Authors: Andrew Ball
the streets. The place was devoid of people.
They evacuated in the days after the
president’s speech. With magic picking at his
senses and his ears, he kept jumping at
nothing.
His stomach grumbled louder and
louder. He tried several restaurants, but the
little food he found was uncooked.
Eventually he came across a large
supermarket. He walked through the parking
lot and up to the entrance.
The automatic doors were open. Daniel
stared at them for a long time.
No one was around. The dome should
have frozen the doors shut. Someone who
wasn’t affected by the spell had been
through.
Daniel almost thought better of going in,
but he really needed to eat. He crept past the
stacks of shopping carts and onto the tile.
Signs advertising sales were crowded
around the entrance. There wasn’t any light
besides what was coming in through the
windows. The shelves stretched into a dim
darkness.
He should probably check the whole
place before he let his guard down. He
scryed it out; it appeared empty, but the
paranoia was settling in. He sidled up to the
first aisle. No body home.
He heard a sound. Metal clinked on
metal. He stopped and cocked his head. It
came again.
He inched closer to the source of the
noise, aisle by aisle. The sound clinked and
clunked intermittently. He poked his head
around a corner.
Standing near shelves holding canned
goods was a woman with her back turned to
him. She picked up a can, examined it for a
moment, then chucked it in a bag she was
holding. It settled onto other cans already
there.
Daniel tried to scry her, but to his
magical sense, it was as if she wasn’t even
there. He only knew one thing that could hide
itself like that. She was a contractor.
Daniel ducked back. His first thought
was to find a different store. If she was
anything like Jack at all, he couldn’t trust her
as far as he could throw her.
But what were the chances of that?
Something had happened to Jack, Daniel was
sure, that had deeply affected him. He was an
exception. The woman might be like Daniel,
normal, trying to deal with the situation that
had landed in her lap. Having someone to
watch his back would drastically increase
his lifespan. Worst case scenario, he could
run away. He was confident his sprinting
speed was second only to the jets and the
extractor-birds.
He decided to move back to the
registers and yell at her from there. The extra
space would give him more time to react,
and hopefully she wouldn’t feel as
threatened. He edged behind one of the
grocery conveyor belts. "Excuse me!"
The woman snapped her head up. Purple
lightning arced from her hands and cracked
towards him. He ducked. The lightning
exploded into the customer service desk. The
sharp scent of melted plastic and burning
wood filled the air.
"Wait, wait!" Daniel shouted. "I’m on
your side! I’m a contractor too!"
The sparks dripped in volume, but they
kept snapping. "…we don’t have a side."
Daniel peered over the edge of the
register. She stared back at him. Purple lights
arced and flashed around her. Thin strands of
her brown hair floated in the air,
overcharged with static. He left his baseball
bat on the ground and slowly stood, keeping
his hands where she could see them. "Take it
easy," Daniel said. "I moved back here
because I didn’t want to startle you. If I was
going to try something, I would have snuck
up on you, not announced myself. Right?"
His appeal to reason worked. The
purple lightning twisting at her fingertips
vanished. Her hair fell back onto her thin
frame. She threw the heavy-looking bag over
her shoulder without much trouble; she must
have been stronger than she looked. "What
do you want?"
"You’re right. We don’t have a side."
Daniel licked his lips. "So I was thinking we
should make our own side. They’re not
holding anything back. If we work together,
we could get a lot more accomplished with
half the risk."
"No thanks."
"What about when you sleep?" Daniel
pressed. "Maybe you only need a half-hour
nap like me. But that’s a long time to be out,
if this goes on for a while."
"More reason not to be around someone
that has a vested interest in killing me." She
slowly walked up the aisle, then, keeping her
eyes on him, went for the entrance. "You go
your way, I go mine, and we don’t have any
problems." She ran out the entrance and
behind the building. Daniel heaved a mixed
sigh of relief and disappointment.
He checked to make sure the desk
wasn’t going to set anything on fire, but it
had already been frozen. Even the smell was
gone.
He started around the store. The
refrigerated food, along with the rest of the
perishables, had already been cleaned out.
Everything else had been left to sit. It was
odd seeing a supermarket with whole rows
of meat and dairy empty.
All the bread was gone, but there were
plenty of snacks. He grabbed a box of
crackers off the shelf and started munching.
He stole a can opener from the household
goods aisle, then, taking a leaf from lightning
woman’s book, loaded his backpack with
canned food. There wasn’t much left, but in
the hurry to pack it all away, cans had rolled
to the back of the shelves here and there.
He considered the long-range attacks
he’d seen so far. Daniel had an advantage if
he could get up close, but, like that overseer
on the bridge, he might be gunned down by
oppressive fire. His magic and his armor lent
him some protection, but he needed
something more specialized.
He made his way to cooking wares.
There were plenty of metal items—knives,
spatulas, ladles. He set his bat on the ground
and picked up a paring knife.
Daniel found the biggest, widest soup
pot he could. It was about two feet across the
bottom. He charged the knife with his
powers and sawed through the base of the
pot. He bent several layers of disposable
baking trays around that circular frame,
forming a wide shield.
He grabbed several ladles, cut their long
handles free, and bent them into tight ringlets.
