《Guild of Tokens》Chapter 38: Nonstop
Advertisement

“The Convention was a rousing success and the Federalist secessionists are now a laughingstock. But to be certain of their demise, and of their patron’s, I must pursue one final course of action before my days are over.”
We fled along the water.
Not with the quickness of the speed buffs, which were stupidly in a box in our island headquarters, but with the urgency of a gazelle trying to outrun a hungry lion. The hooded figure pursued us with equal zeal, and I braved a half-second glance back to see him slowly gaining.
Beatrice ran a few paces ahead while I lagged behind, thanks to the wooden box.
“I can’t keep this up!” I shouted to Beatrice, my forearms burning from the strain. “It’s too heavy!”
Beatrice suddenly stopped short and I nearly collided with her from behind. I could see the edge of the park and the city streets just up ahead. She turned and there was something small and smoking in her hand.
“Keep going,” she said and I saw the fire in her eyes. “I’ll catch up to you.”
“O-OK,” was all I could muster as I left her there, alone. I reached the street and started retracing our route from earlier. Beatrice would be fine, I tried to convince myself. She had no shortage of weapons in her arsenal, and apparently had a few that I still didn’t know about. And if she really got into trouble, she could always use whatever strength was left in the ring. I, on the other hand, had nothing of the sort, unless my mom’s locket had somehow been gifted with alchemic powers when I had fed it to that rat all those months ago.
The streets were eerily quiet, devoid of people and cars, and I realized with a sinking feeling that we were trapped here until the next train arrived. I ran along 215th Street until I saw two flickering lights appear in the distance.
The stairs. Which meant that the subway platform was only a few blocks further. I crossed the street and was about to descend to the lower depths of Inwood when I heard a shout from behind me.
I turned and saw Beatrice sprinting toward me, her face red with exertion.
“Go, go!” she cried, grabbing the box from me. “We don’t have much time.” She rushed passed me and disappeared down the stairs. I followed, my arms relieved to be free of the burden but my legs now protesting as I tried taking the steps two at a time.
“What did you do?” I yelled ahead.
“Threw a special firecracker at him,” she said. “Hopefully it set him on fire. Keep moving.”
I reached the landing halfway to the bottom and heard the whistle of an approaching train. It was an unbelievable stroke of luck, but one that was immediately eclipsed by my very next step. I felt my foot barely scrape the edge of the stair before my body tumbled downward.
The next landing quickly rose up to meet me and I held out my hands to brace myself for the impact. I heard a crunch erupt from my right wrist as I hit the pavement and cried out in pain. Beatrice was almost at the bottom, but had stopped and was now gripping the banister, looking past me with a look of horror on her face. I slowly swiveled my head around to see the figure, smoke billowing from his still burning cloak, standing at the top of the stairs.
Advertisement
I summoned what little strength I had left and tried pushing myself up with my left hand, but the night’s exertion had completely drained my reserves and I slumped back down. The train whistled again in the distance and I watched as Beatrice turned toward the platform and then back at me and our pursuer above.
“Help. Me,” I croaked, before trying and failing again to get to my feet. The seven seconds it took for Beatrice to make her decision ticked off like they were days, but when I saw her set the box down and leap up the steps toward me, all remaining doubts I had about her were erased. As she slung my limp arm around her shoulder and hoisted me up, a crack erupted above us.
“What … what was that?” I said with a whimper.
“Don’t know,” said Beatrice. “But we need to get the hell out of here. Now!”
Somehow she braced me against her body and dragged me down the rest of the stairs, grabbing the box on the way. We reached the bottom and I finally steadied myself. The subway tracks loomed in front of us and I finally saw the train chugging slowly down the elevated platform to the north.
“Can you make it the rest of the way?” asked Beatrice, who had broken into a jog. “If we’re not on that train…”
I put one foot in front of the other, ignoring the throbbing pain in my hand and the protests of my body and the terror flooding my mind, and nodded.

The ceiling was ugly, that much I had concluded from my 30 minutes of ceaseless staring. The carpet was also ugly, a dull gray that had maybe once been brown before the years of uncleaned dirt and grime had ossified on top, but it was oddly comforting. I don’t know if I had slept in the hours since we had stumbled into the office, as the pain in my wrist made it hard to keep track of anything else but its constant presence.
