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Authors: Annie Reed

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Rites of Passage

 

 

 

Copyright Information

 

Rites of Passage

Copyright © 2015 by Annie Reed

Published by Thunder Valley Press

Cover and Layout copyright © 2015 Thunder Valley Press

Cover design by Thunder Valley Press

Cover art copyright © Netfalls/Bigstock.com

 

This book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. All rights reserved. This is a work of fiction. All characters and events portrayed in this book are fictional, and any resemblance to real people or incidents is purely coincidental. This book, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced in any form without permission.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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1

 

The creep sat crouched in the far corner of the abandoned processing plant smoking a cigarette. The tip flickered orange in the hulking dark, one small spot of smoldering warmth in the damp cold of a waterfront night.

Finn had given up cigarettes decades ago, but the old longing stole over him like it always did.

One more smoke for old time’s sake, what could it hurt? He wanted the comfort of a lit cigarette held loosely between his index and middle fingers. The taste as the smoke rolled across his tongue. Wanted to feel the kind of heat that would fill his lungs over and over again until it killed him. Eventually.

The creep would give Finn a cigarette if he asked.

Creeps would give him anything if they thought Finn would let them live.

To his left, a wharf rat the size of an alley cat scuttled along the base of the plant’s rust-stained concrete wall. The rat disappeared beneath a drift of trash, and insistent squeaks erupted from the garbage.

Finn could barely hear the rat’s babies over the passing thrum of a heavy bass beat. A car sped past the front of the processing plant, fleeing a neighborhood no one should be driving through at this time of night.

The creep ignored the wharf rat. It sat on its scaly haunches, wings tucked in behind its back, blowing smoke out through its nostrils and making a show of ignoring Finn.

So that’s the way the creep wanted to play it. Fine. Finn could play along.

For now.

He took a few more steps inside the processing plant, peering into the darkness for the first hints of eerie green light that would signal where the creep planned to bring its master into this world.

On another long ago night Finn had tracked a different creep to this building. Back then the processing plant had still been in operation. During the daylight hours, trucks loaded down with fish from the docks disgorged their cargo near where Finn now stood. Conveyor belts had carried the fish down the processing line where they were gutted and beheaded before they were processed for sale.

But once the sun set, the workers had gone home to their families. The few people left walking the street shivered when they passed the plant’s battered exterior, no doubt imagining that the darkened windows along its sides were malevolent eyes that watched them hungrily.

They weren’t far from wrong.

That night Finn had spotted a faint green light from outside the building. The creep had made no effort to hide what it was doing inside.

Finn had been much younger then. Maybe the creep had thought he would turn tail and run.

That was something Finn would never do. He knew what was at stake.

The creeps didn’t belong to this world. They had been sent here to prepare the way for the invasion of Finn’s world by their masters, massive monsters who would devour everything and everyone in their path.

The creeps had only one job—create a portal in this world, an anchor for one end of the passageway their masters used to invade new worlds.

Finn’s job, and the job of others like him, was to stop them.

The only way to stop them was to kill them. Killing them interrupted the flow of dark magic the creeps used to fuel the portal.

And the only way to kill them was to cut off their heads.

The green light Finn had seen from outside the building signaled a location where the border between worlds was the thinnest, but the green light was only visible once a creep had started working on the portal. Even then, only a select few could see it.

Finn could. It was the first reason Finn had been chosen for this job.

But it was only one reason.

The creep that night had been crafty and more powerful than any creep Finn had encountered before. Instead of starting one portal, it was creating dozens.

Dozens of possible entry points, each one nearly complete.

Dozens of possible places where a monster could enter Finn’s world.

The tactic had nearly worked.

Distracted by the sheer number of portals, Finn hadn’t seen the creep dive at him from the pipework over his head.

The creeps had the shape of men, but that was where the resemblance ended. Their thick bodies were covered with scales the color of bilge water. Their arms were heavily muscled, their fingers tipped in razor-sharp talons. Their leathery wings were tipped with barbs. Except for their angry yellow eyes, they were nearly impossible to see in the dark.

The attack had come so fast, Finn had no chance to draw his blade. He had to dodge away from dive-bombing nightmare instead.

He didn’t quite make it.

The creep’s talons missed his neck but ripped into his shoulder.

Finn went sprawling on the dirty concrete floor. Pain shot down his arm and raced along his spine, hot white and urgent.

Before the creep could attack him again, Finn struggled to his feet and drew his katana in as smooth a move as he could manage.

The creep propelled itself back to the ceiling, its heavy wings churning up a windstorm inside the plant. It taunted Finn with curses and promises of a long and painful death, but Finn focused on the creep’s movements, not its words.

They had fought that night among the machines and the belts. Over the piles of entrails and fish heads, sending the scavenging wharf rats scurrying for safer ground.

