Subject: [FFML] [Slayers] Slayers Demiurge, book two: "Belief"
From: Twoflower
Date: 10/15/1999, 5:16 PM
To: ffml@ffml.fanfic.com

                     SPOOF CHASE PRODUCTIONS
                 (http://spoof.maison-otaku.net/)
                            PRESENTS...

                       [ Slayers Demiurge ]

                             book two
                             "Belief"

        A Slayers Fanfic Series by Stefan "Twoflower" Gagne

      (Certain characters copyright H. Kanzaka / R. Araizumi,
     obviously.  If I ever even considered claiming that those
    were my own characters I'd probably be thrown into a small
  cell where I'd be forced to eat my own writer's block to live.)

        Check out the web center with fanart and more, at
         --> http://pixelscapes.com/slayers/demiurge <--

-=-

     It had started.  The players took their places.  The chess pieces were 
arranged on the board of black and white, the good and evil.  The actors 
knew their lines, the horses were at the gate, the cheese had been spread on 
the hamburgers, the first nail had been driven into the coffin, the bear had 
urinated in the woods.

     But the fat lady was still busy warming up backstage and putting on a 
brassiere that resembled a pair of trash can lids, so it was far from over.

     Various forces were just getting going on their respective journeys, 
usually unaware of the others...



                           ------------
                           two part one
                           ------------



     Lina and her newly acquired not exactly her daughter partner, Penny 
Gabriev (and a small table that kept following them no matter how often Lina 
shot fireballs at it), marched along the maze of twisty little roads, all 
alike, towards the town of Nostrum.  There, according to Penny, who was 
proving to be a wealth of half informed trivia and almost on the money 
facts, was more than a little bit of a lot sure that the Unholy Cult of 
Zoamel Gustav would be located there.

     "But you understand," Penny continued, picking up the Wandering Monster 
Table and putting it on her shoulder for now, "It's fourth hand information, 
so I don't really KNOW--"

     "Yes yes, you said that, no need to repeat," Lina said, a little 
irritated.  "And could you just stuff that blasted thing in a sack or 
something?  It's creeping me out!"

     "I think he's cute," Penny smiled, playing with the adorable little 
animatronic stone table with the end of her staff.  "And he likes you, Lina!  
Probably thinks you're his mother."

     "Oh, great, I look like some huge block of unchiseled marble.  I can't 
tell if that's an insult or not.  Anyway.  Way I see it, if we find the cult 
in Nostrum, we find it.  If not... well, I'm sure we'll find SOME crazy 
encounter.  Trust me, I'm a seasoned veteran at this.  So I want you to be 
up and ready, game face on, prepared to deal with ANYTHING that gets in your 
way.  That's Lina's Rule #3 : Expect what's to be expected!  Got that?!"

     "Hang on, let me write it--"

     "GOT THAT?"

     "Yes ma'am!!" Penny blurted.  "Expect the expected.  Um.  What are we 
expecting, exactly?"

     Lina considered.  She took off a glove, licked one finger, tested the 
wind.  Cupped an ear to the sounds of nature.  Counted from five to one.  
"Well, given the current conditions, I think it would be entirely safe to 
assume that we're about to be jumped by nine well armed soldiers of profit."

     "Ah, okay!" Penny said, smiling.  "Boy, Lina, you really know best!  
....what?!"

     Nine armed goons stepped out of the thick trees, surrounding the pair.  
The Table panicked, and scampered off into the bushes where it would be 
safe.

     "You know, those guys," Lina said, pointing, as her stroll rolled to a 
halt.  "Don't worry, they'll explain things first before attacking."

     Penny waved her arms in a panic.  "Butbut--"

     "You two little witches are going DOWN!" the lead goon spat.  "You 
froze that fat pig before he could pay us, and now we're out two days of 
work!  We're gonna take it out of your AAHH AHH OH IT BURNS IT BURNS HELP ME 
HELP ME!!!!"

     "Lina's Rule #3," Lina said, lowering her smoking hand, "Always punk 
them out while they're taunting you.  It saves you work in the long run.  
Now, let's fight."

     Penny paused, brain locked on a bit of confusion, rather than the 
immediacy of the moment.  "But wasn't Lina's Rule #3 that I should expect--"

     "BEHIND YOU!"

     The girl turned, and found a really big sword coming for her head.  In 
a panic, she raised her staff, and blocked the strike -- the cheap wood 
taking a large nick in the process.  She tried to push back, but didn't get 
very far, as she was knocked to the ground, the goon twirling his sword and 
bringing it down to stab her in the chest--

     Lightning crackled through the air, as Lina twirled one wrist, a ball 
of blue-green flame flaring with a raging internal thunderstorm.  Goons were 
trapped in the path of the sparking, jagged lines of electric death, and 
eight goons that were standing were then replaced by eight goons rolling 
around on the ground putting out small fires on their skin.

     Lina exhaled, a little disappointed.  "Penny, look, when you BLAST 
them, they tend to DO something about it.  So you can't let your guard down 
like that.  Don't think, DO."

     "S-Sorry," Penny said, getting back up, still a little shaken.  "I'm 
new at this, you know, and--"

     "Why didn't you just blast them into next Wednesday with a Flare Arrow 
or something, anyway?" Lina asked.  "It's a lot faster than manually beating 
them around with that cruddy blade."

     "...s'not cruddy..." Penny mumbled, before answering.  "I don't do 
magic.  That's MOM'S area.  I'm a weapons expert!"

     "Right, right," Lina said, stepping over a smoldering bandit, and 
leading Penny away from the unpleasant scene.  "You're a lot like Amelia.. 
was.  Too much faith in something, not enough practical sense.  Being 
idealistic is very good IF you can back it up, but until then, maybe you 
should learn some spells.  They're faster to get off, stronger, and are 
really the only way to fi--"

     A sharp, stabbing pain pierced Lina's shoulder.  She stopped in mid 
word, looking at it... and seeing blood.  And THEN feeling the full impact 
of it, as she stumbled, grasping at the shoulder...

     "Lina!" Penny shouted, to rush and help.. but heard a click.  A 
familiar click from behind her.

     She twisted on one heel, getting her weapon up and ready, eyeing the 
bandit who was still on the ground, but still a threat -- another sharp bang 
rang out, Penny's weapon jerked, deflecting the shot.  She wasted no time, 
running in with a sliding kick, propelled by her naginata like a low ground 
heat seeking pole vault.

     The bandit's head made a nice THUMP against her boot.  Penny kicked him 
over, then glared at the other bandits, who were just getting up.

     "Beat it!" she shouted, trying to sound as authoritative as possible.  
The bandits, having enough physical pain and third degree burns for one day, 
did just that.

     Lina staggered back, rigorously applying a healing spell to her 
shoulder, but the pain wouldn't fade.  "What.. what the heck was that 
thing?!"

     "This," Penny said, picking the scorched wooden pipelike object off the 
bandit.  "A gun.  He shot you."

     "A GUN?!  Why, that cowardly little so-and-so!  Just like they did 
yesterday... I should've known, dammit.  Since when do two-bit bandits like 
these on OUR continent tote around things like that?!  I'll--"

     "Lina, most bandits use guns," Penny said, dropping the fried firearm.  
She walked over to the quivering bush, and tried to coax the Wandering 
Monster Table out, while explaining.  "Maybe twenty years ago they were hard 
to find, but nowadays, just about everybody does.  Maybe not so many in 
Zeifelia, where it's more traditional, but definitely elsewhere in the 
world-- what are you doing?"

     "Trying to heal this wound.  It's still smarting like--"

     "Whoa, whoa, stop!" Penny shouted, waving her arms.  "The bullet's 
still in your shoulder!  You're just sealing it in!"

     Lina stopped quickly, going pale.  "Uh.  I hadn't remembered..."

     "I've got a lot to learn about adventuring, but YOU have a lot to learn 
about this day and age," Penny explained, setting her weapon down... and 
getting out a knife.  "Dad taught me this stuff one day.  He has to deal 
with it all the time as a city guardsman.  How's that for practical 
knowledge?  Lie down, I'll get that out of you."

     "Uh, how?" Lina asked.  But knew exactly how.  And didn't LIKE it.

     It was enough to make one wish for the good 'ol days of ordinary hack 
and slash butchery.

                                    [*]

     It was enough to make one wish for the good 'ol days of ordinary hack 
and slash butchery.

     Roy Balderdash examined the vacuum sealed glass display case.  A 
personal shrine to science, a museum of technology; from the first primitive 
work at steam driven engines, two decades ago, to the here and now.  
Vehicles, personal conveniences, food preparation and storage units, 
weapons.

     Plenty of weapons.  Guns of all shapes and sizes, each using some flint 
or powder thing Roy had never quite gotten a grasp on.  Even huge ones, 
meant for mounting on a carriage, which could be cranked to fire four large 
rounds of steel ammo a second.

