? Write it down! Who do you have?”
    Graelyn started to write, started to pen the words, her lips trembling. Then she stopped. She looked up at Auteur, in sudden understanding.
    “I have you, miss Auteur.”
    Auteur nearly tripped backwards in horror, “I, n...I”
    “You...” Graelyn started crying again, but it was different this time, “You’ve always been there on my birthday, and on Christmas, even when no one else was there when I was so alone. And-and you let me walk F.I.D.O, and feed him. And sometimes you bring me nice lunches, and we just...” she rushed forward and grabbed hold of her around the legs, sobbing into her robes, “Oh Miss Auteur, I thought I was alone and no one loved me! But I was wrong wasn’t I?”
    Auteur patted her on the head, trying to figure out what to say. Her face went through a dozen panicked expressions, “...Y...Yes. That. Yes of course, of, of course Graelyn.” Why did she say that. Shit. No, that was not what she was supposed to say, but she was being do damn earnest!
    “Can...can I spend Christmas with you this year?”
    “Of course,” she replied, biting her cheek till she tasted blood.
    Graelyn pulled away from her, wiping tears from her face, and looked at the clock, “Oh! I need to go, I’m so late but...” she looked up at Auteur, who tried to smile politely, “I...I thought you were being mean, but...you’re right, I can make friends. I’ll see you when I get F.I.D.O later.” She scrambled towards the door, and then stopped half way through, turned back, and smiled at her, “Thank you!”
    She waved goodbye, and as the door closed, she stood in the center of the room in silence, listening for Graelyn’s footsteps to grow silent. Then she stood a while longer, staring at the wall, before she screamed, knocking over the chair and kicking the side of her table. She pulled books off the shelved and threw them on the floor, and curled up in the pile of rubble she’d made holding her head. How had she lost control of that? How had that moment she’d prepared for gone so wrong?
    She let out a moan, and then a curse word not suited for family audiences, and thought about what the hell she was going to tell Gideon.

           
Chapter 4: The Plan
   

“Nietzsche is massively overrated, it’s not just that his ideals were co-opted by edge-lords, but really his ideas were never particularly interesting to me in the first place. Is that because I am a dog? Perhaps but—Miss Graelyn, you look deep in thought, but distant. I presume it’s not a rebuttal?”
    “No F.I.D.O, I’m just trying to figure something out.”
    “I am a good listener, or can be.”
    Graelyn stepped over the dead chickens and beer cans from someone’s late night blood ritual, “I don’t know… I just don’t have any friends you know? You’re great, but dogs always love people.”
    F.I.D.O Looked off into the distance, his ears waggling a little in a sudden breeze, “Not this dog, sweetheart.” He looked back up at her, “But I understand your point. Perhaps you’re just trying to be friends with the wrong people?”
    Graelyn thought about it, the dog might have a point.

* * *


    Graelyn knocked at the door, her heart beating hard in her chest. Citizen 176 opened the door, and seeing Graelyn, moved to close it, but Graelyn shoved the cookies she’d baked into the gap.
    “I made these for you. Cause I want to be friends.”
    Citizen 176 looked down at the cookies, “Material goods aren’t the key to endearing camaraderie.”
    Without a hint of emotion, Graelyn replied, “I made them with love.”
    “Well that’s okay then. Um,” Citizen 176 leaned in, “do you want to have a sleepover tonight? I used to have them. But...I haven’t in a while.” She looked down at the simple dress she wore, and adjusted the old hat on her head.
    That was a thing friends did, so Graelyn saw this as a positive improvement, “I would love to have a sleepover. Should we invite anyone else?”
    Citizen 176 thought a moment, “I don’t really want that creepy creepy eyed boy here. Plus, no boys allowed. Girls and enbies only. Um...we could invite The Hollow Childe?”
    Graelyn kept her face blank, “The one who says she has demons in her blood?”
    “Yeah. I mean, I don’t know. You knocked here because I’m a weirdo too, right?”
    Graelyn looked at her feet, “Yeah. I guess. So we should all stick together then. I get that. Um, should I invite her then?”
    Citizen 176 shrugged, “It’s your idea.”

* * *

    Graelyn knocked on the Hollow Childe’s door, which was a four story Gothic mansion.
    “Hello? It’s Graelyn from school?”
    The door creaked open, revealing a living room filled with dust and cobwebs, much darker then it should be for this time of the day. Graelyn stepped inside, and pulled Taranis from her bag. She felt silly for clutching the stuffed Mammoth (“It’s an emotional crutch you need to get over,” she could hear Miss Auteur saying) but the place seemed engineered to be creepy. A ceiling tile broke, and three bats flew out—swooping down, missing Graelyn’s head as she ducked them, and flying out the door. Holding the mammoth in front of her like a holy talisman, she made her way across the room, and opened the door into the next one.
    A piano with no player tapped out a tuneless melody. Dark stains lined the walls, and the checkerboard floor. In the corner, a girl stood, swaying from side to side, her long hair moving with her like a pendulum. She made small noises of laughter in bursts that didn’t align with anything.
    “Hi, the Hollow Childe?”
    “You shouldn’t have come here,” a little girl’s voice said, overlaid with a thick and low voice that sounded hungry.
    “Oh, well, I can go then,” she replied.
    “Go?” The Hollow Child turned, her eyes leaking black fluid from under her mask, her mouth wet with blood, “We’re just getting started.”
    “Well, Citizen 176 and I are throwing a sleepover, and we thought we’d invite you? It’ll just be over at her house tonight. Oh, and I brought cookies.” Graelyn pulled out another box of cookies and held them out.
    The Hollow Childe stopped laughing, and stared at Graelyn, “You’re having a sleepover?”
    “Yep!”
    “And I’m invited?”
    “Still yep.”
    “And you brought me cookies?”
    Graelyn pushed her arm out further. The Hollow Childe took them. She pulled one out, and took a bite of it.
    “These are pretty good...I didn’t know you baked.”
    “I’m still learning.”
    The Hollow Childe turned around again, and pulled up her mask, rubbing her eyes.
    “Are...you okay?”
    “I’m...fine. I’ll see you at the sleepover Graelyn...”
    She was clearly starting to sob, so Graelyn thought about what the correct reaction to that would be, and asked if she needed to talk about things.
    The Hollow Child then just cried harder, and threw herself on Graelyn, crying onto her nice sweater. The tears weren’t as much of a big deal as the blood and black stuff all over her face. But Graelyn patted her on the back, and told her it would be okay. The Hollow Childe pulled away.
    “I’ll uh, see you tonight. And don’t um, don’t tell anyone I did that or I’ll rip your intestines out.”
    Graelyn forced a smile, “It’ll be our secret.”
    The Hollow Childe’s mouth dropped, and scampered up the stairs to her bedroom.
    Well, at least Miss Auteur couldn’t say she wasn’t trying to make friends anymore.

    * * *

    Citizen 176 had a very nice place, which she said was modeled after the Palace at Versailles, which Graelyn had read a few stories about. The Hollow Child and Graelyn had both showed up slightly early, and stood on the doorstep awkwardly, till Citizen 176 cracked the door open and told them to “Come in already it’s getting weird.” Which they did. 176 had gathered together some snacks: popcorn, candy, pop, fully roasted Cornish hens, pizza, and something called “Pain au Chocolat” which she told them repeatedly to not call “Chocolatine” despite neither of them ever having heard of the chocolatey bread before. Graelyn brought more cookies, and the Hollow Child brought milk and a bunch of cocoa. With far too much food, the three of them got into their pajamas, put on a movie, and started snarfing it down together as they lounged on the floor in front of the TV with plenty of blankets and pillows.

Scene: A burned out ancient city, we’re seeing it from a birds eye view, the charred ruins still smoking: something terrible happened here. Into frame come dragonflies, giant ones. On their backs ride ALICE THE SONGBIRD and her freedom fighters against the Kingdom of Centro. They swoop down, and we cut to them landing, dismounting from their dragonflies. Her intrepid squire JACK, leans down, and rubs some of the ash between his fingers.

JACK
This can’t be real. I thought the legends were false.

ALICE
Can you think of any other explanation.

JACK
I...I can’t.

Awkwardly falling from his dragonfly saddle, we meet ALADDIN, who somehow drops five books to the ground, shoving his glasses back up his nose.

ALADDIN
But those were just legends!

ALICE
We’re looking at something awful, boys.

We can visibly percieve the actress steady herself to say the next few lines. She’s been practicing them in the mirror, hoping they sound at least decent.

ALICE
We’re looking at the rise of something new, or something old. We’re looking at--

Smash cut to our title card:

SONGBIRD KNIGHT 2: DRAGONS RISING

“Boooorriiing,” Citizen 176 said, “of course they did dragons in the sequel.” She stretched herself out, and looked over at Grae and Hollow, “How about we tell stories? Like spooky ones? Or...personal ones! Get to know each other!”
    The Hollow Childe tilted her head to the side at an odd angle, “Most of my personal stories are spooky, I think.
    “Well, then you’re a shoe-in!” Graelyn said, “Start us off.
    The Hollow Childe looked nervous, but Graelyn and 176 waited patiently for her to start. “Right, well, it was a dark and stormy night...”

The Hollow Childe’s story

    Gideon walked over the finely dressed corpses, trying hard to keep his Italian leather shoes free from the puddles of bodily fluids mingling on the floor of the mansion. He passed the (childish) arcane symbols, and tut tutted the (painfully) sloppy Latin written over the gold-leaf stenciling on the walls. He was tempted to correct it, but it wasn’t worth his time. He was on the clock, so to speak. Pushing a married couple who’d gouged each other’s eyes out away from the final door with his silver cane, Gideon shoved it open and stepped into the building’s great hall. It was a spacious room, with chandeliers and a high ceiling, but it was difficult to make out the details because the center of the room was dominated by a pyramid of corpses. Atop that, hovering in the air six-inches above the massacre, was a little girl. Her head hung down, black hair veiling her face, a shoulder or leg violently twitching every so often.
    “YOU SHOULDN’T HAVE COME HERE.”
    He held his arm up, and dropped his wrist, “Oh psh.” He began a circle of the pyramid, seeing the edges of a magic circle under the bodies at some points. Of course.
    “YOU THINK YOU WILL FIND POWER HERE, BUT THERE IS ONLY THE ENDLESS SHADOW AT THE END OF ALL THINGS. A WHISPER IN THE DARK.”
    Popping his cane over his shoulder, Gideon gave the child his full attention, “You’re the one from the prophecy right? That’s what this whole mess was about, you’re half demon, or what these people think of as demons at least, half human. A husk with an insatiable appetite for death. The Hollow Childe. How does that prophecy go? The Hollow-”
    They spoke it in unison then.
    “The Hollow Childe Will Stand at the End of the Universe, Laughing Amidst the Tears.”
    Gideon nodded, “Yes, that’s right. You have a promising memory.”
    “AND THAT IS ALL YOU SHALL BE.” The Hollow Childe’s limbs snapped forward towards Gideon, a rush of darkness sweeping over him. A void of pure loneliness, a crushing darkness enough to tear anyone’s mind to pieces. Gideon let it wash over him, twirled his cane, and checked his pocket watch.
    “Well, that’s quite impressive actually. I’ve met a few potential Antichrists in my life, but I’ve got to say, you’re really an early bloomer. I’m guessing these people all sacrificed themselves to unlock your power?”
    There was an awkward silence, “...NO.”
`    “Oh come on, you’ve clearly only just learned to fly. You’re on top of that pyramid of corpses because you can only fly six inches off the ground. Am I wrong?”
    There was a second, longer more awkward silence, “...MAYBE.”
    Gideon sighed, “You haven’t even killed anyone yet I’m guessing. Now get down from there, my name is Gideon, and I work for some people who can unlock your full potential.”
    There was a third, longest silence, and she floated down (6 inches off the closest corpse the whole way) and came to land next to Gideon on the tiled floor. She pulled her hair away from her eyes, and looked up at him with tears in her eyes, “I didn’t want them to do it, Mr. Gideon.”
    “Oh hush, that’s no way for a herald of the endtimes to talk. Now come, take my hand, no wait.” Gideon stopped and put a pair of silk gloves on, “Okay now take my hand. We’re going somewhere I think you’ll like quite a bit.”

