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Chapter 9 – Inquiries

“Well big man, it’ll be a little complicated on this end, but the best buyer for your piece of merchandise is a certain Alpha we both know and, well, maybe we don’t love but we at least get along with.”

“That seems a little too convenient. Is he willing to buy it just so I owe him a favor or something?” Callum asked.

“Honestly, maybe a bit? But like I said, I don’t actually have much in the way of, ah, criminal mage contacts. BSE and GAR keep a very tight lid on that. And homebonds are basically special order from Duvall, so one just showing up is bound to create questions.”

“But the Alpha can handle it?”

“Well, shifters and vamps do hire mages. So I guess the idea would be for him to have a mage charge things or something, not sure.”

“Mm.” Callum was pretty sure that Chester was still trying to do him a favor, more than buying something he really could use. That was something he was quite leery of, but he also needed the cash infusion for a bunker. Preferably in gold, or something that would easily and untraceably convert into other currencies. “Well, once again, I haven’t made it yet, so if there’s some specifications on size or the like, I’ll see what I can do to accommodate him.”

“You’d do better to talk to him directly, big man. I can set that up for you, tomorrow?”

“That sounds great, Lucy.” Their calls had been maybe a little awkward on occasion after he’d admitted a more-than-professional interest, but not much. He had the feeling that she was as strained for proper human contact as he was.

When he hung up he bent himself back to the task of practice and study. If he was going to be making another homebond, this time for an actual customer, he needed to get the enchantment right. Alpha Chester probably wouldn’t appreciate needing antacids and pepto-bismol after every use.

His progress on turning threads into tubes was not going too badly, but it was becoming pretty obvious that he’d never have the facility at it that he did with his threads. He could, with effort, flatten out a thread and roll it into a tube, at which point the structure was stable. It was a tedious and finnicky process, though, and he was far from being able to do it ad-hoc.

Trying to make structures with them clarified a lot of differences between himself and regular mages, though. The tubes were stiffer and larger, not as easy to manipulate but not as prone to deformation. That meant there was none of the vibration or oscillation his threads always had while the frameworks were energized, but it wasn’t possible to match the outline as well. So it actually required less total vis, was presumably not nauseating, but it was far slower and left behind a lot more evidence.

Sadly, it was not the cure-all that he’d been hoping, but it would at least mean his enchantments could be less terrible. Especially since he’d been making at least a little progress with the actual literature and theory. Enough that he could identify some of the simpler aspects, anyway. If nothing else, he could make a larger receiving plate, something more along the lines of the GAR teleporters, so multiple people could fit through simultaneously.

The derivation from construct to enchantment and back still escaped him. It was, apparently, hard to begin with, and the advanced stuff was of course restricted to the Guild of Enchanting. At least the more basic techniques were widely known simply because every mage wanted to turn their spells into foci instead of having to construct them manually every time. Not that he blamed them.

His gravitykinesis was actually the perfect candidate for turning into a focus. It was basically impossible for him to lift himself because of the impact his blurry vis threads had on things like guts and the inner ear, but having to construct that from tubes every time would be exceedingly difficult. Unfortunately, there was just too much involved in that process to even start at the moment, so he’d have to stick to the floating chair or flying luggage version until he found some better references.

Callum had also spent a lot of time drafting up plans for his bunker. Which was, despite the name, not something he wanted to build underground. With air and earth mages, that wasn’t that much protection anyway. No, the value would be in making it difficult to find for anyone, mundane or magical. Doing that while still being able to have things like power and internet might be more difficult, but magic would help.

Now that he had the materials, he really wanted to enchant permanent portals. Not big ones for people or vehicles, but something small enough to run a cable bundle through. He was pretty sure that was what GAR used to increase the amount of mana at their offices, since they very definitely had more than the surroundings. The only issue was whether there was enough ambient mana around, though he’d been making strides on reducing the costs for his own constructs.

He’d kinda-sorta cracked the recirculation issue, after much study of the CAD drawings he’d taken from the dragonlands, but what he could manage thus far was a pretty crude approximation. Eventually, he was confident that he’d be able to manage a proper one, though, since he was ever so slowly learning some of the principles behind the structures. Trial and error weren’t nearly as good as instruction, but he wasn’t sure he’d trust any mage at this point.

