x
Did this guide help you? If so please give them a vote or leave a comment.
You can even win prizes by doing so!
Vote
Comment
I liked this Guide
I didn't like this Guide
Thank You!
Your votes and comments encourage our guide authors to continue
creating helpful guides for the League of Legends community.
Recommended Items
Runes: bruizeri
1
2
3
Precision
Domination
+10% Attack Speed
+9 Adaptive (5.4 AD or 9 AP)
+65 Base Health
Spells:
1
2
3
4
classic spells
Flash
Heal
Items
Ability Order max order
Living Battery (PASSIVE)
Zeri Passive Ability
Threats & Synergies
Threats
Synergies
Extreme
Major
Even
Minor
Tiny
Show All
None
Low
Ok
Strong
Ideal
Extreme Threats
Ideal Synergies
Tristana
take exhaust
Yuumi
cat is very good friends with zeri uwu
Synergies
Ideal
Strong
Ok
Low
None
Yuumi
cat is very good friends with zeri uwu
Champion Build Guide
intro
Hello im zeri and i wanted to help you a bit with playing zeri. I am not the best zeri in the world omg doing 20/0 every game, but i know how to play her so lets begin
who is zeri
A headstrong, spirited young woman from Zaun's working-class, Zeri channels her electric magic to charge herself and her custom-crafted gun. Her volatile power mirrors her emotions, its sparks reflecting her lightning-fast approach to life. Deeply compassionate toward others, Zeri carries the love of her family and her home into every fight. Though her eagerness to help can sometimes backfire, Zeri believes one truth to be certain: stand up for your community, and it will stand up with you.
Zeri's lore
Raised in a large working-class family, Zeri grew up surrounded by warmth, care, and many strong opinions. They were no strangers to hardship, having lost loved ones to Zaunâs dangers. Even so, their community was their strength.
From birth, Zeri had a unique relationship with electricity. Each giggle caught a sparkâeach cry, a shock. Magic wasnât rare in Zaun, but Zeriâs electric charm was. It charged with her emotions, sometimes grounded, sometimes building to fierce and fiery. By her teenage years, her neighbors knew she was more likely the cause of power outages than a broken circuit. Life in Zaun was beautiful chaos, her grandma would say, and Zeri embodied that all too well.
Not everyone found her quirks endearing. To family and friends, Zeri was a lovable mess. To others, she was simply... a mess. During occasional outbursts where her stray currents shattered a street lamp or two (or twelve), Zeri thought she'd even see flashes of somethingâor someoneâbut there was no time to dwell. She wished she had better control of her volatile powers. Her determination was there, but her patience could have used some work.
Still, with every spark came an opportunity.
One night while Zeri strolled through the Entresol markets, the ground rattled from underground excavations that soon swelled into a destructive quake. She wasted no time zooming past fallen buildings to rescue trapped victims. As her world slowly crumbled, Zeri became a furious blur. She knew the chem-barons had mining facilities nearby that were installed after they'd claimed to have discovered resources better than hextech, but what they did not reveal were the risks of their uncontrolled digging.
The faster Zeri moved, the more charged she became. She thrived under pressure, realizing what her powers could do and how much her neighborhood meant to herâeven if it meant nothing to the barons.
After the dust settled, survivors gathered to thank Zeri. Beneath her relief was anger. Zeri knew she couldâve saved more if she had better command of herself.
What Zeri did accomplish was sure to catch the attention of the barons. She knew they wouldnât think twice about who they went through to get to her, and she couldnât risk others getting hurt. Not again. To guard them from herself, Zeri scoured the mining disasterâs wreckage and constructed a jacket to contain her electricity and avert the baronsâ gaze. Now she could restrain her gift to protect those in need.
Walking the damaged streets, Zeri saw broken faces. Families scrambled to rebuild, and Zeri lent her hand, doing all she could without her powers. But the more she helped, the more she witnessed. Workers struggled to jumpstart generators. Parents toiled to make meals with broken stovetops. These people didnât have anyone standing up for them, let alone someone with a gift like hers. She knew her districtâand those like itâwould never truly be safe if things stayed the way they were. The barons saw them as nothing more than objects to be neglected and resources to be bled.
