by Lisa Daniels
As before, Ellie felt the groping presence of her mother’s soul, glowing dimly, circling around her as if anxious to talk.
“This is her, isn’t it?” Rosen said softly, her voice taking on a strange, ethereal tint. “This is your mother.”
“Yes.”
The spirit approached Ellie, resembling a little of what she used to be in life. Vibrant blonde hair. Eyes the same shape, though they glowed a supernatural blue compared to their living color. There was a strained expression upon her ghostly features.
“I cannot be here for long,” the spirit said, clasping Ellie by the shoulder, as if desperate for the touch. “They have my ashes, as do you.” She gestured to the locket that Ellie wore, always wore. “He has found a way. He knows how to make us die for him. Again and again.” The spirit appeared agonized. “He can take us from the sanctity of rest.”
“From Beyond?” Rosen asked, and Ellie stared at the older necromancer.
“Yes,” Ellie’s mother said simply. “Do not ask of what is Beyond. I sense it in you.”
Rosen’s face quivered in obvious disappointment.
“His purpose,” the spirit continued, turning those burning blue eyes back to Ellie, “is corrupted. He too has gone too far. He has taken into himself something that hates. Something attracted to the violence and blood of the living, of the transgressions of the soul. He will first come for Rickard Grieves, whose soul escaped his grasp. Then he will come for you, and every other necromancer. He seeks to wipe you all, so that you may never touch the Other Side again. Though he will not stop with necromancers.” Her mother’s form flickered, then faded away, being tugged somewhere else. The lingering presence of her touch remained with Ellie for a long time afterward.
Both necromancers slipped out of the trance, returning to the world of true colors, instead of the misted, diffused ones the Other Side offered, which grew more monochrome the deeper they went.
“I guess we have more information now,” Rosen said, looking extraordinarily grim. “Not that it is particularly welcome. Another crazy revenant that wants to end us all. Just what the doctor ordered.”
One crisis led to another. Ellie’s pinching anxiety about her own father barely compared to the increasing terror over the knowledge that everything they’d ever stood for might go down in a blaze of sadistic, corrupted vengeance.
Why did things have to be like this? Why couldn’t things be simple, for once? She ground her teeth in frustration. Where the hell was that fool of a bodyguard? If anything happened to him… but she didn’t want to go too far about that. Because nothing would happen to him. Mason was perfectly capable of surviving by himself. He had to be. Because she needed him.
Another memory, invasive and squirming, reignited in her brain, stirred by watching Rosen close the office door behind her. A memory of her father doing the same, locking Ellie away from her parents, and then hearing a screaming, cursing argument. One that never seemed to end. Mason had been there then, gently guiding her away.
We’re going to play a game together, he’d said. One far away from all their shouting. Everything will be fine, you’ll see. They walked so far away that soon all the noises stopped. They played stupid child games, like Grandma’s Footsteps, and the big Jenga they had in their old garden, slightly damp from the rains earlier that day, which made it a lot harder to pull out the wood and stack it on top without it crumbling into a bricky heap.
Mason had always done things like that for her. Taken her away from the crux of her parent’s arguments. Trying to fill her soul with better memories, trying to help her see the best in her family. He tried, and she loved him for it.
He gave her happiness. But no—she didn’t want her happiness to be dependent on one person. She didn’t want it to be dependent on anything but her own willpower, her own choices. Though Mason was a choice, wasn’t he?
Possibly one of the best choices she’d ever made.
Over the course of the day, the news intensified in its reported problems. Now this undead army was marching south. Now another city had evacuated itself, but the body count was piling. One town even went as far as locating its only necromancer and bludgeoning them to death, but that town had been swept aside anyway.
Ellie returned to Talia’s home, jumpy whenever she encountered people on the street, though she specifically went home with Talia and Janos, keeping herself under protection, though people were fully aware of the Grieves family, and clearly saw her associating with them.
“He spoke about doing something the night before,” Janos had informed them, after Talia let out a few agitated curses about how irresponsible Mason was for leaving Ellie alone. He was being paid to protect her, and this wasn’t exactly anything like the protection that was needed.
Please return safely, Ellie thought, sending the prayer off into the unknown, a terrifying place where anything could happen. The empty, gnawing worry continued, and her pile of messages to him increased. Late afternoon faded to the first signs of dusk, and she sat out in the enormous garden, taking deep breaths to stop herself from panicking, and occasionally dipping into the Other Side to sense all the pet spirits that were still there, connected to the buried bones, and a few other spirits in the deeper levels, which had that vague menace to them, common in those who had some kind of trauma in their dying.
Something blurred in the skies above. Something hurtling toward the mansion, toward the garden, dark and winged.
Ellie gasped, standing up, squinting into the sky. The creature slowed in its descent, before flaring up wings, and she let out a scream of delight, forgetting completely how annoyed she was with Mason for vanishing without telling her. The dragon tumbled onto the grass awkwardly. He was wearing a strange harness, and someone unbelted themselves and rolled off his back.
Regal. Her father. Ellie’s jaw dropped open. Out of all the things she’d expected to happen, this was not one of them.
“Father! Mason!”
