--- A week later ---
--- 13th march 2032 â
Against all expectations, the following week was a calm one. A bit overwhelming at first, but Dai was getting used to that life, partially feeling like a brand new one. He had an apartment all for himself, a job as an English teacher, with its not-so-light 45 hours a week, that sometime would magically transform in 60 due to overtime; the students and colleagues were lovely, at least.
âI should be happy Iâm managing to keep the job I guessâ¦â he thought with a sigh, a cloud of vapour coming out of his mouth. Cold nights like this were one of the few moments where wearing the gloves was needed, outside of covering the marks at school because they were mistaken as tattoos.
Yet, the gloves were bearable compared to a bigger problem, the Saturday dinners with the colleagues; the one he was coming back from. Despite having clear memories of them, they all felt distant and just part of a weird dream he felt detached from his very soul. It made him sick and uncomfortable to be amid those known yet unknown faces to the point of nausea, he even ended running away, under their worried gazes.
He was now walking down Shibuya, reaching its famous crossing, surrounded by high buildings that for only a few floors couldnât be defined as skyscrapers. Part of their façades were lit up by all kinds of advertisements and, amid the majority of promotional banners and videos dedicated to anime and video games, one caught his attention as he waited for the light to turn green.
âThis is Adanna. She lives in in state of Nigeria, recently fallen into an havoc due to a combined form of lymphoma and myeloma...â
It was a short animation blasting at high volume the story of some kid from the East-African Union having to deal with a rare blood disease and it encouraged the viewer to donate to help saving hers and more lives.
No one of the drunkards, walking by the footpaths or people waiting at the intersection like Dai, seemed to care about it; everyone talking and laughing over the voice of the advertisement. As sad as it was, he also was about to turn his attention away, when the screen turned white and an acronym faded in at its centre, âWSZYâ.
âWus...zi? Wusâ¦â he attempted and failed to pronounce that in his head while following the flow of people crossing the intersection. Now that he pondered on it, according to his memories no one knew the meaning of those four letters, even though the company was basically leading a worldwide monopoly in multiple fields since its creation in 1984. It was so important that Dai had to learn its story in first grade of middle school; founded the afore mentioned year by a before-unknown Samuel Darielo, who simply appeared out of nowhere with loads of money and an injection for curing the most dreadful forms of cancer.
At the sole thought he yawned.
To tell the truth, the single average person actually didnât care much about it, apart from fanatics that almost worshipped their work and its faceless creator like God on Earth. But at the same time, few from the opposite side tried to resist that corporationâs expansion; which had become a monopoly in multiple fields outside of medicine. Overall, the general consensus was âIf he does good, why stop him?â.
In that starless night, he reached a small apartment building. He went up to the second floor through the flight of outer metal stairs, clanging under his feet in the peaceful night. The multiple neon lights coming from the down streetâs restaurants and pubs poured into the open-air corridor and cast the guyâs shadow over the outfacing apartment doors. When stopping in front of one, he rummaged into his jeansâ pocket and produced a single key.
âI wonder when the landlord will install that electric lock he promised. Itâs almost the standard..â he thought annoyed as he slided the obsolete key into the lock and turned it a few times until a click could be heard. Once inside, he switched on the light of the corridor connecting the genkan to three closed doors and a gloomy room at the end with only a faint light coming from a hidden source.
âDid I forget to turn off a light...?â
Not bothered too much by it, he lightly pushed the door closed with a soft click and without even the time to take off his shoes, a pleasant smell wafted to his nose.
âRamen? This smells way better than the instant oneâ¦â
Right when he was becoming alerted, someone spoke from the kitchen.
âIs it you nii-san?(brother)â it was a shrilling young voice. âI made some extra ramen if you want some! Iâm sure it canât beat what â
Dai sighed, his tense muscles relaxing. âItâs just my sisterâ¦â he murmured to himself.
With a finger between the back of the shoe and the heel of his foot he took the shoe off, then realisation struck him like a thunder in the clear sky.
He froze on the spot. âWait...I donât have a sisterâ¦â
âYou still there?â the same voice asked from the kitchen, something inexplicable was different in her tone.
Leaving the shoe on the ground, the guy turned back to the door and quickly grabbed the handle. At the same time a hand touched his shoulder, cold like ice, causing a shiver to run down his spine.
âWhere are you going nii-san?â the voice was now right behind him, failing to hide an hint of amusement. âYou literally just came back! Relax a bit now.â With an abnormally strong tug, that hand turned him around. He didnât see much at first apart from the wall, then a hand waved right in front of his face.
