Authors: Andrew Ball
photo in a modest dress, clearly the idol of
the men surrounding her. The young Mrs.
Faldey was much thinner, but he could see
her in it—the same warm curve of her cheek,
and something about her hair.
Daniel pointed to a picture of a man in a
military uniform. "Who’s that?"
"My late husband, Jonathan Richard
Faldey. I met him my senior year."
"He has a lot of badges."
"And you bet your bottom he earned
every last one of them." She nodded at the
photograph proudly. "He was an officer.
Served in Korea and Vietnam. He didn’t like
talking about it much, but his men loved him.
I remember more than a few dinners with
them. They always had the best stories."
"Cool."
"You remind me of John, a bit."
"Really?"
"Oh yes." Her face brightened a little. "I was always the chirpy, energetic one. He
was quiet. Stern, even. If you didn’t know
him well, you would say he was
standoffish."
Daniel scratched behind an ear. "Oh."
She chuckled. "But I’m not comparing
you to the bad parts! He was fiercely
competent, but he never saw himself as such;
that’s what I meant. And, rather than
antisocial, he was perhaps too empathetic."
"That doesn’t really line up with stern."
"No, it doesn’t." Mrs. Faldey gently
lowered her plate to her lap. "He’d never
admit it—I hardly think he realized it—but
that was his way of protecting himself. He
felt too much for those around him. And he
couldn’t bear it, so he kept his distance."
Daniel looked back at the picture.
Jonathan Faldey’s firm eyes stared back. One
frame over, a young Eliza was riding a bike
down a road, and next to that, a young John
was standing with his father in front of an old
roadster. Their whole lives, his and hers,
was played out over the wall.
He noticed something that seemed to be
missing. "…do you have any children?"
"Oh, no. He didn’t want any, either. I
never minded."
"Really?"
"I’m a schoolteacher, dear. I’ve
thousands of children."
Daniel turned away from her. He didn’t
want her to see his face right then.
"He liked when I had them over," she
continued, "or when we met their parents,
though he didn’t admit that, either.
Sometimes I wonder…I think he might have
said he didn’t want any because, well, we
never had any. That was his way."
"You loved him a lot."
"I did." She patted him on the shoulder.
"You’re very handy, just like him, too! That
garage is still his space more than it is mine.
If you ever need to borrow anything, you just
let me know. A lot of car stuff is there, if
you’re into that sort of thing."
"…thanks. I’ll do that."
****
It wasn’t until the fourth day after the
extractor had come that Daniel began to
notice the real change. Maybe he’d been
ignoring it on purpose. Maybe he didn’t want
to see it.
He knew he didn’t want to see it.
His history class was missing five
people. The thing was, he knew they were at
school. One of them was the valedictorian.
She had perfect attendance.
Mrs. Faldey walked in on time, but the
sharp luster of her shell had faded to a dim
glimmer. She didn’t seem to notice how the
room paid her no attention. She wasn’t
aware of how her voice was quiet, of how
she kept losing track of the lecture. She
seemed confused the fourth time she asked
what day it was.
Daniel gripped his desk in both hands so
hard his fingers hurt. He kept reminding her
of what she was talking about. He answered
all the questions she asked. He was the only
active participant, and he was more active
that day than he’d ever been. No one else
seemed to care.
He was late to Mr. Grigg’s class again.
His teacher slowly shook his head. "Daniel,
every time you’re late, I die a little on the
inside."
"Sorry."
"You could at least start walking a bit
earlier when you have a free period."
Daniel did a double-take. "What?"
Mr. Griggs gave him a look. "Isn’t that
what a normal person would do?"
"…I don’t have a free period before
this. History class. Top of the Foster
building." Daniel swallowed. "With Mrs.
Faldey."
Mr. Griggs frowned, then nodded.
"Oh…right. Well, sit down."
Daniel sat. Mr. Griggs blinked, shook
his head. Then he grabbed his chalk and
started writing.
****
Daniel left school by his usual route,
walking along the sidewalk up near where
the woods cut close to the road. Kyle was
there, waiting for him against a tree. His red
mohawk was pink around the edges where
the white shell encased him. His wart, on the
other hand, seemed even more disgusting
than usual. Daniel tried not to look at it too
closely, but it was like trying not to look at a
train wreck—so horrible you couldn’t tear
your eyes away.
"Yo Fitz!" Kyle stood up from the tree
and moved to block the sidewalk.
"Hey wart-face, what’s up?"
Kyle lunged for him. Daniel gripped his
power on instinct. His sneakers shone as if
he wore shoes made of fluorescent light.
Kyle’s attack came in slow motion, as if he
was moving through water. Daniel
sidestepped and let him stumble past. Kyle
took a few steps, surprised that he’d caught
only air.
Daniel kept his magic flowing down
through his legs and to his feet. They were
like unshaded lightbulbs, but Kyle didn’t
even blink. People that didn’t have magic
couldn’t see it, couldn’t feel it.
"What’s your problem?" Daniel asked.
"Hold still, faggot," Kyle said. He spat
to the side.
"Don’t make me put that video on
youtube."
"I don’t care if you do!" Kyle shouted.
"Ever since that day everything’s been shit.
My friends won’t even look at me. They
think I’m a wimp because you got me in the
face with spray." He clenched his fist. "That killed my eyes for days. I’m putting you in
the hospital for a week."