     'Just some of the many accomplishments of Sairaag Technology and 
workers just like these,' the huge sign behind glass read, along with a 
yellowing, fuzzy image of a group of swarthy men in hard hats.  Presumably 
behind the glass so nobody could reach out and touch these things, mess them 
up from the perfect display they were in.

     This wasn't his day and age.  Roy was old school all the way, a bandit 
to the core, relying on muscle, wit and a sharp tongue.  He'd resorted to 
the new tricks sometimes, when it was needed -- usually when the opposition 
was packing firearms as well, making them unapproachable... but he'd never 
liked the stuff.

     And here he was, half a world away, in the core of the palace at 
Sairaag.  Being watched by a chimera.

     A strange boy.  He couldn't be more than nineteen, with stone skin, 
craggy and blue-gray.  The boy was content to just stand there, looking 
impressive in his military issue armor and fatigues, arms crossed.  Waiting.  
Of course he hadn't explained what they were waiting FOR.  But Roy had a 
pretty good idea.

     The double doors hissed once, steam pressure building, then slid apart.

     Roy stopped picking his nose and looked up.

     "You," he stated.

     "And you," the woman said, walking in, heels clicking on the metal 
floor.  "The bandit."

     "The brain."

     "Musclehead."

     "You hit like a girl."

     "You hit anything that looks at you funny."

     "Bitch."

     "Neanderthal."

     A long pause.

     "Mother says hello, by the way," Roy added somewhat after the fact.

     "I'm not on speaking terms with mother," the woman said, walking around 
to sit on a conveniently placed office chair.  She withdrew a pen from her 
white lab coat, and clicked it into place, twirling a clipboard at the 
ready.  "Now for the purpose in bringing you here, Roy.  As much as I see 
you as an obsolete component of the old age, I have use of your skills for 
the time being."

     "Well, that's a fine how do you do," Roy grumbled, kicking a wall.  
"Elizabeth, I haven't seen you in YEARS since you ran off to revolutionize 
the world, and this is your greeting?  'Hi, Roy, serve me'?  You know better 
than to think I'm at your beck and call.  Even if I gave a damn about your 
empire of nerds and losers, I've got a large rivalry cooking at home and--"

     "If you work for me, I'll absolve your gambling debts," Elizabeth 
Balderdash explained in simple words.  "If not, I inform Gino the Leg 
Breaking Man Of Ill Disposition of where you can be found, where you will be 
chained to the heaviest rock in Zeifelia with a sign around your neck 
reading 'Come and get it'."

     Roy Balderdash stopped talking.

     The scientist tapped her pen on her clipboard, impatiently awaiting.

     "I thought you didn't believe in taunting, sis," Roy said quietly.  "I 
thought you were a 'rational' minded woman now."

     "I wanted to ensure your comfort with the situation," she said cooly.  
"I know how your mind works and what reactions would be achieved with the 
right prompting.  So, I selected optimal words for an optimal response."

     "I'm not above killing family," Roy said.

     "You're surrounded by thousands of my soldiers and the entire 
population of Sairaag, to whom I am savior," Elizabeth countered.  "I was 
there when this city was decimated by Rezo.  I was there when this city was 
annihilated by Phibrizo.  But most importantly, I started the reconstruction 
when nobody else had any hope of recovery.  The people trust me.  In smaller 
words, it would be an easy suicide if you chose that option."

     "What do you WANT from me, Liz?!  Spit it out!  I hate your damn head 
games."

     "Zelgadis, my second in command and leader of Special Forces, requires 
an assistant," she said, without missing a beat, gesturing to the chimera.  
Zelgadis simply nodded in acknowledgement.  "The last one was killed.  You 
will replace him.  It's simple enough, you obey his commands.  You'll be 
asked to perform military style tasks, which I assume you are capable of?  I 
wouldn't ask anything above your level of intellect."

     "Yeah, I can be a grunt," Roy said, still completely disgusted with the 
situation.  "What's the matter, your freak can't handle your errands 
himself?"

     Roy turned his head and found that the freak had a sword to his neck 
before he could even notice he had a sword to his neck.

     "Zelgadis is an expert modeled in the new age," Elizabeth said, again 
without pause, without inflection.  She pulled a map off her clipboard, 
complete with machine printed instructional papers.  "A student of pure 
science, with us from nearly the very beginning.  He is not expendable.  You 
are.  You will proceed to this location with him and a small force, and 
complete the mission.  There will be other missions, of course..."

     Balderdash CAREFULLY nudged the sword away from his neck; Zelgadis 
didn't resist, as the point had been made, so to speak.  He snatched the 
papers away, studying them.  "And the mission?"

     If Roy had looked up, he'd have seen a tiny, tiny perk to the corners 
of Elizabeth Balderdash's mouth.  A puffy cloud of gray over the sea of 
absolute sanity she sailed in.

     "Genocide," she stated.

                                    [*]

     A hooded figure -- as hoods were all the rage this season for those 
seeking to conceal their identity -- picked his way along the mountainous 
trail, through the rocks and debris from some age old crumbled kingdom.  Of 
course, he knew exactly which kingdom and to a degree where each misshapen 
rock once went in its greatest palace, but that didn't do him much good when 
he just wanted a nice quiet rest and some shade.

     The bird perched on his staff screeched in irritation, but it's hard to 
screech in any other expression.

     "Yes yes, I know, must hurry up," the man replied.  "Always nagging.  
Caw caw this, caw caw that.  This is a shortcut to where we need to be, 
isn't it?  Don't you trust me anymore?  We'll catch up to Lina and her 
little friend.  Even she can't get into too much trouble before nightfall... 
oh, glory of glories, a rest area!"

     He wandered along the path, trying not to stumble on the little 
pebbles, and sat on the rock under the craggy outcropping.  Sat, and sighed.

     "I'm not getting any younger, you know," he told the bird.  "None of us 
are.  We wouldn't be in this state if I was running things..."

     "CAWCAWCAW!"

     "Caw caw caw all you want, but it's true.  And now look.  Terrors of 
the world, reduced to wanting quiet naps and milk.  How silly.  Okay, 
perhaps it's not THAT bad, but I wouldn't have to feed every other day to 
stay fit and active if not for this whole mess... are you even listening to 
me?"

     The jet black raven's beak poked up from the nearby entrails of some 
poor baby mountain goat.  "Caw?"

     "Oh.  Terribly sorry to interrupt lunch.  Carrion," Xelloss joked.

     The Mazoku prankster leaned back against the cool rock wall, and 
pondered fate.  Actually, no, he didn't have to ponder fate; he'd known 
about fate for a long time now, and made it a business to avoid not knowing 
fate very well.  But he did ponder the fate he had known about all along.  
There was hope, and that was a good thing.  (Even though Xelloss was 
considered evil by most who truly knew him, he wasn't daft enough to kick a 
good thing in the mouth.)  All would be well, assuming everything fell into 
place properly -- which it would, if he had anything to say about it.  He 
was a little disappointed that he had to prompt Lina onto the next step, 
but--

     A sound like pebbles falling down a cliff alerted him to pebbles 
falling down a cliff, as a rope was tossed over the outcropping, and a young 
man in flashy clothes and sunglasses swung down in front of him, planting a 
spiked boot into the rough rock.

     "Whoa, dude!  This is EXTREME!" he exclaimed.  "Hey, old guy!  You 
scalin' this rock too, dude?"

     "There are some who say those who would employ the word 'dude' twice in 
the span of twenty seconds... well, nobody says anything about them, but I'd 
say something fairly negative if I felt like it," Xelloss rambled.  "Which I 
don't, so begone, foul youth.  Go corrupt further generations on your own 
time rather than mine."

     "...huh.  Whatever, dude," the mountain climber said, squeezing some 
water into his mouth from a waterskin in an especially cool way.  "Let me 
guess, you're stuck up here 'cause you're too weak to get down, huh?  
Bummer.  Heh."

     Xelloss started to think of a suitable retort (frankly, anything would 
be sufficient, against this) but had a better idea.  He focused his mind 
briefly, very briefly, touching the young boy's psyche...

     "Say, you don't like spiders very much, do you?" he asked.

     "Wha?  How did you kno-- AAH!  GET THEM OFF ME!  GET THEM OFF ME!!" the 
mountaineer screamed, running around the narrow clifftop, clawing at his 
skin.  The rest was just incoherent yelling, foaming at the mouth and wails 
of absolute terror, but they were delivered while falling at nine point 
eight meters per second per second towards the ground.

     Xelloss stood up, stretched out, and felt quite refreshed.

     "A little intense burst of human fear always perks up the old body," he 
said, smiling in the face of the setting sun.  He nudged the goat a little, 
to stir his companion.  "What are we standing around for?  Fate waits for no 
man, woman or demonic stereotype.  Onward!"



