Authors: Andrew Ball
have hugged him and patted him on the head
and told him not to give up on his dreams.
She would have offered to call someone she
knew in Boston, to help him adjust when he
went off to school. She knew a surprising
number of people.
Daniel wiped his eyes with the back of
his hand. Her body was growing translucent.
Disappearing. "Mrs. Faldey," he said, "I’m sorry."
Mrs. Faldey shook her head. "I’ve
been…tired, lately. Very…"
And then she was gone.
Daniel leaned against the blackboard.
He looked to her desk. Her little nameplate
was blank. He kept staring at it, searching the
fine grains of metal for the letters telling the
world that his history teacher existed, but
they weren’t there.
The bell rang before he knew it. He
trudged to English. Mr. Griggs kept throwing
him concerned looks. He ignored his
teacher’s call for him to stay after the bell.
When school finally ended, Daniel
began to walk up the familiar sidewalk past
the woods. And then he started jogging up the
sidewalk, and then he was running, and then
sprinting past the trees, smashing through a
low branch hanging across the path. His
backpack struck his back as he pumped his
arms, faster, until he was using his power,
faster, speeding through intersections and
past all the houses that all looked the same.
For a terrifying instant, he felt totally lost,
trapped in a labyrinth made from his own
neighborhood.
He reached her house. There was a for-
sale sign in the front lawn. He charged up the
steps and kicked at the door with a glowing
foot. The door blasted off its hinges and
crashed into the front hall. He ran into the
living room.
The photos were still on the walls, but
Eliza Faldey had vanished. The group scene
looked awkward without her as the
centerpiece. Her portraits were now squares
with nothing in them. A smiling John Faldey
held his arm around air.
Daniel burst into tears. He fell on her
couch and pounded the cushions. He cried
until his throat was sore and he felt sick. He
climbed up onto the seat and bent forward,
holding his knees to his chest.
Maybe that was why Kyle had been so
desperate. On some level, he realized it—
that people were forgetting him. His only
outlet had been Daniel. What did it feel like,
to be forgotten by your friends, your own
family?
Daniel had killed hundreds of spawn,
now. He killed hundreds of creatures that
would have otherwise erased people from
the universe. If he hadn’t intervened, the next
round would have been that much worse.
Hundreds, gone. Winked out. Forgotten.
Erased.
How many towns didn’t have a
contractor to guard them? How many had
already been forgotten, how many cities
rubbed from maps, how many names and
dates and people vanished from history
books, stolen from minds? How many
children had no parents? How much of that
could the world take before it collapsed?
And this was a backwater universe. This
was the edge of the storm. Earth was an
afterthought.
Daniel stood. His hands were balled up
so tight his nails bit into his palms. Whatever
wizards the world might have were letting
this happen. They were ignoring Xik’s
warnings. They still didn’t feel desperate
enough to allow contracting. He wondered
what planet they thought they were living on.
Unless they were strong enough to take
on extractors. That was the bottleneck. The
souls were fine if the extractors were
defeated, if the spawn were left unharvested.
If the wizards were killing the extractors
every month, then they were probably
holding off the worst of it.
But Aplington didn’t have a wizard.
Aplington had Daniel. And if he killed one
extractor, more would come. He had to be
ready.
****
School was out, and with that, Daniel
had a lot of time on his hands. He couldn’t
do quite as much during the day, but just
walking around, he found plenty of Vorid.
Too many.
His first encounters with spawn had
frightened him. He felt revulsion. Disgust.
They were otherworldly, and it bothered the
hell out of him.
When he saw them now, he felt only
hatred.
His power turned the outside edge of his
hands into a blazing-white knife. He didn’t
need tools to cleave the parasites in two. He
was getting pretty good at sneaking up behind
people; they never noticed his powers.
Hitting invisible bugs with an invisible glow
was easy enough.
He relished every such opportunity. It
was his revenge, one slime-covered, putrid
little slug at a time. He killed them, and they
disintegrated into that black dust. The
remains floated into his chest, absorbed to
fuel his strength. And he immediately used it
to kill more of them, faster.
He kept a mental count of his kills as he
patrolled further and further from his home.
He hung a map of the town in his room and
crossed out blocks with a permanent marker
as he culled them of parasites. It was with a
gloating and compulsive finality that he
marked off the final intersection. 1,457
spawn and a single week later, Daniel had
cleared out the entirety of the Aplington
township.
****
His hunting grounds run dry, he came up
with a new plan. His reasoning was simple:
the big city had more people, and therefore,
more parasites. It was time to visit
Cleveland.
He excused himself as spending a night
at a friend’s house. His father took it with
pleasant surprise. Daniel didn’t really care if
James believed the story or not—it was
more to give Felix the sense that things were
normal.
He didn’t have a car, but he didn’t need
one. He could run faster through Aplington
than a car could drive. He left the isolated
suburbs behind, skirting the edge of empty
fields until he reached the exit onto 71 North.
It was after dark when he left, and
normal people couldn’t see his magic, but
Daniel kept to the woods beside the
highway. The only light he had to go by was
the glow produced by his body.
