Sidestory: Hexblades
Ideworld Chronicles: Alexa May [art magic, urban fantasy, cultivation, slice of life]
They donât usually let warlocks into the Hexblades. Too many questions about divided loyaltiesâGuild needs versus patron demands. And honestly? Fair enough. There is a potential conflict there. My patronâs an angelânever asked me for anything, not onceâbut that doesnât mean itâll stay that way forever. Angels donât operate on our timeline. Theyâve got eternity. What would someone like me matter to a being like that?
Still, the power Pravuil gave meâGodâs own scribe, keeper of realityâs recordsâit was good enough to get me through the door. Barely. They watch me like a hawk, judging every mission I take. One misstep, and theyâll say itâs my patron pulling the strings. Best-case scenario? I get discharged. Worst case? They end me. Not a lot of room for error. Doesnât exactly inspire trust. But they havenât kicked me out yet. So maybe, just maybe, Iâll earn their confidence one day.
But letâs start with the basics. Iâm Dominic Corsetti. Warlock. Bound to Pravuil. That gives me the ability to tap into the undercurrent of fate itselfâto pull the threads and read the echoes of lives long gone. Iâm an initiate in Squad Seven, New York Cityâs Hexblades division. My Spellguard is Marek Podolskiâtough guy, doesnât smile much. Iâm paired up with two other wardens: Catherine OâHaara and Gavier Constance. Together, weâve been ordered by the Archwarden to track down and contain someone weâve tagged only as the Unraveler.
Why the name? Because he turned twenty yakuza gangsters into a pile of bloody streamers. Skin, bone, muscleâribbons. Seers across the city felt the backlash ripple through reality itself. It was that violent.
Our investigators were practically salivating over the scene. Me? I nearly threw up. Who the hell builds a power around unraveling people like theyâre some bad knitting job?
Seers and analysts agreed: we had a small window. The Domainâthe space where magic like his comes fromâwas reeling from the outburst. Heâs cut off or weakened. This was the time to move. Thatâs how I ended up here, kneeling in the dust and stringy remains of someone who, hours ago, was just trying to earn his keep in the mob.
âPravuil,â I whispered. âShow me the life.â
I reached outânot with my hand, but with the power my patron placed inside me. A light shimmered down from the Ideworld, threading into the glow rising from my own soul. And just like that, I was him. I saw everything. Every decision. Every sin.
I hated most of what I saw. Cruelty without remorse. Violence like it was routine. But I forced myself to focus on the endâon the moment it all shifted.
The person that did all of this. Heâd messed up. Disobeyed an order. And in their world, that meant cutting off your pinky at the bone. Ritual shame. Commitment to the gang. He did it, tooâplaced the severed finger on a ceremonial plate. Then, without warning, everything went white. A pulse of searing light swallowed the room, and when it faded, a man stood at the center of it, wrapped in a violet haze.
The elderâwho ran the crewâstepped forward, calm, placing a hand on the manâs shoulder. Probably to ask if he was alright.
Wrong move.
The elder began to come apartâskin, muscle, bone peeling into soft, bloody threads that slumped to the floor. Panic erupted. Knives were drawn. Swords swung. But nothing worked. Everything that touched him disintegrated. Metal. Flesh. Will.
The Unraveler didnât hold back. He fought like a wrathful god. Kicking. Punching. Raging. And every time he landed a blow, someone dissolved. Just like that. Even the man whose memories I was holding nowâgone in seconds.
âWarlock,â came Spellguard Podolskiâs voice, cutting through the quiet, a warning and a sneer all wrapped in one. Just loud enough for the rest of the squad to hear, so theyâd remember exactly what I was. âDid you get anything?â
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I stood up, wiping blood and dust off my glove. âSame as the last three. But this one⦠he knew the Unraveler. Knew him well.â
I looked up and met their eyes.
âHis nameâs Shiroi Akira. And I know where he lives.â
--
Hexblades arenât just your everyday enforcersâweâre the Guildâs elite. We are like the magical equivalent of the FBI. There arenât many of us, which is why weâre deployed nationwide. We are trained to wield pure Authority, to shape it, control it, make it ours. And yeah, weâre expectedâno, requiredâto develop our Domains too. We face the kind of threats that burn towns down or bend reality sideways, and we face them every damn week.