Zeri knew what had to be done. She couldnât wait for the next mining âaccident.â She had to take the fight to the barons.
Zeri was a one-woman force, sending shockwaves through Zaun. Word spread of chem-baron supply lines being destroyed, with reports of âlightningâ striking faster than the eye could see. Enraged at their losses, the local barons formed a rare alliance, and their combined power trounced Zeri wherever she went. She tried to adaptâto strike fasterâbut against the baronsâ endless resources, it wasnât enough.
She retreated with her body broken and her powers fizzling. The barons were united. She was alone.
As she headed home, Zeri expected disappointment from those she let down. But what welcomed her was family, friends, and people sheâd never met, all standing up to fight their oppressors. From their rebuilt homes came rediscovered courage. Zeri had never felt so inspired, yet it was she who had inspired them. She was the spark that ignited their fire.
And she was no longer alone. With the help of their neighbors, Zeriâs mother had fashioned her a rifle made of materials given by those Zeri fought for: The people of the Entresol. The gunâs ammo was Zeriâs emotions, its conductive barrel amplifying her powers directly from her hands. Paired with her jacket, she could better control her voltage, charging up to shoot preciseâor, at least, somewhat preciseâelectric bursts. Zeri gazed warmly at her family and her neighbors. She thought sheâd lose them all in her efforts to fight back, but because she stood up for them, they stood up with her.
Backed by her community, Zeri fights for those who cannot. Zaun is not perfect, and neither is Zeri, but sometimes a spark is all it takes to change the world.
From birth, Zeri had a unique relationship with electricity. Each giggle caught a sparkâeach cry, a shock. Magic wasnât rare in Zaun, but Zeriâs electric charm was. It charged with her emotions, sometimes grounded, sometimes building to fierce and fiery. By her teenage years, her neighbors knew she was more likely the cause of power outages than a broken circuit. Life in Zaun was beautiful chaos, her grandma would say, and Zeri embodied that all too well.
Not everyone found her quirks endearing. To family and friends, Zeri was a lovable mess. To others, she was simply... a mess. During occasional outbursts where her stray currents shattered a street lamp or two (or twelve), Zeri thought she'd even see flashes of somethingâor someoneâbut there was no time to dwell. She wished she had better control of her volatile powers. Her determination was there, but her patience could have used some work.
Still, with every spark came an opportunity.
One night while Zeri strolled through the Entresol markets, the ground rattled from underground excavations that soon swelled into a destructive quake. She wasted no time zooming past fallen buildings to rescue trapped victims. As her world slowly crumbled, Zeri became a furious blur. She knew the chem-barons had mining facilities nearby that were installed after they'd claimed to have discovered resources better than hextech, but what they did not reveal were the risks of their uncontrolled digging.
The faster Zeri moved, the more charged she became. She thrived under pressure, realizing what her powers could do and how much her neighborhood meant to herâeven if it meant nothing to the barons.
After the dust settled, survivors gathered to thank Zeri. Beneath her relief was anger. Zeri knew she couldâve saved more if she had better command of herself.
What Zeri did accomplish was sure to catch the attention of the barons. She knew they wouldnât think twice about who they went through to get to her, and she couldnât risk others getting hurt. Not again. To guard them from herself, Zeri scoured the mining disasterâs wreckage and constructed a jacket to contain her electricity and avert the baronsâ gaze. Now she could restrain her gift to protect those in need.
Walking the damaged streets, Zeri saw broken faces. Families scrambled to rebuild, and Zeri lent her hand, doing all she could without her powers. But the more she helped, the more she witnessed. Workers struggled to jumpstart generators. Parents toiled to make meals with broken stovetops. These people didnât have anyone standing up for them, let alone someone with a gift like hers. She knew her districtâand those like itâwould never truly be safe if things stayed the way they were. The barons saw them as nothing more than objects to be neglected and resources to be bled.
Zeri knew what had to be done. She couldnât wait for the next mining âaccident.â She had to take the fight to the barons.
Zeri was a one-woman force, sending shockwaves through Zaun. Word spread of chem-baron supply lines being destroyed, with reports of âlightningâ striking faster than the eye could see. Enraged at their losses, the local barons formed a rare alliance, and their combined power trounced Zeri wherever she went. She tried to adaptâto strike fasterâbut against the baronsâ endless resources, it wasnât enough.