* * *

“And then he took me here. Said it was a place I could prepare for when I would destroy the universe, he hasn’t really...visited though. Just left some training books, ‘the Apocalypse for Dummies’ and ‘So, you’re destined to bring on the apocalypse: A Beginners guide with pictures’, but neither of them has been super helpful...”
    “You said he brought you here,” Graelyn ventured, “from where?”
    176’s face blanched, and Hollow laughed, “Oh come on 176, like Graelyn hasn’t already had suspicions? There’s another place, outside here. It’s where everyone came from, including you, Graelyn.”
    Graelyn shook her head, “I don’t remember anything but this town.”
    176 frowned, “You must have been very young when you were brought here. Maybe even when Auteur founded the town!”
    Graelyn furrowed her brow, “She founded it?”
    Hollow nodded, her body lurching rhythmically with it, “We’re all here for her project, whatever it is. The grownups know, but they won’t tell us anything. Think we can’t keep a secret.”
    Citzen 176 shrugged, “Well, I hope you get to destroy the universe I guess?”
    Hollow shrugged, “I guess.”
    Graelyn paused, “The only good story I have is a weird dream I had the other night, but you’ll probably think I’m making part of it up.”
    176 shrugged, “Well, go at it then.”

Graelyn’s Story


The planet they arrived on seemed too barren to support life, but there were several major cities, and one metropolis. Graelyn complained the whole way towards their destination, as Lady Aesculapius had parked far enough away from their destination that they had to walk through blowing sands to get to it. At least Aesc provided her with goggles. Archimedes was blissfully unbothered, the only effect of the wind to billow his coat and make him look heroic. Their destination was a temple, a towering building that had been carved into the shape of a goddess, her arm stretched out in the act of creation. Millenia of winds had erased the details from the stone, and there were birds nests in its open mouth, but the gates in the feet were well cared for, and when Aesc slammed her fist on them a few times, they slid open quickly.
Shaking the sand off, they were greeted by a few people in long layered garments, goggles on their own foreheads, and a man in imposing black robes. The place was well lit inside, with modern lights running along the walls, which seemed decidedly off brand for a spooky temple, but made more sense when they noticed all the signs to direct tourists around the place.
“Lady Aesculapius, I presume?” the man asked in a surly voice.
“Yes, Sergeant-Instructor I take it? Here with my pals, if that isn’t a bother.”
“Only if they’re better at puns than me. Follow, it’s down this way.”
They descended a long set of stairs, until they reached a neat pile of bricks, and a hole in the wall.
“There was a break in not too long ago, and the thieves damaged this wall. During the repairs, the Gendar here discovered the secret room behind it.”
Lady Aesc peered her head inside, and then pulled out the Quantum Whisk, and poked it inside.
“I don’t think that whisk does anything,” Graelyn whispered to Arch, who displayed a nodding face on his hand in reply. Aesculapius stepped in, and the rest followed. The walls were scrawled over completely in writing in dozens of languages, but only a few hands.
    “These are previously unknown prophecies of the rogue oracles, who came here in ancient times.”
    Aesculapius ran her hands along one of them, “A few have been carved up, almost looks like tusk marks.”
    “Yes, presumably by beings who didn’t want those prophecies read. But that’s not why we’re here. My people can read all of the existing scripts, all but one.” He gestured to the far wall, where there was a circular inlay of crystal as part of a carving of the same goddess the statue was of. “That crystal isn’t from our universe. It’s Firmament technology, and it’s old.”
    Graelyn frowned, “I take it you’re not happy that’s there.”
    He looked at her, face blank, “Furious, but we’d rather know what it says.”
    Lady Aesc reached out to the crystal and gently pressed her hand against it. The room was illuminated, the crystal brilliant, and Aesc’s eyes gained the same glow. From her mouth came a different voice, from a different time:
    “From the White Canvas, she will never escape. Only from flickers will angelic skin return. The Hollow Childe Will Stand at the End of the Universe, Laughing Amidst the Tears.”
    The light faded, and Aesc stumbled back, breathing hard.
    “What does that mean?” the Sergeant-Instructor asked.
    Aesc, Arch, and Graelyn shrugged in near-unison, “Heck if I know,” Aesc said.

* * *

“Oh that’s not too unbelievable, I’ve heard that prophecy about Hollow dozens of times, it’s common knowledge around here. You probably just heard it and forgot you did. Pretty creative, the other parts. I like that you put Lady Aesculapius in there, her TV show is pretty good.”
    “I like all the monsters in it!” Hollow added.
    “You’re a big fan of monsters, Hollow?” Graelyn asked.
    There was a beat of silence, “Well...I’m one.”
    176 and Grae both launched into a chorus of “Noooo!”s, “You’re wonderful!”s, “Would a monster have hair that nice?”s and “I will absolutely fight and kill the next person who says that about you!”s which made her smile.
    “I get what you’re saying though,” Graelyn added, “I feel like a monster to sometime. Like I’m a cold person destined to hurt other people or something.”
    The other two launched into the same thing about Graelyn, which also made her smile, and then Graelyn and Hollow turned the praise onto 176 just to make sure she wasn’t left out.
    “Well, my story isn’t as good as either of yours,” protestations followed this statement, “but I’ll tell it anyways!”

Citizen 176’s Story

    The guillotine slid down again, and Louise finally felt comfortable using Monsieur LeFoy’s notebook and pencil. He couldn’t scold her for using it now anyway. She began sketching the chopping machine, and the operator. She could give him the drawing before it was her turn, that would be nice.
    “That’s quite good, surprisingly good,” a voice said from behind her.
    She looked back to see a red haired woman peering over her shoulder. Blushing, Louise tried to hide the drawings, but the woman stopped her with a firm hand.
    “You’re a little young for the guillotine. Not that you wouldn’t be the first. Your crime?”
    “I helped the Marquis and his wife escape, ma’am. They didn’t make it very far, though.”
    The woman grabbed the notebook from her hands, “Your understanding of light sources and perspective is extraordinary for your age. It’s an absolute waste to kill you. What’d you do for the Marquis?”
    “I was a chambermaid, Mademoiselle. I mostly took care of the chamberpots.”
    “Gross. Well come on then,” she snapped. “You’re coming with me.”
    She shook her head, “It’s too late for me, I...” then she noticed the silence, the birds hanging in the air. The frozen crowd, mouths open in mid holler. The woman looked impatient.
    “Yes I froze time, everyone can do that it’s not that impressive.”
    “Are you...an angel, Mademoiselle?”
    She laughed, “My name is Auteur, and I’m better than an angel, I’m an artist. Now are you coming or not?”
    Louise clambered over the bench, and followed Auteur into the crowd, she looked down to see she looked different, and looked back to see herself sitting in the bench, as the crowd snapped back into motion, “It’s magic!”
    Auteur winked, “It’s art.”


* * *

    “See, that was still a good story,” Graelyn affirmed.
    176 shrugged, “I think Auteur thinks I’m going to become some sort of artistic spirit of vengeance. She gives me painting classes, and tells me how to kill people.”
    Graelyn furrowed her brow, “So...we’re all here because we’re being trained for something?”
    “Must be,” 176 concluded.
    “I don’t know what I’d be being trained for though? Miss Auteur just has me write my dreams down, or paint them.”
    Hollow and 176 looked at each other with a knowing grin.
    “What? What is it?”
    “Isn’t it obvious? Your dreams are special! You’re an oracle or something!” Hollow said.
    Graelyn slumped a little, “I want to be a scientist though.”
    “Well lucky for you dreaming is pretty easy, as long as you’re not an insomniac or whatever,” 176 said, grabbing another slice of pizza.
    “Can...” the Hollow child took a deep breath, then several breaths, her face turning red.
    Graelyn and 176 each reached out for one of her hands, “You’re okay,” Graelyn said.
    “You can tell us, we won’t judge you,” 176 said.
    “Can we all be friends?”
    The pair blinked at Hollow, then broke into grins.
    “You know what Hollow, I think we already are,” Graelyn said.

* * *

    “Lady Auteur, you have to know at this point that people back in the Empire aren’t happy with how things are going here,” Gideon was swirling his glass of whiskey dramatically, letting the light from the window glint off of it just right.
    Auteur gave him a polite smile, “I admit it’s taken longer than I expected...”
    “It’s been ten years, Auteur.”
    “Oh don’t act like years matter to you. You’ve probably checked in on me every year during the same day back home. You haven’t even changed your shirt.”
    He swirled the glass slower, “It doesn’t matter to me, but you’ve still used ten years of resources. Dedicated hundreds of our people to making this town function so you could finish one ritual.
    Auteur snapped forward, finger waving in the air, “You know how important this ritual is. We’ve almost done it, and when we do we’ll win the war. The whole war. Not the major players. Us.”
    Gideon downed his entire glass of whiskey, and set it down on her desk, “How?”
    “The sheer narrative weight of it all!”
    He nodded, “Then why not just cut your losses and run, you have enough as it is.”
    She stood up, and walked over to her bookshelf, letting Gideon watch her. She flitted along the spines, she didn’t actually need to she knew exactly where the book was, and stopped pointedly at one as though she’d finally found it, letting out an “Aha!”. Pulling it down, she handed it to Gideon.
    “Cranford?”
    “It’s Jane Austen's last book that she never finished. Does it inspire curiosity from that fact? Of course. Have people tried to finish it? Definitely. Have there been film adaptations of it? Naturally. But tell me Gideon, did you even know it was a Jane Austen book? If I’d thrown Pride and Prejudice at you, would you have just read the title back to me?”
    He handed the book back to her, “I’ll let everyone know you need more time.”

