“Tuesday, April 15th 00:19’
“Your visa,” the Archivist interrupted, his voice a whip-crack,
“is meaningless. Will your papers save you when the Hunters catch your scent? If it is any consolation,” The Archivist paused as he pulled out his phone and sent a quick text,
“you will work for me now. All of you if you’re so concerned about money. My assistant will meet us tomorrow at noon. Your visa situation should be the least of your concerns. Congratulations.”“Just like that,” Lena raised an eyebrow.
“Just like that,” The Archivist responded as he put the phone back in his pocket,
“I am what your shorter-lived species calls ‘old-money’. You will be taken care of. Unless you prefer to simply pull yourselves up by your bootstraps.”Lena paused as she considered her next words. On one hand, the prospect of not having to work was enticing, but she knew that the comedy club would still call her name.
“You better have benefits.”“I promise you,” The Archivist paused as he lifted his top lip, pointed to his teeth, and looked towards Mathias,
“your canines will never look better.”"How do we learn to control it? How do we keep them from finding us?"The archivist lowered his lip as he turned to her slowly. He thought for a moment before he sighed.
“Right now, you all leave trails like a wounded animal. Your magic begs to be found. You will learn control,” he paused as he used his free hand to reach into his pocket and pull out a compass. The group would see that it was a palm-sized brass compass with a cracked ivory face. The needle is a dull grey and silver, forged from cold iron and tipped with a sliver of silver. And the outer rim is etched with runes.
“This is a Witchfinders Dial, something that has been passed down since the inception of our order.” The Archivist moved it from side to side, yet the dial remained fixated on the center of the group.
“It tracks latent magic, and it will find you. Once I am finished, however, you will be able to cover your tracks. We’re lucky that the new generation of our enemies have forsaken the old ways, but that will not lead.”“How does it work?” Jackson asked as he placed a hand on his chin. While his mind was not as well suited for the magical world, a device like that seemed strangely practical. Mundane. It made sense to Jackson that a device made by people who hunted mages would not be magic.
“If you want to know, there are books in my study,” The Archivist responded as he closed the compass and put it back into his pocket.
“If you wanted to be any use to our cause, you would learn how the Witch Hunters operate. How they work.” He paused, his gaze sharpening to a blade’s edge.
“Or do you require me to draw you a picture book? I can even let you color it in.”Lena shifted in place as she looked over the device. She was not a smart woman and her thoughts were more gushing wind than constructive as she thought about how it worked.
”You were either real good at what you did, and something fucked up happened, or you weren’t and these guys aren’t that scary. And why didn’t you just shoot yourself when you suddenly became part of the problem? I don’t care that much, as long as I get answers. I’ve heard enough stories about monsters that used to exist that I believe you, but the first thing I’m doing before I do your wizard shit of figuring out how to get this destruction shit I’m doing under control. You got any future vision shit for that?”The Archivist’s lips twitched, then split into a laugh as cold and sharp as a scalpel.
“Oh, are you daft? Does a bodybuilder naturally possess control over their muscles or do they have to work at it?” A ping pulled the Archivist's attention away from the group. He pulled out his phone, and his expression soured at what he saw. On his screen was a direct message from E. Longtusk, and the message contained a link to a video conferencing service.
"What kinda shit do you see in the future for us? Like, do y’see us as trained mages?"Pacing the phone back in his pocket, he looked towards the lake spirit and sighed. He wondered if he should let them know that something was happening, or if he should answer more questions first. Maybe a demonstration was in order?
"Training is merely a fork in the path, and a trained mage is but one possible destination. The far future is ever changing." The Archivist’s fingertips traced through the air, and a yellowed spider web cracked and spread from where he touched. As it spread, the Arcivist's eyes began to glow the same golden color. As the spiderweb spread, the Archivist moved to specific parts of it as if he was reading from a scroll. After a few moments, the cracks dissipated, and his eyes returned to normal.
"Some of you may carve runes into their body to control their power, only to become prisoners of their magic. Others yet let their power run wild, but become consumed by the backlash until nothing but husks remain. I can’t answer your question. You will answer that yourself. Do you want to be a trained mage? Or do you want to die?”"I have been having similar visions. Some of things that haven't happened and some of things that did. What does that mean for me? For us?"Ah yes. The other gifted with foresight. The Archivist knew that her power was much more random than his own, this much the future told him. Yet he had the feeling that she would have a much more clear picture when the time comes.
“For you, it means the same as the rest. We need to train you further. Induce more visions. Record everything we see in great detail, and induce further visions. I have just the drugs to do this.” "I agree though. I don't know anyone here, really. Let alone trust anyone. For all I know you led us here with the sole intention of having these...witch hunters come find us and wipe us all out. Hell, I'm used to being hunted down. What's a few more people added to that list?"His cane struck the floor.