She retreated with her body broken and her powers fizzling. The barons were united. She was alone.
As she headed home, Zeri expected disappointment from those she let down. But what welcomed her was family, friends, and people sheâd never met, all standing up to fight their oppressors. From their rebuilt homes came rediscovered courage. Zeri had never felt so inspired, yet it was she who had inspired them. She was the spark that ignited their fire.
And she was no longer alone. With the help of their neighbors, Zeriâs mother had fashioned her a rifle made of materials given by those Zeri fought for: The people of the Entresol. The gunâs ammo was Zeriâs emotions, its conductive barrel amplifying her powers directly from her hands. Paired with her jacket, she could better control her voltage, charging up to shoot preciseâor, at least, somewhat preciseâelectric bursts. Zeri gazed warmly at her family and her neighbors. She thought sheâd lose them all in her efforts to fight back, but because she stood up for them, they stood up with her.
Backed by her community, Zeri fights for those who cannot. Zaun is not perfect, and neither is Zeri, but sometimes a spark is all it takes to change the world.
The unexpected spark
âI canât accept this,â the shopkeeper said, pushing Zeriâs change back at her. âItâs just spare parts. Youâve done too much to help since the Mist.â
Restless, Zeri looked around. Familiar streets showed unfamiliar lossâhomes and shops battered by wicked sorcery that nearly ended the world. People were missing. Families were hurting. But crowds still gathered at the Entresol markets. Zeri didnât understand exactly what had happened, but she knew this: Zaun would rebuild, and she would help.
She frowned at the shopkeeperâs work-hardened hands and pushed her own forward. âGet some banana cues. For your girls.â
The shopkeeper sighed, then smiled.
Zeri continued through the market, recalling her grandmaâs oft-repeated reminders. âIgnore old man Shayâhis parts are always rusted! Line up early at Auntie Mariaâsâher marinated chicken is divine!â Zeri admitted her grandma could sometimes seem annoying, but she couldnât deny that the woman was right. Her grandma knew the market and its people inside out, like how Moeâs daughters loved caramelized bananas. And it was in moments like this where that intimacy proved helpful.
âCâmere, rat!â
Zeri spun toward the noise in time to see a boy scurrying through the crowd. Two men tailed him, one short and square, the other tall with lanky limbs. Their outfits were unmistakable. Chem-baron thugs.
As the boy darted by, Zeri snatched his arm. âThere, quick,â she said, pointing with her lips at Moeâs shop. The shopkeeper nodded knowingly. The frightened boy stood still.
âTrust meâgo!â
The boy sprinted over, ducking under a table that Moe quickly covered with cloth.
âHoy! Looking for someone?â Zeri shouted at the lackeys as they approached.
The men shoved past the locals. âYeah, a kid. Just ran through here. You see âim?â asked the stocky one.
âMaybe. Maybe not.â
The man narrowed his eyes. âTell us. We wonât hurt you.â
âDoubt that. But letâs skip to the part where I hurt you instead.â
The man laughed. âWith what?â
Zeri reached for where her gun was usually strapped, only to find nothing there. ****. Mustâve left it at mom's workshopâagain.
Well, time to improvise. She rubbed her hands together and started running in place.
The thugs straightened in surprise.
âIs she... dancing?â observed the lanky one.
âWho cares?â his partner squawked. âNab her already!â
Zeriâs hands and feet became a blur. The gear on her jacketâs back, a limiter device she called the Sparkpack, spun with building electricity. In a blink, she zipped between the men, bowling them over in a trail of wild lightning. Stray currents bounced from her body onto nearby doors and awnings, leaving little embers.
âWoo!â Zeri skid to a screeching halt. The lackeys lay collapsed on the ground. Her jaw dropped as she noticed a blackened awning collapse and fall to the street. âOh, sorry! Iââ
âDonât worry about it,â said Moe, gesturing under the table for the kid to come out.
âYouâre amazing!â the boy blurted, arms stretched wide. âYou gotta help me. They still have my parents.â
âWhat? Where?â Zeri asked.