The copious notes he was taking, on the other hand, might well help someone down the line. He didn’t know who, or when, since it wasn’t like he was in the running to get his work immortalized by the magical authorities. Still, there was no telling what the future held. Plus, he’d long ago gotten into the habit of sketching or writing down everything, and so much magic was relative distances, curves, and angles that it shared a lot of commonality with his architecture training.

In anticipation of the cash infusion he’d be getting from Chester, Callum drove all the way to Dallas to trade in a couple of his gold plates for money. There was nothing particularly exciting about the trip, save for the fact that there was quite a bit of supernatural presence there and he felt a little weirded out having a heavily warded building within his perceptions.

With his tattoo gone, he couldn’t pose as a mage anymore, so he had to make do with a normal buyer for his gold, though he didn’t cash out more than one plate at a time. If he looked hard enough, he could find people who were happy to take bullion, no questions asked. One particularly seedy place, though, sent someone to trail after him when he turned down their laughable offer. That was kind of hilarious, since he just discreetly turned a corner and teleported to the next block.

It did drive home why he was staying out in a sparsely-populated area in a trailer home, despite the drab surroundings and occasionally sketchy neighbors. The whole thing made Callum miss West Virginia, or even South Dakota. Anywhere with more green. But even that was better than the sea of uncaring faces and bland concrete of a city.

After he refreshed his cash reserves, it was a long tedious process of shopping around and doing the minutiae of getting his plans fleshed out. He had, somewhat regretfully, decided that his bunker couldn’t be in the United States, if for no other reason than the surveillance everywhere. Or rather, the fact that every transaction and phone call and so on was so interlinked and the requirement for identification so ubiquitous.

Eventually, some facial recognition database somewhere would flag him on a store camera or something, and he’d have another GAR kill team after him. Considering the way the last one acted, that wasn’t something he wanted to deal with. Especially since they didn’t seem to have much care for other people or infrastructure. He had to wonder how many “industrial accidents” and “tragic fires” were the result of such things.

Though from what he’d seen, there probably weren’t too many rogues like him. Enough that they had a black ops force, sure, but for all he knew they mostly operated in the portal worlds. Or their magical cleanup squad was really good, which was equally possible, since there weren’t overt signs of major magical battles anywhere.

The secrecy still bothered him, because from what he saw it wouldn’t have been that hard for mages and assorted supernaturals to establish themselves on top. Sure, there weren’t that many of them, but they were so obscenely powerful that they ought to have been at the top of all the classical civilizations. But there were no real hints of that.

Either history worldwide had been thoroughly scrubbed, which didn’t seem likely, or supernaturals hadn’t actually been around in antiquity. It was one thing if they’d been there to found Rome or Babylon, but it was another if they would have had to compete with the Holy Roman Empire. Now, of course, he was sure they’d inveigled their way in with the elites of the world, who could use things like healing magic. Or instant teleports.

The mages, he could understand. They had the portal worlds and probably not a huge need for normal technology. The vamps and the shifters seemed like they’d benefit far more from positions of power, though he supposed they might have issues that weren’t clear at first glance. Even with glamours, things like not being active during the day would make it difficult for them to rule over humans.

Or maybe they just wouldn’t be able to restrain their appetites.

For the moment that secrecy did help him, or rather, the disconnect between the magical world and the real one. It meant he could wander around a showcase on solar panels without having to worry that something would mark him as a rogue mage. Partly because no normal person knew about mages, and partly because solar panels just weren’t something the magical world especially cared about.

He doubted they spent much time in the offices of civil engineers, either. Which Callum did. He couldn’t get his plans properly certified since he hadn’t located the actual land he wanted to put his bunker, but he could at least get someone qualified and start running it through the process of figuring out electrical and plumbing. Not that he even wanted to get it officially certified, since that would risk his ID and he’d rather not.

As it stood he’d at least learned from his past mistakes and had his pickup under a different name than Keith Summers, amateur metalworker and the actual purchaser of the various services and material. The amateur was not a stretch, either. After watching the mordite processing, Callum figured that he might as well get a crucible and some other equipment so he could do it himself in the future, or if he needed to recycle his wire.

His knee made it essentially impossible for him to move heavy stuff with pure muscle, but that was what magic was for.  He could even transfer molten metal with gravitykinesis, and probably more easily and safely than physically pouring a crucible. At some point he wanted to see if he could get anything of value from simulating microgravity, but that was pretty far down the list in his notebook.

