Authors: Andrew Ball
He had to stay on the offensive. He
struck out at the one closest to him before its
friends could get around to help it. A few
two-handed swings left it totally armless.
It went for one of its kicks. Daniel
repeated the move he’d used earlier—he
ducked sideways, grabbed the heel, then
elbowed it in the knee. It bent backward with
a satisfying crunch.
The other two extractors were almost on
top of him. He tried to circle them. Black
lasers ripped and melted the asphalt around
his legs as he ran.
They weren’t as confused as before—
they kept following his movements; the
lasers were scarily accurate. Were they
learning?
No, they weren’t getting stronger—he
was getting slower. Too much power, too
fast. His lungs were burning. His toes
throbbed from jamming into his shoes every
time he changed direction.
He let one get too close, but he saw the
kick coming. He stepped back.
The back of his heels hit the curb. He
held there for a moment, leaning back, arms
circling for balance. He saw the punch
coming, and pushed power into his
chestplate.
The fist landed. Black lightning crashed
and sparked against his white light. He was
sent to the ground, but he was lucky, rolling
across grass, not pavement. His armor held,
and he got away with a bloody lip.
The fight went on. He dodged. He
jumped. He attacked, whipping his baton
against their iron casings over and over. He
made dents, disabled limbs, cracked their
heads.
He was exhausted. His vision felt dark
at the edges, narrowed. He couldn’t focus.
His movements felt automatic,
repetitive. He stopped planning. He was too
tired to think. He just kept reacting, kept
hitting them.
His baton struck a crack it had made
earlier. The extractor’s casing buckled, and
his weapon smashed through its core. He put
his foot on its chest and kicked his weapon
free.
With a long, grinding creak, it fell back
onto the street. Energy surged through him as
he absorbed it.
He had to use that opportunity. He
lunged at the second extractor, overcharging
himself with his magic.
Just as it had before, time slowed to a
crawl. Daniel attacked so fast it was as if he
struck from five directions at once. Its arm
broke off from the shoulder. It tried to catch
itself, but a damaged leg crumpled with the
strain. Daniel hit its torso once, twice, three
times, crushing it. It began to disintegrate.
Even as Daniel absorbed the energy
from the crumbling machine, he was grabbed
from behind. Steel fingers wrapped around
his back. He activated his armor.
The final extractor’s hand shone black
with power as it attempted to squeeze him to
death. If its other arm hadn’t already been
damaged, it might have been over right then.
Daniel wormed in its grip, trying to slip out,
but the hand held firm.
It became a sick game of tug of war;
Daniel pressing outward with his armor’s
power, the extractor’s grip tightening like a
vice. Black and white light shone in his eyes.
Putrid smoke roiled around them.
And then the pressure was gone, and he
was flying.
Some shred of good sense told him to
put his power into the armor on his back. It
was just in time for him to slam through a
brick wall. He tumbled over carpet, broke
through a table, and crunched into the wall of
a living room.
His head rang. He was buried halfway
in the drywall, his legs splayed over the
carpet. He shoved a hand under himself to
get up, but slipped, and fell back on the rug.
His baton was gone.
Pain throbbed up his calf. He looked
down. A splinter of wood the size of his
wrist was sticking out the back of his ankle.
Blood streamed down to his foot.
It didn’t feel as painful as it looked.
Hazy. Like it was happening to someone
else.
He sat upright. The room spun. He put a
hand on a broken part of the wall, trying to
steady himself.
There was a grinding sound. He looked
up.
The extractor was dragging itself over
the curb, then across the lawn, pulling a dead
leg behind it. Its hand was melted and
twisted where it had held him. The other arm
dangled free, useless. But it was still
moving.
He had to move. He tried putting
pressure on his injured leg. His vision went
black and red. A noise like a dog’s whimper
leaked out of his mouth.
The extractor reached the house. It
ripped a wider hole in the brick so it could
fit through. An iron foot crushed the carpet.
His leg was shot. That was his
advantage, speed. He was screwed.
The extractor took another step. He
pressed himself back against the wall,
gathering the precious inches between
himself and the robots.
In the debris of the table he saw an old
radio, a fat speaker on one side, a dial for
different stations on the other. A big antenna
stretched up from the top. The way it
telescoped reminded him of his baton.
The extractor reached him. It raised its
twisted hand. Energy gathered under its
fingers. The blackened iron hissed and
rattled with the strain, but the laser was
coming.
Daniel grabbed the radio. He pointed
the tip at the machine, and poured himself
into it until it glowed like white-hot iron.
He jammed the end of the antenna into
the extractor. It punctured through its
weakened hull. He brought it up, up, tearing
a line through his enemy. He was screaming.
The extractor’s inscriptions fizzled. Its
palm dropped. The laser fired. It burned a
hole in the wall under Daniel’s arm, leaving
him unscathed.
Daniel sat there, still holding the radio.
He heaved air. His throat was hoarse.
Metal creaked. The machine tipped. A
half-ton of steel was about to fall on top of
him. He tried to raise an arm to protect
himself, but he didn’t have any strength left.
The extractor’s head thumped onto the
wall above him, and it rested there, propped
over Daniel’s body like a lean-to.
Daniel started laughing, a half-hearted,
coughed-up chuckle. Or was he crying? He
wasn’t sure. He didn’t care.
The extractor’s body disintegrated.