âLook down dumbass- erm...â there was a brief clear of throat before she corrected herself with false sweetness â..nii-san.â
He did so and remained confused if to be frightened or not. In front of him stood a short girl, light skin, messy black hair reaching below her shoulder blades, grey eyes and a gentle smile. That wasnât the devil he met in that nightmare, although reminiscing of it. There was a light in those eyes, even if barely visible it was there and her skin had some resemblance of colour, unlike the paleness of that devil.
âNow I look like the unhealthy oneâ¦â he thought unironically, the bag under his eyes being proof of an horrible sleep schedule, without mentioning the diet.
The girl tugged on the sleeve of his suit jacket, not even trying to hide the abnormal strength that could have ripped it off.
âFine fine.â Dai said in the end. âWait, isnât something...burning?â he curled his nose at a smell of burned that assaulted him, slowly replacing that goodness from before. He glanced back at the girlâs face who was still smiling while looking away from him, bearing the most guilty and uncaring face he had ever seen.
âLet me guess, you forgot the turn off the gas stove, right?â
She silently nodded and he sighed. She was surely the same girl of that nightmare, there was no other explanation on how she could have ended up there if not for some demonic power of hers. Although something made that air of terror previously surrounding her disappear; it may have been because of her more âaliveâ features. The guy took off the other shoe and sauntered to the end of the corridor followed by the girl. The dim room was big enough to barely fit a couch, TV and tea table in the middle in the left half. While in the right side there was a small dining table against the wall and the kitchen area from where the light was coming fromâ¦
Daiâs mouth fell ajar. âH-howâ¦?â
A tower of pots rose from the sink and reached the ceiling with the last pot pressing against it, keeping the construction steady. Putting aside the simple facts that Dai never had that many pots in the first place or how that happened, it was honestly quite impressive, almost on par with some pieces of modern art.
âMaybe I could actually make some money from thisâ¦â Dai scratched his shaved chin, seriously contemplating the idea. âMh?â
He looked at the girl as she walked towards the pot on top of the lit up stove, full of boiling soup and also the source of the smell, and grabbed it by an handle.
âNo wait-!â he shouted but it was too late. The girl lifted the big pot effortlessly and slammed it against the piled ones. The whole tower collapsed in a mix of clangours and water dripping out towards Dai, who quickly moved out of the way. All the pots hit the floor with the same ferrous sound, splattering the water all over and mixing with the burned soup.
The puddle of diluted soup expanded under his stare then moved to the girl, who stood on the other end the puddle, bearing that innocent smile.
âOopsieâ¦â she simply said shamelessly, still with the pot in her hand.
The guy remained speechless, he didnât know if to be mad or act calm towards her, but the fear that she could turn against him by doing the former took over.
âDonât worry.â Dai sighed. âJust help me cleaning this.â
He expected a no, at least and was surprised to see the girl nodding. âSure nii-san.â
The curtains were parted open and windows too, refreshing the air from the girlâs burned disaster. After finishing the clean up, the two had sat at opposite ends of the small dining table to enjoy a salubrious meal of instant noodles with an added cold can of beer for Dai.
He slurped a few noodles then popped the beer open.
âAahâ¦â he breathed out satisfied after a good sip. âThatâs what I needed.â The roller coaster of emotions that night brought him in such a short time was like a punch in the stomach after the almost peaceful week he had. Weirdly enough not a single neighbour had come to lament about the noises.
âShouldnât you eat more healthy, nii-san?â the girl asked before eating a few noodles, clearly and unimpressed by the dinner.
Dai blinked twice, confused. âShouldnât you stop calling me nii-san? You werenât convincing before and adding that nickname thousands of times makes you more ridiculous.â
In the tense silence that followed, the only ice breaking sound were dinging notification coming from the phone in his suit stranded on the sofa pocket; probably from his worried colleagues.
âMh...really?â the girlâs voice shifted to a more cold tone although still not the the same level as in the nightmare. âIf Iâm that ridiculous then you should be laughing instead of acting all nervous, no?â
The guy glanced over at his hand wrapped around the beer can, the forefinger constantly tapping against it. The devil tilted her head slightly. Even without showing it, she was probably basking joyfully in that nervous silence of his.
Here they were gain. The nightmare risked of repeating itself, which at this point, was just as real as their first meeting and not a product of his âcomaâ.
