Green Flame Rising (Exalted vs Dresden Files)

Arc 14 Post 43: Tearing Tainted Threads
Tearing Tainted Threads

18th of February 2007 A.D.

As Dark Sun parries both water lances, light, revealing and blinding at once, erupts from Tiffany's pointing finger, blossoming soundlessly in the face of your enthralled attackers. Halfway up the wall to the left before the term wall-running passes through your mind you lunge at them. Both young, maybe young enough to have the same thought in that split second before they both flinch, aerosolized water settling on you arm as you drive your sword hilt into the solar plexus of one of your attackers. You make an involuntary face of disgust as your victim abruptly pukes missing you by inches before you shield check them into into the other driving both of them into the wall as a single carefully aimed shot strikes her—a woman braided hair tied off with silver clips— in the chest right above the heart.

A heart attack you can fix, but you need them down.

Something's wrong. As Tiffany's silver light fills the air you watch in horror as the energies reverse, balefire transmuted into a strand of green thinner than a hair brighter than the sun, a curse of ever-changing painful symphonies laid by a master's hand.... infectious... familiar.

Lost 2 Essence (Occult and Melee Excelency) -> Now at 12/18

"Not yours!" The words hiss between your teeth as you slam your will into the thread of power with all the strength and all the skill of a smith's hammer.

The curse tries to worm its way into your mind as it would have the mind of any wizard trying to counter or intercept it incinerating minds from within.

Against you it does as much good as a match thrown into the Pacific.

Lost 1 Willpower (IPP) -> Now at 6/9

But then it wasn't meant for me was it, you think furiously. The curse was meant to contaminate and set alight the minds of anyone using magic to fight the thralls, crucially including magical weapons. That curse was meant for wardens.

"Careful, they've been booby-trapped," you go on to explain the thread of arcane fire changing and adapting like a virus in as few words as you can manage.

Carlos looks sick and even the more experienced wardens seems shaken. The sound of guns being drawn fills the air, plain bullets won't carry contagion.

"You got one extra?" Olivia asks. A moment later she is thrown a gun, but before she can thank Morgan for the throw an unwelcome presence makes itself known.

"Oh my that was unreasonably quick of you," the voice, smooth and cultured, though not with the accent of any recognizable tongue does not come though the air, it does not sound inside your face. Instead it simply emerges from a belt-pouch one of the thralls has been wearing.

"Probability of speaker-technology used meets the parameters for in battle-certainty," you hear Clippy in your headphones.

There was a hole cut in the fabric of the pouch and through that hole a phone's camera. Looks like you aren't the only one who can ward tech around wizards. As part of your mind, mostly the part that's a demon, wonders if there's something in there you can suborn.

"It would have been much more sporting of you to let the wizards try their hand. How do they say it these days, 'don't hog the fun'?" The voice can only be the Knight of the Blackened Denarius from the skill and horror of the curse carries on chidding you.

What do you do?

[] Never interrupt a villain monologuing when they should be running, try to get information out of the Fallen
-[] Write in Stunt (Optional)

[] Stab the phone and keep going until you can stab the one on the other end as well

[] Write in


OOC: The horrifying monster is not kidding over here, Molly rolled that dispel at DC 9 from all the multiple action and the only reason she could do it at all was BSM. The curse was meant to hit someone like Carlos or one of the wardens either when they hit the thralls directly with magical weapons or when they attempted to dispel it.
 
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And that's something he could whip up in like, an hour?

Or did he just happen to have these ready for months and just kept them not used for grins and giggles?

Because what the hell, a contingent "If any supernatural force at all is used to oppose these guys, hit them with a giant DC giga-death curse that mind controls you if you try to counterspell it as an extra rider" is just straight up a "GG no re" bomb.
 
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And that's something he could whip up in like, an hour?

Or did he just happen to have these ready for months and just kept them not used for grins and giggles?

Because what the hell, a contingent "If any supernatural force at all is used to oppose these guys, hit them with a giant DC giga-death curse that mind controls you if you try to counterspell it as an extra rider" is just straight up a "GG no re" bomb.

