"Unleash your creativity and unlock your potential with MsgBrains.Com - the innovative platform for nurturing your intellect." » » “A Game of Death” (Shade of Vampire #79) by Bella Forrest

Add to favorite “A Game of Death” (Shade of Vampire #79) by Bella Forrest

Select the language in which you want the text you are reading to be translated, then select the words you don't know with the cursor to get the translation above the selected word!




Go to page:
Text Size:

“I’m learning more and more about it,” Taeral said. “Death insists that I don’t fiddle with it, but sometimes I feel like it wants me to use it, if that makes sense. I never push it, though. Everything I can do with Thieron, everything I have learned, it’s only because the scythe has allowed it. I’m sure of it.”

“You’re a most fortunate soul to be its keeper, then,” I replied. “Now, tell me, what are we doing? Where are we going?”

“Lumi, my dear, I’m taking you on a Reaper-like trip,” Taeral declared, beaming with the enthusiasm of a young boy about to jump from great heights into the ocean. There was a devilish glow in his amber eyes, and it almost made my heart sing. His eagerness was downright infectious.

Staring at Thieron, I exhaled sharply. “Okay. Treading worlds, then?”

“Indeed. You might want to hold on to me,” Taeral said.

Hooking my arm around his, I braced myself for whatever such a journey might entail. We’d only done it once with Phantom, and I was already getting dizzy from remembering the sensations such a voyage had left me with. Taeral was nowhere near as experienced as any of the First Ten, so I assumed things might get bumpy.

He brought Thieron’s blade up to his lips and whispered a word into it. I didn’t recognize it, but it was old-timey death magic, which once again left me in awe of how resourceful the Fire Star prince and future Reaper truly was.

The runes on Eirexis lit up blue, shining like sapphires in the moonlight, as the world around us began to shimmer and ripple. Matter and space became soft and bendy, like delicate fabric, and we both stepped forward and through it.

The secret chamber fizzled away like ink washed off the table with a jet of cold water. The blackness of cosmos took its place, and my knees got weak. A knot formed in my throat, as I was suddenly weightless and senseless, with no control over myself or anything around me. I had become a flicker, an insignificant blip in the endless net of time and space, as Taeral walked us through a plethora of galaxies.

We were in the In-Between again. I recognized the stars, the reddish suns, the vibrant streams of pink and orange stardust. Glistening in the distance, with its fuchsia mists and giant sun, was Eritopia.

“Are you okay?” Taeral asked as we kept walking, quite literally, through an invisible wormhole that cut through billions of light-years in a matter of minutes.

“Mm-hm…” I breathed, trying to focus on the path ahead.

Before us, a mysterious solar system became visible. A group of fifteen planets, all titans of the universe, bigger than anything I’d seen before. These behemoth marbles came in shades of ochre yellow and lilac, delicate blue and turquoise green. They orbited an equally enormous sun, a star so bright that I couldn’t even bear to look at it, directly, without my eyes stinging and hurting.

“What is this?” I asked, barely feeling my own body at this point.

“I don’t know what the system is called, but we’re going there,” he said, and I followed his gaze.

The thirteenth planet was… off. It was a deep red with orange streaks and loose powder and stones all around it. A hole had recently been formed in its northern hemisphere, a bowl-shaped void from which phosphorescent lava seeped out in loose bubbles in the absence of gravity. The closer we got, the better I could see.

The orange streaks were clouds scattering away, losing their structure. The planet had been hit by something massive, and there were still traces of the thing around it. Something large and black, judging by the obsidian shards that mingled with the rocks and the lava droplets. My stomach tightened as I tried to wrap my head around this catastrophe.

“What happened here?” I whispered, feeling my eyes widen as we walked toward it.

“This used to be called Akryos,” Taeral said. “Up until a couple of days ago, it was a prosperous and peaceful world, with a species that cannot be found anywhere else in the In-Between. Some kind of Druid-related humanoids, though I know very little about them. Only what I’ve heard through the grapevine.”

“The grapevine?”

“Reaper radio,” Taeral replied. I looked at him, understandably confused. “Sometimes, if I focus on Eirexis hard enough, I can hear Reapers whispering, talking to one another. I can tap into their telepathic connections, though I have no control over who it is I’m listening to. I can’t even stay on for too long before my head starts to hurt, but I know something awful happened to Akryos. A massive asteroid, to be precise. And everything… everyone… they’re gone now. Dead.”

“Oh, no… That’s awful.”

“If there’s one thing I’ve understood better since I’ve been snooping on the Reapers, it’s the enormity and the complexity of the universe, of its dimensions… of the calculated rules that set it in motion. Worlds like Akryos perish every other day, and others are born elsewhere. It’s a constant cycle of sorts. It would take lifetimes just to fully grasp it all.”