* * *

On Christmas morning, Auteur bit into the cookie Graelyn had made. It was essentially perfect. The little chemist was relentless with her baking precision, “It’s quite good!” She said before she could stop herself.
Graelyn’s eyes lit up, “Thank you Miss Auteur!”
    She waved her off, and then pushed F.I.D.O’s muzzle away who was angling to try to get one of the cookies, “Stop it F.I.D.O, you don’t even have a stomach.”
    “Then fix my programming fixation on treats,” he countered, “If a being’s nature is insurmountable to it’s--”
    “Oh fine, just don’t give me a lecture,” she threw a cookie at him, and he chewed it up happily, the entire cookie’s crummy remains ending up in a pile on the carpet. Graelyn laughed, Auteur found herself laughing too, and stopped herself. She stared at the girl, in the bad Christmas sweater she was wearing, watching as she shook the present she’d pulled from under the tree. Auteur had failed, and she knew it. She’d been too kind. She had stalled for time with Gideon but…it hit her suddenly, watching the girl look back at her with real affection. She’d gone about it the wrong way this whole time. The real solution was simple, and all she had to do was lean into her own mistakes.
    She’d announce the moratorium on having children within the town was over.
    She’d let everyone get attached to the town.
    The horror that was going to follow, well...
    Gideon would understand the change, and what it would mean for everyone here. When she got results, who would care, after all? You had to break a few eggs to make cookies, after all.
    “Can I open the presents, Miss Auteur?”
    She smiled, “Of course, go wild.”
    “Did you see the one I got for you?” she hadn’t. She looked at it under the tree, and as Graelyn carefully removed the wrapping paper from her present ( A microscope ), Auteur ripped open her own present, and stared down at the perfect set of brushes. They were her favorite kind, made from the hair of an animal on Vo’lach prime. She hadn’t seen a set of these in decades.
    “How did you know?” she said, legitimately stunned.
    “I asked the shopkeep for help! He asked Mister Gideon, and they found a set of them somewhere. They made me promise to tell you that, actually.”
    Her stomach churned, “Merry Christmas Graelyn.”
    “Merry Christmas Miss Auteur!”


Interlude: Auteur

Auteur walks into her office, and sits down in her chair, letting the chair spin from the force. She drops her gauntlet onto the desk, letting the metal clunk reverberate. A slow sigh comes from her lips, and she closes her eyes. Pulling the mask off her face, she rubs them, and opens them, looking right at us.
    “Oh shit. Uh, hi there. I didn’t realize you were reading this. How’s it going? What day is it for you, Thursday? I can’t really tell, but I hope it’s a Thursday. I like Thursdays.” She reaches into her desk, and pulled out a styled decanter and two glasses. She pours something fizzy and purple into both of them. “Would you like some? Er, wait, you can’t reach it from here. Sorry. It’s...difficult to tell how you can interact with me. I suppose this means it’s working? I’m breaking through?”
    She wipes her brow, and downs one of the two glasses, “Relax, it’s just grape pop. I hope you don’t think too badly of me, with what I’ve been doing. Wait—has that been revealed to you? Or is the story structured so it’s not clear yet.” She squints, “Sorry, you’re still faint. Look,” she gestures broadly, “no matter what happens here, this isn’t going to impact you. You’re safe reading this. Maybe you’re worried about that little girl, Graelyn, but she’s not so little. Not really. Not in the future. No one is a child forever and she’s so artistically...dull.”
    She steeples her fingers, and smiles vaguely in your direction.
    “This is all going well. So when this is all over, I think you’ll be grateful.”
    She downs the other glass.
    “So cheers. Thanks for stopping in.”

Chapter 5: A Flicker

FIVE YEARS LATER

Cá Bảy Màu was far far past tipsy, despite his protestations to the contrary, which meant that as the youngest member of their group it was Axastyakis’s job to keep an eye on him while Mullion stewed in her own thoughts. He was trying to flirt with everyone, in a way that somehow managed to stay charming in its content even though it was annoying in its repetition.
“I’m cutting you off,” Axastyakis hissed.
He downed the rest of his drink in defiance, but still acquiesced as Axastyakis began to pull him to the door. Mullion only gave them a disapproving glance as they left.
“Do you need help, Mister Axastyakis?”
He turned his head slightly, to see Graelyn there, loosely holding F.I.D.O’s leash. He smiled, showing his needle-sharp teeth, “Always awaiting aid, but never asking for it.”
She returned the smile, and dropped F.I.D.O’s leash to help stabilize Cá Bảy Màu as they walked him home.
“I hope that we’ll still continue the usual route upon completion of your neighboorliness, Miss Scythes,” F.I.D.O said, taking a scan of a dead bird.
She rolled her eyes, “Of course F.I.D.O, I assume you have much more to tell me about Sandifer.”
“I do think Neoreaction a Basilisk is an important work.”
She looked back at Axastyakis, “He does.”
Two other girls called at Graelyn, and she waved, keeping her other hand under Cá Bảy Màu as they came closer.
“Are you coming with us to the premiere tonight, Graelyn?” one of the girls, dressed in 1700’s French clothing said.
“Like I’d miss an Archimedes film. I have to do my session with Auteur first, but I’ll be there.”
They kept walking, and reached Cá Bảy Màu’s abode. Axastyakis started rifling through his pockets for the keys, but F.I.D.O picked the lock with a laser, which wasn’t exactly how any laser actually worked by Axastyakis wasn’t really complaining.
“Thank you for the assistance,” he said, “I will finish his care.”
Cá Bảy Màu managed a wink and a sort of salute at Graelyn, which was still somehow charming even though he couldn’t support himself.
“Welcome, always good to get to know the new arrivals a bit. I’m Graelyn Scythes by the way, I’m a student at the school.”
“Oh, we know who you are, you’re practically...celebrity,” Cá Bảy Màu crooned.
“He’s drunk, and is called, Cá Bảy Màu. I am Axastyakis. You may see our comrades Hole and Mullion around.”
“Oh! You know Hole? I wasn’t sure if Hole was…alive fully or not.”
Axastyakis shrugged. “See you, young one.”
The girl and her dog kept walking.
“Glad to have some new neighbors around here, isn’t it F.I.D.O?”
“They seem alright, of a larger concern however, is Sandifer’s influence on pop culture criticism in the 2000’s.”
* * *

Graelyn knocked on Auteur’s door, but was already opening it as she did so. Auteur was busy painting, and didn’t even notice Graelyn at first. The canvas was filled with a picture of a child in a field, sitting on a grassy hill looking up at the sky. There was no one else in sight.
“Miss Auteur?”
She startled, and hand a hand to her chest in mock fright, “Ah, Graelyn! I see you let yourself in.”
“I brought a cake for us to share?”
Auteur eyed it. It was a nice cake. The girl’s baking skills were quite incredible. Graelyn’s eyes were on the painting though. “Curious?”
“She looks like a lonely child, who ever you’re painting.”
She rose from the easel, and took off her smock, “That’s me, actually. I was a fairly solitary child, not by choice even. There just...weren’t other children around. You might even say it was an experiment for me to be a child there at all.”
Graelyn looked at the girl. She looked nothing like Auteur.
“You think it’s a bad likeness?”
“Honestly?”
Auteur posed the same way as the child, and then laughed, “I haven’t always had the same face, or gender, or a lot of other things. When you live as long as I have, you want to have a few options after all. I didn’t even like most of them, but different can be enough.”
Graelyn’s brow furrowed, “How old are you?”
    Auteur winked, “Enough secrets for today. So what brings you in, we didn’t have a meeting scheduled for today, therapy or otherwise.” They’d long ago moved beyond a therapist / patient relationship into something mildly guardian like. Auteur still wasn’t sure how to feel about it.
    “I...have something for you that’s surprising.”
    Auteur nodded, “I’m curious.”
    “...It’s a...dream.”
    Auteur sprung up, and snatched the journal from her hands as soon as it had come out of Graelyn’s handbag.

