by A. R. Kahler
He gritted his teeth and prayed today wasn’t that day.
He lunged forward, meeting a kraven mid-leap and slicing its body right through the gut. Cold black blood sprayed out, but Tenn was already slashing another kraven before the first corpse fell. Michael was just out of sight beside him, grunting and yelling, the skull-shattering cracks of his mace rolling across the fields like thunder.
But more monsters were coming. The field was thick with beasts, the air alive and hellish with their screams. A shadow darted behind him. He turned just in time to parry the slash of a cleaver. He barely had time to register the opponent—male, shirtless, drenched in blood and whiter than snow—before counterattacking. The man’s head fell to the ground with a wet smack.
“Bloodlings!” he yelled, but even though he screamed it at the top of his lungs, he knew his companions hadn’t heard. The world was a living, grinding thing of scarred flesh and teeth and talons, and everywhere he turned he was slashing, dodging, trying to stay alive as the grey tide overtook him. His breath was fire as he fought, as he hacked and screamed his way through the melee. Seconds felt like an eternity, and the damage done to him and his foes was immense. A thousand cuts burned across his skin. A thousand moments he was too slow. A thousand instances he could have died, and a thousand reasons he still might.
A yell broke through the din—masculine, enraged, and in pain. Then Michael’s voice cut short in a gurgle. Tenn spared a glance over but couldn’t see anything through the kravens scrambling over corpses. Katherine screamed as well, but whether from rage or pain, he wasn’t certain. That’s when he realized, in the far-off corner of his mind, that he was going to die. They all were.
His arm went numb from a kraven’s bite. His hands were drenched red. And still, the monsters came.
Jarrett’s voice drifted through his mind as he fell to his knees: Don’t use magic, not under any circumstances. We can’t give ourselves away.
Water and blood seeped through Tenn’s jeans, his numb hand limp at his side. He could only stare at the blood and wonder at how quickly this had come, his end. At how easy it was to die. Pain seared across his back as a Howl ripped through his flesh. Blood was everywhere—black blood, red blood, red rain. Water screamed inside of him as his blood spilled forth. Memories rode the current—flashes of his mother and father the last time he saw them, Jarrett’s hand in his, and a song, his mother’s voice, a lullaby he couldn’t place. His eyes fluttered. His working hand dropped his staff.
This is how it feels to die, and I will be eaten before they find my corpse.
And as another kraven lunged for the kill, mouth wide and broken teeth bared, the Sphere of Water did something it should not have been able to do—it opened unbidden in Tenn’s stomach.
Power flooded him, rushed through in a whirlpool of memory and pain, filled every pulse with a thousand freezing agonies, a million regrets that dragged him down, down, down into the pits of his every despair.
The Sphere connected him to the element without, to the rain hammering from the sky and the blood pooling on the ground and the pulse in every vein of every creature within a mile. He could feel it, all of it, the agonizing tide slowly seeping toward death’s shore. He felt Katherine a few yards away, her heart throbbing so fast it hurt his own. He felt the kravens, all of them, and in that split second, he wrapped his fingers deep into the torrent of power and screamed.
The rain shivered. Changed. He twisted the power and twisted the elements and felt his past scream in his ears as raindrops became ice, became shards sharper than glass, became hammers that lashed from the sky with sickening velocity. His Sphere raged in joy and agony as its power unleashed, as the bloodlust filled his darkening vision and screams filled the air. Blades of ice met flesh, sliced through skin and bone. Ice spilled forth blood, and Water rejoiced as the world drenched itself in crimson agony. Power ran through his veins, and this power craved revenge.
In seconds, it was over. He felt the Howls die, all of them—felt their blood leave their bodies and pool against the sodden earth. He curled on the ground, frozen, sobbing, and forced the power away, forced his Sphere back to silence. The magic closed, but the memories seethed. Those screams would never die down. They echoed in his emptiness, chained him down and dragged him through the dark.
Nothing moved in the world.
Just the rain.
Just his breath.
Just his blood mixing with the dead.
