Authors: Andrew Ball
get the hell out."
"I suppose, in your case…" Xik sighed
and set his cup down in midair. It vanished.
"Those small creatures are called spawn.
They are tools, bioengineered to prepare the
soul for high-efficiency extraction. Your
brother’s life is now measured in days."
"…how long does it take the work?"
"It depends, but usually between 12 and
24 hours. Felix is at risk."
Daniel shook his head. "That makes no
sense. If people were disappearing that fast,
everyone would notice."
"Magic, Daniel," Xik said, "is
dangerous and nuanced, but very powerful.
Those who lose their souls are replaced by a
magical shell. Over the course of about a
week, that shell steadily vanishes from the
world. This creates a buffer against the kind
of collapse that would alert the populace at
large. All those who knew the lost soul
forget the person even existed." Xik put a
thin finger on his chin. "Or rather…it’s the
other way around. Their existence fades from
reality, and reality bends to compensate. The
time interval is so that reality does not tear."
Daniel frowned hard. "What would
happen if a mother forgot her son? Her entire
life would change. And what about photos,
and paper records?"
"Terrifying, isn’t it? Of course, those
who were closest to the shell don’t survive
unscathed. With holes in their lives that
large, they often develop serious mental
complications as they struggle to justify and
explain their own lives to themselves.
Human population statistics indicate a rise of
mental illness in your developed countries.
This is because developed countries have
more places with big cities, and the Vorid
prioritize places with more people." Xik
folded his arms. "And here you are, happily
ignorant, refusing to assist. Does the issue
seem more relevant now that it’s reached
your own stoop?"
"Will I…forget him? Just like that?"
"Yes—unless you have the power of the
contract. Those with magical gifts are
immune to the effects of the spell; such a
widespread construction can only provide a
thin screen. Of course, with your power,
you’d be able to save him outright."
Daniel couldn’t begin to imagine the
consequences of forgetting Felix. If it wasn’t
for his brother, he didn’t think he would have
made it this far. "Can I ask you something?"
"Of course."
"I just want to get on with my life. I’ve
got other things to do. I don’t have time to
save the world. I’m sure there’s plenty of
other people that are more than willing. You
don’t have to waste time on me. But please,
just get rid of that thing on my brother."
"What are these goals of yours, exactly?
What’s driving you so hard?"
"It’s none of your business."
"Fair enough." Xik shrugged. "I would
help you if I could, but my interference in
this world is quite limited. It is an intrinsic
part of the spell that allows me to be here.
Appearing—that is easy. Physically touching
this world requires energy to which I don’t
have access. To save your brother, you must
agree to the contract."
"Let’s see it."
"What?"
Daniel tapped his desk. "Contract this,
contract that. Show me some literature. What
are the rules?"
Xik gestured. There was a soft patter.
Daniel turned around in his chair. Resting on
his desk was a surprisingly mundane stack of
paper. It was exactly six pages of plain,
double-spaced English text.
Daniel licked his thumb and flicked
through it. "This is a magic spell?"
"Spell is a colloquial term in your
language for an act of magic," Xik said. "It doesn’t really mean anything. Magic already
existed in your world before the Vorid
arrived, you know. Many are naturally
talented." Xik took a breath. "So, no, that isn’t the spell. It just outlines what the spell
does."
"How long have the Vorid been here?"
"About ten years," Xik said. "They’re
being fought by your homegrown wizards,
among other things…but they’re losing
ground."
"And…" Daniel thought a moment.
"What are you and your people called,
again?"
"We are known as the Klide."
"How long have you been here?"
"We’ve only been making contracts for
about a month, now," Xik said. "There are
now several dozen contractors scattered
across six of your continents. It’s a
dangerous thing to do."
"Why?"
"We grant you this power with the
understanding that you’ll fight the Vorid, but
without an extremely powerful spell that
takes more energy than we can spare, we
can’t control your use of said talents," Xik
explained. "By making more magicians,
we’re destroying the boundaries of the
magical subculture that already exists in your
world. They’re a secretive bunch, for
obvious reasons, and they have their own
rules and laws. We can’t take responsibility
for what contractors do in their free time, so
there’s plenty of people that would rather we
did nothing." Xik folded his arms. "If we sit and watch, the Vorid will quite literally eat
you. If we do act, there’ll be a new class of
undisciplined superhumans running about and
robbing banks—or what have you. We
choose to act and hope that you’ll sort the
rest with the wash once you’re not being
preyed upon like an easy snack."
"Basically, people can and probably
will abuse their powers when they’re not
fighting Vorid. The magicians that already
exist don’t want to deal with that, or lose
their monopoly on magic."
"Precisely."
"You seem very concerned about energy
use. Are aliens all environmentalists?"
Xik huffed. "We are not a small species
confined to a single planet, like yours. We
use the energy of galaxies to keep our
civilization running. Ultimately, energy is the
currency of universes, of life itself.
Conservation is extremely vital, and the war
is not helping."
"So, the only thing that, uh…" Daniel
paused. "…real wizards dislike is the fact
that untalented snots are getting a shot at
power." Xik nodded, but it was a small,
hesitant motion. "What else, Frogger?"
Xik rubbed the back of his neck. "The
nature of the gift…it’s a delicate subject for
your people."
"I’m getting really tired of beating
around the bush," Daniel said.