Callum also picked up a new cane while he was out, something with a bit more style than the generic medical one from Mallorca, since despite all the exercises he was still feeling a bit lopsided. With that, he was ready for his call with Alpha Chester. Mostly, anyway. He still felt that same tension as he used to whenever he met any client for the first time, that little niggling worry that he’d come off as a complete idiot. Of course, he’d dealt with Chester before, but not in this exact way.

“Chester here.” The man’s voice came from the phone as Lucy linked him into the conversation. Callum wasn’t entirely certain what technological witchcraft she had worked so they could talk anonymously, but he figured she had to know what she was doing. “You say you’ve got a homebond to sell?”

“More like I can make one to sell,” Callum replied, sitting in the back of his pickup out at the edge of cell service. “Considering you’re not a mage, I was thinking you might like something a little different from the ring-plate setup. Like maybe two plates that connect to each other?”

“That would be excellent,” Chester said. “How would I use it, and how big can you make it?”

“Well, you’re still going to need a mage to activate it, unfortunately. I can’t change that just yet, nor the fact that you’re going to need a mage or some kind of mana source to charge it up. But as for size, probably a meter diameter circle.”

“Wait one,” Chester said. Callum tapped his pencil against his notebook while he waited, thinking. The paired-plate thing was actually a fairly simple evolution of the homebond, since the actual teleportation enchantment was symmetrical. It wasn’t nearly as complicated as what GAR used, but it also didn’t have any protections or security or anything. Which was why he wasn’t going to make one for himself.

Chester might be able to secure both ends of the teleport, but Callum sure couldn’t. Teleport pads would probably be more pleasant to use than a homebond, but it’d also be an open invitation for someone to wander into whatever secure area he used. That wasn’t even counting that he wasn’t sure how the teleport overcame the vis resistance people had.

When he fed it directly, it was linked in, so that made sense. But mages that just shoved mana into it, rather than vis, didn’t have that benefit, and that wasn’t mentioning the bubbles and shields and so on. Nor did he know how a non-mage like Alpha Chester would use one, given the difficulty he’d had teleporting Clara.

“We can manage that,” Chester said after a moment. “One meter is acceptable.”

“It also doesn’t have any of the flourishes the GAR system has,” he said. “There’s no security, nothing. It’d just teleport from point to point.” He was planning to leave some room on the pads for Chester’s pet mage to add any extra stuff to address that, though maybe it was just a matter of raw power. Either way, he needed to make it clear because it wouldn’t do to sell Chester a lemon.

“That’s actually better, for our purposes,” Chester assured him. “The more stripped-down, the better. ”

“That’s handy,” Callum said dryly. “Though that means no safety features, either.”

“But it will work?”

“I’ll test it myself before I send it over,” he said. “I assume we’ll use a dead drop again.”

“Of course,” Chester said, with some degree of amusement. “I’ll have Lucy supply you with a map of my territory.”

“Works for me,” Callum replied. “Speaking of Lucy, I’d like you to pay her out of whatever this is going to run. Say, ten percent finders fee and ten percent more for a deposit.”

“So, twelve kilos to you and three to Lucy,” Chester said, without skipping a beat.

“Works for me,” Callum agreed. “I’ll let Lucy know when it’s ready.”

“That is acceptable,” Chester told him.

“Sounds great to me, big man,” Lucy said happily. “Another couple like this and I can retire!”

***

Most of the official work correspondence Lucy got was routine. For her, it was all through email, because fortunately enough her bosses were technology-literate. Most of GAR proper was, in fact ⁠— all the bureaucrats and decisionmakers for the day-to-day operations. The Houses themselves still lagged behind. There was also the fact that GAR employed a lot of non-mages, so they couldn’t use foci.

Lucy was pretty sure they’d come up with scry-coms solely to avoid using mundane-produced goods.

The email that dropped into her inbox that morning landed with an almost audible thud, marked with importance flags and all caps and exclamation marks. That by itself wasn’t really an issue, but the contents were a little unsettling. Orders for every employee at GAR Midwest to report to the main floor, with the implicit threat that anyone who didn’t would be at best fired. Considering it was GAR, the penalties could run a lot more severe than just job termination. Like life termination.

“Well, shit.” She scrambled to flip a few switches on her various machines and peripherals, burning her secretly routed connections and purging a few bits of local storage. Most of her illicit work was kept offsite, with only a few connections that she had full control over. It was probably a little cheeky to route anything to GAR Midwest, but she was the one who was in charge of the network and had as anonymous and encrypted a connection as could be managed.  Besides, it wasn’t like she had anything else to do most of the day. Her job was mostly a game of waiting until something broke.