Running in the forest was like running
through a dark tunnel. The soft white
illuminated the trees in a blur of brown and
green as he sprinted ahead. The tree trunks
and leaves blended together in a stream, and
the wind whipped his hair. Even if he
decided not to dodge a particular branch, it
just snapped across him without hurting
anyway. The power turned his skin into
Kevlar, and the thick brush was trampled by
his sheer momentum. He could react to
sudden drops and rises in the ground faster
than they came up on him.
It was a rush. He pushed his feet harder,
churned his legs with more force, and the
tunnel of leaves turned into a high-speed rail
track. And if he focused, he could still see it
all, even running like this, the ripples of
cracked bark, the slightly dark veins of
leaves only just visible by the light of his
magic.
Faster than he could have imagined, the
forest peeled away in favor of buildings and
suburbs. Cleveland loomed in the distance, a
nest of flickering skyscrapers prodding at the
purple nighttime clouds.
Daniel checked his watch. His face
paled. He’d just run an hour car ride in 20
minutes. He wasn’t as nearly as tired as he
should be.
Cars. Gas mileage. Was his magic like
that? It took a lot of fuel to get up to speed,
and stop-and-go traffic burned gas, too. But
he’d sort of entered a sort of cruise control
state with his power, putting in just enough
strength to keep going. He hadn’t really
thought about trying to be efficient with how
he used his magic, but maybe there was
something to that.
Without the woodland cover, he had to
slow up. They might not see the glow of
magic, but a person running across the
ground faster than a car would definitely
draw attention.
Going house by house was boring, slow,
and exactly what he was fed up with.
Cleveland’s urban area was filled with
Vorid spawn—he could feel it—and he
didn’t run all the way there to flit around the
edges. He went straight downtown.
His kill count skyrocketed on the
crowded streets—easy pickings. He found
that if he moved close and pulsed his power
briefly, he could frighten the spawn into
abandoning their hosts, and the civilians
were none the wiser. Their attempts to
escape were no problem; before, they were
darting little rats, slippery as soap. To his
improved senses, they were sluggish and
vulnerable. He stomped them down before
they could get more than a few feet.
There were a few other places that
caught his attention—towering apartment
blocks seemed like juicy targets. And then
there were bars, and nightclubs, crammed
with drinkers and dancers. He debated trying
to sneak into one, then just decided to stick to
the streets. There were plenty of Vorid to go
around. He barely had to concentrate his
senses before another black splotch nicked at
his attention.
Daniel cut a line through the city,
attacking whatever was within easy reach.
He wound through the alleys and bright
streets all the way down to a lonely avenue
on the edge of Lake Erie. The cool wind off
the water made him look up. He was right in
the middle of North Coast Harbor.
The road was grey brick pavement. A
few parked cars were his only company. On
his left was the massive Cleveland Browns
stadium; past that, a curved steel and
concrete construct with big signs declaring it
the Great Lakes Science Center. He
remembered going there with his parents. He
hadn’t been in a long time.
Next on his little tour was the Rock and
Roll Hall of Fame. The glass triangles that
capped the building jutted straight from the
street. Now those were good memories.
He hadn’t really been into music until…
James brought him there. It had been just the
two of them. No mom, no baby Felix.
And then across the street—a brick
compound with high fencing, complete with
barbed wire. Angry white and red signs
declared that none should tread upon the
ground of the U.S. Army Engineers. Funny
that an outpost of The Man was set facing a
monument for rock legends.
He wondered if the government knew
about the Vorid. If they did, they had pretty
much decided to keep everyone in the dark.
Maybe it was the memories, but
suddenly, he was tired. He was tired of
killing Vorid, tired of chipping away at a
problem a hundred thousand times bigger
than he was.
His feet carried him to the very end of
the street. A few stone pylons connected by
heavy iron chains marked where manmade
things ended and the water began. He placed
his hands on the metal. The lights of the city
made a blurry reflection in the dark lake, and
then, a few hundred feet out, dwindled down
to nothing. Past that there was only black on
black, and above, red-grey clouds hazy with
the light of the city. It was like standing at the
brink of nothingness.
Cleveland had over 300,000 people. If
his senses were right, combined with the
suburbs, there were tens of thousands of
Vorid. He was a hell of a lot faster, but it
had still taken him more than a week to clear
out Aplington.
How many Eliza Faldeys were sitting in
their homes, oblivious to the creature
suckered onto their back? How many of them
had husbands, children, grandchildren? How
did you live after forgetting your
grandmother…after forgetting your mother?
The iron links of the chains were cold
and hard under his hands. He swallowed
hard.
If he spent all of his available time just
hunting Vorid in Cleveland, stopping only to
eat and piss, he might be able to clear out the
city before more extractors came. But what
then? What would happen when they did
come, and see that every spawn had vanished
without a trace? What about the hundred
other towns in Ohio that were left
untouched?
It was too much. He couldn’t do it. His
shoulders sagged.
Something flared in his senses.
As if flinching, he jerked into the scry-
world. He didn’t float away from his body;
he didn’t have to. He turned.
In the distance, high in a building, a few
points of power flickered and danced. He
thought he could make out nasty black dots