Angelic lore is a hell of a drug, welcome to dealing with someone with Molly's level of occult understanding, not that of the average wizard.
(though it should be noted that the curse could be resisted and even broken, but not easily in either regard)
 
Angelic lore is a hell of a drug, welcome to dealing with someone with Molly's level of occult understanding, not that of the average wizard.
(though it should be noted that the curse could be resisted and even broken, but not easily in either regard)

If he's using that, he's broken the NAP I think, while the Denarians are very powerful, letting them use the Angelic Lore against mortals invites Uriel to push back in an equal and opposite way. And this was intended for the mortals, even if Molly is exempt from the NAP (Which I think would be a fair cop).

That's exactly what happened in Changes. Lasciel used her Lore to remote whisper Seven Words in his ear to set him on a path of no return, and Uriel got to whisper Seven Words to Harry to give him the strength to keep going. That's why they generally keep towards giving advice and empowering their Hosts rather than straight up using their unmatchable angelic power, because that gives Uriel and the other Big Goods latitude to act in turn.

Which makes me wonder whether this is more important than we know, that he's willing to risk Uriel getting a freer hand to act to achieve whatever his objective here is.
 
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If he's using that, he's broken the NAP I think, while the Denarians are very powerful, letting them use the Angelic Lore against mortals invites Uriel to push back in an equal and opposite way. And this was intended for the mortals, even if Molly is exempt from the NAP (Which I think would be a fair cop).

That's exactly what happened in Changes. Lasciel used her Lore to remote whisper Seven Words in his ear to set him on a path of no return, and Uriel got to whisper Seven Words to Harry to give him the strength to keep going. That's why they generally keep towards giving advice and empowering their Hosts rather than straight up using their unmatchable angelic power, because that gives Uriel and the other Big Goods latitude to act in turn.

Which makes me wonder whether this is more important than we know, that he's willing to risk Uriel getting a freer hand to act to achieve whatever his objective here is.
was it lasciel who gave those words?
 
If he's using that, he's broken the NAP I think, while the Denarians are very powerful, letting them use the Angelic Lore against mortals invites Uriel to push back in an equal and opposite way. And this was intended for the mortals, even if Molly is exempt from the NAP.

That's exactly what happened in Changes. Lasciel used her Lore to remote whisper Seven Words in his ear to set him on a path of no return, and Uriel got to whisper Seven Words to Harry to give him the strength to keep going.

Sorry that was needlessly confusing, I do not mean in the literal mechanical Lore in this case, I mean the magical insight of beings that helped shape the laws of physics used to inform the crafting of technically mortal magic (hence why you could counter it with equally normal sorcery)
 
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was it lasciel who gave those words?

It was confirmed to be Lasciel whispering in his ear there, the actual Fallen, breaking the rules of engagement specifically to fuck Harry over, which gave Uriel the latitude to use his own power to get him back on track, while bending things to give him more time while in traction to screw his head on straight as a ghost without directly using that latitude personally.

That's why they don't like risking tit-for-tat, because Uriel is very good at turning an inch into seven leagues. Mr. Sunshine managed to leverage Seven Words into an entire cooldown and self-reflection arc by just timing when he'd deliver them.
 
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So Merlin doesn't have a warded cellphone, but these bad guys do? Sigh. Really understanding the complaints about the white council. We even offered a awhile ago.
 
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And that's something he could whip up in like, an hour?
Or did he just happen to have these ready for months and just kept them not used for grins and giggles?