2
He didn’t know how long he lay there. The wind and rain were a constant roar, but their sound was distant compared to the throb of blood in his ears. He couldn’t open his eyes against the screams of memories raging in his head.
An empty house, lines of blood streaking the halls. The bedroom door, perfectly clean. It opened under his fingertips with a slow, forbidding creak. Inside, everything was pristine. His skin crawled with the emptiness. Mom? Dad? Where are you?
Something brushed his cheek. Frayed nerves snapped into life, and his eyes fluttered open.
Katherine knelt above him. Blood stained her skin, and long gashes webbed across her in leaking lines.
“Are you okay?” she asked. Her voice was angelic, if only because he had been certain he’d killed her.
Tenn could only nod.
“You’re bleeding,” she said. “Badly.”
He took a deep, shaky breath and forced himself to sitting. His bones screamed in defiance. He was covered in cuts and bruises, some gashes most likely fatal if he didn’t act fast. Her wounds were just as bad.
“So are you,” he managed.
“You’ve already broken orders,” she said, without the slightest hint of sarcasm. “We might as well live to face Jarrett’s wrath.”
He nodded.
Then he closed his eyes and pushed deep into the pit of his pelvis, to the place where the Sphere of Earth rested. It was the second and last Sphere he’d been attuned to. He coaxed it awake and sank his focus into the rich soil of it, to the heavy power that rooted him to the earth. Energy filled him with green light, with the warm, calming sap of gravity and flesh. When he opened his eyes, he could still see the light vining through his pelvis. He reached out and placed his hands on Katherine’s arm, feeling every cut and injury in her body. With the gentlest of touches, he pushed the energy through her and began to heal her wounds.
She winced as flesh knitted itself back together. If his connection to Earth had taught him anything, it was that dying was easy; healing was the painful part. When her wounds had closed, he turned his attention to himself. Arcs of fire lanced across his skin. He didn’t grimace. This pain, this physical hurt, couldn’t hold a candle to the hell that Water dragged him through. An old Monty Python quote flitted through his mind, and he had to force down a manic chuckle: “It’s just a flesh wound.”
His stomach rumbled and his limbs shook the moment he closed off to Earth. It felt like he hadn’t eaten in weeks. That was the main drawback of Earth—when it filled you, it made you feel invincible. The moment it left, you were reminded just how weak your body truly was.
Tenn forced himself to standing, using his staff as a crutch. Katherine was either too preoccupied or too polite to try and help him up.
“Michael?” he asked.
She just shook her head and continued looking off into the distance. The rain hid whatever tears she might be shedding. He bit back an apology; apologies wouldn’t bring the guy back. Idiot or no, he had still been their companion. He was still important.
For a while, they stood there, looking out over the massacre. The field was covered in grey corpses, blood pooling like an oil spill. Even through the deluge, the scent of death and decay was thick in the air, cloying and coating his lungs. Michael was probably underneath the bodies somewhere. It didn’t seem right. He deserved a better burial.
“We need to burn them,” Tenn said.
She looked at him. Her eyebrows were furrowed, but for the life of him, he couldn’t place what she was thinki
ng or feeling. She didn’t look lost or frightened or sad. If anything, there was a resignation, a determination he knew all too well. Death left you hollow. Many deaths left you expecting more.
She didn’t say anything. Red light flickered in her chest as she opened to the Sphere of Fire. Heat shimmered around her, made sweat break out across his skin. Then, with tendrils of flame snaking around her fingertips, she screamed.
The fields erupted into flame. Tenn hid behind his arm as the world around him roared with heat and anger, and beside him, screaming every curse she could, Katherine called forth Hell, her clothes whipping in the maelstrom like an angry god.
It lasted only a minute, but when the power died down and the fields were nothing more than smoldering ash and steam, she was sobbing.
“Goddamn you,” she cursed through her tears, dropping to her knees on a pile of ash. Fire winked out in her chest. “Damn you all.”
Tenn reached out and put a hand on her shoulder. The rain still steamed off her skin, but he didn’t flinch from her heat. He welcomed the pain. It let him know he was still alive.
