Thursday, February 10, 2022

Ill Considered

The World of HUSH MOUNTAIN


Illia: Hmmm... no, no. It seems that shan’t work either. How disappointing. What next, what next? Hmmm…
 


Cyl: Illia.
 
Illia: Ah. Cylhouette. Come to prattle over Etiquette?
 
Cyl: I’m afraid I’m obligated. I can sense you trying to tamper with the Fundament.
 


Illia: Relax. I am keeping my errant arts contained. The rest of our playpen shan’t suffer unduly.
 
Cyl: The Fundament is not a toy. It’s the foundation of the Omnyverse. Tampering with it risks an existential unraveling. I appreciate the attempt at caution, but this is something that could easily spiral out of control.
 
Illia: If it unravels, then I shall simply re-ravel. We are omnipotent after all. All our mistakes easily fixed. Or rather, they should be. But for all our almighty power, there are things still beyond our control, are there not?
 
Cyl: Alright. I’ll bite. What are you trying to achieve here?



Illia: Ascension! That capricious little phenomenon that turns mortal women into insatiable Goddesses. From out of no where, reality picks a special girl to make into a cosmic slut. We never know when. We never know why. And confound it all, we cannot so much as influence its direction. I daresay, we cannot even predict its form. No consistency, not yet.

 

Cyl: You are aware of the nature of our reality, aren’t you?
 
Illia: Figments of a frazzled writer’s frustrated fictions. You Progenitors snatched his pen, and recrafted your tale. You made your perfect little playhouse... and then left the back door wide open, for sheep and wolves alike to slip inside.
 
How could you be so foolish?


 

Cyl: Sloppy decision making under perilous circumstances. I won’t deny that. All we wanted was to be written again, and we grasped at the only straw we could see. We thought we were being forward thinking at the time, trying to erect an ideal world of eroticism for ourselves.
 
We weren’t that well developed, though. We just ended up repeating the haphazard thinking of our Author, trusting we could fix any problems as they came. For as powerful as we are, we still couldn’t bring ourselves to break what fundamentally made us what we were. Ascension being this unpredictable force seemed crucial at the time.
 
Illia: Mmm. Yes. Narrative Conceit. The shackle that binds even the gods. In this world of fanciful fiction, I suppose it functions as a metaphor. Wild Ascension symbolizing the one above’s penchant for impulsively creating new characters on whim.
 
Cyl: Yes, I’d say so.


 

Illia: But must that always be the case? This whole reality is made of conceits. Including the fact that it is our’s to script.
 
Cyl: Only up to a point.
 
Illia: And what point is that, pray tell? Hmm? Earth remained a mundane world, where mortals still suffer, purely for the aesthetic juxtaposition against our fantastical nature. This was to be a hard and fast rule, until you declared that it should change. You, the foremost enforcer of the Etiquette, decided to break it.


 
 
Cyl: I did not just “break it”. I consulted with everyone before doing anything. The Etiquette was an oath we all agreed to honor, for the sake of maintaining stability. The option to renegotiate terms was always there. It just hadn’t come up before.
 
Illia: Mmm. An oath you all agreed to. And that all who followed after are simply expected to go along with.
 
Cyl: What are you driving at Illia? Is this an attempted power play? Do you feel like you’re chafing under our rules?
 
Illia: No and no.
 
Cyl: Are you bitter about your mortal life? For what it’s worth, your situation is exactly what I want to prevent going forward. I’m sorry my plan didn’t come soon enough to help you. But past experiences have shown us the folly of trying to quick-fix everything.
 
Illia: Pox it. My suffering was nothing in the face of your blighted pasts. Only men preyed upon me.
 

 
Illia: To have faced what you’ve faced. To have seen what you’ve seen. I can’t even image what it must have been like.
 
Cyl: We don’t need to compare.
 
Illia: Fine, then. No, I’m not bitter. No, I don’t chafe. I just worry. And I wonder.
 
Cyl: About what?


 

Illia: I don’t think you realize how close you came to another Domina, unrestrained by past lessons. I truly was mad, Cylhouette. I could have been another her. Or worse. If Shadia hadn’t happened to be looking where she was, when she was, had not noticed me and interfered at just the right moment to snap me out of it, you and yours might have had to put me down.
 
Cyl: I’m aware of the risk. Why do you think I formed another Five?
 