Because what the hell, a contingent "If any supernatural force at all is used to oppose these guys, hit them with a giant DC giga-death curse that mind controls you if you try to counterspell it as an extra rider" is just straight up a "GG no re" bomb.
Yup.
This is the guy who canonically did this to Dresden:
I pounded through the entry to the Oceanarium, felt a shivering sensation as I ran right through a veil I had not sensed was there, and all but barreled into a demonic figure crouched down on the floor. I skidded to a stop, and there was an instant of surprise as we stared at each other.
The Denarian was basically humanoid, as most of them were, a gaunt, even skeletal grey-skinned figure. Spurs of bone jutted out from every joint, slightly curved and wickedly pointed. Greasy, lanky hair hung from its knobby skull to its skinny shoulders, and its two pairs of eyes, one very human brown and one glowing demonic green, were both wide and staring in shock.
It was crouched amidst the preparations of a spell of some kind-a candle, a chalk circle on the floor, a cup made from a skull and filled with water-and it wore a heavy canvas messenger bag slung across one shoulder. One hand was still down in the bag, as if it had been in the midst of drawing something out of it when I'd come charging up.
Fortunately for me, my mind had been in motion. His had been tangled up in whatever spell he was doing, and he was slower to get back into gear than I was.
So I kicked him in the face.
He went down with a grunt, and a chip of broken tooth skittered across the floor. I didn't know what spell he was getting together, but it seemed a good bet that I didn't want him to finish it. I broke his circle with my will as I crossed it with my body, unleashing a ripple of random and diffused energies that had never had the chance to coalesce into something more coherent. I knocked his skull goblet into one of the enormous nearby tanks with my staff as I raised it and pointed one end of it at the stunned Denarian, snarling, "Forzare!"
Some of that searing storm of power I was holding in screamed out of my body and down through my staff, hurtling at the Denarian, an invisible cannonball surrounded by a cloud of static discharge. It was more power than I'd meant to unleash. If it hit him it was going to throw him halfway across Lake Michigan.
But while the Denarian's mortal set of eyes may have still been blank with shock and surprise, the glowing green set was bright with rage. The thorny Denarian lifted his left hand in a sweeping gesture, made a rippling motion of his fingers, drawing his hand toward his mouth, and…
…and he just ate my spell.
He ate it. And then that gaunt, skeletal face spread in a toothy smile.
"That," I muttered, "is incredibly unfair."
I lifted my left hand just as the Denarian crouched and vomited out a spinning cloud of black threads that came whirling through the air in dozens of tiny, spiraling arcs. I brought up my shield, but none of the threads actually came down to touch me-they landed all around me instead, in a nearly perfect circle.
And an instant later my shield stuttered and shorted out. I still had the energy for it-I hadn't been cut off. But somehow the Denarian's weird spell had disrupted the magic as it left my body. I tried to throw another bolt of force at him, and got to feel supremely silly, waving my staff around to absolutely zero effect.

"Interruptions," the Denarian said in an odd accent. "Always the interruptions."
His left hand returned to rummaging in his bag, while his mortal eyes went back to the now-scattered remnants of the spell, evidently dismissing my existence. The green eyes remained focused on me, though, and darkness suddenly gathered around the forefinger of his upraised right hand.

