Evil Spark (21 page)

Read Evil Spark Online

Authors: Al K. Line

"Watch the floor," I moaned, as Rikka blasted them again and my meticulously cared for floorboards blackened and curled up under his onslaught.

"Sorry, Spark, but it's been so long since I was in a proper fight. This is going to be fun."

"Yeah, whatever." I glanced at Rikka quickly—he really did look like he was enjoying himself. He was smiling like a madman, and I can't tell you how weird it was to see him like that. Or to see him slim!

"Kill them both," ordered Yrjo, sneering with a bravado it was obvious he didn't have.

"Haha, what's the matter goons, feeling a little outclassed?" My goading had the desired effect. They came at us as I knew they would. Rikka has taught me well, and I know that reacting to such insults is a sure way to get yourself killed, and fast.

The goons did that "here one minute, gone the next" thing vampires do that is so disconcerting, but we were ready. Side by side, our arms came up fast, forearms touching, our ink multiplying each other's power as they connected through dark magic that bulged along black lines and exploded in all directions, keeping us safe at the epicenter.

All four goons slammed back against the walls of my home as though a bomb had gone off. Once the dust settled somewhat, and the plaster stopped falling, that was exactly what it looked like.

I raised an eyebrow at Rikka but he was lost to battle. The four bodyguards righted themselves and this time they moved slowly, cautiously closing in, ready for anything.

Almost anything. When I suddenly shouted, "Hey," at one, then turned quickly to another and blasted him with a jet of magic so thick it coated him like tar. He clawed at his face like it was melting. To be fair, it was melting. The magic swirled around his body but he remained on his feet. I kept sending the magic, but twisted it in my mind, so the black turned red and the heat grew so fierce we had to take a step back.

Rikka spun in a circle and muttered a spell—he does like to do it the old-fashioned way—and a pale blue light circled us. A protective shield, I guess you could call it.

The goon continued screaming so I decided that if Rikka was going old skool then so was I. I mumbled a spell I hadn't said for half a century or more. It wasn't needed, but it made Rikka happy and as I slapped my hands together a blot of magic as slender as one of Rikka's new fingers, but as sharp as a faery's tongue, shot across the room and took out the top of the burning vamps head.

The screams stopped—amazing how loud you can scream even without a tongue—and the vampire toppled sideways from his position on his knees into a pool of his own gore.

Two more came at us, but Rikka was ready before I even had the chance to think about defending us. Not taking his eyes off Yrjo, Rikka whipped his arms out to the sides and I had to duck. Two fat balls of terror made of screaming demonic faces, edged with fractal nightmares that would cut to ribbons anything in their path, shot at the two vampires.

One of them ducked and the Demolition Demon—not a bad name for a magic spell, right?—slammed into the wall, chewed up the brick, then shot up to the ceiling where it spun wildly, eating up the plaster before popping out of existence. The other hit its mark and the unlucky goon stared down numbly at the gaping hole through its belly. You could see the blackened, damaged walls of my home right through his middle. It was like in a cartoon, apart from the very real goopy bits and the smell of seared lower intestine.

"This isn't over," snarled Yrjo before he did the vampire dance thing and was gone.

The remaining goon stared around wildly, unable to take in the fact he'd been abandoned.

"So much for loyalty amongst vampires," said Rikka, about as happy and excited as I'd ever seen him.

I stared at him like he'd gone crazy, which I think he had for a while. I half expected him to start bouncing up and down and asking me to guess how much weight he'd lost. Instead, he lowered his arms and let the forcefield dissipate. The remaining goon was gone. We heard the crunch as it appeared then disappeared out the front door.

My shoulders sagged as the sickness came to take what was owed. I sank to my knees and took my punishment.

I think I must have remained that way for ten minutes then somehow managed to lower myself onto the floor properly, where I curled my legs up tight and hugged my knees hoping for death.

Rikka seemed to get off with little more than the shakes for a minute, then whistled to himself absentmindedly while he waited for me to get over my prayers to be taken to hell, or anywhere, as long as the pain stopped.

Blood magic filled the room, trapped. The overflow too strong for it to dissipate quickly. At some point it must have though, and I found myself alive and able to breathe.

