Authors: Andrew Ball
awful thing. He didn’t realize he’d miss the
night until it never came.
If he didn’t have his cell phone, he
would have lost track of time entirely. He’d
found spare cell phone batteries with a half-
charge in an electronics store. He felt like a
scavenger picking his way through a post-
apocalyptic New York. Add in the fact that
everyone was trying to kill him, and it was
almost like a video game.
Kind of sick to think about it like that,
really. But it was either laugh, or cry.
He didn’t see Rachel or Eleanor. He’d
seen people use similar spells—defensive
shields of crystal or ice, or rocky golems to
bash at extractors—but neither an Astor nor
an Ashworth. He suspected Henry was
keeping them from the front intentionally. As
far as Daniel was concerned, Henry was
therefore the greatest man to ever live.
The three armies surrounded Manhattan.
The military and the magicians decided to
establish their beachhead at uptown by
pushing across the Harlem River. The Vorid
decided that they weren’t giving up land as
easily as they had been—and that initiated
the first major head-to-head conflict between
the armies.
What happened was beyond Daniel’s
wildest expectations.
First was the onslaught of birds. They
came not in flocks, but like a swarm of silver
locusts. There were so many it was like a
cloud was passing over the sun. The mass
stretched over the entire bay.
Even bombing raids only made a dent in
the bird population. Army positions were
overrun. Daniel tried to fight them, but it was
essentially the worst possible scenario for
him as a combatant. With his growing
powers, he was strong enough that he could
sit in the middle of them without much
worry—they ignored him to attack other
targets—but he couldn’t kill them fast
enough. He was one man trying to hold back
an ocean.
As magicians abandoned their positions
and retreated, he saw normal men and
women left behind. Without magical
protection, they froze in the grip of the dome.
Alone, it was impossible to save them all—
the birds latched onto frozen souls like
resting moths and sucked out their lives.
That was when the Ivory Dawn
unleashed its secret weapon. Rachel had
given him enough of a description to know
what they were like, but he wouldn’t have
needed it to figure out that the things that
came forward were demons. Some were like
minotaurs, huge men with the heads of bulls.
Another kind were what she’d called
harpies, bird-people with talons and sharp
claws on the hands at the end of their wings.
He saw something that looked like a grim
reaper, complete with scythe.
They were strong. They were fast. And
they weren’t packing just the destructive
power that Daniel thought they would. They
came clad in steel and light. It was almost
like magic mixed with technology. An army
of corrupted angels met the press of the
extractor-birds.
One demon she forgot to mention were
the dragons. At least, he thought they were
dragons. Some were snakelike, while others
were like bulky dinosaurs, but they all
shared the same reflective scales in varying
shades of green and blue. And they all
breathed fire.
Alfred Hitchcock’s worst proved no
match for the legions of whatever Hell
spawned the monsters. The dragons turned
the clouds of birds to ash with enveloping
streams of fire. The harpies picked off
overseers with coordinated aerial attacks.
Daniel saw a minotaur crush an extractor’s
head in with one magic-powered fist. They
weren’t invincible; he watched one Dragon
be cleaved in two by an overseer’s grey
sphere, and enough extractors could
overwhelm the minotaurs and harpies.
Nonetheless, they drove a hole in the Vorid
lines, allowing Daniel and other magicians
to attack the overseers that were controlling
the majority of the birds from the back.
It wasn’t long before the army had
established a stable front in Harlem with full
control of the northern tail of Manhattan
Island. Daniel kept his distance from the
worst of it. He didn’t want to find out what
would happen if he had to fight a dragon
after he saw one swallow five extractors
whole without so much as a blink.
They came when he was sleeping.
Three and a half days of warfare had left
him strung-out; if he hadn’t been sleeping so
lightly, always with his armor on, he might
have been dead. Something grabbed at his
senses. He snapped awake just in time to see
needle-like claws jab at his face.
Daniel threw himself to the side. The
hand stabbed clean through the wall behind
him. He rolled to his feet. The thing staring
back at him was small, only four feet tall, but
bone-thin. It was entirely black. Its face was
flat and featureless.
At first, he thought it was a Vorid—but
then it smiled at him. Its eyes lit up like a
jack-o-lantern. He noticed sharp, tiny horns
protruding from its skull. He couldn’t scry it
at all—it might as well not have been there
for all his magical sense helped him.
It ran at him, but it was slow. Daniel
dodged and punched at its face.
His hand slipped through it like it was
made out of smoke. Once he passed by, it
turned to attack him again. If it wasn’t for his
improved reaction time, Daniel would have
taken a claw in the back. They skipped apart.
"What the fuck are you?"
Its breath was like chlorine. "A
Nightmare."
"What’s that, exactly?"
"…hmm." The thing cocked its head. "It will be more fun if you know what we are.
Demons, summoned by humans. We make
excellent assassins against your kind."
Daniel’s eyes widened. "How did you
find me?"
The thing sniffed the air. "Scent. A little
hair from where you’d fought before, and
now..."
Daniel barely got out of the way as a
second nightmare attacked him from behind.
He dashed around them, grabbed his gear,
then flung himself out a window he’d opened
for an emergency exit. In an instant, he was
blocks away. He sprinted, and sprinted some
more.