Dream Journal Entry 3

Everyone tumbled out of the portal in a heap on the floor of a massive library. Archimedes, unfortunately, was the last one through, and the massive cyborg apologized profusely as he climbed off of the group. The Emissary sat up, holding her stomach, trying not to retch, as Graelyn felt around for her glasses, which Arch handed to her. Lady Aesc stood up dizzy, stumbling, and felt someone steady her arm, “Oh thank you.” She said to a young man who looked exactly like Harry Styles from the band One Direction, wearing a suit and a badge that said, “How can I help you today :) ?”
He looked the group over, “Did you check in at the front desk when you came in?”
“Sorry, we arrived via crystalline incision portal.”
He nodded, “I’d rather not learn about that at all, but sure.”
Graelyn squinted at him, “Alright, I hit my head too hard.”
He looked down at himself, reached into his own chest, and disappeared instantly, in that same awkwardly quick way people vanish in silent films. In his place was what seemed to be empty air then he became a cactus-person, then vanished, then finally a massive writing ball of tentacles. “I’m sorry, is this a more pleasing look?”
They all just stared.
“It’s fine,” the Emissary said, “we’re here to look at a book?”
The tentacle mass pointed to the left, “I’ll lead you to the desk, we can help you there. Come on then!”
They walked along rows of bookshelves, the lines of them going on as far as the eye could see.
“So uh, are you a Plume Coterie then?” Arch asked.
“A Bookkeeper, me? No, my name is Coloth. I’m an Ulk-Ra. I work here, which is a long story that could be a book in itself. The Plume Coteries run this place though, one of several places that claim to be the biggest library in the Universe.”
“Is it the biggest?” Graelyn asked.
“I’m contractually obligated to say yes!” he replied.
The Emissary waggled her hand up and down and scrunched her face up.
Graelyn ran her fingers along some of the spines, “I could live here. Imagine the knowledge you could learn.”
Coloth squirmed his tentacles in an emotion none of them could read, “Er, sure. Anyways, here’s the front desk. Marissa! We have some people looking for a book!”
Marissa, a girl wearing robes screwed her face up upon the sight of them, “Coloth, could you chose any other form? Literally, any other form?”
He vanished, and then reappeared as a wild-west cowboy, “Better?”
“Perfect, so you’re looking for a book? What’s the title?”
“The Book of the Enemy,” Arch replied, as Graelyn rested her gauntleted hand down on the desk.
Marissa looked disapprovingly at the gauntlet before reaching under the desk, and pulling out a card catalog, which apparently was a catalog of which card catalog she needed to look in next. She pulled out another drawer, and flipped through it, pulling out a glowing card, “This is a fairly dangerous book, as far as books go. I’d be careful. Coloth, could you take them to it?”
Coloth the cowboy took the card, and led them far into the shelves, where he pulled the book down, and handed it to Graelyn, who handed it to Arch, who opened it to Page one, and then put up a live video feed of the book on his body so everyone could read it. It wasn’t long before they reached a chapter in the book called “Cobweb and Ivory” that detailed an incident with the Painted Warriors...and revealed who their master were.
Graelyn crossed her arms, and stuck her lips out. Lady Aesc nodded, a bit puzzled. The Emissary raised an eyebrow.
“So...” Graelyn began, “they work for Mammoths?”
“Not just any Mammoths, the Original Mammoths. They’re a powerful force, if an old one,” The Emissary said, “I don’t know why they’d invade the 10,000 Dawns though.”
“What does that even mean?” Graelyn asked dryly, “Original Mammoths?”
“It means,” the Emissary replied, “they have a spaceship.”
“What would a Mammoth want?” Lady Aesc pondered, stroking her chin, “Anime?”
“The Mammoth’s didn’t invade the 10kd for Anime,” The Emissary growled.
“I mean, are you sure you have it in this universe?”
“Yes! Now the question is what are we going to do?”
Graelyn shrugged, “We have to confront them. They have Kinan, and well...everyone. I know I’ve dealt with dangers like this before but...the scale of this is just so hard to fathom.”
“She’s right,” Arch added, “we know who they are, our course is set. But this didn’t give us a lot of hints on how to stop them.”
“If we had an incentive we could give them to leave...hell, if we had an army. But we just have the four of us.”
“I get off in five minutes, and an Ulk-Ra lives on bravery,” Coloth added.
“Five of us,” she gave him a smile, “Thank you.”
“Is it too much to hope they’ll listen to reason?” Arch asked, “Maybe this is just a misunderstanding.”
“A mighty big misunderstanding. They kidnapped everyone we care about Arch. You really think this is just an awkward whoopsie?” Graelyn said, her eyes narrowing. “They invaded our home, Arch. Spiral, Dawn, you, it’s all I have. I can’t lose it. I can’t.”
Arch got up, and put a hand gently on her shoulder, “I think whether it is a mix up or not, we don’t have the resources to do anything else. We can talk to them, and make a quick exit if it goes badly.”
“Alright, problem!” Lady Aesc said raising her hand, “We don’t know where they are.”
Graelyn’s eyes lit up, “We don’t need to. The Quantum Whisk, you said it can help you find things?”
Lady Aesc pulled it out, looked at it, and shrugged, “Maybe? Honestly it might just be a whisk, I’ve never been able to find anything special about it.”
“Well it’s our best bet. If I can make a portal while holding the whisk, maybe it will guide us through the tear, through the void, and to where the Original Mammoths are.”
Arch looked down at the whisk, “I hate to be the skeptical one here, Grae, but that really just looks like a whisk.”
“Do you have a better idea?” Graelyn said, throwing her arms up.
“I don’t,” he admitted.
“Do any of the rest of you? Please, I want you to have a better idea.”
There was silence, and Graelyn looked between each of their faces, “If you don’t want to go, that’s fine. I understand. You don’t have the kind of stake in this I do. I get that. But-”
“I’m with you,” The Emissary said, “I’m actually not supposed to do anything to interfere in other people’s affairs but...well, sod it, let’s be naughty.”
“I’m in, of course,” Arch said.
“Me to,” Lady Aesculapius said, “let’s save the 10,000 Dawns from space Mammoths.”
“I’m not sure what I’m agreeing to, but I’m in as well,” Coloth finished.
Lady Aesc handed Graelyn the whisk, and Graelyn reached into her satchel and pulled out a handful of crystal dust. She steadied herself, standing equidistant from the shelves to her left and right, and held the whisk out in her gauntleted hand, it felt like there was a circuit between her hands, an energy running between one hand to the other, flowing into the crystals...though honestly she couldn’t tell if it was the gauntlet or the whisk that was doing it. It really could be just a whisk. But that was a distraction. She pictured the Mammoths as she’d seen them described in the “Book of the Enemy”, pictured their stone servants, and pictured a path from here to there.
Usually, she did the hand motions quickly, and by rote. It didn’t matter if they were imperfect, it just had to be close enough if you knew where you were going well enough. But this was different. She was diving into black water, and she didn’t know what dwelled in these seas. She moved both hands in the motions, twirled both arms, felt the circuit connect, felt her body channeling the energy, and she spun the dust in the air and felt the small crackles between each tiny mote, moving her hands through them, adjusting their path in the air slightly. The dust spun for a moment, a hollow circle crackling with tendrils of white lightning, and then Graelyn took a deep breath, and shoved the whisk and the gauntlet into the middle of the circle.
She stared up at the mammoth skeleton, and her father put a hand on her shoulder, “It’s big isn’t it?” she nodded. She wanted to see one for real, alive, but here were its bones, and it was so close to being real.
“We’d better keep moving, I need to get you back to your mother by seven--”
He’d left. Everyone always left.
The white light exploded out, throwing books off the shelves, and pushing Graelyn back, her heels digging into the carpet, but she held firm.


Great beasts, lifting their trunks high in the air, in a room of clockwork and bone, surrounded by painted stone bodies. Their furs were rich and long, their tusks sharp. They trumpet a call of victory, their bones rattle inside them from the depths of history.


Mammoths.
Painted Warriors.
Kinan Jans.
Mammoths. Painted Warriors. Kinan Jans.
MAMOTHSPAINTEDWARRIORSKINAN--
The light became blinding, and the world was nothing but a white and empty void, and then it faded, and a perfect white portal stood in the middle of the library. Graelyn fell to her knees, panting, a thin layer of sweat over her body.
“I...” she said, panting, “I think I did it?”
“What the heck is going on over there?” they heard Marissa yell, and Graelyn scampered up and hopped into the portal, followed in a clump by the others. The portal hovered in the air, crackling, and vanished as Marissa came around the corner.
“Coloth?” She looked around at the mess of unshelved books and sighed. Library patrons were the worst.

* * *

“So, that was...interesting, to say the least.”
    Graelyn nodded, “It picked up where my last dream like this was five years ago, I checked my journals, both the originals and your rewrites of them. There’s nothing off between this one and the last one, and I’d...practically forgotten about these dream journals. We stopped doing them-”
    “-Cause they got boring, yes.” Auteur steepled her fingers, “So the question is, why are they back.
    Graelyn shook her head, “They’re just dreams. Dreams don’t mean anything.”
    Auteur couldn’t help but chuckle, the girl had been growing up among ritual magicians for years, and still she had the mind of a skeptic deep down. “So then, what does that tell you about these dreams?”
    Graelyn’s eyes lost focus, but she was intent in concentration. A moment passed. “It means...these dreams either do mean something, they’re not dreams, or they’re not normal dreams.”
    “And which do you think it is?”
    “If I knew I wouldn’t be asking you.”
    “Of course. In my opinion, they aren’t normal dreams.”
    The girl’s eyes went from unfocused to hyperfocused, “Explain.”
    “You have to know by this point that there are parts of the world that don’t function by normal laws.”
    “Like the white canvas?”
    Auteur scrunched her face up, “The what?”
    “The endless white outside the town. It looks like it’s ready to be painted on, to have something pop out of it created and alive.”
    “An interesting description. We need to think on all of this. Are you going to the movie tonight?”
    Graelyn nodded, “I’m so looking forward to it. Archimedes movies are always my favorites.”
    “Then you should go have fun with your friends this evening, and we’ll talk more about this once you’ve had time to let it sink in. Sound good?”
    Graelyn picked up her bag, and took the journal back from Auteur, “I’ll let you know if it was good or not.

* * *

    176 and Hollow were already outside the theater when Graelyn arrived, Hollow dressed up like a Goth princess, 176 in casual clothes, though casual for the 1700’s. Graelyn was decked out in Archimedes swag, from her Arch satchel to her Arch shirt, to her earrings in the shape of his eyes.
    “Well aren’t you fancy, back in my day--”
    “They would have guillotined me for that, yes I know 176.” Graelyn wasn’t sure 176 to this day understood the intricacies of the French Revolution, but you weren’t going to argue with someone who was almost executed about nuances.
    “You should tell your girlfriend that,” Graleyn said.
    Hollow and 176 suddenly tensed, eyes askance, hands clasping.
    “Oh, sorry, uh...I thought since you guys made out that...”
    “Nooo we’re just best friends!” Hollow said.
    “Who made out for three hours so I couldn’t leave the party last weekend,” Graelyn monotoned.
    176 scratched her temple, “Let’s uh, go into the movie huh?”
    Graelyn was not convinced, but she let it slide for now.
    They got their snacks from Hole, (A big tub of popcorn to share, 2 pop [Graelyn], I slushy [Hollow] and one tankard of mulled wine flavored with the lost memories of dreams that you feel like you could remember upon awakening, but which slip from your mind the more you focus on them [176]. They also got some Red Vines.
    Going to the theater with friends was so much nicer than going alone. Even when the other teens were jerks, the three of them were together, and they could laugh at the same things, and whisper to each other at the good bits. Having friends was such a wonderful thing, though Hollow and 176 were spending more time just with each other recently. Graelyn was both happy for them and worried that she would become first their third wheel, and then forgotten. She’s thought, last week, when she rolled her eyes and gave up all pretense with a, “Just kiss already, Jesus,” and they did in fact just kiss already that the problem was solved. But no, the two of them were still dancing around whether they liked each other. The trailers began, and Graelyn watched Hollow’s pinky edge towards 176’s, which twitched a little closer to.
    Come on.
    They nearly touched and then—they both pulled away, and Graelyn let out an audible sigh. She really didn’t care that they knew she knew at this point.
    Finally after a trailer for the Lady Aesculapius movie, which Graelyn really wasn’t sure was going to work (It was really better suited for TV?), the titles for the Archimedes movie began, like they always did, pulling out to reveal that everything was being projected on Arch’s chest. Classic.

Scene: Arch is being held captive in an underground facility, there is a man with a bad German accent, a monocle, and a big scar on his face who has tied him up in a way that the director clearly didn’t think was provocative, but also clearly hadn’t looked up anything on the internet since 2006.

DR. VON BADGUY II
Now, Archimedes, you will tell me the secret to Dawn, or…

The lighting darkens, and the camera zooms in a little bit.

DR. VON BADGUY II
...You die.

ARCHIMEDES
You’ll never get me to...Wait. What do you want, specifically, Dawn is a lot of things--

THERE IS AN EXPLOSION! And CELESTE ROTH comes charging in with CANADIAN, BRITISH AND AMERICAN SPECIAL FORCES! It’s now clear that this is supposed to be set in World War II.

CELESTE ROTH
Arch, are you okay? What did you do to him Dr. Von Bad Guy?

AN EVIL LAB ASSISTANT
The second.

CELESTE ROTH
The second!