Time slowed down.
Dark light leapt toward me.
Sheer defiance made me step forward, trying to brush past the little spinning columns of shadow that surrounded me, only to find them as solid as steel bars, and colder than a yeti's fridge. I threw my magic against those bars to no avail as a shaft of dark lightning streaked toward my heart.
Something happened.
I don't know how to describe it. I was trying to slam another bolt of force between the bars of my conjured prison when something…else…got involved. Ever been carrying something and had someone intentionally, unexpectedly jostle your elbow? It felt something like that-a tiny but critically timed nudge just as I threw my will into a last futile effort of defiance.
Power screamed as it wrenched its way out of my body. It shattered the black-thread bars of my prison and left a streak of metallic light on the air behind it for an instant, reflective, like a trail of liquid chrome. It caught the falling Denarian in a massive silvery simulacrum of my own fist.
I actually felt my fingers close over the gaunt, skeletal, grey-skinned figure, felt the numerous spurs of bone jutting from its joints press painfully into my flesh. I flung it away from me with a cry, and the huge silver hand flung the Denarian into the nearest wall, ripping through several feet of expensive stone terracing and carefully simulated Pacific Northwest.
I stared for a second, first at the stunned Denarian, and then at my own spread fingers-and at the floating silvery hand beyond, mirroring my movements. Then the skeletal Denarian gathered itself and rose, fast as hell-until I shoved the heel of my hand forward and drove his bony ass six inches into the wall of rock behind him.
"Oh, yeah, baby!" I heard myself howl, elated. "Talk to the hand!"
I picked up the thorny fiend by a leg and laughed as it raked and bit and scrabbled at the construct that held it. I could feel the pain of it-but it was a small thing, really, something I might have gotten from a rat. Unpleasant as hell, but I'd felt much, much worse, and it was nothing compared to the agony of the power still burning inside me. I slammed him into the wall again, then swung him twenty feet through the air, shoved him through a pane of unbroken three-inch-thick glass on the outer wall of the Oceanarium, drew him back through, and then rammed him through the next one, and the next one, and the one after that, cutting him to tatters as I did.
I had maybe half of a second's warning, as my already overloaded nerves screamed that the circle was closing, that the Sign was rising, as I felt the surge of energy approaching from no more than a dozen yards away. There was still no time for a shield.
So Spinyboy would have to do.
I flung him between me and where my instinct warned me the inbound power was coming from, and then there was a roar like a dozen turbine engines howling to life in synchronization. Thirty feet from me the walls exploded in light and Hellfire. Heat, light, and sheer, intangible power slammed against my senses and threw me from my feet. Bits of molten rock hissed through the air, deadlier than any bullet.
Spinyboy caught a bunch of those. They flew out his back and left gaping, smoking, cauterized holes in it. I could see them through the silvery haze of the construct hand that still held him, could feel the heat as they bored through the construct, and-
- and then my head bumped the ground hard enough to make me see stars. I rolled to my feet and nearly wobbled over the railing and into the pool with the whales. I slammed the end of my staff into the ground with my left hand and leaned heavily against it, panting.
I was still alive. I still retained an agonizing amount of energy. So far, I thought woozily, everything was going exactly according to plan.
The skeletal, spiny Denarian lay twitching on the ground ten or twelve feet in front of me. There were big smoking holes in its body. One of its arms was moving. So was its head. But its legs and its lower body were completely limp. I could see the bones of its spine standing out sharply from its gaunt, emaciated back. Two of the smoking holes intersected that spine precisely. He-or she, I supposed, if it mattered-wasn't going anywhere.
Great currents of energy, eight or nine feet thick, intersected maybe fifty feet away. It was like…looking at the cross-section of a river in flood-if the river had been made of fire instead of water, and if two rivers could have intersected and passed through each other without affecting each other's courses. I turned my head and saw, through the walls of glass that I'd broken, more of the same beams, all around the Oceanarium in an unbroken wall.
The eerie part was that the fiery current of energy was silent. Absolutely silent. There was no crackle of flame, no roar of superheated air, no hiss of steam as snow and ice melted. I heard some rubble falling, stone landing on stone. I heard a broken electrical line somewhere, spitting and snapping for a few seconds before it, too, went silent.
That was when I realized a couple of things.
The silver energy construct that had gripped the Denarian was gone.
And I couldn't feel my right hand.
I looked down in a panic, but found that it was still there, at least, flopping loosely at the end of my arm. I couldn't feel anything below my wrist. My fingers were slightly curled and didn't respond when I told them to move.
"Crap," I muttered. Then I gathered my wits about me, gripped my staff more firmly in my left hand, and took several rapid steps until I stood over Spinyboy.
Then I bashed him over the head with the solid length of oak until he stopped moving.
Immobilized wasn't the same as unconscious. He wouldn't be the only one of his kind in the building, and I didn't want him shouting my location to anybody the second my back was turned.
One down. Who knew how many to go.
I crouched in the walkway with the wall on my right, the windows facing the outside of the Oceanarium on my left, and the beam of Hellfire at my back. It was the most secure position I was likely to get. There was still no sound, which meant that they hadn't tried to take the Archive yet. Kincaid would not go down quietly.
But they were in here with me. They had to be.
But they didn't necessarily know I was in here with them.
That could be an advantage. Maybe even a huge advantage.
Sure, Harry. What cat ever expects the mouse to come after it?
I stuffed my numb right hand in my duster pocket, tried to ignore the bone-deep ache of unspent power racking my body and the limb-weakening tremors of raw terror radiating through my guts, and stalked silently forward to sucker punch some Fallen angels.
If Uriel hadnt intervened at precisely that moment to both give Harry soulfire and alter the spell he was casting to something that would work, Harry would have died there in the Shedd Aquarium.

