by Jayde Brooks
The blurred images showed a woman being picked up and carried into a broom closet, and then moments later, that same woman dragged a man across the floor.
Eden stood there in shock, watching that woman—watching her—do things that couldn’t possibly be done.
“Eden!” her boss, Tawny, stomped toward her. “You’re late again!” she said, angrily. “Put your things away and relieve Ben. His shift ended half an hour ago.”
Eden couldn’t speak. Tawny’s hard stare left Eden and trailed to the television screen. She stared at it, confused, and then stared back at Eden. “Eden?”
She knew. That footage had no doubt been played over and over again, and by morning, people would have it memorized, and anyone who knew her would see that she was that woman. Eden jerked away from Tawny and left Patmos knowing that she could never come back.
Snow was just starting to fall when Eden ran out of the bar. She made a mental note to go someplace where it never snowed, someplace with a beach and palm trees and with no Internet or cell phone service.
She had killed a man and he had killed the other. The Guardian. Eden knew who he was the moment she saw him, even though she’d never laid eyes on him in her life. She’d felt him and remembered things about him that she couldn’t have possibly known. Tukufu was his name. The moment she saw him she could feel what he felt—relief, that he’d finally found her. She was his Beloved and nothing would keep him from her now that he’d found her again. He was real, and she felt things for him that didn’t make sense.
“Mkombozi!”
Eden stopped when she heard someone behind her call out that name. A thick lump swelled in her throat, and her heart thumped even harder in her chest.
“That’s not what they call you now. Is it?”
Eden turned slowly, dreading the person talking to her. If it knew her by that name, then it was one of them. This one had swamp-water-colored eyes, clay-brown skin, stood about four feet tall, had a wide tree stump for a head, with no neck to speak of. It wore a fashionable, high-end designer coat, had squeezed its massively wide feet into a pair of gold Jimmy Choo stilettos and carried a twenty-five-thousand-dollar Hermès bag on its arm. Diamond earrings dangled from its mangled ear lobes.
People passed right by it without stopping and staring. None of them saw what Eden saw.
“Images of you are on every news channel,” it said, stepping toward her. “I don’t want to believe it’s you, but I know it is.”
Eden backed away. “It’s not me,” she managed to say, shaking her head in disbelief that it was actually speaking to her.
“You’re afraid,” that thing said, frowning, sounding almost surprised. “Aren’t you always?” This thing looked disappointed. “You need to get over it.”
The voice coming from it was downright intoxicating. It was comforting, reassuring, seductive, but it looked like a troll and smelled like rotting meat.
“They want you,” it said, taking another step toward her. “They won’t let you run.”
They? The police? “They can’t catch me if they can’t find me,” she said anxiously.
Was it smiling?
“He’s bringing one to you now, Redeemer.”
“H-he?” Eden stammered. “Who are you talking about? The Guardian?” Was she referring to the Guardian? Is that why he’d appeared?
The creature shook her massive head. “No, not him. He’s found you already, but this other one searches for you because the Omen compels him to. She commands him because she has grown impatient. It knows that you won’t come to it, so it’s coming to you. It doesn’t matter what you look like or how far you run. The Omen is coming to find you.”
Omen? There was more than one, so why did she just say “Omen”? Eden was practically a story on America’s Most Wanted and this thing was talking about a fuckin’ Omen? She shook her head and turned to walk away.
“You can’t deny the truth, Redeemer.”
Eden turned to face it. “Stop calling me that! I’m not Mkombozi.”
“Liar,” it challenged. “And you fail to complete the Prophecy of the Omens.” It looked angry, if that were possible. “You fail to destroy Sakarabru, and because you fail, he is back and he is angry.”
Fail? Or failed? This thing spoke strangely. Eden shuddered. No one but Rose had ever said that name to her—Sakarabru. Coming from this thing, it sounded different. It sounded personal.
A couple of guys driving by hung their heads out of the windows of the car, gawking at the troll as if it were filet mignon. “Hey sexy!” one of them called out, licking his lips.