ARCHIMEDES
I’m okay, Just get me out of these--

Graelyn lost the rest of the dialogue. She remembered this. She remembered...Arch was taken, they had been on...on...a moon, a dark cold moon. They’d been chasing something, been on a mission, and...he’d been taken. She’d searched for him, and found him in the past.
    She’d had a cat named Mr. Sprinkles. She’d lived underwater, there were fish...She remembered her mother beating her. She remembered….she had a mother? She...Archimedes. She knew him. She knew Archimedes.
    She rose up, barely aware she was rising, reaching a hand out towards the screen.
    “Arch?” she said.
    “Oh geez, you’re way too into the fandom, come on sit down,” 176 muttered.
    On the screen, there was an awkward pause.

CELESTE ROTH
Arch? Did you hear me?

ARCHIMEDES
Graelyn?

CELESTE ROTH
No, Arch I’m Celeste, your best friend--

“ARCHIMEDES!” Graelyn yelled, “I’M HERE!”

He looked out of the screen at her,

ARCHIMEDES
Grae, what’s going on--

The projector shut down, and a worried attendant ran to the front, “Sorry everyone, looks like there was some sort of projector error--
    “PUT IT BACK!” Graelyn screamed, “What aren’t you telling me?”
    The theater was silent, then the sound of footsteps grew. Auteur entered, followed by F.I.D.O
    “I heard there was an issue, what exactly is the problem it’s just a--”
    She came into view from the entryway, and saw Graelyn, saw the look on her face. Saw the silent crowd.
    “Everyone, get out. Except you Graelyn. There was a slow move to start getting up, and Auteur snapped her arm out, her gauntlet pointing at the attendant. And then, there was no attendant, and there was the sound of something small but heavy hitting the floor like a dropped book.
    Then it was pandemonium.
    Graelyn didn’t stand still. She vaulted over seats, vaulted over the side of the stairs next to the entry way, and dropped behind Auteur, her knees hurting, but kept moving. Auteur yelled something, and F.I.D.O followed, the crowd to. The whole building fleeing, shoving Auteur out of the way even as they tried to get away from her. Graelyn pushed past people, F.I.D.O edging through the crowd.
    “Mistress Graelyn, please, I am only following the order to catch you I shall not hurt you.”
    Graelyn had reached the doors of the theater, people streaming around her. Her heart was pounding, F.I.D.O sat. Hollow and 176 caught up, and then so did Auteur.
    “Graelyn, you don’t need to be afraid,” Auteur said.
    Graelyn’s face was red, her eyes watering, “You think I haven’t known something was going on here. Something weird. Something that didn’t make sense. What just happened, Auteur. What aren’t you telling me?”
    Auteur gave her a sad smile, “You have to have figured out that Hollow and 176 are both projects for the cult, correct?”
    Graelyn nodded.
    “Of course you are too. And there’s parts of that that…would be hard to tell you about.”
    Graelyn shook her head, “No, I’m not an experiment, I’m not!”
    “Of course you aren’t!” Auteur crooned. “You aren’t anymore, at least.”
    They held each other’s gaze. Hollow and 176 stood to the side frozen like Painted Warriors.
    “Then tell me what’s going on,” Graelyn said.
    Auteur’s lip quivered, “I’m trying to win a war.”
    “Using me?” Graelyn asked.
    “Yes.”
    Graelyn broke her gaze, and looked at the floor. She stared at the skull pattern for a moment before bolting out the door, her two friends following, melding into the darkness.
    As the theatergoers fled into the distance, Mullion stared at the chaos till Auteur came out of its glass doors. Under her mask, she scowled.
Auteur waved excitedly upon seeing her, and Mullion walked away.
    Graelyn, Hollow, and 176 tumbled into Graelyn’s house, which wasn’t the nicest just the closest, and locked the door behind them. Not that locking the door would stop anyone hell bent on grabbing them, but it made them feel a little safer.
    Graelyn dropped into a chair and stared at her hands. She remembered things. Things she shouldn’t remember. Things she had dreamed. But it was hazy, not all there.
    176 was crying, and Hollow was holding her.
    “He was there and just…gone! What did she do to him?”
    “I don’t know,” Hollow replied, and they looked in each other’s eyes, “but you’ll be safe. I’ll keep you safe. I’m the antichrist, and I can fight back and...I love you.”
    “I..love you to, Hollow.”
    And they kissed.
    And this time, Graelyn knew it was something different than last time.
   

* * *

Gideon threw the pictures of the smiling girls on the table, “Do you--do you...” he had to steady himself, he had never been so furious at Auteur, “do you realize what you’ve done?”
    She nodded, “I had to modify the plan, like I told you.”
    “You can’t break everyone else’s toys just because you think yours are nicer. You’ve...you’ve ruined the antichrist! She’s supposed to-”
    “Stand at the end of the universe and laugh amidst the tears or whatever, I know. I wrote a lot of prophecies myself you know.”
    “You wrote short stories about how people you didn’t like had bad things happen to them. It annoyed everyone back home.”
    “Same difference.”
    “Don’t be so glib about this, the Hollow Childe was a coup for me. And now she has friends, and she’s...drinking milkshakes and going to movies. Not to mention what you’ve done to the rest of the members here.”
    She leaned back in her chair, “Oh?”
    “You’ve domesticated them! You had to build playgrounds because they’re having kids. I checked in on an orgy last night where they decided to end early because they had to get up in the morning. We’re a death cult! Or we’re supposed to be! This is...” Gideon threw his arms up.
    “The new plan,” Auteur said.
    He looked at her, “You’re serious.”
    She nodded, “And oh my good friend, what terrors await.”

Chapter 6: The Screening

TWO YEARS LATER

“Are they going to set up a college for us to go to, or not?” 176 moaned.
    Graelyn shrugged, “I don’t know. I guess it depends on if Auteur thinks us getting an education matters to whatever her plan is.”
    Hollow and 176 didn’t reply, but the silence was the answer really.
    “I want to go to college,” Hollow said, “It looks like it would be fun.”
    Graelyn tried not to think about her old memories, to try to reach in and see if she had gone to college. Maybe she had. But how did she have those memories? How did she know Archimedes, who was in a movie? How had he spoken to her? She was seventeen now, and the questions didn’t have answers. She’d looked into reincarnation, it seemed possible given the circumstances, but it also didn’t seem to be the correct answer.
    “Do you think Auteur will make me destroy the universe?” Hollow asked, her voice cracking.
    176 shook her head, and cuddled her closer, “Don’t think like that, you don’t have to destroy anything.”
    “We can’t just ignore these questions everything they come up 176! We’re all here for a reason.”
    Graelyn booped Taranis, at 17 Hollow and 176 were the only people who didn’t make fun of her for keeling the Mammoth Toy in her bag at all times. “I wish I knew the answers, Hollow. But we just don’t know enough...”


* * *
Mullion had been waiting for ten minutes for the rest of the group to arrive, which was putting a damper on her plan to storm into Auteur’s office like she’d power-walked right over here. Auteur had seen her through the window by this point and asked if she wanted some tea, which had only made her more incensed when she had to politely say no. She couldn’t let it out yet. The proper place, the proper time. Hole had arrived first, which made her only madder at Cá Bảy Màu and Axastyakis.
“Well, did you all sleep in?”
“If we are being honest...” Axastyakis began.
“We really don’t want to do this meeting at all, and we’d rather be sleeping in,” Cá Bảy Màu finished.
Hole just stood there. It creaked.
“You’re coming with me to this meeting--”
“Did you think we just showed up to tell you we weren’t doing it? I’d have stayed in bed,” Cá Bảy Màu cut in.
Mullion didn’t have a retort, so she spun on her armored heel and pushed the door open to Auteur’s office. Auteur had made tea, and put out a nice tray of biscuits. She waved cheerfully.
“Hello everyone! Tea? I made four different kinds, I’m not sure what everyone likes. I put some broken dreams in them for flavor...” She squirmed her lips to the side, “I take it this isn’t a friendly visit about the Christmas Eve festivities tonight?”
“We’re here,” Mullion said forcefully, “to demand you let us go back to the Empire.”
Auteur looked her in the eyes, and cocked her head to the side, “No.” She went back to the tea.
“This isn’t a request,” Mullion charged up to the desk, “I come from the same people as you, and you may be able to tell these lesser people that--”
“Please stop this is very awkward.”
“--they have to stay here at your whim, but we are leaving. Now.”
Auteur poured the tea, and handed cups to everyone but Mullion.
“We came here together, and you had the gall, the sheer gall to bring Hole here five years before the rest of us—five years! We didn’t agree to that.”
“Oh, you didn’t have to luckily,” she said, eating a biscuit.
“And I was willing to let that slide, willing, but we’ve been here two years and I’ve got to be honest, I’m not sure you’re even a member of our group. I think you just found out you joined later and you’re using us because you know Gideon to--”
Auteur tapped out a pattern on her desk. It was the heartbeat of their people. She kept tapping it. Mullion was thrown off her rant. Auteur looked at her companions, “Do you share her grievance?”
Hole creaked, and the other two shook their heads.
Auteur smiled, “Just you and me then. So you think we’re equals?”
“We are--”
Auteur twisted her wrist, and Mullion was swallowed up by the floor, the carpet breaking as white goo surrounded her, and pulled her away.

Little Mullion, how cute. You think you know me?
Mullion was crawling the grass, she was a child. The sky was the same color as the town’s, Auteur’s little hint of home. Auteur was in front of her on a hill. Standing by her parents.
“You think you have any control?”

She fell forever. And then after falling forever, she fell for a day, and there was Auteur’s face huge as a mountain, opening her mouth and--

She was in the Empire—surrounded by everyone she knew in their little death cult. One by one they removed their masks. Auteur after Auteur was revealed. “You think you’re my equal?”

She was on a pillar of white, surrounded by white, the goo entrapping the bone armor around her. Auteur walked up to her, white goo rising to each of her footfalls.
“So then, Little Mullion...”
“I’m not ‘Little’.”
“You shouldn’t be so rude. You shouldn’t say things, or make accusations like you did,” she grinned, and a swirl of rainbow color rose up from the white, and stroked her cheek. “Even if maybe they’re true? After all, I want the best for all of us. So, if you’re right and I’m not a member, think of me as family. As… Your Godmother! After all if you call me that and I’m not a member it isn’t even copyright infringement!”
Mullion’s eyes went wide. “There’s something wrong with you.”
The color wrapped around her neck as a rainbow noose, “Say it. Say you’re sorry.”
The noose tightened.
“I-I’m sorry.”
“Who are you saying it too?”
“I’m Sorry… Godmother Auteur.”
“That’s better.”

She was back in the office. Her companions were staring at her.
“Did I adequately address your complaint? Sticking around?”
Mullion nodded, grabbed a biscuit, and walked out.

