Authors: Andrew Ball
Daniel’s bat came in strong. All five
swords crossed to block the strike. They
clashed there, white club against a defense of
black steel. Daniel’s powers flexed against
the weight of all the swords. "NOW!" he
shouted. "ATTACK NOW!"
Rothschild pressed on his earpiece.
"Hold your fire. I repeat. Do not engage."
"What are you doing?!" Eleanor said.
"It’s better this way." Rothschild
shrugged. "The lord will probably kill him,
but not before he puts up a good fight. Then
we kill the lord while he’s tired. Problems
solved."
"We had a plan! Order them to attack
before that thing can free itself!"
"Are you honestly taking his side?!"
Rothschild shouted. "He’s foolish, and on
top of that, totally irresponsible. If he gets
any stronger, he’ll pose a bigger threat than
the Vorid. Unless you’d prefer I withdraw to
Europe and leave you to fend for
yourselves?"
Daniel’s bat slipped off the swords. One
of them caught him across the gut; if it wasn’t
for his armor, he would have been sliced in
half. The strike threw him across the square,
but he managed to stop himself in the air
before he hit a building.
"What are you doing!?" Daniel shouted.
He leapt away as the lord attacked him
again. Rachel could only watch as he dodged
the swords.
****
Daniel slapped away a blade. Another
cut in. He beat it back, then jumped.
Even as he dashed into the sky, the other
two caught up. At top speed, he was faster,
but every time he made a turn they gained a
little ground. If he ran away, he was sure the
lord would turn his attention to the mages.
And Rachel.
To make matters worse, the lord had
some kind of secondary spell that let him
bring his swords back to his position
instantly. It had to be some kind of
teleportation; Daniel’s eyes hadn’t been able
to follow it.
He wasn’t getting any support from the
Dawn. Rothschild was probably holding
Eleanor’s feet over the fire.
Daniel shot back toward the ground. The
sudden reversal gave him a bit of breathing
room. He landed hard on his heels, bending
his knees to absorb the momentum.
He ran toward where the lord was
standing in the middle of the square. The
swords met him halfway. Daniel pushed
power into his arms.
His hands flickered and swatted the
swords away. They spun up from his strikes,
stopped, then fell back toward him. He kept
at it.
He slowly worked his way forward. He
focused carefully, striking just as they
reached him, a batter hitting every pitch from
a machine. The swords were too slow to
stop him.
They came all together in a last-ditch
attempt to halt his progress. He pushed out
about three quarters of his full strength. He
crushed them away with his bat and leapt the
rest of the distance to his enemy.
The lord teleported them back as Daniel
reached him. The five swords blocked him
again, but this time, Daniel wasn’t trying to
keep them in a shaky balance. That was
harder. He pressed every bit of energy he
had into his bat.
There was an explosion of white light.
The swords collapsed in under the force.
Daniel’s weapon struck the black inner
shield. The end of the bat punctured that final
magic barrier, but it deflected him enough
that he caught the lord’s shoulder instead of
its head.
The lord was blasted back across the
square. He smashed through a pillar of
concrete and through the doors of a building.
Daniel leaned on his bat, heaving his breath
back while he could.
The lord emerged from the dust and
rubble. Its clothes looked a little ripped up
where Daniel had made contact, but
otherwise, it wasn’t harmed in the slightest.
Daniel’s spine shivered.
The lord clenched its fists. A sigil spread out
from its feet. The swords multiplied. There
were dozens of them.
They sped for Daniel as a single swarm.
Daniel flew away, pounding his feet against
sigil after sigil to keep up his speed. The
cloud of steel curved to follow his path.
Ten or so swords had broken off the
main group to intercept him. He raised his
shield. It was like getting hit by a meteor
shower. He kept his arm stiff and weathered
through the barrage.
One of the swords cut into his shield. It
was alive with effort, wiggling and twisting
to enlarge the hole and get at him. Daniel
slapped its other end with his bat to dislodge
it.
Running wasn’t helping. He had to
attack. He dived back to the ground and ran
at the lord, but it just teleported the swords
back. They were on top of him in an instant.
Daniel put his strength into his arms.
The swords were slow compared to his
striking speed, but there were so many that,
by the time he’d swatted away one row, the
others were already moving back in.
The conveyor belt of swords pounded at
him. He felt his limbs burning. His
diaphragm was tired of breathing. He shoved
one more step forward.
The swords were getting faster. No. He
was slowing down. He was reaching his
limit.
He could tell that he wasn’t going to get
his bat to the next sword in time. He raised
his shield.
They beat against his steel barrier. He
magic sputtered like a rusty engine.
The shield was pulverized, but his
armor held. He was blown off his feet. He
crashed through a wall, kept going, slammed
through desks and tables. He struck another
wall, rebounded, and hit the floor face first.
He put an arm under himself. His hands
slipped. Tiles twisted and turned in his
vision. He thought he heard screams. He
wasn’t sure. There was a lot of ringing.
He looked up. A dark figure stood in the
light outside. Around it hovered clusters of
swords, poised to strike.
day, your souls, and the souls you’ve taken—
they’ll live again. The seeds of new life.>
Things in the office started moving on
their own. The lord hesitated. Daniel blinked
as golems pieced themselves together from
office supplies and swivel chairs. Long red
hair caught the corner of his eye.
The golems lined up and crossed their
arms in a defensive position. Rachel’s body
armored itself in staples and printers.
The swords would slice right through
her.
