nancy werlock's diary s01 - episodes 10
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Nancy Werlock’s Diary:
In a Bind
By Julie Ann Dawson
©2015 Julie Ann Dawson
Bards and Sages Publishing
Bellmawr, NJ
www.bardsandsages.com
Episode Ten of the Nancy Werlock’s Diary Series
Features Two Nancy Werlock Stories:
Deception
After months of trying to outwit the maneuvers of Lord Advocate Joshua Brynwolf, the powerful psion finally makes his presence known. But what he reveals alters everything Nancy and Houston thought they knew about the strange events in which they have found themselves involved.
In A Bind
The granddaughter of a deceased demonologist comes into the shop looking for information on haunted houses and alerts Nancy to the existence of a powerful but obnoxious demon.
These stories are works of fiction. Any resemblance to persons living, dead, or undead is coincidental and vaguely disturbing.
Digital License
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Deception
October 5th,
I wake up to the sound of Houston hitting his punching bag in rapid succession and regret letting him set the thing up in his room. I should have made him put it in the basement. But usually he works out his frustrations at the gym and it never occurred to me he would use the thing in the middle of the night. I turn to look at the clock and, of course, it is 3 o’clock in the morning. Because, you know…witches…
After five minutes of listening to him work out his issues, I throw on a robe and walk down the hall. I knock on the door and he stops working the bag. “Sorry,” he replies.
“You all right?”
“I’ll be fine, Nancy.”
I open the door. He turns around and I can see he’s been crying. “Houston, what’s wrong?”
“I’ll be fine.”
“But you aren’t fine now. What happened?”
“I’m just…Harlan…just...I don’t want to talk about it.”
Harlan, our house brownie, was attacked by the neighbor’s cat a few nights ago. Cats for some reason see brownies as prey and often attack them. But the cat in question actually has a good temperament and wouldn’t have gone after a brownie on someone else’s property. Our investigation indicated something possessed the cat to incite it to violence. The agency says Harlan will make a full recovery but that is all we know.
“Harlan is lucky that you found him,” I say. Houston just nods. I can tell from the look on his face there is something he wants to say, but he can’t seem to get it out. But when I try to open up a channel to talk to him telepathically, I realize he’s warded. Then I notice the charm around his neck.
Realizing I’m looking at it, Houston touches the charm and says, “I got it from Risha. She was worried.”
“What did you tell her?”
“Nothing! But…she knows Brynwolf is out there. And she’s knows we’ve been up to our eyeballs in weird shit. So…oh, that reminds me.” He goes over to his dresser and pulls another charm out of the drawer. “I meant to give this to you earlier but my mind was in a million places.”
“Thanks.” I take the charm. Lead core from the weight of it, dipped in silver and inscribed with runes. “Did Risha make these?”
“No, she knows an Artificer. He owed her a favor.”
“You realize we won’t be able to talk to each other telepathically wearing these.”
“Yeah, well, you’re always saying I need to learn to communicate without jumping in people’s heads, right? Now’s as good a time as any.”
“Well, we don’t need them in the house,” I say. Between my mother, your mother, and—”
“Yeah, well, something got to Harlan despite all of them,” interrupts Houston. “So humor me and wear it.”
I put the charm on. “Better?” He nods. “Try to get some sleep.” I turn to leave.
“Oh, um, I forgot. Eric needs you to sign off on some progress reports for his internship?”
“Um, fine. Weird thing to think about now.”
“I got his file. He gave it to me when I left the shop and I forgot to give it to you so here.” He hands me the folder.
“All right. Could have waited until morning. But Okay.”
“Sorry. I’m just so distracted by everything. And spooked. And pissed.”
“I get it. Try to get some sleep.”
I go back to my bedroom and leave the folder on my dresser. I start to remove the charm and then look around the room. I realize I am shaking. I decide to leave the charm on and try to go back to sleep. By 5 o’clock, I give up trying and get out of bed. A hot shower doesn’t help shake off my tiredness.
Vivika staring back at me in the mirror, however, does the trick.
“My son won’t talk to me,” she blurts out. I can’t hear her because of the charm, but I can read her lips well enough.
“He’s freaked out, Vivika,” I reply as I wipe the condensation off the mirror to see her better. “You are aware what happened to Harlan?”
She nods and vanishes from the mirror. As I leave the bathroom, she manifests into an almost solid form to speak to me. “Will the fae live?” she asks in a disembodied voice. Ghost-Speech always unnerves me. Usually, ghosts and spirits speak telepathically. To mundanes, such telepathic speech may sound normal; as if you were talking to any other person. But it is actually an auditory illusion created by the mind as a way of rationalizing what is happening.
But spirits can vocalize when the manifest. It takes a lot of effort and strength to do so, which is why they prefer telepathy. When they vocalize, the sound surrounds you. You can actually feel it like a sudden cold breeze flowing over you from all directions. I hate it.
“As far as I have been told, he should recover.”
“Oh. Well, that is something. At least.” She begins to nervously pace. “Any idea what did it? Could it just have been the cat?”