The green dragon’s form melted, until it became the familiar form of Mason, who had a proud if tired grin upon his face. Regal appeared decidedly green, and kept his hands firmly planted on the grass for a good moment or two, while Ellie hurtled herself into Mason’s embrace, reaching for his hair and tugging at it. Then she crouched down to greet her trembling father, who didn’t look anything like the imposing figure he liked to act as when he was in the deadrings, running them, carrying out the orders of Zaimov.
Rickard and Talia came running out of the building, bodyguards hot on their trails.
“We’ll need to get Regal into witness protection,” Mason said, turning curt and professional in front of Rickard Grieves. “I retrieved him from hiding, and he’s agreed to share the information he has and cooperate in what is asked of him. Though he is aware he may have to do some jail time regardless.”
Regal didn’t say a word. In fact, Ellie’s father didn’t seem to be wholly… there. “What’s wrong with my father?”
“He’s...” Mason licked his lips. “He’s been having trouble staying in the normal world. He slips into the Other Side a lot. Something to do with how Zaimov was using him.”
Light returned to Regal’s eyes, and he sat up. “Sorry.” Father and daughter locked eyes together. They settled for a rather perfunctory hug—the rift created between them over the years still needed some fixing. But it was enough to have him here. To have him and Mason safe. For Ellie, that meant the world.
“I hate you for not saying anything,” she snapped at Mason, since he kept smiling in that tired way of his for entirely too long. “You didn’t answer anything, you didn’t leave a message...”
“I apologize,” Mason said. “I’ll make up for it. I swear to you.”
Slightly mollified, Ellie turned to the plight of her father, clearly bailed out from the heart of darkness. A man who slipped into the Other Side without control—someone who needed help. Someone, who for all their sins, deserved more than death.
Chapter Ten – Mason
/> “I knew you’d stop me,” Mason said. He and Ellie faced one another in her room, not too long after Ellie’s father had been delivered to the precinct. The father and daughter reunion had not lasted too long. Mason expected as much. He knew the cracks between them were wide. Not wide enough to allow the man to be left to suffer alone, however. “That’s why I went without a word.”
He watched as Ellie spluttered a bit, before she said, “You could have at least messaged. Anything. ANYTHING at all. Instead you don’t say anything and just vanish?”
“I was flying in my dragon form,” he said defensively. “I had to buy the permits to cross states. They let me do so to escort an endangered citizen from the necromancer-hit areas. I didn’t have a whole lot of time to check my phone.”
She continued to look pissed off, her cheeks puffing up slightly in that adorable way she had. Why does she have to look like that? He did feel a little guilty for flying off without a word, but he knew he would have done the same thing regardless. He didn’t want to raise Ellie’s hopes about fetching her father, just in case he failed. He wanted to return to her with concrete evidence that her father was alive.
And he was. If now a technical prisoner.
“Don’t do that again,” she said, though obviously he couldn’t do it again.
“Alright. Next time your father gets mysteriously kidnapped, I’ll stand aside,” he said, which earned a sharp jab from Ellie’s elbow. “Ow.”
“I’m serious. Don’t just run off without any words. What if they fired you? What if something happened here? What if I needed you?”
“You didn’t need me,” Mason said softly. “You’ve honestly not needed me for a long time. But it’s an honor nonetheless to serve you.”
“What do you mean?” Ellie said, her face scrunching up in confusion.
“I mean that you’re dangerously self-reliant, nowadays,” he said, attempting to smile, though perhaps it didn’t convince her. “You’ve become the capable woman you always promised to be. Even with Regal holding you back somewhat, putting a stopper on your legal career path. I’m proud of you.”
To his surprise, she blushed at those words, and he could practically feel the heat from here. He grinned inwardly, happy for some absurd reason to have that kind of effect on her. However, he also firmly believed in his own words.
She didn’t need him. She never did. Maybe once upon a time, he might have been a good influence in her life, with the kind of father she had, but there was always that hidden steel within her. There was always that light.
In a way, he was envious of her. She didn’t need to worry about her own caste or where she stood in society. Even with her kind of magic, which others feared and misunderstood, she wielded it well. She understood it intimately. She respected the spirits that she came into contact with.
He’d rather be a necromancer than a low-caste dragon.
“You helped me,” she said, and the glittering in her eyes suggested she really meant it. “I doubt I would have turned out half as sane if I didn’t have someone like you in my life.”
A warmth flowed through him, beautiful and serene. Her words were like gold to him, and he grasped them eagerly. “Well, if you say so… who am I to disagree?”
They continued to smile at each other gently, and the warmth seemed to expand, to fill up his lungs and blast open his mind, and a crazy impulse hit him, to just step closer, and touch her flushed cheeks, and bring her face close to his…
No. He couldn’t go down that path. He couldn’t risk it. Not when she seemed so grateful to have him in her life. The last thing he wanted was to sabotage that.
Though it bothered him, at a deep level, that he was attracted to her. It bothered him to the point of distraction. He couldn’t allow himself to entertain such things for long. His treacherous thoughts continued to boil within as their conversation drifted from these dangerous waters to something safer. Though he wasn’t sure if anything would be truly safe.
