That yearâ¦. That first year went fast. Each of us had celebrated a birthday here, and I was coming up to my next one, twelve. Reece was five⦠and he had grown quick too, so damn fast.
Our new life was very different.
The electric from the grid had failed in the first month, there were some old school signals dad said, analogue I think but then after than nothing at all in terms of news, of people.
Our daily life revolved around so many things and foraging for food was the biggest. My days were alternated, Iâd be out hunting and trapping with dad, and learning all kinds of outdoor survival skills, then with Mom we studied the books from the shop on all the wildlife, local animals. Not that there were many around now. Theyâd almost vanished, a bit like all the people had.
But with foraging, learning about the plants too, it wasnât long though that we had mushrooms, leafy plants, and root vegetables plucked from the surrounding forests. If mom was doing the heavy work. I was keeping Reece occupied and watching her back.
Watching her back had become a must. There were drifting monsters coming in now, and no matter how much of a warning Dadâs alarm system gave us, it was never enough. Just like he said, I had to listen and watch.
It was about six months after weâd settled in the cabin when it happened. Mom was harvesting mushrooms near the tree line, and I was watching Reece play with sticks nearby. The alarm system sounded, and putting my fingers to my mouth I let out a sharp whistle.
Mom looked back at me, and she paled. Before mom could do anything, I saw it, something on four legs and dam was it running fast.
In a split second I had the guns sight to my eye, the safety off and my finger on the trigger. I didnât have any other time to react, but I had to be sure of my shot. It was running straight for her.
I saw Momâs fire spark, but I was faster, the animal in my sight, and the trigger pulled.
Dad had let me see as close as possible what the recoil was like on this gun and his larger weapons when he shot rabbit, or other animals for us. But nothing prepared me for that first time. It wasnât as bad as Iâd feared - more of a firm push against my shoulder than the violent kick Iâd imagined.
But the creature hadnât gone down, it was lurching instead of running. The bolt action of this rifle meant that it was a much easier reload, quick lift and pull back the bolt to eject the spent casing.
I sighted again and pulled the trigger.
This time though it was maybe fifty feet from my mom, it went down.
Mom turned to look at me, her fires till sparking and I ran for her.
Recognizing First Kill - Stri-Cat
Recognizing Skill
Shooter
Skill will not upgrade till puberty.
Mom clung to me, but I wanted to see what it was, my eyes scanning the terrain.
âThere,â Mom shouted, but Iâd already spotted another one.
âI see it. Thereâs another one?â My voice was steady, focusing on the threat like Dad had taught me.
âI count six,â Dad came in behind us panting. âHeard the alarm and the gunshots.â
We watched in horror as the other critters popped up, stopped, seemingly communicated with each other, then stalked around us.
âWhereâs Reece?â Dad asked.
âThe play pen,â Mom said.
âSlowly,â Dad said and waved his hand so weâd back off.
Slow it was, we kept our eyes on the Stri-Cats and moved as one.
When they wanted to though, they roared, and then they lunged.
Dad was faster than me with his gun and much more accurate. I hit one again but didnât knock it out. Heâd hit two and was moving to get the fourth. Five and Six though, they were nowhere to be seen.
Then in that instant, one was before me, and I did the only thing I could when it opened its large mouth, showing me razor sharp teeth, I pushed the gun into its face and fired.
Dad got number five and mom let loose with a flaming hurtling stream of fire at number six.
Recognizing Second Kill - Stri-Cat
By the time we reached Reece he just looked up, and said, âHungry.â
Mom took him and we walked slow back to the cabin, Dad and I never leaving our eyes off the surroundings.
âWe might need to take it in turns to watch at night,â Dad said.
âThat will make any day jobs, much harder,â Mom added.
Dad looked at me. âYou can take south side on your own, right Cer?â
I was nodding but mom was not.
And that was how the next few days went. I did take the south side, the furthest away from the main roads, the closest to any critters, but nothing else came our way.
Those days turned to weeks, and then months.
We worked as a team and when dad was out fishing, I was now checking all the traps. Every single day.
On days when mom was too exhausted and Reece was extra cranky, like all kids are when they reach teething and the terrible that get into everything phase, I stayed with her no matter what jobs I should have been doing.
Winter set in, and we ran out of propane. Dad couldnât do anything else, so we packed up the truck and we moved to the next house, and then the next. Till out of eight properties, weâd used four.
The following summer Dad and I cut trees and loaded the next two houses up with wood, we were practical, systematic.
Mom and Dads âmagicâ was growing stronger. Every time they went out, every time they practiced, and when dad wasnât there, I helped mom strengthen her control. âFocus on your breathing, Mom,â Iâd tell her. âPicture the fire as an extension of yourself, not something separate.â I sounded like one of those meditation guides from the old YouTube videos, but it seemed to help.
