Content warning: This story is exactly what it says on the tin. Readers looking for straight up porn are likely to be disappointed. It's close to 30,000 words long, and there's no sex at all for the first two thirds of that. Readers may also find the romance unacceptably vanilla. The entire story is an exercise in extreme self-indulgence, and I'm not sure if an actual audience for this even exists. That said, I'm sharing it publicly in the hope that someone out there will enjoy it.
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Fingers aching, Melina chalked down the last mark of the summoning circle. She knelt back, breathing heavily, closing her eyes and forcing herself to take a minute of rest before looking at it again. She gave her measurements a final check, then erased the stroke and redrew it again, adjusting by a few minutes of arc. That was as perfect as it was going to get.
She looked over her work. A twenty-six vertex star, with over eight hundred sigil instructions. Technically not the most complicated summoning
ever
attempted, but that wasn't a lot of comfort when a full eight of those sigils were practically untested. If everything worked as intended, the circle would locate, summon and contain a living being from another world, a place unreachable by any measure of distance.
Expecting absolutely everything to work as intended would probably be wildly overoptimistic though. Every part of it ought to work in theory, but it was probably still too much to ask for a novel and ambitious summoning function to work perfectly on the first try. Still, just demonstrating clear progress ought to be enough to impress the advisory board.
Melina took a sip from the now-tepid mug of sweetened milk she'd prepared to steady her nerves. She was going to be too tense to eat dinner until she'd actually tested this. If the spell went off without a hitch, she'd be famous. If there was some minor flaw in the execution, she'd looking forward to days of intensive troubleshooting before her presentation. If there was some major technical obstacle to the method, if she could at least figure out what it was in time, she could probably secure funding for the year.
If it was something worse... she forced herself to drain the mug, fortifying her depleted blood sugar. She was
almost
completely certain the circle wouldn't explode and kill her on activation. And the functions to make sure it wouldn't target some creature powerful enough to break through the seal from the inside had been thoroughly experimentally vetted. The circle should protect her from practically any means by which a summoned creature could harm her from inside, and if she stopped actively maintaining the mana supply to the spell for more than a few seconds, it should automatically abort and dismiss the summon.
No, if anything went seriously wrong, it would be something completely outside the scope of her ability to anticipate.
Melina stood, drawing herself up to her full, imposing height. If the spell was going to work at all, it would probably summon something small. In fact, if ecological principles held between worlds, she'd most likely be looking at something on the scale of an insect or a rodent. Whatever ended up inside the circle would probably be much more scared of her than she was of it. Rather than dwelling on the vast space of the unknown opening up before her, she tried to focus on the thought of a cute, otherworldly mouse appearing inside the circle.
The final step was as simple as breathing. Just a small flow of mana would bring the circle to life and unveil the results of years of research. Melina activated the spell.
The space in front of her imploded.
Melina had a fraction of a second to register the thunderclap roar, and the column of darkness opening up before her, before a blast of rushing air hit her like a wall from behind. The floor fell away beneath her feet, and the cautionary distance she'd put between herself and the summoning circle vanished in an instant as she hurtled towards the black space ahead. She had no time even to brace herself in anticipation before it swallowed up her vision as she was sucked through into starless empty space. After a couple seconds of reeling shock, she tried to see if her lab was still visible behind her, but with no ground beneath her feet, she was left helplessly flailing at the air around her with no way to turn her body and look.
At least there
was
still air around her. She breathed it in in panicked gasps, wondering if she'd trapped herself in endless void. She had only a moment to consider the possibility before she caught sight of a glimmer of light ahead. Soft and yellow, more like a firefly than a star. Only a pinprick at first, but growing quickly. Within a second, it shone like a lamp glow in front of her. Another second, and Melina realized she should brace herself for impact. She flinched and shielded herself with her arms as it rushed up to overwhelm her field of view.
Despite her apparent speed of travel, Melina's feet settled softly onto solid ground. Her legs gave out under her regardless, her knees jolting with the impact against hard stone. The light which had shone so clearly in the void was now nothing more than a faint glow illuminating her surroundings: a cave of smooth dark stone, with columns of rock stretching up to a high, domed ceiling far out of reach. The source of the light was a crystal sitting at the top of a tall cylindrical pillar, shining with a steady yellow phosphorescence.
She struggled back to her feet, trying to regain her bearings. Where was she? No, more importantly, what had just happened? If she could figure out what had gone wrong with the spell, that might allow her to figure out not only where she was, but how to get back. But was figuring that out even possible? She cast around her surroundings. The summoning circle she'd so painstakingly created was nowhere in sight. Either it had been left behind in her lab, or worse, destroyed when the spell malfunctioned. Without having it to check her work, there was absolutely no way to tell what had gone wrong.
In that case, trying to figure out where she was first was her only option. She walked up to the stone pillar, and ran her hands over its surface. It was hard to make out in the dim light, but it felt smooth, almost polished. That was enough to give her a glimmer of hope. The pillar, and the crystal on top, were probably man-made. Whatever this place was, people had been here. Maybe she could find someone she could ask for help.
She stepped back a bit to get a better look at the crystal, puzzling over the fact that it had been placed somewhere so hard to reach. Even if she jumped, Melina's fingers wouldn't be able to brush the top of the pillar, and for most of her life she'd never even needed to go on tiptoe. So, whatever it was, someone had wanted to make sure people couldn't easily get their hands on it. Focusing her senses, she could clearly feel a glow of magic emanating from it, but at this distance, it was impossible to get a read on its function.
She turned her back on the pillar. There was no sense getting preoccupied. It was easy to focus her attention on the crystal, since it was her only source of light in this unfamiliar place, but that was an easy problem to fix. What she needed now was to find other people. She held out her hand and called up a flow of mana to create a light of her own.
Her knees hit stone again, knocked off her feet by an overwhelming wave of vertigo. Her stomach heaved, and she retched up a mouthful of the sweetened milk she'd drunk only minutes before, coughing it out across the cold stone floor.
A cold, smothering panic settled over her. She huddled on the floor, gasping for breath, the already dark cave now swimming in her vision. Tentatively, she made another attempt to call up a flow of mana, a tiny current, only enough to create a faint flicker of light. Another wave of nausea. She let out a whimper. Had the malfunctioned summon interfered somehow with her ability to use magic? If so, she was completely helpless. Not merely stranded in some unfamiliar place, but probably as good as dead. No way to fend for herself, no chance to reverse the spell and return home, no way even to make a light to find her way out of this cave.
A sudden sound echoed through the darkness. A rustling noise, like dry leaves shifting over stone. Melina froze, choking down a sob. What was that? It might be a person, but under the circumstances, that could also be a danger itself. But then, could
anything