âItâs clear sheâs the same demon but why does she feel differentâ¦?â
âThatâs the most uninteresting question you could have asked.â the girl snorted out of the blue.
The guy startled and looked around as if to check for someone elseâs presence. â...I didnât say anything.â
This text was taken from Royal Road. Help the author by reading the original version there.
âYou thought about it.â
Dai opened his mouth about to say something but then thought for himself âShe can...read my mind?â
And surprisingly, the girl promptly nodded. âAnd now youâre thinking of that time you had food poisoning as a kid and vomited in your motherâs purse.â
âH-Hold on! How can you do that??â the guy leaned forward, his hands grasping the edge of the table, desperately trying to divert the conversation.
âYou have the answer in hand.â she said slightly annoyed, almost as if talking to a stupid kid. Dai glanced at his palms, the rhomboid marks lighting of that red light and those stylised pupils staring back at him. He looked back up at the girl, still not getting her point.
âRight...you donât know anythingâ¦â she admitted with a defeated air. âThose symbols are proof of our pact, which connected us in more ways than just me giving you my powers. It created a link and now youâre an open book to me.â
âO-ok,â It wasnât ok, but any other answer could have brought serious consequences. âyou never said anything about hearing my thoughts though...â
The girl waved a hand as if to send away his worries. âIt doesnât matter that muchâ¦â
Dai was left flabbergasted. Not only she didnât find it weird, she didnât seem to care at all.
âWhat can I even expect from the devilâ¦â
âHey, thatâs rude.â a grin tugged her cheeks. The slyness protruding from her made him wince. âDonât you think youâre getting a little bit too comfortable?â
The air in the room had turned bone chilling. Silence had fallen on them once again,occasionally broken by the cars driving near the apartment, only reassurance for Dai whose heartbeat was going through the roof.
âS-sorry.â he murmured more out of fear than sincerity speaking. âThis is just...so confusing...I-I donât know what to make out of all this. It doesnât even feel like my actual life...â
The girl leaned back in the chair and stared pensively at her half-full ramen cup. âMh...Sad indeed sad indeedâ¦â the level of disinterest was louder than her breathy answer, almost hurtful, especially spoken in that gentle tone she feigned. âGuess we gotta do this huh...â
âW-what do you mean?â
âItâs not another nightmare, donât worry.â she glanced up at his worried face, literally caught him in the middle of that thought. âIt will be just a normal conversation to clear up a few things about all this and your job. Sounds good?â
âMy job?â Dai thought at first, then remembered the whole price of having gotten a new, even if confusing, life...and the idea of âcleansing goodâ still wasnât something his sane mind could conceive. Staying silent, the devilish girl took the conversation in her hands.
âWell, Iâll start from something you already mentioned.â her tone was suddenly serious, dragging the guy out of his train of thoughts. âAs you already imagined, you arenât Dai. I simply sent your soul inside his body right after his last breath.â
âMy soul...after his last breath- Wait, how am I even breathing then? If this body had shut downâ¦It doensât make sense.â
âI see youâre the rational type.â she gave the pleased glance of someone satisfied of having predicted something before turning back to serious. âdonât you think the soul is enough to keep someone alive?â
âI mean, it doesnât make any senseâ¦â Dai said before taking the last sip of lukewarm beer.
âIt doesnât make any sense, as much as what you experienced right?â
âTouchéâ he thought and instantly a smirk on the devilâs face grew wide; he was never going to get used to not think. It was pointless into denying what had happened, he had the proofs tattooed in his palms and one sitting right in front of him, unfortunately.
âSo how do this soul work?â he asked as a way not to directly admit she was right and she played along.
âYou can think of it as your life source. It contains all your memories, your personality, your powers, everything of who you are.â
âPowersâ¦â Dai thought for a moment. It was something she had mentioned already if memory served him right. He considered asking about it, but desisted as she would eventually go over it anyway; hopefully.
âObviously, thatâs not all.â she went on, unbothered by his thoughts. âA soul needs a container where it can pour out all that stuff, hence, the body. In the Realm of The End you were just that, a soul in need of a new body. And thatâs why you have that one, which would have been a waste to let it wither away.â she clapped her hands together as to wrap up. âAll clear now with this?â
âI guess soâ¦â the guy said while passing a hand on the back of his neck. His whole body felt cold, although there wasnât a single breeze coming from the open windows. And it wasnât just him, even the food in the plastic cup were cold, with the soup having turned into a more slushy consistency.
