Authors: Andrew Ball
doesn’t give him the right to steal."
"I didn’t know anything about magicians,
or your laws," Daniel said.
"Ignorance of the law excuses no one."
"I didn’t think that would fly, but I
thought I might as well throw it out there,"
Daniel said. "Let’s talk practicalities. I’m the strongest weapon against the Vorid you have.
I’m not even sure exactly how powerful I am
after killing the lord. You’ve decided to
chuck me down a well and forget about it.
Do you really not need me?"
"We can prevail without resorting to the
extreme you represent."
"I personally saved at least two dozen
lives on that battlefield, and without me to
hold off the lord, you’d be dead."
"We cannot trust anything you can’t
prove."
"Guilty until proven innocent. I can see
why that makes sense, you know, since I’ve
kept my word the entire time. News flash:
you’re the one that tried to stab me in the
back."
"Unfounded accusations aren’t -"
"Seriously, dude, kiss my ass. You’re so
full of crap it’s pouring out your mouth."
Rothschild shrugged. He stood. "Then I
hereby -"
The witch raised a hand. "Wait."
Rothschild hesitated a moment, then sat back
down. The old woman stood instead, peering
over her wart-covered nose at Daniel.
"Young man." Her accent was a lot thicker
than Rothschild’s, but her English was clear
enough. "Do you understand why we must
send you away?"
"I’ve got no clue, lady. Seems to me like
you’ve only got as long as it takes for the
Vorid to pick someone else to invade Earth."
"Tell me. If we allowed you to stay,
what would you do?"
Daniel felt a tiny thread of hope worm
through him. He took a slow breath. "I’d fight
the Vorid."
"And then?"
"What do you mean?"
"When the Vorid are dead, or have
stopped attacking," she said. "What will you do then?"
Daniel thought for a moment. "…I
guess…I don’t know. I was in school to
become a prosecutor, but now I’m a part of
all this. I’m not sure what I’d be. But I’d
work with Eleanor, and anyone else, to keep
the peace."
"You do not comprehend your own
power," the witch said. "By all reports, even before you absorbed the lord, you could
overwhelm almost any mage. Now you could
destroy a battalion of them. If you fought
alongside us, you would continue to grow
more and more powerful. If magicians and
wizards and witches are as stars, then you
would become a black hole from which not
even light could escape."
Daniel gave her a disconcerted look.
"This might sound stupid…but I’m just a
normal person. The Klide threw me a gun
and told me to shoot, and I did, because I
didn’t want any more people to get hurt.
When the fighting’s over, what I’d really
want to do is go home. I’m not here because I
want to be."
"That’s beside the point." The witch
stared at Daniel until he looked away. "You
would be powerful enough to change the
world, to destroy, and perhaps to build, as
you saw fit. You would inevitably attract
others to your side, those in admiration of
your power, or those who wanted to use you.
They would influence you. Push you. You
would see the bad things in the world and
realize that it would take merely a flick of
your wrist to change them. You would be an
unchallengeable being, capable of enforcing
whatever law or morality you saw fit. Who
would dare question you when you could
eliminate them with the slightest effort?"
Daniel tried to protest, but the witch cut him
off. "It does not matter what you intend.
Troubles and conflicts condense around
those with the power to resolve them. Take it
from me, child—I know this, because we
have lived it. The nature of your magic
would inevitably draw you into conflict.
Even if you did not move, the problems
would simply come to you. You cannot tell
me that you wouldn’t be continually tempted
into action. It is not you we distrust, but your
power. Power is man’s great weakness.
When absolute, it is a terrible thing, and it
would surely corrupt you." The witch sat.
"That is the difference between you, and
ourselves. We are limited. You are not. That
is why you must be removed. You are no less
a threat to the world than the Vorid.
Daniel started to speak, but the woman
raised a hand. "I do not mean to say that you
made the wrong choices. Perhaps, had I a
family to protect, and no other means of
doing so, I would have done as you did. I
pity the fate which has fallen on your
shoulders."
No clever responses came to mind.
She’d made a good point. Would he really
just pack it up and go home after the Vorid
left? Humanity had plenty of issues even
without an invasion. He would be turning his
back on all that. There would be more than
one person trying to pull him into something.
He had a brief vision of a United States
backed up by a new nuclear weapon—
Daniel Fitzgerald. What kind of world would
that be like?
Was the witch right? Maybe he wouldn’t
sit on his hands. He’d certainly want to make
the world better than it was. Wasn’t that why
he wanted to be a prosecutor, anyway? His
own brand of karmic vengeance?
But how bad a thing would that be? He
wasn’t insane. He was just another guy. He
didn’t want to rule people; he believed in
republics. He could rationally ignore people
that tried to get him to be more than that.
Prosecution was his revenge, but it was
directed through the laws that society had
decided were acceptable.
No. He couldn’t accept her logic.
"You’re wrong," he said.
The witch’s face was patient. "How
so?"
"I wouldn’t use my powers after the
war," Daniel said. "Maybe in self-defense.
Save someone in a burning building, that sort
of thing. Other than that, I just wouldn’t do it.
That’s my answer. Being a contractor is only
about fighting the Vorid."
"And we come back, then," the woman
said, "to the fact that we would have to take
you at your word. The word of a hotheaded
young man is not something I can trust. I
doubt many would."