âCorner of Brasscopper Alley! A factory. They... they took them there. And others. I saw it!â
âGot it,â Zeri nodded. âWhatâs your name?â
âTimik.â
âTimik, Iâll get your parents.â Zeriâs eyes met Moeâs. âMind doing me another favor?â
âSure thing.â Moe patted Timikâs head. âHey, kiddo. Want some banana cues for dinner?â
Like its neighboring streets, Brasscopper Alley housed rows of chem-baron factories. Soot filled the air, heavy enough to taste. Who else but the barons would force people to work in these conditions?
On the corner, a few guards reeking of less-than-fine spirits played cards by a run-down building with rusted double doors. Just like Timik described. Zeri touched her belt, ensuring her gun was secure.
She looked for another way in, spotting a rickety air vent large enough to crawl through halfway up a nearby wall. She jumped for the opening, coming up inches short. Stepping back, Zeri ran, her feet catching sparks. She hopped higher this time, boosted by her electricity.
âYou already played that card!â she heard a guard growl as her fingers gripped the ventâs edge.
âDid not!â snapped another. âAnd you woulda known too if yer head wasnât buried in that bottle.â
Zeri exhaled in relief. Right again, Grandma. Guards are lazier at night.
She pulled herself into the vent and started crawling, eventually coming to a large grate in the floor. Below was a curious room where wide metal pipes lined every wall. The exit was closed off by the double doors she saw earlier.
In the middle, a group of people assembled parts as several thugs with hextech-powered spears watched on like jail guards. Every time something reached the end of the assembly line, a thug tested it. And every time, thereâd be a flash of blue light followed by nothing. The guard captain smashed these apparent failures and demanded the people start over. âAnd they said you were the smart ones,â he said, spitting on the floor.
Zeri could tell these people were clearly being held against their will. Parents and spouses and friends, all suffering.
âArgh!â Without thinking, Zeri banged a fist charged with frustration and electricity against the grate, which rattled from the impact. Zeri scrambled to secure it, but as the heavy grate fell from its fixture, so did she. With a loud clang, she landed in the middle of the factory floor.
The room gasped and recoiled in surprise.
âIs it him?â asked a thug, shaking off the shock.
âNo,â snarled the captain. âHer face doesnât have the painted hourglass.â
Zeri rushed to her feet. âDunno who youâre expecting, but you canât keep these people here like this.â
The captain scowled. âSays who?â
âMe.â
Zeri whipped out her gun, her right hand clutching its rusted crimson grip. Her mom had designed it without trigger or magazine, needing only her daughterâs innate electricity, which now swelled with anger. Static buzzed from Zeriâs hand into the gunâs conductive barrel. She took aim.
âUltrashock laser!â
A thunderous beam struck the double doors behind the thugs, blasting the rusted metal apart.
âRun!â Zeri cried. âIâll take care of the guards!â
The hostages scattered, guards in pursuit.
A woman grabbed Zeriâs arm. âHave you seen my son? He wasnât taken with us!â
âTimikâs fine. Heâsââ
âTimik? No, thatâs notââ
More thugs swarmed close. Zeri yanked her gun to face them and fired, pushing them back and creating space for the worried woman to flee.
âWe gotta go,â a man warned, pulling the woman away.
Zeri unleashed more electric bullets as coverfire. âWhen word of this gets out to your boss,â she yelled, âyouâre gonna wish youâd killed me here.â
The frustrated guards turned their attention away from the fleeing hostages and toward Zeri.
Good. Come to me.
As they approached, she vaulted onto one of the wide interlocking pipes attached to the walls. It was made of brass and copperânatural conductors.
Zeriâs feet crackled with electricity. Fueled by her sparks, she skated along the web of pipes, unloading flurries of bullets at three of the onrushing guards. Their bodies twitched and flailed before falling over. Deftly, Zeri switched directions, dropping the next few who were climbing the side railings to surprise her from behind. Only a handful of her attackers were left. She could head home soon. Her family was probably worried sick...
A blast struck the pipe beneath Zeri, forcing her off balance. She crashed to the ground.
âGot you now,â the captain said, holding what looked like a hextech cannon, smoke billowing off its muzzle. His remaining troops rallied, spears ready.