                           ------------
                           two part two
                           ------------



     By the time the pair and a quarter had reached Nostrum, the sun had 
set, Lina's shoulder was aching and she wasn't very happy about either 
aspect of her situation.  At least the Table wasn't tumbling and doing 
tricks to try and get her attention, it was just quietly walking beside 
Penny, while the two talked about the Issues of the Day.

     "So you're saying that the whole world's turned into some bad novel 
where everybody flies around in machines and people pull levers to get 
everything in life done?" Lina asked.  "Bards usually got laughed off the 
stage when they told kid's fantasies like that..."

     "Not all that, no, no," Penny said.  "Just... some stuff.  Like, Dad 
has a special rotating brush for polishing his armor.  And at school we're 
learning more about geometry and chemistry and--"

     "Alchemy, you mean?"

     "Sort of, but things explode less often and there aren't as much 
glowing substances that move by themselves after the day's done."

     "Well, I'd hope not.  Alchemists always had a few screws loose, in my 
opinion.  Mucking around in copy homoculus and other crazy experiments..."

     "Out here in Zeifelia, there isn't that much advanced stuff," Penny 
continued.  "Just a few things that leaked out of the more industrial areas.  
Usually people say they can get by on magic just as well, but everybody my 
age is really interested in this stuff.  It's the new way of things.  I bet 
you in another twenty years, well, you won't recognize this world anymore!  
People will fly around in machines and we can pull levers--"

     "I get the idea, I get the idea," Lina said, to stop the flow.  Penny 
did tend to ramble on and on when you got her excited.  (At least it wasn't 
about the spirit of noble justice...)  "Okay, whatever.  Stuff's different 
in the world, I'm familiar with that by now.  But I don't see what this has 
to do with the temples."

     "I was just getting to that," Penny said.  "After awhile, the 
technologists started saying that not only was magic obsolete, but religions 
were too.  After all, any miracles on record could be explained 
scientifically if you sat down and thought about them long enough, and gods 
didn't really mess with men's lives very much -- not even Ceipheed, who 
everybody saw as the best god around to worship.  Some folks even wondered 
if Ceipheed actually existed."

     "I'd appreciate if gods would mess in my life a little less than they 
have," Lina muttered.

     "Eventually, people stopped going to church regularly, if they were 
going in the first place.  Keep in mind this is over twenty years in the new 
age, it wasn't overnight.  But generally, folks didn't see the point in 
worshipping Ceipheed anymore," Penny continued, as the two started to walk 
through the dark city streets.  "There are always a few people with a lot of 
belief, but it just wasn't popular to others.  Not with anybody my age and a 
good education.  None of the Dragons complained about it and there weren't 
any plagues, so... you know."

     "Uh-huh.  Right.  Aaaand what about the Mazoku War?" Lina asked.  "Sort 
of a large thing to be dismissing as a non-event, isn't it?"

     "Wasn't that, um, thousands of years ago?"

     "Yes, but... that doesn't mean it didn't HAPPEN!  It's in the books and 
everything, and--"

     "Nobody's alive who experienced it; maybe it was all a metaphor for 
something important, like saying that you catch eighty fish in four nets and 
it's really about global peace, like in most religious kinda books.  The 
Mazoku haven't been a problem since, anyway."

     Lina waved her arms in heated protest.  "Haven't been a problem since?!  
What about SHABURANIGDO?  Don't forget he resurrected not... twentysomething 
years ago!  I should know, I was the one who took him out!"

     "I heard about some country to the south having some kind of disaster 
that a lot of people blamed on Shaburanigdo," Penny said.  "Probably was 
just some Mazoku who looked like Shaburanigdo.  But it stopped less than a 
day after it started and everything went back to normal."

     "That's because I killed him!!"

     "Oh.  Well, there you go!  Wasn't a big problem, was it?"

     "WASN'T A BIG... okay, okay.  What about Phibrizo?  He enslaved and 
destroyed all of Sairaag!"

     "But then he got killed by you, didn't he?  So it wasn't a problem.  
And now Sairaag's rebuilt itself to be one of the biggest empires in the 
world!  So something great came out of it!"

     "This is ridiculous!  You mean I did such a GREAT job at saving the 
world over and over that nobody realized they had anything to worry about?!" 
Lina huffed, getting little veins sticking out in her forehead.

     Penny took a few steps away, just in case Lina exploded or anything.  
"Ah... maybe.  It's been so long since the Mazoku have been a real problem 
that the whole thing just isn't much of an issue for the average person.  
Most people, most cultures and countries get by in life without having any 
problems with the Mazoku to begin with.  So, people worry more about 
prospering in life than they do about Ceipheed, Mazoku, and all those 
legends and myths.  And besides, the Mazoku are all gone now."

     The world screeched to a painful halt as Lina hit the one thing she 
couldn't quite wrap her mind around today.

     "WHAT!?" Lina shouted, shaking Penny by the shoulders.  "WHATWHAT 
WHAAAAAT?"

     Penny wobbled around, trying to start a sentence, but finding her 
tongue jarred out of place each time by a freaked out Lina.

     Noticing this, Lina let go.  "No way.  You can tell me the Common Man 
is dumb enough not to notice demons running around causing problems, but you 
CAN'T tell me the demons are dead.  Do you have any idea what kind of effort 
it takes to get rid of them?  If--"

     "The Empire of Sairaag did it," Penny said, taking MORE steps back.

     "Sairaag?!"

     "It was so cool!  There's stories about it and poems and everything," 
Penny beamed.  "It all happened fifteen years ago.  Sairaag had already been 
burned by the Mazoku so many times that they just could take it anymore.  So 
they didn't wait for the next attack.  They marched an army up to the North 
Pole, where the Mazoku Lord Dynast resided, and immediately went to war!  
And they crushed the Mazoku in a single week long campaign!  The stupid 
beasts didn't see it coming!"

     "..." Lina ranted.  "..."

     "Okay, maybe they didn't kill ALL of them," Penny said, noting Lina's 
disbelief and shock.  "I don't think they could do that, even if the stories 
said it.  But it's true otherwise!  We 'simple humans' punished 'em so hard 
that the Mazoku haven't been seen or heard from since!  Dynast is dead and 
that means there's only two lords left, and after the beating they got, they 
won't be coming back.  So people are free to get on with their lives and not 
worry about some silly monsters.  Isn't that great?  The world's in a new 
age.  Science is flourishing, we don't have to be afraid of huge forces that 
can kill us at a whim, and everybody can LIVE their lives.  That's why I'm 
happy to be in this day and age.  You know... Lina?"

     "...?" Lina replied.

     "Maybe this is just me making a silly theory, but maybe the world 
doesn't need you anymore.  It's already saved and humans saved it with 
science.  Of course, there's always quests and stuff for adventurous types 
like me, but at least we don't have to worry about saving the WORLD anymore.  
Isn't that great?"

     "..........no," Lina said.

     "Huh?  I mean, not to belittle your accomplishments but--"

     "No, I mean I don't buy it in general," Lina said.  "Obviously it LOOKS 
the way you've described, or you wouldn't buy it.  But I've lived long 
enough to know that what looks like a sheep is actually a seventy tentacled 
eighty fanged perverted beast waiting to tear your ears off!  Make no 
mistake; the Mazoku aren't GONE.  I can't see it.  Somewhere, someone is 
plotting something or other.  And I'd bet dollars to doughnuts that I know 
who it is!"

                                   [*]

     While strolling along the mountain path, Xelloss paused a moment to 
sneeze.

     "Hmm.  Funny," he decided, then continued on his merry way.

                                   [*]

     "Ne, ne, Lina, you sound paranoid," Penny said.  "I'm just saying what 
I know, okay?  And I know that--"

     "We're getting sidetracked," Lina said.  "History lesson to be 
continued.  It's getting pitch black out there and I want to get to this 
cult before sunrise.  Get some ANSWERS.  So where is it?"

     "Uh..." Penny said, looking around.  "It's here, in Nostrum."

     "Where in Nostrum?"

     "My best friend's brother's cousin didn't say."

     Lina counted backwards from ten to one, and unclenched her hands.

     "...then we look around until we find it," Lina said.  "If it's as 
persecuted as you're saying, that won't be easy!  It'll take sharp intellect, 
sharper eyesight and sharper yet reflexes!  We'll search every nook, cranny 
and dark alley in this whole city until--"

     "Why don't we follow that cultist?"

     Lina stopped cold, watching as a suspicious looking figure in a hooded 
black robe skulked in shadows across the street.  He/she/it was doing 
his/her/its best not to be noticed by anyone, but had about as much training 
in the ancient technique of stealth as a drunken cow.

     "You've got your father's blind luck, don't you?" Lina asked, peering at 
Penny in a particularly perplexed way.  "Now let's stay quuiiiiiet and 
follow."

     After a brief argument about jamming the Table into a sack so it 
wouldn't make any noise (an argument Penny lost), they started to trail the 
Dark Cultist.  On tiptoes they went, staying a city block or more behind, as 
the cultist went on a deliberately winding path in, out and around the city.  
The whole process took a half an hour and was clearly intended to shake any 
tail.  The process, on the whole, failed miserably.

