Authors: Andrew Ball
wall below the old man’s window. He set
his hands into the wood slats and tested his
weight. It creaked a bit, but held him. He
began a slow climb to the second floor.
The window was shut tight. He peered
in, making sure the man was actually
snoozing, then pressed his hands against the
glass. He pushed up. It didn’t move.
Daniel fished around in his pocket for
his Swiss army knife. He flicked open the
tiny saw and wedged it under the crack in the
window near one of the locks.
He pushed power out to his hand. His
fingers were coated in the magic as if he
were wearing gloves—and his tool picked
up that effect. The red handle and steel
appendages were bleached solid white. His
fingertips felt as if they were being pressed
against something that was vibrating—there
was a slight loss of sensation, a touch of
numbness. A small hum reached his ears. Not
too loud, though. That was good.
He set the tool against the edge of the
lock and started to saw. The grating made
him wince, but the magic made it quick
work. In five strokes, he sliced through the
plastic. The second lock went just as
quickly.
He put his palms on the window pane
and slowly pushed up. Unfortunately, he’d
drastically underestimated how the magic
enhanced his finger strength.
The window snapped up, clacking hard
into place. Daniel reeled backward, off-
balance, and his arms flew in circles,
grasping for something, anything.
His left hand caught part of the wood
lattice. He twisted backward and smacked
against the side of the house. One of his feet
slipped off the wood. His focus was shot,
and the white light of the magic flickered
silent.
His fingers were wedged between the
wood and the house siding, and now they
were bending back, straining to hold his
body up. Daniel shoved as much power as he
could into that arm. A thrumming filled the
air and a light like a torch bathed the yard.
He dragged himself back and threw
himself over the windowsill. With his head
now hanging in the bedroom, he looked up,
expecting the worst.
The old man dragged on a long, rattling
snore, rolled away from him, and fell still.
Daniel let out an unsteady breath. He
inched his body through the window and set
ginger toes down on the carpet.
With the man’s back now facing him, the
Vorid was right in Daniel’s sights. He crept
along, wincing at creaks and groans in the
floorboards. He made it to the edge of the
bed without further incident.
Daniel paused. He glanced at his feet.
He looked up at the old man.
He hadn’t really thought this far ahead.
How was he going to kill that thing without
waking the bastard up?
Daniel worked a finger into his hair and
turned it in a circle. The lock of hair flipped
up, then down, then around. He tapped his
thigh with his other hand.
The finger turning his hair stopped.
Ok. I
got this.
Daniel reached out over the bed with
both hands. He pushed magic into both of
them at the same time. Each hand and wrist
glowed with a white power-glove. The
Vorid slithered slightly.
Daniel brought his hands together,
catching the Vorid on either side of its
mucus-coated carapace, and squeezed. It
shrieked and flailed like cat dropped in a
boiling pot. Inky tentacles withdrew from the
man, then slapped and beat at Daniel’s arms.
Where it hit his power-coated skin, it only
burned itself, but he quickly earned a series
of lashes on his chest.
A blade-like appendage stabbed out and
opened a burning cut on Daniel’s shoulder.
He stumbled backward, weathering the storm
of blows, barely keeping his hands on the
thing. He fell to the floor, and the parasite
was on top of him, biting, whipping,
clawing. It nipped at his face with the pincer
jaws of a scorpion.
Daniel grunted and squeezed harder.
The Vorid stopped attacking, and started
squirming ferociously in an attempt to
extricate itself. Daniel bared his teeth and
dug his nails into its flesh.
The spawn screamed. A glass on the
man’s dresser shattered. Water sprayed over
the floor. Daniel winced and pushed harder.
The Vorid’s shell-like carapace
snapped in two, and his magic-coated hands
mashed the soft bits into pulp. The bits and
pieces clinging to his arms vaporized to
black dust. It swirled up into the air,
collecting itself into a black cloud that then
rushed into his chest. Daniel lay on his back
a moment, wheezing his breaths.
He’d been starting to feel the stinging
from his wounds—but that stopped. He
stared at his hands in amazement. His skin
wavered, grew, and pressed together, sealing
the cuts. Rising red welts from the whipping
faded and vanished. The gash on his shoulder
melted away, though a bit of blood still
stained his shirt where the wound had been.
His heart hammered against his ribcage.
He felt great. Fantastic, even. Recharged and
ready to go.
A deep growl rolled over the room.
Daniel whipped his head up. A black
Doberman was standing at the door to the
bedroom, staring him down with narrowed
eyes. Daniel could practically see the cogs
turning as the dog’s brain rapidly reached the
conclusion that he was a foreign object.
"…eh…Harley…" The old man rolled
up, rubbing his eyes. "…whatcha…"
Daniel was up in a flash. He sprinted for
the window. And he was fast, but Harley had
the jump on him.
Just as his hands reached the edges of
the sill, the dog’s mouth clamped around his
shoe. Daniel pushed power into his foot, then
kicked back. The dog whimpered as it took
the blow and fell back across the room. The
man shouted.
Daniel flung himself outside. It was a
long drop. He tried to roll into it, failed
miserably, and took most of it on his rear and
lower back. The wind rushed out of his
lungs. He shifted onto his hands and knees
and coughed into the grass.