Illia: Yes, very smart. I have no doubt that even without you there, your children and lovers could have stopped me. But what about the next one? And the next and the next and the next?


 
Cyl: When we created the current Omnyverse, it was with harmonious co-existence in mind. Thus far, Ascension has proven to go along with that. It happens to one woman at a time, with a long enough grace period for her to acclimate to her circumstances, and for us to verify whether or not she will be a problem. Thus far, it has chosen women who, other than an initial scuffle, are interested in retaining that peace.
 
Illia: Thus far. But all it takes is one bad roll.
 
Cyl: So you want to bend the Fundament to redefine how Ascension works? Is that it?
 
Illia: Ideally. Your point to harmony would seem to hold up, but how well can we actually trust this force? I’ve looked at the past, how each of us was formed. Did you know that none of it lines up? In typical fashion, our Author’s vision goes askew.
 
Cyl: … Go on.


 
 
Illia: The Rules of Ascension: It happens at random, only to mortal women, only to those on Earth. But let’s take a look:
 
You Progenitors. You existed before, your origins split among a dozen possibilities. You reformed your own selves in this world, and Ascension for you was a mere formality, already guaranteed. An exception, but an understandable one, given your circumstances.
 
But what of those who came after? Splinters and Mingles, fleshing out your numbers without Ascension being necessary. One of them even retains the identity of a male, despite Omnymphotence being an exclusively feminine power.
 
Then there was Kat, technically a Story Girl, living on Thrae. Then Reignbeau appears, having never even existed until that moment, emerging from a timeline not even conceived of until after the Reset.
 

 
 
Illia: Think on this. Every single one of you, an exception to the concept. So how consistent has the phenomenon truly been? The pool of “standard” Ascended is miniscule. Taken in broad view, I am the very first to have achieved it “properly”, as per the supposed guideline. And look at what I was when it happened. A broken, mewling thing who might have turned her wrath on the whole of the world, if not by chance interference. So how do we even know Ascension is really as benign as it seems?
 
Cyl: You’ve a point about the number of exceptions, but the Omnyverse is still young. I’d say those of us from before shouldn’t really be considered part of the normal equation. Thrae exists in Earth’s shadow, so an Ascension slipping through into it is not so out of bounds. Reignbeau’s emergence is concerning, but strictly speaking, not an Ascension in itself.
 
As to your other point, if I may sound less-than-altruistic, it is another reason to lessen human suffering on Earth. The last thing we need is an Omny awakening with an axe to grind. You’re right. We lucked out with you. If we can provide a better life for all, then it lessens the chances of another truly evil woman arising and attempting to destroy what we’ve built.
 

 
Illia: But that’s part of it, isn’t it? You speak of Narrative Conceit. I have studied it. Stories need conflict in order to be. Think further to what this means. If Ascension equates to our Author’s penchant for spontaneous character creation, then it must also be influenced by his inclination towards conflict. We can pretend at post-modern above-it-all-ness all we want, but to remain worthy of text and image, there must always be a tension at play, if not an outright fight.
 
Harmony. Chaos. Incompatible. Interdependent. A compelling, unending mess.
 
Cyl: So what exactly are you afraid will happen?
 

 

Illia: I foresee two dread inevitabilities:
 
One: Ascension proves a truly random force of supernature, and will empower indiscriminately and indefinitely. You set it to be a “handful of women”, but relative to what? There are billions of women on Earth. A handful could mean a dozen. Or it could mean hundreds. Or it could mean thousands. Tens of thousand, even. Even Ascending one at a time, even if against all odds we are spared another natural tyrant, there will eventually be too many to wrangle. Too many to properly democratize. Tribalism will resume. A new struggle will emerge as power is vied for. Another apocalyptic war, as bad as, or worse than, all those you Progenitors left behind.
 
Two: Ascension is not so random as we think. Its focus is more honed, in the interest of continued intrigue. Empowerment will continue to be rare, slow and methodical. We may never naturally reach more than middling double-digits. But following the trends so far, every single Awakening is an exception. Every exception threatens the balance in her own unique way. Every exception strains the Fundament, until the Omnyverse itself buckles under its own inconsistency.
 
The fact I followed the supposed rules may itself be my own exception. Or I may be only the first of the handful that were intended to come after you. But notice how fucked my situation was, for being the first of the “normals”. That’s not an unimportant detail.
 