Daniel’s hands fell to his sides as he felt
the fight drop right out of him. Kyle’s friends
weren’t ignoring him because Daniel
outsmarted him. They were ignoring him
because he was turning into a ghost. Hitting
Kyle now was like curb-stomping someone
with no teeth. "…I don’t feel like it today,
Kyle. I’m going home."
"I don’t give a shit if you feel like it!"
Kyle ran in for a tackle, arms wide. Daniel
watched it happen. He waited until the last
minute to dodge, and as he moved past, he
shoved a hand on the back of Kyle’s head.
Kyle’s body followed into the dirt.
Daniel watched him splay onto the
ground. His power had already progressed to
the point that a normal person couldn’t keep
up with him. He turned and started walking
up the sidewalk.
Kyle clambered to his feet. "The hell are
you going?!"
"Home, dumbass."
"Fuck you!" Kyle shouted. Daniel turned
his head. Kyle had a knife out. He stabbed at
Daniel’s back.
But Daniel had killed 176 Vorid spawn.
Seeing the weapon, the pity he felt for his
assailant shriveled to nothing.
Daniel’s right leg glowed white through
his jeans. He snapped his foot up with
everything he had. He felt the bones snap as
he connected the point of his shoe with
Kyle’s hand. The fingers contorted into
angles they weren’t supposed to go. The
knife flew into the trees.
Kyle collapsed to the ground, howling.
He clutched his arm to his chest. Daniel
watched him with a detached sadness, the
sort of expression people make when they
hear news about a natural disaster 5,000
miles away.
He almost called an ambulance, but
then, remembering the long years of violent
harassment, turned away and left Kyle to
crawl in the dirt.
****
The weekend came again. Daniel hunted
the Vorid as soon as his brother and father
went to sleep, and stayed out until it started
getting light. The blocks around the school
had been cleared; he had to range further
every day. Even then, he was killing more
and more each night because he could move
faster.
He’d always had an average build; it
felt strange to run so fast and see his arms lift
fifty pound weights like feathers. He’d been
worried he’d wear out his clothes or hurt
himself from the friction or momentum, but
his power protected everything he touched.
He had trouble stopping quickly if he was
really sprinting, but for the most part, his
enchantment grew with him.
He kept measuring his top speed. His
gains from killing the spawn were
plateauing. At first, a few dozen had been
enough to knock a full second off his time,
but now a hundred only cut a hundredth of a
second.
In an odd moment of inspiration, he
decided to make a graph of kills vs speed.
Surely science could discern the nature of his
superpowers.
When he plotted it out, it was definitely
rounding out at the top. It was worrisome to
see his growth slowing, but there wasn’t
anything else he could do. Just keep stomping
ants. If he stomped enough, it wouldn’t
matter.
****
On Monday, Daniel sat in the history
room alone.
A map of the United States still hung on
the right wall. Everything else that had
marked the room for any form of social
studies was gone. There was a small ring of
dust around the spot where a globe of the
world had sat on the corner of Mrs. Faldey’s
desk, unmoved for years. The janitor had just
come in, given Daniel an odd look, and taken
it out the door. Daniel hadn’t tried to stop
him. He’d stopped trying to remind people
about her last week.
The bell rang. No one came in.
He’d asked a few people what they
were doing. They all thought they had a free
period. Mrs. Faldey and her history class
were erased from their minds, replaced with
foggy recollections of study hall. None of his
other teachers could remember her anymore,
either. Just him.
You had to have the required number of
history credits to graduate—some of his
classmates were in the class because they
had to be. Invented explanations filled the
gaps in their heads. They even contradicted
each other. When he pointed those out, they
became distracted, unable to focus on what
he was saying.
Mrs. Faldey shuffled in. Her body was
transparent. The shell around her was an old
bulb about to burn out. She slowly lowered
herself into the chair behind her desk and sat
there. The warm energy that kept her smile
glowing had drained from her face.
Daniel got up. "…Mrs. Faldey?"
A little spark blinked into her eyes. "…
Daniel? I…feel a little lost. Hmm."
Daniel stood at the front of the room.
"You made it to class. That’s a good start."
Mrs. Faldey smiled briefly, then flicked
back to neutral. Daniel was about to say
something when she looked back at him.
"You have a good sense of humor. That’s
good. Very good."
"…you think so?"
She nodded slowly. "John always says
he loves that about me. You’re quite good at
that. Though, don’t let that cynical streak get
the best of you, now."
"…I won’t."
"I was telling him about you, and he said
what you need is some good hard work. He
was forgetting…about when you fixed that
shutter…didn’t he do that? I—it broke in that
big storm, last year, and you…no, he…ah…
hmm."
Daniel watched her struggle. Her eyes
moved over her desk, searching for solid
ground to land on. They found none. The
room was silent again.
Suddenly, she spoke. "You know, as
long as you keep laughing, you can get
through anything. That’s what I think."
Her words reminded him of something
his mother had told him. Something that stuck
close. Too close. It was grown into him.
Thorns embedded in his heart.
Daniel squeezed his eyelids shut. "Yeah.
Guess so."
"I heard your mother died two years
ago. I always wondered about that." Her
head lowered. "I couldn’t ask you about that,
though. It’s rude to ask things like that…"
Mrs. Faldey frowned. "Isn’t it?"
"She…and my dad, they got mugged.
The guy panicked. She got shot."
Mrs. Faldey’s eyes searched for
something. "…what now? I don’t
understand."
"A mugger killed her. He killed her."
"…I see." Her head bobbed. "What a
shame."
It was too weak. The normal Mrs.
Faldey would have been in tears. She would