Far Horizons: Tales of Sci-Fi, Fantasy and Horror. Issue #19 October 2015 | Page 52

stretched out on two chairs, eating peanuts. For the past three months he came closer to understanding her than he thought he would. He did feel bad every time he discovered a new piece of her past with Malik, especially when he finally convinced her to let him go through similar training as she. But that also gave him unique insight into how peculiar her mind was. She was in a mold that didn’t let her develop any empathy, so she treated her kills as nonchalantly as buying bread. But she never felt pleasure from it. Murder and torture were ingrained in her, she used them as any other skill, but not for kicks. She was bluntly realistic about the things she had done, and expressed both negativity and positivity with the same level of indifference. And yet she was capable of love. He never forgot how she saved his life, and after their first small conversation he learned to look at her actions through a magnifying glass. How difficult it was to convince her to make his training more arduous, how he woke up one day to a stack of college books on his bedside table and it took him a week to figure out that neither Jake or Patrick had bought them. The bartender handed Lucas a tray. As he was walking over to the table, he started to get introspective. The biggest tell that he was getting more comfortable in his skin was his demonic side. It was about time, his awkward years were supposed to be over when he stopped being a teenager. He would sometimes wake up in his demonic form and not even think about it. It had stopped being a burden and started being just a fact. The abilities he had had began being just that – the abilities he was born with. He never thought that hiding magic was so detrimental. And yet here he was. And speaking of XY