Read Dark Game (Merikh Book 1) Online

Authors: C L Walker

Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Spies & Politics, #Assassinations, #Supernatural, #Ghosts, #Psychics, #Witches & Wizards, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Paranormal & Urban, #Superheroes, #Literature & Fiction, #Horror, #Dark Fantasy, #Thrillers, #Metaphysical & Visionary, #New Adult & College, #Superhero

Dark Game (Merikh Book 1) (23 page)

He began to raise his hand and I could feel something, like an electric current passing through the air. I felt a heat at my back that increased as his hand rose higher. It intensified until his arm was straight up and the heat became unbearable.

It was the dagger. I tore the pack off my back and threw it to the ground as it caught on fire. Foster lowered his hand and the dagger tore free of the pack and flew to him.

I fired the rifle without thinking. The bullet ricocheted off something and I fired again, and again. Single shots, perfectly aimed, and they all bounced away from him.

“There is more power in my hands tonight than I’d dreamed possible,” he said, staring at the dagger with wonder. “Do you understand what I’m going to achieve here? What you’re about to witness?”

“Your ego getting even more overbearing?”

His wonder slipped for a moment. “I could kill you right now. You realize that, right?”

“You’re a grown man dressed in a Jedi costume.” I dropped the rifle to the floor and let my arms rest at my sides. “You’re about as threatening as a child on Halloween.”

“Don’t you want to see it? The end of days, and the beginning of a new age? The dawn of a world of wonders?”

“I’d settle for seeing you dead.”

He shook his head, disappointed. “So be it.”

His hand was suddenly raised, the dagger pointed at me. White hot energy shot from it and hit me in the chest, enveloping me, working its way inside me through my mouth, nose, ears, and eyes. For a moment, the entire world became nothing but that pure, unbridled power.

And then it was gone, and I was still standing, unscathed.

“Well,” I said, forcing a smile, “that was anticlimactic, wasn’t it?”

Foster shook his head again, a smile of his own in place. “We would have made a great team, you and I. We could have ruled the world.”

“Oh, do please shut up.” I attacked, stepping left as I punched right, driving my hand into his stomach with all the strength I could muster.

His hand was on my head before I could move, and a moment later I was flying through the air to crash into the dark metal wall.

“You’re immune to things that should terrify you.” Foster approached slowly, giving me time to get back up. “But you’re still just human. You’re physically vulnerable.”

He lashed out and I got out of the way. One moment he was six feet away and the next he was in front of me, his fist driving into the wall with a bong sound, like a large bell. I backed away and tried to work out how I was going to pull this off.

“Do you even know what you’re summoning here?” I asked. I put the altar between us and circled to keep it there as he advanced on me. “It’s got a lot of people very upset.”

“As they should be. I’ve spent my life chasing this.” He held up the dagger and the mist of energy in the room pulsed with the movement. “Do you know what it is, what was done with it? This was used to kill the creator of the universe, but the creator’s power is still free. It’s still out there for the taking.”

“And you think you can control it?” I stepped away from the altar, afraid he might launch himself over it and catch me unawares. Mouse’s face seemed almost alive in the light of the energy swirling through the room.

“Or die trying.” He stepped slowly around the altar, never chasing me in earnest. I wondered if we would simply stay in that loop, forever circling my dead friend.

“And what happens if you die? Do you know?”

He shook his head and grinned. “I don’t care, Merikh.”

He was in front of me in a heartbeat. A moment later, my world was filled with pain and I was lying on the floor beside Claire and Patty. I looked up at them, perhaps begging for help. They clung to each other, a small-town girl and a god, equally frightened by the scene before them.

He’d stabbed me in the stomach with the dagger. The heat of it had cauterized the wound but the damage was done and waves of pain overwhelmed me. I couldn’t get up as he walked slowly toward me.

“I’m tempted not to kill you, you know. I want witnesses for this, and you’d make a fine witness. My would-be killer watching my ultimate triumph.” He crouched beside me. “Alas, it isn’t to be. I will visit you in the nether when it becomes my playground, assassin.”

He raised the dagger theatrically, aiming the blade at my head. I turned to watch Mouse, ready to join her.

