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Authors: Annie Reed

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BOOK: Rites of Passage
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“Could use a little help here!” Finn shouted after her.

She turned around. He could see the indecision on her face.

“If we don’t stop this, we’re all going to die,” Finn said.

He had no idea if she’d heard him. His voice was losing strength too.

She raised the plastic gun. It made a ridiculously small popping noise when she pulled the trigger.

A hole the size of a dime appeared in the side of the creep’s head.

The creep’s body stiffened as the blood dripping from the hole in its head bubbled and hissed just like Ooveth’s had. Its feet hammered at the floor as its wings flapped uselessly, and then it was still.

She’d actually killed the thing.

Finn had to get himself one of those guns.

The creep’s master bellowed in rage. The appendages that weren’t tentacles writhed as the brilliant white light started to dim.

But the portal didn’t wink out of existence.

The monster was still coming through.

Finn summoned strength he didn’t have to spare. He staggered up to the dead creep and decapitated it where it lay.

His katana rang as it hit the concrete beneath the creep. The cut was straight and true, but the portal still didn’t close.

One of the master’s appendages reached Finn.

The monster struck Finn square across his body. He felt a rib break, and then he was sailing through the air.

Something else broke when he landed.

He hoped it wasn’t his back.

One of the master’s eyes was visible now. As big as Finn’s entire body, the eye glared at him from inside the portal with a triumphant, vicious insanity.

Finn had lost.

All of his years of training had been for nothing.

His parents would die. His friends would die. All of the women he’d longed for but never had time to meet would die.

All because he’d lost.

He dimly heard the female goblin empty her gun into the monster, but the shots had no effect.

“Give me your blade,” she said.

She was standing next to him. When had that happened?

He looked down at his good hand. He was still gripping his katana.

“You wanted my help,” she said, her voice a near growl. “Give me the damn blade!”

He handed it over.

He thought she’d handle the katana carefully. The sharp steel could kill her just by touching her skin. But she grabbed the long handle with the kind of ease that made her look like she’d been wielding his sword her entire life.

Goblins were naturally stronger and faster than humans. Finn had always thought they were also far less graceful.

Watching the female goblin fight the monster, he realized he’d been wrong.

She fought as well, if not better, than his old master. She sprinted around the edges of the portal, deftly avoiding the grasping appendages and the slime trails on the floor. She hooted and yelled at the monster in a language Finn didn’t understand, and he realized it was her battle cry.

Whenever she had an opening, she attacked an appendage with the blade.

Each slice made the master roar. When she finally managed to severe an appendage completely, the entire building shook with the volume of the master’s bellow.

The monster’s anger only seemed to spur her on.

Finn lost track of her individual moves. She was a blur against the fading light of the portal, a busy stinging hornet who knew she had her prey on the run.

She cut and sliced and sprinted away, laughing and chattering at her foe.

She was magnificent, a warrior like none Finn had ever seen.

And when she thrust the katana deep into the monster’s mad eye, he knew she’d done something he never had.

She’d defeated an Elder God.

She yanked his blade out of the mess of blood and ichor that had been the monster’s eye just as it pulled back into the portal, drawing its wounded appendages after itself.

The brilliant light turned sickly green, and then it was gone leaving only a filthy, cracked window behind.

The goblin trotted across the floor to lay the katana at his side. She wasn’t even breathing hard.

“You should keep it,” Finn said. “You earned it.”

She shook her head. “Pretty poison is still poison, but thanks for letting me try it.”

He got the feeling she liked to try all sorts of things.

She picked up the empty plastic gun he’d dropped at his feet.

“What are those things?” he asked.

“Haven’t you heard?” She gave him a wicked grin as she slipped the gun through a loop on her leather belt. “Human technology. You creatures can print almost anything these days, given the right incentive.”

Finn thought he understood. “And the bullets?”

Her grin got wider. “My little secret.”

One of those secret bullets had taken out a creep. That was impressive.

He’d always wanted to kill a creep with a gun. Maybe someday she’d let him use one of hers.

The thought made Finn pause.

He was getting up there in years. He’d made mistakes tonight. Those mistakes would have been fatal if he hadn’t stumbled into the middle of a goblin gangland coup d’état.

Or had he stumbled into it?

What if fate had sent her into this building tonight just like it had sent him to walk through a field on the night he was destined to meet his own master?

He’d never taken an apprentice before. He hadn’t had the stomach for it after his own master died. It was time.

Hell, it was long past time.

She turned away from him. The gun on her hip made her look like a parody of the cowboys in the old Westerns his dad had liked so much.

“More of those things are out there,” Finn said to her back. “You could learn how to fight them.”

“Learn?” Her voice had an edge as sharp as his katana. “I kicked its slimy ass, human.” She turned to glare at him. “Better than what you did.”

