Authors: Andrew Ball
order to propagate life, they must consume
it."
Daniel took a long breath. "Holy shit."
"Quite."
"Back up a minute. What’s a heat
death?"
"The probable end of every universe.
You know that your star is burning through
its fuel, correct?"
"Well, yeah," Daniel said. "But it’s got enough for a few billion years, right?"
"True. But what happens when it runs
out?" Xik pointed into the sky. "The sun is the energy source of your entire solar system.
You could move to another sun, use other
stars. But eventually, eons into the future,
they will all burn themselves out. That, or
collect into black holes. But even black
holes will eventually radiate away the last of
their energy. One by one, all the billions of
galaxies will vanish into blackness. The
universe will be nothing but scattered gases
and background heat—a silent state known
as heat death. The energy which sustains life
and motion itself will have been used up."
Daniel mulled it over in his head. "And
their solution to this problem, basically, is to
gather everything together?"
"Yes. We’ve run the numbers, to borrow
a saying from your language. According to
our mathematics, it doesn’t work out.
Therefore, on both moral and factual
grounds, we oppose their campaign of
universal genocide."
"You gave me the impression they were
bugs. Mindless drones." Daniel sat on the
roof tiles and folded his legs underneath him.
He looked up. Puffy clouds floated along in
the sky, oblivious to the tiny things on the
ground. "This is worse. They’re an empire of
zealots. They must think what they’re doing
is the right thing to do."
"You’ve grasped the situation soundly.
We tried to reason with them, but our many
diplomatic missions have all been destroyed.
We’ve long since stopped sending them."
Xik folded his arms behind his back.
"They’re a monolithic force trying to crush
everything. What I’ve told you is most of the
little we’ve learned about them. They aren’t
interested in cultural exchange."
"This is a hell of a lot to take in."
"It is the reality of the world you live
in."
"It’s kind of depressing," Daniel said.
"We’re fighting for a universe that will burn
out."
"Better than a universe in which
everyone is dead."
"Can’t argue with that."
"In any case," Xik added, "that end is still an unfathomably long time away. Over
100 trillion years for your universe, about
the same for mine. Enough time, I suspect,
for us to find a better solution." He made a
sort of grim smile. "We’ll be gone by then
anyway."
Daniel looked back. "Hey, if you’re so
advanced, don’t you have super-medicine?
Immortality?"
"We live about 400 years. That is
considered…enough. After that time, we
have a choice to either commit ourselves to
recycling or go into stasis. Or keep living—
but that’s frowned upon."
"So -"
Xik raised his white-gloved hand. "I
can’t go into the details, Mr. Fitzgerald. It’s
a bit hypocritical, but aside from giving you
the means to defend yourself, I’m not to
interfere. Especially concerning technology."
Daniel shrugged in acceptance. The
Klide lifestyle wasn’t really relevant,
anyway. Earth had bigger problems. "So…
extractors are pretty tough?"
"One could rip you limb from limb quite
easily."
"Thanks for the vote of confidence."
Daniel rubbed his nose. "And overseers?"
"There are a variety," Xik said, "though the most common aren’t very flexible, for
magicians. Makes them easier to train. Their
magic is still extremely powerful, of course,
and being a sentient individual as smart as
you or I, they’re much more dangerous."
"You know…if we don’t kill that
extractor, a lot of people are going to die in
three days."
"Yes. A lot of people."
"Isn’t there anything we can do?"
"No."
Daniel didn’t know what he felt then.
He’d signed the contract and had his magic,
and he was still a useless weakling. The
world was spitting on him and laughing
about it.
Xik must have seen it on his face.
"Remember this anger, Daniel. Remember
how you felt when you saw a spawn on your
brother’s back. You’ll need that feeling."
"You think so?"
"Your earth is a complicated place.
Humans, like many races, are capable of
great irrationality, be it from love, or hate. I
fear that the Vorid are merely one of your
worries."
"…I’m not surprised."
"Really?" Xik said. "So suspecting of
your own people?"
Daniel shifted on the tile somewhat,
drawing in one of his legs. "You mentioned
love and hate. You forgot fear. I wonder
what a wizard is afraid of?"
Xik gave him a grim nod. "Your magical
orders might very well have hidden more
history from us than we expected."
"Everyone has skeletons in their closet."
"Too true."
"I don’t blame them, though. Seriously."
"The ever-pragmatic Mr. Fitzgerald
doesn’t blame them for the consequences of
their fear?"
"I don’t have a right to," Daniel said,
"considering I’m no longer human, am I? I
turned myself into a monster to get what I
wanted."
"…that’s quite a suggestion."
"It’s true." Daniel looked at his hands. "I have to kill things, now. It’s part of the
program." He stared at his fingers a bit
longer, then glanced back to Xik. "But we’d
rather die on our feet than live on our knees.
Said a great man at some time. I forget."
"…I’ll remember your words," Xik
said. "I am sorry, Daniel."
"It’s the reality of the world I live in,"
Daniel repeated. He sighed. "I can’t trust
anyone, can I? Wizards, or contractors. I’m
wanted by one group as a criminal, and by
the others as a potential source of power."
"Not everyone is bad. But yes." Xik
turned away. His voice was quiet. "Stay
hidden, Daniel. Stay safe."
"Are you leaving?"
"You’ve put me behind schedule." Xik
smiled. "…I was surprised you changed your
mind so quickly, though. Even if it was for
your brother."