     Eventually, the ride came to a halt underneath the Not a A Cult Hideout 
Inn and Tavern and Bingo Parlor.

     "Yeah, this is definitely one of Martina's cults," Lina commented 
quietly to herself.

     Of course, back in the day, Martina's cult had a sum membership of one : 
Martina herself.  She was the only person who really believed in dark god 
Zoamel Gustav, and that's because she made him up.  It didn't stop her from 
selling Zoamel protective pendants to anybody desperate enough to buy them -- 
and there were usually enough desperate people when Lina was in town, because 
it meant something was exploding nearby, more often than not.

     There had to be a LOT of fear and panic there to resort to worshipping 
Zoamel Gustav, the imaginary god.  Even back then.  Lina briefly pondered 
Penny's absurd world view... that maybe people got along better now, without 
having to fear the Mazoku.  Or fear Ceipheed.  Ceipheed probably wouldn't 
have stood for this kind of a cult, if the Dragon god actually did anything 
of note in the course of everyday affairs...

     The cultist knocked on the door in a complex pattern that spelled out 
'the dread portal' in ancient Zeifelian converted to smoke signal dot pattern 
syntax.  A small window slid open on the oaken door.

     "What's the password?" a throaty whisper sounded.

     "Walt sent me," the cultist replied.

     "One hand washes the other," the keeper of the gates to hell counter-
passworded.

     "I fear nothing."

     "The seagull perches on the steeple in the rain."

     "Bacon."

     "If this is five and this is one, what is this?"

     "Three."

     "Enter the fold, oh my brother."

     And the door opened just long enough to admit the cultist, before 
swinging shut, with the resounding clatter of seventeen locks sealing 
themselves behind.

     "...uh.. that's not going to be easy to get through," Penny said.  She 
twirled her weapon into the ready position.  "I've got a plan!  You blow the 
door off its hinges with a Dragon Slave, and I'll charge in and beat them all 
senseless, and we can make off with the High Priest!"

     "Or we can use the rear delivery entrance," Lina decided, walking off to 
the nearby alley.

     Penny blinked a few times.  Her eyes followed the Inn and Tavern sign 
down to the smaller one, Please Drop Off Deliveries And Boxes Not Containing 
Ritual Sacrifices In The Rear.

     "Oh," she said, vaguely disappointed.  She caught up quickly.  "Is it 
always like this? Like when you blew up that guy before he finished taunting 
us and--"

     "Don't get me wrong, we could go ahead with your plan," Lina said.  
"Works for plenty of other hero types.  But that's not my style.  Unless I'm 
in the mood for some satisfying mindless violence.  Now hush and follow my 
lead."

     "I've got a lot to learn, don't I?"

     "Eh, we're all green at one time or another.  Don't let it get you down, 
kid.  Stick with me and I'll impart some wisdom that hopefully won't lead to 
your early demise!  But shut up for now and let's do this."

     "Fine, fine, mom."

     For the manyth time tonight, Lina stopped dead in her tracks in shock.

     "I mean, Ms. Inverse," Penny quickly corrected.

     "...right."

                                   [*]

     Of course, others were out this night than Lina and company.  But they 
were not particularly happy about it.

     On any other day, Roy would have been thrilled with the gear he'd been 
given for free.  Armor of the latest styles, with ultrathin layering to stop 
even the toughest bullet, arrow or sword.  A belt that made carrying dual 
blades effortless and noiseless, as it was padded with a special fabric that 
was made by machine-weaving human hair.  An eyepiece built into his headband 
that could flip down, and allow night vision; amazing, that this was built 
only using a form of hardened glass made in the core of Sairaag's forges!

     There was a drawback, of course.  He was going to have to use it in a 
particularly strange mission, led by the particularly strange Zelgadis, and 
a particularly strange pair of soldiers...

     He'd heard about these guys.  Sairaag's shock troops, soldiers trained 
especially for combat in the worst possible conditions.  A special drug had 
been designed to block all emotional responses from them.  They moved with 
precision, with speed, without hesitation.  The ultimate warrior, but with a 
catch -- self preservation wasn't in the mix.... but that could just be 
rumors.  Roy heard a lot of rumors in the far away country of Zeifelia about 
his sister's empire.

     His sister...

     She had left to seek her fortune in Sairaag after a bad falling out 
with mother.  Unfortunately a day after she arrived, Rezo leveled the place.  
Less than a year after that it was Phibrizo.  Somewhere along the line, 
she.. maybe other people and her... figured enough was enough.  And one long 
story later, here they were.  And here Roy was.

     Not that he'd be staying.  Zelgadis was working the controls on the 
machine, a machine that took up one gigantic room, and ran on steam driven 
pistons that could flatten Roy into a six foot wide pancake if he stepped 
just a LITTLE too close.  The round disc continued to spin, the portal, he 
remembered it from when Zelgadis first brought him here...

     "Sir?" he called out, not liking the term.

     "What is it, Balderdash?" Zelgadis asked, not looking up.

     "Is this for real?" Roy asked, in his normal, flippant tone.  "I mean, 
we're REALLY heading off to lay the smack down on the Tooth Fairy or 
something?"

     "Of course not," Zelgadis said, twisting a final knob, igniting some 
incredibly complex mathematics that opened a hole to a distant country... 
"The Tooth Fairy is not an issue anymore.  It's time.  We will proceed."

                                   [*]

     There are places...

     There are places where the light twists into itself, and does things 
that no innocent mind may comprehend.  Where the darkness itself has a sort 
of unwholesome quality to it, seeping into the bones, into the flesh.  Where 
drippy candles can be found by the gross and everybody's got a curvy knife.

     Lina had been to many cult hideouts in her time and they all basically 
followed the same pattern.  You'd have a ritual circle and altar on which 
goats, bunnies, duckies, virgins and so on were sacrificed, you had a huge 
statue to your god's honor, and a lot of guys in black robes chanting and 
going through the motions.

     You usually didn't have a big Bingo calling board propped up against 
one wall, but space was limited here and the store room was already filled 
with eyeballs.

     Swiping two spare robes that were the right size from storage was the 
easy part.  The hard part had been convincing Penny to leave her cherished 
naginata behind in the store room.

     "Couldn't we just, um, put a robe over it and call him Brother Stick?" 
Penny asked, but eventually relented when Lina described what would probably 
happen to her if their ruse was uncovered.  She also lost her lunch, but in 
this sort of place, the mess probably would go unnoticed.

     Lina prayed to whatever gods of luck were listening that Martina wasn't 
actually HERE, and got her wish.  The leader of this sect of the Unholy Cult 
of Zoamel Gustav was a middle aged man with a very bad combover.

     "O terrible god!" he declared, bowing to the statue.  "Please do not 
step on us like the worms we are.  Hear our calls, hear our cries, and CURSE 
our enemies who tremble like pillars of salt in the eyes of your rage!!"

     The statue didn't reply.  Which was for the best considering that the 
statue had the gigantic, misshapen mask of Zoamel Gustav, six tentacles, 
four clawed arms and was large enough to swallow three penguins whole, if 
you really wanted to count these things.

     The effect was killed by a stonecutter's designer label chipped across 
Zoamel's mighty evil ass, but nobody was pointing that out.

     "The curses of the unholy and the damned be on our enemies!" the leader 
chanted, with repeat verses and choruses backing him up.  "Black god of 
vengeance, above all gods, these are the names of those who will burn 
forever in the acidic pits of your gallbladder!..... ... Marty, where's the 
list?"

     A cultist nudged another cultist and that cultist woke up.  "Er, wot?"

     "The list.  The list of the damned and the so on for this week's 
meeting."

     "Ah.  Well, you see, I hadn't gotten around to compiling it, because I 
was ah.. so stunned by the shadow magnificence of his lord Zoamel Gustav 
that I forgot it.  Sorry."

     "People, this is why I keep saying we need DAY PLANNERS," the leader 
groaned, turning to face them.  "If we're going to be taken seriously by 
this town of gearheads and intellectuals we have to get organized.  Now 
we're not leaving here until we've got a good number of people cast into the 
stygian abyss to writhe in pain for an aeon or two.  Does anybody have any 
suggestions?"

     The group largely shuffled their feet and mumbled.  Nobody liked to 
specifically single someone out, that's why they had a list.  Because 
usually they snuck each other's names onto that list for always leaving the 
altar all waxy or stepping on each other's feet in the poor lighting.  
(Cultists of Zoamel Gustav had a penchant for revenge; they liked to exact 
it at the drop of a hat, or more frequently, before the hat drops just to be 
on the safe side.)

     "That bastard down the road who sells apples sold me one with a worm 
innit," someone suggested.

     "Right, then.  O TERRIBLE ZOAMEL GUSTAV, *CURSE* THE APPLE MERCHANT!  
May he experience a new level of agony for the rest of time!!  Who else?"

