“… lucky this kid was there.”
Whose… whose voice was that? “… civilians shouldn't have been anywhere near that place.” He recognised the second voice. The voice of a girl… “… that soul stone we found is… evidence to convince them.“ His couldn't hear completely clearly, but those were the voices of a man and a girl talking. Where the hell was he? “… the fact that he's alive is no coincidence.“ He groggily opened his eyes. A bright blinding light came flooding into them, forcing him to wince, straining his eyes and turning his head. His other senses returned way too quickly. There was a soft cushy feeling under his head and body, like he was lying in a bed, covered by a bed sheet. Strangely, this place had no smell at all. His ability to track the supernatural by smell ended up improving his normal scent as well. He could separate everyone in his class by scent alone even if they were all in a separate classroom. Yet, aside from the scent of expensive perfume and a less expensive perfume—probably from that man and girl—he couldn't smell anything at all. His mouth didn't taste like anything either, but he could swear it tasted like burning flesh not too… what time was it? How much time had passed since he killed that giant frog from the inside? He sat up slowly, still adjusting to his returning senses. Taking a look around, things started making less and less sense. Lifting the bedsheet slightly, he found himself dressed in unfamiliar clothing—a black tee and white sweats. The walls and ceiling were white, the floors were plain concrete. The room was nearly empty, other than the bed he lay on, a table not too far from him, and the two people he'd heard talking. He turned to them both, sceptical and cautious. Marcus recognised one of the people in front of him: a redhead—a girl—the same one who battled the giant frog. This time she wasn't on fire, and she wasn't wearing the battered suit she wore before. She was dressed in a branded white tee and some dark pants—like an average teenager. But most confusing of all, she was uninjured. That was impossible. Both of them were injured far more than any living person should be. Why wasn't she in a cast? Why wasn't she dead? Wait… why wasn't he dead? He examined himself hurriedly, confused. Had he gone crazy or were all his injuries gone—POOF—just like that? His skin, his ribs… nothing ached. He felt better than even before he chased the first Loveland frog. How long had he been out? “You're awake,” said the man with a curious gaze. Marcus's attention fell on him. He was a blonde man, dressed in a clean suit, with a clipboard in hand. His slicked-back hair, coupled with the barely noticeable scar on his lip, and fit body his suit couldn't completely mask, gave him a certain air. He wore glasses, but Marcus could feel his prying eyes on him. Like he was being stared at naked. The man's entire presence felt precisely dangerous, like every move was intentional. He felt like a CEO. He walked towards Marcus with an air of authority, his voice blunt and straightforward. “Do you know who you are?“ He asked. “Marcus…” he paused for a moment as the two of them exchanged looks, “Marcus Moon.“ He needed answers as to where he was and how much time had passed since the frog incident. His mother would be worried half to death if he went missing. She'd lost her husband already, she didn't need to lose a son too. Right now, cooperating was the best way to get information. “Who are you? Where am I? How long has it been?—” “You died,” the girl said bluntly. “At least you were supposed to,” she added, examining his body. He was supposed to die?… Hearing that made Marcus uncomfortable. Given his last memory before appearing in this place—wherever “this” was—it made sense he was supposed to die. But waking up in a room with strangers testing his memory, examining him, and being surprised he wasn't dead didn't sit right with him in the slightest. Cooperation didn't feel like the best course of action anymore. The man looked at Marcus like he could read his mind. Was his expression that obvious? "Don't misunderstand. Your death would've been no fault of ours. The report says you let yourself get swallowed by a greater beast-grade OC and set it on fire from the inside.“ The man sat on the bed. “The fact that you've got air in your lungs is thanks to us.“ Marcus wasn't appreciating the oh-so comforting speech, or the stranger's proximity. He moved his leg to get off the bed, but it wouldn't budge. There was something wrapped tightly around his ankle—something metal restrained him. He tossed the bedsheets to the side and panicked. His foot was handcuffed to the metal frame of the bed. “What the hell!?