* * *

Graelyn Scythes awoke in a cold sweat. She was still in her room, still in the town. The dream was vivid. So vivid that even though she took a minute to steady herself, staring at her cat pattern pajamas, she still remembered every detail She scrawled it down, and when she finished, she knew that this would be the final dream journal she ever did. For better or for worse. She re read it. She stared at Taranis on her nightstand. She reread it. She fell back on her bed and rubbed her eyes. She reread it She knew what she had to do. Or rather, she knew that it was time to do something. The details eluded her. But she had to begin. She got dressed, despite it still being dark out. The Diosca Eitilte in the sky no longer held her fast by it’s cycles. It was time to see Hollow and 176.

* * *

Her friends read her dream journal, and then spent the next ten minutes freaking out.
“This all makes so much sense!” 176 yelled.
“Be quiet! What if someone is listening!” Hollow countered.
“Then they’re listening! Whatever! Graelyn, do you know what this means?”
Graelyn nodded, “I wish I didn’t.” She picked at the upholstery on the couch.
“So what are we going to do?” Hollow asked.
“What Alice MacLeod would did in ‘Songbird IV: Revolution Rising’, confront it.”
176 slumped in her chair, “You’re right, but...”
Graelyn threw her hands up, “But what? We’ve been waiting years for this.”
176 leaned in, “We were going to tell you later when we met up, you know, not before breakfast.”
“I brought my whisk so I could make pancakes,” Grae noted.
“Okay, that’s good cause I’m starving, but Hollow and I learned about a secret movie screening.”
Grae narrowed her eyes, “Okay, I’m interested.”

* * *

The showing was a secret, and Skinflint needed to keep it that way. Getting the film had taken years of work, trying to get a message out at all from the town was nearly impossible. Yet he had done it. By sheer force of will, he’d brought the film back into existence. Throughout the town, the whispers had carried long and far. But as far as he knew, never to Auteur. And so the screening went on as planned. He was nervous, and excited, and so were Graelyn and her friends as they snuck in.
    “Okay, but if they do build a college,” 176 said, “this is absolutely going against our applications.”
    “176,” Hollow said, “sweetie, do you really think they have enough people to turn anybody away who’d want to be there.”
    Graelyn raised her eyebrows and waited for 176 to reply.
    “Alright, fair, but I don’t think that really matters anymore.”
    Everyone in the theater itself looked fearful of everyone else in it, like it was a roomful of snitches. Skinflint came to the front, to say a few words before it started.
    “Thank you all for taking the risk to come here, I hope you all enjoy the movie it’s taken me years to smuggle in here, a masterpiece of winter cinema we know of as “Ice Age 2”.
    There was scattered applause.
    And the movie started. It was decent enough, there was a mammoth, and a squirrel, and a screaming Auteur who blasted the doors to the theater open with a flick of her gauntlet.
    “Ice Age 2. You brought in Ice Age 2!” she yelled, and from the ground, white tendrils broke through the carpet, wrapping around Skinflint. “You never should have told Mullion, Skinflint, you little artisticly dead rat.” The theater, for the second time in Graelyn’s life, ran for the exits. Auteur only had eyes for Skinflint and his conspirators though, and Graelyn, Hollow, and 176 followed through on their plan, and slipped into the bathroom. Not that they’d thought the movie would get raided, but it worked out either way. The screams died down, and they heard Auteur cursing as she left the theater.
    “Don’t tell me I was too harsh F.I.D.O, you can’t tell me that I reacted too hard to someone showing my Town Ice Age 2, so--” and then the door shut behind her. They waited a while longer, and slipped out. 176 and hollow went to the projection room, and sorted through the film cans. When they found it, they put the reel into the projector.
    Graelyn went to the theater. And as the projector flickered on, Archimedes opening logos appeared. She walked to the light.
   
* * *

“Come in!” Auteur said, and Graelyn slipped in the doorway.
She pouted her lips, “Well you look like you’re having a bad day, come in I’ll make us some tea. F.I.D.O?” The dog poked its head in the door, “Grab the kettle if you wouldn’t mind.”
    “Mission acquired,” he replied.
    “There’s a good boy. Now, Graelyn, what’s going on?”
    Graelyn reached into her satchel, and pulled out the dream journal. Auteur slowly pulled it from her hands, and began to read:

Dream Journal, Entry 4


The green void tore around her body, a violent wind that ached and pulled and squeezed. She could see faces in it: friends, enemies, strangers. There was Alice MacLeod, giving some sort of big speech. Manuel Salazar, asking for a surgical tool during an operation. Her mother, screaming at her. A woman she’d never seen before in a batman t-shirt standing by the Berlin wall. And then, a Mammoth. She fell from the end of the portal, and rolling neatly, coming to her feet as though she’d planned it that way, shoving the whisk into her bag as her comrades rolled out of the portal behind her.
The room was as she’d seen it. Bone and clockwork, a great vessel of a construction unlike anything in her own home. A circle of Mammoths turned, their huge dark eyes blinking at her. Painted Warriors lined the room. The walls ticked and groaned.
“Original Mammoths! My name is Graelyn Scythes of Dawn. I’m here to talk.” She stood as tall as she could, and the other four spread out as wings behind her, five against history.
One of the mammoth’s, who had parts of his fur braided and laced with beads, stomped ahead of his fellows.
“Talk?” it communicated...somehow. Graelyn strained to figure out if it was telepathy or something else. Whatever it was it was...old. Older than words, or paint on rocks. “Your realm has fallen, you have nothing to do but beg to your conqueror, Taranis.”
“I have plenty to do but that,” Graelyn snarled, “in my time you’re bones, history, and you have the nerve to steal my own future.”
Taranis trumpeted, “A future of infinite bloodshed! Do you think we have not read the prophecy? Know your plans, she-with-the-arm-of-gold.”
Graelyn furrowed her brows, “Uhh,” she looked at her comrades, “No, this is the first I’ve heard of that.”
“Yes,” the Emissary said, “I can’t say I’m familiar with this prophecy.”
The Painted Warriors moved closer, and so did Taranis, “Then you shall know your fate. The Prophecy states that from the realm of 10,000 rises of the sun, the end of the Mammoths will come. That she-with-the-arm-of-gold will be the herald of the end, and the end of all things for our kind. That Mammoths would be massacred by her, and then by all of the armies of the sunrises. We learned of the theft of the gauntlet from those who guard the ticking of the eons, and knew that we had to act to protect ourselves.”
“I didn’t steal the gauntlet!” Graelyn cried out, “I took it from the people who did steal it!”
“A cheap lie,” Taranis said, “We have given your realm more compassion than it deserved. We found holes between your realm and ours, and sent our Painted Warriors through. Freezing every person in a moment in time, and harming none. We will give you the same option.”
The ceiling lit up as Taranis spoke, showing the path of the Warriors though the holes, bright lights that seemed to form a shape, like a constellation or a sigil.
“Taranis, please, this is a misunderstanding, the prophecy is wrong, we don’t want to hurt you, or any of the Mammoths. We didn’t even know who you were till today.”
“Lies! I give you one last chance, Graelyn Scythes of Dawn.”
That was when The Emissary started cracking up. She had tried to hold it in, keeping her lips pursed tight, putting a hand over her mouth, but it all just came out, and she doubled over, leaning over trying to hold her belly with her heavy laughs, and then falling onto the floor. Everyone just watched her, confused.
“Your friend has lost her mind,” Taranis said.
She stood up, wiping tears from her face, “Oh, oh, I’m sorry about that, I really am, but I just...you guys were being so sincere. This could have been a BBC drama, well, the effects would be too good, but you get me.” She stepped between the two groups and applauded, “Truly, a great performance by everyone here. I was nearly moved.”
Taranis reared onto his hind legs, and dropped down, causing a thunderous boom that staggered most of the beings with two legs, “I find no humor in this.”
She rolled her eyes, “You Mammoths always were so dull. No wonder you went extinct.” She reached an arm out, and Graelyn’s arm began to tug. She pulled back, trying to hold onto the gauntlet, Arch reaching over to attempt to hold it in place, but it shot off, hurtling across the room, and sliding right onto The Emissary’s arm. “Graelyn wasn‘t lying by the way, she didn’t steal the gauntlet, I did.”
Coloth, somewhat unexpectedly, yelled from the back, “You’re a coward and a traitor! Your gods will shame you when you die!”
“And you will die,” Taranis said, one of his big eyes shifting to Graelyn with a soft sorrow, “The Diosca Eitilte shall never bow. Warriors, destroy her.”
The Painted Warriors began to vanish, and The Emissary simply waved the gauntlet, spinning her body in a circle, and the bones on the walls were filled with new paintings: warriors, fierce but shocked, frozen in illustration.
“You’re so simple!” she guffawed again, prancing around the room, whirling with glee, “Oh Taranis, you don’t get it do you? Who do you think wrote prophecy?”
“The Sisters at-”
“I did! I wrote it, not my best work admittedly, a few too many rhyming couplets, but you believed it. And then my people and I stole the gauntlet, and cut a bunch of holes in the universe. Little ones, nothing that would be noticed by the powers that be, but enough for say, a single warrior to slip through.” The lights on the ceiling lit up brighter. “And now all of you have done just what I thought you’d do!”
She looked at Coloth pointedly, “Except you! Good on you for the bravery thing, I mean, it didn’t make a different, but still!” She gave him a thumbs up, “Gold star for effort.”
Lady Aesc, Arch, Coloth, and Graelyn began edging towards Taranis, whose Mammoths were forming up into a battle line.
“You’ve lied to us this whole time,” Lady Aesc said, “so who are you?”
She grinned, “Oh, no one really, my name’s Auteur. And you’re part of the greatest piece of performance art ever accomplished.”
The Mammoths charged, and they fell to the floor, their fur turning to pages, their bones to spines, their brains to ink. Each landed with a dull thud.
“I made the largest ritual circle in history, oh come on, be impressed,” she frowned, “I think it’s impressive.”
Arch walked over to one of the books, and picked it up, opening it to the first page.


Luigsech was born under the waxing moon to her parents--


“It’s her life story...” he said softly.
“Yep!” Auteur said, and Arch fell to the floor, clattering in his complete film boxset case.
Graelyn screamed. She ran towards the case, trying to make any sense of this, trying to understand how this was even happening. This was lunacy, this couldn’t be real. She was dreaming. She picked up the case. It had Arch’s picture on it, jumping away from an explosion. It was just a case. She heard Coloth charging, and then he dropped to the floor too. Lady Aesculapius pulled out some Gizmo, but she dropped to the floor, a pile of 276 Blu-Ray disks.
Graelyn didn’t even realize that she wasn’t on the floor anymore, that she was being carried, at first, she was wrapped in Taranis’ trunk, as he charged down a corridor.
“Small one, I have made error. I don’t know how to fight her, and I have wronged you.”
“She’s going to turn us into stories, we have to...”
She looked up at him, “Taranis, you made statues that were alive?”
“We did, yes.”
“Then...I have an idea. It might be stupid but...”