     "Wembley Peterson!" Penny shouted, getting into the swing of things.  
"He always throws erasers at the back of my head in cla--OW!"

     "What my fellow dark minion of the doomed and despaired MEANS to say," 
Lina filled in, "Is we have no suggestions, o lord, but Zoamel in.. ah... 
his infinite anger will have plenty of people to torture this week, so 
perhaps the list can be.. skipped?"

     "I've got a cake in the oven," a cultist near the back piped in.

     "Fine.  Fine!  But you all had damn well better get us some more souls 
to be our slaves for the duration of creation next week," the leader warned.  
"Zoamel Gustav demands nothing less."

     'Almost there,' Lina whispered to her companion.  'Once they finish up 
we can ransack the place for religious texts, and find out what a Demiurge 
really is!'

     "Now, let us begin the four hour closing ceremony!"

     Lina's stomach fell far enough to possibly reach the black stygian 
gallbladders of Zoamel Gustav.

                                   [*]

     Deep snoring could be heard from the cramped pews of the cult room, 
only scant hours before the sun would come up.  The rest of the sounds were 
of Penny, shuffling around the room in an attempt to search the place by 
fading candlelight.

     She considered waking Lina... but Lina had fallen asleep on her feet a 
few times during the closing ceremony, and could probably use the rest.  
Besides, how hard could searching be?  There was plenty of stuff piled up in 
this tiny room, but it was a tiny room, by definition!

     Except, of course, that she was seeking 'information', which is pretty 
intangible, and meant going through MANY books.  Instead, she found another 
use for the Wandering Monster Table; it had a special kinship to books and 
tomes, and was helping her sniff out the best ones, which she'd scan for 
anything useful.

     Penny was a fast reader.  Too fast, in this case.  It made sense: she 
was a particularly bright student in her class, adept at anything you threw 
her at -- and yet, lacking a lot of the skills others had, such as meeting 
nice boys, not tripping over your own feet and not getting into trouble for 
doodling famous war scenes on her desk.  She persevered, because she really 
liked school, especially PE class, where she often put a little extra spring 
in her work, until the teacher told her that a flying double arm elbow 
strike was an illegal move in baseball and that she could sit out the rest 
of the season...

     Actually, the problem was that she was a person who seemed born to an 
exciting, death defying life of adventure trying to make it in the dull day 
to day of the world -- and she wasn't that good at living the exciting life, 
either.  A common problem with children of such important and dangerous 
parents.

     Thus, every time she poked through a book, she'd skim real fast and try 
to get to the good, exciting part, and that's why she slipped RIGHT by all 
the warnings of eternal death-within-life and maggots gnawing at your lungs 
and got straight to the incantation.  'Ask A Question Of The Terrible Zoamel 
Gustav.'  JUST what Lina needed!

     (If anybody else had read this, including some members of the Cult of 
Zoamel Gustav, nothing would have happened.  You have to believe in it to 
make it work.  And Penny believed it could help...)

     "Auf neef keif aff freddyisthedevil afff neeef kiff iy iy!  Zoamel!  
Zoamel!" she chanted.  "Gustav est ein leibenshein dayo dayo!  BOSCO!!"

     She looked around to see if it had any effect and her face ended up 
less than three inches from the monstrous, sanity-wrenching visage of the 
demon god Zoamel Gustav.

     His eyes glowed with a fierce red aura like the flaming hatred of a 
million raged souls, and his breath was akin to the plague that consumes 
flesh from your bones.  He had a look to him, one that bore six feet into 
Penny's skull, which cried out from every corner of the dark inside her 
soul, 'Yes, what is it?'

     The Wandering Monster Table opted to take a chameleon approach, and go 
completely rigid, to look like any other six inch tall piece of furniture in 
the room.

     Penny screamed and screamed and screamed and screamed and screamed 
until Lina clamped a hand over her mouth and pulled her to safety behind a 
pew.

     Both girls remained very, very silent, as the building shook silently 
with each footstep of the beast.

     "What... did... you... DO?..." Lina hissed.

     "...I summoned Zoamel."

     "WHY?!"

     "So you could ask him what a Demiurge was!" Penny yelled back, 
snapping.

     "Ah, excuse me?"

     Both girls blinked simultaneously, making a neat 'squick' sound effect.  
That voice was male, human, and rather dignified.  Both slowly peeked over 
the edge of the pew, where Yes, the demon still stood... but he wasn't 
raging or anything.

     "Did you say Demiurge?" Zoamel asked, quite calm and pleasant as how-
do-you-do.  "Sorry to interrupt, but I was sort of wondering why I was 
summoned by a non-believer, and, well... rather a curious question, is all."

     Lina.. slowly stood up.  True, she'd known flesh-eating atrocities that 
walked on two or more legs that could talk in a sweet voice, but something 
was really askew with the world right now.  "...because I think I am one," 
she said simply, then waited to be devoured, keeping a spell charged at the 
ready...

     The monster leaned its massive head in, to study her.. but then 
withdrew, reached under its chin, and pulled UPWARD...

     The effect was like seeing an elephant pull upwards on its own trunk, 
skin peeling back in some eye-popping special effect, eventually revealing 
an ostrich.  Sort of.  In this case, a demon god pulling off his mask, and 
the illusion stretching off, sinking into the mask, to leave only a tall, 
but unassuming man in his mid twenties.  A man in a spotless white suit, 
with pure white hair, and a flawless face that most girls would drool over.  
He slipped the Zoamel Gustav mask around to his back, as it was on a 
convenient carrying strap, and pulled a pair of glasses from a neatly 
pressed shirt pocket.

     (With gods, there just isn't much middle ground; they're either 
hideously ugly, or astonishingly perfect.  Nobody ever worshipped someone 
named Great Athlion the Average.)

     "Terribly sorry, but I'm afraid I can't see a thing without my 
spectacles," he said, before brushing his hair back in a perfectly manly 
gesture.

     "Waaaaai..." Penny chirped, little hearts in her eyes.  "He looks like 
my old sempai!"

     Lina.. tried to ignore that, and struck up the conversation.

     "So YOU'RE Zoamel Gustav?" she asked, just to make sure.

     "My name at this time is Zoamel Gustav, yes, this is true," Zoamel 
said.  He pulled a folding chair usually reserved for the bingo nights over, 
and sat down, careful not to crease his pants.  "The unholy terror of 
vengeance, the curse-god, the dreadlord of the disrespected.  And you 
are...?"

     "Lina Inverse," Lina introduced, getting more of a grip of things and 
offering her hand to shake.  Which the god did.

     "Ah, Martina's arch rival," he said, recognizing.  "I should have 
recognized you, but it has been some time.  How do you do?  I must admit to 
being surprised to see you as a Demiurge.  You are right; you are one.  I 
can sense it in you.  Is your friend well?  She seems to be drooling."

     "What IS a Demiurge?" Lina asked, at last.  "Just say it straight out.  
I've had a long, long day."

     "Very well.  Since the dawn of time--"

     "Skip that," Lina instructed.  "Definition first.  Explanation second.  
At this point I don't care how shocking or unbelievable it is, I'm ready not 
to be shocked and I'm ready to believe."

     "We are workers for the people," Zoamel corrected right away.  "Workers 
for the maker of the world, the Lord of Nightmares.  Agents employed by 
creation to shape belief, and be shaped by belief.  Gods and demons.  We are 
worshipped, we are spoken of in myth and legend, we grow with strength as 
people use us to guide their lives, and we fade to the winds as we are no 
longer needed.  That is the existence of a Demiurge."

     Lina's brain swallowed it.  She latched onto one word.  "I'm a god?.."

     "A god, not the Lord herself," Zoamel noted.  "Just as me.  I am a god 
of vengeance, a god of curses.  A god that brings down fire and wrath on the 
enemies of my believes.  And I do.  But the cult is small; my powers are 
limited.  For instance, the seller of apples will have an extremely bad 
stomachache tonight, but he will not languish in the acid pits for all time.  
Do you understand?"

     "You?  Yes.  I always figured you didn't exist, though.  Martina made 
you UP!  I mean, an imaginary god--"

     "But she believed, and the belief shaped me," Zoamel stated, pulling a 
teacup from nowhere, and sipping from it, to wet his throat.  "Mmm.  Do you 
remember when she obtained your headband, and cursed it with a knife?  Your 
friends thought it was from sheer will.  In a way, they were right.  But it 
was the same will that eventually brought me into being.  And soon after her 
divorce, when she resurrected my concept, others came under the umbrella, 
and belief increased.  And thus, I am.  But I see you do not understand?"

      Lina definitely was shaking her head.  "No.  I mean... okay, I 
understand belief.  But.. you're... you're a PRETTY BOY.  Not a monster!  
What's up with that?  ...Penny, close your mouth!"

     "Huh?  What?" Penny started, startled.  She looked around.  "Oh, oh, 
sorry.  Belief.  Right.  I've been listening the whole time, I swear."

