âOkay, the spell is locked in the vault and all mention of it is wiped from the recordâ¦now.â Perry said, pressing the âconfirmâ button.
Paradoxâs Elysian Enchantment was far too dangerous for the likes of mere mortalâ¦teens.
âUgh, my eyes are all bloodshot now,â Heather said, dabbing the last of the tears out of her eyes and whipping out a compact to fix her makeup.
âSo obviously Sophieâs hair is not a good ballgown enhancer.â
âYa think?â Heather asked as Perry wiped snot and tears off his shoulder.
âHey, Iâm not the bundle of repressed emotions,â Perry said with a shrug.
âTell Nat and die.â
âTell me what?â Natalie asked, poking her head into the lab.
âWe were chopping onions.â Perry said.
âLots of them.â Heather added.
âMagical ones.â Perry continued with a nod.
âYou guys are full of shit,â Nat said before raising the heavy tome of etiquette with a grunt. âHey, did you know military dress uniforms are considered acceptable garb to wear to a ball? We could wear our super suits!â
Perry and Heather shared a glance, the last vestiges of the Elysian spell creating a moment of perfect mutual understanding:
They both wanted to see Nat in that dress.
âNah, super suits arenât really a uniform,â Perry said with a shrug. âPlus your mechsuit would have a hard time dancing.â
Nat pursed her lips. âTrue.â
âBuuuut,â Perry said, holding up a finger and motioning Heather and Nat over to the massive growing tanks where he was growing their dresses. âWe could make the dresses pretty awesome.â
âSo I had the LCC scan you and made silicon molds of your bodies,â Perry said, pointing into the tank where rubber Heather and Nat were submerged in perryâs armor-growing vat.
âNow, Iâm using lasers to superheat microscopic points in a woven pattern across the surface of the silicon to convince the material to grow the way I want it to. Itâs almost the same material my armor is made out of, with a few tweaks to make it more fabric-like.â
âWas it too hard to just sew a dress together, so you had to 3-d print it onto a silicon mold that, quite frankly, feels like an invasion of privacy?â Heather asked.
âThatâs so cool!â Nat said, peering down into the vat where the laser was making glittering points of light appear and disappear across the facsimiles of their naked bodies.
âShe gets it,â Perry said, pointing at Natalie.
âThose get destroyed when this is over,â Heather said.
âCan I have them?â Nat asked. âTheyâd be great to prototype stuff.â
âOf course you can,â Heather said, changing her tune instantly.
âHow did you get them to stand so still?â Nat asked.
âWell, itâs just silicon over a sheet metal skeleton,â Perry said with a shrug. âThey are poseable, though. I put joints in them. Theyâre held in place by friction.â
âI always wanted a guy to have a life-size, naked, poseable doll of me.â Heather said.
âOh,â Perry said, frowning.
âI can see itâs starting to sink in to that thick Tinker-fog brain of yours.â Heather said.
Normally Perry would be able to see the problem, but heâd been riding high on the Tinker Twitch for hours now.
âWell, when the dresses are done, you can do whatever you like with the models,â Perry said, turning away from the vat. âIn the meantime, we need two more things. A guest list, and a venue.â
Ding!
Perry pulled out his phone and glanced down at it.
I will take care of the guest list and the venue. You are a debutante acting as the host, not the principle organizer. â Marigold Zauberer
âWell, my grandmother is listening to every word I say.â Perry muttered.
Ding!
Not at all, my dear grandson, itâs called magical predictive texting. -Marigold Zauberer
âIâm not really sure which is worse,â Perry said. âMy grandma thinking Iâm a failure, or her sudden interest in me.â
Ding!
My interest in you will undoubtedly prove worse, grandson. â Marigold Zauberer
âCool.â Perry turned off his phone and tossed it across the room.
He glanced up and saw Heather and Nat giving him a strange look.
âGrandma says sheâll take care of the venue and guest list.â
Perry wasnât completely naïve. Grandma had a tough-love, throw them in the deep end to learn how to swim kind of attitude.
That meant Grandma was going to invite someone, or several someones, that were unpleasant to be around, just to grow Perryâs character, maybe show off his pathetic new light spell to prove he was a âmageâ.
Although by the strictest definition, Perry would call himself a wizard. Or perhaps some kind of hybrid, since he was powering his spell the same renewable way a mage would, with a symbiotic spirit at the core, in a dizzyingly complex combination of Gadrevan and Pecholardâs techniques.
Semantics aside, the ball was sure to be an unpleasant one.
Who could show up?
John Gabras, the nocul with a genocidal grudge against his entire family.
Chemestro, the guy with a stick up his ass who had to hold back in every fight he was in, rather than just turn Perry into dust.
Monolith, the obsidian-skinned mobster that Perry had humiliated?
