Michael (The Curse) (The Airel Saga, Book 3: Part 5-6) (13 page)

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Authors: Aaron Patterson,Chris White

Tags: #YA, #Fantasy, #Epic Fantasy

BOOK: Michael (The Curse) (The Airel Saga, Book 3: Part 5-6)
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If I was getting anything, it was mad. She was acting like I was a weakling. “You’re confusing small with helpless. I’ll be fine.”

As if in response to my boast, and right out of the fiery wreckage, a large and evil thing approached us. “Okay. That one’ll be yours, then,” she said.

It used its raven-like wings to shield its appearance from us, probably to protect itself from the flames. Those wings were arrayed with thousands of darkly pearlescent scales that overlapped in patterns, trailing off at their edges to paper thinness, catching in the bursting updrafts of the fire. It stood well over ten feet above my head and its body was as wide as one full lane of road. Its wingspan had to be at least forty feet.

It came closer still, folding its wings back slightly. I could see its long, powerful arms, and its short, fat legs doubled up under it like those of a frog. Beneath eyes that burned deep red were crooked, jagged teeth that dripped blackness. It spoke in voices that fought each other in timing and pitch, like an overdubbed recording, a doubled-up vocal track.

“You will die. Give us the boy immediately and we might, graciously, make the death quick and painless.”

I felt movement nearer to me and discovered that Michael was limping to my side, joining Ellie and me. I shot him a look of warning. “Stay back,” I whispered.

“You,” the demon continued its threats, “are right to fear. We can kill you easily.”

I wasn’t convinced. I took a step toward the huge beast and it actually leaned back a little.
Is it scared of me? Or us? And why?

Ellie touched my arm.

I looked toward where she motioned. There were three tough-looking men slinking out of the darkness. They were brandishing what looked like military hardware—big guns that shot lots of bullets. I looked back to Ellie.

“This is gonna be fun. Mind how you go, girl. They mean business.” She left us, stepping toward the three men with her sword raised.

“Ellie …” I knew we were missing one host and three demon Brothers. “We don’t know where all of them are yet.”

Ellie turned and glared at me for a split second, then motioned to the massive beast with a nod of her head. “Mind how you go.”

I guessed that meant to be careful killing the sucker.
No time like the present,
I figured, and charged, launching myself at its head.

It was quicker than I thought it would be. One of its wings swept around and clipped me in midair. I bounced off and landed awkwardly, deflected. I stood, clenched my fists, and tried to puff my hair out of my face, except it was soaked and stuck to my cheeks.

I looked to Ellie. She was busy with the three men already, stepping into them, her sword swinging around. I watched as she effortlessly took off one of their heads. He went down like a dropped sack of flour and she did a little pirouette move toward her next victim.

I had my own problems, though. I faced my foe and tried to remember my training, such that it was.
Darn you, Kreios, where are you when I need you most?
I looked toward Michael. He had found a blunt object for a weapon and had returned to Kim’s side. He stood ready, with his feet apart.
Good. He’ll keep her safe.

There was nothing left for me but the mountain of nastiness that was waiting for me. I turned back to my enemy, sizing him—
it
—up. I remembered how Kreios had taught me about using hate or love to fuel and augment my abilities.

Then
She
spoke up.
“Believe in what can
be, not only in what is.”

“Ooooooo-kay,” I said, completely baffled. But something instinctual was rumbling within me, and before I knew it I had taken off running, directly at the monster.

The thing crouched into a battle stance.

“Feint,”
She
said.

I knew what that was. It was pretending to do one thing while intending to do another in battle. It was a good idea, and might buy me time. I needed to sell it well.

When I was close enough, within a couple of strides of my enemy, I crouched in midstride as if I was going to leap up at the creature’s head once more. Instead, I intended to slide beneath and try to get behind it.

It worked.

The thing rose up slightly and cocked one arm as if to backhand me. I dove into the opening this created, sliding right between its legs on wet pavement. I scrambled to my feet, stomping on and grabbing at one of its wings, trying to climb up, maybe get to the head, find a weak spot, a way to wound it. Clearly I needed a weapon. Something besides my bare hands.
Maybe I can poke it in the eye or something.

