Heaven and EarthA Story by Sam AmmonsA short story of fantasy and science fiction.Heaven and Earth
The light of the full moon glistened through the clouds drifting in the night sky. Moonlight shone on the East River to reflect off the black water along with the lights from the New York City skyline. Silhouettes of old warehouses sitting on an abandoned wharf with skeletal docks and piers left to rot in the water could be seen in the dark. Two shadowy figures crept over the roof of one of the buildings. The two men stopped suddenly, and dropped into a crouch as the moon briefly came out from behind the clouds casting an eerie pale light on them. They continued to one of the skylights when the clouds moved to obscure the moon once more. Carillon knelt beside the skylight. Magus reached down and heaved it open with a grunt. The metal frame creaked in protest. Carillon urgently placed his index finger to his lips. Magus nodded, slipping through the hole, and onto the rafters stretching across the warehouse ceiling. Carillon turned making his way to another skylight some distance away. He crept through the open skylight catching a handhold on the steel rafters five stories above the floor. He carefully made his way across the spiderweb of rafters to the center of the warehouse. He sank deeper into the shadows and peered down to the floor below. A group of about twenty robed and hooded figures were filing into the warehouse lighting candles sitting on stacked empty crates. Five gaunt frames filled red robes. They moved in a strange sort of gate. An odd decayed smell filled the air. Strangely sweet. Carillon built a spell by tracing invisible lines in the air with his fingers, and muttering under his breath in a forgotten language. He cupped his hands, and made a tossing motion as if he were releasing a bird from his open palms. The spell was intended to identify the people in the building. Their thoughts and feelings came to him in flashes, like fireflies in a summer storm. He could feel anxious fear coming from the figures dressed in the black robes still lighting candles under him. He shifted his attention to the red hooded figures. Carillon drew in a sharp breath. The feelings from them were alien and primal. The red hooded figures were not human. He expanded the spell, probing further to try and sense everyone in the building, and immediately felt the power of another magic user. For an instant, he thought it was Magus, but realized it was the thoughts of a woman. He focused his thoughts toward her in an attempt to sense more from the woman. Abruptly, Carillon broke the spell. The malevolence coming from her was staggering. He quickly looked across the ceiling to where Magus had gone through the skylight. Carillon could faintly make out an arm against one of the distant rafters. He pictured Magus in his mind's eye, then built another spell tracing different lines in the air, and touching his lips with his index and middle finger, pointed them toward Magus. "Careful, Magus, I can see your arm," Carillon warned, his voice not even a whisper. Magus' arm slowly turned black, and appeared as just another shadow. "Black steel, Magus? I'm impressed." "You're easily impressed, my friend. I've been practicing with Malachi for two weeks. First time I tried it, I turned purple, and she had to reverse it for me." Magus had a deep east Asian accent. This time Carillon laughed. “There's an Aryan women in the building, Magus." “She didn’t sense you did she?” "No. I ended the spell in time. . .I think." “You think? Well, if you didn’t I’m sure they’ll enjoy your British charm.” Magus ended his spell, and after ending his own, Carillon looked down to watch the gathering below. A large pentagram was painted on the floor; surrounded by an enormous circle. The five red hooded figures walked to the points of the star, while the rest stood on the painted circle, once in place, all of the shrouded figures knelt on both knees. The orange flames from the candles made it appear as if the kneeling figures moved in the dancing light. They then began a rhythmic chant. There was a stone altar in the center of the star. Just then, three more people entered the large warehouse. Two wore hooded black robes, and they were holding a young woman between them dressed in alabaster. Tears were streaming down her face as they walked to the altar. They lifted her roughly before slamming her on top of the altar, binding her hands and feet. She struggled to break free. Carillon looked at Magus and built the spell once more. "We have a problem, Magus," he said after releasing the spell. “I noticed. We should go now,” came the reply. "No. No. Not yet," Carillon said. "Keep the spell open, I'm going to see if the other magic user is down there." Carillon ended the spell, but Magus continued his in order to hear him. The spell he was about to use was a fairly complex one. If one made any mistakes with the gestures or mispronounced the words, all sorts of things could go terribly wrong. Carillon preferred to forgo the pleasure of having a second head appear on his shoulders, or have the entire building crash around everyone's head. He went over the spell in his mind several times. Once he was satisfied with the pronunciation, he began tracing invisible lines in the air with his fingers, while chanting under his breath. When the spell reached it's end, Carillon gestured toward the ritual. Gradually, an aura of black appeared around the figures in the red hoods. The black hooded figures had auras of a colorless gray with flecks of black crawling here and there like ants swarming an anthill. The woman tied to the table was bathed in a silvery white. "The hooded figures in red robes aren't human, Magus," he said. Just then a woman walked from the shadows of the warehouse toward the altar. Carillon could see her aura was completely black with red fiery energy leaping here and there over her body. He broke the spell and the aura surrounding the woman vanished. "It's, Calyx, Magus. Let's move. You get the woman on the altar, and I'll take care of Calyx." Carillon and Magus leapt at the same time. Carillon landed with little sound, but Magus hit the floor with a resounding boom. Spider- webbed cracks shot this way and that in the concrete. He was still using the spell that had turned his body to black steel. Magus thundered his way to the altar and started to free the woman after gesturing with his hand to conjure a knife out of thin air. Carillon raised his hand shooting a ball of brilliant blue lightening