Authors Note: The
following story takes place between The Chronicles of Jack Primus book I
and book II. Jack is still living in Boston, spending most of his time
studying the ways of the Stalwart with the ‘Man in Brown,’ Phillip
Brownhurst.
Even
though almost three months had passed since Jack moved into the storage
room in the back of Phillip Brownhurst’s tavern, it was still hard for
him to get used to having a bar be his home. Phillip had his own place
not too far away and although the Dionysus follower spent much of his
time with Jack, on most mornings Primus found himself wandering through
the chairs and tables alone.
He
bellied up to the bar and focused on downing a half-dozen cold chicken
wings and getting some caffeine into his system. He had just opened his
second can of soda when he heard a cry coming from the alley behind the
bar.
Slowing
only long enough to grab a baseball bat, he was half way into the alley
when he remembered that perhaps he should have called Phillip first. Too late now, he thought as his boots took him into the early morning mists.
Gray
still owned the morning and made him wonder if the Glooms could somehow
be involved with whatever occurred behind the tavern. Phillip had
warned him that Stalwarts often see Xemmoni everywhere when there was
plenty of mundane evil to go around without any help from supernatural
masters.
The
strange thing was he couldn’t see anything. Then he looked down and
spotted small circles of darkness on the cracked pavement. It didn’t
take him long to recognize it as blood. It looked like a trail, but did
it head left or right. He might only have seconds…
He enacted his Detect Darken
spell. His Ki sent it moving through the clinging mists. He wouldn’t
help him detect a decent person or maybe even an evil uncorrupted man,
but if a Xemmoni was involved it would alert him at once.
At
first he thought that he had stumbled into a more normal conflict, but
then his spell reached something moving to his right. Like a thorn on
malign energy, a sick purple aura stabbed through his awareness. Violet,
the color of decaying flesh, disturbed and distorted the very reality
it passed through.
“A Hyades,” he whispered. “The silent stalkers.”
Whatever it was, it appeared big and powerful. Crap, Jack thought. Maybe I should have called Phillip first or grabbed a better weapon. But then the scream sounded again, maybe a hundred feet away and certainly female. Screw that, he chided himself. I never had help before and I’ve been through worse with less.
A second later he was running west. A second after that a strange banging could be heard echoing through the lonely alley.
Whatever
chased the woman was between Jack and the screams. Something tall,
wide, and loud loomed up out of the fog. Jack slowed his sprint. The
figure had to be almost seven feet tall, but even from the distance, it
looked odd. Everything about it seemed square. Like a child had created a
giant out of building blocks. Legs and chest were rectangle in shape as
was its head.
As
Jack drew closer, he saw the cause. Whatever this thing might be, it
appeared to have made a suit of armor for itself. But this was nothing
like medieval armor that matched a person’s form. This armor appeared
bulky, like some guy used a blow torch in his basement and welded thick
sheet of metal into squares, which covered most of his frame.
Just
past the Xemmoni, Jack could make out a woman dragging herself along
the pavement. One of her legs appeared useless and she released a third
scream as the steel giant moved in for the kill.
“Hey,
Tin Woodsman,” Jack called out. “Care to see what it’s like taking on
someone who isn’t helpless or are you too chickenshit for that? Maybe
you should just stay at home and pull the wings off of flies you poor
man’s Iron…”
But
Jack’s bravado faded with his voice as the thing turned toward him.
Glowing violet eyes cut through the fog and for a moment, Jack wondered
if maybe the creature could be a machine of some kind, but then the
booming metal feet started to come toward him. The armor squeaked and
rattled, but looked thick and sturdy. Along each of the Xemmoni’s steel
legs, as well as its forearms, large knives nearly the size of machetes
appeared to be built into the armor itself. The space on its left arm
was empty for a two foot, back hued blade already rested in its right
hand.
Jack
didn’t wait to be attacked. He yelled for the woman to flee and then
went in low and tried to smash the mountain of metal on the knee. He
might as well swung at a lamppost. His fingers throbbed from the impact,
but it didn’t slow the man down for a second. It swung its blade in a
wide arc and Jack was just able to move back in time to keep from
sprouting a second mouth.
Jack
swung again, but the Xemmoni just held up its armored left arm. And
there was another bone rattling blow to his hands. This time, with
surprising speed, he hacked down at Jack. The Stalwart cried out when
the blade cut him from his right collar bone to the bottom of his
ribcage. If he had been a couple of inches closer his bowls would have
spilled over the pavement.
As
it was, Jack almost lost his footing as he back pedaled away from the
Hyades and healed himself. The wound was bad and he felt a sliver of
fear when he realized he’d already burned through half his KI.
But
the creature proved relentless and rushed at him swinging again. This
time Jack blocked it with his bat, but at the price of losing a foot off
the tip of his weapon. He lunched what was left at the Xemmoni’s face.
It hit the stark helmet there, but the unexpected blow caused the man of
metal to take a step back. During this pause, Jack rushed away. But he
remained weaponless and hadn’t even hurt the thing yet.
Sirens
cut through the cold morning air. The Xemmoni stared at Jack. Their
eyes met and Jack felt his blood run cold against his spine. Yet,
instead of attacking him, the killer drew an object off its back. It
proved to be a crowbar and with no great hurry it moved to the nearest
manhole, pulled the top off, and then climbed in. The top was replaced
and Jack was alone in the alley.
Alone
in the alley… with cops coming. Some luck remained with him for he was
still only a few hundred feet shy of the tavern and he was just able to
make it through the back door when three squad cars tore into the alley.
“Son of a bitch,” he panted. “Phillip isn’t going to believe this one.”
To be continued next Monday
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