“ he muttered. “Who's 'us'? Who are you people? Where am I? How much time has passed since—” “Answers will come in due time, but first I'd like to know how much you recall before you lost consciousness.“ Marcus stared at him, pissed. A guy wakes up handcuffed in God knows where with some dude and a teenage girl and he can't get any decent answers? He deserved that much at least. Still, cooperation was the best option for now, no matter how much he hated the idea. He looked at both of them one after the other; he conceded. “I chased down a Loveland frog into an alleyway and killed it with a bat covered in barbed wire. A bigger frog exploded from one of the surrounding buildings, and I found her fighting it alone,” Marcus said. There was a long silent pause as he contemplated whether or not to tell them about the gemstone—not like he knew where it was. He conceded again. “I helped move the bodies of her comrades and got gas so I could burn it from the inside. She was too injured to stand, and I got…” he couldn't say the next word as easily as he thought he could, “burned.“ As he spoke, the girl circled him, examining him closely, making him even more uncomfortable. Just what kinda creeps managed to capture him? “The way you talk… you've been aware of the supernatural for a long time, and you've garnered experience fighting them too.“ The man got up from the bed. “What do you think?“ he asked the girl, still examining Marcus. “You were right, he's got awakened soul essence running through his body.” She turned to the man and stopped pacing. “He didn't have any when we met on the battlefield. I would've sensed it.“ “Then there's only one logical explanation for his survival and current state…“ The man turned to Marcus. “Describe how your body feels right now.“ Marcus looked at both of them, confused and unsure, but did as he was told. His body felt fine, more than fine actually. He hadn't felt this good in… ever. In fact, he was bursting with energy—too much energy—energy he'd never felt before. But other than that, deep in his stomach, he could feel a coldness beyond his ability to describe. “Other than my stomach being a little cold, I feel fine.“ The man and girl exchanged looks after hearing that. Dipping his hands into his pockets the man pulled out a gemstone, one that looked exactly like the one Marcus found in the mouth of that frog, right down to the smoky glow and everything. “Do you know what—” “The gemstone!” he blurted out. “It was in the guts of the Loveland frog—the first one—I was holding it right before I threw the lighter…” The man set the gemstone on the table beside him. “This is a soul stone, not a gemstone. It's a mass of pure soul essence.“ “Soul stone? Soul essence?“ None of this was making any sense. “Just who the heck are you guys? The men in black?“ The girl smirked and shook her head—there it was again, for a split second he saw pain in her eyes. “In this world,” the man began, “there are people known as Witchcasters. Humans born with a supernatural amount of what we term soul essence, which is exactly what it sounds like—the essence of a soul. “Witches, wizards, warlocks, and every other form of 'magic user' throughout history and folklore were all Witchcasters whether they knew it or not. And every supernatural feat, whether that be fighting demons, healing wounds, commanding the elements—” “Setting yourself on fire…” Marcus looked at the girl. “… Or summoning creatures, were all done using soul essence,” the man completed. Marcus took a second to process everything. “So then… she's a Witchcaster?… And that's why you were fighting the frog?“ “Not exactly,” the girl pitched in. “We're part of a covert government agency of good Witchcasters known as Caster's Community, or CC for short.“ “'Good' Witchcasters?“ “Not all Witchcasters are good people…” She looked like she just remembered something unpleasant—maybe it was her comrades. “We protect civilians from OCs in the shadows. We're humanity's protectors.“ Humanity's protectors… these people were trying to do what he was doing—protect human life from… original characters? “OC?“ “It means otherworldly creature,” the man said. “The frog you fought, goblins, dragons—otherworldly creatures are masses of pure soul essence that have posed a threat to humans since their existence. The CC protects humans from them without causing mass panic.