Dark Calling

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Authors: Darren Shan
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narrows then expands—he’s winking at me! Then he grabs hold of me and leaps. We shoot forward and the window
     snaps shut behind us. Art transforms back into a ball of light and wraps around me. We swoop towards the pulsing lights like
     a pair of birds, laughing hysterically at our narrow escape.

GOING UNIVERSAL

    I T takes a while to settle down. “Thanks,” I say when I’ve stopped chuckling. “You saved my life.”
    “That’s my job,” Art says wryly.
    “I thought I was done for. There were so many of them…” I frown. “That wasn’t the demon universe, was it?”
    “No,” Art says. “I told you we would not be crossing to their realm.”
    “Then what were the Sligstata doing there?”
    “That world was demon-free a few months ago,” Art says. “They must have broken through recently. I wouldn’t have come this
     way if I’d known.”
    “Even so, how could so many…” I stop as the answer pops into my head. “They opened a tunnel between their universe and that
     world.”
    “Yes,” Art says.
    “The sky demon,” I say slowly. “Did you see it?”
    “Yes. There were more, a convoy of them in the sky.”
    “Where were they going?”
    “Other worlds.” Art sighs. “There were stones of magic hanging beneath it. You call them lodestones. We set such markers in
     place on all the worlds we visit. They help us hold the Demonata at bay and give the inhabitants of the planets a chance to
     evolve.
    “The defensive power of the stones fades when we move on. As the safety net crumbles, demons seek to open windows and tunnels.
     If they succeed, they wipe the world clean. Then, in most cases, they return to their own universe. But sometimes on a world
     where lodestones are plentiful, they use it as a base to launch more attacks.
    “The sky demon and its passengers are heading for neighboring worlds, using the stolen, corrupted magic of the lodestones
     to sustain them. It will take millennia, but they are patient. The power will drain from the stones eventually and they’ll
     have to return home, but that might not be for millions of years.”
    “And as long as the stones hold, they can stay in this universe?” I ask, feeling sick.
    “Yes.”
    “How far is that sky demon from Earth?”
    “Billions of miles. It will never trouble your people.”
    “But if it was setting off from a nearer world, like Atlantis, it could descend on us one day, carrying hordes of demons?”
    “Yes,” Art says.
    “Is our universe full of sky demons, slowly making their way from one world to the next?”
    “Hardly
full of,
” Art mutters. “But there are many of them.”
    “Then we can’t beat them,” I croak. “We thought if we stopped them crossing, we were safe. But if armies are already here,
     making their way towards us…”
    “All worlds will fall eventually,” Art says glumly. “All beings will die. That is the nature of the universe. Nothing is forever.
     Death claims all things in the end.”
    “Sure,” I grunt bitterly. “But I didn’t know there were scores of demons cruising the skies, working hard to wipe us out.”
    “It is not an issue,” Art says. “Your world will have fallen long before any sky demon reaches it.”
    My eyes narrow. “What are you talking about?”
    “The lodestones are a temporary form of protection,” he says. “Demons always cross. The only hope any beings have is to master
     the skies. If a species learns to move on to other worlds, they can stay ahead of the Demonata. Your people haven’t made that
     crucial step to the stars. Your planet will fall within the next year. It is inescapable.”
    My jaw drops, then firmly closes. I breathe in and out through my nostrils, waiting until I’m calm. When I’m in control, I
     say very clearly, “I want to go home.”
    “It would be pointless,” Art says. “You could do nothing to stop it.”
    “I have to try. Even if I fail, I want to be there at the end. If Earth’s going to fall, I’ll fall

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