     Zoamel offered his best polished smile... a wry smile, amused, but not 
condescending.  He closed his eyes, and asked.  "Which do you think Martina, 
in her heart of hearts, secretly believes most in; ugly monsters, or 
handsome men?"

     Lina didn't even answer that.  The answer was so obvious it was 
practically a hypothetical question.  "Now.  Your life story is very 
interesting, but why am *I* a Demiurge?  There's already a Lina Inverse, 
even if she retired and got married and grew old; she's... she's probably 
the real one.  So what happened?  What am I really?  I gotta know..."

     "Technically, users of the incantation are only entitled to one 
question--"

     Penny took his hand in hers, and looked deep into his soft blue eyes.  
Candles around them lit a little brighter from the sheer drama of it.

     "Please, Zoamel-san," she pleaded, quietly.  "It's very important.  
Will you grant us another question?  We would be very grateful, sir!  We 
would do anything for you!"

     "Oi!  Does your mother know you act this way?!" Lina asked, feathers 
ruffled.

     "I suppose it is fair," Zoamel said, reclaiming use of his hand gently.  
"But truth be told, I am not sure how this occurred.  You were human; now 
you are a Demiurge, leaving a human behind?...  it's unheard of, but there 
is one explanation.  A theory of mine.  Do you wish to hear it?  Conjecture, 
true, but--"

     "Yeah, yeah, spill it," Lina egged on, snapping her fingers.

     "You say your.. human self retired.  But I know you; you are legend," 
Zoamel said, with a slight tone of awe.  "The legend, it seems, carried on.  
With no continuing adventure of Lina Inverse, the world needed a Lina 
Inverse, and one was provided.  ...but you already knew that, didn't you?"

     "Of course not, I.... I mean..."

     "A 'tug', I believe.  I know it in my existence, but it would be new to 
you," Zoamel said.  "A feeling of where you should be, where Lina is needed.  
A servant of the people, a god of vengeance similar to myself, lost in a 
blur of actions and reactions and quests and--"

     "I know," Lina said, stopping it there, before the creepy feeling came 
back.  The feeling that she could sink into the haze again, she could...

     The tug.

     Somewhere, near Darata, bandits were attacking a family.  All the 
possessions they had were stolen, along with their only daughter, and they 
called out for help, for someone to rescue, to assist, for Lina Inverse--

     "--Lina?" Penny asked, shaking her slightly, breaking the call.  
"What's wrong?"

     "No, NO!" Lina shouted, grabbing her head.  "I'm on a quest!  I stopped 
those urges with it, I.... oh, no.  The quest.  It's over... you told me the 
answer and ended it!  I'm free again for anybody to call me..."

     "It's best to let go to it," Zoamel said, sipping his tea again.  "We 
have a purpose and a reason to exist.  Anything else is selfish.  I'm sure 
you are a spectacular Demiurge, and well needed in these dark times for our 
kind.  Thank you for coming.  I always enjoy visitors."

     Lina staggered backwards, bumping into a pew, as she tried to resist.  
She could sink into it.  She could do some good, knock over some bandits, 
humble some cooks, all the things she does, she does them SO WELL... just 
like she's done for twenty years, ever since coming into existence, since 
starting her journey.  Her life as a Demiurge.  The end of her life as the 
human Lina Inverse...

     Again, Penny's voice calling.  Worried.  Zoamel unconcerned.  The 
Wandering Monster Table perched on a pew, looking nervous and frightened -- 
how a chiseled stone table could look nervous and frightened was a mystery 
but Lina was too occupied to solve it.

     What do her instincts say?

     Her instincts tell her she is self.  She is Lina Inverse.  She is in 
control at all times.

     Pulled back to the present, like a man hanging in the air by tugging 
himself upward by the hair.  She faced down Zoamel.

     "Tell me... how to stop it," she said, through clenched teeth, as the 
tug started to fade.  "This is very nice for you, and I'm sure I'm just a 
LOVELY Goddess Inverse, but it's not what I want to be.  I want to be human.  
To be Lina Inverse again.  Not Lina Gabriev, but myself, and ALIVE.  You 
said Demiurges fade away eventually..."

     "When the belief well runs dry, we return to wisps of notions," Zoamel 
said calmly.

     "I want out."

     "It's.. unheard of," Zoamel admitted.  "I've never personally met a 
Demiurge who didn't want to be what they were.  Perhaps because you started 
as the memory of a human, you--"

     "ENOUGH theories!" Lina shouted.  "What do I DO?"

     "I don't know," Zoamel quickly said.  "...but I may know someone who 
does."

     Another tug, this time in a distant tribal land where she once passed 
through while grabbing a mystic idol and the locals accidentally worshipped 
her as a sun goddess, that was new, she was needed to bring the dawn and eat 
all the breakfast in the village, curious, calling-- no.

     "Of course, it would take many days of journeying to find him, since I 
don't know where he went after ceasing to be Demiurge," Zoamel added.  
"Likely with plenty of hardship along the way."

     "A quest!!" Lina shouted, diving on the idea like a man dives on a 
chocolate chip cookie in the middle of the burning desert.  Everything 
snapped into sharp focus, into relief.  "Right!  You're hired!  Penny, go 
grab your weapon, put that damn table back in the bag, we are GOING right 
after we find a nice inn and have a big breakfast and sleep off this 
ridiculous night, Zoamel, I'll pay your way until you can start to pull 
your--"

     "I cannot accompany you," Zoamel said, setting his empty teacup back in 
the nowhere he got it from.

     "Oh, say it isn't so!" Penny wailed.

     "I'm afraid that my place is with my people," Zoamel sighed.  "I cannot 
leave them.  They need me here, and want me to be here, and I am unable to 
resist that.  It would not do for me to gallivant around the world while the 
followers of Zoamel Gustav are left to twist in the--"

     "If I find a way for you to get out of here, would you follow?" Lina 
asked quickly, a plan immediately forming in her mind.

     "Excuse me?  I'm afraid it's not possible."

     The young sorceress allowed a wry, evil grin to light up her face, and 
the candles to give her spooky underlighting to the point where the 
Wandering Monster Table skittered around Penny to hide in fear.

     "Never underestimate the determination of a very tired, very hungry 
Lina Inverse!!" Lina proclaimed, clenching a fist.  "You're coming with me, 
God, and I'll see to it that your followers WANT you to!  Just you wait and 
see!"



                          --------------
                          two part three
                          --------------



     Rain poured down on the city streets.  Roy didn't care, though; he was 
indoors, enjoying a large amount of alcohol, and waiting for something to 
happen.  A something he hoped would never happen, that this whole exercise 
would be a complete waste of time.

     The two soldiers, Lt. Burke and Lt. Biggs, were sent out on a 'fact 
finding mission'.  Find the target, to be specific.  They'd hidden the 
temple well, and it'd take a bit of picking through the city through the 
night to find it.  Through the night and to the morning, when Roy said oh to 
hell with it and was enjoying a brandy breakfast.

     Zelgadis entered through the double doors of the inn, his face 
concealed by a mask, to keep the locals from panicking at his skin.  Roy 
panicked anyway and tried to hide the booze.

     "No luck so far," Zelgadis commented, sitting next to Roy.  "But soon 
we will have the target locked.  You'll take lead of the charge.  Expect up 
to ten of the enemy cultists to resist."

     "Yeah, whatever," Roy said, downing another drink, since the commander 
hadn't said anything.  The drink, unfortunately, made him curious enough to 
stick his neck out.  "So what are you doing with this outfit?  Sir."

     Zelgadis glared sideways at him, not interested in answering.. but 
answered regardless.  "Working and waiting.  Partially to pay a price."

     "Oh, gambling debts.  Yeah, same boat."

     "No.  I haven't purchased the item I intend to buy yet.  It has taken 
years, but we are quite close to perfecting the process..."

     "The what?"

     "A cure," Zelgadis said, simply.  "A cure that magic has failed to 
provide in the thirty plus years of my life.  A cure that science can find.  
I'm a patient man, though.  I can wait a bit longer for the results I need."

     "Yeah, it's got to suck to be a freak and not be able to mix with 
normal people," Roy stupidly said.  "And to be that way for thirty years, 
fweee, bad news-- you have your sword to my neck again, don't you?"

     "Yes," Zelgadis said, voice like ice, grip as steady as a mountain.  
"And one of these days, I won't take it away.  But for now, you're of more 
use to Elizabeth alive.  And to me.  But never refer to me as a freak again.  
Never."

     The boy stood, slowly easing the blade away, and plucked two pills from 
his belt pouch.  He dropped them into Roy Balderdash's alcohol, where they 
fizzled immediately.

     "Sober up," he ordered.  "Be ready to move out soon."

     After the commander had left, Roy took one sip of the drink -- head 
clearing instantly to a large headache.  He tossed the rest of the bottle to 
the potted plant and stomped off, in a foul, foul mood.

