Authors: Andrew Ball
machines like bulls. A harpy shrieked as it
was ripped apart by birds.
Daniel passed an intersection. There
was a huge roar. The birds behind him were
engulfed in red fire. He watched the
enchanted steel melt to glowing ash. The
heated remains rained down on the extractors
below.
A dragon whipped around the corner, a
giant winged monster with a long, snaking
neck and sharp spines running down its back.
Daniel turned again, and the dragon followed
his path, letting loose another roar as it
adjusted its wings. He felt like he was being
pursued by a freight train.
He felt the heat before he saw it. Daniel
flipped in midair, curled up, and raised his
shield. The stream of fire slammed into it.
Tendrils of flame licked around its edges,
but his armor plating protected him.
Daniel hung a sharp right at the next
intersection, then, before the dragon caught
up, smashed through a window. He slid to a
stop inside a nest of tan cubicles and
suppressed his presence. The dragon
whooshed passed his position, oblivious to
one more broken window among dozens.
Daniel sat back against a steel cabinet and
breathed.
He jerked back up and jumped onto a
desk. He had to stay alert. Being up higher
off the floor would give him more time to
react if the Nightmares came from below.
The dragon doubled back. The scaled
monster searched for a few minutes, peeking
in a few windows with its reptilian head
cocked, then flew off to light up more
extractors. He watched it until it went far
enough that he felt safe.
Daniel leaned out the building to get his
bearings. Below, lines of extractors marched
along with robotic precision. At this point,
he figured they were more cannon fodder to
soften up the Dawn.
Times Square was just two blocks
away. All the signs were shut off and greyed
out by the dome. Without the lights and the
people, it might have seemed empty, but no
less than three black pillars had set down
there. They spewed out extractors by the
hundreds. He could feel at least twenty
overseers milling around.
Daniel ducked back inside when he
heard a heavy flap of wings. Sure enough, a
green-colored dragon cruised down, dousing
the extractors below with brilliant yellow
flames. The only thing left was a streak of
burnt pavement.
Just behind the dragon was a small
horde of Minotaurs, and behind them,
magicians. They pushed into the region the
dragon cleared. Everything in the city was
converging, fast. It confirmed his suspicions
—they were going to use the square as their
launch pad for a direct attack on the fortress.
Rachel and Eleanor had to be with them.
He wasn’t missing this party. Daniel jumped
out the window and pushed off straight for
the closest overseer.
Chapter Twelve
Times Square
Rachel’s golems were all embroiled
with extractors. As soon as they killed or
damaged one, another took its place,
shooting the black lasers or punching with
steel fists. Rachel herself was even using her
most powerful spell, a combination
construct-physical sigil that coated her with
the shell of a golem, effectively making her a
stone-armored warrior. Unlike her dolls,
which could only take orders, she had
instinct and creativity on her side—and
focusing all her magic on only herself
multiplied her strength several times.
Rachel caught an extractor with an
uppercut. It soared into the air. Eleanor,
calmly walking just behind, flicked her
wrist. The robot was shredded by icy spears.
Rachel moved up for another attack.
She needn’t have bothered. Henry
completed his spell. The massive sigil
appeared in the air over the horde of
extractors. The lines of blue light shifted and
clicked like the face of a giant clock.
It was a massive, perfected version of
Eleanor’s quick attack. Dozens of gleaming
stalactites ripped downward. The flock of
birds above them were shredded, and the
wall of ice continued down, spearing through
metal arms and heads of the extractors. A fog
boiled across the ground from the chipped,
melting ice.
When the cloud cleared, there was
nothing left but a field of unmoving metal
bodies. Rachel’s golems shoveled a path
clear. Ahead lay more black pillars, and the
nest of the overseers. More extractors were
already crowding their base. Henry’s spell
hadn’t been enough to take out the
commanders; even he couldn’t force that
amount of power over that wide an area.
A dragon roared in the distance. The
extractors opposite them were caught in the
conflagration from the demon’s mouth.
Rothschild’s side was closing in. "Move
up!" Henry yelled. "Get ready for their
spell!"
Even as he spoke the words, the grey
spheres appeared around the pillars. There
were dozens, maybe even hundreds, some
small, others the size of trucks. Rachel kept
her golems close. Eleanor prepared her
barrier magic. If they didn’t stop this attack,
a lot of people were going to die.
There was a flash of white light.
A nearby display sign blew in half—an
overseer had struck it. The sign creaked,
tilted, then collapsed on the overseer’s body.
A black mist drifted upward. A green sigil
flared under a man covered in layered iron
plates as bits of the Vorid’s soul were
absorbed. Daniel.
He stood in midair. He had a baseball
bat in one hand, and an iron shield in the
other. The grey spheres flew at him. There
were no gaps to slip through. It was a solid
wave of magic.
Half of a skyscraper was erased. It was
the strangest thing, seeing the top half of the
building still floating there, frozen in time,
when it should have collapsed right on top of
them.
Daniel was gone. But he wasn’t dead.
He was so fast she couldn’t follow him
with her eyes. The only way to track him was
by the physical sigils he used to change
direction. The hazy pads didn’t dissipate
immediately.
The whole of the street lit up with his
efforts. A white blur shot around the
overseers like a laser reflected off mirrors.
The grey spheres launched his way were
useless; he was gone long before they
reached him. By the time the Dawn had
moved up to where he was fighting, he’d
killed half of them.
