The Minutes of the Extraordinary Meeting
Being a Faithful Account of the 117th Quarterly Conclave of the Hermetic Order of the Silvered Compass, Held in Suite 4B of the Elk Ridge Community Center (Not 4A — That's the Quilters)
The Hermetic Order of the Silvered Compass held its quarterly meetings in the back room of the Elk Ridge Community Center, which it rented for $475 a month. The room was slightly too small for ritual work, aggressively fluorescent, and shared a wall with Suite 4A, home to the Elk Ridge Quilters' Circle, who met on alternating Thursdays and were not, as far as anyone could determine, magical in any way, though their ability to secure the better parking spaces suggested forces beyond the merely organizational.
Suite 4B had no atmosphere whatsoever. The Order had attempted to consecrate the space on multiple occasions, but consecration could not fully overcome drop ceilings and motivational posters left behind by the community center's Tuesday evening self-esteem workshop. There was a poster of a kitten hanging from a branch that read HANG IN THERE! directly above the station of the Hierophant. The former Hierophant had attempted to remove it. It was, in some obscure bureaucratic sense, load-bearing.
The kitten remained. Beneath it, on this particular Thursday evening, the Hierophant's chair sat empty.
Soror A.L. called the meeting to order at 7:14 p.m., fourteen minutes late, because Frater G.K. had brought hummus and the hummus had required a discussion about whether food was permitted in the ritual space. It was technically not a ritual space tonight — this was an administrative meeting — which meant the food rules were ambiguous, which meant the discussion about the food rules lasted longer than the hummus.
Frater G.K. had brought the hummus because he knew Soror T.M. skipped dinner on meeting nights. He didn't mention this. He simply put the hummus near her end of the table and opened the crackers. This was, depending on your framework, either a small kindness between colleagues or an act of practical magic so minor it didn't register as magic at all. In Soror A.L.'s private opinion, that was the only kind that reliably worked.
"The 117th Quarterly Conclave of the Hermetic Order of the Silvered Compass is called to order," said Soror A.L. In practice, she ran things when the Hierophant wasn't there, which had historically been rare and was now, as of eleven days ago, permanent.
"Before we begin the agenda, I want to acknowledge—"
"Is someone taking minutes?" asked Frater V.L., whose magical name translated roughly to "Victorious Light" and whose primary contribution to the Order was asking procedural questions at moments designed to derail momentum.
"Soror P.N. is taking minutes."
Soror P.N., seated in the corner with a laptop that was older than several members' magical careers, raised one hand in confirmation without looking up. She had been the Order's secretary for six years and had developed the ability to type, listen, and silently judge simultaneously — a form of multitasking the Order's teachings on concentration had never intended but could not, strictly speaking, condemn.
"As I was saying," said Soror A.L., "before we begin the formal agenda, I want to acknowledge the departure of our Hierophant, Frater T.A.O."
A silence settled over the room. It was the particular silence of a group that has strong feelings about something and is trying to determine, through psychic consensus, which feelings are safe to express first.
"He quit," said Frater R.S., who was the Praemonstrator — the chief instructor, the keeper of the curriculum — and who had never, in twenty-two years of membership, expressed a sentiment he hadn't first considered from at least three angles. This was not one of those times. "He quit because of a font."
"He quit because of a pattern of disrespect toward—"
"He quit because someone used Comic Sans on the Equinox flyer and he lost his entire mind."
"Frater R.S.—"
"I was there, Soror. I saw the email. The subject line was 'I WILL NOT PRESIDE OVER AN ORDER THAT COMMUNICATES IN COMIC SANS' and it was in all caps, which, as a typographical choice, somewhat undermined his point."
Another silence, this one slightly warmer, tinged with the guilty pleasure of discussing someone who isn't present.
"For the record," said Soror C.D., who was the Stolistes — the officer of water, responsible for ritual purification, and also, because nobody else had volunteered, responsible for the flyer — "the font was Comic Sans MS, which is technically a different font from Comic Sans, and I used it because the flyer was for a public event and I was trying to seem approachable."
"To whom?" asked Frater R.S.
"To the public. That's what 'public event' means."
"The Autumnal Equinox ceremony is a solemn re-equilibration of the Temple forces, the threshold moment when—"
"That's not what you said last time. Last time you called it 'the descent of the dying god,' which is Wiccan."
"It is not Wiccan."
"The dying god is literally Wiccan Wheel of the Year, Frater. It's from Frazer. We are not Wiccan. We are a Hermetic order. I know this because I am personally responsible for purifying the space, designing the flyer, managing the mailing list, and explaining to strangers that we are not, in fact, a cult. I am the Stolistes. My job is purification. Purifying the temple, purifying the perceptions of outsiders, purifying their impression that we hold sacrifices. The flyer is part of the purification. Fight me."
Soror A.L. tapped her pen against the table three times. This was not a ritual gesture, though three members instinctively sat up straighter. "The font question is on the agenda as item twelve. We are currently on item one, which is the Hierophant vacancy. Can we please stay on the agenda."
It was not a question.
The agenda was eleven pages long. Soror A.L. had estimated ninety minutes. This estimate was, even by her own private assessment, a fantasy.
The agenda, in full:
1. Hierophant vacancy and succession procedures 2. Financial report (Q2 and Q3, combined due to Q2 never having been presented) 3. Rent arrears and communication from the Elk Ridge Community Center management 4. Membership applications (3 pending since April) 5. The Zoom question 6. Ward maintenance — East and North 7. Curriculum review (Neophyte through Practicus) 8. Inventory of ritual equipment (following the Incident with the Censer) 9. Outreach and recruitment strategy 10. The Equinox ceremony (logistics) 11. The font question 12. Any other business
"Item one," said Soror A.L. "Hierophant vacancy."
"Point of order," said Frater V.L.
"Yes?"
"Do we have quorum?"
Soror A.L. looked at the room. There were nine people present, including herself. The Order's bylaws — written in 1987 by a founding member who had modeled them on a combination of Robert's Rules of Order and the Cipher Manuscripts — required a quorum of "not fewer than the number of Sephiroth represented on the Middle Pillar," which was either three or four depending on whether you counted Daath. The question of whether to count Daath had, at the 94th Quarterly Conclave, generated a forty-minute argument that ended with no resolution and a strong collective preference for never raising the issue again.
"We have quorum," said Soror A.L.
"Even without the Hierophant?"