Finn had ignored the way his blood fell in thick splatters every time he swung his blade.

Ignored the bone-rattling thrumming coming from the dozens of portals.

Ignored the rumbling, grating laughter as the creep’s master shoved its bulk through a passageway that had no right to exist.

Finn’s injury had sapped his strength, but at last his blade found its mark. He’d put every spare ounce of strength he had left into the swing of his katana, and the creep’s mottled head had separated cleanly from it shoulders.

When the creep died, the portals faded from existence—each and every one—as if they’d never existed at all.

Finn had allowed himself a grim smile when the creep’s master screamed, the sound of its fury fading to a distant echo.

Stuck in the passageway with no place to go.

“Take that, monster,” Finn had said, his voice little more than a hoarse whisper.

The scars on his shoulder from that long-ago encounter had faded. He had new ones to replace them, and when those faded, more would take their place.

He was a Guardian. Scars came with the job.

Ever since that night, Finn had checked the processing plant just in case another creep decided to try creating a portal there. Tonight was the first time he’d seen another creep inside.

The belts and machines and shipping crates that had cluttered the floor of the processing plant were gone now. The place was nothing more than a deserted building in a long row of deserted buildings in a part of town the city fathers didn’t like to acknowledge existed. It still smelled of fish guts and seaweed and the oily murk that dripped off the overhead pipes.

Street gangs had claimed this place as their own. Graffiti marking their territory covered the walls. Only in this part of town—the rough part of town—goblins ran the gangs. Finn had recognized the ruins they’d mixed in with the graffiti. Simple threshold wards, most of them.

Thresholds wards didn’t work on someone like him. He’d broken through just by stepping inside.

Enough faint streetlight filtered through the filthy windows that Finn could see the creep still crouched in the corner. Its mottled, brackish face was surrounded by a thick cloud of cigarette smoke, but Finn caught no hint of green light.

The creep hadn’t started a portal yet.

“Nice place you got here,” Finn said. “Love what you’ve done with the décor.”

The cigarette flared brighter, then the creep chuckled, a deep, throaty sound. “Only for you, asshole.”

“I’m flattered.”

The creep nodded its head. If it had been wearing a hat, it might have tipped it in Finn’s direction.

Creeps never acted so nonchalant, not around him.

Another car drove by, its bass-heavy music rattling the windows. Different song, same beat. Finn preferred classic rock.

He moved closer, his katana a comforting weight in the sheath against his back.

“Got one of those for me?” he asked, pantomiming taking a drag off a cigarette.

The creep studied him for a moment before it shrugged and reached down beside itself toward the floor.

Finn tensed. He didn’t draw his blade, not yet, but he had a feeling the creep had noticed his reaction.

He also had a feeling the creep was enjoying this.

Instead of drawing a weapon, the creep merely tossed a pack of cigarettes in Finn’s direction. “Knock yourself out,” it said.

The cigarettes landed on the floor a few inches in front of Finn. He didn’t bend to pick them up, just arched an eyebrow at the creep.

“That’s not very hospitable.”

“My aim sucks,” the creep said. “So sue me.”

Finn ignored the cigarettes. He still didn’t see any hint of green light, not even in the windows. Eyes might be the windows to the soul, as the old saying went, but real windows made for easy places to frame a portal to another world.

Or dozens of portals.

This whole thing was downright weird.

“So what’s the deal?” Finn asked. “You’re just hanging out, having a smoke?”

“No law against it,” the creep said.

That wasn’t quite true. While no laws prevented this world’s magic folk from moving freely about the city—provided they didn’t practice magic without the proper licenses and permits—the creeps weren’t from this world.

The creeps were basically illegal aliens, and hostile ones at that. Finn was within his rights to kill them. He even had a license to prove it.

Take that, 007.

“No law against me taking your head,” Finn said.

The creep went very still, the cigarette still in its mouth. Smoke swirled around its head. “You see a portal here?” it asked.

“You’re here. That’s all I need.”

“Not very sporting of you. Guardian.”

Outside another car drove past the plant. More window-rattling music. Finn was starting to yearn for a good Aerosmith song to break up the monotony.

He’d had enough of the creep, too. It was sparring with him. It might not have opened a portal yet, but it would. Finn had never met a creep who lived for anything else.

“Who said this is a sport?” Finn asked.

He started to draw his katana from its sheath when something popped behind him, and an unseen fist slammed into his left shoulder.

The impact nearly knocked him to his knees.

“We do, asshole.”

The new voice came from a broken window in the back of the plant. The voice was grating and guttural and unmistakable.

A goblin.

Not only a goblin. A goblin with a
gun
.

How was that even possible?

The creep laughed as more guttural voices took up the words and turned them into a chant.

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