The missions that were available were basic at best, dealing with either simple defence or discovery, and very little chance for anything exciting to happen. After the humiliating failure of the angel's back in the forest, being near so many of them, and forced to not get into a fight, had put some strain on Lily's control over herself. She itched to do
something, be it a simple brawl or just anything that could get the blood pumping.
She had partially gotten that wish fulfilled, when the oddity that was Malvvosia had appeared. The new demoness had been off-putting, not because she was inhuman–Lily was, after all, inhuman herself in more than one aspect–but rather because she seemed to try to
be humour, yet failed spectacularly. Some humans might be scared by that juxtaposition, but to Lily it just came off as off-putting. It made her realise that she didn't like Malvvosia very much. If one wanted to mimic humanity, at least give them to honour of doing it well, as she herself did.
She shook her head and forced those thoughts away, returning to the present and her daughter beside her. They had found an isolated spot in the city, windowless buildings to one side and a railing to the other, keeping them from falling down into the water, quite a ways down below.
"I think it's time I taught you a new trick," she said, interrupting Cassandra as she was drawing. She was sketching the view beyond the railing with astonishing detail, Lily noticed. She had even drawn algae that covered the rocks that shot up from the water.
Cassandra quickly put the sketch and pens back in her pack, "What trick?" She asked, standing up.
"You know that the way I usually fight, I never use all of my strength? Only drawing a fraction from it at a time?"
She nodded. "You use your cat, dragon, and flame forms," she said, counting each on her fingers. "One is fast, one strong, and the other... fiery. Together, they're the original 'you'."
"You remember," Lily said. "Good. I want to teach you the same–Don't give me that look,
Fayette, it's not that hard." She chuckled at Cassandra's look of bewilderment, as if she honestly didn't believe her. "It's based on shapeshifting, but different. Think of your demonic form not as a whole, but as several individual pieces, that, when combined, becomes 'devil trigger'–or whatever the humans call it–then isolate one of those pieces, and shape your body to fit that piece."
Cassandra pursed her lips, fingers idly toying with her earrings as she mulled it over. The gears spinning within her head were almost audible, Lily thought.
"So, like if I were to choose my wings...?" She let the question hang in the air.
Lily nodded and stepped closer to Cassandra, putting one hand on the middle of her back. "Yes. I was thinking of your wings as well. You can't fly outside of your demon form, but if you learned to do this, you could." She pressed two fingers into the upper back of her back, making her wince, and once again a short ways down her back. "I know it hurts, but it's a good way of reminding you where they should be," she said when Cassandra shot her an unamused glare. "Your wings comes in two pairs, not one like I make mine. Now remember, isolate that piece of your demon self, and will your body to change." She took a step back, giving Cassandra space. "Just like with your hair colour."
Cassandra nodded and closed her eyes. Things like this were already easier said than done, but she'd had nearly a hundred years of practice with her shapeshifting. She had never been as good as Lily, and she likely wouldn't ever be. Supposedly she had more potential than her mother did–Lily always assured her that she could become strong if she applied herself to it–but she had a hard time believing it. She had become her superior in swordfighting, certainly, but she had also focused on that, made it her speciality.
"Focus," came Lily's voice.
"I am," Cassandra muttered, nose wrinkling.
"I can see by your face that you aren't."
"Je suis!" She exclaimed, annoyed.
"Wouldn't be making your thinking face if you were."
Cassandra cracked open one eye, mock-glaring as best she could at Lily, and received only a knowing smirk in return. She sighed and closed her eyes again, this time focusing on the matter at hand. She had been provided with a number of places to focus on, courtesy of Lily's sharp nails. While not painful, she could still feel it. She took a deep breath and held it as she crafted the image of her demon self in her mind's eye. The intricate and swirling markings that covered her body, the monochrome eyes and, lastly, the two wings she possessed in all their iridescent and kaleidoscopic glory.