This seemed like it was a little more than something breaking though, and she could always re-establish things if it wasn’t anything unusual. Or maybe she’d just leave them off. Given how stirred up things were at the moment it was probably a smarter idea, but she’d always enjoyed sticking it to the mages higher up who were supposed to be supervising her and had no idea what she actually did.

She locked down her workstation and got out of her chair, patting herself down for a quick inventory to make sure she had everything before heading out of her dungeon. The IT center was, in fact, underneath the main part of GAR Midwest, a flight of empty echoing stairs taking her up to the ground floor and in among the people who were emerging from various offices.

There was various confused conversation, the crowd naturally splitting into the duds and the lower-level supernaturals who worked at GAR. Lucy was by far the youngest of the duds, most of the others being well into middle age and about as cheerful and exciting as could be expected from a group of office drones. She was technically an office drone herself but she preferred to think she didn’t count.

“What’s going on?” Albert, the facilities clerk, asked her.

“I don’t actually know,” Lucy said, which was the concerning part. Usually she caught wind of anything unusual going on by snooping on emails, but there had been nothing to indicate some kind of emergency all-hands. Which meant it had come through purely supernatural channels, mage-to-mage.

“Huh,” he said, and they continued on out into the main floor. Everyone else was there, with some of the mages and a couple of the fae floating above the gathered employees. Supervisor Lowell stood at the front, flanked by people in black uniforms. In fact, she realized, the entire area was surrounded by the black-uniformed types, scattered about the edges, which made Lucy very uneasy.

“Hello, everybody,” Lowell said, a false smile plastered on her face. “There have been some internal issues of late, so the BSE is here to do some interviews. If you don’t have anything to hide, you don’t have to worry about it. All interviews will be confidential, of course.”

A thrill of fear shot through her, but she tried not to show it. Of all people gathered there, she was the one who actually did have something to fear. There wasn’t any way she could bow out of it either, if the Bureau of Secret Enforcement was about. At least she didn’t stand out because everyonewas nervous, and a dozen people started talking at once.

“Silence!” The speaker was a small woman next to one of the BSE folks, and her voice carried enough magic with it to still the tongues of everyone who was speaking. Lucy found she couldn’t even open her mouth, and shuddered involuntarily. She hated compulsion, and she hated more than she had no real way to stop it.

Usually she had some resistance to that kind of thing, even if she was a dud. While she couldn’t exactly see magic, she could still sense it, and sort of brace herself against it. Not so in this instance, since the woman’s magic was so powerful, some fae thing of frozen rose petals reaching into her brain.

“Thank you, Agent Black,” one of the BSE members said. “Now, M-0 follow Agent Carter. M-1, Agent Jay. M-2 and above, Agent Black.” The agents raised their hands as their names were called. Lucy gritted her teeth and started making her way toward Carter.

The compulsion was already fading, but there were only a few mutters here and there. Nobody was happy, but at the same time, nobody was going to risk the wrath of BSE. They were the real deal, and they had no sense of humor whatsoever.

What was even worse than being separated out that way was the fact that they were being taken to the teleporters.  There were some interview rooms on-site, but they were just meant to deal with low-level supernaturals who had been caught being naughty. Going off-site meant they were anticipating something serious.

She found herself maybe third in line, ahead of Albert but behind two of the switchboard operators. A quick glance showed that there were more BSE personnel up there, working the teleporters and determining the destinations. They were definitely taking this seriously.

The line shuffled forward as a BSE agent processed them through the teleporter one by one. When it was Lucy’s turn, the room blinked and she found herself in a bare, white alcove behind a security station. The atmosphere was oddly oppressive, so it was probably in a portal world, but there was nothing to indicate where. Yet another black-clad BSE agent, this time a vampire lifted a crest marked with the symbol of House Fane, and the tattoo on her wrist tingled.

“You will state your name,” the agent instructed, the vampire’s voice compelling her to speak. She couldn’t even brace herself against it that time, her mouth opening of her own accord.

“Lucile Harper.”

Some of the fae and vampires employed by GAR pushed around their dud coworkers, so it wasn’t like she’d never been the target of compulsion before. It was kept to a minimum, since even if they were duds they were still part of GAR, but that didn’t stop the occasional instruction to forget what they’d walked into the room for, or eat the wrong lunch. So she wasn’t completely unfamiliar with nature of such things, even if she’d never felt it hammer home so hard before.

