This is a tale set at Azimuth Academy - a school for magic and the like inspired by (among other things) Hogwarts, the Unseen University, and I.O.U. These stories can be read in any order, really, but they do follow on from each other, so the order they're published in would probably work best.
This story follows on from the events of Libertine Liberation and Lust In Translation.
Given some aspects of the setting, I want to make very clear that anyone engaged in adult behaviour is at least eighteen years of age... if not massively more.
* * * * *
From this office, the entire island could be seen quite easily. At the top of the Academy's central tower, someone could look down upon the mishmash of architectural styles amongst the buildings, the colours of the flowers blooming in the open spaces... and the scurrying movement of student and faculty alike as they went about their daily business.
In some ways, the perspective from up here was enough to inspire a sort of aloof detachment from the progress of life down below, especially given the little detail that the windows themselves only permitted someone to see
out
- but the darkly robed figure currently taking in the sights hardly needed any sort of help on
that
score. Not after so many years of practice...
Alright, so she'd gotten into the habit of being occasionally rather supremely arrogant, but it wasn't without cause. When the Old Dominion had collapsed, she'd carved her own little niche out of what the dragons' squabbles had left behind, and ruled it well. Yes, there'd been a certain amount of harshness, the occasional application of tyrannical power and overwhelming magical might - but in those days one couldn't govern simply by being
polite
. Those who'd tried had seldom managed to live long enough to change their minds, and to be fair the perks that came with the position she'd seized had been more than worth the effort.
Not that it had lasted, of course. Such things never did... But at least she'd managed to take the one who'd ruined it all for her with her - in a manner of speaking - and it wasn't as if it had all been a
total
loss.
A soft, sibilant hiss broke the silence of the room, and it's sole occupant turned her hooded head from the view to aim her gaze at one of the skulls on the truly massive desk nearby. An amber glow, precisely matching the shade of the eyes regarding it from the hood's depths, shone in the skull's otherwise empty eye-sockets, and bony jaws parted ever so slightly to let an eerie, hollow voice emerge.
"The intrusion you foresaw is beginning, Mistress."
A faintly musical little chuckle emerged from beneath the hood, carrying with it the sense of a soft, indulgent smile. "Do I need to remind you again, Demethius? You, of all people, hardly need call me
that
."
"Better than some of the alternatives, Lillian," the skull hissed back. "As you should well know by now."
"Ah, my dear enemy, have you not realised yet that I actually rather enjoy your creative vocabulary?"
The sour grunt she got by way of reply sounded distinctly odd, given source, and the smile hidden in the hood's shadows grew a tiny bit wider at the muttered "Should have just killed you."
"Maybe you should, but you didn't. You tried to bind me - and my power - to your will, instead. And we both know how that worked out for you in the end, don't we?"
There was no answer, not that she'd expected one, and she turned back to the window once more. Memories of that time were still a source of... discomfort for her, which was no doubt why Demethius' shade occasionally brought them up, but she'd found enough ways to keep her mind busy since. This place, for example. It would never have occurred to her to create something such as the Academy back in the old days, but after a few centuries of bumming around the world, causing trouble and generally being a pain in the ass to anyone who caught her eye, the capacity for mischief that came with being dead and yet still free to roam the world had... paled.
Not that she hadn't done her damnedest to prove that wasn't possible in her day, though. Thanks to her... antics, it had taken a very long time indeed for "The Witch Queen of Sacremaar" to fade into her proper place in the history books. She didn't mind, though. Her new title felt quite comfortable enough, now she'd had a chance to settle into it.
Another sound made itself known, this time a chime emanating from the crystal orb sat within easy reach of the desk's ornate - and sinfully comfortable - chair. With a tiny sigh, she walked over and laid a hand on the softly glowing sphere, ignoring the fact that the hand in question looked like it belonged to some wizened old crone instead of the youthful woman her voice might have suggested.
"Archdean?" the orb said in a moderately harried tone a moment after her touch signalled it to connect fully to another of it's kind elsewhere. From the sound of the voice, it was one of her secretaries, specifically the one that was in charge of keeping the Academy running smoothly in the face of the little... accidents that sometimes cropped up from time to time.
Like every week or so.
"What is it this time, Marcus? Have we had another demon manifest out of Professor Tegan's Alpetha relics?"
That said, the last one had been quite amusing company, once he'd gotten over the idea that she might decide to eat him. Not that she'd have been tempted anyway - he was far too good a source of insight into the times before he'd been trapped for her to get all that excited about what had happened upon his release. And it wasn't as if the student in question had been all that inclined to complain, either...
"No, Ma'am. Nothing like that. I just thought you should know that the third-year Evocation class has managed to demolish roughly a third of their building."
"Again?" she asked with a genuine note of surprise. It had barely been a month since the repairs on the last of those little incidents had been repaired.
"Again," came the wry response. "On the the bright side, there are no casualties beyond the odd bump and bruise, and the part of the building in question was due for renovation anyway."
"Ah, then it could have been worse. Thank you Marcus."
Lifting her fingertips from the orb, she severed the connection, then raised her hand in front of her, turning it this way and that as she studied it critically. Yes, it was definitely time for her to do something about that...
And doesn't Demethius' message have just the most wonderful timing?
With another smile, this time one far more predatory than friendly, she closed her eyes and concentrated. Responding to her will, Essence coiled itself around her, bathing her robed form in eldritch light for the moments it took for her to finish weaving it how she desired - at which point, she was simply... gone.
* * * * *
Not many people ever really came out to this part of the Academy grounds, or at least not many students or faculty. About the only people that ever
did
spend much time in and around these particular buildings were the maintenance staff, and even then not all that often. It was something of a running joke, though not a particularly funny one, that the whole part of the grounds was an experiment to see just how long it took for the buildings to collapse on their own.
They weren't as abandoned as they seemed most of the time, though. One particular tower was even less unoccupied than usual, and it was the shadows of the main chamber of that tower that suddenly darkened, wrapping themselves tightly around one corner so that there was no chance of anyone seeing anything that might have been there - or anything that
appeared
there. That wasn't the only way the arrival could be sensed, though, but a simple - for her - precaution took care of that, the Essence signature of Lillian's materialisation inverted so that nobody but herself could perceive it.
When the transition was complete, however, she opened her eyes once more to see that there had been little real need for the level of precautions she'd taken. Noticing her arrival would have required a little more attention to anything around them than the trio that were already present seemed willing to share with their surroundings.
Actually, that wasn't totally accurate. One of the two males, both human, was looking out of the door, keeping an eye on the outside as he pulled it closed. With that done, and apparently satisfied that no prying eyes had seen the group as they'd 'broken' into the tower, he turned toward the others. As he did so, his gaze swept straight across where Lillian was standing, but he gave no sign at all that he'd seen her as he burst out laughing at the sight of his fellow intruders.
For her part, Lillian was a little curious as to how this was all going to play out. There was nothing particularly
unusual