                                   [*]

     Of course, Lina's determination was so strong, burning like the fires 
of a sun, so incredibly powerful and righteous that she IMMEDIATELY walked 
right out into the rain and checked into the nearest inn, walking upstairs 
and into the room and flopping on the bed and snoring in one swift motion.

     Several hours later, though, she was up and ready to put plan 'Amaze 
the Natives' into effect.

     "What's the plan, exactly?" Penny had asked.

     "Well, we walk in, and I convince them to let Zoey go!" Lina said.  "I 
mean, it's a simple enough idea."

     "But HOW!"

     "I'm working on that," Lina said, dismissing it.

     In order to fully prepare for this complex plan which had to be 
exercised like precision clockwork, Lina spent the rest of the day eating 
and shopping at various locales in and around Nostrum.

     "Are you looking for ingenious special effects devices that will 
convince the cultists they're having a religious experience?" Penny had 
asked.

     "No, I'm trying to find a new pair of boots.  It's high time I replaced 
these, the heel squeaks."

     As the zero hour approached, the rain stopping, the sun setting, Lina 
further braced herself mentally and physically with a very large dinner that 
she asked Penny to pay for.

     "Gods don't carry much money," Lina had explained.  "We just have gifts 
of bounty bestowed on us."

     FINALLY the hour of the ceremony was on them.

     "Guess we'd better get going," Lina decided, hopping off a bar stool 
(as she had been enjoying various drinks and complementary pretzels for the 
better part of an hour).  The Wandering Monster Table, which was being used 
as a footstool to compensate for Lina's short stature and the high bartop, 
was tremendously relieved.

     "About time," Penny grumbled.  "I'd go broke if you took any longer to 
prepare.  So WHAT is the plan?"

     "The plan is THIS!" Lina said.  "You stay quiet and follow my lead.  Or 
better yet, just stay quiet and follow behind me.  I know crackpot religious 
types, and I know Martina, so I've got the expertise to have this crowd 
eating out of my hand.  Mark my words, in an hour (assuming they don't do 
the closing ceremony again) we'll be out of town with a dark god to guide us 
to what we seek!"

     "What you seek, you mean."

     "You're the one who wanted to tag along for the adventure experience," 
Lina pointed out, poiking Penny in the armored chest a little.  "Now.  
Here's how it'll work.  We take our stolen robes and sneak in the back, just 
like before..."

                                   [*]

     "OH GREAT AND UNHOLY ZOAMEL etc. etc. etc," the cult leader declared, 
waving his ceremonial staff with a knob on the end of it in the air, tracing 
the demon's sigils in the sky with black fire that nobody could actually 
see.  "We come before you this night in the spirit of bloodlust and anger, 
so that our enemies may continue to burn forever in the sight of your 
RAGE!..."

                                   [*]

     "Eventually, he'll get to some point where he babbles about 
instructions from Zoamel," Lina continued.  "And that's when I fake a 
rapturous seizure using a mild electrical spell on myself, for realism..."

                                   [*]

     "Let the infinitely powerful voice of your dark brilliance echo across 
the land!" the leader shouted, little veins poking out in his neck.  "Hear 
us, o terrible lord, and guide us on the path!  Let us be your hand as your 
wisdom leads us in a bloody path towards--"

     "Whaaaoorgh!" Lina wailed, twitching and shaking her arms.  Little 
white sparks popped off her hands, to add to the effect.  "Hooaahr!  Wubba 
wubba!  Oooaoaohagooooo!  ZayzayzayZAAAY!"

                                   [*]

     "A seizure?" Penny asked.  "Do you think they'll buy that?"

     "That's what the spell's for, kid.  Realism!  Not that I've actually 
seen a mad cultist in the throes of a religious conniption fit, but I'm sure 
it'd be similar enough."

     "But it's safe, right?"

     "Of course!"

                                   [*]

     One of Lina's flailing arms smacked into Penny's robed head, and 
blasted the young girl back into the next pew from static discharge.

                                   [*]

     "Oh, okay," Penny said, relieved.  "As long as it's safe.  So what 
then?"

     "Okay, then I improvise a little, depending on how they react.  But the 
idea is to pass it off as having had a vision of Zoamel, one I'd be MORE 
than happy to relate to the rest of them..."

                                   [*]

     Lina turned off the spell, trying to shake off the aftereffects.  The 
other cultists watched her, wondering in a sort of odd curiosity if she'd 
explode anytime soon -- the leader quietly wished he'd picked a god to 
worship who didn't have things like this happen on a regular basis.

     "...O, what a vision I have had!  What rapture!" Lina started.  "I have 
seen the dark lord!  The great and almighty Zoamel Gustav!"

     "Well, of course, his statue's right there," a younger cultist said, 
pointing helpfully.

     "Not THERE, you twit, I mean in my mind!" Lina snapped.  "Now shaddup 
and pay attention!!"

     "Yes'm," he mumbled.

     "What glorious sights I have seen, and so on!" Lina continued.  "The 
Dark Lord rising triumphant over all enemies, striking them down with a 
fantastic sword of fire!  It must be an omen, a message, from the Lord to 
us!"

     "Well, why didn't *I* see it, then?" the leader complained.  "I'm the 
one who started this branch of the cult.  I put in the paperwork and sent in 
my fifty gold, and I want at least ONE vision before I--"

     "Zoamel doesn't LIKE it when people interrupt his messenger's 
prophecy," Lina warned, in her best Creeping Evil Death voice.  "Ahem.  
There is a PROBLEM!  Out there, in the wilds of the world, rests an enemy 
who plots to DESTROY Zoamel Gustav!"

     "...don' wanna get up for school today, mum..." Penny mumbled, one pew 
behind Lina.  Lina got a large sweatdrop behind her head, but carried on 
regardless.

     "We must all pray for Zoamel to go out into the world, and destroy this 
enemy!  Only with our sacrifices, our hopes and our RAGE can the Dark Lord 
persevere!  Our hatred and unending anger will, you know, help.  So.  How 
about it?  Wish him well on his vacation?"

     The bewildered cultists turned to the leader, the only real voice of 
authority around here.  Such as it was.

     "Uh..." the leader leaded.  "Well, I guess so.  You're quite certain it 
was lord Zoamel?  Not some enemy posing as him to trick us?  Who ARE you, 
anyway?  You seem new."

                                   [*]

     "Yeah, but what if they don't buy it at all?" Penny asked, while they 
were planning.  "You've got to have some kind of trump card.  Maybe.. ooh! I 
know!  We dig underneath the building and erect a complex trap door escape 
system that lets us flee to safety before we're all slaughtered?"

     "I've got something better, which doesn't involve as much physical 
labor..." Lina said, with an evil grin.

                                   [*]


     "Ah.. I come from a far away land," Lina explained quickly.  She pulled 
Penny out from where she was resting, jerking the girl awake  "With my 
companion, I am spreading the word of Zoamel Gustav to all the branches, 
under.. the direct orders of HIGH PRIESTESS MARTINA!"

     THAT impressed them.  Hushed whispers whispered in hushed tones.

     "Very well!" the leader said, spreading his arms to look cool.  
"Friends, this is a glorious day!  Under the Unholy Martina's geas, we shall 
pray for the success of the Dark Lord in his travels!  May his time from us 
be spent wading knee deep in blood!"

                                   [*]

     "Sounds like a good plan, I guess," Penny agreed.  "Maybe we should run 
it by Zoamel first, though... you know, just in case?"

     "Why?  It's PERFECT!" Lina declared.  She gathered up her cape, and 
walked out of the inn, to head right for the ceremony with Penny in tow.  
"In one fell swoop, we'll have our own Demiurge in the back pocket.  What 
could go wrong?"

                                   [*]

     "In accordance to scripture, an offering will be made to speed Zoamel 
on his journey!" the leader declared, to the rousing cheer of the cultists.  
"Let us pay homage to the terrible lord.  Marty, cast Detect Virgin."

     "Right, boss," the cultist goon said, chanting a quick spell and 
snapping his fingers.

     "Eh?" Lina asked, right before she started to glow a pale pink.

     She was the ONLY one in the room glowing a pale pink.  She looked left, 
looked right, notably looked at Penny, who had started blushing for some 
reason...

     "Um," the leader said.  "That's not good.  Can we sacrifice Martina's 
messenger?"

     "There's a precedent, o leader," Marty said, flipping open a Pocket 
Guide To The Unholy Rites of Zoamel Gustav.  "Happened once fifty hunner'd 
years ago.  Once dead, her spirit will become a beacon of ultimate power 
that continues to spread the message, according to Martina 3:16, which goes 
on to say 'I just sacrificed your ass!'."

     Two meaty hands clamped over Lina's shoulders.

     "Well, fire up the altar, let's get this show on the road!" the leader 
cheered.

