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Spring Showers Box-set

Page 20

by Avell Kro


  They seemed to be deep in an argument.

  “You want me to miss track for . . . combat practice? ” the dark-skinned girl with dreadlocks

  demanded.

  “Did you see? Daniel looked at me in fourth period!” the pale-skinned girl with a brown ponytail

  squealed, bouncing up and down as she walked.

  Crimson Dragon and Green Fairy, Chronos identified them. She checked their futures to confirm

  that, and corrected herself. Pink Dragon. The one in dreadlocks hasn’t changed her magical girl

  form yet.

  “You can’t deny we desperately need it,” the blonde-haired Kendra announced, looking straight at

  the dreadlocked girl and ignoring the other one. “If we’re ever going to power up again, we need

  to learn the meaning of teamwork —”

  “I’m going to learn the meaning of teamwork in track, ” the other girl said, starting to march away.

  Kendra seized her by the end of her long dreadlocks. “No, you’re not. This is important —”

  “Felicity and Daniel, sittin’ in a tree!” the other girl burst out singing, oblivious to her friends’

  disagreement. “K-I-S-S-I-N-G! First comes love, then comes . . .”

  She stopped, finally seeming to notice her friends’ heavy glares.

  “What?” she asked, blinking.

  ***

  It took a lot of effort to pry Florence away from her precious track practice, so Kendra was relieved

  when they finally entered the ice cream parlor.

  “Okay, here’s the deal,” Kendra said, sitting down at the nearest table. She tried to ignore the fact

  that Felicity, who had insisted that they hold the meeting here, was now flipping through the menu

  with avid enthusiasm rather than listening. “We haven’t had an arch-nemesis since we defeated

  Queen Hemlock, and I think that’s made us go soft.”

  “I hope you’re not suggesting we pick a fight with someone new,” Florence said sourly. “Isn’t

  saving the world three times enough?”

  “Of course it’s not!” Kendra snapped. “We still have power, hence responsibility! Besides, what’s

  with this attitude? Wings of Justice was your idea!”

  “Does anybody want to buy me ice cream?” Felicity’s voice poked in.

  “Wel , no one said I’d have to stay Pink Dragon for the rest of my life, ” Florence said angrily.

  “Adults can’t become magical girls!” Kendra snapped. “You won’t be doing this the rest of your life!

  That’s why it’s all the more important to put all of your time and effort and emotional investment

  into this now! ”

  “Doesn’t anybody want to buy me ice cream?” Felicity’s voice asked tearfully.

  “Oh, so you want me to be a washed up, former magical girl whose life revolves around her glory

  days?” Florence asked bitterly. “You want me to be like your mother? ”

  Kendra leapt to her feet in outrage. “YOU TAKE THAT BACK!”

  Florence sneered and hopped up out of her chair and headed towards the exit. “Whatever. I’m late for track.”

  “Florence! ” Kendra shouted.

  But the door swung shut, and Florence was gone.

  Kendra sat down, her fists clenching and unclenching in fury. She admired her mother. She wanted

  to emulate her mother. Her mother had kept her magical girl powers until nineteen years old,

  even though most girls outgrew them between sixteen to eighteen. That meant Kendra’s mother

  had been so innocent, so pure, so good that the magic had still wanted her even that late. Even

  now, her mother spoke about magic with reverence and regret.

  Kendra had always known that she would one day be a magical girl. And she had always known

  that she would be so good, so pure, so righteous that the magic would choose her to stay a wielder

  of it past high school age. Just like her mother had.

  She’d based her whole childhood around that. She could have become a magical girl much earlier,

  but she had chosen to wait until she was twelve, so that she felt ready to do it right. She’d studied magical girls through history. She’d taken ballet and martial arts classes. She’d even learned

  German, the language of the world’s first magical girl, so that she could read books about Sönnig in

  her original language.

  The only thing that had derailed her plans had been Florence, her best friend, who had insisted

  that if Kendra was going to become a magical girl, she wanted to be one, too. And, not content

  with that, she’d wanted to be a team.

  Kendra’s jaw clenched. So I based my magical girl form around being part of a team. I can’t change

  my powers to be an effective solo magical girl unless I power up — and it would be very difficult to do

  that without her.

  How could Florence, who was supposed to be her best friend, be so selfish? She’d insisted on

  shoving her way into this part of Kendra’s life. Now she couldn’t just slack off or leave or quit.

  Kendra came back to herself and realized Felicity was yammering something about Daniel and

  yearbook photography.

  “I’ll let you obsess in peace,” Kendra said, shoving her chair back and standing.

  “Hey, why are you leaving?” Felicity asked blankly. She glanced around. “Where’d Florence go?”

  Why did we ever let her win the audition to join our team? Kendra wondered, marching out of the

  building.

  Chapter Three: The Vision

  Marching down the sidewalk, Kendra continued fuming. “Pick a fight with someone new,” she said .

  . . and I don’t pick fights! The FBI assigned us to the drug lord, and Queen Hemlock and Dark

  Deathzone attacked us first!

