Authors: Andrew Ball
That’s why he was noticing it so much; it
was another jump in power.
Probably. But maybe it really was just
his magic.
While investigating personal defense
strategies, Daniel came across something
interesting—a recipe for homemade riot
gear. He stole a few sheets of scrap metal
and plexiglass from the junkyard and, with a
magicked knife, cut and bent sections of it
into armor plates. He backed it with pieces
of tire to create three layers of protection.
It wasn’t very comfortable, but he could
wear a hoodie underneath it for padding. He
also cut two smaller metal plates, one to rest
on top of his hands, and another to lay flat
against his knuckles. If he had to punch, he
had his own set of brass knuckles at the
ready.
The weight barely slowed him down.
With a little practice, he could divert power
to any piece of armor he chose, blinking them
on and off as if he was a walking Christmas
tree. Protecting his body with magic all at
once tired him out quickly; the key was
directing power only when and where he
needed it. There was that gas mileage thing
again.
He secured the tire-backed steel and
plastic around his body with belts. He
looked like a cross between a SWAT team
wannabe and a hipster, but even without his
magic he could probably take a shot and live
to tell the tale. Powered up, it should offer a
lot of protection.
When he wasn’t beating up tires, Daniel
took time to study the effects of his
enchantment. Aside from allowing a normal
object to strike Vorid, the white glow of his
magic enhanced the physical properties of
whatever he touched. That translated to
speed and strength for himself; to a knife, it
was sharpness and toughness; to armor,
increased strength and durability.
He searched the internet for the Ivory
Dawn, but after two hours hunting through
pages of text, he gave up. Whoever they
were, they worked in absolute secrecy.
Considering the magic at their disposal, it
wasn’t very surprising they could hide
themselves from normal people. He found
nothing about contractors, either. But then,
you’d have to be pretty stupid to make your
powers public with how things were.
Having spent two nights watching
videos, he ranged far from home, hunting
down the spawn in droves. He didn’t even
think twice about his privacy violations
anymore. He scared more than one person
half-to-death, and set off home alarms
constantly, but he could get in and out fast
enough that it didn’t matter.
If his father and brother noticed the fact
that he was out all day and night, they didn’t
say anything. Daniel thought his Dad was
happy he was getting out of the house and
having a last hurrah of his final summer
before college. Felix entertained himself
with TV and video games as usual.
The day of the fight came. If Xik’s
prediction was correct, and there was no
reason to believe it wouldn’t be, the
extractor would come that night. Daniel tried
to relax to save his strength, but it was like
trying to sleep after drinking five cups of
coffee. He ended up pacing restlessly around
his neighborhood.
His feet carried him to Mrs. Faldey’s
house. Eliza’s house.
The lawn was starting to get high. The
grass tangled around the support posts of the
for-sale sign. He stood there for a long time,
staring at the shutter he’d fixed and the
gutters he’d cleaned for a person that didn’t
exist anymore.
****
Daniel waited on the roof of the high
school. He was clad in his armor, the triple-
layered rubber-plastic snapped and tied
around his body. He crouched near one of the
ventilation shafts.
The three-story school was the tallest
thing outside of Aplington’s sliver of a
downtown. He could see a large area around
him; the track, the field, the parking lot. He
wouldn’t be caught by surprise.
It was dark. Clouds blocked the
moonlight. The air was still and humid. He
worked his finger through the lock of hair
that drooped over his eyes.
A black power sundered the air.
He looked up. From the edges of a
jagged red hole descended the magical
dome, and as it fell, it bled the color from the
world. He sensed an orb of darkness drop
from the tear in the sky, the characteristic
splotch of Vorid magic.
He jumped down from the school,
falling down the three stories. A burst of
white light glowed under his shoes, and he
landed neatly on the balls of his feet. He ran
to meet where the orb was going to impact
the street.
The dome sealed itself into the ground,
finishing the process that changed the world
from Technicolor to black and white. The
extractor slammed into a yard a block ahead
of him. A cloud of dust rose over it, drifting
over the fences.
Daniel snapped open his baton. The
rod’s handle was warm in his hands. It felt
really, really good to have something
between him and the world.
He inched around the yard’s white
fencing. Resting in a hole in the grass was a
compact ball of metal a few feet across. It
looked nothing like the hulking robot he’d
faced in Cleveland.
The ball remained silent, but it was the
dust that caught his eye—because it had
color. The brown cloud, thrown from the
impact, was spinning about like a little dust
devil. But then it slowed, and stopped,
midair. The color drained from it. It hung
there, a haze of white smoke, frozen in place.
Daniel tried to put the pieces together.
So, everything was frozen in time…but
things that were touched regained life
briefly. And then froze up again, if they were
left alone. He supposed the whole point of
the dome was to keep them hidden, but it
seemed a bit elaborate for just that.
The orb shifted. Daniel flinched back.
In one smooth movement, the extractor’s
body transformed. Nested steel plates
clacked out, forming the arms. Legs lifted it
up into the air. The head snapped up and
swiveled into place. The inscriptions on its
chest and limbs flickered with black and
white light.
