Authors: Andrew Ball
Daniel dodged another crushing blow.
The extractor hit so hard its arm stuck in the
concrete. Daniel threw a powered punch at
the trapped limb. His knuckles banged off the
iron. He winced and ducked back a few
steps. He’d made a solid dent, but it felt like
it was hurting him more than the extractor.
The machine drew itself up and
considered Daniel for a long moment. From
the corner of his eye, he could see the girl
collecting the crackling sphere over her
head. A small sigil rotated under the light. It
was slow going; she had to be tired.
The extractor’s legs flashed neon white.
Daniel barely got out of the way of a
spinning kick. The leg planted itself
unnaturally fast, and the second leg came up
faster.
Daniel blocked with both arms, all his
magic shoved between him and the robot.
The kick took him off the ground. His
forearms went numb. He landed on his heels,
stumbling to keep his balance.
It was on him a second later, moving at
least twice as fast as it had been. He tried to
circle behind it, but its torso kept moving
independent of its legs, always facing him.
He knocked it a couple more times, but it
was scratch damage at most. He was reduced
to skipping around it like a fly. He drew
back a few yards to think of a new strategy.
The extractor went for the girl. Daniel
bent his legs and sprinted forward with
everything he had. The world zipped by. He
jumped into a kick just as the extractor turned
back. He caught it in the chest with both feet,
body fully extended. There was a boom as
his white magic impacted the inscribed
armor. It crashed down with Daniel standing
on top of it.
He wasn’t able to get away before it
caught him in a giant hand, snatching one of
his legs. Light pulsed down the steel of its
arm, and a twisting black glove wrapped the
steel. He slapped at the hand, doing a little
damage, but it didn’t shake its grip. The
darkness grew, hungrily stamping down his
light. He braced himself for pain.
A roared battle cry echoed over the
street. The glowing red sword sliced through
the automaton’s shoulder like butter. The arm
and Daniel dropped to the ground. Daniel
pried the fingers open and jumped back as
the extractor righted itself.
The machine charged another fist attack
with its remaining hand and punched at the
swordsman. The man lifted his kite shield;
the red glow of the sword faded, and his
defensive barrier shone bright gold. He took
the extractor’s attack straight on.
There was a flash as they connected.
Gold light snapped and arced across the face
of the shield. The man grit his teeth and dug
in. The extractor pressed its fist down. The
man’s knees buckled.
Daniel zipped in from behind and
attacked the arm with a rapid series of jabs.
Dents cracked in up to its elbow. The arm
crunched inward. Daniel’s momentum took
him out of the danger zone, and the man
shoved his shield up against the
compromised limb. The robot was forced
backward.
Daniel ran up to the man’s side as the
extractor reoriented. He and the swordsman
exchanged a glance, then moved shoulder-to-
shoulder. The robot’s torso swiveled
between them, deciding on a target. It
stopped on the warrior; its feet started to
glow again.
The girl finished her spell. The
thunderbolt rolled off her hands and slammed
into the extractor’s backside. Its
enchantments flickered. Its bad arm twitched
and creaked.
Daniel smelled opportunity. He pushed
everything he had into his fist and threw his
body into a punch, catching the machine as it
fell. His fist punched a hole in its shoulder,
and he followed through, slamming it back
down and onto the asphalt.
Daniel jumped on top of it and started
pounding its body. It reached up to attack
with its dislocated arm, but the warrior
swatted the limb off with his sword. Daniel
kept pounding, denting the armor one way,
then another—and his last punch plunged into
the core of the robot, through its iron shell,
and crunched something fragile inside of it.
Its enchantments flickered and died. It
fell limp. Daniel drew his hand back. His
knuckles were bloodied and raw, and
bruises ran up his arms. He couldn’t feel
them at all.
The machine crumbled to dust. Daniel
stood in the middle of it. A storm of dark
clouds whipped his clothes. A sickly green
sigil twisted and glowed under his shoes, a
bigger spell to absorb a larger amount of
magic. The ache in his arms and legs faded
as he sucked in the power. The cracked skin
on his hands wavered, swam, and knitted
itself up. The bruises faded.
The spell vanished. The warrior and the
girl stared at him like he had three heads.
Their friend was still out cold, tossed over
her shoulder. Daniel slowly backed away
with his palms raised.
"…a necromancer?" the man muttered.
"Necro…" Daniel stopped. "If sucking
the life out of things counts, yes."
"How could you do that to yourself?" the
girl whispered.
"Look," Daniel said, "can we all agree on one thing? You’d be in a bad way if I
didn’t help. Right?" They said nothing.
Daniel cleared his throat. "I go my way, you
go yours. I just wanted to -" The warrior
shifted in front of the other two. The girl
charged a bolt in her hands. Daniel took
another step back. "Take it easy! I just -"
"You just want to prey on us while
we’re weakened, you disgusting piece of
shit!" the girl shouted. "While these things were attacking us!"
Daniel’s eyes went wide. He shook his
head. "What the hell are you talking about? If
I wanted that, I would have just stabbed you
in the back at the start!"
That gave the man pause. He glanced at
the girl. She didn’t take her eyes off Daniel.
"…we’re alive because of you," the man
said. "Get out of here. And consider the debt
paid in full."
"Captain," the girl started, "we can’t just
-"
"Megan. He has a point."