“You will proceed through the gateway.” She had no choice but to comply, in that horrible feeling of doing something against her own better judgement. Of knowing that something is a mistake and doing it anyway. It wasn’t like there was even any need to use compulsion to simply wave her through into the facility, but they did it anyway.

Her feet carried her forward past the warded gateway, skin crawling at the feel of the vis scan, and she stopped. The facility was chillingly bland and unmarked, a dull gray hall with dull gray doors and sourceless lights stretching out in front of her. The door to her left opened and another vampire stepped out, also clad in BSE black.

It could have been the brother of the one at the security station, but most vampires bore at least a vague resemblance to each other. They could be taller or shorter, paler or darker, but there was something about the eyes and the mouth that they all had in common.  Maybe it was just the inhuman interest and the faint sneer, but Lucy didn’t need to see fangs to know it was a vampire.

“You will follow me,” the new one instructed, and proceeded down the hallway, forcing her to walk along behind. A few moments later she heard the agent at the security station instruct someone new to state their name, and heard Albert answer.

“Halt,” the vampire told her, forcing her to nearly fall over as she stopped abruptly. He opened one of the unmarked doors to reveal an empty room with two chairs, a table, and some cameras. “You will enter the room,” he instructed, and she was compelled inside.

“You will sit down. You will not speak until you are told.”

Lucy seated herself on the nearest chair in a kind of nightmarish haze, unable to ask questions or even protest her treatment. Not that she thought BSE would listen, but this was far beyond bullying or poking fun. It was like they’d already judged her guilty.

What was worse, they just made her sit there for a good ten or fifteen minutes before the vampire agent returned. For some reason the compulsion never waned, and all she could do was stew in fear and anxiety, not knowing what was going on or whether they knew anything about her. When the agent did come back, he had a small folder that he set down on the table as he took the seat across from her, his nametag labeling him as Agent Blanchet.

“This interview will be recorded,” Blanchet stated flatly, and Lucy would have scoffed if she could have. It was hardly an interview when she couldn’t say anything of her own accord.

“You will answer all questions truthfully and completely,” Blanchet said, and opened the folder.

“What is your name?”

“Lucile Rosetta Harper.”

“What are your duties at GAR Midwest?”

“Information Technology management. I run the servers for GAR.” Even if she couldn’t fight against the requirement to speak, she could at least control the precise words she used. The first few questions were innocuous enough, which she was glad of. It gave her some time to regain her bearings and start actually thinking rather than reacting. The introductory portion of the interrogation was probably to get people used to answering questions, since even under compulsion people could trip over their tongues, but for her it was an opportunity to clear her mind.

“Have you given anyone, for any reason, any information restricted by GAR?”

“No.” It wasn’t a lie. She had never given anyone any information. She had always sold it, never given it for free.  Although part of her struggled to elaborate on that, the flat no was far better than a twisty truth that might invite further questioning.

“Are you aware of anyone who has, for any reason, supplied restricted information to individuals opposing GAR’s interests?”

“Five years ago, Lucian Friar supplied the preferred pastry choices of the lower office pool to Gran’s Doughnuts across the street.  Four years ago, in August, Albert Lan gave the bid data for office supplies to a wholesaler friend so they could underbid.” She had almost five years of personal experience with all the little, petty, harmless sort of peculation that could be considered restricted information and individuals opposing GAR’s interests, without even touching on the sort of nonsense more important people got up to.

Tattling on anyone of real importance would generate questions of its own, but she had plenty of little things to get through first. It was the best bluff she could think of to screen anything she had done, because while she couldn’t refuse to answer, she could answer in the least helpful way possible. Blanchet listened for a few minutes, frowning, before finally getting fed up with her increasingly petty and convoluted stories.  He held up his hand, then realizing that didn’t do anything, actually commanded her to stop.

“You will stop talking,” he said bluntly, and then referred to his paper again. Lucy rubbed at her throat, glad that she hadn’t been specifically commanded not to, wishing she had something to drink.  Wishing she could ask for something to drink.

“What are your duties with regard to Alpha Chester?”

She’d been expecting that one. It was no secret she was on retainer for Alpha Chester, and even had her physical residence near the pack headquarters. It wasn’t like she could stay in the House she’d been born to.