“I think I’m in love,” another shouted from the back seat. “Meet us at Patmos! Drinks are on me!”
“And me!” the other shouted from the passenger seat.
That troll thing rolled its eyes in annoyance. “Tiresome,” it muttered irritably. It turned its attention back to Eden. “I should be afraid of you.” It studied Eden, looking her up and down. The troll smirked. “We all should be afraid of you.” Disappointment washed over it as its eyes met and held Eden’s gaze. “He’s found you.”
“Sakarabru?” she asked, hesitantly.
The troll laughed. “Of course not. I’m not talking about him. The other one. He finds you and he’s impatient too.”
Eden swallowed. “The Guardian,” she muttered to herself.
“Your lover.” That thing smiled again. “Your Guardian. He is a handsome one and determined. He knows what must be done. Trust him. You need to hurry,” it said, before turning and walking away. “Hurry and bond, fulfill the prophecy so that we can all finally be done with this.”
* * *
Rose stared hypnotized at the video footage being played over and over again on every news station in New York City.
“Authorities are asking anyone who thinks they can identify the woman to contact them immediately.”
“It appears that the woman was being attacked by these men, but what happened next … well … it’s just unexplainable.”
She had seen so many strange things in all of her years living this life. She had seen Eden do strange things, but nothing like this. The rest of the world could not believe what she’d done, or that things like that were possible. What would they do now that they had seen?
Eden came into the brownstone and blew through the living room, past Rose like a whirlwind, taking the stairs two at a time leading up to her room.
“Eden?” Rose called after her, and followed her upstairs.
Eden had already started packing by the time Rose got there, and she was crying.
“Don’t try to stop me, MyRose,” she snapped, throwing things into a small suitcase. “I’m no savior. I’m not what these Ancients need. You know it as much as I do.”
Eden had tried to be brave, and Rose’s heart went out to her. But maybe the girl was right. Mkombozi’s essence may have been reborn into this child’s body, but it hadn’t been reborn to live out its destiny, at least not in this life.
“Stopping you is the last thing I would try and do, MyEden,” she said, sadly, walking over to Eden and taking hold of her hands.
Tears streamed down the girl’s face in rivers, and all of a sudden, to Rose, Eden looked like she was six years old again. “It’s over,” she said, sounding so defeated. “The police are going to be looking for me. I’m all over the news, the Internet…” She shrugged. “I killed that guy,” she said remorsefully. “I can’t explain how I did it, Rose. I just got so angry and I hated those men for what they were trying to do to me. It’s only a matter of time before they find me, MyRose. And what’s going to happen when they do? What will I do to the police if they find me?”
The authorities were the least of the challenges facing this young woman, and still, she couldn’t see it, but Rose could.
Eden sat down wearily on the side of the bed, pulling Rose down next to her. “I have tried to understand the things you’ve told me all my life, MyRose,” she sobbed. “Believe me, I’ve tried, but
I never wanted to be her. I’ve never wanted to have to see and do the things she did, because to me, I’m just Eden.” She stared helplessly back at Rose. “I’m me.”
“And you are, Eden,” Rose said, tenderly. “I’ve always understood that, and I’ve always tried to do my best to prepare you, but I’m afraid I’ve failed you.” She pressed her hand to Eden’s cheek. Rose hadn’t realized that she had started crying, too.
“It’s all so impossible to believe,” Eden said, swallowing, struggling to compose herself. “I’m not—that person, that being. I’m not her, MyRose. I can’t be, because…”
“Because you’re afraid to be,” Rose said, finishing her thought for her.
Eden nodded. “Who would want to be that? I killed that man as easily as I’d swat a fly.”
“They attacked you, Eden!”
“They fuckin’ did!” Eden shot back angrily. But just as quickly, she suppressed it. “They deserved to be punished, but not like that, Rose.” Eden grimaced. “I did things to them that … I tortured them. No matter how I try to forget that, I can’t. I punished them in a way that was cruel and evil. If that’s what this Mkombozi is like, then why would I want to be her?”