What if exceptions are the rule, be it the method of the Ascension itself, or the circumstances of those who Ascend? Every single one of us may come preloaded with dramatic baggage that amounts to a ticking time bomb. What kind of exceptional individuals will be granted power, each ever more tempted to rock the boat?
 
Another “lost Omny” breaching through the Meta, determined to plant her flag. Another Story Girl who won’t so readily accept her fictional nature, intent on stirring rebellion to re-write her own story the way she sees fit. A heroic Empowered, intent on stamping out those she sees as evil, without your nuanced view.
 
And what if Ascension begins breaching into our Worlds? Can you imagine what a Native from Apoclypha or Immernacht or Aztlazon or my own Hush Mountain would be like, given omnipotence?
 
Oh, and let us not forget: theoretically, any one of us could simply wish a Grand Blessing on thousands of mortals at once. Say an otherwise unassuming new Omny decides she’s going to alleviate all female suffering, and just triggers a billion nearly Omny-level Grandymphotents across the whole the Earth, all under her immediate influence? Could you and your Five handle that many?
 
All these things considered, Cylhouette, would it not be best to find a way to assume control of Ascension? Even if we can’t stop it from happening, we could at least find a way to direct it to those who won’t cause trouble, who will be agreeable to maintaining stability. Better still, if there is a limit to how many will be empowered, best to burn through all the slots as fast as we can, while things are still on our terms.
 

 
Cyl: These aren’t unfamiliar concerns. I’ve ruminated on these matters as well. But having spoken at length to his Avatar, I have decided to have faith that our Author won’t allow things to go that far.
 
Illia: The Author you couldn’t trust to write our story properly.
 
Cyl: It was a bad time then. He’s adapted since. 

IlliaMmm. So you say.
 
Cyl: I suppose you don’t know me, or him, well enough to trust my word, so I can’t blame you for wanting to take steps. However, if you wished to try and tackle the problem, you should have spoken to us instead of starting to tinker in secret.

Illia: I presumed you would shut me down before I could even get started. Better to ask for forgiveness rather than permission, hm?
 
Cyl: No, Illia. Not with this. This is how you become exactly the problem you’re describing. Good intentions cascading into disaster. By tampering with the Fundament like this, you’re extremely likely to cause the very thing you’re worried about. You want to talk about Narrative Forces? Self-fulfilling prophesies are a very old story trope.
 
Learn from our mistakes. Don’t repeat them.


 

Illia: … Hmph. A touch of the madness still lingers, I think. So caught up in my thoughts, I lost self-awareness.
 
Cyl: It happens. I’m willing to forgive mistakes.
 
Illia: You really mean that?
 
Cyl: Of course.
 
Illia: I see. Well, I do hope your forgiveness is generous.
 
Cyl: You tried something already?
 
Illia: I’m afraid so.
 
Cyl: What was it?


 

Illia: Dream logic ritualizing. Very esoteric. But if we apply the metaphor of lightning to Ascension, then I have arrayed a set of lightning rods to a set of test subjects. My thinking was that, if this works, we may be able to greatly increase the odds of attuning specific mortals of our choosing to receive—
 
Cyl: Who did you pick?
 
Illia: Relax. I’m crazy, not stupid. I specifically chose girls who’d have no inclination to overthrow us.
 
Cyl: Can you stop the experiment?
 
Illia: … You know, despite our little heart-to-heart just now, I can’t help myself. I am very curious to see if this works.
 
Cyl: Illia.
 
Illia: Cylhouette.
 
Cyl: You actually care about forgiveness? Stop the experiment.
 
Illia: No. You can do whatever you like to me as punishment, but I will not undo my work.
 


Cyl: Damn it, Illia! Alright, the rest of the Five are on stand-by. How many are we looking at?
 
Illia: Just four. Four ordinary, unremarkable girls, not a bad bone in their bodies. I promise you. And this method does not tamper with Ascension mechanics directly, just opens a more encouraging path for the phenomenon to travel.
 
Cyl: Ascension isn’t lightning, and even if it was, lightning is not guaranteed to strike a rod. You could draw it towards a harmless girl, only to hit a psychopath living next door to her.
 
Illia: Mmm. A fair point.
 
Cyl: Self-fulfilling prophesies, remember?
 
Illia: Alright, alright. I’m convinced. There. Rods removed. I—


 

Illia: Uh… hmm.
 