He didn’t say anything when she started to laugh. Fire had that effect on the mages that used it.
“It’s gone,” she said. She chuckled and looked up at him. “The fucking deer. It’s gone. They ate it.”
Tenn let out a long sigh and turned around. Sure enough, the cart with the deer was no more. Hell, there was nothing on the road save the steaming remains of car skeletons and pools of the dead that streamed like magma.
“Michael would be so pissed,” she continued. Then her laughs became a hiccuped sob. “We should have let him eat the tongue.”
The walk back to base was long and silent. Tenn didn’t stop scanning the fields, but both he and Katherine kept their Spheres closed off. There was a slim chance that the approaching army was still too far away to sense their magic. A slim chance, but he would hold on to it while he could. The idea that he’d singlehandedly sabotaged their entire mission—all for nothing—wasn’t a notion he could entertain. One thing was certain—the Howls they’d faced were one of the many wild bands that roamed the States. It wasn’t the group of monsters they’d been sent out here to intercept. When the army they were waiting for approached, they’d know.
They reached the town before nightfall. The scattered houses were empty, the lawns overgrown and tangled with forgotten toys and shadows. Lake Michigan flanked one side of the harbor town, while the other met rolling fields and scattered woodland. Even without Water open, Tenn could sense the great lake stretching out in the distance. Ever since he’d been attuned, he’d been able to feel those sorts of things, like ghosts of limbs he didn’t know he was missing.
Katherine said nothing as they walked the empty streets, stepping over rusted bikes and piles of old refuse, dodging craters and overturned cars. Both her swords were clean and bared, and Tenn’s grip on his staff was just as tight. No matter that the rest of their troop was only a hundred yards away—anything could be hiding in the shadows.
It was nearing nightfall now, and the houses reared up on all sides like hungering beasts. It looked like a tornado had hit, but the damage done was no act of nature. Some houses were perfectly intact; others were torn apart, with roofs blown off, façades ripped open like scabs to reveal abandoned dining rooms and unmade beds. Everything had that sick old stench of antiquity, like a sodden vintage store. Even in the dying rain, Tenn couldn’t help but feel the dust of the past creeping through his nostrils. It made him feel unclean. Shadows shifted over the rubble, and he jerked his staff to the ready. Then the shape stepped into the road: a small fox, its ribs horribly pronounced with hunger. The creature didn’t flinch as he and Katherine walked past. It watched them intently before finally turning and slinking back into an alley.
When houses gave way to the broad downtown avenue, he felt his nerves calm. Their hotel rose up from the buildings on the other side, one of the few structures still intact. Uprooted trees stretched like black veins across the concrete. Marble slabs and pillars tumbled on the road in piles of white bone. The hotel stood strong and seemingly deserted, the clean red brick and white marble an anachronism in the destruction surrounding it.
Something shifted from the corner of his eye, and Tenn turned on the spot, ready for another attack. A girl in black stepped out from the crumbling post office. Tenn exhaled a breath he hadn’t realized he was holding when he recognized the red hair and compact frame.
“Audrey,” he said. He lowered his staff. “I nearly killed you.”
“Jesus H,” she said. There were two daggers in her hands, the kris blades glinting like wolves’ teeth. “I thought… We thought you were in trouble. Jarrett’s had us on high alert since noon.” It was then she noticed Michael was missing. Her voice became a whisper, and her shoulders slumped. “What happened?”
Tenn hung his head. If the troop had felt their use of magic all the way back here, there was no way the necromancers had missed it. How the hell had Water opened like that?
“Kravens,” he admitted. The word was bitter on his tongue. “And at least one bloodling.”
“Shit,” she whispered.
“He died fighting,” Katherine said. She sheathed her blades, trying to sound nonchalant, but Tenn could sense the waver in her words. “It’s all any of us could ask for.”
“Where’s Jarrett?” Tenn asked. The last thing he wanted was to stand here in the rain, mourning the loss of someone whose death warrant he had as good as signed and sealed.
Audrey nodded to the hotel.