âSpeak up.â the girl had sensed the doubts welling up in Daiâs mind and her imperative tone scared him into straight in the chair and hid his fidgeting fingers under the table.
âWhat...what happened to the previous owner of this bodyâ¦?â
âYou mean the real Dai?â she said nonchalantly, which caused the guyâs expression to sorrowfully shift. Albeit he knew he wasnât the real one but just an unfortunate person with no memories. And yet, hearing someone say that so easily made him feel even more dreadful.
âA part of his soul is still inside you.â the girl said, elbow on the table and chin cupped in the hand, bearing the same exact cold calmness the whole time. âTo make it brief and simple, normally a soul would wholly reincarnate in a newly born body when the previous one dies. However, since your soul took over moments before its death, the previous soul had not the time to fully say goodbye- Donât worry though, it wonât cause any problems.â she hurriedly clarified at his darkening expression, which didnât change immediately. Moreover, who would believe her knowing what Dai had experienced. (If they didnât call him crazy in the first place.)
âNow that your questions should be out of the way, Iâll go with the next thing, probably the most important. Your job.â
âW-waitâ¦â Dai interrupted her and was promptly rewarded with a stern glance. He didnât desist. âAbout the powersâ¦?â
â...Iâll get to that if you shut up.â she said curtly and stared daggers until he looked down submissively. âAs you already know, your job is to kill good people and for that youâll need to use those powers. Now before you start thinking how this is immoral, we arenât talking about killing randomly, but other beings with powers, just like you.â
âSo you mean otherâ¦Nylicts was it?â
âNot quite.â she shook her head, disappointed that she had to repeat herself on what being a nylict means already âFirst of all, the enemies youâll have to fight are so called Zonnikies. In an ancient and forgotten language Zon means âSonâ and nikies for âGodsâ, together they become âSons of the Godsâ. They called like this because itâs said that the powers came from them first.â
âZonnikies...Sons of the Godsâ¦â The sound of those words reminisced him of something that he couldnât quite figure out what though and moved on. âSo, even Nylict has some kind of meaning?â
âOoh, youâre smarter than I thought!â she said, truly impressed and Dai looked at her in the with a scowl as if to say âReally?â at that clear mocking. â Ny means âNoâ and lict means âLightâ. And now that you know what a Zonniki is, I can tell you bluntly that Nylict is just a category of it; a really evil one. The worst of the worst.â
The way she emphasized those words, the same ones she had pronounced in their first meeting, worked like a remainder. A remainder that he wasnât there thanks to her overwhelming kindness, but because his situation didnât left him much choice.
âS-so...what is this ancient language youâre talking about?â
The girl shrugged. âYou wouldnât know it either way.â
â...But if you tell-â
âNo.â
Dai scratched a cheek, clearly puzzled. â...and about the Gods-â
âJust a legend.â
The girlâs tone kept being stern, again, as if she was talking with a stupid child, too young to know anything about the world. âUhm...ok, then...do I have to kill them? I mean those Zonnikiesâ¦â
âMhâ¦â she hummed while tapping the forefinger against her chin. âLet me think- Oh right!â she flashed him a cheerful smile, so sudden the guy was startled by it. âItâs that or you would die.â
âWhat?â he almost shouted, surprised more because of her placid tone than the actual truth. He expected the situation not to be a walk in the park but damn, a little bit of touch was something he was starting to miss, especially after seeing the worried faces of his colleagues; those were real humans.
âMaybe youâre a lost causeâ¦â she pinched the bridge of her nose. âThink about it. The worst evil comes back on Earth and you think other Zonnikies are going to watch your ascent? You must be more moron than I imagined if you thought so...â she chuckled, amused to...whatever funny bit there was.
The air around them was still cold and Dai was grasping at his pants in search for some comfort and courage to say anything; even though the situation wasnât on his side at all. He opened his mouth to ask the umpteenth question.
Thud.
An heavy stomp coming from the other side of the room blocked his words halfway along with his breathing.
âFoosteps?â Daiâs blood run cold. The coincidence with how this was happening was unsettling.
Meanwhile the girl remained calm with an hidden hint of annoyance. âWell, looks like our chat ends here.â
Thud.
Thud.
Whoever was coming closer must have been the size of an elephant because the floor shook with each stomp.
âJeez, if only you had asked less questionsâ¦â the girl griped as she got up and the chair drifted back, loudly scraping the floor. âWeâll talk about powers tomorrow, during your training.â
âT-training?â Dai muttered. Every drop of strength had abandoned him and he felt like becoming one with the chair as he sank in it.