“ “So what? You guys fight fairies, dragons, goblins…“ “And frogs apparently,” said the girl. “Anything and everything classified as an OC gets hunted by the CC. OCs have been around since humanity started recording history and the CC's been in operation and actively hunting them for over three hundred years now. “And though dragons and larger OCs have appeared less and less in recent times, nearly all 50 million deaths worldwide that are unaccounted for, are linked to an OC in some way,” said the man. Marcus digested everything slowly, and soon his confusion turned into frustration. OCs, the CC, Witchcasters… where the hell were the CC ten years ago when he needed them!? He calmed himself down and took a breath. Boiling over now won't get his other questions answered; he needed to get home to his mom. “So that's where we are now? Your base of operation?“ He asked. “One of them,” said the girl. “We're still within the confines of New York City, and rest assured your mother won't be worried about you,” said the man. Marcus's anger flared up. “How the hell would you know!? You don't know anything about—” “Marcus Moon, Latin American, age sixteen. Lost your father, Marcel Moon, at the age of six and you now currently reside with your mother, Willow Moon,” said the man. Marcus paused, stumped. “How did you?—” “It's been less than two hours since your encounter with the frog, your school just let out a few minutes ago—believe me when I say she won't be worried.“ Marcus was even more stumped. It's been less than two hours? How? Why is he fully healed? What the hell was going on? “If this is all true… then what does that have to do with me? Why am I here?“ Marcus was starting to panic a little. The man turned to the girl and then back at Marcus. “I said Witchcasters are born with a supernatural amount of soul essence, which lets them perform feats beyond human capabilities.“ Marcus watched him with a cautious eye, unsure of his next move. “That's not true for all Witchcasters, especially not in modern times. “With the reduction in the frequency of OC appearances came the discovery of what the alchemists once called the philosopher's stone. However, modern research tells us what they really were. “Those 'philosopher's stones' are actually masses of pure soul essence—unlike OCs—that if absorbed by a compatible person, causes them to awaken to a greater amount of soul essence within them, similar to natural-born Witchcasters. With this knowledge, the term describing these stones changed from philosopher's stone to soul stone. “Marcus Moon,” the man said, pointing at the table, “the soul stone on that table isn't the one you found in the guts of a Loveland frog; that one was gotten from within the organisation. When we found you, you had no soul stone with you, but you survived something that would kill a man twice your size.“ Marcus's eyes opened in disbelief. “Only a strengthened body could survive what you survived, and a strengthened body is a trait only Witchcasters share. Another trait of Witchcasters is a cold sensation in the stomach.“ Marcus looked down at his hands unsure of what to think of this; the cold feeling in his stomach grew colder. “That means…” “As long as you feel that coldness in your gut,” the girl said, with a hint of displeasure, “you're a Witchcaster.“Latest Chapter
The conjuring
The entire manor began to shake violently; the candles hanging on the walls lit up one by one, burning blue flames. A massive chandelier lit up in the middle of the room; dangling from it was five skeletons, hanging from ropes by the neck. They swung like toys on a baby's crib as the manor shook. Then the tremors subsided. Cold daggers washed through Marcus. What the hell was he looking at!? He looked away, his body still trembling. “What the hell!?…” He struggled to piece together his thoughts; his lips were trembling. “Why are they…” “The Count's family…” said River. She lit parts of herself on fire; enough to ward off the cold on Marcus, but not so much that it burned the wooden floors beneath them. Marcus steeled his resolve and looked back at the skeletons hanging on the chandelier above. Two of them looked like adults, one dressed in a battered and worn three-piece suit with a shoe missing, and the other waa dressed in a torn, white, puffy gown. The other three were small
Paranorman