Auteur found her, standing alone in a room lined with tusks.
“So, the last one ey? You held out well. Where’s Taranis? He run away?”
Graelyn stared at her, “Go on then. Do it.”
Auteur shook her head, “This is the end you know. I thought you’d want some sort of great last words. You’re the sole survivor of 10,000 Universes, that has to be a big burden on your heart. Don’t you want revenge? Come on, give me drama!”
She looked at Auteur sadly, “A long time ago, there was a girl named Graelyn Scythes.”
Auteur waited for more, and gestured with her gauntleted hand, “And?”
“And she knew the story wasn’t going to go the way Auteur thought. So she was brave, even though she was scared.”
Auteur shrugged, “Weird, but okay.” She did a flourish of her arm, and Graelyn dropped to the floor as a book.


Auteur cracked her neck, and walked over to the book, finally, all these years of planning, all this work-- and the book began to shake.
She stepped back, that wasn’t normal. Or part of the plan. Her eyes grew wide. She opened the book even as the thing spasmed, and turned to the last page. She looked above Graelyn’s last words, and saw--
“And Graelyn wrote on her arms, knowing that the text would become lines in the book, and those lines read:”
“Aw, crap,” Auteur said, and the room went white.

* * *

Auteur looked up, “The prose here is much better. I didn’t even need to rework it this time.”
Graelyn pulled her lips in, “Miss Auteur, I don’t think that’s the thing we need to talk about.”
Auteur drummed her fingers on the desk, “I suppose it isn’t. And I suppose there’s no convincing you this was all a dream.
“Of course not.”
“So you know why you’re here.”
“I know enough, at least. But a lot of it doesn’t make any sense.”
Auteur unlocked a drawer of her desk, and pulled out a piece of paper, “I figured I owe you at least the end, whatever happens next.”

Dream Journal Ending, by Auteur

Auteur looked down where there should have been a book, and there was a baby. A crying baby on the floor of the Diosca Eitilte. She picked it up, and soothed it. She’d been a mother and a father before, and a parent. But her mind was already filled with dread at the next conversation, as Gideon arrived.
    “Auteur, Congratulations. I take it things went according to plan?’ He was dressed to the nines, as always.
    She held out the baby, “Nearly, I’m afraid.”
    Gideon frowned, “Why haven’t you killed her?”
    Auteur nearly threw the baby in exasperation, “I can’t, because then I’ll ruin the whole ritual. The girl needs to get old enough she can end the story, presumably by writing herself the ending we want.”
    Gideon rubbed his chin, “That’ll take years.”
    Bellow them, the endless unmade white stretched, “I can build a scenario for her...a few years is nothing. We can salvage this. Trust me.”

Auteur’s Office


Graelyn stopped reading, and looked up, “Who fed me as a baby?”
Auteur frowned, “I had to, obviously. You really wasted my time, you were a clever girl, are a clever girl.”
“I had to live a whole other life here.”
“Oh come on, you’re a time traveller. Don’t tell me you didn’t lose track of time before, spend years in a place. Spend months in a high school for a mission. Wait on an empty moon. Infiltrate a World War II special operations mission to rescue a friend. Seventeen years is nothing. We don’t live like other people, Graelyn. We don’t even live like the rest of this Town.”
Graelyn shook her head, “You want to erase all the people I knew and loved, to make them stories.”
“Stories to rewrite history with. To make an alternate history, one strong enough that it can overpower the entirety of the old one. And I can do it. I just need you.”
“I won’t let you.”
“You really think you can stop me?”
The door swung open, and Auteur’s jaw dropped.
“It looks like you’re trying to erase me from existence, would you like some help with that?” Archimedes Von Ahnerabe said.

* * *

“Arch,” Graelyn said, the glow of the screen illuminating her. “I need you. I need you more than ever, and you’re not even real. You’re a character. A story I read to make myself feel better at night. But You’re here, aren’t you? You’re my friend. And...”
    The face of Arch on the screen turned to her, and she touched it. The fabric rippled, and the light grew, and her hand bled into it. She felt something, and grasped it. It was a hand. She pulled, and from the screen, a glowing figure came. Their skin was light, and then it dimmed to a carapace of screens, with one electric eye.
    He looked at his hands, and looked up at her. And the memories flooded back.
    “Arch!” she hugged him, “you’re real! You’re really real!”
    He returned the hug, and they held each other tight, “I...suppose I am, yes.”
    Another figure came out of the screen.
    “Where are we, Arch?”
    “Oh uh, hi Celeste. Meet Graelyn.”
    Graelyn waved, “Big fan.”
    From the projection booth, Hollow and 176 were freaking out.

* * *

Auteur rose from her desk, “You can’t have brought him back. He’s fictional.”
Arch struck a pose, “Not anymore.”
Auteur looks at you, and mouths, “Well, sort of.” No one really notices this though. “It looks like I’ll have to move ahead on the plan then.”
    The Hollow Childe, Citizen 176, and Celeste Roth rushed into the room after them, Hollow rising into the air, objects trembling around her.
    “No, Auteur. This whole plan ends now.”
    “It’s Christmas though. We can always put this off.”
    Graelyn sighed, “I’m sorry.” Graelyn pulled the toy mammoth from her satchel, and Auteur laughed.
    “That’s what’s going to stop me? A toy?”
    “Auteur, it may be Christmas, but welcome to the ice age!” She threw the toy, and the toy suddenly began growing, its fur becoming real, its plush tusks hardening, till in the air ready to drop on Auteur’s head was a full-sized mammoth. It crushed her desk, breaking the wall and the ceiling, Auteur scampering out from under it bloody, and hurling the Hollow Child through the air and out of the way with a flick of her gauntlet as she charged through, running out her own door. Outside, Auteur was stopped in her tracks.
    In the sky, Songbird was swooping about on her dragon, Jack and Aladdin on the ground fighting the members of the cult. Lady Aesc and Coloth were back to back, taking on a group of her own people. There were hundreds of characters, and more were spilling out from the movie theater every second. Auteur looked back at Graelyn in shock.
    “You are clever,” she gave a smile that seemed too honest, “I’m proud of you. I hope you know that’s uh, not something I usually tell anyone.”
    “It’s over, Auteur!” Celeste yelled, “Give up.”
    “Please, Graelyn said, “surrender. I don’t want you to die.”
    Auteur nodded, “I lose. Thank goodness. There’s no way I can beat this.” The cult was being subdued all across the Town, every resident held by their fictional captures. Graelyn’s dream journal glowed through her bag, and Auteur grinned, “And it looks l lost just in time.”

    THE END

    The journal flew from Graelyn’s bag, and into Auteur’s hands, and Songbird and her dragon were sucked into it, then ten members of the cult.
    “What’s happening?” Hollow yelled, covering her ears.
    Graelyn’s face fell, “She was trying to turn everyone into stories.”
    Auteur threw her arms up, and did a weird little jig, “You figured it out!”
    176 watched as her hands turned into letters, drifting to the book, “Hollow, I--”
    But she was gone, and Hollow screamed, her eyes turning black, her scream shattering windows, but the windows and her vanished in a puff of fiction.
    Cá Bảy Màu and Axastyakis were trying to pull Hole with them, but Mullion shoved them forward, “Its too slow, leave it behind!” But it was no use either way. The White Canvas swallowed them, and like the rest of the town, Auteur watched as they were written into her book.
    Celeste vanished, the buildings vanished. Taranis charged Auteur, and vanished again. And the book filled up.
“Arch, hold onto me, come on now. You’re the brawn, right?”
    He was already melting into letters as he shook his head, “I was never the brawn, you know that Grae. I give kids candybars, and--”
    He whispered into ink, and flew into Auteur’s book. Shutting it, she snap echoed in eternity.
    “Well, that worked out. Whew. I was worried there for a few years. Yipee!”
    Graelyn sunk to her knees, “I...Auteur…” her eyes welled with tears, “Auteur what did you do?”
    “Turned everyone into stories! I realized I was never going to get you to crack, so instead I realized there was another way. If your story ended, I could just take everyone elses, and that would finish the ritual like I’d planned. Sure, it meant a few hundred members of that stupid little death cult would get fictionalized, but who cares about them anyway.
Graelyn shook her head, “They’re people Auteur. You can’t…”
“No, pretty sure I just did. Nice sentiment though.”
“So what now?”
Auteur shrugged, “I don’t really need anyone. Especially not that cult. Ugh. They were a bit...extra? I mean, I know I’m definitely a member in the future, but I can fix that. Fix anything. All the plot holes in history especially. I mean, really reality is ridiculous. I can do a lot better.”
Graelyn shuddered, “You’re going to kill me now?”
Auteur paused. She looked at Graelyn, and walked over to her, arms open for a hug, but Graelyn shirked away.
“Please don’t be like this.”
“You killed my friends!”
“They’re not dead, they’re just fictional!”
“Bring them back.”
“I can’t. Well, I won’t. I certainly can, but that would mean ending the whole ritual, and this has taken decades of work, and so, no.”
“This can’t be what you want.”
“Uh, no actually this is exactly what I want and I’m very happy about it,” Auteur held a hand out, “You can be my co-author. I don’t say that lightly, you’re not even particularly good at prose, but you can learn. And I like you. I...” she bit her lip, and scrunched her face up, “I...oooh don’t make me say it.”

    Graelyn furrowed her brows through her tears, “Say what?”
    Auteur waggled her arms, “You know!”
    Graelyn shook her head, “I really really don’t.”
    Auteur looked away from Graelyn and pivoted her foot back and forth, “I uh, I love you, um, kinda like a child? You know. Not a big deal. But uh. You know. I did sort of raise you on accident, and um. Wow this is awkward.”
    Graelyn looked at her, tears still in her eyes, “If you loved me you wouldn’t do this to me.”
    “Of course I would! Parents don’t have to be good people! Now come on, let’s rewrite the universe.”
    “Your universe,” Graelyn said, “there are others.”
    Auteur mused on this, “Well… Yeah I guess so.”
    “Get rid of it,” Graelyn said.
    Auteur took a step back, “Excuse me?”
    “I’ll join you, but you have to make your own universe fictional. We can play with others, but if I don’t get a home, you don’t.”
    Auteur rubbed her chin, and thought on this, “I...I didn’t think about that but...You know, fair enough Graelyn.”
    She pressed something on her gauntlet, “I already did 10,000, what’s one more?”
    Graelyn wiped her tears away, “A mistake?”
    Auteur raised an eyebrow, and then felt her past and future self, still in that universe, pulled into the book.
    “Oh come on,” she said, as she vanished into ink, the gauntlet dropping to the ground.
    Graelyn stumbled over to the gauntlet, and put it on, “Of course, I have to be the last person to exist in 10,000 some universes. The sole survivor. Figures.” She fiddled with it, till she found the “eject” setting. “Someone else can take that next time.”