And thats not counting what happened during their second encounter at Demonreach, where he literally went through Dresden's shield as if it wasnt there, force-choked him and picked his pocket.
Simultaneously.
In front of me Thorned Namshiel howled out in frustration and evident terror in some tongue I didn't know, and I saw that both Tessa and Hellmaid Rosanna had pulled a vanishing act. Namshiel, his arm outstretched in the general direction of the far side of the stone throne, added, despair in his voice, "Come back!"
Then he turned toward me as he heard my feet churning through the wet snow. He still held a corona of green lightning in his spiny hand, and as his eyes focused on my general location he bared his teeth in a snarl of bitter hatred and flung out his hand, hurling a sphere of crackling emerald electricity at me.
My shield bracelet was ready to go, and I had terror and rage and determination in plenty to empower my defenses. I deflected the sphere at an angle and sent it rebounding harmlessly up into the sky.
"Amateur puppy," Namshiel snarled, and began to gather more sickly green power at his fingertips. He made an odd little gesture and flicked his fingers, and suddenly five tiny threads of green light leapt toward me on five separate, spiraling paths.
I brought my shield around to intersect the new attack-and realized at the last second that each individual thread of energy was coming at me on a slightly different wavelength of the spectrum of magical energy, a variance of frequencies that my shield couldn't stretch to cover. Not all at the same time, anyway. I countered three of them and nearly got the fourth, but it slipped by me, and I never even touched the fifth strand.

Something that felt like cold, greasy piano wire wrapped around my throat, and I couldn't breathe.
"Insufferable, arrogant little monkey," Namshiel hissed. "Playing with the fires of creation. Binding your soul to it, as if you were one of us. How dare you so presume. How dare you wield soulfire against me. I, who was there when your pathetic kind was hewn from the muck."

It wasn't so much being strangled to death that I objected to, or even the megalomaniacal monologue I was being subjected to in the process. I just wished that I knew what the hell he was talking about. Granted, I had busted him up pretty good with that silver hand thing, but he was taking it so freaking personally.
I lost track of what I'd been thinking. My head hurt. So did my neck. Thorned Namshiel was ranting about something. Practically foaming at the mouth, really-right up until Amoracchius flashed in a line of silver fire, and Thorned Namshiel's head hopped up off his shoulders, tumbled twice, and fell into the snow.
Suddenly I took a deep breath and the world started sorting itself out again.
Michael stepped forward, took one look at Namshiel's body, and hewed the right hand off at the wrist. He picked up the hand and dropped it into a pouch on his sword belt. Meanwhile, Sanya shouldered his rifle and dragged me to my feet.

Lucian/Thorned Namshiel is Serious Business.
 
I mean divine using the phone the best thing to say to make the angel come and fight us. It doesn't have free will so the crown should be able to predict it.
 
Fairly sure dp kinda ignores the supernaturals not having free will thing at least to some extent and for certain species.

The Knights of the Blackened Denarius do have free will. Unless you are dealing with a host wholly subsumed by the will of their Fallen like Ursiel, which a powerful wizard like Thorned Namshiel cannot be they still count as having free will when they confer.
 
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[X] Stab the phone and keep going until you can stab the one on the other end as well

I don't know what this vote means, but I am interested in finding out.
 
Real shame we don't have Golden Years tainted Black. Best way to mess with someone over the phone.
 