An eerie presence flowed out from within the manor. It was like frost itself crept up along Marcus's skin. The hair on his arms stood on end ever since River opened the Manor's doors.He could sense it right from where he stood: whatever ghost was inside this building, did not want either of them there.Squeezing the handle of the SEJ that he'd been holding since Parks left, he steeled his resolve. He knew soul essence was cold, but the feeling that rubbed against his skin was different somehow.Parks said that if soul essence left the body, nothing could live, but weren't OCs beings of pure soul essence? He didn't describe humans or Witchcasters like that—according to him, Witchcasters were humans with an absurd amount of soul essence, letting them do the impossible.The only other thing he described as being totally made of soul essence was soul stones. And any information on what those were was something he wouldn't be told until he passed.But since OCs were made of soul essence a
Mission impossible
He laughed inwardly because he obviously didn't hear the last thing Parks said clearly.They couldn't touch ghosts?Even as a Witchcaster?Funniest joke he'd heard all day.Why in the world would they make him fight something he couldn't even touch?“You're joking, right?“ asked Marcus with a grin.River and Parks exchanged looks without so much as smirking. “No,” said Parks.Marcus convinced himself not to panic.So when Parks said 'we can't touch ghosts,' he meant we as in, the CC and all its Witchcasters?Then how the hell was he supposed to fight what he couldn't touch?“Even with soul essence, I can't grab them or something?“ Maybe getting in this car was a mistake.“You can't grab ghosts,” said Parks. “Only ghosts can grab ghosts. Ghosts are made of soul essence. You being able to grab them means soul essence would have to leave your body—a piece of your soul grabbing a soul.“The issue with that is soul essence doesn't exactly leave your body. If it did you'd die. Remember, sou
Once upon a soul...
As he did, Marcus couldn't help but push his hands against the seats. Each time he pushed into it, they pushed back. They were both soft and springy; he couldn't even tell what material they were made of.He sank into the chair, enjoying the feeling of what he'd imagined lying on clouds would feel like. That, coupled with the cool inside of the car despite it being cramped… he was beginning to understand car guys.It smelled like strawberries, masculinity, and rich folk. How that combination worked together, he didn't know, but he knew that he wouldn't mind living in a car if it were this one.“That's enough kid,” River said, turning behind her chair. “Don't get your loser all over the seats.““Haha, very funny,” Marcus said sarcastically.He was still unsure of how he'd approach her after the whole spat they had yesterday.Sure, he was still mad at her for all that she said, and was he going to make her eat her words? Hell yeah he was.But she said those things because she was hurtin
I pulled up in a new Bugatti
The annoying beeping of his phone alarm woke him from the most epic dream, (where he killed two massive OCs and Lucan Silas, saving the world and erasing all OCs from the face of the earth).He sprang up from his bed with one eye barely open and his brain still booting.A second later and he was fully awake.His gaze darted across the room before landing on the alarm clock. It blinked 7am. Marcus's brows furrowed.“Seven am? River and Parks'll be here by eight…”Shit!He darted from his bed, moving like a whirlwind as he organised all his clothes, took his bath, brushed his teeth, and silenced the alarm clock before leaving his room.Rushing to the living room, he ran past his mother and headed straight to the kitchen—she was eating breakfast and watching Love Island.“Dios mío, Mars, you join the cartel? Where are you headed in such a rush? It's Saturday,” she yelled from the living room.“I've got plans with friends,” he yelled back as he searched for food.Getting ready and cleanin
Soul Game
It wasn't from the hunger (it couldn't be, he'd gotten his fill recently), which meant it was the recoil.It wasn't unbearable, but it was enough to take note of. He was used to pain, and this amount was manageable, especially given the damage it caused.Aside from that though, he took note of the speed of his attack.His own fist moved like a blur, faster than he could see. Before he knew it, his fist landed on the tree and pain followed.“I could do more…” he said, pondering on the sight in front of him. The tree continued to splinter, tearing under the weight of its displaced upper half.It fell over and tore in two, kicking up some dust and wind. He looked at his aching sides, “Maybe not.“Six threads were the safe limit for now. Anything more than eight would almost definitely do significant damage to his insides, but now he knew how much damage he could output before crippling himself—and it wasn't small.Zero for humans, two for OCs that looked weak, four for moderately strong
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