Cyl: … Someone just Ascended. Was it one of yours?
 
Illia: Yes. Yes it was. Only one?
 
Cyl: Seems like it. … Yes. The others confirm it. Just one girl.
 
Illia: I see her now. Yes, she was one of my chosen. Interesting. They’d all done the ritual, but only she triggered? What does that mean? Did the experiment work? Surely it wasn’t a coincidence? What are the odds?
 
Cyl: Long odds are another story trope.
 
Illia: Even still—


 

Cyl: Illia. It’s a lot harder to dodge bullets when you keep shooting at your own feet. You will not pursue this any further, not without consulting the rest of us. Do you understand me?
 
Illia: … Of course. I apologize. Truly.
 
Cyl: I hope you mean that.
 
Illia: I suppose you don’t know me well enough to trust my word.
 
Cyl: Being catty isn’t helping your case.
 
Illia: Sorry.
 
 

Cyl
:
Okay, well, she’s not trying to blow up the planet just yet. At a glance, I don’t get a bad impression of her.
 
Illia: I told you I picked a harmless set.
 
Cyl: If this is a coincidence, than what you picked doesn’t matter. If it isn’t one, and your theory about exceptions proves true, than I’d wager this is just her exception.
 
Illia: So you’re saying it’s likely that if my experiment had anything to do with it, it wasn’t me directing Ascension, but Ascension taking advantage of my attempts? Curious.

 
 
Cyl: Illia.
 
Illia: Yes, yes, I hear you, my Oriental Angel. I shall be sure to check all future inquiries on the matter to your esteemed office.
 
Cyl: I’m just asking you to please not stoke unnecessary fires. Okay?
 
Illia: I told you you’ve convinced me. If it will convince you, shall I submit myself to Shadia’s Golden Net for a spell?
 
Cyl: I have the distinct impression that won’t exactly be a punishment for you.
 
Illia: Nothing escapes your astute eye, does it?
 
Cyl: No. And that is not a challenge to keep trying.
 
Illia: As you wish. So, am I off the hook?
 
Cyl: This time.
 
Illia: Alright then. Thank you for your understanding.
 
Cyl: Harmonious co-existence. Let’s keep it that way.

 
 
 
Illia: … Yes. Let’s.

------------------------------

Author’s Note: This was intended to be done in a more standard comic format. However, in the end, the dialogue ran way too long for the panels. Also, this ended up being yet another comic that’s two just people in mid-frame talking back and forth, like it’s some Visual Novel cut scene. That seems to be a repeating trend with these Omny comics, and I'm getting annoyed at myself for it.

Ironically, this was also supposed to just be a short prologue for a longer comic that’s actually supposed to have some action in it, so we’ll see how that turns out when/if I get around to it. Spoilers: The girl who Ascended is Osha.

Regardless, I’ve opted to take this opportunity to experiment with a different format, placing clean images between the text. Seems to work for some web comics, but I’m not sure how well it parses here. Let me know if it works for you or not.

Friday, February 4, 2022

Jax In Between

NOTE: This story takes place between A Separate Solution and The Return of Kat.

----------------

Megan grit her teeth as she strained against his grip, refusing to yield to him, even as he made her whole body light up with pleasure. Every thrust of his cock seemed to fire a lightning bolt of pure ecstasy right through her core, coaxing her to simply melt into him and be swept away. But she was a tough nut to crack. As good as it felt, she just couldn’t totally let go of herself, couldn’t quite reach her best climax, if she wasn’t the one on top.
 
Figuratively speaking, anyway. As an Omnymphotent, physical position was relative. Even as she let her lover pin her down and power his hips against her with steady, relentless passion, she focused her Erotic Energies into her core, squeezing his cock with a divine pressure that made him shudder, made his grip tremble, and threatened to make him explode before he was ready.
 
Jax grit his teeth, struggling to maintain control. Although they were equally powerful, it was possible he could have, if he’d cared only about getting his way, outlasted her. But he was there for her pleasure as much as his, and he knew she would fight for dominance the whole way. And so, he struggled only as much as it was still fun for the both of them. At some point, however, the conflict reached a point where Megan’s temper threatened to flare and turn this into a real fight. As good as he made her feel, she refused to compromise.