"The Hierophant resigned. He is not absent; he is gone. We have quorum, Frater V.L."
Frater V.L. settled back in his folding chair with the expression he wore to approximately eighty percent of all social interactions: a man who has performed his duty and been unjustly silenced.
"The Hierophant vacancy," Soror A.L. continued, "needs to be filled before the Equinox ceremony, which is in nine days. Our bylaws specify that the Hierophant must hold at least the grade of Adeptus Minor or above." She added the "or above" before Frater R.S. could, because the Praemonstrator had never encountered a piece of knowledge he did not wish to publicly demonstrate possessing, and she was not in the mood. "Currently, the members holding Adeptus Minor or above are myself, Frater R.S., Frater D.L., and Soror T.M."
"I don't want it," said Soror T.M., immediately and with feeling.
"I haven't offered it."
"I'm preempting."
"Noted. Frater D.L., would you — Frater D.L. is not here tonight?"
"Frater D.L.," said Soror P.N. from behind the laptop, "emailed to say he is, and I quote, 'on a personal retreat focused on inner equilibrium and will not be available for lodge politics until he achieves it or dies, whichever comes first.'"
"When did he email this?"
"July."
"Has anyone heard from him since July?"
The silence was a "no."
"So our candidates are myself and Frater R.S."
"I accept the nomination," said Frater R.S., with a speed that suggested he had been composing his acceptance speech since the convening email arrived.
"There hasn't been a nomination."
"I'm preempting."
"That's not how—" Soror A.L. pinched the bridge of her nose. Behind her, from somewhere in the north wall — not the wall itself, exactly, but the region of space the wall was currently pretending was just wall — there was a faint sound. Not settling. The building was a single-story community center built in 1994; it had finished settling decades ago. Something else.
Soror A.L. felt it. She was a trained practitioner with fourteen years of magical practice, and she felt the shift in the north quarter's ambient pressure the same way you feel a change in weather through a closed window. She noted it. She filed it. She did not acknowledge it, because acknowledging it meant going off-agenda, and going off-agenda meant losing control of the meeting, and losing control of this meeting meant losing control of everything. Soror A.L. could not afford that. She was currently the only person preventing everything from collapsing.
She moved on. Later, she would recognize this as the mistake.
"Frater V.L.?"
Frater V.L. had raised his hand. "I'd like to nominate myself."
"You're a Zelator."
"I'm a Zelator here. I'm a Philosophus in the Order of the Eternal Threshold."
"The Order of the Eternal Threshold is an online order. They charge $49.99 per grade and the initiations are conducted via pre-recorded YouTube video."
"The Eternal Threshold uses a valid lineage derived from—"
"Frater V.L., the bylaws of this order require Adeptus Minor grade in this order. You are a Zelator. You are not eligible. This is not a judgment of your development; it is a procedural fact."
Frater V.L.'s expression suggested he found it very much a judgment, and that the judges were operating from a limited perspective that did not account for his work in other systems, including but not limited to the Eternal Threshold, a chaos magic study circle he'd attended in 2019, and a weekend intensive in Sedona that had included what the instructor called a "field promotion to the astral grade of the Magus" and what Soror A.L., when she'd heard about it, had called "grift."
"Fine," he said. "Then I nominate Frater R.S."
"I've already — I accept."
"There needs to be a vote," said Soror A.L. "And before the vote, there needs to be a discussion, and before the discussion, I'd like to ask whether anyone has serious objections to either candidate — meaning myself or Frater R.S. — because if we're going to have that conversation, I'd rather have it now than in the parking lot afterward."
A beat. Then two. Then, from behind the laptop:
"I have some concerns," said Soror P.N.
Every head in the room turned. Soror P.N. had been secretary for six years. In six years, she had expressed a concern exactly zero times. She took minutes. She sent agendas. She maintained the Google calendar. She was, in the organizational ecology of the lodge, a constant — so quiet that newer members occasionally forgot she was present, which was, she had once confided to Soror T.M., kind of the point.
"About which candidate?" asked Soror A.L.
"Both."
The room recalibrated.
"Frater R.S.," said Soror P.N., still typing, "has been Praemonstrator for fourteen years. He is knowledgeable, dedicated, and would approach the role of Hierophant with the same scholarly rigor he brings to instruction." She paused. "He is also the reason four of our last seven Neophytes quit before reaching Zelator."
"That's not—"
"I have the exit surveys. You asked me to tabulate them. I tabulated them. The word 'condescending' appears in six of them. The phrase 'made me feel stupid' appears in four. One simply says 'that guy' with an arrow pointing toward your usual seat."
Frater R.S. opened his mouth, closed it, and opened it again.
"And Soror A.L.," Soror P.N. continued, implacably, "is already functioning as Hegemon, acting Hierophant, unofficial treasurer since Frater B.W. stopped showing up, and the person who fixes the lock on the storage closet every time it jams. If she takes the Hierophant role officially, she will be doing three jobs, none of which are adequately supported. She will burn out within a year. Then we won't have a Hierophant or a Hegemon or anyone who knows which key opens the storage closet."
"So what are you suggesting?" asked Soror A.L.
"I'm suggesting that item one cannot be resolved without addressing item two, which is the budget, because whatever we decide about the Hierophant depends on whether this order is going to exist in three months. I have seen the financial report. The answer to that question is not as obvious as everyone in this room seems to think."
Soror P.N. returned to typing.
In the north wall, the sound grew slightly louder. It had a quality that might, by certain ears, be described as rhythmic. Something was moving behind the wards. Something was testing them. Something had been testing them since March, with increasing confidence, and the wards were holding — mostly — because Soror T.M. had been reinforcing them on her own time, without budget, without help, and without anyone on the other side of this table understanding that the thing in the wall was not plumbing.
Nobody noticed. Soror C.D. was unwrapping a granola bar. The crinkling was louder than the thing in the wall. This was, depending on your perspective, either reassuring or terrifying.
"Item two," said Soror A.L. "Financial report."
"Do I have to?" asked Frater G.K., who was the closest thing the Order had to a treasurer, in the sense that he had once mentioned he "knew QuickBooks" and had been handling the money ever since — a trajectory familiar to anyone who has ever made the mistake of demonstrating competence in a volunteer organization.
"It's on the agenda."
"It's on the agenda because you put it on the agenda."
"I put it on the agenda because we haven't seen a financial report since Q1."
