The rain had stopped an hour ago, but the streets still glistened with the sheen of it. A narrow alley cut between two rows of crumbling apartments. A single streetlamp flickered above, its light stuttering like a heartbeat.
A boy no older than twelve sprinted into the alley, his bare feet slapping against the wet concrete. His breath came in sharp bursts as he moved, his eyes wide as he kept glancing over his shoulder in fear.
Something moved behind him. A soft rusting, like feathers brushing stone.
The boy stumbled on the uneven cobblestones, falling to his knees, his palms scraping the ground. He pushed himself up, but a shadow slid across the wall beside him. It was long, thin and just plain wrong.
He froze.
Two pale eyes opened before him in the dark. They reflected the streetlamp like an animal’s, but the shape behind them were too human. Whatever it was clung to the leftmost wall as if gravity meant nothing. Its limbs bent at unnatural angles as it perched there. As it stalked.
The creature dropped silently to the ground. It moved effortlessly despite its bizarre proportions.
The boy could only whimper.
The creature’s head tilted as its jaw opened. A low clicking sound echoed in the alley. The air grew colder.
None of them paid any attention to the rain that began to fall from the sky around then. Nor the storm clouds that had appeared overhead.
KATHOOMM!
A crack of thunder split the sky.
A streak of blue light tore down from the rooftop, hitting the creature with a force so brutal that it shook the alley. The boy shielded his face from the burst of sparks.
Gabi Rivero, Wonder Girl, stood tall from where the lightning had struck, her axe humming with residual energy. Her now wet hair clung to her face and her chest rose and fell with the effort of the landing.
The creature hissed, its skin rippling. Feathers pushed out through its shoulders and its mouth elongated outwards into something like a beak made of bone.
Gabi tightened her grip.
“Corre. Ahora.” She barked, taking a glance to the boy behind her as she ordered him to run.
He obeyed immediately. He scrambled to his feet in seconds and began to book it. A small wave of relief washed over Gabi. She couldn’t begin to imagine how events would have differed if she had arrived even a few moments later.
She couldn’t think about that now though, as the creature before her began to pounce.
Gabi swung her axe up to block the lunge, but the creature moved faster than she expected. She let out a cry as Its talons raked across her forearm. The cut opened instantly. Her blood welled up and quickly began to run down her wrist.
The creature seemed to pause slightly as it recovered itself. Its pupils widened. Its breath quickened. And a thin line of saliva dripped from its beaklike mouth.
It lunged again, this time with hunger.
Gabi stepped back this time, but the creature’s claws caught her thigh. The pain was sharp and immediate. She gasped and nearly dropped to one knee. The creature inhaled deeply, savoring the scent of her blood.
It clicked its teeth. It wanted more.
Gabi gritted her teeth and swung the axe in a tight arc. The blade crackled with electricity. The creature twisted away, but not fast enough. The edge caught its shoulder and tore through a line of feathers causing black ichor to spray across the wall.
The creature shrieked, darting forward with renewed frenzy. Its claws hammered against the haft of her axe. Each impact sent vibrations up her arms. She staggered back. Her heel slipped on the wet concrete.
The creature saw the opening.
It pounced.
Gabi braced herself and slammed the butt of her axe into its jaw. The blow knocked it sideways, but it recovered instantly, skittering across the wall like a spider. It launched itself from above, talons outstretched.
Gabi raised her axe and let the lightning surge through her arms. She swung upward with all her strength.
The blade connected.
The creature dissolved into a cloud of black feathers that scattered across the alley. They drifted down like ash.
Gabi exhaled. She’d done it. Barely.
Her leg throbbed. Blood trickled down her thigh. She wiped her fingers across the wound and stared at the fading feathers.
It was a teyollohcuani. A blood feeder. A shapeshifter that shouldn’t exist outside of the old stories.
And this was the third one she’d found this week.
The motel room smelled of damp wood and cheap disinfectant. A single lamp cast a warm circle of light over the bed. Rain tapped against the window in a steady rhythm.
The sound of it soothed her.
Gabi sat on the edge of the mattress, her shirt laying discarded on the floor, stained with blood and ichor. Her skin was a map of bruises. Purple blooms along her ribs. A deep bruise on her shoulder where a creature two nights ago had slammed her into a wall. And then tonight’s wounds. The gash in her are arm and the long cut across her thigh.
She winced as she peeled away the bandage. The wound pulsed faintly, as if it still remembered the creature’s touch.
Thankfully her connection to the rain god meant that her healing was accelerated. It was probably the only thing keeping her conscious right now. That didn’t mean she didn’t hurt like hell though.
She reached for a small device on the nightstand. A gift from Julian. A reminder of a time when she had not been alone.
She pressed the activation stud.
A soft hum filled the room as light erupted and a holographic map unfolded in the air. It was littered with writing. Crude notes and markings.
It was her path. Her hunt. Every town she had visited. Every creature she had faced. Every place she had bled.
She lifted a finger and dragged it across the glowing outline of the town she had just saved. As if using a pen, the hologram reacted to her movements and crossed it out. Another kill confirmed. Another step in a journey that had begun two years ago.
Her eyes drifted north, back to where it had begun.
Seattle.
She remembered the day she left. The ache in her chest as she walked away from the team. Eilidh’s fierce hug and Seline’s constant offers to come along with hers. Red had quietly understood and Connor’s had put a steady hand on her shoulder and wished her the best of luck. She had promised she would be back. She had believed it herself.
Then the first creature appeared. Then another. Then another. And she had followed the trail south, deeper and deeper, until the world narrowed into a single purpose.
Her thigh throbbed, jutting her out of her memories. It was sharp. Immediate. She sucked in a breath and pressed a hand to the wound.
She looked back at the map.
So many marks. So many encounters. So many close calls. After everything two things were very clear.
The first was that things were worsening. It wasn’t just teyollohcuani. Other creatures of the night were rising. Monsters were appearing more and more.
The second thing was that she couldn’t keep doing this alone.
The rain outside grew heavier. It sounded like distant applause. Or a warning.
She stood, reaching for her axe. The metal glowed faintly in the lamplight.
Her gaze returned to Seattle.
She had made up her mind.