Yup.
This is the guy who canonically did this to Dresden:
I pounded through the entry to the Oceanarium, felt a shivering sensation as I ran right through a veil I had not sensed was there, and all but barreled into a demonic figure crouched down on the floor. I skidded to a stop, and there was an instant of surprise as we stared at each other.
The Denarian was basically humanoid, as most of them were, a gaunt, even skeletal grey-skinned figure. Spurs of bone jutted out from every joint, slightly curved and wickedly pointed. Greasy, lanky hair hung from its knobby skull to its skinny shoulders, and its two pairs of eyes, one very human brown and one glowing demonic green, were both wide and staring in shock.
It was crouched amidst the preparations of a spell of some kind-a candle, a chalk circle on the floor, a cup made from a skull and filled with water-and it wore a heavy canvas messenger bag slung across one shoulder. One hand was still down in the bag, as if it had been in the midst of drawing something out of it when I'd come charging up.
Fortunately for me, my mind had been in motion. His had been tangled up in whatever spell he was doing, and he was slower to get back into gear than I was.
So I kicked him in the face.
He went down with a grunt, and a chip of broken tooth skittered across the floor. I didn't know what spell he was getting together, but it seemed a good bet that I didn't want him to finish it. I broke his circle with my will as I crossed it with my body, unleashing a ripple of random and diffused energies that had never had the chance to coalesce into something more coherent. I knocked his skull goblet into one of the enormous nearby tanks with my staff as I raised it and pointed one end of it at the stunned Denarian, snarling, "Forzare!"
Some of that searing storm of power I was holding in screamed out of my body and down through my staff, hurtling at the Denarian, an invisible cannonball surrounded by a cloud of static discharge. It was more power than I'd meant to unleash. If it hit him it was going to throw him halfway across Lake Michigan.
But while the Denarian's mortal set of eyes may have still been blank with shock and surprise, the glowing green set was bright with rage. The thorny Denarian lifted his left hand in a sweeping gesture, made a rippling motion of his fingers, drawing his hand toward his mouth, and…
…and he just ate my spell.
He ate it. And then that gaunt, skeletal face spread in a toothy smile.
"That," I muttered, "is incredibly unfair."
I lifted my left hand just as the Denarian crouched and vomited out a spinning cloud of black threads that came whirling through the air in dozens of tiny, spiraling arcs. I brought up my shield, but none of the threads actually came down to touch me-they landed all around me instead, in a nearly perfect circle.
And an instant later my shield stuttered and shorted out. I still had the energy for it-I hadn't been cut off. But somehow the Denarian's weird spell had disrupted the magic as it left my body. I tried to throw another bolt of force at him, and got to feel supremely silly, waving my staff around to absolutely zero effect.

"Interruptions," the Denarian said in an odd accent. "Always the interruptions."
His left hand returned to rummaging in his bag, while his mortal eyes went back to the now-scattered remnants of the spell, evidently dismissing my existence. The green eyes remained focused on me, though, and darkness suddenly gathered around the forefinger of his upraised right hand.