Perhaps I should encourage the distance between us. Perhaps it would be better for the both of them.
When they parted at last to allow some time alone, he checked the news and resolved himself to keep the distance. To not allow his thoughts to stray and threaten their connection.
Unfortunately, he couldn’t control what his brain did at night. The floodgates were open. That one dangerous thought had rushed through, leaving him to torment himself at night instead, fighting to keep everything the way it always used to be.
I’m sorry, he thought to Ellie, glad that she couldn’t see his mind. I wish I was a better person for you, but it looks like I’m the same as everyone else.
* * *
His duties to her became more strained over the coming three weeks. The news continued to paint a horrific picture of an advancing army. It displayed any necromancers killed in this flood. Ellie continued to get fleeting visions from her guardian angel mother—but the most disturbing report of all, obtained by the precinct, was that Zaimov couldn’t die. He’d already been shot at by tactical strike forces, but the guardian angels he utilized for himself took the hits. And they kept regenerating. He’d figured out the secret, making a mockery of their sacrifice, and of the spirits who were twisted and turned hostile by his experiments.
More perturbing was the fact that Rickard Grieves was now locking himself away in his study, and Ellie confirmed that the patriarch of the Grieves family was conducting his own experiments. Reaching into the Other Side, using his unique flavor of revenant and human to find a way to counteract the situation.
“It’s not going to be anything good, of course,” Ellie grumbled, when they met up and began to talk about whatever the hell it was that Rickard Grieves intended to do. Today she wore a blue top and a rustling, silken skirt that reached her knees. Her blonde hair was tied back in a simple ponytail, and the application of makeup was light. Somehow, she seemed more beautiful to him than before, and of course, he knew he’d be beating up his own brain later about the fact. And handle any growing frustrations as a result of it.
“What’s not going to be good?” He stepped in time beside her, as they left the confines of the mansion and took a walk in the nearby park that Talia Grieves had recommended.
“Whatever Talia’s dad is up to. He’s going to have to do something equally wrong as Zaimov if this mess is going to be stopped.” Her face darkened further, like a thundercloud, when she checked the news threads on her phone, with reports claiming Zaimov’s army was less than a week away from Lasthearth. Already, people were evacuating. Rickard Grieves and his family didn’t. They were leading the effort to try and stop this inexorable advance. Them, and the Irish necromancer, Morgana Hargraves, and a few others they were roping in from other parts of the globe.
Everyone was working around the clock, leaving little breathing room for any of them to enjoy themselves. The dragon shifter at the precinct kept finding ways to dig at Mason’s caste, and it irritated the ever-living hell out of him, knowing he had to hold his tongue or risk losing the contract. Which was why he suggested a walk like this. He could see Ellie was practically climbing the walls in her frustration and stress, and he wanted to help her, somehow. Since words were not enough.
“I wish I could just swoop in, pick up that guy, and drop him from a very high height.” Mason stepped through a neatly trimmed bush that led to a tree, with three rope swings attached to its biggest branch. “That’d solve a lot of problems.”
“Ugh, why did I even bring this up?” Ellie grumbled. “I’ve suddenly decided I don’t want to talk about it.”
He smiled at her sudden frustration. “Of course. What would you like to talk about?”
“Nice things,” Ellie said, her blue eyes narrowed. “Things less about the looming necromancer apocalypse and more about what a great day it is, with the sun shining and all that.”
“Perhaps we can do nice things,” Mason said, before his brain had enough time to screech at him to shut up.
“Oh
yeah?” Her lips twitched upwards in a small grin. “Nicer than walking in a park like a couple, you mean?”
“Like a bodyguard and client,” Mason said curtly, wincing internally at how ham-fisted his statement was. Like a bodyguard and client, because incidentally, I, a bodyguard, am in no way interested in my client, because we are walking exactly like a bodyguard and client would do.
He grimaced when her smile widened, though there was a reddening to her cheeks as well. “What did you have in mind, then?”
Oh, right. He needed to think of something. No point coming up with a notion unless he had something concrete behind it, after all. “I, uh, was thinking… a-a movie? That’s a nice thing to do, isn’t it?”
“Movie.” She scrunched up her eyebrows, before resorting to her phone again. “Let’s watch a horror one.” She showed him the image of a rather sinister-looking man with teeth like daggers and metallic eyes. “Talia was going on about this one, and I’ve never been to a cinema before.”
That’s right! Mason’s eyes widened, surprised at the revelation. “Damn, I really thought you would have. You went to school, you stayed with friends, right?”
“I did… but if I watched anything, it was at their places or mine,” Ellie said, looking strangely wistful. “I’m probably not missing anything big, though, right?”
In all honesty, Mason’s experience of movie theaters was disgustingly low. He’d been in his entire lifetime a total of three times, all of them for things his sister wanted to see, and his mother, when she was on a good day, treated them all to. With the advent of streaming platforms after that, none of them felt obliged to visit such a place afterwards. He examined her movie choice with a queasy feeling in his stomach. He didn’t think he’d do well with horror. He barely even functioned with anything that had the slightest hint of darkness in it without somehow teleporting himself into the situation and imagining what it might be like to be in that person’s shoes. Being scared out of their minds.