"There's a reason for that."
"Is the reason that the finances are bad?"
"The reason is that the finances are bad and also confusing, because Frater T.A.O. — the former Hierophant — made several purchases in May that he described as 'essential ritual supplies' and that I would describe as 'expensive' and that the credit card company describes as 'overdue.'"
Soror A.L. closed her eyes. "What purchases."
Frater G.K. consulted a spreadsheet on his phone with the air of a man reading an autopsy report. "A set of consecrated beeswax candles from a supplier in Prague. Fourteen hundred dollars."
"Fourteen hundred—"
"They were hand-dipped during specific planetary hours by Carmelite nuns. Allegedly."
"Allegedly?"
"The supplier's website also sells cryptocurrency and CBD oil, so I have questions about the Carmelite nuns."
"What else."
"A replacement Hierophant's lamen, commissioned from a jeweler in New Mexico. Twenty-two hundred dollars."
"He commissioned a new lamen? The old lamen is perfectly—"
"He said the old one had 'energetic residue' from the previous Hierophant, and that presiding in a contaminated lamen was 'an invitation to egregoric interference.'"
"The previous Hierophant was his mother."
This was true. The Order had been founded in 1987 by Muriel Ashworth, who had served as Hierophant for twenty-one years before retiring. Her son had assumed the role — technically legitimate, as the highest-graded eligible member, but it had felt dynastic, and over the past six years, the son had increasingly demonstrated that being raised in a magical order did not necessarily produce a functional adult.
"There's more," said Frater G.K.
"Of course there is."
"A deposit on a venue for what he called a 'retreat and realignment gathering' at a hotel in Taos. Non-refundable. Eighteen hundred dollars."
"He booked a retreat without telling anyone?"
"He booked a retreat without telling anyone."
"Did he — was there a retreat?"
"There was not a retreat. The deposit is non-refundable. I have called the hotel. They are firm."
Soror A.L. performed a calculation that was not kabbalistic. "So the former Hierophant spent approximately fifty-four hundred dollars of the Order's money on candles, jewelry, and a hotel room in New Mexico that nobody went to."
"Plus regular expenses. Rent, insurance, supplies. Total Q2 and Q3 expenditure: approximately ninety-one hundred dollars. Total Q2 and Q3 income from dues: thirty-four hundred dollars. Current balance: negative two hundred and twelve dollars."
"Negative."
"Negative. We overdrafted in August. The bank charged a fee. The fee caused another overdraft. The second overdraft caused another fee. It's been a whole thing."
"Mercury retrograde," muttered Soror C.D.
"It's not Mercury retrograde," said Frater R.S. "Mercury was direct in August."
"It feels like Mercury retrograde."
"Things don't happen because they feel like Mercury retrograde. That's not how planetary—"
"And yet."
"And rent?" asked Soror A.L.
"Three months behind. The community center sent a letter in August. A second letter in September. The September letter uses the phrase 'regretfully inform you' and is copied to their lawyer, who is not a Rosicrucian and will not be sympathetic to our mission."
"I could review the letter," said the Imperator. "From a legal perspective."
The Imperator was Frater L.H. — a semi-retired real estate attorney whose therapist had once described his interest in the occult as "a midlife crisis with a better vocabulary." He had risen to Imperator — the executive chief — largely because no one else wanted the job.
"Is there a legal perspective?" asked Soror A.L.
"There's always a legal perspective. Our lease contains a thirty-day cure period for payment defaults. If the letter is dated before September 22nd, which is today, and we remit at least partial payment within the cure window—"
"With what money?"
A pause. "I could advance the funds," said Frater L.H. "As a personal loan to the Order. At zero interest. We'd want it documented, obviously. I'll draft terms."
"You want to draft a loan agreement for a magical lodge."
"I want to draft a loan agreement so a magical lodge isn't performing the Autumnal Equinox in the parking lot of a Denny's. Yes."
From the north wall, the rhythmic sound paused, as if whatever was producing it had heard the word "parking lot" and was processing the implications.
Soror T.M. looked at the north wall. Nobody else looked at the north wall, because nobody else maintained the north wards, and nobody else had spent eleven years developing a sensitivity to the specific vibration of things that should not be in walls — a skill set that was not on the curriculum and was not recognized by any grade and was, as far as the Order's institutional structure was concerned, not a thing.
She looked back at the room. She decided not to mention it yet. She had been mentioning things since March. Mentioning things had accomplished nothing. She would wait.
"Item three, the rent, is addressed by item two," said Soror A.L., crossing it off with a pen stroke that carried more force than strictly necessary. "Item four. Membership applications."
"We have three pending applications," said Frater R.S., who as Praemonstrator was responsible for evaluating candidates. "One since April, two since June."
"Why are they still pending?"
"The application review process requires a personal interview with the Hierophant, a sponsoring member's letter, and a divination by the lodge astrologer to confirm the candidate's natal chart is compatible with the Order's egregore."
"We don't have a lodge astrologer. We haven't had a lodge astrologer since Soror M.J. moved to Boise."
"Which is why the applications are pending."
"Can we waive the astrological requirement?"
"The bylaws are specific."
"The bylaws also require the Hierophant's personal interview and we don't have one of those either. Who are the applicants?"
Frater R.S. consulted a folder containing three application forms he had designed himself. The forms ran to eleven pages each, including a section titled "Esoteric Background and Philosophical Orientation" that required applicants to describe their understanding of the Four Worlds of the Kabbalistic Tree of Life and had, by Soror P.N.'s quiet estimate, been responsible for roughly sixty percent of the Order's applicant attrition.
"Applicant one: Margaret Chen. Thirty-four. Background in Wicca, some Golden Dawn self-study. Her philosophical orientation essay was" — he paused, selecting his words — "enthusiastic."
"Enthusiastic is good," said Soror C.D.
"She described the Kabbalistic Tree of Life as 'kind of like a spiritual LinkedIn' and said Malkuth was 'giving grounded energy.'"
"That's not wrong," said Soror C.D.
"It is not right, either."
"Applicant two?" asked Soror A.L., before the room could develop opinions about whether Malkuth was or was not giving grounded energy.
"David Ashworth-Park. Twenty-eight. Ceremonial magic background. Studied with the Ciceros' materials. Solid essay. He asked if we had a podcast."
"Do we have a podcast?"
"We do not have a podcast. We are a mystery school, not a media company."