Foster paused at the sound of people running down the stairs. I turned in time to see the first of a wave, a tsunami of attackers.

The people of Midway had arrived, and they were all aimed at Foster.

 

 

The Knight: Intervention

The knight watched from the corner of the metal room as people ran down the stairs, some stumbling, to be crushed by the ones behind them.

Ehl spent its time shepherding the poor souls, standing in their midst and urging them on with glee on its stolen features, which were those of a deputy. Ahn stood quietly in the body of a housewife with blood covering her clothes.

“I don’t understand what you’re trying to do,” the knight said for the tenth time. He didn’t want to watch the carnage any longer but he couldn’t tear his eyes away. The gods had sent an army to interfere in Foster’s ritual, somehow timing it so that they arrived when the dagger had spilled its first blood.

“He is tied to the process now,” Ahn said. Its voice was soft yet managed to carry over the din. The first of the god’s victims reached Foster and the disciple of wrath punched the possessed man back into the throng. “If he dies then he cannot carry it to fruition. There will be no one to guide her when she comes.”

“So you no longer need the assassin?” A group approached Foster, more wary than the first man, and were blasted by energy from the dagger. They fell to the floor, on fire and screaming.

“He still has a part to play. He will kill Foster for us before he dies. These people are a distraction.”

The knight finally looked away. Ahn and Ehl had spent centuries not interacting with the world, letting things run their course. When they did act on the world it was subtle, untraceable. He counted on that from the moment he realized he could cloud Ahn’s thoughts through their link. He’d planned for this all to happen without their knowledge, and assumed if they discovered it that they would be powerless to stop it. The rules of their game prohibited it.

“I will allow you to remember your family before I destroy you,” Ahn said absentmindedly. The knight turned to his master. “I may even return your name to you.”

“Why?”

“So you know what you’ve lost. I am not a sadistic being but I feel you deserve more punishment than simple annihilation.”

“That sounds remarkably human of you.”

The assassin stirred as the desperate energy of Despair finally came to him. It wouldn’t make him stronger or faster, or better able to fight the superior strength of Wrath’s disciple, but it would allow him his chance to fight back. That had been the knight’s plan all along, to allow the ritual to begin and then have someone he could trust take control of it. He’d wanted the terrible thing Ahn and Ehl were scared of to return to neutral hands.

“Your thoughts betray you, knight.” Ahn was barely paying attention to the room, casting it a glance every few seconds. “How did you hide this from me? More importantly, how did you keep your machinations with Despair a secret from Ehl?”

The knight had lost his will to fight. Seeing the carnage – another ten people had died in this fruitless attack, all so the assassin would have time to rise – had defeated him.

“You were easy. We are linked and that link grows stronger every year. And I have been here a long time.”

“So allowing your thoughts to touch on my own was a mistake,” Ahn said. “I will remember that for the next one. And Ehl?”

“You cannot see your children without exerting effort, and neither of you ever bother exerting effort. Wanehl found me a century ago, and we’ve been planning this ever since.”

Ahn shook its head in a very human manner. “So we almost allowed the game to be destroyed because we were too busy watching the big picture and didn’t spend enough time on the minutia. There’s a lesson there, I believe.”

The flow of people had slowed, and Foster was grinning like a maniac at the sight of the dead and dying around him. The assassin had risen but was barely able to keep to his feet.

“There will come a time,” the knight said, “when someone will discover you are here and work out how to destroy you.”

Ahn didn’t laugh, because it never laughed, but there was amusement in its stolen voice, nonetheless. “After all this time you still don’t understand, do you? We cannot be destroyed, not even by each other. That’s what this is all about.” It gestured to the room and the ritual in progress. “When we killed her she wasn’t destroyed. Rather, she was simply suppressed. We cannot ever be truly defeated. Your scheme could never work, even if you’d managed to keep it from us.”

“There has to be hope.”

“A very human thing to believe.” Ahn focused on the room. “Watch. I believe this is where it all finally falls apart. Everyone in this room will soon be on their way to the nether, and the game can continue as it ever did.”

The knight didn’t want to look, didn’t want to watch the end of hope. But he turned, anyway, in time to see the assassin trip over the body of a fallen Littleton resident as he made his way to stop Foster.