"But he’s -"
"I didn’t ask for an opinion, private."
The girl’s mouth snapped shut. "If he hadn’t
intervened, we’d probably be dead right
now." The man lowered his sword. "I’ll be
reporting you to the Ivory Dawn. If I were
you, I wouldn’t come back to Cleveland.
Leave. Now."
Daniel ran, and he didn’t look back. He
made it to the edge of the barrier and
suppressed his power as hard as he could.
He worried there for a while, wondering
whether to stick it out or try to smash
through, but it wasn’t long until it vanished.
Maybe getting rid of the extractors had
something to do with it.
Time restarted. He could smell the wind
off the river. Leaves rustled in trees. He
heard car engines moving down streets. He
sprinted to the bridge and all the way back to
Aplington as fast as he could.
****
The next day, Daniel couldn’t resist
going to the track. There was a marked
increase in his top speed. His reflexes were
sharper than ever. He could make a dent in
steel with a solid punch. 1,705 spawn, 1
extractor.
He expected something on the news.
They’d blown a hole in the wall and left a
few craters in the street. Nothing was
reported. Whoever the Ivory Dawn were,
they must have cleaned up. Or they
controlled the media.
His adventure in the city taught him two
very important things—first, that he really
was an outcast. That girl was advocating for
his death just because of the spell, right after
Daniel saved her life. Even the man hesitated
to let him go. He couldn’t expect help from
anyone.
It didn’t bother him that much. He hadn’t
gotten much help from anyone in years.
More importantly, he was an idiot for
trying to fight that thing at close range with
bare hands and no protection. Granted, he
hadn’t planned on taking one on in the first
place, but in less than a week, he’d be taking
on Aplington’s extractor alone.
He searched for a weapon online. The
first thing that came to mind was a sword,
like that knight. An hour’s worth of research
told him that learning to work a sword with
more finesse than a baseball bat took a good
deal of time—time he did not have.
But the thought gave him another idea.
Why try to slice up his enemies when he
could bludgeon them to death?
He decided on something simple,
effective, and used the world over: a baton.
He ordered a 26 inch telescoping iron stick,
and, after it arrived two days later, looked
up some training videos. It was a
straightforward weapon, but there was
definitely a right way and a wrong way to
use it. He didn’t expect to be an expert in
time for the fight, but he could at least try to
avoid beginner mistakes.
Now he needed a place to train. He
found the perfect clearing a few miles out in
the backwoods near Aplington. It was
overgrown with grass, and there was no
trash, no footprints—no one would be
bothering him. He lugged old tires from a
junkyard a few miles outside town and
stacked them up for target practice. He tied
one of them to a tree branch to give himself a
swinging target.
A test tire was ripped in half by his
magically enhanced attack, so he just used
the baton normally to get the motions down.
His speed was good, but he couldn’t win a
fight by running fast. He needed agility.
During the day, he practiced. He pushed
the swinging tire to give it some life, then
circled it, imagining it like a fist coming to
hit him. He focused on perfecting one basic
attack—a simple one-two strike, one swipe
from off his shoulder, then a second hit back
the other way. It made a solid smacking
sound against the tire. Quick and powerful.
He slammed the tire, and it swung away
from him. He stepped forward, slapped it
again, then ducked under it before it could
swing back down.
The branch creaked behind him, and for
a fleeting instant, Daniel could see the world
behind himself. The tire swinging back at
him. A push of air as it came down its arc.
He spun, his toe twisting in the grass,
and came back with the baton just as the tire
reached him. He landed a hearty thump
against the rubber, and it rotated up and
away from him. He followed it again, and
slammed it in the side, and it swung left. He
backed up a step, turned, and smacked it the
other way.
He stared at his baton. The steel rod felt
comfortable in his hands. What was that he’d
just done? He didn’t really see the tire
coming back so much as feel it.
He waited until the tire lost momentum,
then gave it a hard whack across the front. It
swung away from him. He turned his back on
it and waited.
It came again. A jitter down his spine,
telling him to turn, to react. Something was
there, coming at him. A restlessness in his
fingers, working the baton, his hands glowed,
move now, NOW!
His baton shone like a pale gold track
light. When the tire reached the bottom of its
arc, he made contact. His weapon hit so hard
he could see the rubbed bend in half. It
blasted back into the air, and there was a
crack like a gunshot, and the tree branch was
going with it. The tire, rope and branch
together, sailed above the trees and fell into
the woods.
"…the hell?" Daniel worked his hand on
the baton. Did this have something to do with
his senses getting sharper? It was like…a
premonition.
He practiced until it was too dark to see,
and then trudged home. He loaded batches of
police training videos from the web and
watched them at night, most of them multiple
times. He’d stop them, rewind, watch them
again, memorize the motions. Common sense
stuff, but he needed every variable on his
side.
On a whim, he tried a few keywords to
search for something like what he’d felt
before. The closest thing he found, aside
from bogus psychic research, was that the
reaction time of experienced martial artists
was different than normal people. From
extensive training and long experience, they
could read their opponents almost as if they
were reading minds. But it was a matter of
speed, not magic.
In a way, it made sense. His eyesight
and hearing were better—why not the rest of
them? He was reacting faster, too. And it had
come right after absorbing the extractor.