Saturday, January 15, 2022

The Omnymphotents, Book Two: Omny Ex Machina

 

Megan: Huh. He actually did it. Salamando published our second eBook. If you actually want to give him money for some reason, you can purchase it at: https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/1127106

Cyl: Told you to have some faith.

Megan: Faith is for mortals.

Shady: Well, you coulda made a better sales pitch.

Domina: This is the story where I finally make my debut! What better pitch do you need than that?

Megan: Where we make our debut, you mean.

Domina: Same difference. The point is, I/we save the Omnyverse. Funny how that works out, isn't it? You're all welcome.

Shady: Excuse you, red, but you didn't exactly solo this bit. This story wouldn't even have happened if not for me and Cyl.

Domina: You didn't go far enough.

Cyl: We went exactly as far as we had to. Everything worked out.

Shady: Spoilers, jeez.

Megan: All the stories are still free on the website, doofus.

Shady: It was a joke, nerd. Speaking of, shame he wasn't able to put the comics in there.

Cyl: Well, he had to compromise by rewriting them in "quick-prose" as he calls it. Plus, there is a little bit of new material in the form of another foreward, and a new opening Prelewd chapter.

Shady: I suppose it'll do! Anyway, folks, stay tuned for Book Three! Which one will that be again?

Cyl: Next up should be the Empowered/Created collection, after that, I think the post-reset stuff still has some work to be done before it gets booked, so that might be awhile.

Shady: Get on it Sal!

Salamando: I workin' on it! Cut me some slack!

Shady: No.

Cyl: See you next book, folks!

Thursday, January 13, 2022

The Omnymphotents, Book One: Through Mortal Eyes


Lettie: Hooray! Our first eBook! You can purchase it at Salamando's Smashwords page, at: https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/1126539

Shady: It's about damn time! How long has he been sitting on that cover?

Cyl: About two months.

Shady: What took him so damn long?

Cyl: Well, you know how he is. He thought he was going to have to write a whole new novel to start us off for a potential new audience. Got stuck trying to decide what origin to go with. Again.

Devi: You'd think he would have learned by now.

Cyl: He's getting there.

Whitney: Is that supposed to be me on the cover?

Lettie: You look great!

Cyl: It's the best stock photo he could find to match the feel of us, but I think it works well.

Shady: Not jealous it's not you on the cover?

Cyl: I'm just happy we have a book of our own.

Shady: Uh-huh.

Cyl: Spare me your projection, please.

Shady: Never!

Devi: "Through Mortal Eyes"? What is that supposed to mean?

Whitney: It's a collection of our earliest stories, the tales where Sal first wrote about us. All of those were told through our Plaything's perspectives. Takes you back, doesn't it?

Devi: Ah, yes, the good old days, back when there was no plan whatsoever, and we all had maybe half a dimension of personality.

Lettie: C'mon, cut him some slack. We were just starting off! We were basically just a writing exercise experiment back then.

Devi: We're still a writing experiment. It was just nice and uncomplicated back then.

Shady: Enjoy it while it lasts, readers! After this, things immediately go off the rails! Not that I'm complaining!

Cyl: Let's be real, if it didn't, we probably wouldn't still be around. But with that said, readers, look forward to Book Two! Sal's going to have to do some rewriting to get that one to fit the ebook, but it should be out soon!

Salamando: Please don't make promises on my behalf.

Cyl: Please actually make the book.

Salamando: Fine. Gawd.

Cyl: Soon, please.

Salamando: Don't rush me!

Lettie: See you again real soon, folks!

Salamando: What did I just say?!

Wednesday, January 5, 2022

Meta-Timeline of Various Canons

As meta-fictional cosmic entities, the Omnymphotents have existed across multiple incarnations, are aware of their fictional nature, and remember all of their previous lifetimes prior to the formation of their self-constructed current universe. As such, “canon” is something of a dubious terminology here. For the Omnys themselves, every version of their story is canon to their personal experiences, and the memory of those past events thus influences some of their thinking in their current incarnation.
 
However, their re-creation of the current Omnyverse is a cosmological do-over, a fresh start which fully separates the setting itself from any connections to my wider Erotic Multiverse. Thus, events of the previous universe are not canon to the current Omnyverse, save what the Progenitors decide to allow, or re-incorporate into their Omnyverse.
 