"We could have a podcast," said Soror C.D. "As an outreach—"
"We are not having a podcast," said Frater R.S.
"Applicant three: Rowan Wexler. Thirty-six. Background in chaos magic and Wicca. Advanced practitioner, strong essay, clearly knows the material. She attached a supplementary document she called 'concerns and clarifying questions' which ran to fourteen pages and which included, on page seven, a section titled 'Structural Critique of Hierarchical Initiatory Models in Post-Colonial Context' and on page eleven, a proposed amendment to the membership vetting process."
"She proposed amendments to our process before she's a member?"
"She proposed amendments to our application process. From outside the process. While being assessed by the process. The amendments are" — a pause — "not unreasonable."
A longer silence.
"Page eleven," said Soror P.N.
"I'll make copies. Applicant four: James Okafor. Forty-one. No esoteric background. Applied because, and I quote, 'I found your flyer at the coffee shop and it seemed interesting.' His philosophical orientation essay was blank except for a note that said 'I don't know what this means but I'm willing to learn.'"
A brief silence, during which several members acknowledged that James Okafor's candor was more refreshing than any of them were prepared to admit publicly.
"He seems genuine," said Soror A.L.
"He doesn't know what the Tree of Life is."
"Neither did any of us, once."
"I knew what it was when I was twelve," said Frater R.S., which was true, and which was the kind of true that explained a great deal about Frater R.S. without flattering any of it.
"I can do the natal charts," said Soror P.N., without looking up. "I studied horary and natal with Soror M.J. before she moved to Boise. I have the ephemeris software."
Every head turned, again, toward the secretary who apparently contained multitudes.
"Why didn't you mention this before?" asked Frater R.S.
"Nobody asked."
"Item five. The Zoom question."
The room's energy shifted. Every preceding item had been contentious, but the Zoom question was schismatic. It had been raised at the 115th Quarterly Conclave, tabled at the 116th, and had since migrated from the agenda into the parking lot, the group text, and at least two private conversations that had ended friendships. The question was simple: could initiations be conducted over video call?
"I'll keep this brief," said Soror A.L.
"You can't keep this brief," said Soror T.M. "This is the Zoom question."
"The former Hierophant was opposed. The former Hierophant is gone. His opposition was not in the bylaws. Other orders have moved to hybrid models. The question is whether we want to."
"The energetic transmission is essential to the initiatory current," said Frater R.S. "You cannot transmit the Neophyte current through a webcam any more than you can consecrate a temple through FaceTime."
"How do you know?" said Soror C.D. "Have you tried?"
Frater R.S. did not dignify this.
"But if we're debating Zoom," said Frater G.K., who rarely involved himself in doctrinal arguments but who had been doing math on his phone, "we should know that Zoom Pro costs $13.33 a month, which we also can't afford. The free tier has a forty-minute limit."
"The Neophyte initiation takes ninety minutes," said Frater R.S.
"So we'd need two sessions. Or someone could donate their personal account."
"I have one," said Frater V.L.
"Through the Eternal Threshold?"
"It's just a Zoom account. It doesn't carry esoteric properties."
"Nothing used in a magical context is neutral," said Frater R.S. "Conducting a Golden Dawn initiation through a chaos-magic-adjacent order's Zoom account is energetically reckless."
"The Eternal Threshold is not chaos-magic-adjacent and my Zoom account is just a—"
"Point of order," said Frater L.H. "If I may approach this from a contractual perspective."
"A contractual perspective," said Frater R.S.
"The question of whether a Zoom initiation is a valid initiation is structurally identical to a question I encounter in real estate law: does a digital signature carry the same force as a wet signature? For decades the answer was no. Now the answer is yes, in most jurisdictions, because the legislature acted. What we need here is not a debate about the metaphysics. What we need is a bylaw amendment defining 'presence' for purposes of initiation. Physical presence, digital presence, astral presence — each would have different requirements. I could draft language."
A silence, during which the room processed the Imperator's longest contribution to any discussion in recent memory and found it, against all expectations, not entirely useless.
"That's actually—" began Soror A.L.
"We are not amending the bylaws based on real estate law," said Frater R.S.
"Real estate law is how the mundane world adjudicates questions of presence, authority, and binding agreements. We are arguing about the same things with worse definitions. At least my version has case precedent."
"Your case precedent involves houses."
"And yours involves a tradition that was founded by three men forging letters from imaginary German adepts. We all have our foundations."
This was, technically, accurate — the Golden Dawn's founding myth involved the Cipher Manuscripts and alleged correspondence with a Fräulein Sprengel whose existence was never confirmed. It was also the kind of thing nobody said out loud, and the silence that followed had the quality of a room full of people pretending they hadn't heard a load-bearing wall crack.
"We are going to vote on this," said Soror A.L. "Not tonight. At a special meeting, after the Equinox ceremony — if we still have a venue. In the meantime, no one is being initiated by any method because we don't have a Hierophant."
They moved on. Reluctantly, with the particular reluctance of people who have been denied a fight they were ready for, they moved on.
In the north wall, the thing that was not plumbing was having what might, in the loosest possible sense, be called an evening.
It did not think. Thinking required a self, and it did not have a self. What it had was appetite — a slow, formless hunger that had found, some months ago, a thin place in the barrier between its own emptiness and where the warm feelings lived. The warm feelings were not warm in the thermal sense. They were warm the way a current is warm: charged, turbulent, nourishing.
The thin place had been getting thinner. The feelings had been getting warmer.
Tonight was extraordinary. The thing — which did not have a name, had never had a name, existed in a stratum of reality where names were not a concept — the thing was feasting. The feelings coming through the thin place were richer and more varied than anything it had tasted since it first found the spot. There was a sharp, bright flavor it could not have identified as indignation but which it found exquisite. There was a deeper, slower current that a human would have called resentment and that the thing experienced as something like warmth spreading through a body it did not have. There was a fizzy, unstable note — anxiety, if the thing had known the word — that was less nourishing but interesting in the way that spice is interesting.
The thing pressed closer to the thin place. The barrier flexed.
It did not know what was on the other side. It did not care. It was hungry, and the food was right there, and the barrier was getting thinner with every burst of sharp-bright-indignation, and soon — soon — it would not be a barrier at all.
"Item six," said Soror A.L. "Ward maintenance."
"The east wards are fine," said Frater R.S. "Standard protocol. No anomalies."