Some other fantasy creature with an epic grudge against the Zauberers? There had to be more than one.
Perry glanced over at Nat who was eagerly devouring the book on etiquette, excited out of her mind for the ball, and with no idea how awful it was going to be.
Hmm.
Up until that exact moment, Perry had been going through the motions with the simple, unambitious goal of surviving the ball and then washing his hands of it afterward.
âHeather, can I talk to you?â Perry said, motioning away from where Nat was absorbed in her reading.
âSure,â Heather shrugged and followed him out of earshot.
âThe ball is gonna suck.â Perry said. âMy grandmaâs gonna make sure thereâs some kind of horrible thing that goes down and we have to deal with it. Her goal is probably to make me stronger through adversity or some crap like that.â
âOkay?â Heather said with a shrug.
âOur goal is to make sure Nat has a great time.â Perry said, motioning to the Tinker in the distance. âI donât give a shit about my grandmaâs plots and plans, but we are going to crush them so fucking hard that absolutely nothing goes wrong at the ball, and Natalie has a magical fantasy night sheâll never forget. Capiche?â
Heather gave a slow grin. âSounds like fun.â
They excused themselves, waved goodbye to Nat and flew over to grandmaâs clinic to wrench the master list out of the hands of the witch herself. It didnât take much persuasion to give up the goods.
âHow am I supposed to be a proper host without knowing whoâs going to be there?â Perry asked innocently, making doe eyes at his grandmother.
âIâm not arguing with you,â Grandma said, handing him a sheet of paper. âJust didnât think youâd take that much of an interest in it.â
âNonsense. I love managing people and making sure parties go as smoothly as possible.â Perry lied.
âUhuh,â Grandma said, watching him critically.
Perry gave her a jaunty salute then turned on his heel and retreated from the old hagâs clinic.
A few minutes later, Perry and Heather were poring over the list, with Perry manning the search engine while Heather called the names off.
The first dozen or two were the usual fare: Creatures (and people) who owed their survival to the Zauberer family and therefore were unlikely to cause a scene.
Buried in all that chaff was an unassuming name.
âNathanial J. Herzog.â
Perry entered the name and poured through the entries. âDoes it say where he lives or how old he is? That would narrow thingsâ¦Nevermind itâs Mass Driver.â
Perry pulled up Nathanialâs driverâs license, the spitting image of Mass Driver, sans domino mask.
Domino masks were a little pointless.
âYour grandmother invited Mass Driver to a ball? Is she freakinâ crazy?â Heather asked.
Perry leaned back in his chair and thought about it for a moment, chewing his lip.
âNah, Mass Driver is a red herring. Gramma probably invited him because she knows weâve had beef and she thinks Iâll waste time preparing to fight him or something. But Mass Driver doesnât do anything if heâs not getting paid for it, let alone pick a fight. Hell, if Gramma didnât pay him, heâs probably not even going to show up.â
Perry swiveled around in his chair and stared at Heather as an epiphany occurred to him.
âWhat?â Heather asked.
âHe doesnât do anything unless heâs getting paid for it.â Perry said.
âYeah?â Heather said.
âflip side: he can be relied on to do what heâs been paid to do.â
Heather cocked her head, eyes narrowed.
âNoâ¦â
âDudeâs already got an invite.â
***Later***
âSo let me get this straight.â Mass driver said, sipping his coffee.
âuhuh.â Perry said.
âYou cut off my hand and humiliated me by forcing me to tango with a facsimile of you for over an hourâ¦.
It was the bolero, but who was counting?
âAnd now you want to hire me to do security at a fake ball?â
âNah, itâs a real ball. You shouldâve gotten an invite within the last day or two.â Perry said.
âOh, I thought that was was spam mail,â Mass Driver stood up and walked over to the garbage can by the kitchen counter and pulled out an expensive-looking envelope with a cursive script âyouâre invitedâ on the front. It had an unknown stain from food scraps on the side.
Mass Driver opened the envelope and unfolded the letter, scanning the contents.
âHuh.â He grunted.
He glanced back up at Perry. âHow much are you offering?â
âI guess that depends on how much my grandmother offered you.â
âThatâs confidential information,â Mass Driver said, tucking the invite into his breast pocket.
âShe didnât offer you anything at all, did she?â Perry asked.
âLetâs start with five million.â Mass Driver said.
âHalf a million,â Perry said.
âFive.â
âIsnât negotiating done by meeting each other in the middle?â Perry asked.
âSometimes, when neither party has leverage. Now that I know this party is important to you, the price to chaperone is five million, or else I smash it up myself.â
âOh, thatâs how it is, then?â Perry asked.