“We’re 80% sure the cat was possessed at the time.”
“But not completely?”
“Vivika, I’m not completely sure of anything these days.”
“I see.” She stops in front of the window and looks out over the back yard. The light from the morning sun breaks up her form in some places. She’s having difficultly holding the form together. “Did you see his floor? And the window sill? He’s…my son has warded me out of his room completely. I can’t even manifest to talk to him. He…he blames me for what happened. I’m sure of it.”
“You have to let him work through this on his own,” I say. “I’m sure he has enough blame to spread around to all of us. But he’s also putting a lot of the blame on himself. He needs you to give him some space so he can work through what he is feeling.”
“I just want to protect him.”
“I know. That’s what moms do. But there is a fine line between protection and suffocation. And I suspect the last thing Houston needs right now is his dead mother manifesting in his bedroom for a midnight chat.”
Vivika laughs weakly. “I know you’re right, Nancy. I do. I just feel guilty for putting him through this.”
“It isn’t like you did this on purpose.”
“Kind of you to say.” She pauses as if lost in her thoughts. “I didn’t
want a son. When I found out I was pregnant with a boy, I was…angry. Sounds ridiculous, doesn’t it? I didn’t want a boy. I wanted a daughter to pass my talents on to. His good-for-nothing father was thrilled, which was all the more reason I didn’t want a boy. I almost aborted him.”
“What changed your mind?”
“Pettiness. I used it as a threat against his father to keep him in line. After a while it just…I don’t know. Feel into the trap that a child would make things better between us? But I didn’t actually want Houston until the day he was born and I held him for the first time.” She makes a cradling gesture with her arms. “He was such a perfect little baby. Such a…I don’t know why I’m telling you all of this.”
“Probably something to do with that degree I have in family counseling,” I joke. “People love free therapy.”
Vivika chuckles and turns around. “I am a terrible mother, and a worse human being.” It isn’t a lament or even a confession. She says it as a statement of fact. “For all of my power and plotting and careful planning, I’ve hurt the one person in the world I wanted to protect. And my selfishness has put him on a course that…whatever happens, Nancy. Promise me you will take care of him.”
“We’ll get through this, Vivika.”
“Promise me.”
“I promise.”
She vanishes back across the Veil.
I get to the shop to find Houston and Eric hanging charms disguised as Halloween decorations around the windows and door of the shop. Before I can even say anything, Houston says, “I figure after the whole thing with Anastasia and that wisp, it might be a good idea to keep them out of the shop.”
“You know that will repel her anima as well, right?”
“Price we need to pay to keep safe.”
I leave them to their project and head to my office. After I settle in, I open up Eric’s file folder to get his progress report out of the way. Between the papers is a special order form. It is the special request for a Persian Griffon egg placed by a man named John Shan the other day. Houston has circled the man’s last name. At the time, Houston had made a geeky Star Wars joke about the man’s name, and the man had revealed his own inner geek by replying with a joke of his own.
He also circled the street address and the phone number. On the back of the receipt, Houston wrote the words, “Don’t trust her.” Those were the last words Harlan had said before the other brownies rushed him away.
I tap the address into Google Maps. It belongs to a company called Corellia Heating and Cooling. Even I get that Star Wars reference. The phone number, 874-632-6437, doesn't match the address. It isn’t even a local number. I try Google again but it doesn’t even appear to be a valid number.
A cipher?
I was never good at stupid puzzles. I struggle with it for a few minutes, and then “cheat” and use Google to find a phone number cipher tool. I actually found one in the first three search results. I scroll through the results after imputing the phone number. I stop when I get to: u-r-in-danger.
I close the folder, grab my purse and jacket, and head out of the office. I grab Houston by the arm. “Field trip. Eric, hold down the fort while we’re gone.”
“Where we going?” asks Houston.
“Use the Force,” I say. He nods and follows me.
I park in front of Corellia Heating and Cooling and the two of us just stare at the building until Houston finally says, “Could be a trap.”
“Too many mundanes around,” I reply.
“Maybe we should have called Steve.”
“And tell him what? We’re tracking a Dark Lord of the Sith?”
“I’m rubbing off on you.”
“Oh, shut up.”
“So, we going in?”
I sigh. “Let’s go.”
We enter the business to find the showroom empty of staff. A surprised salesperson comes out of the break room with a cup of coffee in his hand. “Morning!” he says. “You folks are getting an early start today!”
“Hi,” I say as he shoves his free hand at me. I shake it. “We’re looking for Mr. Shan?”
“I’m sorry, who?”
“John Shan.”
The salesman’s eyes glaze over for a moment and he walks behind the counter in a daze. He pulls an envelope out from under the register and hands it to me. I hand it to Houston. “Thank you,” I say.
The man shakes his head vigorously for a moment and then looks back at me. “I’m sorry; who did you say you were looking for?”
“Oh, yes, our friend John told us to stop in…and…you have some sort of promotion on water heaters?” I stammer.