  Okay, granted, Dark Deathzone was a minion of our first villain, and we started the fight with Dark

  Deathwave when we mistook him for Dark Deathzone . . . but that’s not the same thing!

  Villains really needed to learn to use more original names.

  If she’d just listened, Kendra thought, frustrated, she would have seen that I had a terrific idea. This is just like that time we lost the Magical Girl Team of the Year competition to stupid Victory’s Bloom!

  Kendra still blamed her best friend for that. Florence had insisted that they use a team pose

  Kendra had known looked lame, and sure enough, they’d placed sixth. Meanwhile, the winning

  team had completely imploded on stage when one of the girls had accused the team leader of

  hogging all the power-ups and never letting the other two do anything useful in battle.

  I mean, really! Kendra thought. Our magical girl forms even looked cooler! And who names their

  magical girl form “Geranium,” anyway?! It had been two years since they’d failed to win the

  competition, but the memory still rankled.

  But Kendra was too mad about her current grievances to focus too long on an old one. Was it too

  much to ask that Florence be in a good mood so that she could persuade her to let their team

  volunteer as FBI aides again?

  I don’t even know why she made us quit in the first place! Kendra thought indignantly. Wel . . . okay, I do know. Florence had gotten really mad when Kendra had killed their first assigned arch-nemesis instead of capturing him so that he could stand trial. But seriously, the guy had bribed

  two judges and gotten off scot-free twice already. What other way would there have been to stop

  the problem?

  She’d claimed it was unethical to kill someone when you could have captured them. And sure,

  Kendra had worried about that, too. But their handler at the FBI had explained to her that magical

 
girls weren’t bound by the same regulations as law enforcement officers, and that as long as her

  magic continued to think she was worthy, she could take that as a sign that she was doing okay.

  That was even one of the reasons magical girl aides were so helpful to law enforcement, he had explained.

  But when Kendra had passed along this wisdom to Florence, she’d blown her top. She’d said that if

  they didn’t quit helping the FBI, she’d quit the team.

  But that was two and a half years ago, Kendra would have insisted. We’d have a different handler

  this time, and anyway, there are some regulations about magical girl aides now.

  She probably would have even managed to keep from adding, “Unfortunately.”

  So really, how dare Florence not listen to her? This was something they needed to do, as a team!

  Otherwise they’d keep stagnating!

  Kendra became aware that someone was following her.

  Without a pause in her stride, without stopping to think, she threw her arms in the air and

  shouted, “Cream Angel . . . fledge! ”

  Her body soared up into the air, and Kendra danced and flipped through the acrobats she had

  choreographed for her transformation scene.

  She’d tried to choreograph awesome ones for her teammates, as well, but noooo, they had refused

  to use them. “That looks too difficult,” Felicity had complained, and Florence had said, “If you think

  I’m doing anything but hiding while my clothes disappear, you’re dead wrong.”

  Really, Kendra thought, grabbing her halo from the air as it appeared over her head, it’s like they’re missing the whole point of transforming. It’s not like anyone’s supposed to watch you. You’re just supposed to look cool!

  The last of her angelic robes appeared and shot upwards into a double-layered short skirt, and a

  red sash came from nowhere and tied itself around her waist. Kendra spread her fingers like the

  wings of a bird of prey, and dove down at the villain who had been behind her.

  The target tried to leap aside, but Kendra was too quick. She jabbed her halo against the villain’s

  throat.

  “Speak, vil ain! ” she shouted. “Why were you following me?”

  “I just wanted to talk to you!” the villain exclaimed.

  Kendra narrowed her eyes. “All right. Talk.”

  “Well, first of all, I’m not a villain!” the villain said furiously.

  Kendra snorted, but her arm didn’t waver. “I grant that you look more like a hobo, but that’s just a

  disguise.”

  “I do not!” the villain exclaimed. “I brushed and washed my hair, and I’m wearing a skirt! It isn’t

  even dirty!”

  Kendra wrinkled her nose, her arm still unwavering. “Well, it smells like something.”

  “Mothballs!” the hobo shouted. “That’s the smell of mothballs!”

  Kendra shrugged with the shoulder that was not holding the halo. “All right. Then who or what are

  you?”

  “My name is Chronos,” the hobo said. “I’m a born mage.”

  Kendra snorted. “Which almost certainly makes you a villain.”

  “It does not!” the hobo shouted. “Put that halo away!”

  “I think I’ll hang on to it, thanks,” Kendra said dryly. “Why were you following me?”

  The hobo straightened, and seemed to be making an attempt to sound mysterious. “Because of my

  power. I can see the future.”

  Kendra burst out laughing, her arm holding the halo falling to her side as she clutched her

  stomach. This ludicrous hobo, with the power of an arch-villain? Oh, yeah, right!

  “It’s the truth!” the woman shouted.

  Snapping her halo back into a threatening position and wiping a tear away from her eye, Kendra

  jeered, “All right, soothsayer. If you’re so smart, prove it.”

  The woman looked annoyed. “I didn’t say I was smart; I said I could see the future. ”

  It was all Kendra could do to keep from laughing again. She’d seen carnival fortune tellers claiming

  that they had magical powers before, and those claims were beyond ludicrous. They were too old

  to be magical girls, and too drab to be born mages, a.k.a. villains.