 

 

Chapter 23

I slipped in blood and fell over one of the heavies from Littleton. My face smashed into the uneven metal floor.

Foster didn’t notice. He was moving toward Mouse’s body with the dagger held out in front of him. The energy flowing through the room pulsed like a heartbeat, quicker and quicker as he got nearer to her.

I pushed myself up. The weird power that had allowed me to escape Foster before was back, lending strength to my muscles when I should have been getting ready to die. My vision was blurring, though, and the pain was almost more than I could bear, but I forced myself to my feet and advanced. I pulled a blade from my belt and tried to aim through the haze threatening to swallow my consciousness.

Foster raised the blade as though to stab Mouse. My blade reached him first.

He cried out and the dagger fell to the floor. He turned to face me, my knife jutting from his back.

“Why aren’t you dead?” he said.

I attacked, faking a punch to his face as I slipped another knife into my free hand and drove it into his gut. He barely noticed as he grabbed me by the throat and lifted me off the floor. He squeezed with enough strength to crush my neck, but that power prevented it. He tried harder, his smile turning to confusion as it had no effect.

I couldn’t breathe, but I didn’t need to. I had a final knife in my hand and I drove it up under his chin and into his brain.

His eyes crossed and his mouth fell open as he let go of me. We crumpled to the ground together. The pulsing of the energy increased, as though it was excited by the sight of us killing each other.

Foster reached up to his face and removed the knife. It came free with a sucking sound and a fountain of blood. He began to rise again, his robe falling to the ground to expose his blood covered nudity.

I was done. I had nothing else to try, no more moves to make. Whatever he was planning to do, I knew I couldn’t stop him.

Mouse twitched on the table. I caught it from the corner of my eye and didn’t believe it, thinking it was the last gasps of my dying body playing tricks on my mind.

She twitched again, then reached up to touch her neck.

I had strength left, after all. I pushed myself up, my body seemingly weighing as much as a car. Foster was on his feet and heading for the dagger but he didn’t have it in his hands yet. I didn’t know how, but I knew that would be the end.

I managed to get to my feet and stumbled toward him. He reached down to pick it up and I punched him in the kidneys, knocking him over and to the ground.

I reached down for the dagger and watched it squirm away from me again, its movement like an optical illusion I could almost see clearly. Foster growled beside me and lashed out with a kick to my face, but I suddenly had the ancient blade in my hand. His foot rebounded from the energy around me.

I stood straight, every part of me screaming to give up, and turned to Mouse.

She was alive, and it was actually her and not some entity inhabiting her. She sat up and looked around the room until her eyes landed on me. Her look of confusion was the best thing I’d ever seen, because it meant she was alive again.

“We’re so close,” Foster said behind me. He was on his feet again but keeping his distance, afraid of the power I held in my hands. The bodies on the floor were starting to twitch as Mouse had.

“Tell me what to do,” I said, addressing the room.

“I must give her the blade to complete the ritual,” Foster said. “Give it to me.” But I wasn’t asking him.

A deputy rose from the pile of bodies on the floor. Her face was half burnt, her flesh removed down to the bone. When she spoke it was with a voice that came from outside her rather than from her mouth.

“Kill the disciple of Wrath and end the ritual. Disperse the power he has drawn here.”

“Who are you?” Foster said, the first touch of fear coloring his voice.

“What will happen to Mouse when I do that?” I could barely hear my voice over the sound of blood rushing in my head. The dagger was burning in my hand, charring the skin of my palm.

“She will fall once more,” the being riding the deputy said. “And I will bring her back for you.”

“And if I give Mouse the dagger myself?” I was walking toward her without thinking.

“You can’t,” Foster and the deputy said in unison.

“I think I can.” I held it out but Mouse didn’t take it. She didn’t know what was happening.

“I don’t know what’ll happen,” Foster said. “An incomplete ritual is a dangerous thing with unpredictable consequences. Give me the dagger.”

“Kill him and end this.” The deputy had her hands up as though to calm me. “You came here to rescue your friend, to bring her back. Give her the blade and it will have been for nothing.”

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