Black smoke rushed into him. He felt the
burst of energy.
And then he saw the true potential of
what the Ivory Dawn had called a vampiric
enchantment.
The broken piece of wood driven into
his leg was pushed out. It dropped to the
ground, still covered in blood. The exposed
muscle and flesh knit together. His skin
swam and neatly folded over the hole,
leaving nothing to show he’d ever been
harmed.
Daniel tested his leg, then shoved to his
feet, leaning against the wall for balance. His
ankle definitely still hurt, but it worked. He
ached all over. He felt like he could have
fallen asleep standing up.
He’d done it.
Darkness flickered.
He stumbled out of the house in a full
panic. If more came, he was dead. He had to
run, survive, live to fight another day.
The crack in the sky closed.
The dome’s world-stopping spell
vanished. The grass was green again. The air
smelled like heavy mid-summer damp. He
fell to his knees and sucked it in.
He put his hands on the grass. It was wet
with dew. He clenched his fists, feeling it rip
from the ground, feeling the plant-matter in
his hands. It was so normal. So real.
Brick and plastic siding collapsed from
the hole behind him. Lights flashed on in
windows. He heard a shout. He jogged his
half-dead corpse back down the street before
the police showed up and asked what the hell
he was doing in the middle of a warzone
wearing a homemade suit of armor.
He crawled up into his bedroom
window and stripped off the belts holding
the pads in place. They were a steaming
wreck, and his hoodie was ruined, too.
Besides the hole in the center, the giant’s
hand had left an imprint where it touched
him, burning through the Plexiglas and steel
and rubber all the way to the last fibers of
his clothes. Probably explained why his ribs
hurt every time he turned.
He dropped onto his bed and was asleep
before his head hit the pillow.
****
Daniel woke up with a stiff neck and a
throbbing headache. He wandered down the
stairs, wincing as he passed the bright light
coming in through their windows. Felix was
on the couch, legs splayed over the cushions
in a cartoon-induced stupor. Their dad was
gone, already at work. Daniel stopped at the
edge of the kitchen.
"You eat?" Daniel said.
"No."
"I feel like pancakes. Want some?"
"Yeah!"
"Good."
They had a small TV in the kitchen.
James had left it on the local news. A woman
with way too much makeup was standing in
front of a street that looked like a bombed-
out picture of London from World War II.
"As you can see, the damage is
extensive. Authorities are still investigating,
but believe there may have been a problem
with a natural gas line. The epicenter of the
explosion is thought to have been located
under that house." The woman pointed. The
camera zoomed in on the hole in the brick
house, which was cordoned off with yellow
police tape. "The resulting brick shrapnel
decimated the remainder of -"
Daniel turned it off.
He used the instant stuff, and in a few
minutes, he had pancakes frying in a pan. A
stack slowly grew on a plate next to him. He
ran out of batter, mixed more, and poured
another pancake.
He felt like his mind was a hundred
miles away from his body. His hands kept
working without his thoughts to guide them.
Autopilot.
It all seemed fake. A dream. Now he
was back. Everything seemed too normal,
too average. Was the world really like this?
News reports and pancake breakfasts? Or
was it the black-and-white frozen world of
vorid, and forgotten victims, and magic?
"Hey Danny?"
"Hmm?"
Felix tramped over the tile. "Are you
really hungry or something?"
Daniel glanced at the plate and realized
he’d made ten pancakes for the two of them.
He took a long breath, then put some plastic
wrap over the rest of the batter and stuck it in
the fridge.
They sat at the table, slathered the fried
dough in butter and syrup, then sawed it to
pieces. Daniel shoved it into his mouth. It
was warm and sweet. He chewed for a long
time, then swallowed. He set his fork down.
"Danny?" Felix looked at him. "What’s
wrong? I think they taste pretty good." Daniel
got up from his seat and hugged his brother.
He grabbed on tight and cried over his
shoulder. "Dan? Dan, are you ok?"
"…yeah." Daniel stood straight and
wiped his eyes. He sniffed. "I’ll be fine."
"What happened?"
Daniel sat and shoved more pancakes
into his mouth. "Nothing. Forget it."
"Are you sure?"
"I’m sure."
"…hey, Dan?"
"Yeah?"
"…thanks."
"You’re welcome."
"No, I mean…Dad was off for a while,
you know? I didn’t know what to do."
Daniel stared. Felix had never talked
about their father’s depression. He’d always
thought his kid brother wasn’t really old
enough to notice it.
"But," Felix said, "you always did. That made it better."
"…good."
"Why were you crying?"
"…it’s nothing you need to worry
about," Daniel said. "Something I already
took care of. Just…bad thoughts."
"…I miss mom, too."
Felix started in on his food again.
Daniel sat down and did the same. They
didn’t need to talk. There was a sort of silent
communication, thoughts conveyed through
the clatter of forks on plates as they finished
their pancakes.
Daniel thought hard. He had to have
gotten a big boost from absorbing three more
extractors. He had to measure his powers
again. And make more armor. And order a
new baton.
But did he want another baton? It wasn’t
quite right. He was already fast—he needed
something heavy that could do big damage
when he had the chance for a hit. Less like a
stick and more like a club.
He had two more months until he moved
to Boston. Even if the Vorid kept to their
schedule, he’d be facing the extractors two
more times—and probably more than he had
the last time. On that point, and on everything
else, Xik’s information had held true.