“Oh, sure. That time of year, isn’t it? Nobody wants to take a cold shower in the winter!” As he shows me a selection of water heaters, Houston opens the envelope and then looks around to see if there is anything else suspicious. We leave with a stack of brochures and a quote.
“That was slightly creepy,” says Houston as we get back in the car. He taps the envelope to his chin. “It’s him. You know that?”
“I know. Let me see the address.”
“How did you know it was an address?”
“Well, it wasn’t going to be a confession.”
“You sure that you don't want to call Steve?”
“Not yet.”
“We go to this address, Nancy, there may not be time to call him.”
“I know.”
Houston shows me the address. It is my old office address at the Beach Professional Building in Philadelphia. Someone has a sense of humor.
We drive into Philadelphia and park in the garage. As we walk into the lobby, the receptionist gasps. “Nancy? Um, I mean, it's good to see you again.”
“Hello, Isabel,” I say as I sign in. “I believe we have an appointment with Mr. Shan?”
“We do?” says Houston.
I point at the updated directory hanging above the reception area. My old office is now assigned to Millennium Consulting Group. And in case the reference was not completely obvious to the oblivious, there is a little falcon logo next to the name.
Isabel looks at the appointment book and becomes perfectly still for a moment. She then looks up at me with a blank stare and monotones, “Mr. Shan will see you now.”
“Thank you, Isabel.”
Houston and I head for the elevator and go up to my old office. The door opens on its own as I reach for the handle. We step inside and “Mr. Shan” is sitting at the desk. The door closes behind us.
“Okay, I’ll say it,” Houston begins. “I half expected you to be wearing Sith robes.”
“I considered it but it felt over-the-top. Maybe if we were closer to Halloween.”
“Lord Advocate,” I say.
“Madame Warlock,” he replies with a nod. “Thank you for coming. And for your…discretion. The room has been secured. We can speak freely here.”
“Did you kill my mother?” blurts Houston.
“Houston, we—”
“Yes,” says Brynwolf without hesitation. “Though to be clear, your father already had bad intentions toward your mother. I simply hid him from her powers so that he could follow through. And from the look on your face, you’ve already figured out why.”
“My mother has been working with Chana Magus,” Houston says.
“No, Houston,” says Brynwolf as he stands and walks around the desk. “She is Chana Magus.”
In the late 18th century, Haemomancer Chana Magus discovered the first official case of a psychic vampire, a vampire that fed off of psychic energy instead of blood. She captured and tortured several of the creatures and eventually developed spells that would allow the witch to drain residual energies from other living things in order to extend their lives. At first, it was possible to simply siphon off the “waste” energies all living creatures produce to gain the benefits of the ability. But as a Haemomancer artificially extended her life more and more, residual energies would no longer sustain her and she would have to kill the victims. Once the full ho
rror of the magic's application was uncovered, the Nine ordered the entire school purge and the knowledge of the spells was labeled as Forbidden Magic and locked away.
We had assumed that all this time, Chana Magus was hiding in the astral plane; biding her time until the Veil was weak enough to return. But this…
“That’s not possible,” says Houston. “Chana Magus was born in, what, 1730? Something like that?”
“The Soul Jar ritual,” I say.
Brynwolf nods. “Corella Dark created a ritual that would allow a witch to jump into another person’s body. It evicted the existing soul so the witch could move in; much like a demon can take over a newly dead body and become a skin-walker. Dark’s ritual was based on Chana Magus’ forbidden research.”
“But how did you connect this to Vivika?” I ask.
He opens a file cabinet and removes a thick leather portfolio. He hands it to me. “Psions don’t manifest their powers like other witches, as I am sure you know from your own research. With most hereditary magic, it isn’t uncommon to see a slow progression over generations to more and more powerful witches. A combination of nature and nurture in most cases. Parents teach magic to their children and the children have the opportunity to surpass their parents. With Psions, you rarely see that sort of progression, even in families, because of the wild nature of psionic powers. Vivika’s lineage exponentially became more powerful from generation to generation. The kind of power you develop from training, not heredity.
“The Eighth of the Nine became suspicious because Vivika started out so powerful. She didn’t seem to slowly come into her powers. She started off with power and built on it. That is the kind of thing you see with Imprinting or Pacts. And it couldn’t be explained away with training, because there was nobody around to train her until she was older and formally joined the College. So he tasked me with investigating. That file contains all of the evidence I’ve gathered during the investigation.”
I open the portfolio and spread out some of the papers on the nearby table. Old newspaper clippings. Copies of birth and death records. Letters. Discolored old photographs. Centuries of clues neatly sorted and labeled. There is a 1798 registration form to the College of Necromancer for a Chana Mathers. Her 1800 Rank Five certification is attached. In those days, certifications included a woodcut impression of the Necromancer printed on the form as a sort of proof of identity. There is a copy of a page from the Monfort family Bible, owned by Louis Monfort's grandparents according to the notes. It shows the date of Louis' marriage to Hannah Monfort. We had never found a copy of a marriage certificate nor any evidence of Hannah's maiden name. According to the family Bible, it was Mathers.