Zeri struggled to her feet, head spinning, knees scraped and bleeding, electric currents flickering across her injured body. She lifted her gun to fire.
It fizzled.
The captain smirked.
Damn! Mustâve broken in the fall.
Her enemies closed in.
âScrew it!â Zeri chucked her gun aside and tore off her jacket. Freed of the Sparkpack, she felt her body surge with voltage. Leaping into the air, she punched her left fist up toward the ceiling.
âLIGHTNING CRASH!â
Bioelectric waves shot from her fist, then her chest, and then her entire body, ripping the space asunder. Like a lightning storm, the waves arced off conductive metals, crackling violently as they drowned the room with Zeriâs raw power. Bodies jolted before dropping in droves.
Zeri fell to her knees, her knuckles propping her up. Blinking sweat from her eyes, she felt searing pain from her wounds everywhere at once. âThat better have worked.â
âYou little ****.â The captain's voice cut through the room. Zeri saw him stumble to his feet, bleeding from his nose and ears.
âWhy?â Zeri roared. âWhy hurt innocent people?â
The man scoffed, kicking the limp bodies around him in search of his weapon. âNo oneâs innocent in the baronessâs eyes.â
A hum filled the air as the captain lifted his cannon toward Zeri.
With what little force she could muster, Zeri tumbled to the side and slipped behind a large fallen pipe. The blast flung her and her cover into a wall. Zeriâs vision turned black. When her eyes opened, the captain was gone.
Staggering under moonlight, Zeri headed home through nearly empty streets. She was relieved the hostages were safe, but still gritted her teeth. The chem-baronsâthey always had more. More resources, more power. Their strength was the system they created with everyone under their reign, all contributing to a Zaun they controlled. Maybe the captain was rightâno oneâs innocent.
And everyoneâs a victim.
A flash of blue light erupted behind her, stopping Zeri in her tracks.
âHey, nice work.â
She turned to see a teenager with a painted face and a glowing bat in hand. Unsure if sheâd been tailed, Zeri tried to ready herself once more, but struggled to stand up straight in the face of the stranger.
âRelax,â the young man said. âTimik told me about you.â
âAnd who are you?â Zeri asked.
âNameâs Ekko. Those goons from the warehouse were looking for me before you showed up. But man, you wrecked âem.â
Zeri sighed. If heâs against the barons, heâs alright.
âLook,â Ekko continued, âI know youâve got questionsâso do I. And Iâve gotta ask... why help folks you donât know?â
Zeri shrugged. âI stand up for my community.â
Ekko smiled. âThen we should talk. Zaun needs people like you⌠and I oughta thank you for saving my parents tonight, too.â
Zeri smiled back. âAnytime.â
Restless, Zeri looked around. Familiar streets showed unfamiliar lossâhomes and shops battered by wicked sorcery that nearly ended the world. People were missing. Families were hurting. But crowds still gathered at the Entresol markets. Zeri didnât understand exactly what had happened, but she knew this: Zaun would rebuild, and she would help.
She frowned at the shopkeeperâs work-hardened hands and pushed her own forward. âGet some banana cues. For your girls.â
The shopkeeper sighed, then smiled.
Zeri continued through the market, recalling her grandmaâs oft-repeated reminders. âIgnore old man Shayâhis parts are always rusted! Line up early at Auntie Mariaâsâher marinated chicken is divine!â Zeri admitted her grandma could sometimes seem annoying, but she couldnât deny that the woman was right. Her grandma knew the market and its people inside out, like how Moeâs daughters loved caramelized bananas. And it was in moments like this where that intimacy proved helpful.
âCâmere, rat!â
Zeri spun toward the noise in time to see a boy scurrying through the crowd. Two men tailed him, one short and square, the other tall with lanky limbs. Their outfits were unmistakable. Chem-baron thugs.
As the boy darted by, Zeri snatched his arm. âThere, quick,â she said, pointing with her lips at Moeâs shop. The shopkeeper nodded knowingly. The frightened boy stood still.
âTrust meâgo!â
The boy sprinted over, ducking under a table that Moe quickly covered with cloth.