I could feel my energy, my will to fight, being sapped as the evil of the Brotherhood drained my power, feeding on it.
“Make it short and sweet,” She
said.

The demon twisted and turned, shaking its back, trying to throw me off. I grasped it by the leading edge of its wing with one hand. My other hand flailed around for a moment, then came to rest on one of the strange flexible iridescent scales that were like feathers. I yanked on the scale as hard as I could, ripping it out, causing the demon to shriek with rage. It gyrated horribly then, and it was all I could do to hold on. Thankfully, no matter what the thing did, it couldn’t reach me on its back. I felt stupid, though, because all I was doing was pissing it off.

“Take up the Sword.”

A picture flashed into my mind. It was the top of the cliff. The place where I had died. Ellie’s words from a few moments ago came sweeping back to me: “Get your sword …” Ellie couldn’t have known, but
She
certainly did.

The Sword.
Can I make it appear at will? Is that how it happened on the cliff’s edge? Or is there something I’m missing?

I didn’t have time to deliberate. While I was forming a committee to vote on the issue in my head, the demon was working its own solutions to its problem—me.

“Hey.” I heard a voice in the distance.

Michael.
I searched for him as the mountain of corrupt flesh heaved beneath me. Michael was trying to get its attention, running toward it with his piece of jagged street-brawl weaponry at the ready. I then realized what was happening—the beast was backing toward the fire.
It’s going to try to burn me off. Crap.

Michael was closer now, running faster. “Hey, reject. Yeah, you.” He swung his weapon as a warning. “I got somethin’ for ya. Come get it.”

The demon paused.

“Now.”

With as much strength and speed as I could muster, I vaulted up onto the demon’s shoulders and clawed as hard as I could, digging deep into the monster’s left eyeball, squeezing, wrenching, pulling. Something burst like a water balloon and a jelly-goo gushed in between my fingers.

Ewwwww.

The demon dropped to a crouch and doubled over, howling with pain and rage. I used its motion to get the heck off the ride and run for Michael.

“Michael, get back.” I ran at him, gesturing for him to get back, to move away. “This thing’s gonna be really angry now.”

The look on his face was priceless.
He’s impressed,
was all I could think.

“Come on,” I said, “stay back there with Kim. She needs you.” I wheeled back around to face my foe—I didn’t have time to see if Michael was going to go for it or not. I was running on something higher than instinct now and I couldn’t stop it if I wanted to—the energy drain had stopped for some reason.

I clasped my hands together as if holding the grips of a sword. It could have been a gesture of prayer too, and I was okay with that as well. I closed my eyes and tried to imagine in my mind’s eye the Sword of Light, about which I had read so much in my grandfather’s Book. Listening intently, I kept all my other senses on the alert for my enemy. Ene
mies,
possibly. I exhaled, trying to relax a little, then opened my eyes and looked down.

“Aaaaand … nothing.”
Darn it.
No Sword—not even just a regular sword. Hands still clasped, I eyed my monstrous foe as it howled in furious pain and slowly regained its footing.

Then I heard something absolutely crazy. It was
She. “Just pretend.”
A flood of images from my childhood flashed into my mind. Playing house with little Kim when we were younger. We were princesses. We dressed up and pretended to be somebody we weren’t. But it was real enough for us as kids. It was actually more real to us in our childhood than reality. I saw what
She
might have meant by that.

“Okay.” I nodded and held my clasped hands up at the ready, feeling a little bit like a moron.

The demon was up again, sitting atop its frog haunches, shaking its head in pain. It leaned forward onto its fists like a gorilla, roaring at me savagely, whipping its wings and stirring up dirty diesel smoke from the burning wreck.

Then I got a crazy idea of my own. I knelt down on the soaked road in the rain, right in the middle of the destruction, right there with a demon as big as a house in front of me, and began to pray to El. “Just keep Michael away while I do this,” I whispered. I paused, willing myself to be still, to be quiet.

And then I asked for it: “Get that stupid, ugly thing mad enough to attack me, and I’ll split it from neck to loins with the Sword.”