  “Uh huh,” Kendra smirked. “Why don’t you just . . .”

  “And you’ll want to stop that child from running into the street,” the woman added, pointing over her shoulder.

  Kendra spun around and saw a small child running after a ball that was bouncing straight at the

  road.

  “Little girl! ” she shouted, sprinting after the kid.

  Kendra’s wings flared as she shot forward and grabbed the girl and ball right before they hit the

  street. A second later, a car raced around the bend three times faster than it should have been

  going, right where the girl would have been.

  Kendra’s heart beat wildly as she set the kid down and the kid ran off towards a sandbox. There

  were parents everywhere, seeing as she had been walking right beside a playground, but

  somehow, no one had noticed that this kid had run off.

  Was it possible . . . was it feasible . . . that the hobo could see the future?

  Or had this whole demonstration just been staged?

  Kendra couldn’t decide. The two seemed equally likely.

  “So,” the hobo said from a seated position. She was sitting on the sidewalk, despite the fact that it

  was filthy and covered with sand. “Do you believe me?”

  “Maybe . . .” Kendra said cautiously.

  “What would convince you?” the woman asked.

  “An explanation wouldn’t hurt,” Kendra said darkly. “Why were you following me?”

  The born mage hobo shrugged. “I figured it was high time someone told you not all magical girls

  are inherently good.”

  “What?! ” Kendra shouted.

  “You heard me.”

  “That’s absurd! ” Kendra burst out, shoving her arms outward. “Everyone knows our magic only

  works for the pure in heart!”

  “Yes, I’ve heard the propaganda,” the woman said coolly. “It’s true a girl has to be young, innocent, and well-intentioned to become a magical girl. But I’ve studied the magic system since before you

  were born. After gaining their powers, magical girls can become corrupt.”

  Oh, that was what she was talking about. Kendra relaxed microscopically.

  “Well, sure, but then they’ll lose their powers,” she said, as if speaking to an idiot. Her halo spun in

  the air over her hand. “Just as if they’d grown too old or given them up willingly —”

  “— or died,” the hobo finished for her. “But, Kendra, I think you’re missing something. Only death

  or voluntary loss make magical girls powers vanish instantly.”

  Kendra didn’t ask how the hobo knew her name. It wasn’t the first time a villain had figured out

  her secret identity. She’d never gone to much effort to keep it hidden.

  “Don’t be dumb,” Kendra said impatiently. “I’ve seen recordings of defectors. Their focus items

  crumble, and they lose their transformations permanently!”

  I mean, really, you couldn’t get much more instant than that. The second a magical girl declared

  that she was turning to villainy, all her powers and costume and transformation vanished

  immediately. And it wasn’t just defectors, either. When a magical girl quit for any other reason,

  the results were the same.

  “There are dark magical girls,” Kendra conceded. “Is that what you mean? But they’re

  brainwashed by villains. When you take away the magic brainwashing them, they go back tor />
  normal again. They’re still pure underneath.”

  The hobo brushed away this comment as if it were irrelevant. “Well, obviously. But I meant real

  magical girls. Like you. The kind who look completely harmless on the surface.”

  Kendra bristled. If there was one thing she did not consider herself, it was harmless. She was

  mighty and powerful. She was a strong force for good.

  “You say you’ve seen recordings of defectors,” the hobo said. “It’s true that the news loves to

  report those rare events. It looks so convincing, doesn’t it? The instant a girl decides to turn evil,

  she loses her magic permanently.”

  “Right,” Kendra said, nodding sharply. She was starting to feel irritated.

  “Think it through, Kendra,” the hobo said. “A girl declares her intention to join the other side, then loses all her magic. The same thing happens with all defectors. But that isn’t because they’ve just

  turned evil. It’s because they’re choosing to give up their magical girl forms after turning evil. Do you really think that anyone would make such a decision out of nowhere? In a split second? Do

  you really think those people change drastically overnight?”

  Kendra was starting to see red. “MAGICAL GIRLS DON’T TURN EVIL!”

  “. . . And yet you assume all born mages do,” the hobo said. “Why are you so quick to judge my

  people, and so quick to praise yours? Haven’t you ever heard the saying, ‘Power corrupts;

  absolutely power corrupts absolutely’?”

  “I wrote a paper on how that doesn’t apply to magical girls in fourth grade,” Kendra snapped.

  The hobo looked unsurprised, then exasperated.

  “Look, it’s been nice chatting,” Kendra said, starting to walk off, “but I have combat practice to

  salvage, a best friend to chew out, and —”

  “I didn’t come without proof, Kendra!” the woman interrupted. “Would you like to see it?”

  Kendra hesitated.

  Proof?

  “All right,” Kendra said slowly, turning around.

  The hobo held a hand out, cupping it, and images appeared. A pair of wings; a whip; a halo. Then

  a ful scene appeared, tiny in the palm of her hand. The woman pinched it, and it stretched out

  wide before them. Sound began to swel from it, too.

 

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