“You shot me,” Finn said. “You weren’t exactly seeing me at my best.”

She stared at him for a long moment. Finn could see her working things through in her mind. She’d killed the rest of her gang. That might buy her respect among the other goblin gangs, but that respect would be short lived.

“What’s your name?” he asked.

“Keesa.” She bit the word off like she hated it. “Why?”

He tried to smile, but he was pretty sure it came out a grimace. Every part of his body hurt. Guardians weren’t super human. He was going to need medical attention, and soon.

“I’m Finn.”

“Finn,” she said. “Stupid human name.”

“It’s what I’ve got.” He held up a hand. “Think you can give me an assist?”

She started to reach for him but stopped a split second before their fingers touched. “You even think about calling yourself my master, you can forget about the whole thing. I’ve seen those movies.”

He didn’t let himself laugh. It wasn’t easy.

“How about partner instead?”

She pulled him to his feet. He gritted his teeth against the pain, but it all seemed to come from his ribs, not his back.

She let go of his hand like it burned her. “You assume a hell of a lot, you know that?”

Finn’s old master had assumed a hell of a lot, too. Not that he’d been wrong.

Finn didn’t think he was wrong about Keesa. She had all the energy and passion he’d lost during the years he’d spent killing more creeps than he could count.

His master had been right. The life of a Guardian was a hard life. A lonely life, especially the way Finn had lived it, but maybe it didn’t have to be. Apprentices eventually left their masters behind. Partners didn’t have to say goodbye to each other.

“You’ll learn to love that about me,” he told his new apprentice.

She snorted. “Arrogant, too. Have I told you that I hate humans?”

She hadn’t, but Finn didn’t mind. She could hate him all she wanted. He didn’t like goblins much either.

Great partnerships had started with far less.

 

 

 

 

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

 

 

Award-winning author
Annie Reed
describes herself as a desert rat who longs to live by the ocean. Since she hasn’t yet convinced her family to relocate to a nice chunk of beachfront property, she’s done the next best thing—written a series of stories set in a contemporary Pacific Northwest city where magic and reality go hand in hand. Private investigators Diz and Dee populate Annie’s more lighthearted stories, while denizens of a much rougher neighborhood lurk in her
Tales From the Shadows
.

A talented and versatile writer whose fantasy, science fiction, and mystery stories have sold to a wide variety of publications, Annie is also the author of the Abby Maxon mystery novels
Pretty Little Horses
and
Paper
Bullets, as well as
A Death in Cumberland.
Annie’s short stories also appear on a regular basis in the
Fiction River
anthologies.

Annie reports that her husband is thrilled that with her contribution to this issue of the Uncollected Anthology, she’s finally written about one of his favorite urban fantasy subjects. After more than three decades of marriage, he says he’s finally brought her over to the dark side. She’s pretty sure that happened when she started watching football.

For more information about Annie, go to
www.annie-reed.com
.

 

 

THE UNCOLLECTED ANTHOLOGY STORIES

 

Rites of Passage
is part of the innovative
Uncollected Anthology
series.

Every three months, the talented group of UA authors picks a theme and writes a short story for that theme. But instead of bundling the stories together, each author sells their own. No muss, no fuss—you can buy one story or you can buy them all. (We’ll be honest; we hope you buy them all!)

This time around we’re thrilled to not only feature a story by guest author JC Andrijeski, but also to welcome
USA Today
bestselling guest author Kristine Kathryn Rusch as the newest member of the Uncollected!

If you’d like to keep reading more fine stories with this issue’s theme—Portals & Passageways—click on the following links:

 

 

 

KIREV’S DOOR

JC Andrijeski

(
featured guest author
)

 

Kirev is a seer. Raised in an alternate version of our Earth, where his people are enslaved under human owners, Kirev joins a resistance army of rebel seers after spending most of his youth in work camps and brothels. He wants to help his people, but during his first mission with the seer rebels, Kirev faces a terrifying new future when a voice from his past intervenes and sends his life into a whole different direction.

~ A spinoff story from the ALLIE’S WAR series ~

 

 

 

WAR ON ALL FRONTS

Leah Cutter

 

Tong Yi carries the mysterious message of Zhang Gua Loa back to his boss.

The immortal had said there would be war. But between whom? And why?

Huli
Transport takes advantage of the situation to become the messenger service of choice in the war zone. They promise to remain neutral, and to deliver messages to all sides.

In the meantime, Tong Yi has battles of his own to fight, both with his older brother and his own growing understanding of magic.

But in the middle of a war, is it possible for him to remain neutral? Or has his side already been chosen for him?

“War on All Fronts” is a sequel to the story, “Dancing with Tong Yi” which appeared in
Uncollected Anthology, Issue 1: Magical Motorcycles.

 

 

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