Authors: Andrew Ball
being stamped out. It was tough to see so far.
One of the lights paused. The others
gathered around it. A bright ball of white
light began to grow rapidly. What…?
Another person was scrying. Heading
toward him.
Daniel immediately shoved the sight
away and turned back to the river.
As Xik had taught him, he hid his power
away, layering it in sheets. It was like
wrapping himself in thick grey blankets,
dyed the same blank color as the scry.
Couldn’t use it like that, but that wasn’t the
point.
He stayed perfectly still. He couldn’t
move much, anyway, not unless he wanted to
risk undoing the magical stealth, but the
comfort of performing the task eased his
nerves. Without needing to sleep, he’s spent
a lot of time sitting still, practicing the
maneuver, and incredibly paranoid how fully
he was hidden. He had no one to tell him
how well he was doing.
He could feel the light reach him. It
buzzed behind his back for a few moments,
then took off along the river. Daniel waited
for a long moment, then casually stood and
walked back down the road, careful not to
use any magic. Reaching for the magic had
become so easy, it was like moving an arm.
Seconds passed. He couldn’t feel
anything else.
Other contractors? Or wizards? It didn’t
matter. Better to keep his head down. He
started trying to figure out the quickest way
back across the river.
He didn’t get far before he felt
something else—something different.
Something wrong.
It cut at him, black, cold. Nothing
touched him. He could feel it. The flat edge
of a knife running down the skin on his back.
A horrible promise.
A large part of Daniel told him to run
away as fast as he could, go home, throw
himself in bed, pull up the covers, and go to
sleep.
The vision of a fading Mrs. Faldey made
him turn back around.
Stretching over the spires of the tallest
buildings was a curtain of shadow.
Everything within was stained and foggy, as
if he was looking through old tinted glass. At
the dome’s peak was a jagged hole in the sky
from which the power was emerging. He
could see flecks of red and black through the
tear in reality. A little window into hell,
floating between the clouds.
Only the clouds caught inside that thing
had stopped moving. The severed pieces
outside the barrier continued to drift, misting
out and away from where their bodies had
been hacked off.
The dome sunk down to the ground and
stayed there, silent, enveloping most of
downtown Cleveland within its borders, just
missing the stadium. The edge was only a
block away from where he stood.
He remembered feeling something like it
before, but his senses were weaker then. Not
to mention he’d been busy cowering in his
room under orders from Xik.
The extractors were here.
He left his perch at the edge of the lake.
Walking down the street was like walking
the plank. The desolate tap of his shoes on
the road echoed in his ears.
The darkness stretched up before him.
On one side, the normal world; on the other,
the partition of downtown trapped inside. He
reached forward with a hand. His fingers
clenched into a fist, unwilling to touch it.
He brushed the barest edge of his finger
against the barrier.
Nothing happened.
He tried a bit more, then, and then the
whole finger. He pushed his whole hand in.
The darkness didn’t change or ripple. It had
no more resistance than air. He drew back
without a struggle.
That wasn’t so bad.
Then he remembered Xik’s words. One
could rip you limb from limb quite easily.
But that was the old Daniel.
Going inside would be risky, but he
needed information about the extractors and
the human magicians both. He wouldn’t get
another opportunity before they hit
Aplington, and he couldn’t afford to be
surprised. If he died…Felix died.
No. He’d be worse than dead. He never
would have existed in the first place.
"Ok," Daniel said aloud. He leveled his
hands in front of himself, visualizing a
walkway. "I can do this. No sweat. Free my
mind."
He took a long breath, grit his teeth, and
stepped through the barrier.
The dome had transformed the city. The
color was sucked out of everything, turning it
into the black-and-white movie version of
the real world.
Daniel turned, testing the barrier again
with his fingers. It was solid. He pressed his
palm against it and pushed. It didn’t budge.
He risked concentrating a bit of power
in his fist and punched the dome. It thrummed
at the point of contact, but repelled him like a
thick layer of rubber. He shook his hand
loose.
Daniel made a mirthless smirk. "Well,
that’s not good."
At the moment, he’d wanted to hear
himself talk. Put some normality back into
the situation. A little self-deprecating humor
to alleviate the sense that he’d knowingly
walked into a haunted house.
The words floated out, then fell flat,
dead before they got a foot away. It was like
talking in a pressurized airplane cabin. His
voice had no life.
Daniel shut his mouth.
He glanced up at the darkened city, and
he could see patches of black mingling with
the bright light of magic. He started forward,
jogging along and keeping his senses alert.
****
Downtown was like something out of the
Twilight Zone. People were still there,
crowding the sidewalks and stores, but they
were statues frozen in time. Some were
caught mid-laugh, others sipping drinks. An
entire club was paused mid-dance. The
Vorid spawn seemed unaffected by the
dome’s spell, still latched onto backs here
and there. He sliced his hand through any he
passed. They fell apart and turned into the
soul-dust that seeped into his skin.
It wasn’t long until he sensed powerful
magic up ahead. It came in spurts and blasts.
He pushed part of his magic into his legs and
hopped up to a fire escape. From there, it
was an easy climb to the roof. He crept up to
the opposite edge and peered down into the
street.
