Chapter 3
The three of us went through alleyways in the downtown area
until we came to a recently emptied lot marked by a construction company’s
sign. Jade pointed to the empty space.
“This is where she was kidnapped,” she said.
I walked into the center of the field. “I can feel some leftover
resonating angles that tell me your friend went …” I pointed. “That way. Up.
Over the rooftops. Surprisingly fast.”
“How can you tell?” said Jade.
“York has a knack with these things,” said Rei. “He’s the
best magical tracker in the city.”
“And yet you scored so low on Rockwell practical exam?” said
Jade.
“Where did you hear that?” I said.
“I have my ways,” said Jade. She started walking in the
direction that I had pointed. When she reached the wall of the adjacent
building, she slammed her foot into the ground and flew up onto the rooftop,
which was three stories high.
Rei was about to do the same when she caught herself and
looked at me. With a sideways glance, she held out her hand.
“I’ll leave this to you,” I said. I took hold of her offered
hand.
We jumped onto the rooftops, propelled by a blast of frozen
air, landing with a graceful flourish. We then ran along the roofs of the
downtown buildings until I sensed that the trail changed direction.
We returned to street level with another leap. The trail led
to a park in the middle of the downtown area that was jeweled with a lake that
had a dozen swan-shaped love boats on it. I stopped at the bank.
“Beneath the water,” I said. “There seems to be a disturbance
in the ether at the bottom of the lake.”
Jade held up her hand and a blast of air swirled around her
arm. “I can make us a breathable pocket of air,” she said.
A laugh echoed from behind us, filled with high-born
nosiness, like a princess. I looked towards the source of the sound to see a
girl with bright blonde hair that was permed into ringlets. She held her hand
near her mouth as she laughed. Her dress was very high quality, of a brand that
probably cost ten times what I earned in a month. She approached us.
“What do I see here?” she said, stopping before Jade.
“Tetra,” said Jade, without much emotion.
Tetra gave a small curtsy. “I did not expect to see you
here, my rival,” she said, her voice haughty.
“I don’t care who you are,” said Rei, “But we’re looking for
Jade’s friend. Please don’t interrupt us.”
“What if I had news for you?” said Tetra, the back of her
hand facing her cheek. “News that could change everything.”
“Tell me,” said Jade, not seeming to be affected by Tetra’s
obvious prodding.
“Your friend is not under the lake,” said Tetra. “I followed
her to a mansion in the outskirts of town.”
Jade looked over at me. “Then what is under the lake?” she
said. “I believe York.”
“York?” said Tetra. She looked at me with a haughty expression
on her face. “That’s your name? A mere commoner like you has the ability to
track signatures?”
“Commoner?” said Rei, under her breath. “Where are we,
eighteenth century London?”
Tetra put the back of her hand against her mouth. “You are standing
before Terta Pearlash, daughter of Morian Pearlash, CEO of Peak Industries.”
“Peak—” said Rei, with obvious surprise.
“So you’re a rich girl,” I said.
“Of course I am,” said Tetra. “How else would someone like
me look so elegant?”
For some reason everyone appeared to take her statement
seriously. I, however, couldn’t help but chuckle a bit.
“What?” said Tetra. “Do you not believe me?”
Rei put her hand on my shoulder. I understood what she
meant. The girl was, despite her obtuse manner, the daughter of a very powerful
person. It would be unwise to make her unhappy. I sighed.
“I believe you,” I said. “Can you help us, then, with your
knowledge?”
Tetra seemed vindicated as her smile curled upwards. “There’s
something else that you don’t know about underneath the lake, that I suggest
you do not disturb.”
“And how do you know this?” said Rei.
“Because my father has people who work on this,” said Tetra.
She covered her mouth with the back of her hand. “I can be of much assistance
to you.”
“I’m still going to check what’s under there,” I said. I
turned to Rei. “Give me that bubble of air.”
Rei formed a bubble of ice that surrounded me. She could not
manipulate air exactly, but by aiming certain facets of her magic at precise places
between molecules she could compress an amount of air inside a localized
position.
I dove into the lake. The water, pressed away by the field
around me, did not touch my clothes. I could see quite far through the liquid
surrounding me.
At the bottom of the lake was a bubble of shining material.
I landed on the silt floor and walked towards it. There, inside of it, was a flash
drive on top of a strangely positioned wooden desk. I walked through the bubble
with no problem and picked up the drive. I swam back up to the surface.
When I popped out of the water, Rei rushed to me.
“What did you find?” she said.
I showed her the flash drive.
“Is this it?” she said. “That’s all you found?”
I shook my head. “It was strange. I didn’t sense anything besides
the marker I saw before.”
Rei took the flash drive and slid it into her pocket. “Tetra
knows where Jade’s friend went,” she said. “This flash drive may prove useful,
but we need to see what’s inside it first. For now let’s focus on the urgent
matter at hand.”
I nodded. The four of us walked through the downtown and to
a mansion that was at the outskirts of the developed area. It was large,
crested with an iron gate and walls that separated it from the outside world.
“This place has been abandoned for ten years,” said Tetra,
as she punched a code into the panel at the gate’s edge. “Our family owns it,
but ever since a high level of radon was detected inside of it it’s been condemned.