"Thank you. North?"
Soror T.M. had been waiting for this item since March. She produced a folder. The folder was thick.
"The north wards are failing."
She let the word sit. Failing was a strong word in a magical context. Wards didn't fail gradually, like a battery. Wards failed like a dam: slowly and then all at once, and the things on the other side were not water.
"The north quarter has shown increasing spectral bleed since March. Something on the other side has found a thin spot and has been pressing against it. I don't know what it is because I filed a report in April requesting a diagnostic working — a scrying session, three operators to triangulate — and the report was not actioned. I filed a second report in May. In June I filed a report about the reports."
"I read the reports," said Frater R.S.
"You liked them on Facebook. That is not the same as reading them."
"I read them and liked them. The like was an acknowledgment."
"The acknowledgment I needed was someone helping me reinforce the wards, not a thumbs-up emoji on a document describing a potential astral breach."
"You said it was non-sentient."
"I said it was consistent with non-sentient. That was in March. It's September."
"Things can't just develop sentience—"
From the north wall, something made a sound. It was the sound of a throat being cleared by something that did not, in the conventional sense, have a throat — but had been listening, and had decided, with whatever passed for decision-making in its particular form of existence, that this was a good time to make its presence felt.
The fluorescent lights flickered. Not dramatically — not in the horror-movie way. They flickered the way fluorescent lights in community centers sometimes flicker, which was just enough to be noticeable and not enough to be conclusive.
"Was that—" began Soror C.D.
"The lights do that," said Frater V.L.
"The lights don't do that," said Soror T.M.
"They did it last month."
"Last month, when I was reinforcing the wards alone on a Tuesday night because nobody responded to my emails, the lights flickered because something was testing the north quarter boundary. I mentioned this in my June report. The one Frater R.S. reacted to with a heart emoji."
"It was a like. A regular like."
"You used a heart emoji. I can show you."
"Can we table the wards?" asked the Imperator.
"We have been tabling the wards since March. You can't table what comes through when wards fail. That is literally the point of having them."
Soror A.L. felt the north wall pulse again. She had been feeling it for the past hour. She had been choosing not to feel it, the same way you choose not to hear a smoke alarm when you're on a phone call that cannot be interrupted — you hear it, you know you hear it, you decide to hear it later. She had been deciding to hear the wall later because someone had to run the meeting.
"Budget request?" she asked. Her voice was steady.
"One hundred and twenty dollars for salt, boundary markers, and incense. Plus at least two additional operators."
"We're negative two hundred and twelve dollars."
"Then we'll be negative three hundred and thirty-two dollars, but we'll have functioning wards."
"Tabled for now," said Soror A.L. "We'll revisit under any other business."
Soror T.M. looked at her. The look said: You know. You've known all evening. Why won't you stop the meeting?
Soror A.L. looked back. Her look said: Because if I stop the meeting, I have to admit I've been ignoring it, and if I admit that, I lose the only thing keeping this room from chaos, which is the belief that someone is in control.
Neither of them said any of this. The agenda moved on. The wall breathed.
Item seven was the curriculum review. Frater R.S. had prepared a seventeen-page document. Soror A.L. suggested he summarize. He summarized for twenty-two minutes. The summary contained footnotes, which he read aloud.
The substance of the review was this: the Neophyte curriculum hadn't been updated since 2014, and there was one exam question Frater R.S. had been trying to change for three years. The former Hierophant had blocked every revision. The question itself was, by any reasonable standard, ambiguous, and Frater R.S. had spent more energy arguing about it than any single exam question in the history of Western esotericism had ever warranted.
"I think you can change the question, Frater R.S."
"I—really?"
"The former Hierophant is gone. You're the Praemonstrator. It's your domain."
He sat with this for a moment — the expression of a man who has been pushing against a door for three years and has just been told the door was never locked. He smiled. It was the first time he'd smiled all evening, and it softened something in the room.
"I'll draft a revision," he said.
"Please do."
Item eight was the censer incident.
"We all know what happened," said Soror A.L.
"Do we?" said the two newest members, almost in unison, from the far end of the table where they had been sitting in the careful silence of Neophytes who have determined that everything in the room is insane and who will nonetheless, against all rational judgment, return for the next meeting.
"At the August solstice," said Soror C.D., "the censer launched a burning coal onto the altar cloth."
"Launched is a strong word—" said Frater R.S.
"It achieved an arc of approximately three feet. I measured afterward. Three feet is a launch."
"The charcoal was improperly seated."
"The charcoal was seated the way we've always seated charcoal. What happened is the censer — which is forty years old and which I have been saying needs replacing since 2021 — has a cracked hinge that lets the bowl tilt under thermal expansion. Halfway through the Opening of the Watchtower, the hinge gave way. The coal hit the altar cloth. The altar cloth caught fire. Frater R.S. said, and I will remember this until I die, 'Is that part of the ritual?'"
"It was a reasonable question. The Hierophant had been making unauthorized modifications to the—"
"It was a FIRE. On the ALTAR. During a CEREMONY."
"I grabbed the chalice water and put it out," she continued. "The chalice water was consecrated. The altar cloth was consecrated. I am now standing there in a room full of smoke, holding a chalice that I've used as a fire extinguisher, with consecrated water dripping onto a consecrated cloth that is gently smoldering, and I ask the Hierophant — the then-Hierophant — whether we need to reconsecrate the water before continuing the ceremony. And he looks at me and says—" She paused. "'That depends on what the water experienced.'"
"What the water experienced," repeated Soror A.L.
"What the water experienced. As though the water had feelings about its new role as a fire suppression tool. As though the consecrated water might have been traumatized by the encounter."
"Water retains vibrational memory," said Frater R.S. "Masaru Emoto's—"
"Do NOT cite Emoto at me. Do NOT cite a man who claimed to photograph the emotions of water at me while I am describing a fire that could have burned down the community center. The water is fine. The water was always fine. I am less fine than the water."
"I filed a maintenance request for the censer," said Soror C.D. "To the Imperator. It's a facilities issue."
Everyone looked at Frater L.H.
"I received the request," said Frater L.H. "I referred it to the Praemonstrator, as ritual equipment falls under curriculum and practice oversight."
"I received the referral," said Frater R.S. "I referred it back to the Imperator, as the physical condition of equipment is a maintenance issue, not a curriculum issue."
"So it went back and forth between you until a burning coal landed on the altar cloth," said Soror A.L.