Three people were fighting what had to
be an extractor. It looked as Xik had
described it—a construct animated by magic,
maybe seven or eight feet tall. The towering
steel robot was covered with glowing black
and white inscriptions which flashed and
flickered as it moved, almost like some kind
of magical circuitry. Its steps thundered hard
on the asphalt. A wide, cylindrical head was
perched above square shoulders. There
wasn’t any particular part of it he’d call its
face.
The three people fighting had an obvious
but effective strategy. One was harrying and
distracting the machine close up, fighting
with a sword and shield. The other two were
throwing what looked like lightning bolts
from a safe distance.
Daniel watched the magicians work.
They formed a sigil, a flat but complex little
frame of lines and white shapes, and a
moment later, a ball of light shot from it at
their target. It reminded him of the green
lines of Xik’s spell. Wondering how the
sigils worked, he tried to figure out some
pattern, or at least detect how they were
channeling energy like that, but gave up after
a few moments. He could feel the ebb and
flow of the power, but it was like trying to
pick up a language he didn’t know by
listening to native speakers talk a mile a
minute.
The robot’s arm glowed black. Its fist
flew forward, crushing into the man’s shield.
The magic knight was flung through the air
and crashed back against the wall right
below Daniel hard enough to break bones.
Daniel inched back, making sure only his
eyes were peeking out above the roofline.
The knight clambered up onto his hands
and knees. Daniel was surprised he could
move. But he didn’t stand.
Seeing their comrade in trouble, the
other man started chucking his spells even
faster. The woman stopped the small shots
and started gathering a larger sigil together.
Lines and shapes and strange letters spread
out under her feet in a twisted tangle.
The extractor had just reached the
injured warrior when the charged spell was
unleashed. A stream of blue-white lightning
cracked from a sphere above her head and
slammed into the robot. It ground to a halt,
magic inscriptions flickering erratically.
The warrior was back up on his feet. He
leapt high and brought his sword down with
both arms. It glowed bright red and plunged
through the machine’s head and down
through its chest. The extractor’s inscriptions
snapped and buzzed, then faded. It fell limp,
and then began to disintegrate into the same
black smoke as the spawn.
Daniel watched them regroup. The
warrior had a heavy limp, and the girl had
slumped onto her rear and was breathing
hard. The other guy looked completely zoned
out, comatose with exhaustion. Daniel felt a
strange sense of pride. It was a little close
for comfort, but they’d won out.
If he had to fight them, though…that
knight could take some serious hits, and
while he could run fast if he built up speed
over time, he might not be able to instantly
dodge lightning bolts. They were in the
major leagues. He was Double-A at best.
He’d been so focused on their abilities
that he hadn’t noticed their clothing. They
were dressed casually, but what looked like
small tabard was draped around their
shoulders. It had a gold symbol he couldn’t
quite make out against a white background.
He doubted any contractors had a chance to
organize that much—he was probably
looking at warriors from a serious magical
organization.
A heavy, repetitive thump ground down
the road. Daniel looked up the street.
Another extractor was running toward them
like a charging rhinoceros. The warrior
lifted his shield and closed at an angle to
draw it away from his friends.
It ignored the swordsman and churned
straight for the lightning casters. Two bolts
dinged it, but it slowed only slightly. The
male caster threw another bolt that went
wild, smashing through a window, and then
collapsed, totally spent.
The woman didn’t have enough time to
charge one of those big attacks. The warrior
was limping back to intercept, shield and
sword glowing, but he wasn’t going to make
it in time.
Daniel leaned back from the edge and
turned away. When it finished them off, it
would come for him. He had to get away.
Run away again. Run because he was
too weak. Be useless. Let people die. How
many more could those three save if they
lived? How many Eliza Faldeys?
Shit.
Daniel leapt off the balcony and knitted
his fingers together. His arms became a
white hammer. Streamers of light flared from
his fingers as he fell. The extractor looked up
just as he slammed into its head.
The machine was blown to its knees, but
its own enchanted armor crackled at him.
Daniel rebounded from the force, flying back
up into the air. His reflexes kicked in; he hit
the ground upright, a few feet back from the
machine. He rung his hands. They stung like
he’d punched a brick wall.
The extractor hummed, then stood
straight again. Its head had been crushed into
its shoulders, but the damage wasn’t enough
to stop it. Daniel shoved the power back into
his feet and tried strafing around it.
It swiveled by its waist to follow his
movement. Daniel took a couple more steps.
It stayed on him, turning past 180 degrees. It
wasn’t limited in how far it could stretch like
a person, but jointed like a robot. He took a
couple steps back, trying to figure out how he
should attack it.
"Who the hell are you?!" the woman
shouted. She was supporting her fallen
partner under the shoulder.
"An idiot with a bad idea!"
The extractor attacked with a black,
magic-wrapped fist. Daniel flitted backward.
The iron hand crushed into the ground. Its
knuckles left craters in the concrete.
"Holy…" He snapped his head back at
the woman—the girl. Jesus, she was
practically his age. Weren’t adults supposed
to be doing this sort of shit? "Hey, can you
do another one of those?! A big lightning bolt
thing?!"
"…it’ll take time!"
"Just get it ready!"