See, regular magesâeven the ones whoâve just awakened their soulcoreâare already borderline bulletproof. Guns? They only work if youâre up close and personal. Real close. Blades and blunt force still have some effect, sure, but only if you hit hard enough. Unless, of course, the weapon itself is infused with Authorityâthen itâs a different story entirely. Weâre trained to do just that.
Learning how to extend the shadowlight of your Authority from your body into a weapon takes time, but itâs doable. Bullets, though? Infusing something that leaves your aura in a blinkâthatâs a whole other beast. Thatâs why most magical combat is still close-quarters. Blades, fists, stavesâhence the name: Hexblades.
We rolled up to Akiraâs apartment dressed like a standard SWAT teamâblack armor, gear tight, nothing fancy. We could hear movement inside. Someone was definitely home. Spellguard Podolski took point. He came from a long line of Polish carpenters, until one of them developed a Wood Domain. Since then, every generationâs carried that torch. Marek touched the doorâit was solid oakâand in seconds, it started to twist and wrap around his arm, crawling along his armor. The whole door became part of him, part of his suit. Seamless.
Then he moved.
Gun raised, eyes locked ahead, Podolski charged through what used to be the door. The rest of us filed in behind. The apartment was spacious and quiet, styled in that clean Japanese minimalism. Not a lot of furniture. Just a few ornate pieces scattered around. What caught my eye, though, was all the fabricâpiles of it, scattered across the room. And in the corner? A sewing machine. For a supposed Yakuza butcher, that was⦠unexpected.
Weâd made no noise going in. The transformation of the door was silent, our steps even quieter. So when the man walked in and saw us, the surprise on his face was genuine.
Long black hair flowed behind him. A short, neat goatee. He was builtâsolid, strongâand unmistakably the man we were hunting.
âI confirmâthis is the target,â I said into comms.
Podolski didnât wait. One shotâthunder in a metal boxâand the bullet hit Akira square in the chest. He slammed to the floor, knocked out cold from the impact. He didnât dieâhis Authority mustâve absorbed the worst of itâbut he wasnât getting up anytime soon.
Catherine moved in fast. She didnât wait for orders; none of us needed them at this point. We all knew the rhythm. She knelt beside Akira and extended a hand toward his forehead, careful not to touch him. She knew betterâthanks to my warning. But she didnât need contact. Her Authority could reach inside a person without ever laying a finger.
Before she was a Hexblade, Catherine was a psychologist. A damn good one. Her Domain didnât come from trauma or magic passed downâit came from passion. Obsession, even. The kind that burns into something real. Sourcerers like her donât need Patrons. They are the source of their own power.
She tapped into his mind, bent his will gently, made him stand and place his hands behind his back. She cuffed himâcarefully, reverentlyâand when the cuffs held, when they didnât melt or unravel, we knew the backlash from his Domain outburst was still suppressing him.
We moved fast. Catherine had him under her control, and we escorted him to the armored transport parked out front. Standard police issue. Me and Catherine sat in the back with the prisoner, eyes sharp, nerves tighter than guitar strings. She kept him calm. Kept him quiet.
We were crossing the bridge out of the borough when I heard it. That voice. The one I hadnât heard since the day I signed my soul away.
[Kill her. Let him loose.]
No. No, not now. Why now?
But that was the deal, wasnât it? You donât question your Patron. Not when they call on you. Not when they command you. Thatâs the price of powerâtheir will overrides your own.
Catherine was still focused on Akira, calm as ever. She didnât see me move. I stood up, pulled the Authority-coated knife from my belt, and drove it into her left eye. Quick. Clean. She dropped instantly, her body hitting the metal floor with a sickening thud.
Gavier, driving up front, hit the brakes hard. He knew something was wrong.
I scrambled to Catherineâs body, fingers shaking as I searched for the cuff keys. Found them. Unlocked Akira before I could even think.
He stirredâeyes fluttered openâand reached out.
His hand touched my chest.