âThatâs how it is.â
âAlright.â Perry said with a shrug. âIf five million is your price, then five million is your price. That begs the question, thoughâ¦How much are the tapes of you dancing with me worth to you?â
âEh?â Mass driver said.
âIâ¦letâs sayâ¦liberated the raw footage of our battle from the news stations and wiped the data from their computers.â Perry said. âIâm willing to sell it to you for the right price.â
âHalf a mil.â Mass driver said.
âEight.â Perry countered.
Mass Driver cocked a brow, a moment of tense silence hanging between them. Mass Driver knew his reputation was directly linked to how much he could charge for mercenary work, which meant keeping the tapes buried was worth that much. Or more.
âCall it an even trade?â He asked.
âSure,â Perry said, producing the original tapes and placing them on the wood between them. Mass Driver reached across the table and seized Perryâs hand in an iron grip.
âNice doing business with you, kid. See ya at the party,â he said, shaking Perryâs hand with the irresistible force of heavy machinery. âNow get outta my house.â
Perry nodded and headed out of Mass Driverâs apartment, stepping into the fresh air of the exterior-facing hallway, where Heather was waiting for him.
Perry heaved a giant breath and shuddered from head to toe. Mass Driver couldâve crushed him like he was made of soft-serve anytime he wanted. HP be damned.
It was like haggling with a one-ton bull.
âYou sure that was a good idea?â Heather asked.
âHope so. He wasnât even planning on attending, like I thought. Now I gotta hope Iâm right about him being a good mercenary, too. With any luck, weâve turned one of Grandmaâs liabilities into an asset.â
âWell, things will be interesting, at least.â Heather shrugged.
âWhoâs next on our list?â Perry asked, glancing over at the list of problem characters that theyâd drafted.
***Elijah Methas***
Invite ME to your grandsonâs debut ball, will you? Elijah thought, vitriol swirling in his veins as he designed his âplus oneâ: A battle golem capable of turning the ballroom into a blender of chunked meat.
Decades after we arrived on Earth, after you stole everything from meâ¦after your daughter snubbed my son, you invite ME!?
I suppose you think me toothless. Harmless! Youâll rue the day you forgot about Elijah Methas, Master Enchanter!
Seeing her son wearing his golem as armor and using Earth-based techniques for flight and attack had given Elija a jarring burst of inspiration. He was no longer stuck in the old country. In the old mindset.
How ironic that Paradox would inspire the new techniques that will be his undoing? Lasers, gunpowder, high explosives, oh my!
Even if his golem, dubbed âLonaâ, failed to kill Paradox, the sheer destruction it wreaked would be the end of Paradoxâs career as a royal, and a black eye to Marigold Zauberer, The master of evil in the guise of an old woman.
Just a bit more testing and adjustments, and Lona will be ready to fulfill her lifeâs goal.
The golem looked like his daughter had when she was young, and no one would question it too hard if his âplus oneâ was his granddaughter. After all, Elijah Methas had tried to wed his son to Claudette. Why wouldnât he try again with this young man?
It was the perfect disguise. The fake soul was a looped recording of a young woman reading a mindless romance novel, but it only needed to fool Marigold long enough to get close to her grandson.
Then, yes, thenâ¦Elijah would have his revenge. He would end the Zauberer line then and there, and regardless of what came after, Elijah would be content in the knowledge that he had stopped the spread of their blight upon Earth!
BOOOM!
Elijah was tossed halfway across the room as the side wall of his arcane laboratory was reduced to concussive shrapnel. The protective amulet around his neck grew hot against his chest.
Elijah shoved himself to his feet, but what he saw stopped his heart.
Standing in the hole in the wall was a black, armored figure, like the shadow of death himself.
âGood evening, Mrâ¦Methas.â The suit of armor said, with an unnaturally deep voice, striding forward as it referred to a clipboard with a sheet of paper filled with names. âYouâve been randomly selected for a preliminary ball attendee screening.â
The suit strode forward, crushing his steel golem underfoot like it was made of soft clay. It flipped to another sheet of paper on the clipboard, and produced a pen from its wrist.
âLetâs start with question one: Do you have any plans to make trouble at Paradoxâs debut ball?â
Elijah shook his head violently.
âUh-uh, nope, not me, Iâm perfectly happy with the Zauberer family. They saved us all, and all that.â
âIt says here Marigold took your lifeâs savings and all your business assets in exchange for her daughterâs hand in marriage to your son, and when the marriage fell through, she refused to return the money.â
âAncient history,â Elijah said hastily. âIâve moved on since then.â
âGood, good,â Paradox said, before glancing down at the squished murder machine under his feet. The blades and gun barrels had popped out of the golemâs crushed chest, revealing its murderous intentions.
âOh my, I seem to have accidentally crushed your toy.â
âItâs fiiine,â Elijah wheezed.