Authors: Andrew Ball
"For someone so adamantly apathetic, you’re
asking quite a lot from people who are
consumed with their own lives, their own
battles, and busy keeping their heads down."
"Apathetic?" Daniel said. "Where the
hell was this bit about being a cursed life-
sucking magician last night? You kept quiet
because you figured to save the juicy stuff
until after I was locked in." Xik’s averted
gaze confirmed Daniel’s words for him. "I
don’t want to be anyone’s savior. I just want
some stability for me and my brother. I guess
an average life was too much to ask from the
universe. Wanting to live without being
bothered is just too much ambition."
"If you had agreed last night, I would
have given you more details before
bestowing it in full, so please calm
yourself." Daniel sat back in his chair with a
skeptical look on his face. Xik was quiet for
a long time. "Perhaps it is unfair to thrust this burden on you," the alien said. He lowered
his big frog eyes. "But wouldn’t you rather
know? Wouldn’t you rather be the one
fighting than the one going about without a
care in the world?"
"No. War is young men dying and old
men talking."
"Who said that?"
"I forget. But they were right."
"…maybe so." Xik said. "But are you
really stubborn enough to let your brother
die?"
Daniel slapped the contract. "Can this
be altered if I find any of its conditions or
stipulations lacking?"
"…well, I -"
"Yes, or no."
"…yes. Probably," Xik added quickly.
Daniel swiveled to face his desk. He
dragged a piece of scrap paper over and
carefully began to read, copying parts as he
went along. He expected tricks, or at least
some vaguely worded clauses, but it was
open and direct. By the end of it, he’d
written a short summary of the entire
contract.
- On condition of agreement, the
contract manager will advise the
contractor in matters pertaining to magic
and the Vorid.
- The contractor agrees to use his
magic for the purpose of combating Vorid.
If it is judged by council that this
responsibility is neglected to serious
extent, the contractor shall become an
enemy of the state and treated as Vorid; on
this account, there will be no quarter or
appeal.
- In exchange for this service, when not
in combat against our mutual enemy, the
contractor shall be free to use his powers
at his discretion. However, if the
contractor’s actions violate local laws or
otherwise earn the enmity of those in his
universe or any universe to which he
travels, the Klide will offer no special
protection or guarantee of safety. The
contractor is solely responsible for the use
of his powers.
- The artificial unlocking of magical
talent provides the contractor with unique
magical skills, but does not necessarily
enable the contractor to learn any and all
forms of magic.
- The contractor will be unaffected by
Vorid spells that replace extracted souls
with magic shells. He shall be able to tell
them from real people, and his memory will
remain unaltered.
"…Xik."
"Yes?" Xik leaned forward. "Finished
reading?"
"There’s nothing in here about the
magic."
"What do you mean?"
"Say I accept the contract," Daniel said.
"What can I do? Breathe fire? Wear pinstripe
suits? Conjure tea?"
"Well, about that." Xik fiddled with the
collar of his suit. "I’ve no idea."
"…you’re serious, aren’t you?"
"Deadly," Xik said. "Magic can be
learned by those with the talent for it, but it
takes years of study to master. You are
different." Xik lifted his index finger. "I know one thing for sure: you gain what you
would call an enchantment. Any tool you use
will be very sturdy and have the capacity to
harm Vorid. The efficacy of said device will
depend on your weapon of choice and the
strength of your powers. Secondly." He
flicked his middle finger up. "It gives you
your own particular magical talent."
"Xik, you’re killing me. Be specific."
The frog shook his head. "I told you—I
don’t know. It depends on the individual.
Amongst the species I’ve visited, I’ve seen
flight, telekinesis, accelerated healing,
transmutation…it could be anything. Unlike
normal mages, you will have an intuitive
grasp of your power without the need for
sigils."
"Sigils?"
"The monkey wrench, as it were, of the
magician," Xik said. "A sigil serves to focus magical energy into a defined purpose. It’s
like a magic word…just more complicated.
Point being, you don’t need them."
"…one last question."
"Yes?"
"Is it really random? Picking me out of
seven billion people?"
Xik unfolded his legs and knitted his
hands between his knees. "Natural magical
talent is a link of the soul into the energy grid
that underwrites all reality. Magic is the
ability to call upon and manipulate that
energy. Few in your universe are so lucky.
Fewer still occupy your position—more
talent than the average person, but not so
much that it manifested as magical power."
Xik looked at him. "You are one of those
people. In a sense, it was random."
"In a sense." Daniel nodded. "And that solves the mystery of your persistence. I’m a
rare breed, and you need every soldier you
can get."
"You have an incisive manner of finding
out what you want to know."
"I just hate bullshit."
"I see."
Daniel sighed. He held his head in his
hands. He fiddled with the lock of hair that
hung over his eyes, spinning it in circles with
a finger.
And then he stopped. "Can you take it
away from me?"
"The contract’s magic?"
"No, my pet elephant," Daniel said. He
put a hand over his eyes. "Yes, the contract.
Can it be taken away?"
"No. It’s permanent."
"How permanent?"
"Absolutely permanent," Xik said. "The contract alters the connection between your
soul and the multiversal energy field.
Undoing that would be like un-burning a
piece of wood."
"Great. Let’s get this over with before I
change my mind."