Neck to loins? When have I ever said anything like that?

Remaining on my knees, I snapped my eyes open and looked right at the enormous thing I wanted to kill. It was as if I had sounded a battle trumpet—its one good eye instantly locked onto mine, widened in momentary fear and then narrowed into distilled hate.

So it is me you fear.

It roared once more and launched itself right at me.

I stood my ground, on my knees in the rain, my gaze drilling holes in the center of my enemy, my hands clasped around the imaginary grips of my grandfather’s Sword, ready to kill.

“This one’s for Kreios,” I said softly, summoning as much love for him as I could muster, given how very little I really knew about everything.

Exploding out in ribbons of light, appearing with great power in my hands, the Sword lit up the night. It caused the falling rain to bow outward around me, encapsulating me in a globe of stillness, light, and energy.

I still didn’t know if I was imagining it or if I had actually called up the Sword.
No need to pretend now.

I looked up. The beast was almost on top of me. The dull, bare hatred of its face was now raked aside in the light of the Sword.

I rose to one knee and jabbed upward as forcefully as I could, into the belly of the beast. Its momentum did the rest, the Sword gliding easily, deeply through demonic tissue, gutting it from neck to loins as I stood there, just as I had prayed. Unspeakable amounts of stench filled the air. I was sure I had killed it instantly.

It crashed on the other side of me, skidding to a dead stop right about where Michael and Kim had been.

I stood up quickly, standing on tiptoes, looking over the split carcass, searching for them, trying to see if they were safe. “Michael. Kim.”

Their heads popped up just on the other side of the whale-sized beast. “Airel,” Michael said.

“Ohmygosh, are you guys okay?”

Michael laughed. “Du-huuude, wow.”

I blushed. “Where’s Ellie?”

She answered for herself, off to one side where I had left her. “Right here.” She came walking up to me. “That’s no toy, girl. Just where did you get
that?”
She was pointing to the Sword.

I looked down at it just in time to see it fade and disappear. I didn’t look back up at her until after I had spoken, “It belonged to my grandfather.” When I did look at her, the expression on her face was indescribable.

The huge demon crackled as the rain soaked into its skin, rendering the thing into little bursts of ash with each impacting raindrop. We just stared.

CHAPTER IV

I WAS ABOUT TO relax.
Silly me
.

A trio of smaller demons fell to the earth—zippy little things. They looked like they might have once been children, at least in their faces. Apart from their classically cherubic countenances, though, they bore on every other surface of their bodies what I could only imagine was part of the penalty for their original rebellion in paradise. Sickly looking growths of fungus covered their bodies. Some of the growths were like little tubes, others had caps like mushrooms, and others secreted ooze or bursts of black spore clouds.

I gagged. They moved in twitchy jerks—they were fast. They would be dangerous.

I quickly tried to assess the situation from a martial point of view. We stood in three separate units—Michael and Kim together on one side of the road, me on the opposite, Ellie off to one side. Michael was armed only with his street-brawl weapon, what looked like a piece of pipe. Kim, too, looked determined, brandishing a pistol. It could only be the gun Michael had flashed when we first met Ellie at the burned-out school.

As for Ellie, she stood off on one side of the road, forming the point of our little triangle. She was armed with her sword, but she also had slung the shoulder strap of some massive firearm over her shoulder. She had no doubt commandeered it from one of the three men she had just killed. The three fungus demons stood twitching like squirrels in front of her on the opposite side of the road.

Whether it was
She
or the Sword’s power still ebbing through me, I knew that the way we were positioned was better than trying to get into one big defensive circle and face outward—at least this way, in order to take us out, these three evil little things would have to split up.

But as I scanned the scene, I saw movement in the darkness. “Ellie, behind you,” I shouted.

She wheeled, sword at the ready.

A huge man, over seven feet tall, strode out of the darkness.

Ellie backed off as he approached, joining Michael and Kim, which pissed me off. I couldn’t understand why she didn’t stand her ground, why once again, she basically sold me down the river and left me on my own with the strongest enemy, and why she had to be close to Michael.
Darn that woman, I’m going to hurt her, and frickin’ soon.

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