Miraculously, my fridge was still intact. Stepping carefully over warped floorboards and mangled bodies, I opened the door, pulled out a bottle of water and guzzled it, spitting out the dust of my home and the remnants of blood magic that tainted my lungs and my heart.

I may have collapsed again then, just for a while.

 

*

 

I looked around the devastation of my sanctuary. The floor was mostly gone, rugs, boards, the lot, all splintered or burned, revealing the cavity beneath. If there had been interior walls they would have been blasted to bits, but even so the side walls were a mess. Plasterwork and render was falling off, exposing the Victorian brickwork beneath, deep gouges in the ancient walls. The ceiling was hanging in places, other parts gone, revealing upstairs joists and a peek into my bedroom and bathroom.

My furniture was about as useful as my vinyl collection in a teenager's bedroom, and the chance of me being able to repair any of it was as likely as a goblin singing you happy birthday, giving you a cake, and not charging you for it.

It was definitely time to move.

"Hey, Spark," said Rikka.

"Yeah," I sighed, picking up a cushion and staring at it like it had answers as to why me.

"Did I tell you I have a job for you? Apparently a zombie has managed to get a position as an MP and he's been winning elections by eating the opposition. They want me to help clean up the mess and cover it up. Won't take long. You know what the undead are like, never very subtle. Should be a breeze. It pays well." Rikka waggled slim eyebrows at me and rummaged in the fridge. "I'm starving. Being a goblin is exhausting. Don't know how they do it for so long."

"Um, because that's what they are. Goblins," I added, feeling displaced and way too confused. "And, I quit." Rikka turned to me, a knowing smile on his face.

"Okay, I take a leave of absence, for a while. I need to find somewhere else to live. You messed up my home, Rikka. My sanctuary."

"Don't worry about that," he said, biting the top off a length of chorizo then staring at it suspiciously—I have no idea how long it had been there. "I've got just the place for you. You'll love it."

"I think I'll find something myself."

"It's got a big garden, and no neighbors. My treat. It's empty at the moment. I'll give it to you, the whole place. Sign over the deeds."

"Done," I said warily. "What's the catch?"

"Well, about these zombies. And let's not forget this little piece of unfinished business first."

I stared at Rikka like he'd gone insane. "Little piece of unfinished business! You go missing, Grandma went missing on purpose, Finnish vampires trash my home, now you want me to go after zombies, after we deal with Yrjo? Are you nuts?"

Rikka scowled at me, like I'd overstepped the line. I didn't care. It was as if everyone was playing a sick and twisted game but refused to let me in on the rules. "I understand you have had a rough few days, Spark, but remember who you are talking to."

"Let's get out of here. I can't stand to see the place like this. God knows what the neighbors will think."

"They will think nothing, Spark. Do you think I would come in here knowing what would happen and not put the right protective spell in place?"

Rikka was right. From the outside all would be nice and quiet. Normal. Another semi-detached on a nice street in Cardiff.

"Okay, let's go. We'll sort this mess out. But no zombies," I warned.

"That's my boy."

I got the feeling there was no zombie problem. Rikka was just goading me to keep my anger up and carry on. Make me want to fight. Hit something. Even if it was him.

 

 

 

 

A Drive

The door was gone, so I didn't even get the chance to close it behind me with a sigh and lament all I had lost. I'd painted it recently too! Instead, I stood in the shattered doorway and looked back on the devastation that had been my little oasis of normality for so many decades.

It was gone now. I couldn't remain there any longer. Sure, I could get the place repaired, would have to if I wanted to sell, but it wasn't my home. It had been violated. The memory of what it looked like at that moment would always be there. It was just a house now.

"Come on, no time to waste," said Rikka as he stood by the car, tapping a foot impatiently. His new slimline figure had done nothing to improve his manner.

"Fine, but you owe me an explanation." I turned my back on my old home. I never saw it again.

"Come on, what are you waiting for?" urged Rikka, fastening his seatbelt with ease. It was the final straw. Normally he'd be puffing and wheezing, doing my head in trying to get it over his fat belly.

