Chapter 7: Past Midnight
Kaelen staggered to his feet, each movement sending a fresh wave of pain coursing through his battered body. His chest heaved, lungs struggling to draw breath after the relentless onslaught from his brother, Jason.
For a moment, the world around him tilted violently, as though he stood on the edge of a precipice, his body threatening to give out beneath him. His head throbbed with a sharp, persistent pain—a clear sign of a concussion—but sheer force of will dragged him upright. He blinked hard, trying to focus, the ghostly afterimage of Jason’s last hit still burning in his mind.
Out of the corner of his eye, Kaelen saw a flicker of movement—Red Dot. Mason’s dark silhouette shimmered for a brief moment before he vanished, teleporting into the shadows, leaving nothing behind but a faint ripple in the air. Kaelen barely registered it; his thoughts were too tangled, too sluggish to fully grasp anything beyond the fight. Every nerve in his body screamed with exhaustion, but the fire in his chest kept burning. He wasn’t finished.
Jason moved with swift precision, already attending to his downed team. Bolt lay motionless, sprawled out on the cold concrete, still struggling to recover from Kaelen’s telekinetic attack. Patch was slumped against the wall, half-buried in debris from the force of Kaelen’s energy blast. Glitch groaned, gripping her head, clearly still rattled by the shockwave. Only Surge remained standing, though her wide-eyed expression betrayed the turmoil within. Jason, once brimming with cocky confidence, now wore a mask of concern, his usual bravado tempered by the sight of his comrades battered and broken.
Above them, the elite spectators—draped in wealth and secrecy, their faces hidden behind masquerade masks adorned with Roman numerals—rose from their plush seats in the balconies. Their departure was silent and eerily synchronized. They glided out, the whispers of expensive fabrics the only sound accompanying their exit. No applause. No cheers. To them, this fight was just another fleeting spectacle, a momentary distraction in a life filled with power and privilege.
In the back of the warehouse, the air buzzed with hushed conversations. The spectators who had come to witness the underground brawl were caught between awe and disbelief, their eyes darting toward Kaelen, murmuring his name with a mix of reverence and curiosity. He could hear their fragmented sentences—snippets of praise, fear, and speculation—all melding into a chorus of voices that quickly faded as the crowd began to disperse. Yet, some lingered, their excited chatter continuing, dissecting the battle they had just witnessed.
Kaelen leaned heavily against a nearby pillar, the rough texture of the metal digging into his shoulder as he gasped for breath. His entire body ached, muscles burning from the intensity of the fight. His mind, however, was already shifting, trying to compartmentalize the chaos. He caught sight of Strike—her lithe form cutting through the thinning crowd, the bandages around her arms a stark reminder of her own earlier battle. Her stride was purposeful, yet something in her eyes seemed softer, more curious than before.
Before she could reach him, the air in the warehouse thickened, tinged with a darkness. A ripple of cold, otherworldly energy slithered through the shadows, coiling around the edges of his awareness. His eyes darted toward the source, where a figure emerged from the inky blackness—a necromancer. The same one who had orchestrated the earlier trials, summoning undead monsters to test the fighters. The pale glow of his eyes was the only light that pierced the gloom around him.
The necromancer stepped forward, his movements fluid, his skeletal hands clasping a dark staff. His face was gaunt, almost skeletal, illuminated by an eerie glow that seemed to pulse with the rhythm of his voice. “My mentor has taken a liking to you,” he said, each word carrying the weight of something ancient and malevolent. “He’s eager to meet you. He believes you have… potential.”
Kaelen’s heart pounded, but his face remained unreadable. The necromancer’s eyes glittered as he extended a hand, offering a small, ornate card. It was unnervingly pristine, like a relic from another era. The name etched on it in silver: Valerian Drakov. Below it, contact details. Kaelen stared at the card for a long moment before slipping it into his pocket.
Without another word, the necromancer dissolved into the shadows, his presence evaporating like mist at dawn. Kaelen exhaled a breath he didn’t realize he had been holding.
“Making all kinds of friends, I see,” Strike’s voice pierced through the tension, her tone light but tinged with intrigue. She had stopped a few feet away, arms crossed, studying him carefully. “And here I was, about to ask if you wanted to form a team.”
Kaelen’s exhaustion caught up with him then, but her offer stirred something in him—a sense of purpose he hadn’t expected. Despite the weight of the day, he found himself nodding. “I’d be down,” he said, his voice steady despite the fatigue pulling at him. “But I’ve got a shift at Zeke’s Convenience Store tomorrow night. Four hours. I’ll be free by 1 AM.”
Strike smiled, a flicker of something warmer passing through her eyes. “I’ll meet you there. In my civvies this time.”
The brief handshake they exchanged felt like more than just a formal gesture. It was the beginning of something deeper. As they exchanged contact information, Kaelen could feel the shift, the weight of their choices settling in.
Exiting the warehouse, Kaelen found the night had grown colder. His muscles were stiff, but the crisp air helped revive him. He walked toward his Audi, feeling the ever-present hum of the city as distant sirens echoed through the streets. His phone buzzed in his pocket—it was Jason.
“Lil bro, nothing personal about that fight,” Jason’s familiar voice broke the silence, though this time it carried a layer of warmth, as if their brutal confrontation hadn’t driven a wedge between them. “Had to get my stack up a bit, you know? No hard feelings.”
Leaning against his car, Kaelen sighed, his breath a mist in the cold air. “None taken.”
Jason’s tone shifted, growing more serious. “Listen, I wanna make it up to you. There’s this casino—Bankhands runs it. Don Cappo asked me to join him on a heist there tomorrow. We hit it at 2 AM. What do you say?”
Kaelen thought for a moment, weighing the risks. His mind flashed to the card in his pocket, the necromancer’s offer, and now Jason’s plan. “I’m in,” he finally said, voice firm. “But I want 25 percent of the cut.”
Jason chuckled on the other end, the sound familiar and almost comforting. “Deal, lil bro. See you there.”
The call ended, and as Kaelen drove through the neon-lit streets of Ravetham, he passed under flickering streetlights, their glow casting long shadows across the cracked pavement. The city seemed alive with a restless energy, the hum of distant traffic and the occasional wail of a siren. Kaelen pulled into the parking lot of the Midnight Mirage Motel.