“You’ve been chased by strays all your life. The wolves are coming. They will peel you apart to see what makes you bleed. Still eager to play martyr? I suggest you get to know each other well, and quickly.””None of us wanted this magic. Is there any way for us to get rid of it, instead of fighting or dying?”The Archivist leaned forward.
“I have tried. I have countless tomes, scrolls, and other manuals that documented my ancestors' attempts to do the very same. Sadly, you are a mage and a mage you always shall be.”Lena snorted.
“I get it. You’re lonely in your old age and you want us to keep you-““Your comedy,”he cut in,
“is as tiresome as your recklessness. The fire won’t laugh when it devours you.”Jackson stepped forward, his voice steady.
“What do you want us to do first?”The Archivist sighed. The low intelligence and selfishness of these people made him tired.
“Let me show you my study. If you would rather die out there then so be it, but make that decision with all the facts. I promise you will not die by my hands, and I promise that the future has a place for you.”“Fuck it,” Lena sighed,
“I have nothing better to do.”
The Archivist’s study was a cathedral of shadows, its vaulted ceiling lost to darkness. Dust motes drifted through slants of pale light from heavy velvet curtains, settling on the spines of ancient books and the cold steel of relics that lined the walls. The room was rather large, and it too was filled with trinkets and other busts. Bookcases spanned the two side walls, meanwhile the wall that lined up to the doorway was surprisingly empty. The Archivist stood at the head of a scarred oak desk, his silver cane planted like a flag. He did not sit. He did not blink. His gaze swept over them, sharp and unyielding, as if dissecting their worth. Behind the desk was a tall and wide painting that showed two elderly elven figures and three children. Each was dressed in garments befitting royalty. Lena leaned against a bookshelf, arms crossed, her fingers idly tracing the edge of Burnie’s flickering form as he floated in front of her while her eyes scanned the painting. Jackson stood beside her, his posture rigid, the faint scent of water clinging to his sleeves.
The Archivist grabbed a see-through tablet from the desk and pressed several buttons quickly. A soft creaking noise filled the air as a paper-thin screen rose from the floor on the front wall, and after a few seconds, it finished rising. The screen flickered to life. The group would watch as the Archivist pulled up a program, and a video began to play.
The forest swallowed sound. Pine needles muffled the crunch of boots, and twilight dyed the world in grays. A team moved in practiced silence, four shadows in tactical gear, rifles slung low. Their leader, nicknamed Vault, raised a gloved fist. He was taller than the rest by a good foot and a half, and his eyes betrayed his excitement. Ahead, the cabin sagged beneath a shroud of ivy, its roof not maintained.
Vault pulled up a tablet, and every heat signature was visible on it. “Perimeter clear,” Vault muttered into his comm, though the words felt hollow. No birds sang here. No insects hummed. Even the rain had stopped, as if the clouds feared what lay beneath the trees. Vault knew this was a dark place where God demanded destruction.
Reaper, gaunt beneath his gear, grinned as he loaded a grenade launcher underneath his gun barrel. “Burn protocol?”
“Burn it,” Vault said.
The first incinerator round tore through the cabin’s rotting wall. Flames erupted as it exploded, greasy and too-orange, devouring wood and cobwebs alike with reckless abandon. Hush, their tech specialist, activated an electromagnetic damper that was attached to the front of her vest. It was a black box that hissed static. Nothing happened. No shimmer in the air, no wail of disrupted energy. Just fire. She knew that there was no magical attack coming their way. The scientist assured them that this would protect them.
“Level it,” Vault ordered.
Automatic gunfire followed, muzzle flashes strobing the dusk. Bullets punched through walls already crumbling under the flames. Splinters flew. The porch collapsed inward with a groan.
“Thermal’s dead,” Hush said, staring at her scanner. Her silver hair glinted in the dying firelight. She was shorter than the rest, a bit pudgy and it looked like her tactical outfit was sized a hair small. “No traces of anyone inside.”
“Extinguish it,” Vault ordered.
Hush pressed a button on her wrist, and the whizzing sound of several drones spinning up filled the air. A moment later, they surrounded the cabin and began spraying it down with flame retardants until the flames died out with a whimper. The group all approached the cabin with weapons raised until they were close. Eventually, Vault lowered his gun, and the rest soon followed.
Wraith, the rookie, hovered near the threshold. He was slender, and a sober silver cross was very present on the outside of his vest. Their rifle trembled slightly. “Maybe we got the wrong—”
“It’s not wrong,” Vault snapped. He kicked a smoldering beam aside. The floorboards beneath were scorched black, save for a few surviving DoorDashed food containers. “She was here.”
Reaper, dressed in a ghillie suit designed for another location and climate, nudged a collapsed bookshelf with his boot. A yearbook from a middle school in the area fell out. No spell books. No bones. “Place is a tomb. No one’s lived here for decades.”