"What am I waiting for? Are you serious! My house is trashed, Grandma went missing and apparently you blamed the vampires, but she was just helping out Stanley. Then you went missing, vampires just invaded my home and tried to kill me after pulling Oliver apart in front of me, you turn up, but you're a goblin, then you morph into a thin version of you, and we still have to chase down Yrjo and his goons and you want to know what I'm waiting for? I want to know what the hell is going on, Rikka. No more playing."

Rikka looked at me and smiled a smile I'd never seen before—one that wasn't lost in folds of fat. "Spark, you know me, we go back a long way. Have I ever done anything unless it was the right thing?" He studied me, giving me time.

"No. But there's always a first. What has been going on? I need to slow down, know what I'm up against here. I was going to watch TV and have a beer!"

Rikka put his hands on his belly, looking down in surprise when they kept on falling and falling, the usual monumental mound no longer there. "This will take some getting used to."

"Yeah, about that."

"Okay, let's start at the beginning."

"Please. And if you tell me you planned this all along I'll scream."

"What? Why would I plan my own kidnapping?"

"Because that's what Grandma did."

"That's because she's a kind lady and wanted to help Stanley."

What is with these people? "You knew!" I accused.

Rikka looked at me with disappointment. "Spark, of course I knew. I'm a goddamn mage, Head of the Councils. I know more than you can ever imagine." He was right. I never really thought about it like that.

"Okay, spill it."

"I blamed the vampires after Grandma was taken as that's just what I would do. Had to keep it realistic. Plus I did get a little worried once there were vampires involved and dead witches in training, so it wasn't much of a leap anyway. Grandma didn't exactly fill me in on what was about to happen, but I have my sources."

"I bet."

"But then things got rather out of hand. Oliver, that slimy amorphous blob, he took me. Okay, to be precise I let him take me. Okay, it was Yrjo's goons, who are very strong with magic, I must say."

"Rikka!"

"Right, sorry. The fool couldn't arrange such a thing and hope to succeed against me, so I made his job a little easier for him. They had good disguises, even took me by surprise."

"But you could have stopped it?"

"Yes. But I wanted to know what was going on. Got to keep your finger on the pulse at all times, Spark, it's how you stay ahead of trouble."

"Right, okay, go on. You let wizard vampires take you, then what?"

"Then I played along. Oliver really was a fool. He told me what he was doing, thinking he had me contained. How he imagined that he could keep me I have no idea, but there you go. Guess that was Yrjo. Probably thought I was some fat dope playing wizard rather than who I really am, and that is his worst nightmare."

"I think you'll find that would be me," I said.

"Haha, you are probably correct. Tonight is the night they had it all planned. Get you out of the picture, then Taavi, and Yrjo would be in charge. But Yrjo is rash and impulsive, didn't stop when he should have. What a fool."

"After you escaped, you mean?" My head was spinning. Trust me, this isn't even as bad as it gets sometimes. Why do you think I take to my bed after jobs? It's not just the use of magic, it's because Rikka always seems to mess with my head.

"Of course I escaped!" Rikka said, indignant. "I'm a nine-hundred-year-old mage and Oliver was a three-hundred-year-old fool who happened to get help from powerful vampires. But they were amateurs. He kept me locked in a box. Me! In a box!"

"I guess you got out," was all I could manage to say. I tried to picture a box large enough to hold the old form of Rikka—it took some doing.

"Of course I got out. I'm a nine—"

"Yeah, yeah, old wizard. Blah, blah, blah. Just tell me what happened."

"Don't get smart, Spark, it doesn't suit you."

I'd had enough. "I'll tell you what doesn't suit me, Boss, it's all this bloody confusion and craziness. There have been way too many people involved in my personal affairs lately and I am sick of it. I want to know what is really happening and I want to know now." I may have overstepped a little, but I was just so tired, and to be honest I think I wanted to just go visit Kate and slip into bed next to her. Maybe sleep for a few lifetimes and wake up when it was all over. Plus my house was trashed, and it was mine. My personal, private place, away from all this crap.

Rikka frowned, then nodded. He understood. He knows I'm an Alone, work jobs for him mostly solo. I'm a people person, but for short bursts. There had been too much activity and it drains me worse than the dark magic.

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