"The altar cloth," said Soror C.D., "which was consecrated, which I then had to extinguish with the chalice water, which was also consecrated, which raised the question of whether using consecrated water as a fire extinguisher deconsecrated it, and nobody could give me a straight answer because the Hierophant was on vacation and Frater R.S. said it depended on the operator's intention and Frater L.H. said it depended on whether the Order's insurance covered ritual equipment damage, and I'm standing there with a smoldering altar cloth and the sacred chalice dripping and the two Neophytes—" she gestured to the far end of the table — "watching all of this with the expressions they're wearing right now."
The two Neophytes, who were indeed wearing the expressions of people witnessing a car accident in a seminary, nodded.
"The censer has been replaced," said Soror A.L. "I bought a new one. Thirty-five dollars. Out of the budget we don't have. I consecrated it myself last Tuesday."
"Under what authority?" asked Frater R.S. "The consecration of ritual implements falls under—"
"Frater R.S., I consecrated a censer so we could have a functioning censer. If that consecration is insufficient, you are welcome to reconsecrate it. If the reconsecration requires a budget, we don't have one. If the budget requires dues, we need members. If members require initiations, we need a Hierophant. We are, as a fraternal organization, eating our own tail, and we are not finding it edifying."
"The censer is fine," said Frater R.S.
"Thank you."
Item nine — outreach and recruitment — devolved immediately into the font question (item eleven), because the font question was the outreach question. The flyer was the outreach, the font was on the flyer, and the former Hierophant's resignation was a direct consequence of the font on the flyer that was the outreach. The three topics formed a causal loop that the Order could not discuss separately because they were not, in any meaningful sense, separate.
"The point," said Soror C.D., for what she calculated was the seventh time since the font incident and what others in the room calculated was the twelfth, "is that we need to present ourselves as accessible."
"What? Secretive? Mysterious? Good?"
"People hear 'hermetic order' and they think either cult or Renaissance fair."
"Our materials should look serious. They should convey the gravitas of—"
"They should convey 'come to our Equinox event, there will be refreshments.' That's what they should convey."
"And Comic Sans conveys that?"
"Comic Sans conveys friendliness. You know what Garamond conveys? Garamond conveys 'we will make you memorize Hebrew letters and judge you for your pronunciation.'"
"We DO make people memorize Hebrew letters. That is PART OF THE CURRICULUM."
"Right, but we don't have to LEAD with it."
"This is actually a gematria question," said Frater V.L.
Every head turned. This was a new contribution.
"It's not a gematria question," said Frater R.S., reflexively.
"Hear me out. Every Hebrew letter carries a numerical value and a symbolic weight. That's why the letters on the paths of the Tree of Life matter — form carries meaning. The shape of a letter affects its magical resonance. So the argument that Comic Sans is inappropriate for esoteric communication is, technically, a legitimate magical argument. The typeface carries a vibration. Comic Sans vibrates at the frequency of—"
"If you say 'fun,'" said Frater R.S., "I will—"
"—of accessibility. Which is what we need. So Soror C.D. is, from a purely vibrational standpoint, correct."
A beat. Soror C.D. looked at Frater V.L. Frater V.L. looked back. It was, between these two, the first moment of genuine alliance in the story, and it produced a flicker of something in the room's egregoric atmosphere that Soror T.M., who was sensitive to these things, registered as faintly hopeful.
In the north wall, the thing registered it as faintly unpleasant. Like a whiff of something astringent.
"Can we—" began Soror A.L.
The wall exhaled.
It was, by now, unmistakably an exhalation — not a draft, not the HVAC. The drywall bowed outward by perhaps a centimeter, which was not a distance that drywall was designed to bow and not a direction that anything behind drywall should be pushing. The motivational poster nearest the north wall — a sunset with the words BELIEVE IN YOURSELF — tilted to the left.
Soror T.M. stood up.
"Soror T.M., we're on item—"
"The wall is bowing."
"—nine, and I—"
"Soror A.L. The. Wall. Is. Bowing."
Soror A.L. looked at the wall. She had been not-looking at it all evening. She had been not-feeling it for two and a half hours, suppressing her own trained perception the way you suppress the urge to check your phone in a meeting — constantly, with effort, and with diminishing success.
She stopped suppressing it.
The wall was wrong. Not dramatically wrong. Not Hollywood wrong. Wrong the way a face looks wrong in a photograph when something is off and you can't identify the problem until you realize: that is not entirely a wall.
"Everyone stop talking," said Soror A.L.
Everyone stopped talking.
In the silence, the thing in the wall breathed. It was audible now — not loud, not frightening, just present, the way a large animal is present in a dark room. Patient. Heavy. There.
"How long," said Soror A.L., very quietly.
"Since March," said Soror T.M.
"How long at this level."
"It's been escalating. The bowing is new. I think the concentration of people is feeding it. We're generating a lot of" — she glanced at the room — "emotion tonight, and the wards aren't filtering properly, so it's leaking through."
Soror A.L. stood. She placed both hands flat on the table.
"The agenda is suspended."
"You can't suspend the agenda without a—" began Frater V.L.
"I am the acting Hierophant, the current Hegemon, and the only person in this room who has both noticed and chosen to ignore the fact that the north wall of our temple is being breached by an astral entity while we argued about fonts. I chose to ignore it because I was running this meeting. That was wrong. The agenda is suspended. We are going to reinforce the north wards. Right now. All of us."
The admission — I chose to ignore it, that was wrong — landed in the room with more force than the wall had managed. These were not words Soror A.L. said. These were not words any leader of this Order had said, possibly ever.
"We don't have materials," said Soror T.M. "I've been doing it with intent alone since May, but for a full reinforcement—"
"What do we need?"
"Salt. Consecrated, ideally, but table salt in a pinch. Literally."
"Salt isn't Golden Dawn," said Frater R.S.
"Frater R.S., do you see a consecrated chalice? Do you see the Hierophant's wand? We have a community center, leftover hummus, and nine people who can't agree on a font. Work with me."
"Frater G.K., is there salt in the community kitchen?"
Frater G.K., who had been eating hummus with a serenity that suggested either profound spiritual equanimity or a complete failure to read the room, looked up. "There's a salt shaker by the microwave."
"Get it."
"It's the community center's salt."
"We are going to steal the Elk Ridge Community Center's table salt and use it to banish an astral entity from their north wall, and then we are going to replace the salt, and no one is going to mention this to the facilities manager."