This text was taken from Royal Road. Help the author by reading the original version there.
Those logs helped the propane last longer, at least better for cooking. It also kept us warmer in the cabin. Eventually though, no matter how prepared we were, things were starting to run out.
I was thirteen now, at least I thought I was, mom had tried to help track the days in an old journal, but they blurred the only things that were consistent were tracking the weather, the days, the rain, the spring summer, and then winters.
âI have to start going farther, maybe the next town,â Dad said as he sat before the fire one night.
âYou canât go alone,â Mom begged him. His only other option, their option was to leave us. At first that worked. But thenâ¦.
Reece and I got sick.
I donât recall much of that time, though I knew it was bad.
Dad had tried to use his skill of protector to manipulate the magic around us for healing but nothing heâd tried worked. Weâd ran out of drugs that were worth anything so that meant, he had to travel.
Dad went further afield and brought medicine home. It was only later that we started to get better, that he got sick, and then so did mom.
It was freezing out, so cold. I did the only thing I could: I kept the fire going, I did for them what theyâd done for me. I spoon fed them both and kept Reece occupied as much as I could. I set traps, though a lot closer to home and I cooked. It wasnât anything special, but the broth and the meat was enough for them to get better too.
Mom looked me in the eyes that day, and cried, she cried so hard.
***
âWeâve got to make a plan for leaving the valley,â Dad said one night. âItâs clear weâre done here, thereâs nothing trapping, the wood weâre storing is no way enough for winter.â
âWe canât leave,â Mom fought, but it was a weak effort.
Iâd pretended as usual to fall asleep in the chair. Usually, dad would have moved me by now, taken me to bed, even if I was a teen.
This time he hadnât. I knew he was letting me listen. Heâd been doing that more lately - treating me less like a child and more like part of the decision-making team.
âWeâve seen settlements,â he prompted her.
Wait, I almost sat upright. There were other people out there, theyâd seen them.
âTheyâre not safe, and you know it,â Mom said.
âWe have to try, Mirta, we need more for the kids.â
âYou always blame the kids,â Mom spat, but I knew she didnât mean it quite like that.
âLetâs go to those in the town center, early tomorrow. Let the kids sleep in. Weâll be back before they know it.â
Mom relented way too soon, and I felt bad for her. Only then did Dad come and move me, gently placing me in bed before kissing my forehead.
I lay there thinking about what Iâd heard. Other settlements. People. After three years of just the four of us, the thought was both thrilling and terrifying. But why wouldnât they tell us? And why go without us?
I let my mind drift, and then the next thing I heard was the door going.
It really was early, very early, and following them was rough. Iâd already tucked a note under Reeceâs stuffed bear explaining Iâd be back soon, and left him food and water by his bed. Heâd be fine for a couple hours - he usually slept late anyway.
I kept my rifle tucked in behind me and kept pace. I was proud of my stalking, it had become a real skill the last year, tracking with Dad. Iâd even surprised him a few times while he was fishing, he never heard me coming, not at all.
Iâd never been this far out of the Valley though, everything was different, cars abandoned in the middle of streets, rotting away to nothing but rusty shells. Some covered in vines and even trees sprouted out of them.
Mom and Dad made their steps very clear. And I wasnât brave enough to veer off at all, even if I thought something looked interesting.
âNot today, Cerys,â I muttered to myself. âStay focused.â No detours, no matter how curious I was about the ruins of this civilization.
Thatâs when I heard a deep male voice. âHello there.â
My heart nearly stopped. Another person! A strangerâs voice after all this time was almost shocking to hear.
My ears⦠Iâd never heard anything as exciting. I wanted to see, but I couldnât from here, this is where to get closer I would have to sneak around them. So carefully, making sure my foot holds were solid I made my way around.
âHello,â Dad called back. âWeâre looking for somewhere to stay, my wife and I.â
No mention of children? I tensed. This was why they hadnât told us - they were hiding our existence from these people.
Why? I was confused.
âWell then,â I could see the man step forward, he was covered in thick clothing, though it wasnât pre fall clothing, this was hand made. Iâd seen mom patch many things for Reece as I as we had grown in sizes the last few years, but this⦠was interesting.
âWhatâs in the bags?â the man asked.
âNothing,â Mom said. âWeâre scouting, hoping to find things.â
âThrow them over,â he said. This time though he was waving a gun. âAnd put your gun down too. Then back away.â
I crouched lower, my finger moving to the trigger guard of my rifle. Something wasnât right. Dad had taught me to read body language - this man wasnât interested in making friends.
I didnât think Dad was going to let them anywhere near his gun, they were our only weaponâs even if Mom had fire.
Which as soon as the man stepped forward, she reacted with, bright red sparks flew from her fingers.
The man screamed then. âJames! We got some fresh abilities out here, best come see.â
My parents were surrounded in seconds and the people doing so had animals with them.