"The Vorid are a vast and diverse race,"
Xik said. "Even with the contract in place,
you’re much too weak to defend against any
serious assault. Not to demean your
homeland, but this universe is a tiny
sideshow to the real battle; it has seen only
the earliest probes of Vorid forces.
Therefore, we include in your contract the
ability to grow stronger. This is forbidden by
your indigenous magical community."
Daniel raised an eyebrow. "Seems
counterproductive to forbid something so
useful."
"Normally, magical talent is decided at
birth," Xik said, "Like a muscle, it can be strengthened with effort, but only so far—
some are just stronger than others. You, a
contractor, absorb the life energy from every
Vorid you destroy, and in so doing, your own
pool of power grows. Contractors become
the Vorid of Vorid."
"Fighting fire with fire. Turn us into
parasites to drain on the parasites."
"Your assessment is accurate," Xik said,
"but it isn’t all so one-sided. We are giving
you the means to fight back, after all.
Consider your own country. The United
States offers military support to regimes
which fight on its behalf. Twenty years down
the line, those same regimes might use those
weapons for nefarious purposes of their
own, but at the time, it seemed a good idea to
give an ally the means to defend itself. Is the
United States fully responsible for the evil
committed later?"
"…that’s oddly specific."
"I am well-versed in your history," Xik
said. "Being a contract manager, I am a sort
of diplomat."
"Does that mean you’ve been in touch
with the…wizards?"
"We made contact a year ago," Xik said.
"We wanted them to take contractors under
their wing, but they…were stubborn. They
resist the idea that life absorption is
necessary to their success, and refused to
accept our help. We’ve failed to convince
them otherwise."
"And now you’re going behind their
backs and doing it anyway."
"We must," Xik said. "Vorid are that
threatening. They are a plague upon the
entirety of the multiverse. We have to use
everything we can to survive.
"But at the same time, we can’t fight
directly," Xik continued. "If the Klide and the Vorid threw their full weight upon one
another, the clash very well might tear apart
something so fundamental that existence
itself would be in danger. And so we fight
around one another. Worlds like yours—
small, isolated—have become the
battleground. We conduct ourselves through
proxies, playing games of territory and
allegiance. We cannot afford to let your
people be absorbed because we can’t afford
any people to be absorbed."
"…it’s a giant, multiversal cold war."
"Frozen solid," Xik confirmed.
"So this getting-stronger process…"
Daniel waved a hand. "…makes the
newcomers on the magic scene a threat to the
old guard? Despite the fact that we have a
common enemy?"
"Unfortunately."
"All anyone ever cares about is political
positioning after the dust settles. It’s this kind
of shit that makes me misanthropic." Daniel
made a face. "I almost want to say yes just to
spite them."
"Almost."
Daniel narrowed his eyes. "Why is it
illegal? For natural wizards?"
"It’s so-called dark magic," Xik said.
He raised a gloved hand. "This is a fallacy.
There is no dark and light magic, just as
there are no evil tools and good tools. It is
how it is used that matters. But." Xik went
quiet. "The spell does not—cannot—
discriminate between different forms of life.
If you kill Vorid, you absorb them and grow
stronger. If you kill humans, you absorb them
and grow stronger." Xik met Daniel’s eyes
with his red stare. "If you killed a powerful
magician, or even another contractor that has
absorbed many, many souls…you’d become
that much stronger. Powerful enough,
perhaps, that you couldn’t be challenged."
Daniel swallowed. "I can see why it’s
discouraged."
"Indeed. But against the flood of the
Vorid, we have little choice but to go to such
extremes. If you had to choose between
humanity’s complete erasure or the use of a
nuclear weapon on your own soil, which
would you pick?"
Daniel gave a single nod. "Live today.
Do your best to clean up the mess later."
"Exactly."
"So by signing this thing, I’d become an
illegal alien within the magical community."
"An admirable continuation of our
political metaphor," Xik said, "but I’ll be honest with you. You wouldn’t be looked
upon nearly as favorably as an illegal alien.
Most would consider the contract a curse,
and you a pariah. If you were discovered,
they would take immediate action to stamp
you out." Xik indicated the papers with a
long finger. "The details are there in full.
Study them at your leisure."
"My leisure. I wish." Daniel looked at
him. "How much time does my brother
have?"
"The extractors come at 2am, your local
time, to remove prepared souls once a
month. Based on previous observations of
Aplington, that’s three days from now."
"What’s an extractor?"
"Spawn prepare souls," Xik said.
"Extractors collect the spawn, absorb the
souls, then release the spawn to repeat their
task. Spawn and extractors are both
automated, in a sense. Above them are
overseers, who regulate extractor activity."
"Sounds pretty organized."
"A well-oiled war machine. In fact, this
is all almost completely automated. They
aren’t even paying real attention to you yet."
Xik exhaled. "Perhaps now you’re beginning
to appreciate the threat?"
"Can’t you do something about the
extractor?"
"The strength to fight, channeled across
an interdimensional pipeline, would
consume too much energy."
"Is that a no?"
"Correct."
"…then it’s up to me."
"Yes."
Daniel’s lips thinned. "No other
contractors around here?"
"I’m afraid not."
"No one within three days travel?
Incredible."
Xik gave him sharp look of disapproval.