Xik clapped his hands together.
"Then…?"
"Yeah. Where do I sign?"
"You don’t need to." Xik peeled off one
of his white gloves, revealing smooth, lime
green skin. The frog stretched out his hand.
"We just have to shake."
Daniel looked at the extended hand for a
long moment. Was there any other way? No.
He couldn’t fight the Vorid. That thing was
stuck in Felix’s back, grown into the skin—
even if he could rip it out, it would take
Felix’s insides with it. Magic was the only
thing that could save his little brother.
Daniel started to swallow, but he
stopped halfway. It felt like trying to choke
down a basketball.
There were two possibilities. The first,
and the far more likely, was that he’d gone
completely insane. The second—this was all
real, and Felix’s soul was in danger of harm.
No, not harm—removal. Erasure.
He took Xik’s hand.
Green fire flared down Xik’s arm.
Angry flames coated Daniel’s hand in an
instant. He jerked free of Xik’s grip; the frog
let him go without a struggle.
The fire didn’t burn. It wasn’t fire,
either—it didn’t give off light. It spread like
ooze, but it flickered and wavered like fire
should. It coated his wrist, then slipped
under his clothes. It felt like moist rubber
steadily sealing him up.
The flames rounded his shoulder, spread
down across his chest, and then up his neck.
Daniel felt himself tense as it crept up to his
chin, but it stopped there, leaving his face
exposed. He kept his focus on his bookshelf,
trying to ignore the rest of it. Eventually, the
wet rubber worked down his legs, squeezed
into his shoes, and curled about his toes.
It stopped. For a moment, Daniel
relaxed. This was it—he was the Green
Lantern in a latex costume. A little more
ostentatious than he’d expected, but hey,
maybe he’d be a real life superhero. He
started to rise.
A beam of red light cut through the air
between Daniel and Xik. He threw himself
back down into his chair. Blinking showers
of lasers blossomed to life in seconds.
Numbers, symbols, and lines twisted into an
intricate net within the glowing construct.
Daniel’s eyes darted to keep up with the
changes.
The lights formed a rough orb, which
began to spin, and it grew, like a ball of
twine picking up extra slack. Through it all,
Xik was silent, and still, an odd green statue
that grounded the chaos.
The rotating sphere halted. Someone
turned up the dial on the brightness. The
bedroom was dyed in maroon light. Whites
reflected pink; blacks and browns went the
color of dried blood.
Daniel felt a punch in the chest. He
grunted and shut his eyes. A rush of air
whipped his hair and clothes and stung his
face. He struggled to get a new breath in the
high wind.
And then it was gone.
He sat back, snapped his eyes open, and
breathed. The red lights had vanished. He
checked himself over. The green coating was
gone. No injuries.
"How do you feel?" Xik asked.
"I guess…" Daniel blinked a few times.
"…well…about the same, really."
"First you need to learn about your new
sense, and how to conceal yourself. Close
your eyes and relax."
Daniel did as he was instructed. A few
long breaths helped his heart return to a
normal pace. "Ok."
"Scrying—that’s what you’re about to
do—takes concentration. The only rule is
that you must be still. Remember that."
Daniel nodded and shut his eyes. "Now," Xik continued, "imagine stretching your mind
outside your body, floating up into the room.
Push yourself out of your body."
Daniel prepared himself for a herculean
effort of will. Xik made it sound simple, but
from what he’d seen so far, magic was
anything but. He braced his hands on the
armrests of his chair and mentally shoved
himself through his skull.
It was a bit hard to tell if anything had
happened.
"Open your eyes."
Daniel opened them. They widened
immediately. The color had gone.
Everything was cast in shades of grey.
The edges of objects wavered as if made out
of smoke. He was a spirit in some ethereal
alternate reality.
"Very good." Daniel turned. Next to him
was a shining sphere of light. It pulsed as it
spoke. "The light is me. You look about the
same, just so you know. Come. I’ll show you
your brother, and the Vorid. To move about,
simply will it. It will happen. Just like
moving an arm or a leg."
It turned out to be as easy as advertised.
Daniel followed Xik’s sphere without
trouble. They passed right through Daniel’s
door like phantoms, then floated across the
upstairs landing and down into the living
room. Felix was on the couch, watching TV.
He was a bright fire compared to the pale,
ghostly cushions, almost painful to look at.
The Vorid was latched onto his back
like a leech. Its tentacles wound through
Felix’s body, wrapping around him in
patterned, pulsing net.
And he could see it now—the pattern. It
reminded him of Xik’s magic, only smaller,
less complex, a carefully constructed tangle
of black lines and sigils. A dark cloud rested
around it, the antithesis of Felix’s white soul.
Daniel watched it with sick fascination. "Can
it see us?"
"No. Vorid spawn have little
intelligence and no magic of their own."
"How do I kill it?"
"Let’s return to our bodies first."
Xik’s white ball went up. Daniel
followed. They slipped through the ceiling
and back into his room.
Daniel focused on moving himself back
into his head, and in a moment, he was there.
He blinked. The color was back. The smoky
fog had vanished, replaced with the straight,
solid lines of reality.
"You’re a natural."
"Are there any limits on that?" Daniel
asked.
"Did you notice how everything
appeared rather hazy? Indistinct?" Daniel