Time slowed down.
Dark light leapt toward me.
Sheer defiance made me step forward, trying to brush past the little spinning columns of shadow that surrounded me, only to find them as solid as steel bars, and colder than a yeti's fridge. I threw my magic against those bars to no avail as a shaft of dark lightning streaked toward my heart.
Something happened.
I don't know how to describe it. I was trying to slam another bolt of force between the bars of my conjured prison when something…else…got involved. Ever been carrying something and had someone intentionally, unexpectedly jostle your elbow? It felt something like that-a tiny but critically timed nudge just as I threw my will into a last futile effort of defiance.
Power screamed as it wrenched its way out of my body. It shattered the black-thread bars of my prison and left a streak of metallic light on the air behind it for an instant, reflective, like a trail of liquid chrome. It caught the falling Denarian in a massive silvery simulacrum of my own fist.
I actually felt my fingers close over the gaunt, skeletal, grey-skinned figure, felt the numerous spurs of bone jutting from its joints press painfully into my flesh. I flung it away from me with a cry, and the huge silver hand flung the Denarian into the nearest wall, ripping through several feet of expensive stone terracing and carefully simulated Pacific Northwest.
I stared for a second, first at the stunned Denarian, and then at my own spread fingers-and at the floating silvery hand beyond, mirroring my movements. Then the skeletal Denarian gathered itself and rose, fast as hell-until I shoved the heel of my hand forward and drove his bony ass six inches into the wall of rock behind him.
"Oh, yeah, baby!" I heard myself howl, elated. "Talk to the hand!"
I picked up the thorny fiend by a leg and laughed as it raked and bit and scrabbled at the construct that held it. I could feel the pain of it-but it was a small thing, really, something I might have gotten from a rat. Unpleasant as hell, but I'd felt much, much worse, and it was nothing compared to the agony of the power still burning inside me. I slammed him into the wall again, then swung him twenty feet through the air, shoved him through a pane of unbroken three-inch-thick glass on the outer wall of the Oceanarium, drew him back through, and then rammed him through the next one, and the next one, and the one after that, cutting him to tatters as I did.
I had maybe half of a second's warning, as my already overloaded nerves screamed that the circle was closing, that the Sign was rising, as I felt the surge of energy approaching from no more than a dozen yards away. There was still no time for a shield.
So Spinyboy would have to do.
I flung him between me and where my instinct warned me the inbound power was coming from, and then there was a roar like a dozen turbine engines howling to life in synchronization. Thirty feet from me the walls exploded in light and Hellfire. Heat, light, and sheer, intangible power slammed against my senses and threw me from my feet. Bits of molten rock hissed through the air, deadlier than any bullet.
Spinyboy caught a bunch of those. They flew out his back and left gaping, smoking, cauterized holes in it. I could see them through the silvery haze of the construct hand that still held him, could feel the heat as they bored through the construct, and-
- and then my head bumped the ground hard enough to make me see stars. I rolled to my feet and nearly wobbled over the railing and into the pool with the whales. I slammed the end of my staff into the ground with my left hand and leaned heavily against it, panting.
I was still alive. I still retained an agonizing amount of energy. So far, I thought woozily, everything was going exactly according to plan.
The skeletal, spiny Denarian lay twitching on the ground ten or twelve feet in front of me. There were big smoking holes in its body. One of its arms was moving. So was its head. But its legs and its lower body were completely limp. I could see the bones of its spine standing out sharply from its gaunt, emaciated back. Two of the smoking holes intersected that spine precisely. He-or she, I supposed, if it mattered-wasn't going anywhere.
Great currents of energy, eight or nine feet thick, intersected maybe fifty feet away. It was like…looking at the cross-section of a river in flood-if the river had been made of fire instead of water, and if two rivers could have intersected and passed through each other without affecting each other's courses. I turned my head and saw, through the walls of glass that I'd broken, more of the same beams, all around the Oceanarium in an unbroken wall.
The eerie part was that the fiery current of energy was silent. Absolutely silent. There was no crackle of flame, no roar of superheated air, no hiss of steam as snow and ice melted. I heard some rubble falling, stone landing on stone. I heard a broken electrical line somewhere, spitting and snapping for a few seconds before it, too, went silent.
That was when I realized a couple of things.
The silver energy construct that had gripped the Denarian was gone.
And I couldn't feel my right hand.
I looked down in a panic, but found that it was still there, at least, flopping loosely at the end of my arm. I couldn't feel anything below my wrist. My fingers were slightly curled and didn't respond when I told them to move.
"Crap," I muttered. Then I gathered my wits about me, gripped my staff more firmly in my left hand, and took several rapid steps until I stood over Spinyboy.
Then I bashed him over the head with the solid length of oak until he stopped moving.
Immobilized wasn't the same as unconscious. He wouldn't be the only one of his kind in the building, and I didn't want him shouting my location to anybody the second my back was turned.
One down. Who knew how many to go.
I crouched in the walkway with the wall on my right, the windows facing the outside of the Oceanarium on my left, and the beam of Hellfire at my back. It was the most secure position I was likely to get. There was still no sound, which meant that they hadn't tried to take the Archive yet. Kincaid would not go down quietly.
But they were in here with me. They had to be.
But they didn't necessarily know I was in here with them.
That could be an advantage. Maybe even a huge advantage.
Sure, Harry. What cat ever expects the mouse to come after it?
I stuffed my numb right hand in my duster pocket, tried to ignore the bone-deep ache of unspent power racking my body and the limb-weakening tremors of raw terror radiating through my guts, and stalked silently forward to sucker punch some Fallen angels.
If Uriel hadnt intervened at precisely that moment to both give Harry soulfire and alter the spell he was casting to something that would work, Harry would have died there in the Shedd Aquarium.