Once we reached the surface, I felt extremely hot. Taeral whispered something else into Thieron, then gently pressed the blade against my skin. In an instant, I felt much better. My skin was cool, and I could breathe, effortlessly, despite the absence of an atmosphere.

“It destroyed everything,” I said, looking around.

The entire crust had been cracked. Lava rivers burst from below, dripping upward and outward without any gravity. Whatever Thieron had done, it was keeping us alive and anchored to the ground, despite all the conditions that dictated against it.

“They didn’t stand a chance,” Taeral said. “They saw it coming days ago, but they didn’t have the knowledge or the technology to evacuate. Millions of them.”

We walked along a sharp ridge, and I did not let go of Taeral’s arm. He insisted on that, stating that I would immediately lose Thieron’s privileges if physical contact between us were to cease. Remnants of glorious cities were scattered all over, the entrails of iron and steel snaking around, unbound and broken. White-and-pink marble chunks littered the sweltering red desert that had swooped in and swallowed them all. Fractured towers and molten glass. Charred trees and blackened skeletons.

There was everything and nothing, all at once, and the air was replaced by swirling mists of black smoke and ash. Upon impact, the asteroid had destroyed whatever stood in the path of its shockwave. It had splintered the planet’s outer crust. It had ripped apart the atmosphere itself, somehow, and it had turned everything to dust and dirt.

It broke my heart to see all this, while my mind struggled to keep up, to understand everything laid out so ruthlessly before my very eyes.

“Tae… What are we doing here?”

“Hold on. Can you see them?” he asked, pressing Thieron’s blade against my forearm again. I sucked in a breath. Reapers appeared, one by one. There were hundreds of them, clad in long black leather tunics with white collars, their hair long and braided back with blue silk threads. They moved weightlessly around, raising spirits from the catastrophe’s remains and using their scythes to reap them.

“Oh, wow…” I managed.

The millions of people Taeral had mentioned. Many were still here, gradually sent into the world of the dead by the hundreds of Reapers that had been dispatched to this planet.

“They can’t see us,” Taeral said, “but we should keep our voices down. Just in case.”

I frowned at him, and he gave me an innocent shrug. “I’m not sure how good my stealth skills are with Thieron. I’ve never kept myself and someone else hidden from so many Reapers at once.”

This all had a specific purpose, so I didn’t ask him again about our presence here. It was all leading somewhere, so I pressed my lips into a tight line and allowed Taeral to guide me down the ridge and across the desert, our boots barely touching the crimson sand.

We moved past Reapers who were busy pulling souls from the rubble, telling them what had happened and explaining that they were dead. My heart broke all over again whenever I heard the people sobbing as they realized that this was the end. That their lives had been snuffed out by a single wandering object that had made its way into their world.

In the blink of an eye, it had all been obliterated. I was witnessing something I had never dealt with before. This large-scale tragedy was quite difficult to stomach, but I focused on what laid ahead—the purpose of our visit here.

Eventually, we reached the edge of the desert, where the earth broke and sank deeper, lava lakes glowing from below. Farther down from where we stood, I could see a Reaper with long black hair and piercing galaxy eyes helping the soul of a male creature out of the smoldering lava.

Moving closer toward him, I noticed that the Reaper kept looking around, perhaps hoping that no one would see him. His features were beautiful, almost ethereal, his skin pale and the blade of his noise perfectly straight. His lips were full and pearlescent. He was tall and well built, though not at all bulky. His frame was imposing, though his Reaper eyes were more intimidating than his physique. “What is your name?” he asked the soul.

“Bym,” the soul replied. “What… What happened?”

“I’m afraid the worst thing possible happened, Bym,” the Reaper said. “The death of the planet. The death of all of you. I’m sorry.”

The soul blinked several times, staring at his semi-transparent limbs and wiggling his fingers, as if just to make sure he still had them or felt them. The look on his face didn’t confirm or deny that sensation, but he was definitely curious. “Who are you?” Bym asked.

“I’m a Reaper. What were you doing in a prison?”

Taeral and I listened carefully, both of us intrigued by the question. Bym wasn’t that shocked, though, so there was truth in the Reaper’s words, for sure. “I… I was locked up.”

“For what?” the Reaper asked, occasionally glancing over his shoulder. The other Reapers were far away, moving deeper into the red desert. The air rippled above it from the heat. Thunder boomed in the distance—only it wasn’t thunder but cracks deepening into the planet’s surface, breaking and tearing and destroying whatever was left of this once-civilized world.

Bym lowered his gaze, saddened by his own fate. “For killing…”

“That’s Sidyan,” Taeral whispered. “One of the Reapers from the Calliope sanctuary. Not a bad fella. But he captured my interest a few months back. He’s the one I want you to meet.”

“Why did he capture your interest?” I murmured.

Are sens