The Nightmares followed him
everywhere. It was hard to figure out how
many there were, but he guessed about five
or six. A few swings of his bat and fists
quickly taught him that his magic was totally
ineffective.
He wasn’t sure how their ability
worked. That was probably the thing that
frightened him the most. If they could slip a
hand inside him, who knew what they could
tear out? There was only one sure way to
protect himself: run like a bitch.
A long bath in the river didn’t help the
scent issue. He tried slathering himself with
soap. It didn’t make a difference. He waited
in different locations—inside buildings, on
rooftops, or in skyscrapers. They always
found him, and they could fly, too, zipping
along like little black ghosts. Walls and
doors meant nothing to them. They passed
through normal objects at will.
The Nightmares didn’t always trail
directly behind him; as it was sunny out, they
were easily seen against the pale grey sky.
They waited until he stopped moving. Then
they attacked all at once, drifting up through
the floors or from behind.
They kept away when he fought the
Vorid. He suspected that the Vorid’s brand
of magic could probably make short work of
them. They were not front-line warriors. But
Daniel killed quickly, so that never put them
off for long.
The only real safety he had was
distance. They didn’t pursue him outside
Manhattan; it seemed that mission control
just wanted him out of the way. But he was
never entirely sure. He went from fitful
sleep to almost no sleep at all. The monsters
had a fitting name.
He kept on the move, smashing and
blasting his way through the Vorid in
Harlem. Whenever he needed a break, he
retreated near the edge of the dome, several
miles out onto Long Island. He spent a few
hours storing extra supplies in a building he
appropriated as a sort of safe house. The
simple work helped relieve some of the
stress.
Soon after the first major demon assault,
Daniel saw a new faction of magicians
wearing deep blue tabards. It was good to
know that the Ivory Dawn had allies willing
to come to their aid. Rachel had told him a
bit about other magicians. If he remembered
right, that was the Order of True Flame from
Western Europe.
Their combined army pushed forward,
creeping down along central park, extending
sorties further into downtown. The black
pillars were so dense they were almost at
every other intersection. The streets past
96th were packed with extractors. From
what Daniel could tell, the fortress was
hovering almost directly above Times
Square. He wondered if it was just
coincidence, or if the Vorid did it
intentionally.
He was eating well enough, and his kills
gave him a good stamina jolt, but the lack of
sleep and constant activity was starting to
take a toll on his head. He felt an exhaustion
that a nap and a meal wasn’t fixing. He
wasn’t sure how long he could maintain his
hyper-alert state.
His supposed allies were starting to piss
him off. Not only did they attack him on
sight, despite his having expressly gone out
of his way for them, but they even sent
demons after him. Still, he didn’t dare stop
his efforts. The man he saved might be the
one to save Rachel. The overseer he killed
today was one less that could hurt her.
Occasionally he saw a flash of purple
light here and there around the city. Gabby
was hard at work. Daniel kept a polite
distance. He didn’t know if she had her own
set of Nightmares already, but it was
probably for the best, just in case they were
contagious. Sometimes he wondered why she
shot his offer down, but there was nothing for
it.
He hadn’t seen any contractors aside
from her. They must have known better than
to get involved with what was obviously a
total mess. Or they were dead.
****
The forward command post of the Ivory
Dawn was the top floor of an apartment on
the north end of Harlem. The cramped,
wood-paneled rooms were a bustle of
magicians from both the Dawn and the Order
of True Flame. Their European allies had
taken three days to arrive, but they came just
in time to bolster their defense against the
swarm of aerial extractors.
Rachel leaned in a corner of the
operations room. The walls were coated
with maps and pins. Computers were a
luxury inside the Vorid dome; they didn’t
have a man to spare for every monitor, so
they were back to paper and pen. A table at
the center of the room was layered with
reports.
Around the table were the leading forces
of their defensive effort: Eleanor, and Henry;
Matthew Aiken, the son of the magician that
governed the southeastern United States;
Madame Flemmet, their liaison to the True
Flame; and finally, Lenhard Rothschild, the
head of the Order himself.
Rachel remembered Rothschild from the
congress. He was young compared to Henry,
only thirty or so, with short-cut blond hair.
He had a sharpness about him that reminded
her of Daniel, but he took himself infinitely
more seriously.
Rothschild also had a serious case of
tunnel vision. He refused to consider the
contractors allies. Rachel had been working
on Henry for three days, and she felt as
though he’d almost come around, and then
this idiot had arrived. The sins of the past
were still fresh in the minds of the
Europeans. Admittedly, that was where the
war had actually taken place.
Still, that didn’t excuse him in Rachel’s
book. After dismissing his three dragons,
Rothschild had personally summoned the
seven Nightmares that were even now
hounding Daniel, despite the fact that every
report made it clear Daniel had been
working his ass off to help them.
But she knew this would happen. That’s
why she told him to stay in Boston.
She rubbed her hands on her face. She
knew he was lying as soon as his promise to
stay put left his mouth. But what could she
do? He was stronger than her, and getting
stronger by the minute. They needed him.
Despite the fact their whole force had
standing orders to attack him on sight, he