at Calyx. The Aryan woman shrank down to a small rodent in a blink of an eye, and dodged the crackling ball of energy. The orb of lightening arched toward one of the iron girders supporting a wall slamming into it with a great shower of sparks. Calyx scurried away to avoid the flying debris. Carillon felt a slight tingling of his skin. A sign someone was directing a spell at him. He reacted instantly and raised his arm above his head. Streams of lightening erupted from his hand to arch over the robed figures who were getting to their feet. The black hooded figures scattered, but the red hooded figures ripped off their robes with inhuman hands. Magus had set the woman free by this time, and lifted her from the altar. Magus gestured with his hand once he set her on the floor making the knife liquid to grow and solidify into a broadsword. Carillon moved to Magus' side. "They’re draken," he said to Magus calmly. The two men moved toward them, putting themselves between the beasts and the woman who was to be sacrificed. The draken were dark creatures born from nightmares. The Aryan Knights pulled them from another time, another dimension, using dark magic to change, mold them, so they could serve on Earth. Forbidden spells. They were bat-like insects with talons for fingers, and knees hinged backwards. One of the eight foot tall creatures launched itself into the air at Carillon and Magus. Carillon raised his hand muttering two quick words. The thing paused in mid-air. He then threw down his hand like he were throwing something to the ground causing the draken to smash into the ground with a sickening crunch. Two of the things attacked Magus. His movements with the sword were timed and his strikes perfectly placed. Both of their heads sailed through the air and fell at the feet of the astonished onlookers in black robes. The last two mindless brutes were almost on top of Carillon. He rolled his hands in the air in front of him as if he were running his hands around a globe. A large ball of lightening fizzled, and burned into existence. He threw it at the closest creature. The ball of lightening crackled, and buzzed as it flew through the air, slamming into one of the creatures. Lightening jumped from one beast to another burning one in half turning it to dust. The rest of its body crumpled to the floor. Wisps of smoke rose from the body of the last as it stood transfixed in place. The stench of burning flesh and metallic ozone filled the air. Magus gestured with his free hand conjuring another broadsword out of thin air, and ran the last one through with both swords. He ripped both swords from its body cutting the thin creature in half. The woman that was on the altar came to their side. The air over the stone altar suddenly shimmered as if it were molten glass. It sent waves of heat across the room. Arius emerged from the mirrored portal and stepped down from the stone. He was the leader of the Aryan Knights. Calyx came forward, changed back to human form and knelt in front of him. He only glanced at her nakedness before glaring darkly at Carillon and Magus. They both felt an oppressive pressure at the back of their skulls as if someone were trying to crush them. Magus raised his swords. "Why hast thou intruded upon this ritual?" Arius demanded. His voice echoed like hundreds had spoken at once. "Because it was an offense against humanity, Arius," Carillon spoke just as sternly, stepping forward. Arius' laugh echoed through the building vibrating the cement floor under their feet. "Dost ye think that thy magic wilt protect thee from mine wrath?" "You know as well as I do that you must have others do your bidding." "Insolent, wretch. Dost ye think that those present cannot defeat thee?" The black hooded figures began to advance on Carillon, Magus, and the woman. Magus tossed Carillon a sword, and with the same fluid motion, made another appear to replace it almost as soon as the first had left his grasp. Carillon thought very quickly at this point. "Don't you think they should know what they're worshiping? Why don't you show them what servitude means to you, Arius?" Carillon quickly built a spell, and before anyone could do anything to stop him, he released it toward the hooded people. The spells only purpose was to allow them to see through Arius' glamour spell, and see his true form instead of the illusion. The men and women under those black robes stared in horror at Arius. Pestilence and decay were not easy things to see in a soul. They screamed, and ran for their lives, tearing off the robes in their flight to escape. They would remember their sojourn into the darkness for as long as they lived. Once they had gone, Arius stared hard at Carillon. "Ye hadst nerve, Carillon," Arius said through clenched teeth. "They deserved to know the truth before they were lost to you, Arius," Carillon said as Magus and the woman in white moved behind him. "Long hast thou and thine kind been bothersome to me and mine." "And we'll continue to do so. For as long as it takes." "Ye forget thyself, Celestial Knight. Hast ye forgotten thine kinds defeat? Thy number is nay sacred. Without the seventh, all Celestial Knights hast been doomed." Arius gestured to Calyx. She rose to her feet and stepped onto the altar and disappeared in the shimmering air. "That remains to be seen," Carillon answered. Arius' laugh echoed through the building. "Thou wilt be defeated Celestial. And with thou," Arius said, "all humanity shalt be mine." "You'll have to get better creatures then," Magus said gesturing to the dead on the floor. "It is of no moment, Magus. The draken are endless. Mine Aryan Knights wilt defeat thee, and with this, the accursed Celestial bloodline will be no more." "That will never happen," Carillon said before Magus could lose his temper, "As long as one of us lives, there is always hope." "Mine point exactly, Carillon," Arius howled with laughter. The sound was so loud the three of them had to put their hands over their ears. Windows in the warehouse shattered sending shards to crash on the floor. Arius stepped up into the portal and disappeared. The shimmering air rippled like waves in a pool of water and vanished. The heat abated with the disappearance of the mirrored gate. The echo of Arius' departing laugh faded; the only sound was that of the last fragments of glass falling to the ground, along with the weeping sobs of the woman after she buried her face in Magus' steel-clad arms.
© 2019 Sam AmmonsAuthor's Note
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