Daniel burst forward with his baton high
on his shoulder. His weapon flared. He
whipped it forward diagonally, then back the
other way with his basic one-two strike. The
extractor shielded with its arms. Twin thunks
of steel denting steel resounded where
Daniel’s weapon struck.
The extractor stayed bunkered down, so
Daniel kept up his attack, whipping it
repeatedly, wracking up bends and cracks on
the extractor’s folded arms. He pushed his
power into the tip of the weapon—so that
just the very end was glowing a white-hot
gold—then stabbed for the extractor’s
elbow. The joint crumpled inward.
At that, the extractor reacted. Its other
arm grabbed Daniel’s baton before he could
pull it away, and twisted. Daniel was forced
to let go or get dragged into the air. The
machine bent the weapon down the middle
and tossed it away.
Daniel took a few steps back. He’d been
too brazen, and now his weapon was in the
bushes. He flexed the steel plates on his
gloves, then balled up his fists.
The extractor’s circuit-like inscriptions
flashed. It walked forward, then punched.
Daniel dodged it easily and countered
with his fist-plates, landing a sold blow on
the arm. The machine punched and punched
again. It was strong, but mechanical. Daniel
stayed patient, evading, then counterattacking
to build up damage.
The inscriptions on its feet flashed in a
familiar pattern. This time, Daniel was ready
when the kick snapped up. He leaned back.
A metal boot whizzed by his head.
This was his chance. He forced his
power out full blast, as much as he could at
one time, shoving the gold light at his core
out every pore of his body.
The world slowed down.
The extractor’s foot crawled up through
the air, stopped, then started to drop. Daniel
caught the extended foot under the heel, then
jammed his other elbow down into the
extractor’s knee. Iron groaned and whines as
the joint was wrenched the wrong way.
With one arm and one leg gone, the
extractor was flailing for balance. Daniel
jumped, spun. His foot caught the extractor in
the head, knocking it over.
It rocked like a turtle on its back. Daniel
ran circles around it, picking and nicking
until its limbs were completely destroyed.
He kicked its torso over and over, crumpling
it up like a tin can.
The light faded and went dead. The
extractor went limp, then disintegrated.
Daniel absorbed the clouds of black mist,
then fell back against the fence. His breath
came hard.
It was gone. It felt like an hour, but his
watch told him he’d killed it in less than two
minutes.
"I did it." He pumped his fist. He looked
up at the still-gaping hole in the sky and
flipped it the bird. "Keep the change, you
filthy bastards!"
Daniel paused. His watch. He looked at
his wrist. It was still ticking, still colored.
Things he touched was immune from the
dome’s freezing magic.
His senses burned at him.
He snapped his head up. His eyes went
wide. Three black comets were careening
toward the ground. Three. Three more.
Daniel ran in the direction of his baton.
He found it stuck in some bushes just as his
enemies hit the ground. He pressed his
power into his hands and bent it straight. It
was a little crooked. Good enough to hit
things with.
The three extractors were closing fast,
stamping their way down a street between
the houses. He kept his distance, slowly
backing away. They rushed him together. He
used his speed to circle behind them, forcing
them to stop and turn.
He moved quickly to keep them pinned
down—they always swiveled and stomped
about to try and keep him in front of them.
That also made it hard to get in a strike. He
took out an arm on one, than a leg on another,
only risking it when there was an obvious
opening.
It became a war of attrition. They
switched strategies and bunched up,
protecting each other’s backs. They couldn’t
target him because he was circling too fast,
but he couldn’t keep running forever. And
when he slowed down…
He looked at them. They stared back at
him, a triangular formation of solid steel—or
whatever metal they were made from. Their
heads rotated to follow him, sometimes
losing his progress, snapping back when they
spotted him again.
They were machines. They had a
program, a limited number of actions they
could take. That was his advantage. They just
needed the right stimulus, the right bait.
Daniel stopped on one side of the group.
They faced him, two limping, one with a bad
arm. He took a few steps forward, then
away, trying to goad one into leaving the
pack.
One of them raised a palm. Inscriptions
on its wrist glowed. Daniel frowned. He was
too far to be punched.
A black laser shot from the hand.
Daniel didn’t get his arms up in time, but
he was able to activate his armor. The magic
struck him straight on his breastplate. He hit
the street hard, rolling several times until the
curb stopped him. The scent of burning
rubber stung his nostrils. A fist-sized hole
had been melted in his armor.
He scrambled up, but they surrounded
him before he could make his feet. Another
palm was raised, flashing with magic as the
laser charged up. The other two waited.
Daniel dove for the one with a bad leg.
It tried to punch him. He stopped in time, and
its fist flew down in front of him, crushing
the asphalt at his feet. He jabbed it in the
waist with his baton, smashing the spot
where it rotated its torso. It punched again,
but it couldn’t turn properly, and the fist went
far wide.
Daniel drew on his magic and beat its
exposed arm with a flurry of strikes so fast
his baton turned into a grey blur. The
extractor’s limb bent and buckled and
snapped with his blows. The other hand
reached for him. Daniel jumped straight up,
then kicked off the extractor’s chest, sending
himself flying in the other direction.
A black laser whizzed by his head,
singing his shoulder pad. A hand grabbed for
him. He twisted in midair, slapped its fingers
in, and landed outside their ring.