Part 11
(In Paris)
Chase
came to Nova’s side. “Nova! Come on, get up.”
Nova
wept, “It’s all over. There’s no hope for the world.”
Fuma
stood next to her, “It’s no use. He’s been overcome by Cupid’s
power.”
Quark
yelled, “HE’S COMING, MOVE!”
Quark
phased out of sight, and Fuma took up a fighting stance. Chase held
up those shuriken, ready for this fight.
“No,
he’s ours. Find the bow!” Fuma ran forward to meet Cupid.
Chase
looked around, “What? Where do I even start?” Then she saw it. In
the distance, there was a bit of color. A golden object glinted among
the fallen bodies. “That has to be the bow.” She bolstered her
courage and made a mad dash right into the thick of this battle zone.
Cupid
was knocked out of the air for a moment and then let out a primal
scream as he slammed his ax against the ground. This unleashed a huge
wave of that gray energy. Chase couldn’t dodge this in time.
“WATCH
IT!” A red armored man hit the ground in front of her and a
forcefield came from his body that protected both of them.
“Thanks.”
Crimson
Guardian said, “Civilians were to evacuate!”
“I’m
not a civilian. HE’S COMING!”
“Crap.”
Crimson turned and scanned a weapon in a fallen hero’s hand.
Chase
shoved him out of the way just as Cupid went after them. She threw
her shuriken at Cupid. He knocked one away, the other stuck in his
arm. Before he could remove it, Crimson blasted him with a red energy
beam. Crimson punched and blasted Cupid, while Cupid responded with
his own fists and that gray energy. Each time Crimson blocked it with
his barrier. More heroes converged on the battle, which gave Chase an
even wider opening. She bolted for the bow, leaving Cupid to the
others.
“I
hate losing my blades, but I did some good...what the?” She felt
both shuriken in her hands.
She
found the bow in Heretics hands. His once beautiful red wings were
now almost black. He wailed about wanting to go to heaven.
“You?”
Just then Fiero arrived.
“I
found the bow!” Chase pulled it free of Heretics hands.
Fiero
nodded, “I was heading for it myself. I...”
Both
jerked at the sound of a huge explosion. Bodies fell from above as
heroes were caught in the largest energy blast so far. Then the blue
skies slowly drained of color.
Chase
turned around and saw that no one was left standing before Cupid. He
was battered, bruised and even bleeding, but he was the only thing
not down.
“It’s
over,” Chase whispered.
Fiero
shook her head, “It’s not over yet, he’s weak.” She grabbed
the bow and launched herself at Cupid.
Chase
stood back, her blades ready. She prayed in her heart that Fiero
would get that bow to him and this would be all over quickly. The
red-haired woman used mental energy to hit Cupid, but he was too
strong. She thrust the bow at him almost like a blade. In a quick
stroke, he knocked it away and before she could react; he hit her in
the back with the ax and she went down. That was it.
The
breath in Chase caught in her throat. She looked around in
desperation for help. Cupid locked his eyes on her. He showed signs
of wearing down, but not stopping.
“The
bow.” She said, looking behind him. It was on the ground.
Dashing
straight at the approaching god, she threw her blades. He swatted
them away with his ax and then sent a wave of energy. She recognized
it was a flat disc of energy, not a bubble, so she jumped up on a
concrete railing and flipped over the blast before it met her. She
had her blades again and threw over and over. Each time they would
reappear in her hands. Again he sent that wave of energy, and this
time she skidded on her knees, with her back nearly touching the
ground. The energy went right over her. She turned and threw those
blades, this time aiming for his hands. When he went to deflect them,
one stuck right into his wrist. This seemed to cause him a moment of
pain. He dropped the ax. The brief confusion left her open to grab
the bow. She flipped around and dashed at him.
Cupid
flew at her, no longer holding his weapon. She bounded off of a
cement pillar and headed right for him. His hands met her throat
midair and nearly strangled her. She pressed his bow right into his
bare chest. Then her heart broke. He let go of her and she fell back
a great distance. The last thing she saw was his hand catching the
bow as it fell from his body, a reflexive action.
She
lost all sense of concern about the battle, or her own safety. She
felt oppressive misery fill her mind, body, and soul. Flowing waters
took her away. Would she drown? That didn’t even bother her. Every
dark moment, sad reality, lost friend, miserable childhood memory,
filled her and she couldn’t function. She washed away while
lamenting life.