And then Daniel realized the truth of the
inquisition. The magicians weren’t interested
in a better world. They wanted, like so many
others, to maintain the status quo, carefully
protect and grow their own power. The
witch herself, along with the council that sat
before him, were the current masters of the
world, and they wouldn’t condone anything
that might replace them.
The Daniel from half a year ago
wouldn’t have turned himself in. Right after
killing the lord and protecting Rachel, his
old self would have laughed in Rothschild’s
face and walked away. And there would
have been nothing they could do about it.
But he’d set his cynicism aside. He’d
honestly tried to change his perspective. He
tried to do the right thing when he could
barely figure out what the right thing was.
He met their eyes. Matthew smirked at
him. The witch’s expression was flat. The
Chinese Wu was stony and indifferent.
Rothschild’s face was tight with satisfaction.
Daniel could see Eleanor’s hands. She
gripped the railing in front of her seat so
hard her knuckles were white. She was
helpless to save him. It didn’t sit well with
her. At least she cared.
He found himself more comforted by
that than he thought he would be.
The others long since stopped caring
about the ideals championed by prepubescent
boys that believed they’d figured out how the
world worked. They weren’t the magical
heroes from magazines and books. They
weren’t a league of justice. They were
politicians and hypocrites.
Except one.
"Where’s Henry Astor?" Daniel asked.
"What does he have to say about this?"
"I’m right here."
Daniel squinted. He could just make him
out in the unlit back row of the room. The old
man trudged down the stairs. He looked like
he’d never been wounded. Magic had its
benefits.
"Mr. Astor," Daniel said. "You know
me."
"I do." Henry narrowed his eyes. "And
you had the impudence to look me in the eyes
and tell me you’d protect my daughter. When
you’d made yourself into one of these things,
when you knew full well the consequences!"
Daniel’s mouth moved as he found the
words. "…but…I was trying…" He
swallowed. "I had to protect my brother."
"Then you made a choice," Henry said.
"Your life for his. I commend you for your
courage. Now you will pay that price."
"…why?"
"Because my daughter misguidedly
associated herself with Satan’s black magic,
and now she is dead!" Henry leaned in close.
"You should never have courted her. You
should never have dared. You should have
known better than to involve someone you
cared about. My little girl is dead because of
you."
Daniel was speechless.
You know he's right.
Daniel looked down. He shook his head
at the floorboards at Henry's feet—to reject
Henry's words, and the cynical voice in his
head, to try and stave off the fear in his chest
that they were both right and he was in
denial.
Henry stood straight, then marched up to
Eleanor. Daniel could see the struggle on her
face. She was trying with every fiber of her
being not to burst into tears. The betrayal and
disbelief was plain to see.
Daniel knew, because he felt the exact
same way. Was that the same Henry that had
laughed at his jokes back at Eleanor’s
birthday?
Yes, it was. A man like that didn’t last
as president of the world’s most powerful
organization of magicians because he was
nice.
Rothschild cleared his throat. "I hereby
exile you to Hell. Do you have any last
words?"
Daniel closed his eyes. "Miss Astor.
Please protect my little brother. He’s in
Cleveland with my father."
"I will," Eleanor said. "I promise."
Daniel looked up at Henry. "…I don’t
understand, sir. And I don’t think I ever
will."
"I wouldn’t expect you to. You are not a
father."
Daniel narrowed his eyes. Those words
meant nothing. He didn’t have a very good
track record with fathers.
He looked back at Rothschild, and
Henry, and the Wu, and the witch, and that
smug little prick, Matthew. They were
banishing him to protect themselves, the rest
of the human race be damned. Daniel's anger,
his fear, and all the rest of the twisted
feelings in his gut melted and bubbled up into
his throat.
"Fuck all of you," Daniel said. "You had better hope Hell is as good a fucking prison
as you say it is."
Rothschild raised his hands. What
looked like a purple-red laser light show
grew in front of him. It reminded Daniel of
Gabby’s electricity, but this was different.
Sinister.
It took him a moment to realize it was a
sigil. It was convoluted beyond anything he’d
seen. Shapes and lines and lights moved and
danced across its surface like the mechanical
parts of an impossibly complex engine. It
filled half the space before them, stretching
from the floor to halfway up to the ceiling.
At that moment, Daniel felt the fear
crush down on him. They were actually
sending him to Hell. It was happening, right
then. And this sight—the cruel magicians that
were all humanity had between life and death
—was the last thing he’d ever see.
Rothschild jabbed a finger forward. One
of the lines began to warp and vibrate. "May
god have mercy on your soul."
The dark light grew in Daniel’s vision.
Spots danced in front of his eyes. The world
was washed away.
****
He had a brief sensation of falling. The
next thing he knew, Daniel was sitting on the
ground. A cold wet seeped into his pants. He
opened his eyes and looked around.
He was on the side of a mountain, half-
planted in snow. Icy wind numbed his ears
and his fingertips.
The air was sharp and clean. Lines of
rocky peaks stretched to the horizon. He felt
like he’d been dropped in the Himalayas.
He clambered to his feet. He held his
arms to his chest and shivered. Wasn’t there
supposed to be a lake of fire down here?
"Hey you." Daniel turned. Perched on a
rock, wrapped in a thick fur coat, was
something that looked like a goblin. Mottled
green skin covered a fat, elongated nose that