Beneath the gleaming skyscrapers and picturesque facade of
the City of Redemption lies another city; a community of dark and ancient magic
populated by creatures of the night. Dark Redemption is a shared-world
novel based on an online role-playing game by James Crowther.
Strephon MacKenzie, a semi-immortal half-fae, has finally admitted his supernatural heritage to his uncomfortably close acquaintance Cassandra True, (mainly because she’s guessed much of it already). But Cassandra has more pressing concerns: her roommate, Cecilie, has fallen under the spell of a vampire. She has taken Cecilie to Mrs. Simms, a sorceress in the local Jamaican community and a friend of Strephon’s. As Strephon questions her, his cousin Devon arrives.
Strephon MacKenzie, a semi-immortal half-fae, has finally admitted his supernatural heritage to his uncomfortably close acquaintance Cassandra True, (mainly because she’s guessed much of it already). But Cassandra has more pressing concerns: her roommate, Cecilie, has fallen under the spell of a vampire. She has taken Cecilie to Mrs. Simms, a sorceress in the local Jamaican community and a friend of Strephon’s. As Strephon questions her, his cousin Devon arrives.
“Please tell me this
has something to do with your investigation,” Devon said, peering over
Strephon’s shoulder to get a better look at Cecilie’s décolletage.
Strephon gave a snort
and pretended to be taking Cecilie’s pulse.
“This young lady is under the thrall of a vampire and at Miss True’s
request I am endeavoring to help. I
would appreciate your assistance.” Cecile
seemed not to notice him taking her wrist; her attention seemed completely
riveted by Devon’s arrival. How odd,
Strephon thought. Just a moment before
it had been fixed on him.
“So the answer is
no.”
Strephon felt himself
losing patience. “Lord Melchior has
dealings with vampires. The Lady
Kurayami is a business associate of his.
And this young woman fell in with the vampires at Madame Kurayami’s
club. So the answer to your question is
yes, this does have something to do with my investigation.”
Devon seemed about to
retort with something sarcastic, but must have thought better of it. “Very well.
How can I help?”
“Something seems odd
about her aura. What do you make of it?”
Devon gave a cautious
glance over at Mrs. Simms, who glared at him with matriarchal disapproval, and
then at Cassandra, who merely looked at him expectantly. He stepped back and slowly walked around
Cecilie, peering at her over his sunglasses.
Cecilie blushed and straightend, obviously enjoying the attention. She pursed her lips in a coquettish
smile. She was flirting with him,
Strephon thought. And Devon was flirting
back, the cad! And after all the comments
Devon had made about his own romantic entanglements.
“May we… speak
freely?” Devon said at last.
Strephon divined his
meaning. “Everyone here knows what we
are.”
“Ah. Good.
Well, the influence of the vampire is obvious. Her aura shows signs of her being
drained. Psychic anemia, one might call
it. But there’s something else as
well. You haven’t been tupping her too,
have you, Strephon?”
Strephon slammed his
hands down against the armrests of his wheelchair. “Good God, Devon! I will thank you to remember that there are
ladies present! If you must descend to
obscenity, kindly refrain from doing so in the language of Shakespeare!”
He couldn’t be sure,
but he suspected that behind his sunglasses, his cousin was rolling his
eyes. “C'est mieux comme ca?”
“Marginally.”
“Bon d'accord,
mais tu n'as pas répondu a ma question.”
Strephon gathered his
temper, and replied in French. “Je n'ai définitivement pas été intime avec
Mademoiselle Draper. Ni avec Mademoiselle True, Madame Simms, Camilla
Parker-Bowles, ou autre femme que tes intérés lubriques puissent suggérer!”
He would have gone
on, but an impatient scowl from Mrs. Simms checked him. Cecilie was obviously confused by this sudden
torrent of a foreign language, but Cassandra frowned. Evidently she remembered more of her
schoolgirl French and had followed the gist of the exchange.
Devon gave an
infuriatingly Gallic shrug. “Comme tu veux. Mais l'aura de cette jeune
dame a des fortes traces de magie féerique. C'est surprenant que tu ne l'as pas
remarqué.”
“Faerie magic?” Strephon furrowed his brow and looked at
Cecily again. Devon was right, damn his
eyes. How could he have missed
that. “I supposed she couldn’t have
picked it up indirectly, from shaking my hand, say, or touching my
wheelchair…?” He doubted this was the
case, but he had to ask.
“Regarde pour toi-même.
C'est en elle: l'essence de féerie est dans son sang.” Cecilie
started at that. Had she understood
Devon? “C'est comme si elle avait eu une grandmère fée,” Devon
continued. “Ca ne serait pas la première fois.”
“That’s quite
enough,” Strephon grumped. “Your are
tiresome enough in English. In French
you’re tiresome and pretentious.”