“I provide technical support and troubleshooting,” she said. “I make sure his networks function, his phones are supported, and supply teleconferencing services.” Those were what she was hired for. Anything beyond that was freelancing and not, strictly speaking, a duty.

“Do you have significant relations with anyone outside of GAR aside from Alpha Chester’s pack?”

She struggled with that question a fraction of a moment, completely unable to keep herself from answering it, but not willing to betray the big man. The thought of which sparked enough of an idea that she could harness her tongue in the instant before she actually started speaking.

“My big man calls me up sometimes and we flirt a lot. Last time we talked he wanted to take me out somewhere and I think that would be really great because I haven’t had a proper date in—”

“You will stop talking,” Blanchet said, with a long, flat look at her. Contrary to mundane literature, vampires were not sexy at all. They weren’t sexual at all. They couldn’t reproduce and had no interest in anything related to it.  Finally he stood, closing the folder and tucking it under his arm.

“You will stand up and follow me,” he instructed her, and brought her back along the sterile, featureless hallway. Back through the gateway, and the vamp there lifted the crest again. Suddenly the irresistible compulsion faded, and she staggered suddenly, gasping and heart hammering like she’d run a marathon.

“You will go back through the teleport,” the security guard said, but it lacked the bite of before. Not that she was about to disobey. She wobbled through and found herself back in GAR Midwest, where she was directed to sit off to the side with the others who had finished their interrogations.

Lucy knew she was incredibly lucky that they’d not asked more specific and pointed questions, ones that would have been harder to answer without betraying herself, but it wasn’t all luck. She had always known she could be compelled to speak, which was why she separated everything. Why she always worked by individual contract, why she didn’t call her clients by name, nor ask them for their names. Even Alpha Chester.

Even so, she’d never thought it would be needed. Not beyond, at most, deflecting a too-curious fae. She’d never considered that she’d be treated like some criminal renegade and deprived of even the ability to speak for almost an hour. Lucy slumped down and put her head in her hands. Her jaw ached from gritting her teeth and her palms smarted from where her fingernails had been digging into them.

She sure as hell wasn’t getting anything else done today. Being angry was one thing, but Lucy was too pissed to even think.

***

“So, nobody admitted anything.” Agent Jahn looked at the reports from the BSE folks that he’d cleared to work on the case. He’d known it would be a headache from the beginning, but not this much of a headache. Part of him thought wistfully of the large television at home and the stack of those animated foreign shows he had yet to get through.

Not that he’d ever admit to such a thing.

“I wouldn’t say anything. We did get a lot of confessions of minor wrongdoing,” Agent Lavigne, of the Lavigne nest, pointed out.

“None of which we will be doing anything about. Well, except for Ms. Janry.” Jahn grimaced. He didn’t care about stealing paperclips or salting doughnuts, but a full embezzlement scheme was something GAR would have to address. Not that it was his problem.

“It would be easier if we could have told people what we’re looking for,” Agent Belas said, his bald head reflecting the overhead lights like a mirror.

“That’s against policy,” Jahn told him brusquely.

“For internal investigations, especially,” Agent Danforth added. “The fae spreading around their stories is bad enough, but to admit we think GAR is compromised? We’d have entire Houses pulling their members out, not to mention packs and nests.”

“And the duds would gossip about it,” Agent Blanchet said. Jahn had given him the job of dealing with the duds, though he hadn’t been aware the vampire would be so annoyed about it. “They chatter on and on about such pointless and stupid mundane things!”

“Keep it professional, people,” Jahn warned them. “Danforth, what about the magic sweep? Find anything?”

“Only a few people with extra privacy wards on their office,” Danforth said. “If there were any other foreign enchantments, they’ve been integrated into the base structure, and Tarson checked against all the renovation records. Nothing’s out of place.”

“I don’t like it,” Jahn sighed. “But sometimes you don’t find anything because there’s nothing to find.”

“You don’t really believe that, do you?” Danforth looked over at Jahn.

“No.”


Next 

Comments

Lictor Magnus

Looks like it’s time for a dud revolution! ⚔️

Dahak

Honestly surprised that isnt a normal thing with duds considering what they think of them.

Alex Lindsay

Do you have an idea when this book might be available?

