A blue lamp hummed.
The lamp was actually a tiny glass case, containing bonded fairy. The fairy was
bonded to the lamp for sixty-six and a half years, at which time it would be
paid in magic, and then allowed to leave. This was what the humans laughably
referred to as 'the contract', for it was a contract that the fairy had no
choice in. Fae may be immortal, but they live their lives far quicker than their
human counterparts, and by consequence time travels slower for them. No fae ever
died in a lamp, but all became very, very bored.
This particular lamp stood in a cobbled street in the city or Recnamorken.
Recnamorken was a massive industrial complex, with tall mage-towers that
literally scraped the skies, and riverfront factories that seemed to produce
nothing but black, thick, smog.
The fae within this lamp went by the name of Iltheia. She wasn't sure how long
she had been in her tiny glass prison, for she was only young, but she knew it
was autumn.
Autumn. She'd be weaving spells of protection, flitting between fallen leaves
back in her forests; perhaps she'd even have a mate.
She sighed, and tucked her head between her knees. She found it better not to
think about what she would be doing had she not been caught.
She knew from what she had heard on the streets below her that the city had been
besieged. The besieging army had left when their food to run short, but they
prevented food from entering the city, and burnt all of the farmsteads that
normally supplied those within. Consequently, the cost of food had gone up
exponentially.
She sighed again. It wouldn't be so bad if she could simply go to sleep, to try
and sleep off the boredom, but then she wouldn't be able to do this glow spell
that was, presently, her sole function in life. She couldn't stop – spells were
weaved into her prison to ensure that should she not cast glow during the hours
of darkness, or should she attempt to cast any other spell, she would suffer
excruciating pain through harm spells.
She looked down out of her blue prison. A group of thugs had congregated a short
distance below. At least there was one benefit of being in this lamp: the thugs
dared not try to hurt her, for the harms spells could be projected outwards as
well as inward, and these lamps were tapped in to a citywide grid of ley lines,
meaning they could kill a rhinoceros stone dead at a hundred yards.
In any case, the attention of the thugs seemed to be directed elsewhere. Looking
down the street she saw their focus: a woman clad in the green rags of a
laundrette in one of the mages' towers. She wouldn't have much, but it would be
at least enough to buy a decent meal.
Two more thugs stepped out of the shadows behind her, wielding clubs and broken
bottles, while a particularly huge thug in front of her pulled a knife. The
woman pulled back in despair, and then pulled out a purse. The fairy sighed once
more. These humans were so violent, preying on each other in times of need
rather than dealing with the real problem.
But then something odd happened.
A thread, about as thick as the Iltheia's head, struck the blade of the knife.
It looked almost like twisted strands of spider silk. Then, the knife was jerked
out of the thug's hand, and pulled into an alleyway leading off the main street.
Mugger and mugged both looked equally fearfully into the alleyway, wondering
what may be shuffling in the darkness.
Then the knife came back at high speed and handle first, striking the big thug
on the nose. He staggered back a few steps, and collapsed in the middle of the
street, a trickle of blood from his broken nose.
Most of the thugs in front of the woman bolted, but the two behind were slow to
act.
Then, a web line struck the metal housing above Iltheia's glass prison, and a
black shape swung on it from the shadows. It spun around the lamp, Iltheia
desperately trying to follow it, and finally stopped on the side that faced the
street.
Itheia pushed her nose against the glass and tried to get a good look, lapsing
in concentration for a second. The lamp dimmed slightly, and she had to shut her
eyes for a second to boost the spell, but when she opened her eyes again they
widened with incredulity.
What she saw was a man, swathed in black cloth, with a bronze breastplate that
had a spider motif on it. On his wrists he wore what appeared at first glance to
be large bronze bracers. But in fact they were complex contraptions, consisting
of cogs and with a pale blue light emanating from the underside.
But more incredible than the costume the he wore was the fact that this man was
somehow sticking to the lamp post, not gripping, but merely touching with his
feet and the fingertips with one hand. He leant outwards, and scanned with his
eyes across the street. The two thugs behind the woman had had less of a start
than the others, and were only a short distance down the street when the man
touched the centre of his palm with the middle finger and ring finger of his
left hand. A web line arched to the opposite side of the street, attached to the
eave of a house, and he swung. Mid way through the swing, another web line
arched out another house on the opposite side, and he arched through the air.
Fascinated by these proceedings, Itheia leapt to the side of her prison that
faced the street. Part of the housing obscured her vision, but she managed to
see around.
The man in black leapt towards a nearby flagpole that jutted out into the
street, and fired two of his web lines downward, grabbing the man by each
shoulder. Leaping over the flagpole, he dropped to the ground, pulling the thug
up ward. His head had a painful meeting with the flagpole, and then a far more
painful meeting with the ground when the man released the web lines.
He then turned his attention to the other thug, who had stopped momentarily to
see his friends' demise. He bolted once again, but he was nowhere near fast
enough to outrun the webslinger. The man in black dropped behind the thug, and
planted a web line into the small of his back. Pulling him backwards, he tripped
the thug up. He then stood and fired some webbing that opened out, covering the
thugs hands and mouth, and attaching him to the ground.
"I'd suggest you breathe through your nose," he said, "because those webs taste
horrible."
He got back to the woman, who stood in stunned amazement.
"Wh-who are you?"
"Just think of me as your friendly neighbourhood Spider-man."
"Th-thankyou… Spiderman…" She said, as she turned away.
"Umm… I accept donation… please?" but she was gone. Spider-man sighed. "Well she
could've at least remembered the hyphen" he said, as he swung off into the
night.
A… Hero? Itheia thought to herself as she stood staring after the man in
black.
Many, many miles away, atop a huge mage tower, a man stood in red robes over a
crystal ball. From here he could see what every fae across the city saw, but he
was concentrating on the observations of just one fae. He was worried one of his
experiments would get out sooner or later, but not like this.