The only reason why it hasn’t been demolished is because my grandmother doesn’t
want it gone.” She pouted a bit. “It’s been at the edge of the law for a while
now.”
The gate opened. Tetra paused. “Now do you understand how
much use I can be of to you?”
Rei made a face. “Yeah. I appreciate it.”
Jade said nothing, her grey eyes watching the gate open. We
stepped onto the grounds, which were still meticulously maintained. Walking up
the path that led to the house proper, we passed statues and fountains that
were still running.
“How did the kidnapper gain access to this place when it was
closed off?” said Rei. “They can’t possibly have just jumped the gate.”
“That’s exactly what happened,” said a voice, coming from
behind a wall. A figure stepped out from behind it. He held out his hand.
He was burly, with a bald head and thick mustache. A gigantic
scar ran down his cheek and across his neck. His eyebrows were tiny. His eyes
contained a deadly glint. The casting device attached to his arm was of a top model,
one that had just been released.
The bald man began activating his casting device.
Rei beat him to the punch, sending off a blast of cold air
and sharp icicles. The bald man dove, rolling across the ground to avoid the
attack. He then managed to finish his casting sequence and sprayed poison
across his field of vision.
Jade threw up a barrier using her own casting device and the
poison splattered against it.
The bald man rolled to the side and fired off several poison-tipped
arrows from out of his palm. They punched through Jade’s barrier.
Jade hit the floor and the arrows whizzed over her head. She
twisted around and slammed the earth with her fist, sending an undulating wave of
dirt and rock towards the enemy.
The bald man typed furiously into his casting device and the
wave of dirt froze in place. Rei charged the bald man with a sword made of ice.
A shield appeared out of nowhere in the bald man’s hand and blocked the charge.
Rei flew backwards as if shocked by electricity.
Tetra fired off a beam of intense laser energy that sliced
through the background as it aimed towards the bald man. The bald man blocked
it with his shield for a few seconds, until the beam of light began to burn
through it.
The bald man backed away from us, his shield melding in his
hand. As soon as Tetra’s magic faltered, he jumped two stories into the air and
headed for the mansion.
Rei copied him and flew up into the sky. She threw a lasso
of cold water at the bald man and caught him, bringing him smashing down onto
the pavement, where he stayed, beaten.
I approached the bald man. Rei held an ice blade at his throat.
“Who are you?” she asked. “Why are you here?”
“And where is Tally?” said Jade, also holding a blade in her
hand, this time formed out of pure barrier energy.
The man coughed up blood. “I won’t tell you anything,” he
said.
“Then we’ll turn you into the authorities,” said Rei.
“Ahahaha,” said Tetra, laughing like a princess. “I’ll
handle this.” She walked up to him and put her palm on his forehead. “If you
don’t say anything, I’ll draw your memories out of your head for you. I’ll tell
you now, it won’t be pleasant. It won’t kill you, but it might leave you with a
permanent, I’ll call it, intellectual disability.” Her grin was almost maniacal.
“Tally is my friend too.”
The bald man seemed to give up. “Fine,” he said. “I was
tasked with guarding the ceremony. Your friend—” he spit this word out—”Is
going to have the pleasure of being a sacrifice to awaken Almog.”
“And?” said Tetra. “Where is she?”
“Inside the mansion,” said the bald man. “On the second
floor. The ballroom. That’s where they’re performing the ceremony.”
“And who is leading it?” said Tetra.
“Galmor,” said the bald man.
“Good,” said Tetra. “You behaved. Sleep.” The man’s eyes
rolled back into his head and he was out. Tetra stretched her arms above her
head. “What are we waiting for?” she said. “Let’s save Tally.”
The four of us crept towards the mansion’s entrance.
“I can’t promise there won’t be booby traps,” said Tetra. “It’s
been a while since anyone but the gardener was here.”
“I can detect some of them,” said Jade, her voice as calm as
ever. “My magic has a sensory function.”
“Good,” said Tetra. “Keep it on.”
“There,” said Jade, pointing. “A booby trap. Looks like a
wire activated flechette round.”
“I’ll take care of it,” said Rei. She typed into her casting
device and the whole wall froze solid in an instant. It cracked from inside and
disintegrated into pieces. “That ought to do it.”
“Let me remind you that this is my family’s property,” said
Tetra, appearing a bit miffed. “Even if it is condemned, any damage to this house
will be an affront to my grandmother.”
“Fine, fine,” said Rei. “Come on. Let’s go in.”
We entered the foyer, which was decorated with a gigantic
chandelier. Statues lined the walls, along with paintings that were probably
worth millions. The place had a feeling of old dust.
“Watch out!” yelled Tetra, and a ball of energy slammed into
the space where I had just been a moment before.
“Who do we have here?” said a voice, coming from the second
floor balcony. A man in a deep purple robe appeared from out of a hallway.
“Malcom,” said Jade.
“I knew it would be you,” said Tetra. “You’ve teamed up with
Galmor, haven’t you?”
Malcom held out his hand and a fireball appeared in it. “Well,
now that you know, I’m going to have to kill you. And I don’t believe in clean
killing.”
We prepared for another battle.
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