âHoy! Looking for someone?â Zeri shouted at the lackeys as they approached.
The men shoved past the locals. âYeah, a kid. Just ran through here. You see âim?â asked the stocky one.
âMaybe. Maybe not.â
The man narrowed his eyes. âTell us. We wonât hurt you.â
âDoubt that. But letâs skip to the part where I hurt you instead.â
The man laughed. âWith what?â
Zeri reached for where her gun was usually strapped, only to find nothing there. ****. Mustâve left it at mom's workshopâagain.
Well, time to improvise. She rubbed her hands together and started running in place.
The thugs straightened in surprise.
âIs she... dancing?â observed the lanky one.
âWho cares?â his partner squawked. âNab her already!â
Zeriâs hands and feet became a blur. The gear on her jacketâs back, a limiter device she called the Sparkpack, spun with building electricity. In a blink, she zipped between the men, bowling them over in a trail of wild lightning. Stray currents bounced from her body onto nearby doors and awnings, leaving little embers.
âWoo!â Zeri skid to a screeching halt. The lackeys lay collapsed on the ground. Her jaw dropped as she noticed a blackened awning collapse and fall to the street. âOh, sorry! Iââ
âDonât worry about it,â said Moe, gesturing under the table for the kid to come out.
âYouâre amazing!â the boy blurted, arms stretched wide. âYou gotta help me. They still have my parents.â
âWhat? Where?â Zeri asked.
âCorner of Brasscopper Alley! A factory. They... they took them there. And others. I saw it!â
âGot it,â Zeri nodded. âWhatâs your name?â
âTimik.â
âTimik, Iâll get your parents.â Zeriâs eyes met Moeâs. âMind doing me another favor?â
âSure thing.â Moe patted Timikâs head. âHey, kiddo. Want some banana cues for dinner?â
Like its neighboring streets, Brasscopper Alley housed rows of chem-baron factories. Soot filled the air, heavy enough to taste. Who else but the barons would force people to work in these conditions?
On the corner, a few guards reeking of less-than-fine spirits played cards by a run-down building with rusted double doors. Just like Timik described. Zeri touched her belt, ensuring her gun was secure.
She looked for another way in, spotting a rickety air vent large enough to crawl through halfway up a nearby wall. She jumped for the opening, coming up inches short. Stepping back, Zeri ran, her feet catching sparks. She hopped higher this time, boosted by her electricity.
âYou already played that card!â she heard a guard growl as her fingers gripped the ventâs edge.
âDid not!â snapped another. âAnd you woulda known too if yer head wasnât buried in that bottle.â
Zeri exhaled in relief. Right again, Grandma. Guards are lazier at night.
She pulled herself into the vent and started crawling, eventually coming to a large grate in the floor. Below was a curious room where wide metal pipes lined every wall. The exit was closed off by the double doors she saw earlier.
In the middle, a group of people assembled parts as several thugs with hextech-powered spears watched on like jail guards. Every time something reached the end of the assembly line, a thug tested it. And every time, thereâd be a flash of blue light followed by nothing. The guard captain smashed these apparent failures and demanded the people start over. âAnd they said you were the smart ones,â he said, spitting on the floor.
Zeri could tell these people were clearly being held against their will. Parents and spouses and friends, all suffering.
âArgh!â Without thinking, Zeri banged a fist charged with frustration and electricity against the grate, which rattled from the impact. Zeri scrambled to secure it, but as the heavy grate fell from its fixture, so did she. With a loud clang, she landed in the middle of the factory floor.
The room gasped and recoiled in surprise.
âIs it him?â asked a thug, shaking off the shock.
âNo,â snarled the captain. âHer face doesnât have the painted hourglass.â
Zeri rushed to her feet. âDunno who youâre expecting, but you canât keep these people here like this.â
The captain scowled. âSays who?â
âMe.â
Zeri whipped out her gun, her right hand clutching its rusted crimson grip. Her mom had designed it without trigger or magazine, needing only her daughterâs innate electricity, which now swelled with anger. Static buzzed from Zeriâs hand into the gunâs conductive barrel. She took aim.
âUltrashock laser!â
A thunderous beam struck the double doors behind the thugs, blasting the rusted metal apart.