The Walrus Transcendent

I'm really wondering what kind of effect this is gonna have for staff retention and morale.

austin kutz

Moon base when? Can't wait for the mages to be like "WE'VE TRACKED HIM!" "Well, where is he?" "Sir, it looks like he's on the moon!" "The moon!?" No one can teleport that far and no air mage can fly that high, how could anyone possibly get there?" Because they're so out of touch that they don't know mundanes have already been to the moon

Amelgar

Lucy mentioned it happened a little. Just not on this scale. I guess there isn't usually a need for it.

Leonard Marchant

"But mages that just shoved mana into it, rather than* vis"

White Neko Knight

I've always hated non-consensual mind control. I'd be pissed as well.

Kirrocen

"Your Honor, I wish to have it noted that it was not my client's fault IA never found the mole." "On what grounds?" "Her testimony was yucky and he didn't want to listen to it." "Yeah, fair. With a face like his, he'll always be single."

Dietz

Strike one! And it's suddenly quite obvious how truly built into the society bigotry actually is. The sheer casual disregard for their wellbeing and dignity is actually impressive. But it will also prove to be their undoing now that the veil has been lifted.

Leonard Marchant

Could Callum create a focus that make vis tubes around his threads? Like the line to pipe tool in cad.

Hunter Vook

Look, just go back and fix your chapter numbers. It's trashy and only going to get harder to do. No shot it takes longer than an hour if you do it right now but if you let it be it'll be a whole afternoon of work eventually.

Pyrefiend

That was a tense read to put it mildly.

Andrew

Thank you!

Set

As soon as she said ‘retire’ I thought she was dead. She might still be, “it’s a simple curse but quite unbreakable”

TaylorTot

Maybe Callum won't need to destroy the GAR if battle. But trick it into destroying itself.

BubblyGhost

Aww what a bunch o' cunts.

AsterasIX

I love how all the flirting actually saved her ass. And calling Cal her "big man" in an interrogation is absolutely funny.

Colby Last

Wow, this is a story about a corrupt dictatorship with their heads shoved 9ft up their own asses. The fact that they so thoroughly underestimate the mundane world is jaw dropping.

Marmoset Threat

It wouldn't even be toooo difficult. We're just a year or two away from commercial payloads being semi-regularly delivered to the moon, so it's not unthinkable to sneak a small teleport-beacon aboard a spacecraft. Sure, constructing an actual livable space wouldn't be simple, but with teleportation removing the main limit current space stations and bases have (mass limits) and magic to fill in the gaps, it's doable.

Nairne

It would awaken a murderous urge in me (one that I wouldn't be able to act on, and I would probably cool down from in short order).

Nairne

Fixing up a decommissioned satelite, making a kind of ISS-likeish environment. I like it.

Dashaya Toney

Damn this is good. Binged the whole thing in 2 days. Sucks that one of the few actually compelling serials doesn't have 500+ chapters like some of the other trash out there 😮‍💨

Lee Ortiz

This is what happens when knuckle draggers are in charge.

Tagmin

Nice that she admitted to wanting to go on that date with Callum, wish it was under better circumstances but good enough

Beeees!

I mean, unlike humans they are very much not equal physically/magically to their superiors. Most they could do is strike and slow down the bureaucracy, but I imagine that not working well with compulsion magic and the like

jaycrall69 .

With the GAR suppressing any “illegal” factions from rising up, they’re not so powerful as many may think. Personally I think you should be introducing more underworld and off the books type deals, if the establishment has that ironclad control then there should be a lot more corruption, GAR loyalists should be beating the shit out of any dissenters and perhaps blatantly going against their own beliefs. Though you have shone that too. I dunno, I’m just a little fed up with the fact that noone in the powers that be is taking advantage of this, may they have! And we haven’t gotten to it.. neat to see where you go.

abowden

Clever. She won't be able to sustain it if they actually suspect her in particular though, she needs to quit at some point, and get out of GAR's reach. Preferably in a way that doesn't draw suspicion. she might not be the only person to quit after this.

Neruz

To be fair, until about 100 - 200 years ago, they would have been correct to ridicule the mundane world. Keep in mind; Archmages live for centuries. To magical society the 1700s are still within living memory.

Pebble

I wonder if Callum could make something like a homebond, but with portals instead of teleportation. If he could have it create a tiny portal just big enough for him to move his threads through and the other end open up in some storage room, he would be able to use it as a sort of "Inventory" system by teleporting stuff in/out through that portal. Depending on just how small the portal could be, it could be a tiny box that's hollow inside (where the portal would open), that he could implant inside himself like the homebond.

