After receiving Michael's permission, Jester moved.
There was no visible surge of power or grand display. He simply placed a hand over the man's head. For a mont nothing seed to happen. Then the man's body trembled faintly. His breathing
stuttered, uneven and shallow. A low, almost inaudible sound escaped his throat before fading completely.
Jester's eyes remained calm.
Seconds passed. Then he withdrew his hand.
The man remained still. His chest still rose and fell, but when Michael examined him he already knew. The man was effectively dead. Not in the physical sense. But everything that had made him who he was had been stripped away entirely.
Now he was simply a shell.
Michael's gaze lingered on the body. He found himself wondering what to do with it now. As much as he was a necromancer, he had co to prefer working with actual corpses rather than people reduced to this state.
After a brief mont the Damaged Coffin of the Forgotten opened once more and Michael placed the body back inside. Another matter to be resolved later. For now it could wait.
Michael shifted his attention back to Jester and waited quietly.
Jester stood with his eyes closed, sorting through the mories he had just consud. A minute passed before his eyes opened slowly.
Michael spoke first. "What did you find?"
Jester did not answer imdiately. The information he had taken was vast, scattered, and layered with fragnts that did not fit neatly together. He took a brief mont to arrange everything into sothing coherent before speaking.
"The chaos in the city was planned."
Michael knew this much but did not interrupt.
"It is connected to the Federation's recent actions. Their attempt to bring ordinary civilians closer to the supernatural world has caused significant unrest among certain factions. The demonic faction in particular views this as a direct provocation. Their presence has been nearly nonexistent in the public eye for a long ti, yet they continue to be painted as a primary threat. Despite making no significant moves recently, they have been treated as pests and used for educational purposes. So they chose to respond."
"This was their way of stepping out into the public eye. It appears to be their usual thod. Brightgate was simply one of several selected targets. Not the only one."
Michael felt a wave of disgust rise within him. aningless
destruction. Pointless casualties. All to make a statent.
But before that feeling could settle, Jester spoke again. "There is another factor."
Michael's eyes narrowed.
"You."
Silence filled the room for a brief mont.
"From the mories I accessed, there were plans to capture individuals close to you, which in this case would obviously be Aunt Mia and Lily."
As Jester said this, his eyes went cold in their own quiet way. It was not anger exactly, not any strong emotion. To Jester, Lily was his master's property and his ongoing research subject. Had Michael known what Jester was actually thinking in that mont, he would have delivered a thorough lecture. But Michael's focus had already fixed entirely on the last words Jester had spoken.
For a split second the air around Michael distorted. Mana surged
outward uncontrollably, pressing against the walls of the room. The temperature dropped and the pressure in the air beca briefly suffocating.
Then it stopped. Just as quickly as it had appeared, it vanished.
Michael exhaled slowly. His expression returned to sothing close to normal, but his eyes were cold.
"I see."
Once again the demonic supernaturals had pushed Michael further from any neutral stance toward them. At this point they were branded in his mind as mortal enemies. If he ever found himself with sufficient power and a clear enough situation, he would not hesitate.
Jester watched him quietly for a mont longer before continuing. "There is more."
Michael's gaze shifted back to him.
"The one whose mories I consud was over forty years old and had been part of the demonic faction for nearly twenty years. During that ti he gained access to several of their hideouts. So were located in the wilds. Others were concealed inside cities."
Michael's eyes sharpened. That piece of information alone carried
significant weight.
Before he could think further, Jester continued. "Based on what I
found, why don't we attack them?"
Michael did not answer imdiately. His fingers tapped lightly against the arm of the chair as his mind worked through it.
Attacking the hideouts made logical sense on the surface. The demonic faction had already made him and his family a target. They
had acted first, so striking back was not without justification.
But that sa reasoning brought another problem to mind. If he moved against them now, there would be consequences. Not
only from the demonic faction itself, but potentially from the Federation as well, depending on what he found, what he did, and how much attention he attracted in the process.
Michael did not delude himself into thinking his situation with the Federation was resolved. He had seen enough to know how far they were willing to go for certain things. For all he knew, staying outside the academy too long would make him a target for kidnapping again or making a visible mistake could give them exactly the leverage they
needed.
He had seen this kind of dynamic before, even back on Earth. Cases where the person who acted in response beca the one blad. Killing demonic supernaturals sounded righteous in principle, but if he struck first, it could be frad against him. The law, as that Rank 4 demonic supernatural had once told him in hell, was often nothing more than a tool for those above.
Still, the information itself was valuable. Even if he chose not to act directly, he could pass it along to the academy and let them determine what to do from there.
Michael then asked whether the man had known of any treasure
vaults belonging to the faction. He might not be tempted toward a kill streak just yet, but a treasure vault was an entirely different matter. For that, he was more than willing to get his hands dirty. Jester's expression did not change. "No. He was an ordinary mber. Useful, but not significant. He knew hideouts, routes, signals, and so operational thods, but had no direct contact with the true core figures. No nas worth noting. No access to their deeper structure."
Michael's eyes dimd slightly. For a brief mont he had hoped they had caught a thread leading sowhere larger. But it was not entirely surprising. If the man had been truly important, he likely would not have been so easy to capture.
Michael temporarily set aside the matter of the demonic faction and
was about to give Jester another task regarding the half-dead Rank 4 demonic supernatural still waiting in the coffin when he heard
footsteps.
They were uneven.
Both Michael and Jester turned toward the hallway at the sa ti.
A mont later two figures appeared at the entrance to the living
room.
Lily and Aunt Mia.
Both of them looked as though they had only just woken up. Their movents were slightly unsteady and their expressions carried the particular disorientation of soone erging from sleep they had
not chosen.
For a brief second neither of them spoke as they took in the living
room.
There were two Michaels.
Or at least that was what it appeared to be at first glance. Realization
hit almost imdiately after.
"Michael?"
Aunt Mia's voice ca first, carrying both relief and disbelief in equal
asure. The next mont she moved, her steps still slightly unsteady but not enough to slow her down. Michael stood just in ti
for her to reach him.
She grabbed his arms, then his shoulders, as if checking that what she
was seeing was real.
"You're back."
There was a slight tremble in her voice, though she tried to conceal it.
Michael could feel it clearly. The fear from when she lost consciousness had not fully passed. The relief now was real enough
to cover most of it, but not all.
"I'm back," he said quietly.
At the side, Lily had also moved, but unlike Aunt Mia she slowed
before fully reaching him. Michael noticed it imdiately.
She was happy. That much was obvious. Her eyes had brightened the
mont she recognized him. But there was restraint there as well. A
strange and uncomfortable distance that she seed unable to close
entirely.
Michael felt it the mont she stopped just a little short. For so reason that small gap made his chest tighten.
Still, Lily looked at him and said softly, "You really ca back." Michael felt there was far more contained in those words than what
was spoken.
Even he did not fully understand it yet, but sowhere along the way Lily had developed a trauma from what happened in Woodstone. When she saw those cracks opening above the city, the first person she had thought of was not her mother or any authority. It had been
Michael. Seeing him now reminded her of who her cousin actually
was.
Thanks to the Federation, Lily was no longer as sheltered as she had been the year before.
Michael nodded at her. "Of course I did."
That seed to help. The stiffness in her shoulders eased, though not completely. Aunt Mia had far less of that hesitation. Whatever distance existed in her was faint, almost negligible in comparison. To her, Michael was still Michael before anything else. Her hand remained on his arm as if she did not quite want to let go just yet.
Michael looked between the two of them, then at Jester standing
silently nearby.
After so long, he was finally back ho.
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