âRun!â Zeri cried. âIâll take care of the guards!â
The hostages scattered, guards in pursuit.
A woman grabbed Zeriâs arm. âHave you seen my son? He wasnât taken with us!â
âTimikâs fine. Heâsââ
âTimik? No, thatâs notââ
More thugs swarmed close. Zeri yanked her gun to face them and fired, pushing them back and creating space for the worried woman to flee.
âWe gotta go,â a man warned, pulling the woman away.
Zeri unleashed more electric bullets as coverfire. âWhen word of this gets out to your boss,â she yelled, âyouâre gonna wish youâd killed me here.â
The frustrated guards turned their attention away from the fleeing hostages and toward Zeri.
Good. Come to me.
As they approached, she vaulted onto one of the wide interlocking pipes attached to the walls. It was made of brass and copperânatural conductors.
Zeriâs feet crackled with electricity. Fueled by her sparks, she skated along the web of pipes, unloading flurries of bullets at three of the onrushing guards. Their bodies twitched and flailed before falling over. Deftly, Zeri switched directions, dropping the next few who were climbing the side railings to surprise her from behind. Only a handful of her attackers were left. She could head home soon. Her family was probably worried sick...
A blast struck the pipe beneath Zeri, forcing her off balance. She crashed to the ground.
âGot you now,â the captain said, holding what looked like a hextech cannon, smoke billowing off its muzzle. His remaining troops rallied, spears ready.
Zeri struggled to her feet, head spinning, knees scraped and bleeding, electric currents flickering across her injured body. She lifted her gun to fire.
It fizzled.
The captain smirked.
Damn! Mustâve broken in the fall.
Her enemies closed in.
âScrew it!â Zeri chucked her gun aside and tore off her jacket. Freed of the Sparkpack, she felt her body surge with voltage. Leaping into the air, she punched her left fist up toward the ceiling.
âLIGHTNING CRASH!â
Bioelectric waves shot from her fist, then her chest, and then her entire body, ripping the space asunder. Like a lightning storm, the waves arced off conductive metals, crackling violently as they drowned the room with Zeriâs raw power. Bodies jolted before dropping in droves.
Zeri fell to her knees, her knuckles propping her up. Blinking sweat from her eyes, she felt searing pain from her wounds everywhere at once. âThat better have worked.â
âYou little ****.â The captain's voice cut through the room. Zeri saw him stumble to his feet, bleeding from his nose and ears.
âWhy?â Zeri roared. âWhy hurt innocent people?â
The man scoffed, kicking the limp bodies around him in search of his weapon. âNo oneâs innocent in the baronessâs eyes.â
A hum filled the air as the captain lifted his cannon toward Zeri.
With what little force she could muster, Zeri tumbled to the side and slipped behind a large fallen pipe. The blast flung her and her cover into a wall. Zeriâs vision turned black. When her eyes opened, the captain was gone.
Staggering under moonlight, Zeri headed home through nearly empty streets. She was relieved the hostages were safe, but still gritted her teeth. The chem-baronsâthey always had more. More resources, more power. Their strength was the system they created with everyone under their reign, all contributing to a Zaun they controlled. Maybe the captain was rightâno oneâs innocent.
And everyoneâs a victim.
A flash of blue light erupted behind her, stopping Zeri in her tracks.
âHey, nice work.â
She turned to see a teenager with a painted face and a glowing bat in hand. Unsure if sheâd been tailed, Zeri tried to ready herself once more, but struggled to stand up straight in the face of the stranger.
âRelax,â the young man said. âTimik told me about you.â
âAnd who are you?â Zeri asked.
âNameâs Ekko. Those goons from the warehouse were looking for me before you showed up. But man, you wrecked âem.â
Zeri sighed. If heâs against the barons, heâs alright.
âLook,â Ekko continued, âI know youâve got questionsâso do I. And Iâve gotta ask... why help folks you donât know?â
Zeri shrugged. âI stand up for my community.â
Ekko smiled. âThen we should talk. Zaun needs people like you⌠and I oughta thank you for saving my parents tonight, too.â
Zeri smiled back. âAnytime.â
You must be logged in to comment. Please login or register.