It had eventually died down to a dull hum that ignited whenever I tried to lift my arm, and so I had waited patiently on the carpet until Beatrice returned from the other side of the door. A vitality buff would be welcome, but I doubted it would do anything more than get me to my feet and what I needed now, more than anything, was nothing. I just wanted to be able to close my eyes and let everything fade away. But the events of the evening kept playing over and over again in my mind, like a tape stuck on loop in an old VCR.
Somehow, we had made it up the platform steps before the already waiting train had closed its doors. Our pursuer, by some stroke of luck, had not, and so we had sat silently in the almost-empty subway car with the almost-empty Compendium until the conductor sleepily called out “Times Square, 42nd Street.” From there, it was a short but paranoid walk east to the Chrysler Building, where we were greeted with a raised eyebrow by the security guard until Beatrice had flashed him our badges and he nodded.
We had stood vigilant by the door, waiting for the hooded figure to burst through, but after an hour of perfect silence, we nodded to each other and I had collapsed into my current position.
Advertisement
It would be another hour before Beatrice would finally emerged from the black expanse beyond the door. She looked alert but exhausted, and I wondered how many buffs she had eaten.
“Here,” she said, crouching down beside me and placing a small vial next to me.
“Wh-what’s this?” I asked. “Haven’t seen this before.”
“It’s a vitality serum. It wouldn’t congeal into a gummy for some reason, so it’s less portable but far more potent. Don’t know if it will actually fix your wrist but maybe it will dull the pain for a while.”
“Thanks,” I said.
“Don’t thank me yet, you haven’t drank it.”
“No, I mean, for earlier.”
“Oh,” said Beatrice. “I hope you didn’t think I was just going to lea-”
“I didn’t. But, still, thank you.”
I waited for Beatrice to launch into a speech about how now we were even or that we were something closer than partners, more like sisters, but she just stood over me with a dispassionate expression on her face.
“What? What can I say, except, you’re welcome?”
“No, that’s enough,” I said, pushing myself up to a sitting position with my good hand and picking up the vial. The liquid was brownish-gray, which was fitting, and I swirled it around for a few seconds before Beatrice took it back to unstopper it for me. Downing it in one big swig, I waited for the familiar rejuvenation to wash over me.
What happened next was something else entirely. It started in my stomach, a warm soothing feeling like the one you felt when drinking a mug of hot cocoa after a cold day out in the snow. But then that warmth exploded into a deluge of heat that washed over my entire body like an unexpected wave during low tide. The heat and the pressure kept increasing, as if the liquid wanted to force its way out of every pore of my body. I gritted my teeth and fell back onto the floor, trying to hold back a scream. But it was too much to take and I let out a loud, guttural cry as I reached my breaking point.
And then, it was gone.
The heat, the pain in my wrist, the constant tiredness and anxiety after too many late nights and too many days filled with endless worry, gone. I tested my wrist by trying to push myself back up and found that while I didn’t feel any pain, neither did I have the strength to support my weight.
“Huh,” I said, trying and failing again.
“What?” asked Beatrice.
“My wrist, I don’t think the serum fixed it.”
I rotated it back and forth, still feeling no pain but doubted I could lift even a pencil with it.
“Well why would it? It’s not a healing potion.”
“But I thought maybe th-”
The door suddenly swung open and we both looked over with panicked faces, but it was only Eva standing at the threshold.
“Wh-what are you doing here?” asked Beatrice, running over to the girl and pushing her inside.
“I need something,” said Eva in a voice barely above a whisper. She walked over to the lone chair at the workbench and sat down, a forlorn look on her face.
“And you have a perfectly good method of contacting me without risking someone following you up here,” Beatrice said. “Which in this instance would have been fucking prudent to use, seeing as how we were just attacked by the Guild.”
Eva looked out the window, before the glamour vanished and was replaced by a scared little girl.
“Oh,” said Polly. “Didn’t realize.”
“No, you didn’t,” said Beatrice sternly. “Hence why following the communication protocol before barging in here unannounced would have saved you a trip down here. Go home and get some sleep and I’ll touch base with you soon.”