"I should note," said Frater L.H., "that technically this constitutes misappropriation of community center property, but given that we're acting under exigent circumstances to address a supernatural threat that also constitutes a hazard to the premises, I believe we can argue this falls under the doctrine of necessity. I'll draft a memo if needed."
Nobody responded to this, but nobody told him to stop either, which Frater L.H. took as consent.
"I'll need at least four at the cardinal points, one to direct, and someone scrying to identify what we're dealing with."
"I can scry," said Frater R.S.
"Can you scry without commenting on everyone else's technique?"
A pause. More honest than anything Frater R.S. had said all evening.
"I can try," he said.
What followed was not on the agenda.
The Hermetic Order of the Silvered Compass — nine people in a rented community center room — arranged themselves in the pattern of the Lesser Banishing Ritual of the Pentagram, modified for ward reinforcement. Soror T.M. directed with the efficiency of a person who has been waiting a very long time for someone to finally listen.
Frater G.K. returned with the salt shaker. It was a small glass cylinder with a metal top, the kind found in diners and community kitchens and nowhere in any grimoire ever written. Soror T.M. took it without comment.
She drew the salt line. She spoke the words in English — plain and direct, because the wards needed reinforcement, not performance.
The two Neophytes stood at the south and southeast, unsure of what they were doing but doing it anyway, which was, Soror T.M. thought, the best possible description of the first two years of any magical practice.
Frater R.S. scried. To his credit — and it cost him — he did not comment on the salt shaker. He did not comment on the English. He settled into the scrying posture he had practiced for twenty-two years, let his vision soften, and looked at the north wall with the eyes behind his eyes.
What he saw there shut him up more effectively than any argument ever had.
"It's a cluster," he said, quietly. "Not one entity. A cluster. Low-level astral fauna — thoughtforms, accumulated from—" He stopped. "From us. From the egregore. It's feeding on the discord."
"The discord," repeated Soror A.L.
"Our discord. The arguments. The resentment. The—" He swallowed. "The exit surveys."
A beat.
"It's eating our drama," said Soror C.D.
"In technical terms, yes."
"So the thing in the wall is basically a parasite that grew fat on our inability to get along."
"Yes."
The room processed this. It was either a profound lesson in astral hygiene or the most embarrassing thing that had ever happened to a fraternal organization, and Frater R.S. clearly wanted to articulate which one and was, for the first time in twenty-two years, exercising restraint.
"It has preferences," added Frater R.S., still scrying. "It's — it likes the Zoom argument best. The Zoom argument is — I don't have a better word for this — delicious to it. The font argument is more of a snack." He tilted his head. "And there's something — Frater V.L., it really likes you."
"Me?"
"You generate a very specific kind of frustration in other people. It's — the thing finds it exquisite. You're basically its favorite restaurant."
Frater V.L. opened his mouth to object and then, with visible effort, closed it. The effort not to generate frustration while being told you are the primary source of frustration was visible on his face like weather on a hillside.
"Well," he said.
"Don't," said Soror T.M.
"I was just going to say—"
"I know what you were going to say, and if you say 'in chaos magic we'd just—' I want you to know that this parasite grew partly from sentences that begin with 'in chaos magic,' and feeding it right now would be literally counterproductive."
Frater V.L. closed his mouth.
The banishing continued. It was not elegant. It was nine people with a stolen salt shaker and leftover frankincense performing a ritual that was half canonical and half improvised. For the first time in months, the entire Order was doing the same thing at the same time for the same reason, and the egregore — the real egregore, the living entity created by their collective intention — stirred, and focused, and pushed.
The thing in the wall pushed back. It was strong. Six months of simmering resentment had made it strong — arguments in parking lots, passive-aggressive emails, the slow accumulation of petty grievances that were, individually, nothing, and were collectively a feast. The parasite did not want to leave. It was comfortable.
Frater V.L., at the western point, faltered. He had set aside his chaos magic opinions and performed the LBRP exactly as taught, which was the first time in three years he had done anything exactly as taught. But the pushback hit him like a gust of emotional wind, and the western quarter wavered.
"Hold," said Soror T.M.
"I'm trying—"
"Don't try. Feel where the line is and hold it."
"In chaos magic—"
"Frater V.L. I swear on every Secret Chief—"
"I was going to say: in chaos magic, when you're overwhelmed, you anchor to something personal. Something real." He steadied himself. "I know the LBRP. I learned it here. From Frater R.S., actually. Before I decided it was — before I went looking for other things."
"It's a good ritual," said Frater R.S., from the east, where he was scrying and holding simultaneously, because whatever his interpersonal failures, his magical competence was real and had always been real, and it was the one thing about him that no exit survey had ever questioned.
"I know," said Frater V.L. "I know it is."
He held the west.
The thing in the wall felt the shift. If it had been capable of alarm, it would have been alarmed. What it felt instead was a sudden contraction of the food supply — the sharp-bright flavor it loved was dimming, replaced by something it couldn't consume. Something that tasted of cooperation. To the thing, this was what vinegar is to a creature that feeds on sugar: technically a substance, but not one it could use.
It pressed harder. The drywall bowed. The BELIEVE IN YOURSELF poster fell.
Soror T.M. held the line. She had been holding it for six months, and she was tired, but tired with a direction to push in was better than tired and ignored, and the salt was working, the intent was working, and the thing in the wall was—
It broke.
Not dramatically. Not with a sound effect or a flash of light. It broke the way surface tension breaks — one moment the thing was pressing through, and the next moment it wasn't, because the barrier was whole again and the thing was on the other side of it, cut off from the feast. Already diminishing. Already forgetting what it had tasted. Already dissolving back into the ambient noise of the astral, which was where it had been before it found the thin place, and where it would be again. By tomorrow it would not remember any of this, because it did not have the architecture for memory — only for hunger. And the hunger was fading. And the thing was fading with it.
The lights stabilized. The drywall flattened. From Suite 4A, the quilters' fabric adhesive reasserted itself as the room's primary smell. The north wall became, once again, merely a wall.
Soror T.M. sat down on the floor, because she had been holding the wards together with her bare intention for six months and the release of that tension left her with the structural integrity of wet paper.
"Thank you," she said. To no one in particular. To everyone.
Frater G.K., without being asked, brought her the hummus.