Sean

I wonder if Callum can make his glamor immunity a spell or something. I know we finally got an explanation in the form of him looking at his brain and being freaked out but I think at some point glamor immunity would be a massive thing to give someone

sri kalyan mulukutla

I wonder if he can create spatial traps as he progresses forwards. Like hiding explosives in hidden pockets and then triggering them when needed.

Sdff

it's hinted that they take advantage of it all the time. Every time we see someone important everyone quakes in feer. Its just looking like the sort of buttoned up corruption that takes pushing a senators son off a roof to get caught. In case you didn't know that was an MK Ultra refference. A US/Canadian program Where the cia and canadians drugged a million or so people to see what happened over 10 years and was accused of rape, prostetution, and mind control experiments to go along with the drugs. It didn't get exposed to the public until it had ben going on at least a decade. Its on wikipedia if you want to read about it. the mind control suggestion elements remind me of some of the elegid intimidation elements used by the cia to keep people quite, but their was no mind controll the cia could use.

Person

There is an inverse ratio between quality and volume. "Cheap. Fast. Good. Pick two." Engineering proverb

Person

Yeah. A guy can dream. And stealing a nuke wouldn't even be that hard. Actually detonating it could be a problem, but swiping one? Fairly easy.

TaylorTot

He should buy a yaht. He can build a mini teleport network to just pop back to the mainland. He can park it out somewhere in the middle of the ocean and just never bring it back to shore. And if he figures out permanent portals, he can just "hardwire" it into the mains power system to provide all the power he needs. No need for gas.

Victor Diaz

It's almost like Callum had the right idea here.

wherebear

Holy cow the implications of vampire and glamour compulsion are TERRIFYING. Has it been established if there is any way for a mage or shifter to resist those? I have to imagine an Archmage or an Alpha would take exception to that sort of thing so defenses *have* to exist, yea?

Daoist

Archmages definitely have theirs ways of dealing with it, either through active protections or because they have overloaded their brain with a safe vis aspect like healing and space for Fane and Duvall. Shifters definitely have innate protection : it was said that the only reason why Clara was victim to compulsions is because she's young and weak. An alpha can just shrug it off.

Jason Hu

I doubt it would be any time soon. But maybe Cullum could make a portable home spatial storage. Kind of like what they used in antman 2. Or all those cultivation novels where they live in a storage ring or something.

austin kutz

Or he can build a base on the bottom of the ocean. You can do a lot with portals

k

Since portals preserve velocity and momentum, Callum could make himself a pretty scary death ray by dropping a portal to the bottom of the ocean.

k

Also, I wonder how momentum works if portals are at an angle to each other? Imagine a container of hot gas, with a portal in the middle such that the "front" and "back" are pointed in the same direction. The force of the gas hitting the ends of the container would be unbalanced so you'd get a constant force. You can turn it up or down by adjusting the temperature. Or I guess you don't really care about temperature, just pressure. So, charge it up with high pressure water and you have a little anti gravity lifting device. Which you can find tune by adding or removing pressure.

k

Huh wait you don't need to get exotic really -- the tube of a bicycle tire would do it. Just hold a piece in either hand and squeeze to adjust the pressure.

Barrie Davis

I wonder when we will hear more about gravity magic, I can't imagine them being highly valued. Will Callum snap up some and teach them portal magic? Because they probably have some availability to do what he can in curving space. It would be cool seeing him make an organisation out of the so call useless magic and applying science.

David Cohen

Why do I seem to keep getting notice for posted new chapters then find it one from the last time they were posted?

BJ

Oh snap, good work Lucy.

BJ

Lower tier gets access to chapters later. If that's not it, idk.

David Cohen

Yep. Don't know either. Usually have to close the app and reopen to get the correct chapter. Seems to only happen on my phone and with this story I usually also have a double update for thus story too

Corwin Amber

'she hated more than she' than -> that

Anonymous

Lucy is a little lucky in that what they are looking for is people inside of GAR that are double agents or whatever. And she isn't that. Plus, they don't really expect duds to be up to anything. I bet the mages got more thoughtful questions. The vampire questioning her basically was just going down his checklist and didn't have interrogation experience or interest.

fbt

yeah, the vamps (and the mages, by giving the duds to him) arrogance really bit him in the butt there. I'm a little surprised she was able to steer it as much as she did, given how total the compulsion seemed to be, but maybe it's a known thing and so her strategies worked.