Rose resisted the urge to tell her that she was trapped into a fate that she couldn’t escape. Eden’s choices had been taken from her by Khale the moment the Ancient Shifter had decided to reincarnate Mkombozi’s essence into that newborn infant.
Defeat washed over Eden’s expression as she wiped away her tears with the back of her hand. “I have to go,” she said sadly.
Rose nodded and smiled. “Of course you do, MyEden.” Rose felt her heart split in two. The world wasn’t a big enough place for Eden to run, but Rose couldn’t tell her that. It was a lesson she’d have to learn on her own. “Where will you go?”
Eden shrugged again and took a deep breath before responding. “Someplace warm,” she quipped, forcing a smile. “Someplace where there are no subways, air pollution, or weird-looking creatures that only I can see.”
Rose smiled, too. “I hope you find that place. And I hope that it’s all that you dream it should be.”
Rose said it but she didn’t believe it. There was no place like that in this world for Eden. There never would be.
IN A SMALL TOWN
After a while, Kifo had become numb to the sounds of their screams. It was different than it had been on Theia. Back then, he’d collected the bodies of Ancients who had fallen in battle—Weres, Valkyries, Guardians, and Shifters—and used the spells he’d learned from the mystics and transformed them into soldiers for Sakarabru’s Brood Army. Their bodies were strong, even in death, their resolve and discipline unmatched. A Brood soldier who could shift into a beast or who could fly was worth his or her value in treasure.
Kifo’s spell not only reanimated the dead, but it made them physically stronger, their muscles and bones as dense as armor, and the beauty of it all was that they all became loyalists to the Demon. They were slaves to his will, and that was what had made the Demon the fierce conqueror that he was on Theia.
Some of the people called out to him in Spanish, “Reaper! Llévame! ¡Por favor! Reaper! Take me! Please! Let death relieve me of this torture!”
They weren’t the first whom he had turned, and they wouldn’t be the last.
The scent of disease, urine, and feces filled the air. Kifo donned another expensive custom suit, which he would later burn because the smell was overwhelming. The mystics knelt over each of the undead humans, performing their rituals that would change them and make them into the Brood soldiers of this world.
He had started with the sick, terminal patients who were close to death already, but the transformation turned sick humans into weak Brood. He needed strong, able bodies for Sakarabru’s army. But like forging metal, the strong needed to be broken down before they could be made. The sickness he had released into the world was beginning to spread at an alarming rate, attacking the strong and the weak. The weak would die off. The strong would become soldiers.
Kifo was a Djinn, his mystics were phantoms, and they all had the power to choose whether or not to allow humans to see them. Doctors and nurses rushed through hospital corridors and in and out of rooms tending to the sick who had come to them for help, unaware of the mystics hovering over patients, chanting their spells. There was a sliver of space between life and death, however, where the victims of these rituals could see them. But in the fever of their sickness, their claims of seeing ghosts and spirits fell on deaf ears.
“Wh-what…? Wh-why are you doing this?”
He stopped in the doorway of the room of one patient, a large Latin male going through the transformation, who saw Kifo.
Tears fell from his eyes as he swiped his muscular arm through the mystic at his bedside.
“Calm down, Señor Gomez. Sir, you’ve got to lie still,” the nurse standing on the other side of the bed told him.
He looked at her as if she were the crazy one. “Stop him! Don’t let him do this to me!”
“Declare your allegiance to Sakarabru,” the mystic chanted. “Deny your faith. Deny your God. Sakarabru will set you free,” the mystic muttered over and over again.
“Medico!” she called out as the man became more erratic. “Necesito un doctor aquí!”
“Why are you doing this? Why?” His cries faded as Kifo walked away.
“Are you obedient, Kifo?”
Obedience was important to Sakarabru. More important than power or fighting abilities. It’s what he demanded of his Brood Army. It was what he demanded of Kifo.
