I fired and kept firing, trying to buy us time. Massive gouges scored Romeo where the tiger had carved at it. We couldn't take another attack. If we let the tiger get to us, the construct would open us like a tin can.
An explosion rolled through the air. We rounded the dome and I saw the wall collapsing in huge chunks.
We rocketed down the grass, the small tank and three giants following it: the horse, the tiger, and the rhino.
The horse leaped onto Romeo, looming over me. Enormous teeth ducked down.
I fired my last grenade into its gut and dropped into the tank, hearing it blossom into a beautiful explosion. That's it. Out of ammo. I had three regular grenades left. I grabbed them and thrust into the open. The horse had faltered and the tiger took the lead.
I pulled the pin and tossed the grenade. The tiger dodged and leaped, metal tail snapping, claws spread for the kill.
That's it. We're done for.
A huge chunk of the wall rose and smashed into the tiger, knocking it aside in midair. The tiger crashed, the section of the wall on top of it, its tail flailing frantically, sticking out from under the wreckage. A second chunk landed on top of it.
Ahead, Rogan stood in the circle he drew on the paved driveway. He flexed, his hands clawing the air.
Another massive section of the wall rose in the air and flattened the horse. It didn't rise, buried under the rubble.
Romeo rolled past Rogan.
Behind us, the rhino was coming up, unstoppable, massive, pounding the ground with its feet.
Rogan thrust his hands up.
A twenty-five-yard section of the wall shook. He was trying to break it free from the rest, but it held.
The tank stopped, turning.
"Jump!" Grandma Frida ordered.
"What?"
"Jump!" she snarled.
I pulled myself out of the hatch, jumped and rolled into the grass. Romeo sped toward the rhino.
Oh no. No . . .
The small tank rammed the construct. The rhino veered at the last moment, throwing all of its bulk against Romeo's flank. The tank rolled on its side. The rhino tore at it with its feet, punching holes in the armor. Fear turned my insides liquid. I ran toward it, because that was all I could do.
A shadow fell on me. The section of the wall slid above me and swept the rhino aside, burying it.
The heap of rubble shook and exploded. The rhino sprang free, reforming.
The ground underneath it split. A forest of shoots sprang up, spiraling up to the sky, fed by magic, straight through the rhino. The construct flailed, trying to break free, but the shoots caught the particles that made its substance and kept growing, thicker and thicker, becoming branches, their wood encasing the captured parts. Magic shook the lawn. The tree swept the rhino off the ground, trapping the stray pieces as they fell. An enormous tree spread its branches, a hundred and fifty feet tall, its trunk twenty-five feet wide. The colossal Montezuma cypress shook once and became still, towering over the lawn.
Wow.
Grandma Frida crawled out of Romeo, her face stained with blood. She ran for the remnants of the wall.
The sky tore. A funnel spun from the clouds, reaching toward us. We had run out of time.
"Nevada!" Rogan snarled.
I turned. He was running toward me. I sprinted to him. We collided. His arms closed around me.
The wind disappeared. It was suddenly calm and peaceful. I looked up. Rogan's eyes had turned a glowing turquoise. He'd accessed his ultimate power. We stood in a circle of null space. Nothing would penetrate. This was how he broke entire cities, reducing them to rubble.
Around us the storm raged. An enormous tornado was forming just beyond the dome, as if someone had taken the storm clouds from the sky and spun them into a maelstrom.
The wall of air cut at us and stopped, severed by the perfect circle of the null space around Rogan. Beyond it another tornado touched down. Then another.
Dear God . . .
The circle containing us pulsed, the echo of it rattling my bones. The dome in front of us cracked.
Another pulse.
Pieces broke from the dome's top, crashing down.
Rogan was looking into the distance. He began rising.
I clamped him to me. If I didn't, he would keep going until he ran out of magic. Nothing would be left and our people wouldn't be able to get away. They were too close.
He kept rising.
"Connor! Stay with me."
His hands were still locked around me. My feet left the ground.
The third pulse. The dome cracked like a broken egg.
"I love you, Connor. Please come back to me. Come back." I kissed him. "Come back."
He turned his head slowly and looked at me, his eyes still distant, as if waking up from a deep sleep. Recognition flared within the magic-saturated turquoise.