Chapter 1 Aurelie #2

Placing her kettle on a small gas stove she’d fashioned for herself—the first and last time Aurelie risked conjuring a fire demon—she prepared herself a pot of coffee and waited for it to boil while she tidied up.

Aurelie had spent the last eleven years of her life at the university, and what had once been a dreary and forgotten classroom—back before the “new” annex had been built and classes were relocated aboveground, so students could see the sunlight every now and again—had become her haven when Uncle Leo took her in.

At first, the room had hardly been habitable, and Uncle Leo hadn’t understood why Aurelie needed more than her perfectly nice bedroom in his cottage.

“It’s dingy,” he’d said, sniffing. “With a subtle hint of mildew.”

But her persistence had won him over, and she’d eventually acquired the discarded library sofa, a desk from another abandoned

classroom, and a wardrobe procured from a consignment sale held by a retiring professor. Most importantly, Aurelie had begun

to collect items for her laboratory.

Uncle Leo didn’t know about Aurelie’s inventing. As far as he was concerned, the wardrobe was filled with her spare dresses,

shoes, and underthings, rather than beakers, vials, and experiments at various stages of completion. The desk, he no doubt

assumed, was where Aurelie wrote correspondence or applied cosmetics, and the sofa . . . well, the sofa was for sitting, to

be fair. But it made a surprisingly comfortable bed. Aurelie slept in this room most nights now that she was eighteen.

She poured her coffee into a chipped porcelain bowl and sat at her desk, alternating between inhaling the warm, roasty scent

and blowing steam off the surface. Mephisto squeaked from the floor, its claws tangling in her skirt. “Oh dear, is it dinnertime

already?”

After feeding it another cockroach, followed by a quick sweep of the few seeds Mephisto left in its wake, she took a sip of her rapidly cooling coffee and settled down again at her desk, where the Helping Hand waited for her.

Despite her excitement, a small worm of apprehension wriggled in her gut. She didn’t dread demons the way most Wisterians

did—yes, demons could kill people, but those were the sorts of large demons that no one saw much anymore; any that did arise

were taken care of by the Iron Guard—but she also didn’t like killing them. Mephisto was a demon, after all, and it had never

done anything worse than nip her toes or leave seed droppings on her pillow. But even the most benign demons couldn’t be allowed

to escape. Not if Aurelie wanted to keep inventing.

Perching her magnifying glasses on her nose, she peered down at the fiddly little wire she needed to bend just so in order

to fit it into its mooring. One . . . final . . . twist.

“There!” she exclaimed, causing the demon to look up mid-cockroach, a spiny leg dangling from the corner of its mouth. “It’s

ready, Mephisto. Let’s see how it works!”

Removing her glasses, Aurelie pulled the trigger on the device, causing the pincer at the end to open and close. She squealed

with delight and reached for one of the books still sitting on her bed from this morning. It took a few tries to get the angle

correct, but with a little finesse, the Helping Hand worked like a charm. She pressed the button next to her thumb and the

fishing line inside spooled inward, bringing the telescoping arm in with it. And there it was, a book in her lap without her

having to move from her desk.

Aurelie hardly had time to enjoy the fruits of her labor before there was a slight shimmer in the air beside her, followed by the smell of brimstone and smoke.

A second later, the demon was upon her.

The rapid appearance of the demon caught Aurelie off guard. Usually it was at least a minute before they came from whatever

dimension they originated in, and it was only by luck that her iron dagger was close at hand now.

The demon was larger than she’d anticipated, with seven long arms ending in crablike pincers. Those, she’d been expecting,

though perhaps not quite so many; demons always took a form related to the invention they sprang from. It was the fact that

it went straight for her books that really threw Aurelie, cramming two into its fang-filled maw before she had even drawn

her blade.

Aurelie leapt up, thrusting her chair at the demon and knocking it off-balance to draw its attention to her. As she knew it

would, the demon abandoned the books in search of a hot-blooded meal, forcing her to dodge left and right to avoid its deadly

pincers. Demons ate whatever living thing they could get their claws on, and some had been known to possess venom strong enough

to paralyze or kill their prey.

Diminutive though it was, Mephisto darted between the demon’s pincers, confusing it long enough that Aurelie was able to grab

the pot of coffee. She flung it at the demon while simultaneously slicing off an arm with her dagger, a claw only millimeters

from her nose. Within seconds, the demon began to smoke and crackle, before bursting into green flames that burned out so

quickly it was almost as if the creature had never been. All that was left behind were the confetti-like ribbons of pages

the demon hadn’t yet consumed. That, and her beautiful, wasted coffee.

Aurelie inhaled shakily and dusted off her shoulders, making sure she still had all her appendages.

Mephisto, too, seemed unharmed, and she patted its long, bristly tail in thanks.

With a sigh, she bent down to retrieve what remained of one of the books.

It was an old biology textbook that she would very much have liked to read, and now she’d have to reimburse the library for it.

As Mephisto returned to its unfinished meal, Aurelie picked up the Helping Hand and used it to grasp a glass of water on the

side table that served as a nightstand. She drank it all in one long gulp, tidied her hair in the mirror, and mopped up the

remaining mess. She was already going to be late for dinner, and as she calculated the cost for two old textbooks—their price

inflated, of course, because no new books were being written—she wondered for the first time if this experiment had been worth

it.

“Of course it is,” she whispered to herself as she locked the door behind her. She knew better than anyone that progress was

not a straight path; it featured all the topography of an uncharted world, and all the promise.

And it required a person like Aurelie to brave it.

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