“As always, Lord Sakarabru.”
Why was Kifo doing this? Why had he brought the Demon back from the brink of destruction? Kifo had never known family or where he was from. He had been raised by Sirh Magi in the Northern Territory, and they had taught him the secrets of life and death and the infinite connection between all things.
“There is no end, Kifo, and there is no beginning. We are all who and what we are at any given moment. And it’s the moment that matters. You and I are the same; we are one separate but connected being. If I should die and you live, that bond does not break. We are tethered, as all life is tethered.”
The Sirh were peaceful, spiritual beings who lived quiet and simple lives, neutral to the conflicts brewing between Khale and Sakarabru. It was that neutrality that killed them.
“Run, Kifo! Hide! Go now!”
The Sirh had taught him to respect life and to honor it. They had taught him not to fear the afterlife, but when he lost them, Kifo was a scared and frightened young Djinn, a child who quickly learned that not all Theian Ancients believed as the Sirh had believed that all life was precious, especially his.
He had scavenged for food and a place to sleep at night. He had huddled in caves to avoid being seen or caught up in wars that he wasn’t brave enough to fight. Kifo was a mystic, not a soldier, and he was afraid.
He had wandered into the desert and found a Faih, akin to an Earth scorpion. Kifo found it dying and was going to eat it but couldn’t bring himself to do it. Did it have the same passion for living as he did? Did it deserve to live? Did he?
Kifo had closed his eyes and repeated a chant he had learned from one of the Sirh magi, and as he chanted, he focused on the bridge that this Faih was traveling to get from life to death. He imagined its fear, its uncertainty, and its regret that it had to leave its life behind too soon. And then, at that crucial moment when he knew that the Faih had accepted its fate, Kifo refused it passage to the other side of that bridge he saw in his mind, and the Faih flipped over on its legs and quickly crawled away.
He had been so caught up in his chanting that it wasn’t until he saw the Faih crawl away that he noticed someone standing over him. It was a young general, Sakarabru.
“What did you do?” he asked, towering over Kifo.
Kifo thought long and hard before responding. “I took away its option to cross over,” he finally said. “It had no choice but to come back to
this life.”
Sakarabru had been kind to him. He had been patient and had encouraged his studies in the art of mysticism. It was Sakarabru who convinced him to use his abilities on a fallen Ancient soldier who was near death.
“Remember the Faih?” he asked Kifo, as his soldiers dropped the nearly dead body at Kifo’s feet.
Kifo looked confused. “But this is a Shifter, Sakarabru.”
“Satisfy my curiosity, Kifo,” the Demon had responded.
Kifo lived with the Demon, but in his mind he hadn’t chosen a side in the wars. It wasn’t until that moment that he realized that the Demon was asking him to choose his side.
It took much longer with the Shifter than it had with the Faih. Kifo had chanted over him for three days before he was finally able to stand. He was alive again, but different. He was angry and almost feral, until Sakarabru spoke to him. The Demon’s voice calmed him, and he was obedient to Sakarabru.
“I want you to make me more of these, little mystic.”
Sakarabru had taken Kifo in and cared for him when no one else would. In exchange for a home, Kifo gave Sakarabru his loyalty. The opportunity to prove his devotion came at a time when Sakarabru was wounded after a particularly difficult battle. His healers were all around him, suturing his wounds. Sakarabru had summoned Kifo to his room.
“The Shifter, Khale, would have my head if she could, little mystic,” he said, cringing when he attempted to laugh. “Today, she nearly did. Fortunately, her aim was off.”
“Would you have her head if you could, Sakarabru?” Kifo asked.
Sakarabru stared intently at him. “Yes. Yes, I would.”
Had Sakarabru really just called him into his room for small talk? Kifo suspected that that wasn’t the case. “Why did you summon me, Lord Sakarabru?”
He grimaced and glared at one of his healers. “Because I thought I was dying,” he admitted.