    She hit the button, and all of reality spilled out.
   
    It would take too long to describe it all, but everything that had existed existed again. People were dropped into their homes, their universes fitted back in place.
    And Graelyn was still alone in there, but she knew it had worked as she picked up her dream journal, and found that her dreams had all gone to other people.
    “Figures,” she muttered.
    “You did well,” F.I.D.O said, as he flashed into existence.
    “F.I.D.O!” she tensed, “You’re not going to...”
    “No, you’re safe. I’ve tired of masters. But I fear that Auteur has written herself into a corner. I fear wherever she went when you ejected her, it’s gone badly.”
    “She tried to kill 10,000 universes,” Graelyn replied.
    F.I.D.O nodded, “But thanks to you, she didn’t. She’s somewhere living the rest of her life. But she remembers all this, and I don’t think she’ll take it well. She’s destroy herself trying to get here, trying to get to places like here...”
    Graelyn shrugged, “And that’s my problem?”
    “It’s Christmas, and as much as I try to pretend I’m a bad boy...I’m not,” he bowed his metal head, “I’m asking you to come with me, one last time, to save my Mistress.”
    Graelyn walked over to him, and pet him, “Good boy, F.I.D.O. Let’s find her.”

Chapter 7: An Artist Lies Dying

Auteur had died, that wasn’t a big deal. She’d found a new face. But that old trick was at its limits. Now they were a man, or was a man before his skin had been ripped off. He’d even thought he died, but he clung on. He couldn’t even get to death, that was annoying. The world collapsed around him, and his eyes were unable to close. Even so, he wrote in his head. He imagined his blood as paint swirls. If he was human, he’d have died ages ago. But he could cling on. He would cling on.
    Ghosts appeared to him, that girl from ages ago, and the dog he’d had once.
    “A Christmas Carol!” he shouted as they grabbed him, “you need a third one!”
    “Sorry,” Graelyn replied, “budget cuts.”

They took him back to the White Canvas, and F.I.D.O tried to stabilize him, as Graelyn held his bloody hand, “I’m sorry we didn’t find you sooner, Auteur.”
    “Oh, I’m fine, just a flesh wound.”
    “You are not fine, Master Auteur.”
    “I know doctors, we can--”
    “No doctor can save him in this state...he...I only know one group of people who can...”
    Graelyn took a swallow, “That death cult?”
    “Oh,” Auteur said, “Have I joined already or not? I keep forgetting.”
    “Call them,” Graelyn said.
    F.I.D.O did, and they whispered in as darkness. The man she recognised as Gideon stepped forward, “Friends, I give you the greatest artist there is.”
    Graelyn smiled down at Auteur, and up at Gideon, “You can save him?”
    “We can.”
    She let him go, and he vanished into the shadows.
    F.I.D.O looked up at her, “Thank you. Our service is done.”
    Graelyn patted him, “Do me one last favor, you can teleport and stuff right?”
    “Yes, Mistress Scythes.”
    “I uh, don’t really have a lift home.”


Chapter 8: The Christmas Needle Agreement

Graleyn hadn’t had any say in where the negotiations were taking place, but she sure wasn’t complaining. The station they were on was the biggest she’d ever seen, and she’d seen dozens of realities. It went on farther than she could see out the window, a size so ridiculous she wondered how practical it was.
    “Your first time on the Needle?” The speaker was a floating spinning disk of purple and yellow, only as large as a dime. So, that was new. It spoke incredibly quickly, like it had already moved on from it’s sentences by the time it started.
    “Yeah, first time,” she replied, “I’m Graelyn Scythes of Dawn.”
    “We’re Ambassador Galaxy Violet, of the Quoth.”
    “A pleasure to meet you, if I might ask, when you say ‘we’...”
    “We’re subatomic beings.”
    “Right, so a lot. Well, I’m honored to meet the family.”
    “The pleasure is ours. The Empress is a just negotiator, so I’m sure you’ll end up with a very fair treaty. The turnout to witness is impressive though, representatives from throughout time and space are here.”
    Graelyn looked past the spinning disk, which wasn’t hard since it was so tiny, at the myriad other guests. The Original Mammoth delegation was chatting with a big fuzzy creature she’d heard called a Vo’lach and a member of the Knights of Sky, while ambassadors from the Great Assimilation were chatting up the representative from this universe’s equivalent to the Firmament (though she’d been told not to call them that publicly, apparently they weren’t actually remotely the same species, they just ended up with the same job) Sergeant-Instructor Littlejohn, who looked extremely unimpressed with the Great Assimilation’s bragging about having a multi-universal empire. Kinan Jans was talking to a dejected looking Gideon, dressed to the nines, who was clearly only here out of obligation and trying not to make eye-contact with any of the people he’d nearly helped annihilate earlier. The Firmament was here as well, having in a very heated chat with the Bookkeepers. Lady Aesc and Arch had set up a card game with a big mess of aliens, one of whom had just thrown down a losing hand in disgust with the tentacles under their chin. Coloth had apparently won the hand, and was loudly proclaiming his victory, while Lady Aesc was doubling over laughing. Arch popped a few candy bars out of his arm, and that seemed to diffuse the situation. A few painted warriors stood in the corner exactly like how stone statues stand there without doing anything.
    Littlejohn walked up to Graelyn, nodding at the Quoth, “A marvelous job you did, giving that death-cult a black eye, you should be proud of yourself, kid.”
    “Thank you, sir,” she replied, “wasn’t particularly fun, though.”
    He nodded, “Never is. I do believe you have something belongs to us, though.”
    “Oh, right,” Graelyn reached into her satchel, and pulled out Autuer’s gauntlet, “she stole this from your people, and I’m happy to return it to you.”
    He took the gauntlet, and turned it over examining it close, “Well at least she took good care of it. Thanks. See you around kid.” He gave her a salute, that she awkwardly returned as a proclaimer in full regalia called for attention from the whole room.
    “Please rise for the Supreme Ruler of the Universe, Miranda Dawkins the Last, empress of the universe, commander in chief of the imperial fleets, custodian of the artefacts, mistress of the four keys, head of the galactic bank,” the proclaimer took a breath, “...and absolute ruler of the known and unknown planets.”
    The empress entered, wearing a long ceremonial robe woven from gold and threads so black they vanished the light that trailed on the behind her, the tails held up by a pair of floating drones. Under the robe, she wore a batman t-shirt and jeans.
    “Welcome everyone, I’m proud to be here to negotiate a truce between the 10,000 Dawns, and the powers from our own universe.” There was polite applause, ululation, clicking of pincers, and membrane tapping. “So, let’s begin.”
    The negotiations themselves were boring. Dawkins told a few anecdotes about her father, which everyone seemed to find more interesting than the stories really were for reasons Graelyn didn’t understand, and after agreements were decided upon, one by one, the representatives agreed to various terms and stipulations.
    “Taranis,” Graelyn said, “you were a good friend to me, even when I didn’t know it, so I wanted you to have this.” She slid the Mammoth a button with the Dawn Logo on it across the table. The Mammoth picked it up with his trunk, examined it, and then pinned it to his fur, letting out a loud trumpet that disturbed the proceedings.
    “Small Graelyn, I am honored deeply by your gift, and the symbol of your people. As a representative of the Original Mammoths, I ask you to hold your hand out.”
    Graelyn looked at Arch who nodded enthusiastically, and she did. Taranis touched her hand, and a sigil appeared on it, glowing bright, and then sinking in and disappearing.
    “You are now marked as an Original Mammoth, granted the privileges of the herd and song. Welcome as friend as equal, and known to all to have the spirit of the tusk.”
    “Oh!” Graelyn looked at her hand, “Thank you!” she replied, quickly. “You’re welcome in Spiral, whenever, too.”
    The mammoths all trumpeted, and Miranda had to politely ask them to quiet down.
    Graelyn hoped the mammoths didn’t know the button was a mass produced giveaway she had a pile of in the bottom of her bag, “I’m very honored.”
    “This bond cements our peace more than any paper. Never more will the mammoths threaten your 10,000 Dawns.”
    “Well, that’s a relief,” Miranda muttered, and moved onto the next point.

    Soon, the documents were signed, hands and limbs were shook, and the Christmas Needle Agreement went into effect. Guests began to move to the banquet hall where the celebration would truly begin. She found Arch, and cozied up to his side.
    “Hey Grae.”
    “Hey Arch.”
    “It’s good to be back.”
    She nudged him in the side, “I missed you. Your filmography just wasn’t the same.”
    “Graelyn!” they turned to see Hollow and 176, holding hands and running up to them as 176 started jabbering, “you’ll never guess what happened, we talked to the Empress and she said there was a place for us here on the Needle!”
    Hollow, who was floating a few millimeters above the ground in excitement, grinned, “So we decided we’re going to stay here, and build a life.”
    “Congratulations!” Graelyn said, and Hollow and 176 piled on her in a hug as Arch stood awkwardly on the side.
    Hollow wiped the tears from her face, as she started laughing with happiness, “We’ll have a home here, at the end of the universe.”
    Graelyn took her friend’s hands, “You two don’t be strangers though, okay?”
    “Promise,” 176 said.
    “Oh! I know this song, come on” Hollow said, and pulled her girlfriend to the dance floor.
    As the party really got going, one figure slipped away however, angling for an empty hallway. Graelyn squeezed Arch’s arm, and scampered after them.
    “Wait, Gideon!” Graelyn ran up to him, as he was attempting to start up some sort of doohickey she assumed was his ride out.
    “I have nothing to say to you, you insolent brat.”
    “Hello to you to. I have something for you to give to Auteur, can you do that for me?”
    He paused, looking her in the eyes, one of his own twitching, “No promises. What is it?”
    She reached into her bag, and pulled out a notebook and a pen, “One last Christmas present. Maybe some art therapy will help them.”
    He took them from her, and sighed, “Fine, sure. You know Auteur was the most powerful person I knew, once upon a time. She ruled planets, created wonders, defied everyone and got away with it...even if they were insufferable, they were my closest friend from face to face...now...I just want you to know that I blame you.”
    “They did it to themselves. I didn’t make them.”
    “I don’t care. I blame you,” he flipped through the empty notebook, and read the note Graelyn had written inside, “even if perhaps I know you’re right, deep down. I will give this to him. Merry Christmas, Graelyn Scythes.”
    “Merr-” but he was already gone.
    Graelyn headed back to the celebrations. There were old friends to see, and new ones to meet. And most of all, an Archimedes to bother lovingly. She didn’t know what the future held, but maybe having a white canvas wasn’t so bad after all.

​
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    James Wylder

    Poet, Playwright, Game Designer, Writer, Freelancer for hire.

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