Minerva woke with the pounding headache of one who had been struck with a stunning spell, amplified by the sensation of her mouth being fuzzy and covered with moss. She opened her eyes, groaned as the light stabbed into her irises, and then closed it. She put her hand above her mouth with some effort, feeling that the feeling of mossiness was merely the scum of a long, restless sleep. She smacked her lips, coughed, then rolled to the side, then rolled back again. When she was finally able to sit up, she found she was in a cell.
Not particularly unexpected.
Sitting across from the bars was something unexpected.
Captain Cordwine, looking rather cross, his arms tucked across his chest, his brow furrowed, his mustache bristling.
Minerva had expected any number of guards. Fae. Other students. Her professors. But the Captain? She swung herself upwards, smacked her lips, and then croaked. "Good morning, Captain."
"It's evening," he said,shaking his head from side to side. "You bloody stupid girl. What were you thinking!" He sprang to his feet, then began to pace, back and forth, back and forth. "Parliament's all in knots about this. Not this! They don't know about this. This as in this!" He gestured off in a vague direction that Minerva guessed had an equal chance of being the east, to the Soviet Union, or west, to the equally colossal United States of America.
"Which one?" she asked.
"Both!" he exclaimed, turning to face her.
Minerva realized her question - which had been
which
great country he was blustering about - also could be read as asking about which of the Parliaments was discussing. The magical? The mundane? Both. Hurm. Minerva leaned back against the stone walls of her cell. She frowned slightly.
"Why you?" she asked.
"I volunteered, I wanted to ask you why!" Cordwine glowered at her. "How could you be so inexpressibly stupid?"
"Someone had to do something," Minerva said, her voice a grumble. A soft one.
"Not that, you-" Cordwine rubbed his palm against his face, then stepped to the bars. "How could you be so foolish as to not bloody well ask me? This blood curse business? No proper place in war, none at all. And what do they think they're even going to be managing with it? Kill a few thousand Russians? Pfah!" he laughed. "The cat's well and truly out of the bag now."
Minerva nodded. "They're panicking," she said.
"And so were you, it seems," Cordwine grumbled.
"Where's-"
Minerva's question was cut off by a clank and a
crash
from the end of the corridor. Cordwine turned, and looked rather grim as a fae woman stepped forward. Minerva was in such a state that she barely registered the woman's nude form as she bowed to Cordwine.
"Master Cordwine, I have done as you requested. The word is in. The vote was not." She bowed again as Cordwine let out an explosive sigh of relief.
"Oh thank Christ," he said, turning to face Minerva. "And now, your silly little adventure was all for nothing anyway!"
"The vote?" Minerva asked.
"The War Ministry brought the issue to Parliament - oh, in a cloaked phrase or so, yes, but they did bring it. And they voted no. See?" He clicked his heels behind himself and glowered down at her. His mustache grew even more bristly. "The system works!"
"Are you done?" Minerva asked. She stood up, and she leaned against the bar, her hands pressed to the cold iron bars.
"Hurmph," Cordwine grumped.
"Would you have helped me?" she asked, her voice bitter.
"Oh without a doubt!" Cordwine said, cheerfully. "Sometimes an order's no good, you have to do your recognizance. We're not Germans, after all!"
Minerva chuckled, her voice still bitter. "I'm beginning to see why you're assigned here and not to the actual, ah, scouts? Fighting scouts?"
Cordwine laughed. "Ah, maybe so!" He frowned, then. "Bugger. You're going to Wakefield's and that's that. It's a poor reward for being right, but you need to also do the job too, not just flare out halfway." He turned and started to walk away. "Don't let the Knockers bother you too much, eh?"
Then he was gone.
Minerva thumped her head against the bars. She closed her eyes and felt her knees trembling. She had been running on so much adrenaline that she wasn't...entirely sure how sound her plan had actually been. She was too sleepy and confused now to get any of her thoughts to order straight. Instead, the words tumbled around and around and around inside of her head, bouncing off one another like ping pong balls.
Azrielnacht
,
blood curse, Russia, America, Magic, Mundane...
The only hint that she had that she was not alone in the cell block was when a purring croon emerged from the darkness to her left.
"He's wrong."
Her blood ran cold. Minerva turned and saw that her cell was empty - but when she pressed her cheek against a bar, peeking through, she could just barely see a pair of pale arms, thrust from between two of the bars in the next cell over.
"Cecilia?" Minerva whispered.
"Mmmhmmm," the vampiress said. "I will say, for all that you have merely taken me from one cell to another, at the very least-"
"What do you mean he's wrong?" Minerva asked, her heart in her throat.
"I mean what I say. He's wrong. Blood magic is gathering. Not in London, though. The wind is wrong for it." She smacked her lips. The faint sniffing sound that came to the air was more like a hound scenting the air than a woman. "Ah, yes. Of course. The numbers are too small for this kind of Working. They're making up with the old powers."
Minerva's brow furrowed. Her eyes widened. "Stonehenge?" She whispered.
"That's the place." Cecilia's voice sounded like she was grinning. "We have a day and change, at the rate of this power growth." Sniff sniff. "Maybe less."
Minerva grabbed the bars. She started to shake them. "Merlin!" she shouted. "
Merlin
!"
"He won't come," Cecilia said, her voice bitter. "I know his type."
"Merlin you backwards aging
git
!" Minerva shouted at the top of her longs - her voice echoing off the cold, cold stone. She leaned her head forward, pressing it against the bars. "We have to stop them. We...we have to stop the bloody idiots. Merlin! Merlin!" Her voice echoed back at her. Taunting.
Cecilia chuckled. Her arms pulled out of sight - she was drawing away from the bars. The faint squeak of her long, limber body reaching the bed, made Minerva's heart skip a beat, despite everything. "I screamed like this. And I screamed and screamed and screamed, I screamed until I became mad, then screamed till I became sane, and they never came. They never came at all."
Minerva started to pace back and forth. She closed her eyes, whispering softly. "A wand is just a tool. A wand. Is just. A tool."
"Hmm?"
Minerva turned back to her cot. It was simple enough - four metal bars, hung from a hinge with canvas stretched between them, connected to the wall by a chain. Minerva leaped up and dropped her weight onto the cot. She sprang up and down, frantically.
"What are you- little girl, what are you doing!?" Cecilia cried out as the cot snapped and crashed away from the wall, spilling Minerva onto her back, the ground aching against her spine. She clenched her teeth, fiercely, then grabbed onto one of the metal poles. She cast her eyes around, frowning as she did so. There had to be...ah, there! She knelt by a bit of stone that jutted from the wall - an aged piece of masonry that had become almost razor sharp over time. She held the pole against it and shoved, drawing a thin white scrape along the iron. She clenched her teeth as she wriggled the pole left, right, swung it around - and as she worked it, the stone scraped and screeched.