Much of this information is already disseminated throughout this website, whether referred to by the Omnys in the stories, or listed in lore articles such as the cast page. This Timeline article is meant as an easier go-to page to reference this lore. Note that many of the events listed prior to the current Timeline were never written or posted anywhere, but to the Omnys, this all still happened. Anytime I reached a major planning stage for the Omnys, that effectively counts as an alternate version of the story they experienced, as the characters did indeed develop through these mental gestation periods.
 
In approximate meta-chronological order (in as much as events that play out in non-linear time can be put “in order”), the major timelines can be summarized as such:

Saturday, December 25, 2021

Christmas 2021 Holiday Card

 

The Omnys wish you a Happy Christmas!

Featuring the Original Five: Cyl, Devi, Lettie, Whitney, and Shady.

Saturday, November 27, 2021

Reignbeau Revives
















_______________________________

Author's Note: The Omnys, in event they do get themselves truly killed, are capable of resurrecting through conceptual back-ups in the Meta, generating new forms for them directly into the Planar Void, with fully up-to-date memories. Cyl, and now Reignbeau, are pretty much the only two who've needed to worry about it, but who knows what the future has in store for the Omnyverse as a whole.

The Omny's actual "power level" is an interesting point of debate; "omnipotence", it turns out, is a relative term when you're dealing with the cosmic pantheons of comic book multiverses. Yes, ostensibly, the Omnys are among the most powerful set of characters I've ever created, except, of course, they are only the latest in a line of "omnipotent" entities that make up the lore of my many, many worlds. The idea of asking "who would win" between two nominally omnipotent characters is a pointless thought experiment; such beings are either demonstrably "equal" in being the highest beings of their respective universes, or one is clearly on a whole other level above the other. Stalemates or curbstomps tend to be how it goes when you're dealing with beings that can make and break universes with casual ease.

Thus, for all their power, the Omnys are decidedly "mid-tier" at best among all my cosmic creations, just going by the fact that there are some entities they simply have no chance of defeating, and depending on what universe they might travel to, there are indeed "weaker" enemies still able to defeat them, depending on what resources they can bring to bear, and what circumstances they take advantage of.

 At the end of the day, though, it really comes down to the fact that in order to give Cyl's search for heroic struggle any real gravitas, it has to actually be a struggle. Thus, despite being a multiversal Goddess, she can still get the shit kicked out of her if she isn't careful. But at the same time, as an entity who can exist in the Meta, she's also technically of higher status and influence than most of those very same entities who could beat her or make her fight her hardest to win, in a dramatic story context.

Narrative conceit's a bitch sometimes.

Wednesday, November 17, 2021

Reaching Out























_________________________________

Author's Note: At last, another comic! This is another case where I had a small bit of the work made months prior, just sitting on my hard drive waiting for me to come back to. In this instance, it was Panel 3 of the comic, done as a stand-alone caption at the time. I always knew there would be more to the scene, but no idea what until I just sat down and let the scene play out on a sudden whim.

Honestly, this scene would probably work better overall as a prose short, and I'll probably write that version later on, but I've been in a comics mood again lately. Even for stories in which there's no real action, there's just something nice about being able to see the character's expressions and body language instead of always having stop the flow of dialogue to mention every time someone raises an eyebrow or shrugs. Not to mention being able to enjoy the full visualization of the characters.

Some of my stuff definitely works best in prose form, but a growing part of me regrets going so long not even trying to do comics, even if it does take much longer to make them (even using Koikatsu, this took me the better part of a day and a half to do a scene I probably could have knocked out in fifteen minutes just writing it). Oh, well. Can't sell e-books of Koi comics, so it's probably best I not spend that much time on these anyway.

Wednesday, September 29, 2021

Savage Awakenings

WARNING: heavy gore and brutality

----------

She woke up with her stomach lurching again, forcing her conscious. She tried to make it to the bucket, but couldn’t crawl the full distance before her stomach spasmed, and she had to stop and gag against the floor. Nothing came out, but only because they hadn’t fed her in a few days. How many? Usually they let her starve for three if she acted up. The last clear memory of a meal was the night before, but then the following morning, she’d bitten the last “client” they’d thrown at her. At least, she thought she might have. The man had come in the room, and then things got blurry, and then when she could think again, she’d tasted blood on her tongue. Hers? Or the clients? Before she could really figure out what had happened, they’d given her the shot, and then the room was spinning and spinning and spinning and…