Mild. Not this. The wind was ice cold and knife-like as it whipped back and forth, as if it couldn’t quite decide what direction it wanted to stick to. There wasn’t only rain, but ice. Not just snow, but flecks of hard ice – whether from the sky or broken off from nearby eaves or trees, Elliot didn’t know. As soon as the storm was predicted he knew he had to get to the boat and secure it, somehow. It was what he’d spent most of his night doing, even as the wind picked up and the storm raged like some kind of cyclone. But not a tropic cyclone. No, this was some kind of furious squall kicked up by some Frost Giants, somewhere.
From the boat, Elliot made his way to the 8th Dimension Mall, where he checked on the music shop. It was on the ground floor – and at that time, seemed as if it would be perfectly fine. Regardless, he made sure everything was unplugged and secure before he locked up and headed back out into the furor. The last place he needed to check was Lancaster’s; the pub was either going to be dead, with no customers, or it was going to be packed to the brim with punters trying to find refuge.
Except, when Elliot stepped back out onto the street from the mall, he realised he would not be able to walk. Not easily, anyway. Not without slipping ten million times. Truth was, he hadn’t had much experience in this kind of storm, so didn’t quite know what the procedure was. From his pocket he retrieved his tome, and quickly chanted the message inscribed inside. From the Den, he could slip through the portal to Lancaster’s.
The Den itself was quiet. No one was around. Elliot wanted to know where Pi was, but he figured she might be at the pub. And if she wasn’t, he would call her immediately and tell her to come home. He couldn’t see Skylar or Charlie, either, and his worry pitched – they were all big girls, however, and he had to remind himself that they wouldn’t be stupid enough to be caught out in this. They were all probably doing the same as he was – checking on things.
It was as soon as Elliot stepped into the portal, however, that the ground began to rumble and shake, and the earth cracked and shifted. He was torn from his feet and as he disappeared, he could see the crumbling earth drifting down into the Den. When he landed, it wasn’t in the office of Lancaster’s as he had expected. Instead, he landed on hard ice; he slipped, and his tailbone cracked against shuddering asphalt. He looked up just in time to see the street sign come hurtling his way – just in time to see it, but with not enough time to avoid it.
The pole whacked him over the head. The world at first was a blinding white, before blackness clouded his vision and Elliot slipped into unconsciousness.