“But-”
“Go.”
Polly rose from the chair, rubbing the green stone as she did. The tall blonde who took her place glared down at Beatrice, before walking out the door without another word.
“What that really necessary?” I said. “She looked lik-”
“You too, Jen,” said Beatrice.
“What?”
“Go home. I’m going to do the same. Can’t remember the last time I slept there alone.”
“Where’s your son? And your husband?”
The question left my lips before I realized that maybe she didn’t want to answer.
“They’re somewhere safe. Well, at least Jack-Jack is. Don’t really care where Garrett went.”
“You don’t know?” I asked.
“No. I sent them both away a few hours after the Council meeting. The benefits of being over-prepared, I guess.”
She quickly wiped away a tear and looked out the window.
“So what time should we meet back here? Noon?”
Beatrice shook her head.
“9 a.m. On Monday.”
“What? That only gives us two more days and we sti-”
“I can’t keep doing this,” said Beatrice. “I know you probably think I’m some sort of inhuman robot that can just plow ahead, no matter the circumstances, but even I have a breaking point and I don’t want to reach it.”
“But we’re no further along than we were a few days ago. We might even have moved backwards, seeing as how our only lead is to find a fucking extinct dodo bird!”
“I found one already,” said Beatrice. “It’s in the Natural History Museum.”
“Oh,” I said, before I burst out laughing.
“What’s so funny?” said Beatrice, looking at me like I had just lost my mind, but I couldn’t stop.
“It’s just … of course it is. We needed to find a way to open the door in Long Island City and there was a pile of old door knobs just sitting there at the Met. Now, we need to heal a mythical curse and there’s a long-dead bird on display at the museum across town.”
“You think it’s a trap? But that doesn’t make any sense, how would they know that-”
“I don’t know what to think. What I do know is that I’m going to take you up on your suggestion that I get some sleep.”
I lied.
Next: Jen searches for a leg up.
Advertisement
- In Serial28 Chapters
Fragments from the Wildlands
“Your first death is always the hardest.” Miguela was the third-born child of a well-off merchant family and knew from around the time she could speak that her life’s path was already decided. She was to become an Orator, as was Xandran tradition. However, Miguela had an affinity with the magikal arts and somehow found herself studying at the Academy. She did just enough to keep up with her studies but never found the motivation to apply herself and “reach her potential,” as her instructors often said. It was not that Miguela was uninterested in the arts. Rather, she knew her time at the Academy ultimately did not matter. Whenever Miguela returned home, she would become an Orator, and that would be that. Or so she believed until, one day, an opportunity appeared that would change her life. Miguela was offered the chance to join a research team tasked with a mission of the utmost importance to the future of the Five Kingdoms. She could not turn down the prospect of regaining control of her life and finally finding a purpose for herself. Of course, Miguela might soon discover that offers that appear too good to be true are usually fraught with lies. Welcome to Five Kingdoms of Cordizal! Question: What is the Five Kingdoms of Cordizal? I often get asked this type of question about my stories by friends, bloggers, and potential readers. The Five Kingdoms of Cordizal is a high-fantasy epic universe that is the setting for most of my stories. The foundation of the universe is its multicultural, multiracial setting with several sentient races attempting to carve their legacy and survive. The world is fully fleshed out and vibrant with a rich and mysterious history not based on Tolkien mythology. This brings me to magic. To me, magic is an essential part of the fantasy genre, so, of course, there is magic in the Five Kingdoms universe. However, one critical part of the Five Kingdoms universe is that magic is an abundant commodity that is a part of everyday life and not some plot device used to drive the story. In short, the Five Kingdoms universe is the setting of epic fantasy stories with deep characters and world-building. I try to tell as many different types of stories as possible in the universe, and hopefully, you can find something for you in it.
8 108 - In Serial8 Chapters
Pumpkaboo in Stardew
Stardew/Pokemon crossover [♦] Caroline falls for a guy she met during her secret trips to Cindersap Forest. From that, a beautiful friendship blossoms and an evil curse so blinding that it consumes Stardew valley. **I play my stardew game with the stardew valley expanded mod so there are details from there that are included in this story.