     "H-HEY!  Whoa, whoa!" Lina shouted, waving her arms madly in protest.  
"I'm too important to be killed!  And I don't want to become a spirit beacon 
of power, either!  And I am NOT a virgin!  I mean, uh..."

     "It's in the rules," the leader explained, as the swarthy cultists 
hauled Lina onto the altar.  "Can't wish the dark god off on a journey 
without a virgin sacrifice.  That's how it works.  Don't squirm, it makes 
the ritual messier, and Marty doesn't like mopping up this place."

     "It's not the mopping, it's the blood-soaked Bingo cards," Marty 
explained.  "Hard to scrape off the floor.  Takes all day."

     Lina thought quickly.  Okay, this wasn't good.  But COULD she die if 
they, you know, stabbed her repeatedly?  She was a god, right?  Although... 
she was shot earlier today and that hurt like hell.  It wasn't fatal, so 
MAYBE this would be fine, but pain was generally disagreeable with her 
person.  But if they weren't CONVINCED otherwise...

     What was she thinking?  She wasn't going to play pincushion to a bunch 
of robed weenies.  Option C, blasting the hell out of everybody and wishing 
they'd built Penny's trapdoor so they could take a hike, was looking more 
and more attractive.  It meant no Demiurge companion, but... She kept most 
of the words to a fireball spell at the ready, and waited for the right 
moment.

     Penny, now QUITE awake and alert thank you very much, thought quickly 
as well.  Most of her thoughts consisted of swinging on chandeliers waving 
her staff and shouting 'What ho!' but there wasn't a chandelier.  And that 
would probably get them both killed, which was more of a problem.  She had 
to try to push all the crazy heroic impulses out the door, and work this out 
LOGICALLY...

     Then it occurred to her.  She lowered her voice to a whisper, and spoke 
the words.

     'Auf neef keif aff freddyisthedevil afff neeef kiff iy iy, Zoamel, 
Zoamel," she chanted.  "Gustav est ein leibenshein dayo dayo, bosco.'

     A voice spoke to her mind, a voice of handsome features and good 
annunciation.  Her eyes watched Lina, who was clearly looking towards the 
exits, while the leader whistled and tried to sharpen a curvy knife on a 
flat stone.

     'This is not a very good time to manifest,' Zoamel echoed in her ears.  
'Not with everybody watching.  Not really my style at all--'

     "You've GOT to help," she whispered to herself.  "Do something.  
Please?  Before it's too late!"

                                   [*]

     Three figures stood outside a darkened, closed tavern on the streets of 
Nostrum.  By now, most sane people had gone to bed, so Zelgadis wasn't 
bothering to wear his hood.  Roy paced irritably, waiting for word.

     "So are we going to do this or not?" he asked.

     "Patience," Zelgadis ordered.  "Our scout returns."

     A figure stood on the rooftop... then jumped off.  He twisted in 
midair, and landed with a dull THUD on the dirt road, before straightening 
up and saluting.

     "They are inside, sir," the soldier reported to Zelgadis.  "It is a 
ritual hour, and they aren't guarding the door."

     Zelgadis drew his blade.

     "Now we act," he said.

                                   [*]

     'She would not be truly harmed,' Zoamel protested.  'She is Demiurge, 
and immortal.  It is not our way to make ourselves obvious to people, not if 
it is avoidable.  You have little to--'

     "Today, she was wounded, and she bled," Penny pointed out quickly, 
trying to ignore the looks she was getting from nearby cultists.  "That 
doesn't sound very immortal to me.  I don't know if she can survive this.  
PLEASE, do something!"

     An unearthly pause.

     'Penny... Lina Inverse means this much to you?' Zoamel asked.  A tone 
of curiosity.

     "..I believe in her," Penny said, simply.  It was the truth.

     The massive statue of Zoamel Gustav raised its head.  Stone ground 
against stone.

     Many, many heads quietly turned to see the miracle.  The few 
unbelievers in the crowd, faced with a large statue coming to life of a god 
that likely would bite you in half rather than give you a flower, decided 
that maybe believing wasn't such a bad thing after all.

     The flow actually seemed to strengthen the god, as the slight motion 
turned into a full motion, leaping from the pedestal with the grace of a 
cat; coming down on the altar, feet positioned on either side of Lina, who 
decided to hold very, very still.

     [Your sacrifice is not required, my children of darkness,] Zoamel 
spoke, in a voice like knives shredding flesh.  Handsome, well mannered 
flesh, but the edge was still there.  [I hear your call, o minions of 
despair, and your rage empowers me.  Boldly I shall go into the night, and 
return with the spoils of war, all for you, my faithful.  It shall be done.]

     Nobody was quite sure how to react.  An embarrassed silence fell over 
the crowd.

     [I would appreciate a 'thank you,' you know,] Zoamel admitted.

     The cult fell all over itself to thank the god, swear allegiance, 
suggest the many ways in which they were already thankful and how he didn't 
have to squish them all into paste, that sort of thing.  The leader QUICKLY 
hauled Lina off the table, taking out a lint brush to make her robes a bit 
more presentable, which Lina did her best to bat away in irritation.

     Zoamel walked his statue back to its resting place, and reassumed the 
pose it was in originally... before changing his mind, opting for a fiercer 
sort of pose, as a reward.  Then the light died out in the gargoyle's eyes, 
the ritual was over, and the cultists decided silently and unanimously to 
call it a night with no closing ceremony.

     One minute later, Lina and Penny were alone in the temple.

     Lina yanked off her robe, exhaling in relief.  "Okay, maybe it wasn't 
AS perfect as I'd hoped, but it got the job done," she decided.  "And you 
know what they say, any demonic ritual you can walk away from with your 
intestines intact is a good one--"

     She lost a fraction of her balance when the young girl grabbed her up 
in a huge, energetic hug.

     "I'm just glad you're okay!" Penny exclaimed, laughing in joy.  "It's 
all worked out so great!"

     "...uh... right," Lina said, not quite sure what to do with the hug.  
Fortunately, it was interrupted.

     "I believe we should be going now," Zoamel Gustav said, having 
manifested with no particularly flashy entrance, in his flawless white suit.  
"The night is long, but I am ready to honor my believers in this quest."

     "Right!" Lina said, detangling herself.  "So!... Lina, Zoamel and 
Penny, into the glorious future!  Three kindred souls of adventure and--"

     The Wandering Monster Table jumped out of Penny's pack, and landed on 
Lina's head.  "Demiurge!" it chirped in happiness, repeating the stock line 
it had in its data set as it analyzed Lina.

     "...and that damn thing," Lina conceded.  "Let's go."

                                   [*]

     While that would have been the high note to conclude the night of 
adventuring on, a nice, happy event, it was not the last event of the night.

     After stepping onto the street, they couldn't ignore the roaring flames 
coming from the tavern just across the street.  The building had been 
singled out, the entire structure turned into a roaring inferno, with no 
signs of who had done it.  Likely, they had left shortly after finishing.

     "Ara?  Did someone kick over a lantern?" Penny asked.  Before she 
noticed the dim shapes of bodies in the flames... bodies that were not 
moving.

     Zoamel Gustav frowned, the warm air brushing his white bangs aside from 
his face.  But his eyes weren't hard or rageful, they were sorrowful.

     "That," he explained, "Was the last remaining branch of the Holy Church 
of Melody, Goddess of Bards and Musicians.  And now, they are no more."

     Lina scratched her head a little.  "...wow.  That sucks," she admitted.  
"Who would've done something like that?  Music critic?"

     The dark god in white turned, to progress down the street, not looking 
back.  But he did speak, as he walked.

     "Rational minds started this atrocity," he said.  "Minds with no love 
for myths, legends and belief.  We had best be on our way, Miss Inverse.  
There are more dangerous things than gods out on the streets tonight."

                                   [*]

     High above the city of Nostrum, cold winds whipped through the mountain 
passes, like icy reminders that Mother Nature wasn't always a happy woman.

     Xelloss perched on an impossibly thin rocky cropping, balance better 
than any simple human, as he watched smoke pour out of the city.  Normally, 
he was a smiley kinda guy.  Tonight he frowned.

     The raven made no sound, but Xelloss stroked its feathers anyway, in 
what little he knew about comforting people.

     "Now now, in despair there is hope," he enigma'd.  "They're well on 
their way.  When the time is right, we will introduce ourselves.  And then 
revenge will be ours.  Sweet, lovely revenge.  Mmm.  So, where do you think 
they will go next?"

     "CAW!"

     "My thoughts exactly.  No sense in stalling.  Off we go."

     Summoning his fading strength, Xelloss studied the faded ruins of the 
mountain kingdom.  It was just a matter of picking out the five points of 
the dark magical circle that was here a thousand years ago, which was easy 
to do from the landmarks.

     If he was up to full speed, teleporting all the way to Darata would be 
easy and not require a circle of power.  Sadly, this was not the case.  
Assisted travel would have to suffice.

     For now.



                             [To Be Continued]



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