Authors: Andrew Ball
nodded to him. "The further you are from
your body, the worse that grows. If you kept
going, everything would become a solid blur.
There’s a certain risk of getting lost, so stay
conservative when you scry. There’s no time
limit, and it’s not very taxing, but you still
need to eat and drink at some point."
"…what happens if I didn’t come back
to my body?"
"It would seem as though you’d fallen
into a permanent coma. But don’t worry
about it. As your power grows, you’ll see
further at a glance. You won’t have to
physically move your spirit."
"I still have to sit still though, right?"
"Yes." Xik waved a few fingers in a
circle. "Three dimensional movement creates
ripples in the energetic continuum which
obscure the senses."
"…oh yeah, right. Sure. Energetic
continuum."
"Sorry. If you moved, you’d just see
static, so when you scry, keep still. There are
ways around this, but supposing I could even
get you one, the inertialess systems we have
installed on our ships are as large as your
house. Not very practical for personal use."
Daniel’s mind spun, but he filed away
the idea of interdimensional space ships in
the back of his head. More pressing matters
were at hand. "So what kind of drawbacks
does magic have? Just in general?"
"It will tire you just like any other task,"
Xik said. "Consider it a muscle. Stronger
people can do more without as much strain.
You’ll have to find your limits on your own.
Be sure to practice regularly."
"Ok. So." Daniel slapped his hands on
his knees. "Vorid. Killing."
"Spawn are easy to destroy, even as
weak as you are now," Xik said. Daniel was
a bit miffed at that comment, but he kept his
mouth shut. "First we need to find out what
your talent is. A moment." Xik closed his
eyes and murmured something. He waved his
hand, but nothing happened that Daniel could
see. After some silence, he looked up.
"Speed. And a secondary ability, to imbue
objects with durability and force. That goes
beyond their ability to harm Vorid."
"I thought I’d be throwing fireballs or
something."
"An important aspect of magic is
physical enhancement. You can move faster
than the average human. Running speed,
reflexes."
"So I’m the Flash?"
Xik frowned, baffled. "Afraid I’m not
familiar."
"He’s a superhero."
"Superhero?"
"A hero," Daniel said, "only super."
"…how illuminating."
"Don’t worry about it."
Xik cleared his throat. "Your secondary
ability will be useful. Your enchantment can
apply to more or less anything you touch, but
you should work with your hands first. That
will help you get used to manipulating the
energy."
Daniel rubbed his knuckles. "I don’t
really want to touch that thing."
"No time for squeamishness. But don’t
be in a hurry, there’s plenty more
fundamentals."
"Felix doesn’t have the time for this sh -
" Daniel stopped himself, and took a breath.
"The sooner, the better."
"I’ll explain as quickly as possible,"
Xik said. "But this is important, so listen
closely." Daniel leaned forward. "Contractor magic—your powers—are already
undetectable by other magicians. Your soul,
however, can still be detected. That’s going
to be a problem if you’re ever found
somewhere you’re not supposed to be."
"Ok. So what do I do about it?"
"What I’m about to teach you is more
valuable than the strongest attack. Not even
the Vorid have grasped Klide concealment
techniques. To be hidden is to survive."
****
Daniel trod down the stairs and into the
living room the old fashioned way. Felix
was still lounging on the couch. After-school
cartoons blared from the television.
Apparently all the fun upstairs didn’t leak
out. Xik walked next to him, watching.
"Hey Felix," Daniel said.
Felix’s eyes stayed on the TV. "Huh?"
"Stand up for a second." Daniel grabbed
Felix under the shoulders, lifted him up, and
set him on his feet. The Vorid wobbled
slightly. Daniel’s face scrunched up. That
thing was nasty.
"What are you doing?" Felix said. "I’m trying to watch!"
"Hold still. There’s something on your
back."
Daniel drew his fist back and
concentrated. A tendril of force snaked from
his core and out into his hand. The skin of his
forearm and fingers glowed with soft white
light. He punched the Vorid straight on.
It shrieked like a cat thrown into a pool.
A smoking, cracked crater was left on its
spine, harsh and pale against the black. The
tentacles withdrew from Felix and snapped
back into its body like a turtle retreating into
its shell. It leapt off Felix’s back and
skittered across the floor.
"Don’t let it get away!" Xik shouted.
The Vorid made for the front of the
house. Daniel pounded his legs into the
ground, and, in an instant, he’d passed it by.
He swiveled, surprised by his own
speed, but managed to get himself between it
and the door. The Vorid hesitated. Daniel
came down hard with his foot, pushing the
power into his heel. It tried to jump again,
but the bottom of his shoe was faster. He
crushed it like a cockroach.
It twitched once, went still; and then it
started to fall apart. The slimy black body
crumbled to a fine dust.
If they weren’t inside, he’d think a wind
had caught the remains. The pile of crumbs
drifted into the air like dust kicked high on a
hot day—black, volcanic dust. The dark
cloud rushed into Daniel’s chest.
A surge of energy hit him like a rock.
His heart skipped a beat, injected with the
magical equivalent of an adrenaline shot and
five cups of coffee. His fists clenched tight.
It felt good.
Felix turned around and scratched his
head. "Uh…what was that about?"
Daniel straightened and relaxed his
hands. "Nothing. Just messing with you."
Felix made a face and looked back at the
TV. "Aww, I just missed the best part! You
suck!"
"You suck more."
"Your face sucks."