"Oh my god," Eleanor breathed.
Rachel had similar sentiments. She
could hardly believe it was him. The battle
must have increased his powers
exponentially.
Even as they watched, the rest of their
troops made the square. They’d surrounded it
from all sides, just as planned. It was oddly
quiet. No one, human or demon, made any
move to jump into Daniel’s fight.
Daniel stopped at the end of the square.
Every segment of armor glowed somewhat,
but his bat burned the brightest. It left spots
in Rachel’s eyes.
The remaining overseers had clustered
tight together. They were holding their grey
orbs around themselves as a last defense.
Daniel wasn’t paying them any attention. He
was looking at the underside of the fortress.
Henry flinched. A moment later, Eleanor
did the same thing, and finally, Rachel felt it.
The dark, cutting feeling that always came
with a dome. It plummeted toward them.
Toward Daniel.
He raised his shield. A black spear
struck its surface. A shockwave echoed out
from the point of contact. Magic energy
poured out in a shower of sparks.
Daniel batted at the spear. It was thrown
away, flipping end-over-end. Just as
suddenly, it halted. Rachel saw then that it
was more a sword than a spear, a long,
curved blade sharpened on one edge like a
scythe. It didn’t have a handle.
Then it came. She knew it was the Vorid
lord. It had to be.
Daniel’s shining white light felt like a
flickering candle next to the mass of magical
oppression that rolled over them. She took a
step back. Eleanor bit her lip. The magicians
exchanged nervous glances. Henry raised a
fist to stop his forces from getting closer.
"Hold!"
The lord drifted down. It had the same
form as the others, ink-black skin and
delicate, narrow features. It was dressed in a
white robe with green trimmings. There was
a black patch on its breast, some kind of
sigil. It stopped near the floating sword.
It looked at the overseers. They
cowered before their master. It said
something in a humming language full of n’s
and m’s. Even though they were surrounded
by their enemies, the overseers immediately
prostrated themselves.
The lord raised a thin hand. Its fingers
twitched. Screams echoed over the square.
Rachel felt the blood drain from her face as
the lord ripped souls directly out of its
servants.
The lord waved a hand. A black sigil
flashed at its fingertips, and the sword
multiplied. Five identical blades floated
around it.
Rothschild chose that moment to release
his dragons. All three of the demons flew in
from above. Three streams of hellfire
erupted from their mouths, surrounding the
Vorid leader in magic heat.
The smoke vanished. A crackling black
shield came into view, like an egg sheltering
him from the storm. The lord wasn’t
perturbed. It hadn’t even moved.
The swords leaped forward at lightning
speed. The dragons barely had time to roar
as they were chopped into pieces. Their
thick hides offered no protection. All three
were dead before their corpses smacked the
ground. The five swords returned to their
master, lining up like obedient soldiers.
It raised a hand. Four of the swords
swept toward Daniel. One flew at Rachel’s
position.
A minotaur jumped to meet it, fists
wrapped in shadowy magic. The sword
blurred. The minotaur fell apart. Entrails
slapped to the pavement. The sword
hesitated only briefly before continuing on.
Henry threw up his hands. A blue sigil
glowed under his feet. A diamond of solid
ice trapped the sword in the air just a few
yards away. Over the square, Rachel could
see Daniel flashing about as the swords
tailed him.
The prism buckled. The sword sawed
up, then down, and freed itself. It dove
forward and stabbed Henry through the gut
before anyone could react.
The president of the Ivory Dawn took a
step back. He coughed. Blood lined his lips.
There was a blast of white light. Daniel
flashed by. The sword was gone, pulled out
of Henry. Wind rushed over them as Daniel
exploded away.
Rachel was numb. Her golem skin fell
from her body. She ran forward, tripped,
then crawled the rest of the way. Blood was
everywhere.
Eleanor was there. She grabbed his
robes up in her fists. She was screaming.
Rachel couldn’t hear her. She couldn’t hear
anything.
Arms were under her, lifting her to her
feet. Nickolas. "We can’t stay here!"
Others rushed Henry. A medic came in
with healing magic to stabilize the wound.
Rachel’s world restarted. She had to
protect Eleanor. They had to retreat. "Elly!"
Rachel grabbed Eleanor’s shoulder. Eleanor
slapped the hand away. "We have to go!
You’ll just get in the way! Elly!"
Rachel didn’t know what the sword had
been doing in the meantime, but she felt the
dark magic flash. She raised a single golem.
The blade hardly slowed as it cut through.
There was a flash of light. Daniel was
back, shield high. He slapped his bat at the
weapon, and it spun away from the force.
"Get him out of here! I’ll hold -"
He couldn’t finish his sentence; the lord
wasn’t being patient. Daniel fended off
another sword and moved so as not to make
them a target. All five weapons were on him,
now.
Rachel grabbed Eleanor. Nicholas
helped drag her back from the lines. Eleanor
scratched at Rachel’s arm, crying, half from
grief and half from anger.
Other magicians gathered up Henry. The
demons on the front line scattered, accepting
the pain of disobeying summoning orders to
avoid their own deaths. Magic rumbled over
them as they ran.
****
Eleanor stood over her father. Henry
was resting in the back of a truck, alive, and
stable, but unconscious. Rachel stood with
her, keeping an arm on her shoulder.
Eleanor’s face was expressionless.
Henry might have been Rachel’s surrogate