She let go of the breath through her nose, and
snipped the wings from the image of herself and let everything except the wings fade from her mind. She could see the 'roots' of her wings, where they connected with her body. Each root, she connected with the faint sensations still on her back. That done, she did as she had done so many times before, only on a larger scale. She told her body to change, focusing on the sliver of her true form that were her wings, and where she had mentally connected them to her natural body.
"Good," came a distant voice from the outside. Lily, most likely. "Continue."
She needed no encouragement, and continued the change. Neural pathways, muscles, and sinew came as if from nowhere, her body rearranging itself to suit her desires. She felt a brief sensation of resistance, pushed harder, and broke through it. She heard a hum of approval that fell away to anticipatory silence.
She let her eyes flutter open, feeling something alien on her back. She looked up at her mother, who wordlessly conjured a full sized mirror. She stood up and turned sideways, looking at herself in the mirror. "I did it," she said, smiling at the
quadret of wings now attached to her back. They were more like a dragonfly's wings, than the butterfly-like ones she possessed in her demon form; the top pair angled upwards, and elongated, tapering to a rounded point. The bottom pair were angled downwards, and were slightly smaller than the top pair, and all four responded readily to her commands.
"Add a pair of pointy ears, and your appearance would mirror your namesake," Lily told her and let the mirror-projection fade back into mist.
"Fayette," Cassandra said trying to suppress a chuckle. "Little Fairy, indeed... I should've known I'd poke holes in my shirt.
Merde."
Cassandra, now with a quadret of holes in the back of her shirt, had begun to eagerly sketch the shoreline as soon as it came within view. She had to erase and redraw the stone pillars again and again, seeing as they never seemed to stay the same size, and only became larger the closer they got. Though she knew it was a matter of perspective, it still made her nose wrinkle in annoyance. Lily had remained quiet during the travel, alternating between watching her daughter's charcoal pencil race across the paper like a dragonfly doing its mating dance over a lake, and keeping an eye out for any other dangers that might choose to get in their way.
Lily jumped off the boat as soon as they made landfall, the feeling of coarse sand under her bare feet one she had been missing for longer than she cared to admit. She breathed in deeply, for the moment ignoring everything else around her in favour of just a moment of quiet. When she opened her eyes again, her eyes were drawn to the same pillars Cassandra had been sketching earlier. She listened with half an ear to the briefing they were all given, but as soon as she sensed, that little more was to be said, she let a pair of fae-like wings sprout from her back; this time without tearing holes in her clothes thanks to the open back of her shirt. She jumped into the air, wings buzzing behind her, and started towards the nearest of the pillars, intent on searching for whatever entrance had been found.
Cassandra watched her fly away, staring at the open-backed shirt the elder Demon wore, thinking that it might have been a good idea for her to change as well, before they had gone out to the mission. Alas, she was left with a shirt that still had four holes in it, one from each of her newly acquired appendages. She glanced over her shoulder at them. They were all angled downwards now so as to take up less space, and glittered in the sunlight, light refracting through them and covering her back in a whirl of colours. Pretty as it was to look at, they had a mission to complete, so with a thought she spread them out as they had been when she first 'made' them, and with another propelled herself into the air and hovered a good ten feet off the ground.
She turned and was about to follow Lily when a masculine voice called out behind her, causing her to stop and looked over her shoulder. It was one of the angels, the new ones. He had been giving her the stink-eye throughout the entire journey, but now was the first time he spoke to her,
and of course he's giving orders. I'm starting to think Mother might not be entirely wrong around them. At least this one fits her stereotype. She turned around and gave him her best, most innocent smile she could muster. Having been everything from daughter, to mother, to great-grandmother, it was a look she had practised and perfected for over a century–perfected both by using it herself and having it used against her.
"Of course, Sir Angel," she said sweetly. "I always respect and follow the orders, of those both wiser and more intelligent than I am." She let their eyes meet, waved at him, then turned and flew off in pursuit of Lily, Mallus already forgotten, and eager to learn more about this new and strange place.