"…if this…" Daniel murmured. "If it’s
all a dream—if it’s all some insane
nightmare, it doesn’t matter what I do. But on
the off-chance it’s real, I should take it
seriously. That’s what I decided."
"You would come to that sort of
conclusion." Xik walked to the end of the
roof and raised a hand. "Until we meet
again."
"Happy trails."
Xik paused. "A question. Do you really
think my appearance is off-putting? No one
else said anything."
"Totally. Just get a simple black suit.
My eyes bug out every time you move."
Xik tipped his puke-colored top hat.
"Then I suppose I will." And then he
vanished.
Daniel slipped the stone Xik had given
him after explaining how to conceal himself
out of his pocket. It was a smoky green oval,
cold and smooth. He rolled it through his
fingers. It didn’t even need magic to work; he
just had to squeeze hard. Xik couldn’t help
him fight, but if he absolutely needed to talk,
Daniel had a line of communication to the
Klide.
For a moment, Daniel almost didn’t
believe any of it had happened. He closed
his eyes. The tang of his magic power was
there, a burning ball at his center, a white
little flame. But for some reason, his insides
were numb. He laid back and folded his
arms behind his head.
A multiverse hurtling toward an
inevitable heat death 100 trillion years in the
future. An alien race of religious fanatics
bent on absorbing all sentient life. Another
alien race fighting back. A world of
magicians living in secret. And himself, a
contractor, a human Vorid that could absorb
his enemies and grow stronger.
All in less than 24 hours. And here he
was, relaxing on his roof. Maybe video
games really did desensitize you to this stuff.
Except if he died, he wasn’t going to
pop back to life.
There had to be a good reason the
absorption magic was forbidden. Something
terrible had happened; he was sure of it.
That’s how people operated. Given a car
accident, they put up a stop sign. After the
fact, sure, but at least they acted.
But it was also the only choice he had.
Besides, it was like Xik had said—weapons
weren’t intrinsically good or bad. It was
how they were used that mattered.
Or, he’d just made himself the bad guy.
A monster. A nuke about to go off.
Daniel sighed. Worrying about the
morality of it wouldn’t do him any good. He
was a contractor now. A Klide mercenary.
More practically, he was isolated. He
couldn’t rely on whatever organization was
already out there, and he definitely couldn’t
rely on other contractors. He was on his
own.
Daniel put the green stone back in his
pocket and jumped down from the roof.
****
On Sunday night, Daniel lay awake in
his bed. He stared at the clock for a while.
His jaw ached. He clutched his sheets up to
his chin.
It felt like cowering from the
boogeyman.
Tense as he was, he could easily feel the
tiny white orb at his core, his very soul
itself. It was his connection to magic—to the
underlying motive force of the multiverse.
The width of that energetic pipeline that
determined magical strength. Daniel’s was
still small…but bright.
As Xik had taught him, he hid it away.
He mentally buried himself with plastic
wrap, one layer at a time. Like scrying, it
wasn’t that hard—willing it was enough. He
just had to stay focused.
Xik hadn’t gone into much detail on the
sigil-based human magic, but the contract
made it possible for him to exercise his
powers intuitively, just like Xik’s race. He
didn’t have to direct things with sigils, or
structured spells—just keep his mind sharp
and his thoughts clear. In terms of magic, he
was more Klide than human.
Something sharp and dark cut at
Daniel’s senses. He clenched up even
tighter, balling his knees into his chest.
It faded.
Daniel kept himself wrapped in his
blankets and his powers. He stared at the
clock on the wall. For thirty long minutes, the
wall-mounted device became a terrible
machine counting his time away.
Click. Clack.
Click. Clack.
Click. Cla-
The dark edge came again.
It was like the sheen of an oil slick at
night—black, but viewed at the right angle,
suddenly reflective, the colors oddly twisted
and warped. And there was a sort of stench
that hung over it, somewhere between bad
gas and old car engines, that made you think
you’d never breath fresh air again. An oil
spill on the fabric of reality.
And then it was gone.
Daniel couldn’t fall asleep, but he
wouldn’t want to anyway. He waited another
hour, eyes peeled, senses as keen as he could
make them.
Nothing happened.
He crawled out of bed and checked his
brother’s room. Felix was tangled up in his
comforter. His breath was the small, even
wisps of deep sleep. Safe and sound.
Daniel slipped back to his bed. He slept
in fits and starts, twenty minutes there, ten
minutes here. The ticking of the clock echoed
in his head. Even when he dozed, he could
still hear it, a constant, glaring clatter that
wouldn’t leave him alone. When his alarm
finally sounded, he felt like he’d been staring
at the wall all night.
The morning tumbled into an exhausted
blur. Hot water from a shower. Dressed.
Bowl of cereal. Then school. Lockers
slamming. Glaring fluorescent lights. Pale
yellow hallways.
History class came, and he finally
unloaded that paper on Mrs. Faldey’s desk.
He trudged to the back of the room and
slumped into his chair.
His classmates babbled. Everyone
flipped out notebooks and pens and pencils.
The normality of the sounds was like a
lullaby. He was half asleep by the time Mrs.
Faldey’s voice squeaked through the air.
"Good morning, good morning! Hope
nobody’s caught senioritis at the last
minute!"
For a moment, Daniel felt a flash of ugly
annoyance at being shaken back to the
present, but he couldn’t stay mad at her. He
rubbed his eyes, then blinked to clear the
bleary haze.
Mrs. Faldey had to turn sideways to fit
her love handles through the door; her bright
red dress was big enough to substitute for a