“Did he say…
essence…?” Cecilie said.
Strephon and his
cousin looked at her sharply, and she shrunk a bit in her chair. “It’s just that… well…”
“Out with it, child,”
Grandma Simms said. “It’s about time
someone said something sensible here.”
Devon pulled a chair
up in front of Cecilie and sat down. He
placed his sunglasses in his coat pocket and took her hands in his. “You must tell us,” he said, gazing into her
eyes with a semblance of earnestness.
“We’re here to help you.”
Strephon expected her
to protest, and for a moment she seemed to tense. “Essence is what Philippe called it; the
stuff he gave me.”
“I knew it!”
Cassnadra muttered under her breath.
“It’s not a drug,” Cecilie
insisted. “Ms Kurayami doesn’t permit
them at her club. Philippe explained it
to me. It’s an enhancer.”
Strephon glanced over
at Cassandra, who pursed her lips as if holding back an injudicious
comment. Devon gave Cecilie’s hand a
squeeze. “Tell us more about this… Essence. It’s important that we know.”
Cecilie
hesitated. “Philippe said I wasn’t to
tell anyone about it. But…” Her gaze was transfixed by Devon’s and
Strephon could sense her resistance melting.
“It’s like this nectar, the color of lavender and it comes in these tiny
little vials; and it tastes like thrills and fireworks and every flower you can
think of.. It makes everything more…
more…” she trailed off in a vague state
of blissful abstraction.
“More magical?” Devon
suggested.
Cecilie’s eyes
brightened. “That’s it! More magical!
You understand!”
Strephon fidgeted in
his wheelchair, but Cecilie, ignoring him, continued. “Each night after we left the club, we’d go
to his place and he’d give me some of the Essence and then we’d f---“ Cecilie caught Strephon’s eye and checked
herself. “We’d make love. And after that… he’d bite me,” she finished
in a quieter tone.
“I see.”
Strephon leaned
closer to Devon and in a low voice said, “Well, this explains a lot:. She was flirting with me earlier and I don’t
think she even realized she was doing it.
You are right; she’s clearly been exposed to faerie magic and is
reacting to its presence. She’s come to
associate it with… well, with…”
“Sex,”
Devon put it more
bluntly than Strephon liked, but decided to waive the point. “As you said.”
“Quite interesting,
don’t you think?” Devon added casting a speculative glance back at Cecilie.
“Don’t tell me you
intend to take advantage of that girl!”
“Of course not. I intend to take advantage of the
situation. Listen, we both agree that
the girl’s present paramour is unhealthy for her. What’s wrong with showing her, as the poet
says, that there are lots of good fish in the sea?”
“Are you French?”
Cecilie interrupted. “You’re really sexy
when you talk French.”
Devon favored her
with a seductive smile and squeezed her hand.
“I can be anything you want me to be, ma chère.”
For someone who was
always going on about Strephon’s social life, Devon seemed to be enjoying
himself much more than was seemly. “If I
might speak with you privately,” Strephon said crossly. “And Miss True?”
The cramped break
room offered little scope for privacy, but Devon cast a simple glamour on
Cecilie, rendering her blissfully oblivious to their conversation.
“So what is this
‘Essence’ stuff anyway?” Cassandra
asked.
“A distillation of
faerie magic, unless I miss my guess; which the vampires are using as a drug.”
Strephon replied.
Devon disagreed. “Except that vampires are allergic to faerie
magic. They are unlife, and the raw
magic of faerie is anathema to them.
Like sunlight. That’s why
vampires don’t drink the blood of fae.”
“Is that so? I didn’t know that.”
“Really, what do they
teach in your English schools, Strephon?”
“Only trivial things
like Virgil and Magna Carta. May we get
back to the point?”
“Cecilie didn’t say
that Philippe took the Essence himself,” Cassandra reminded them, “just that he
gave it to her. Maybe it’s safe for
vampires when it’s been ingested by a human and metabolized in her blood. Does that make sense?”
“That could be,”
Devon mused. “I don’t know that
anybody’s ever made the experiment.”
“We have Miss
Draper’s testimony that someone has..”
“So is Melchior
supplying Kurayami with this Essence?”
“Kurayami says she
doesn’t allow drugs in her club,” Cassandra said, “and Cecilie says the same.”
“I’m not sure if
Melchior is involved with this at all,” Strephon admitted.
“There seems to be
quite a bit of faerie magic going about these days. Melchior is selling faerie computer games to
mortals, and someone is selling faerie drugs to vampires. There must be some connection.”
“That’s not all,”
Strephon reminded him. “One of the
werewolf packs have been wearing collars inscribed with faerie runes. I suppose, though, that could be a
coincidence.”
Devon turned
grave. “They don’t teach you enough in
English schools. Twice may be a
coincidence, but three times is always a charm.”
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