And they did. They stabbed through the
first few golems like they were air. Rachel
just didn’t have the power.
Daniel didn’t remember moving. He
was there, powers out, every bit he had left.
His shield rattled against the attack.
His willpower was enough to save her,
but not himself. A sword punched clean
through his barrier, through his armor, and
straight into his stomach. It was oddly
painless.
****
Rachel had barely reached Daniel
before the lord, and now this. The weapon
would cut him in half. And then the rest of
the swords would tear her to pieces, too.
At least death was better than Hell.
Purple light flashed around them.
Lightning struck the end of the sword. It was
pulled out of Daniel’s body without causing
more damage. Did the lord want him to
suffer?
The rest of the swords didn’t come. The
lightning buzzed and flashed around her.
Someone was there. A young woman was
holding up some kind of elemental shield
against the swords. The blades pressed
against the sphere of lightning, but they
couldn’t get through.
"You alive?!" she shouted. Daniel
groaned. His hand flopped up, then down. "I
can’t hold him off for long!" Even as she
spoke, the swords slammed against the
barrier. The violet electricity snapped back
like a rubber band. "If you can do anything,
now would be a good time!"
Rachel kneeled next to Daniel and
grasped his hand. It wasn’t quite as bad as
Henry’s—the sword didn’t cut all the way
through him—but he wasn’t going anywhere.
They were trapped.
"Daniel. I’m sorry. I love you. I love
you."
"I love you too," he whispered.
She held his arm to her chest. It felt like
holding on to the last chunk of the world as
the rest crumbled into the abyss. "I think this
is it," she said.
"Bullshit." She looked at him, surprised.
His eyes were bright. She could see that look
on his face, the look when he’d thought of
something too clever for his own good.
"How do your golems work?" he asked.
"My golems?"
"No time." He coughed. There was
blood on his lips. "They work like
extractors?"
Rachel rubbed her forehead. "Yes. Sort
of. They’re the same family of magic. Why is
that important?"
The shield rumbled. Rachel instinctively
laid herself over Daniel, but the electricity
held firm. Whoever she was, she was strong.
"…make a golem."
"What?"
"Do it. Now. Hurry." He clenched his
eyes shut. "Just do it. Small one."
Rachel focused her powers. A few bits
of a cubical divider crushed together to form
a small golem about two feet high. "What’s
—hey!"
Daniel had gripped his bat. He swung it
down, smashing the golem in half.
Her spell was ripped from her control.
The golem disintegrated. She felt drained.
Exhausted.
Daniel’s flesh knitted itself together.
The blood stopped. The wound turned into a
sort of massive scab. He sat up, winced.
"Another. Bigger."
Rachel didn’t hesitate. She pieced
together another golem, this time as big as
her. She shuddered as the power was torn
away. The force of the vampirism felt…cold.
But he was healing.
She was tired. Too tired. She wanted to
lie down and nap. The cold went away. Now
she felt warm.
Daniel stood and pulled her to her feet.
"A third one. As much as you can manage."
Rachel forced herself to send her sigil
into the floor. The wood and concrete under
them ripped out of the ground and into a
single, massive golem. Its head touched the
peak of the electric cage. In a flash, Daniel’s
bat destroyed it.
Rachel bent double. It felt like she’d
been punched in the stomach. Her legs
bucked. Daniel caught her. "Are you
alright?"
"…ugh." She grabbed his arms. Her
fingers were numb. Her vision was dark.
"Hard…can’t see."
Daniel’s hand clasped hers. He looked
over. "How you doing, Gabby?"
Gabby’s jaw was clenched tight. "Just
great."
Daniel wrapped an arm around each of
their waists. Gabby didn’t look away from
her spell. "Can you knock the swords away
with one big surge?" Daniel asked.
"Yeah. Here goes." Gabby lowered her
head and shut her eyes. The purple electricity
pulsed outwards. The swords flew back.
The shield vanished. And then, so did
they. Rachel felt wind rush by her head, and
in instant later, they were on top of one of the
skyscrapers overlooking the square. Daniel
set them both down.
"Hide," he said.
"Way ahead of you."
"Thanks," Daniel said. "I was pretty
screwed."
"I don’t like owing people things.
Consider us even." She cocked her head.
"What’s the plan?"
"You need to leave. I promised them I’d
turn myself in after the fight."
Gabby brushed a hand through her short
brown hair. "You’re a bigger dumbass than I
thought."
"In the business, they call that talent."
"Hey. Your girlfriend doesn’t look too
good."
"I’ve seen her like this before." Daniel
bent down. "…you ok?"
Rachel murmured something. She wasn’t
sure what it was. Her mouth felt full of sand.
She could barely see him.
"If they don’t hit him this time…there’s
nothing more I can do."
"Rothschild," Rachel said. "I…signal
Eleanor."
"Oh boy, I get to rely on Eleanor. Now
I’m just brimming with confidence." Daniel
rubbed his thumb on her forehead. It felt like
she was watching him do it to someone else,
and the real Rachel was floating up in the
air. "Well. You only live once, right?"
Rachel saw her fingers reaching for him.
She couldn’t feel her arms. He took her hand.
"Danny…"
"Yeah?"
"Live."
"I will. We both will. I’ll be right back,
ok? I love you." He turned away. "Signal
Eleanor, right now."
Rachel put the last of her magic into it.
She wasn’t sure if it worked.
The last thing she saw was Daniel
leaping from the edge of their skyscraper.