"You sonuvabitch! Hope you think you
can outrun the police!"
Lights were flicking on in the man’s
house and the house next door. Daniel
pushed through the pain and started jogging,
one hand clutched to his stomach—pain that
faded in just a moment. He was still on the
rush of the Vorid.
By the time the old man threw open his
front door, Daniel had sprinted several
streets away. He stopped to rest with his
hands on his knees. The lights of a car
pulling onto the road behind him forced him
to keep moving.
Once he was sure he wasn’t being
followed, he doubled back around to the
school. Red-blue police lights were flashing
around the man’s house. Daniel took a quick
glance, then headed in the opposite direction.
Part of him wanted to go home, but he didn’t
have time to call it early.
One down.
This was going to be a long night.
****
Daniel learned a lot of lessons before
the sun came up again.
Pets plagued him constantly. It turned
out they were a lot harder to sense than
people. Daniel reasoned they just didn’t have
the same sort of soul that humans did. He
was very cautious to inspect rooms for
animals before entering.
He got a bit better at breaking into
houses, a skill of which he wasn’t sure he
should be proud. He ruled out climbing
entirely after the total fiasco of night one.
Most of the time, against all common sense,
he went through the front door. No one
expected you to just walk right in at two in
the morning. That almost always forced him
to cut the door open, but he figured most
were willing to sacrifice their deadbolts in
exchange for their lives.
The most nerve-wracking thing was
sneaking up on people while they were
asleep. Sometimes they’d be lying on their
back, with the spawn tucked underneath. On
his second run, he decided to try using his
knife to cut the spawn instead of ripping it
off with his bare hands.
The blade only made it a few inches
before getting stuck, and after shrieking like
a banshee, the Vorid made a break for it.
Daniel dived, caught it in his hands, and
ended up squishing it to death anyway. He
barely made it out of the room before the kid
it had been latched onto realized he was
there.
Being a superhero sucked.
****
He kept exact count as he took down
spawn. There were definitely more after the
extractor had passed through—he’d seen
dozens at school, and it seemed as if every
other house had at least one. It must have
created them, or spread them. Like an
infection.
14 Vorid and seven hours later, he was
feeling pretty tired. Brief bursts of speed
were more effective; it was when he used his
power for an extended period that it forced
him to stop and recover. When he killed a
Vorid, he got a burst of energy, but it was
more like a sugar high than a replacement for
real rest.
His scrying improved dramatically. He
could see much farther at a glance; from
outside a house, he could view all its
occupants and easily tell if a spawn was
present. After a few kills, he didn’t have to
waste time drifting through walls trying to
find the things.
At the end of the hunt, he went back to
the track and timed himself again. His 100
meter time was down to 4 seconds flat.
There were other changes, too. He kept
flinching at sounds, poised on his toes at
chirps or creaks. His eyes caught more
detail—it was as if he could take in an entire
room all at once. Maybe it had something to
do with his reaction time speeding up.
On top of that, even when he wasn’t
actively using magic, he was faster and
stronger than he’d ever been. His body was
light. It reminded him of the freeing sensation
of shrugging a heavy bag off his shoulders—
but all the time.
He walked home feeling like he’d
finally accomplished something. People
were safe. He’d grown stronger.
That night, he only slept an hour. When
he woke, he felt fully rested and ready to go.
Without anything to do until school, and not
wanting to risk going out in the pre-dawn
light, he played some video games to pass
the time until morning.
Chapter Three
Superhero
The gutters weren’t as bad as he thought;
it only took him half an hour.
Mrs. Faldey’s garage was a cornucopia
of tools. He found a ladder, buckets, and
even a gutter cleaning attachment for her
garden hose. One shelf had a pile of power
tools she probably didn’t even know how to
operate. He had a sudden mental image of
her using them to build bombs in her
basement, a fat woman in safety goggles bent
over wires and plastic explosives.
He wheeled the tools out on a little cart
and went outside. He rooted through a
toolbox for some screws. Once he found the
right bit from a dusty crate, he used a level to
set the broken shutter back in place, and from
there, it was a simple fix.
After she discovered his repair work,
she ushered him into her living room to rest.
A small loveseat with pink upholstery was
set in front of an old tube TV. The wallpaper
was gold and white stripes. It was an awful
combination, but somehow, it suited her. Up
on the wall behind the loveseat was a
clustered collection of photographs. Some
showed groups of people; others held
individual portraits.
Mrs. Faldey came back in with cookies
and sat next to him. He tried to ignore how
her white shell wasn’t quite as bright as it
was the day before.
It was a wasted effort.
His magic didn’t let him ignore things.
Details had been popping out at him all day
—the wrinkles of skin rippling over
knuckles, the texture of makeup, the way
eyelashes caught and reflected light. He
stared at the vacuum-patterns in the carpet
below him, momentarily entranced.
Daniel closed his eyes and munched on
his cookie. "You have a lot of pictures. Are
they all family?"
"Friends and family." She turned to
point. The couch groaned under her. Daniel
looked up at the photo she indicated, a big
black and white group shot. "That one is
when I was your age, just a freshman in
college. They didn’t have many women, then,
you know. I was the only girl in my major."
A woman stood near the middle of the