Lunging on a rather large chain length leash was a massive three headed dog, and a woman to his left also had a huge, leashed cat of some kind. No⦠it was like those ones that caught us off guard a year or so back. Tri-Cat.
My parents through their bags down, and reluctantly my dad also put the gun down.
Three guys surrounded my mom and started pulling at her clothes. âCome on, show us what you got,â one said.
I felt sick, rage building in my chest. These werenât people looking to build communityâ they were predators.
âLeave me,â Mom said. âPlease, if you donât have anything, leave us alone.â
âWe canât leave those with abilities here,â the first one said. âYouâll be coming back to us at our camp. Jackson will want to know exactly what youâve been doing the last three years to survive.â
âWeâve mostly been hiding,â Mom said as one of the men grabbed tight hold and she set him on fire.
It all turned to hell, gun shots fired out, the animals roared, and I could see nothing but flames and smoke.
Then there were even more screams. âRatters!â the first man screamed. âBack to base, now.â
The others were backing away, and all I could see were my parents on the floor, a pool of blood spreading around my fatherâs torso.
âNO!â The scream tore from my throat before I could stop it. I raced toward them, my rifle forgotten, panic overwhelming my training.
No, no, no. I was screaming. When the others had gone, I ran to them. I had to stop the bleeding, âDad. Dad!â I screamed.
Nothing. I leaned down to his nose, trying to hear if he was breathing.
Nothing.
Then I turned to mom, straddling her chest and trying to get her to wake.
She was breathing though it was ragged. I tried to shake her even harder. âMom!â
âPlease wake up! Mom, please! I canât do this alone!â My hands were shaking so badly I could barely check for a pulse. I pressed my fingers against her neck like Dad had taught me.
âOh gods. Oh gods.â
I could see eyes in the darkness now there was no one else here to light the way.
Darkness⦠so much darkness. I fumbled for my rifle, tried to sight one of those sets of eyes.
âStay back!â I yelled, my voice breaking. âI will shoot you!â But my hands wouldnât stop trembling.
âPlease, no, no.â
I went back to my father, he was breathing now, but it was so quiet.
But my mom had stopped. I recalled what I had to do, to get her to breathe, and pounded on her chest, throwing my whole weight into it.
âPlease, no,â I begged anyone that was listening.
The creatures surrounding us were chittering now, louder and louder.
In my mind I was screaming at myself to run, but I couldnât. I couldnât leave them.
Thatâs when I saw something else in the darkness, a flittering of wings, a flash of purples.
The ratters stopped advancing. As if they were scared. They were still chittering though.
âWhoâs there,â I asked still trying to get my mom to breath. I looked at my dad and tears streamed from my eyes. âHelp me, please. Someone.â
Then more flittering, right in front of my face.
âShow yourself!â I demanded, trying to sound braver than I felt. âI know youâre there!â
You can see me?
âI can see something.â
Interesting, the voice said.
âWho are you?â My voice was more controlled now. Whatever this was, it seemed to be keeping the creatures at bay. âWhy are you here? Are you... part of the system?â
They know a higher being when they see one.
âYouâre a higher level than they are?â
I am, he replied. But you are not connected to the system, how do you see me?
âI donât know,â I said, wiping tears from my face. âDoes it matter? My parents are dying. Can you help them or not?â
Help you?
âYes, my dad⦠momâ¦. Can you do anything?â
You donât even know who I am, yet youâre asking for my help?
My mom still wasnât breathing. I tried to force air into her lungs. Then compressions once again.
There was a larger presence surrounding me. I felt it.
Then there were more and more eyes around us. âMore creatures?â
Yes, they come because I am here. They wish to see what I leave behind. The voice paused, then asked. What is your name?
âCerys,â I replied. âCerys Bellova.â
I havenât had anyone ask me for help in a very long time. I will give you a choice Cerys, he said. You may save your motherâs life, by getting her onto that car door behind you, and dragging her away.
âAnd my dad?â I asked, though I already knew the answer from the tone of the voice. My stomach felt like it was filled with lead.
Your father is not long for this world. If it eases your mind he will not suffer.
âNo,â I cried.
I couldnât do it.
I couldnât.
But the words tumbled out of my mouth. âMake it quick. Make it painless. He deserves that much.â And with that I was off my momâs chest, and dragging her to the car door. Then slowly I was dragging her away.
The chittering was growing louder. But I heard the voice above it all.
In the name of Cerys Bellova, I aid you in your final moments, your crossing is pain-free of love and of hope. Your last life essences will help her grow and protect those who need it.
Those creatures never followed me, and eventually my mom came too. âAlfie?â
âHeâs gone, Mom.â My voice was flat, empty. I felt hollow inside. âDadâs gone.â
Mom curled into herself on the car door, and even though I was hardly moving she let me drag her home.