He punched them through the aluminum and
bent them like twist ties to hold it all
together. He dug four wide holes in the pot-
backing, then bent two more ladles through to
form a pair of handles.
He tested it up and down the aisle,
blocking an imagined attack, then stepping
forward into a strike with his bat. The armor
plates on his arm stopped any chafing, and
the improvised ladle-grip gave him plenty of
control over the shield.
By itself, the stability of pre-fabricated
kitchenware might be questionable, but
charged with his magic, it was harder than
steel. God bless America.
Satisfied with his latest purchase, he
slung his backpack over his shoulder and
headed for the doors. An easy leap set him
on top of the supermarket. He looked to
Manhattan. The black fortress was alive over
the skyscrapers, buzzing with Vorid ships.
Daniel set his weapons down and pulled
out his cell phone. He turned the camera
function on, took a brief recording, then
played it back. It was working.
He turned the camera back on. "Hello,"
he narrated. "Welcome to New York."
Daniel panned over the skyline. "I had a
history teacher that hounded us for primary
sources. I’m pretty sure there aren’t any other
reporters taking footage of this, so I thought
I’d do that, just in case. If this isn’t the end of
the world, a generation of high school
students will owe me their sincere
gratitude." Daniel panned to Manhattan and
zoomed in on the black fortress. "It’s been a
little over an hour since the dome dropped. It
looks like the Vorid have set up shop
downtown. The army and the navy are
attacking from the east, the north, and the
south. I’m deep in enemy territory."
Daniel withdrew a can from his pack.
"As you can see, the spell over New York is
really strange. That’s the dome I mentioned.
You can’t see its borders if you’re not a
magician, but it’s pretty clear the color is
sucked out from everything—just blacks and
whites. I’m not sure what causes that, or
why, but it’s not the weirdest part." Daniel
tossed the can in the air and followed it with
the camera. The can went up, reached the top
of its arc, then began to slow. It stopped
halfway down, paused in midair. The colors
of its label faded to shades of grey.
Daniel grabbed the can. It lit back up as
if someone had flicked a switch. He loaded
in his pack. "Basically, everything not under
the influence of a spell gets frozen. I’m a
contractor, so I have a natural resistance to
it, and that transfers to things I touch. It
doesn’t seem to influence air, because I can
breathe fine, and I’ve seen smoke moving for
a while, so it might depend on what it is, too.
Magic’s pretty strange like that."
There was a roar of an engine. A jet
cruised overhead. Daniel followed it with
his camera. "Good timing. Magicians have
been helping the bombing runs all afternoon."
The jet flew over the island and released a
missile. The weapon fell apart, opening up
into a cloud of projectiles. An explosive
storm plowed into the fortress and the
overseer ships in a series of fiery blasts. A
few seconds later, the booms crashed over
Daniel’s ears. "That had to sting."
The jet turned to fly back. It was
pursued by a veritable cloud of the steel
birds. They were moving almost as fast as it
was. The jet’s afterburners flared; it boomed
into supersonic speeds, outstripping them in
moments.
The birds kept on it. They gathered
together. Their wings seemed to link up,
creating a sort of half-moon dish of metal.
They fired a single bright blue laser.
The jet dropped to just above the water
to avoid the attack. In another moment, it
vanished out the edge of the dome. The birds
separated and circled back to roost in the
skyscrapers.
Daniel had never seen anything leave the
dome before. They must have figured
something out. Of course—otherwise every
attack would be a suicide run.
"You’d figure there would be a
conveyor belt of planes bombing, but that’s
not happening," Daniel said. "I don’t think there’s enough magicians. They’ve probably
got every man they have on the ground right
now." He cleared his throat. "Well -"
There was another blast nearby. Purple
light flickered up from an alley. The corner
of a building was blasted up. Red bricks
scattered in the air like the sparks of a
firework. Daniel jammed his cell phone in
his pocket and grabbed his bat and shield.
He skipped across the rooftops. The
woman from before was cornered in a dead
end. Birds were everywhere, circling,
occasionally diving down to distract her.
A small army of the extractors was
marching in from the intersection. She was
punching through them with her purple
electricity, one after another, but she was
losing ground fast.
Daniel leapt down to the street just as a
few of the birds shot off their blue lasers. He
dashed to her side and braced himself
against his shield. The iron glowed white
with power. He felt the impact where the
lasers struck, but he held without problems.
They started circling again. Daniel
pointed at the flock. "Can you hit those
accurately?!" he shouted. The woman stared
at him. "Yes or no?!"
"Yes. But the extractors -"
"I’ll hold the robots off, you get the
birds. Got it?"
"Alright!"
Daniel dashed forward. Purple lightning
was already flickering above him; birds
dropped like flies. He slowed in front of the
extractors and put all of his power into his
bat.
The first extractor noticed his weapon
glowing and raised its arms in a cross to
block. Daniel slammed it with bludgeon
powered by thousands of Vorid spawn,
hundreds of extractors, and a handful of
overseer souls.
The sound his bat made was something
between an explosion and an angry car
crusher. Daniel watched as the extractor was
ripped apart by the sheer magical force. He
didn’t even make contact with the thing—the
steel parted and ripped away from his
oncoming weapon, as if repelled by the