âDid you think we were going without one? You donât know what power I gave and you will need some tuning, otherwiseâ¦â she pointed at something behind him. âhow could you beat someone like that?â
Thud.
In that exact moment, the footsteps stopped. Warm air brushed against his hair as someone heavily breathed out and a giant shadow had dawned over him, stretching all the way back to the wall.
Dai slowly turned around, shivering wholly.
Behind him stood a man whose bald head brushed against the ceiling and had an abnormally muscular physique, almost cartoon-like proportions. His dark eyes glaring down at him and the rounded and medium long grey beard, gave the impression of being an old viking, enhanced by the presence of multiple scars. One in particular caught his attention, what must have been a deep gash, going from the right shoulder to below the left side of his chest, passing right over his heart.
âA kid?â the old manâs voice was hoarse and grumpy and seemed rather displeased. âGuess, it will be easier than I thought.â
Beside him, spots of colour materialised out of thin air and expanded along an invisible surface until the form of a thick wooden shaft was visible, followed by the apparition of a big blade it was attached to; a double edge axe, stained with dried blood.
Dai was frozen in dazed fear as the man wrapped his giant hand around the standing weapon.
âDonât take it personal kid.â the man sentenced before swinging the weapon back with both hands, then towards Daiâs neck.
The guy closed his eyes shut, waiting for that new nightmare. He couldnât even think it was a good life for how short it was. He stared for multiple seconds at the faint redness from the light filtering through his eyelids.
âOh? The big man is scared?â the girlâs voice sounded so breathy and closer than before. An arm rested around Daiâs neck, startling his eyes open.
The man was still in front of him, but now locked in a staggering expression with his entire body unmoving. His buffed arm shivered, in attempt to take control and push the axe through the girl, who was casually blocking the blade with a the back of a bare hand while comfily leaning against Dai.
âYou should really think twice before messing with someone elseâs toy.â
Daiâs eyes widened. Her tone was plain and gaze fixed on the man, nothing to be scared about really. It was what surrounded her that took him aback; a black flame the size of the room was coming out of her body. It was slightly transparent and the tongues of flame writhed around the edges enraged, probably the purest form of emotion the girl had displayed so far. It was so strong that it made Dai nauseant and he wasnât the only one affected.
âY-you..â the man said trembly, shivers having spread to the entire body. âThey didnât tell me you would be here-â
âWell, surprise then.â the girl said evenly. âSince you didnât manage to touch him Iâll be merciful enough to give you a quick death.â she raised a finger of the hand hanging from the guyâs shoulder. âBye.â
She lowered the finger, her guillotine.
After a second of nothing, a trickle of blood fell from his mouth and down his beard. His lips moved as to say something but only a groan came out. Bubbles of blood formed in the middle of his face before half of his body separated from the other in a perfectly straight cut from head to crotch.
A shower of blood drenched an horrified Dai while the blank faced girl had took a few steps back as the two halves fell to the ground with a loud thud.
The eeriness of the nightmare was back to haunt that moment- no, maybe it had never disappeared. Every sound from outside seemed to have vanished. Dai stared blankly at the puddle of blood expanding on the parquet, up to the split body, its insides-
He pressed a hand on the mouth and run, almost slipping due to the blood, to the corridor and into the toilet, where he kneeled in and puked his lousy dinner amid some panicked thoughts and sobbing.
âI canât do this! I canât do this!! Is that what awaits me if I fail at my âjobâ? No, no, I donât want to!!â
âBut you have to.â behind him there was the girl already, talking in a matter of fact way. âWe made a pact, you canât go back.â
âP-please..â he crawled toward her, scraping the blood-dirty cladded knees against the floor and grasped at the hem of her weirdly clean nightgown. âI-I will do anything but not this! I simply canât do it!â he showed his marked palms. âIf you want this back then cut my hands!! I can live without them!!â
But the gaze he was met with was one of indifference. A sigh coloured it.
âYouâre tired. Go to sleep.â
That sentence. That unconcerned tone. Her manners. All of that made his blood boil with exhausted rage and spoke with gritted teeth:
âDo you really think going to sleep will solve any-â
The girlâs fore and middle finger touched his forehead. The sound of a drop falling into a body of water filled his mind, bringing an ethereal sense of peace.
â-thingâ¦â Before he knew it, he collapsed onto the ground, asleep.