8 86 - In Serial31 Chapters
NEVER SPLIT THE PARTY: The Adventures of The Creeping Bam (BOOK ONE: The Job)
TAO is a broken world held together with nothing but magic and the will of the gods who protect it and its people. Then thousand years ago THE SUNDERING struck and Tao was almost torn apart by a terrible magical cataclysm which resulted in the planet almost being halted in its journey through the cosmos. It took all the power the gods of Tao could muster to restore its orbit and set it turning again, but in their efforts it was forever changed – its axis was drastically altered, and it now spins in such a way that one face of the world is forever turned from the sun it orbits, leaving half the planet in perpetual darkness. The various humanoid races that survived and now thrive within the habitable parts of THE DAY LANDS have come to live in perpetual fear of what lives beyond THE BORDERLANDS that separate them from whatever dwells within THE NIGHT LANDS, but for ten millennia it has kept its secrets. The land of RUNDAO languishes under the rule of their warlike Northern neighbours, the TEKTEHRAN EMPIRE, while a small, ragtag band of motley adventurers ply their mercenary trade fighting monsters and protecting the common man from the various dangers that haunt the night and prowl the hinterlands on the edges of civilization. THE CREEPING BAM have amassed a modest reputation in their years together, but they’re still just a small-time party of sellswords, thieves, outcasts and mages. They’re also exactly the kind of underdogs the people of Tao doesn’t yet realise are needed to save the world from the encroaching darkness they doesn’t even know is coming … This is a love letter and homage to the high-fantasy worlds of the tabletop RPGs like Dungeons & Dragons, Pathfinder and Warhammer and the sword & sorcery cinema and literature I fell in love with as a kid growing up in the 80s, from Robert E. Howard’s Conan the Barbarian (and the awesome Schwarzenegger movie, STILL my favourite fantasy film EVER), The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit and Ron Howard and George Lucas’ Willow, to the more grown-up and edgy worlds of grimdark masters George RR Martin and (my all-time favourite) Joe Abercrombie, as well as a BIG DOLLOP of Terry Pratchett’s immortal Discworld series. IMPORTANT: This story contains material which some readers may consider to be mature, such as battle violence, some strong language and occasional mild sexual scenes. If this is not your kind of thing, this story is not for you. I am also serializing this story on Tumblr, Wattpad, Quotev and Sweek.
8 313 - In Serial7 Chapters
Shadow Emperor
This is one of my side projects. It is about a young innocent boy, who has some mishap happening at the date of his birth. Through circumstances he is forced to strenghten himself. His fate was decided long ago, and this story is just the journey to his fate. It is very xianxia/xuanhuan-esque, with some Western elements mixed in. It is a cultivation novel, and it will have gore, sexual depictions, but to an extent. Most of the time it is either fun or exciting, as you will see an innocent boy's rise to the Emperor of the Shadows..
8 94 - In Serial107 Chapters
Vlad The Impaler (VAMPIRE-ELF)
Count Dracula wakes up after 2000 years and the only thing he wants, desires and yearns for is to find her and make her his ;the woman he had been promised through years and years of prophecy. Yet this elf princess who captured his soul by just breathing comes with a lot of baggage in the form of curses and a destiny given mission to kill him. Erinna is the most powerful elf to have ever been born and stands by her duty. She doesn't care for fabled prophecies making her mate to the most evil tyrant to ever walk the earth which does not make sense in itself since a union between a vampire and elf will result in a curse that would wipe out both races. The only prophecy she believed was the one that said she'd kill him.What are these two going to do especially when Dracula hungers and yearns for Erinna with a desire bordering on insanity? Will she be able to fight the uncontrollable attraction and bond she has with him and not succumb to her darkest desires?I obviously suck at summaries. Just read the book.Beta Reader @LightningThiefGirl
8 269 - In Serial13 Chapters
The Little Frost Giant
What happens when the Frost Giants invade Asgard, but leave something behind. What will Loki do?This is my first story, I do not own any of the marvel characters, I only own 1 , which you will find out. But the plot is my own.I will try to update as much as I can, but I am still a student.#1 lokisdaughter 6/4/2022
8 211