“Executive suite,” she said. “He’s meeting with the twins now. Everyone else has been stationed in the field in case…”
“In case we brought anything back,” Katherine finished.
“Yeah.”
“How pissed is he?” Tenn asked.
Audrey gave a small grin, though it was more forced than anything.
“Well, I wouldn’t go near him. Though maybe he’s cooled down by now.”
“Right,” Tenn said. He very much doubted it.
He gave them both a quick nod and walked to the hotel.
Tenn didn’t knock when he reached the door to Jarrett’s makeshift office. The twins and Jarrett sat around a large oval table in the center of the room, papers and maps spread across the mahogany in an organized disarray. Whatever conversation they’d been having cut off the moment the door creaked open. Their intent gazes made his skin tingle.
The twins were roughly Tenn’s age, maybe around eighteen. He’d never bothered to ask for specifics, and they’d never told him. Not that they’d ever really spoken to him. Dreya and her brother Devon were fraternal twins, their resemblance extending only to the tilt of their light-blue eyes and the sharp lines of their high cheekbones. According to Jarrett, their ancestry was Japanese, though prolonged use of the Spheres had altered their appearances drastically. Dreya’s skin was paler than ivory, and her hair was waist-length and silver-white. She was thin, wisp-like, with graceful limbs and willowy fingers. Devon, on the other hand, looked like some Peruvian mystic. His hair was short and black, his skin the color of burnt earth. Tenn had never seen Devon’s face, not fully; the guy wore a burgundy scarf wrapped all the way up to his nose. If he ever took the scarf off, Tenn hadn’t seen it in the two years he’d known them.
Dreya’s eyes narrowed the moment he walked in. He felt like a mouse stuck under a falcon’s gaze. He couldn’t look away, and whatever words he had meant to say when entering were stuck in his throat.
Not that he had much chance to say anything.
“What the hell did you do?” Jarrett asked.
Tenn tore his eyes from Dreya and looked at their commander.
Jarrett stood on the other side of the desk. He was nineteen and tall, with lithe Scandinavian looks brought on by Air. His hair was long and golden-blond, pulled back in a haphazard ponytail, one side shaved close. Pale scars laced his skin; one in particular crossed from the stubble at his jaw to the edge of
his blue-grey eyes. When those eyes caught Tenn’s, his breath hitched.
“I’m sorry…” Tenn began, but his words faltered. Sorry isn’t good enough.
“Damn it, Tenn!” Jarrett yelled, slamming his fist into the desk. Air flickered in his throat and sent the papers swirling. Neither of the twins flinched, but Tenn took a half-step back.
Jarrett took a deep, slow breath and closed his eyes. His next words were carefully composed, only a hint of strain at keeping his frustration in check.
“What happened out there?”
“We were attacked,” Tenn said. “There were hundreds. I swear I didn’t mean to use magic. We were holding them off, but then Michael went down and Water… I don’t know. It fought back. It opened before I could stop it.”
Tenn caught the quick glance between Jarrett and the twins. He couldn’t even begin to guess what it meant, but he knew what they were thinking—the Spheres didn’t just open on their own. Magic didn’t have reflexes or thoughts of preservation. The Spheres were energy centers, nothing more.
But Tenn wasn’t lying. He had fully intended on going under. When he had heard Michael scream, Water had taken over.
“Leave us,” Jarrett said. It was only when Dreya stood up that he realized Jarrett wasn’t talking to him. He kept his head bowed as Devon and Dreya left. He couldn’t meet their eyes. Not right now. All he caught were the trailing hems of their light-blue jeans.
When the door closed behind them, Tenn risked a glance at the table. One of the pages—one of the few not scattered on the floor—was a map, showing the continental U.S. Only on this map, there were no states. The new territories didn’t go by that anymore. Half of the West Coast was shaded grey. It was the Deadlands, an area controlled by Leanna. The rest of the states were divided into smaller sections, areas controlled by Hunters or the Church, small sanctuaries surrounded by nothing but waste and ravenous monsters. This was humanity. This was what the Hunters were trying to protect.