Soror P.N. was still typing. She had been typing throughout the banishing — through the salt line, through the invocations, through the moment the BELIEVE IN YOURSELF poster fell, through Frater V.L.'s unexpected sincerity and the entity's dissolution and the silence that followed. Her screen, if anyone had looked, read: Item 6a (unscheduled): Ward reinforcement performed. Nine members participating. Astral incursion identified as parasitic cluster feeding on egregoric discord. Banishing performed using modified LBRP, table salt (borrowed, community kitchen), and frankincense. Incursion resolved 9:41 p.m. BELIEVE IN YOURSELF poster fell during working; rehung. Salt shaker to be returned.
This was Soror P.N.'s gift: she saw everything, recorded everything, and editorialized nothing. In an order full of people who believed their every action had cosmic significance, she was the one who simply wrote down what happened and let what happened speak for itself.
The meeting resumed at 9:47 p.m. It was a different meeting. Not dramatically different — these were the same people, with the same disagreements, the same overdrafted bank account, the same vacant chair beneath the same kitten. But the egregore had been fed something other than resentment for the first time in months, and the room felt cleaner. The way a room feels after a window has been opened.
"Item ten," said Soror A.L. "The Equinox ceremony."
"We don't have a Hierophant," said Frater R.S., but he said it as a problem to solve rather than a position to defend. For Frater R.S., this was significant.
"No. But we have a Hegemon, a Praemonstrator, a Stolistes, and functioning wards. Can we run the ceremony with the Hegemon presiding?"
"The bylaws allow it, in cases of vacancy, on a temporary basis. Yes."
"Then I'll preside. Soror C.D., the flyer."
"What about it?"
"Use whatever font will get people through the door. If Comic Sans makes them feel welcome, then Comic Sans is doing the Great Work."
"I was actually thinking Helvetica," said Soror C.D.
"Helvetica is fine."
"Helvetica is excellent," said Frater R.S., and the fact that he and Soror C.D. agreed on something produced a small but measurable ripple in the egregore, which Soror T.M. felt from the floor where she was still sitting. It felt nothing like the thing in the wall. It felt like what the thing in the wall could not eat.
"Item eleven was the font question, which we've addressed. Item twelve: any other business."
"I move we allocate one hundred and twenty dollars for ward maintenance materials," said Soror T.M. "From whatever budget we can scrape together. I'll pay for it myself. Again. But I want it in the minutes that I paid for it, and I want it in the budget as a line item going forward, because ward maintenance is not optional and I am done being the only person who knows that."
"Seconded," said Frater R.S. It was not an apology. But it was not a Facebook like, and it was enough.
"All in favor," said Soror A.L.
Eight hands went up. Every person in the room except Frater V.L., who sat with his hand in his lap, looking uncomfortable.
"Frater V.L.?"
"I'm abstaining."
"On what grounds?"
"On the grounds that I've apparently been personally responsible for feeding an astral parasite, and I think I need to — I need to think about what that means before I vote on anything else tonight. I'm not objecting. I'm just—" He looked at his hands. "I need to sit with this."
It was, against all odds, the most mature thing anyone had said all evening.
"Noted," said Soror A.L. "Motion passes, eight in favor, one abstention."
"One other thing," said Soror P.N., still typing, without looking up. "Frater D.L. emailed this afternoon. He has achieved inner equilibrium. He wanted it noted in the minutes."
The room absorbed this.
"Noted," said Soror A.L.
"He also said he'll be at the Equinox."
A beat.
"Also noted," said Soror A.L.
She gathered her papers. She looked at the room — at the nine members of an order that was broke, leaderless, and in violation of its lease, and that had, tonight, in a rented back room of a community center with a stolen salt shaker, done something that actually mattered.
"One more thing," she said. "I owe Soror T.M. an apology. I felt the wall at the start of the meeting. I chose to ignore it because I was running the agenda. That was a mistake. The agenda is not more important than the wards. Nothing administrative is more important than the actual work, and I lost sight of that, and I'm sorry."
Soror T.M. nodded. "Apology accepted."
"I also want it in the minutes."
"Already in," said Soror P.N.
The meeting adjourned at 10:04 p.m., four minutes past the community center's closing time. The facilities manager would send an email about this. The email would go unanswered, joining the rent letters and the ward reports and all the other communications that the Order had failed to adequately address.
But the wards held.
And the salt shaker was returned to the community kitchen, rinsed and refilled, with a small adhesive label on the bottom that read, in neat handwriting that was neither Comic Sans nor Garamond but the Stolistes' own practical cursive: Thank you for the salt. — 4B
And the quilters, arriving the following Thursday, would notice that the adhesive smell in Suite 4A was, for the first time in months, behaving itself. They would attribute this to the new ventilation schedule. Not to the nine people who had, the previous Thursday, stolen their salt and used it to banish a parasitic thought-form that had been feeding on institutional dysfunction in the room next door.
APPENDIX: Excerpt from the minutes of the 117th Quarterly Conclave, as recorded by Soror P.N.
Meeting convened: 7:14 p.m. Meeting adjourned: 10:04 p.m. Members present: 9 Quorum: Achieved (Daath not counted) Items addressed: 12 of 12 (with modifications) Outstanding actions: Hierophant election (date TBD); lease cure period (Imperator to advance funds and draft loan terms); membership applications (astrological review to be conducted by Secretary, apparently); bylaw amendment re: definition of "presence" (Imperator to draft, Praemonstrator to object, process to take approximately forever); ward maintenance budget (allocated, Soror T.M. to be reimbursed, again); curriculum revision (Praemonstrator, who is aware he is allowed to do this now); censer (replaced, consecrated, do not discuss further) Absentees returning: 1 (Frater D.L.; inner equilibrium achieved; will attend Equinox; no further details provided) Incidents: 1 (astral, resolved) Salt shakers borrowed: 1 (returned) Posters damaged: 1 (BELIEVE IN YOURSELF; rehung, slightly crooked) Fonts approved for external communications: Helvetica Fonts not approved: Comic Sans (tabled, but its vibrational frequency was acknowledged) Apologies issued: 1 (acting Hierophant to ward maintainer, accepted) Personal revelations re: being an astral parasite's favorite restaurant: 1 Next meeting: October 20th, pending venue availability and continued existence of the Order
Respectfully submitted, Soror P.N. Secretary, Hermetic Order of the Silvered Compass
P.S. The hummus was fine.