And thats not counting what happened during their second encounter at Demonreach, where he literally went through Dresden's shield as if it wasnt there, force-choked him and picked his pocket.
Simultaneously.
In front of me Thorned Namshiel howled out in frustration and evident terror in some tongue I didn't know, and I saw that both Tessa and Hellmaid Rosanna had pulled a vanishing act. Namshiel, his arm outstretched in the general direction of the far side of the stone throne, added, despair in his voice, "Come back!"
Then he turned toward me as he heard my feet churning through the wet snow. He still held a corona of green lightning in his spiny hand, and as his eyes focused on my general location he bared his teeth in a snarl of bitter hatred and flung out his hand, hurling a sphere of crackling emerald electricity at me.
My shield bracelet was ready to go, and I had terror and rage and determination in plenty to empower my defenses. I deflected the sphere at an angle and sent it rebounding harmlessly up into the sky.
"Amateur puppy," Namshiel snarled, and began to gather more sickly green power at his fingertips. He made an odd little gesture and flicked his fingers, and suddenly five tiny threads of green light leapt toward me on five separate, spiraling paths.
I brought my shield around to intersect the new attack-and realized at the last second that each individual thread of energy was coming at me on a slightly different wavelength of the spectrum of magical energy, a variance of frequencies that my shield couldn't stretch to cover. Not all at the same time, anyway. I countered three of them and nearly got the fourth, but it slipped by me, and I never even touched the fifth strand.

Something that felt like cold, greasy piano wire wrapped around my throat, and I couldn't breathe.
"Insufferable, arrogant little monkey," Namshiel hissed. "Playing with the fires of creation. Binding your soul to it, as if you were one of us. How dare you so presume. How dare you wield soulfire against me. I, who was there when your pathetic kind was hewn from the muck."

It wasn't so much being strangled to death that I objected to, or even the megalomaniacal monologue I was being subjected to in the process. I just wished that I knew what the hell he was talking about. Granted, I had busted him up pretty good with that silver hand thing, but he was taking it so freaking personally.
I lost track of what I'd been thinking. My head hurt. So did my neck. Thorned Namshiel was ranting about something. Practically foaming at the mouth, really-right up until Amoracchius flashed in a line of silver fire, and Thorned Namshiel's head hopped up off his shoulders, tumbled twice, and fell into the snow.
Suddenly I took a deep breath and the world started sorting itself out again.
Michael stepped forward, took one look at Namshiel's body, and hewed the right hand off at the wrist. He picked up the hand and dropped it into a pouch on his sword belt. Meanwhile, Sanya shouldered his rifle and dragged me to my feet.

Lucian/Thorned Namshiel is Serious Business.
That's not the same thing at all. One is counterspell and the other is a "just" some sort of magic piercing prime/forces attack.

Dishing out curses that make everyone useless on the spot was never his skill set. Which is why he didn't do something like this when he was hunting Harry. The guy is powerful, but he was more of a blaster on the offensive - like an evil Dresden.

That's actually a relevant character beat, because the current host is a sorcerer instead of a wizard, he's just got ages of cheating behind him to get strong. Pretty sure Harry potentially taking a coin and becoming a better version of him in every way is why the host was so particularly pissed at Dresden from the very beginning.
 
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