“Look.” Wraith pointed. Above them, a rafter had survived the fire. A length of rusted chain dangled from it, swaying in the heat-rippled air. It held various hooks and bobbers.
Hush tilted her head. “Traps?”
“Fisherman’s tackle,” Reaper snorted. “Old junk.”
Vault rose, jaw tight. He knew he’d feel something magical in this place. The algorithm told them that this is where their target, Lena, would be. He knew there had to be a magical sign. But here, there was nothing. No prickling. No hum. Just a hollow, yawning silence.
Wraith crouched by the wall, peeling back a strip of wallpaper. Beneath it, something gleamed. “Sir?”
They all turned. The wallpaper peeled away in a long strip, revealing a symbol spray-painted on the plaster beneath: an inverted cross, crude and flaking. By its appearance, it was at least ten years old.
Reaper laughed, high and sharp. “Edgy teenager shit. This is a waste of—”
“Quiet.” Vault pressed a hand to the symbol. The plaster was cold. No hum of old malice, no whisper of devotion. Just paint. “Check the crawl space.”
Hush pried up a floorboard. Dust billowed. Wraith aimed a flashlight into the void.
Empty.
No bones. No jars of teeth or hair. Not even a rat’s nest. Only a single, cracked mason jar.
“They knew we were coming,” Vault said softly.
Reaper spat. “Or they’re dead. Or they never existed. I mean, magic? I thought that was a joke to get us to sign up for this ‘secret society’. My dad told me that it was just smoke and mirrors..”
The dampener in Hush’s hands suddenly shrieked—a feedback whine that made them all flinch. Her screen flickered: *ERROR. MAGIC NOT FOUND.*
“We’re done here,” Vault said.
They retreated into the trees. Behind them, the cabin’s walls collapsed, sending up a spiral of embers. No one mentioned the way the forest seemed denser now, the path back to the trucks somehow longer, and thoughts darker. No one mentioned the wet, dragging sound that followed them for twenty paces before fading, like a branch caught on a boot.
As they reached the truck, Vault engaged his communication system. “Target was not there, please advise.”
“Yeah… yeah I, um, yeah I saw that,” the muttering voice on the other end of the line responding, “hold steady for a second while we, uh, run some tests on the algorithm. We’ll find her tonight.”
“Any backup plan in case the algorithm is unresponsive?” Vault asked.
“I’ve called in those elven brothers, you know the old fucks we kicked out,” the voice responded.
- -
“Fuck,” The Archivist said dryly.
The screen flickered. The footage showed men in tactical gear firing into her cabin. Lena’s knuckles whitened as she ground her teeth.
“Fuck,” Jackson said in a shocked tone as he looked towards Lena, and then back to the Archivist.
The screen showed more of the destruction, from several angles, and it seemed like the white of Lena’s eyes darkened.
“Fuck.” Lena shook as the fuckers kicked open the door and stormed her last vestige of her parents. Those fuckers had just destroyed her safe space. On the screen, she watched them search high and low to find any trace of magic, and she watched them grow angry when there was none. She felt a heat wash over her, and she bit her tongue to prevent that heat from billowing out. The memories of her playing on that living room, cooking s'mores on the fire outside, and the stupid graffiti she did all flooded her mind. As they did, they stoked the fire that was burning inside her, and as they did, so too did Bernie respond. He grew larger, his movements more erratic, and it seemed as if something was wanting to come out of the sentient fireball. Lena’s body began to subtly change. The keen eye would notice her skin shifting in tone from a more blue undertone to purple.
“They’re idiots,” The Archivist gasped.
The gasp broke Lena from her anger for a brief moment.
“What the fuck do you mean? They seemed pretty good at destroying my fucking cabin.”“They have no artifacts, no proper armor,” The Archivist chuckled,
“they’re no true witch hunters, they’re cosplayers. Larpers. Trusting technology to do the work and leaving themselves exposed to your magic.”“So,” Jackson interrupted as he moved closer to Lena, looking over her rage-filled face with concern,
“can we defend ourselves?”“Against these idiots,” The Archivist scoffed,
“even a blind destitute would have a chance.” He paused as his phone began to ring. He pulled it out and saw that E. Longtusk was calling now.
“But you’ll have no chance against the brothers. The one is across the world at a Tibetan monastery and has been for several weeks, trying to find peace with himself or some bullshit like that. It’ll take them at least a week to figure out where he is, and another to get to him, and then a few days to convince him to fight again. The other,” he paused as he leaned back on the desk and smirked,
“is willing to teach you how to handle your magic and fight back.”Lena’s eyes locked onto the Archivist.
“Introductions are finally in order. I am Sir Percival Ravensmere,” he paused as he let the name hang in the air. The name would be easily recognizable to those who knew of Elven history. One of the oldest and strongest of the Elven noble bloodlines, the Ravensmere name carried with it an aura of significance to those who knew it.
“And you are fortunate I am here to help.”