For a moment, Daniel almost responded
with the expected response drilled into him
by a lifetime spent in the American school
system: your mom sucks.
But he couldn’t say that. Not to Felix.
Daniel snapped his fingers and squinted
hard. "You win this time, Fitzgerald. But I’ll
have my revenge!" Felix laughed and
plopped back on the couch. Crisis averted.
"I’m gonna take a walk, ok?" Daniel said.
Felix shrugged. "Ok. See you."
Daniel locked the front door and went
around the edge of his house. He stopped at
the corner near where a few tall shrubs
shielded him from the road. He tightened his
fist and focused. In a moment, the white
power was back, coating his hand like a
glove. The energy waited patiently, waiting
to be released.
He dropped his hand, then gathered the
power into his feet and jumped. White light
burst under his shoes. He leapt into the air at
least as high as he was tall, then fell onto his
butt and rolled over in the grass. He did it
again, this time grabbing the edge of the roof
with his hands. He pulled himself up and
walked around on the tile. He’d never been
up on the roof of his house.
"Having fun?"
Daniel jumped back, then sighed. Xik
had appeared next to him. "Would you stop
doing that?"
"I enjoy your surprise," Xik said. "It’s the only time I can get something out of you."
Daniel stretched his arms. "So did I just
get a ton of strength from that thing?"
"No, not at all. Killing spawn is like
stomping ants. You’ll have to take out quite a
few to feel a significant difference. This is
mostly all what you had inside yourself."
Daniel looked his pinstriped friend up
and down. "I feel like I could sprint a mile.
And do a hundred pushups."
"Right after absorption, you’ll gain a
boost to your stamina, and heal faster, too,"
Xik explained. "Even without magic, your
normal physical abilities will improve.
You’ll probably find you need much less
sleep, if any at all. The night won’t hinder
you—your eyesight will improve to
compensate."
"Sounds convenient." Daniel punched
his fist into his palm. "So. Three days? Now
that I’m a superhuman, think I can take on that
extractor?"
"Absolutely not. You’re not to touch any
more Vorid, not until it’s come and gone."
"What?! Why the hell not?!"
"Because it would swat you like a fly."
Daniel drew back. That was as stern a tone
as Xik had taken with him. "Your brother
was the exception. One missing spawn will
go unnoticed. More, and you’ll draw
attention that will kill you."
It slowly coalesced inside Daniel’s
brain. "…I wait until the extractor passes
through. Then I go on a spawn killing-spree
to increase my strength. A month later, when
it comes back, I kill it then."
"Indeed. And when you kill that one, a
replacement will come. And if you kill that
one, then more."
"Then what’s stopping them from
annihilating me right now?"
"You have once miniscule, flimsy
advantage," Xik said. "Obscurity."
Daniel thought back to his magic lesson.
"You mean concealing my presence, like you
showed me?"
"That will hide you from any scrying
magic users, yes," Xik said. He waved a
hand. "But that’s not really what I was
getting at. The Vorid forces here are on
autopilot. Earth is rather densely populated,
but it’s in a lonely corner of the multiverse,
which is an extremely big place." Xik made
his frog smile. "The Klide keep their main
forces somewhat locked-up, after all.
Meanwhile, to keep expanding, their war
machine invades elsewhere on their behalf."
"…so I’m not even fighting the Vorid,
I’m fighting their robots? What the hell?"
"It all stems from the same magic, and
so you can absorb it," Xik said. "The spawn are biological. The extractors are machines.
Both are just engineered constructs. They
follow programmed instructions resting at
the juncture of magic and technology."
"…so…as long as I’m careful, the real
ones won’t show up, right?"
"Your magicians have dug in their
heels." Xik shrugs. "They have no choice.
Humans are being harvested everywhere. But
noticeable delays in schedule will show up
in their analyses. It won’t be long until they
launch a real attack. In the meantime, your
goal is to cautiously build your strength."
"You mentioned something else—an
overseer."
"I did. Spawns are created and
maintained by extractors. Extractors
themselves are automatons; they can adapt
somewhat to a changing situation, but as you
said, they’re just magical robots. They can’t
really plan ahead. Overseers are the first
actual sentient individual within the Vorid."
"What’s above them?"
"Soul energy is like their currency," Xik
said. "Their overseers are as farmers and are
the majority of their population. Above them
are the nobility, the lords and their families,
the warrior caste. Above them, several
thousand of what you might call princes, who
each command the loyalty of many lower
nobles."
"Who’s the boss?"
"The royal family, led by their king."
Daniel put his hands on his hips. "Are
you serious? Why are the Vorid here, feeding
on us? If they’re so advanced, can’t they do
something else for energy besides suck out
our souls? Invasions sound really
inefficient."
"You’re right, of course," Xik said,
"though you underestimate the amount of
energy in a soul. Like an atom, souls have
huge amounts of potential energy given their
size. But for them, it’s a religious matter."
"…are you joking?"
"Absolutely not," Xik said. "They have a doctrine of continual expansion and
conquest. They’ve consumed all the sentient
life in their home universe and have ventured
beyond it in search of greener pastures. They
consider it their holy mission to reunite all
the magic of the universe, all the souls, back
into one supreme being from whom their king
claims descent. They believe that this act
will activate a magical singularity that will
overcome the natural degradation of entropy
and reset the entire multiverse. Then, the
cycle will repeat. If they don’t do this, they
believe that all useful energy will inevitably
be consumed and everything will languor for
all eternity in total dissociated heat death. In