“Our lands are laid waste!” She sobbed, surveying the landscape beyond the city’s limits. Acreage once verdant now stretched desolate and torn from the walls to the horizon. “Our own people are decimated, our allies are either dead or fled, and our enemies mass as one against us!” She turned to face him, auric cheeks streaked with tears cutting through dust and ash. “Tell me now brother, was this part of your plan?”
He stood with her on the balcony, untouched by her anguish. “Plan?” he echoed. He also tracked the blackened topography with his eyes, engraving every wasted detail of it to memory. His lips curved in a resigned, patient smile that told how many times before this topic had passed between them. “There was a goal,” he explained again, “and there were possibilities and contingencies.”
His eyes turned from the ruined lands, his silvered gaze meeting hers without flinch. “We trekked shadowed regions,” he reminded her, “our eyes on the beacon shining on the horizon while our feet picked among briars and stones for the best path.” He reached out a hand and traced the clean path from her eye to her jaw. “If I had known the best route when first we started, we would not have needed so much time and pain for the journey.”
Her eyes narrowed as she studied him, digesting his answer. Her voice took on a tone which promised to repay any falsehood or dissembly in a most unhumorous manner. “Do you mean to say we have achieved our dream? In the midst of such sublime devastation we are the victors?”
He shook his head sadly at her. His hand dropped once more to his side. “After so many conversations, your grasp of our purpose is still lacking. There can be but one victor from this war, and it is neither Alliance nor Concord. No my sister, we have not yet achieved our dream. But the road to it now lies clearly before us. Or more precisely, before you. My journey ends here.”
Five thousand years later, on that same spot….
The world had never before seen such a city.
Towers of crystal and metal reached into the peridot sky, their flanks striking blinding sunlight reflections. Avenues balanced broad, flat surfaces against routes which seemed curving and whimsical but somehow managed economical transit between locations. No blade of grass nor branch of tree broke through foundation or sidewalk. Their absence was compensated by metal or crystal sculptures whose abstractions recalled the reach and spread of living growth, adding curve and chaos to the clean, ascetic lines of the buildings. Elevated decks at intersections wore lambent haloes of public portals, ready to whisk those too rushed, burdened, or impatient to their destinations. On a world whose other cities showed antiquity in their mixed architecture and haphazard streetmaps, this one’s immaculate design told of the unified vision which had shaped it.
But there were no people.
Carriages parked at curbsides and driveways. Chairs were tucked neatly next to desks and tables. Windows stared in blank confusion, inward at shops and apartments and outward over avenues which should have been full of citizens tending to the vital minutiae of their lives. For all the grace and polish of its architecture, the lack of anything living to use it made the city seem unfinished.
The air tore open with a scream, at street level on the city’s largest throughfare. The edges of the spiraling portal spat and crackled with energy as it fought the universe’s desire to seal the rupture. Three curious figures stepped from the portal. From their rigid, jointed shells and the smooth blankness where faces should have been, they might have been taken for golems. Their movements betrayed their hidden nature. Automata move with the deliberate resolve of their programming, without indecision or hesitation. These three shifted from one foot to the other, blank heads jerked nervously as they scrutinized the barren cityscape.
The figure which emerged first from the portal turned to its companion on the left and silently nodded. The gesture was obviously an unspoken command.
They had taken but a few steps from the crackling aperture, which remained open in case a fast retreat was needed. The visitor to the left plucked a device from its belt, walked further away so the portal would not interfere with readings, and held the device aloft. Five movable rings encircled the shaft of a metal wand just forward of the handle. Past the rings the wand’s remaining length was studded with crystals and metal nubs. Its tip boasted four prongs, each pointing a different direction from the wand and waving gently like antennae. Adjustment and fine tuning were accomplished by twisting the movable rings. How the knowledge gained passed to the operator was not immediately obvious.
While that task was underway, the other two had only their thoughts and the unnerving emptiness of the city to occupy them. One million, five hundred ninety-seven thousand, nine hundred forty-six. Five days ago they were all here. Now not even their spirits remain. Had I left the laboratory and gone to dinner as Mother demanded, I’d be among them. And to think, Mother always claimed the laboratory would be the death of me! Now I am Lady Most High because all the rest are dead, and it is my duty to save what is left of my people. Ladies most blessed, is this a lesson or a joke at my expense?
“As we feared, Milady Most High,” the figure with the wand replied after digesting the information, turning to the one who’d ordered the scry. His voice betrayed both his gender and his educated upbringing. “The cityspell and the automatic systems are thoroughly corrupted. Anything living is seen as an infestation and immediately eliminated. I suspect that were even our faces visible, the cleaning –”
Hush! Milady Most High commanded silently.
The speaker realized his mistake and shut his mouth, but the damage had been done. A sigh echoed between the towers and swiftly grew into a gale. To the portal! commanded Milady Most High, even as she and her nearer companion spun to follow her own advice.
The one with the wand sprinted toward the promised refuge of the portal, already panting in terror. He was but two steps from the crackling aperture when the wind caught him. It neither lifted nor buffeted him. Instead it enveloped him, clinging and entangling as an invisible web. Milady Most High! his mind screamed to hers, not in panic but to get her attention.
Milady Most High’s other companion had reached the portal first, but paused and stood to one side to make sure she followed. With an exasperated hiss she grabbed his shoulder, spun him around and shoved him bodily through the swirling ingress. At the psychic hail she turned. Her eyes widened behind her faceplate.
The smooth armor of his protective suit was pitted and crumpled, the left arm and that side of his torso compacted too much to contain anything recognizable as flesh. The data! he called, and threw the wand to her as his legs compacted. She caught it, tarrying only a moment more in horrified fascination. Black dust puffed from between the ruptured seals of his suit as it was crushed like a discarded piece of paper. Ladies keep you, she ‘pathed the traditional final farewell to the departed, then turned and dove through the portal.
The wind swirled long enough to dissipate the final remnants of the suit and its wearer, then it too faded. Once more the streets and buildings huddled in silent submission to the traitor in their midst.
Milady Most High cursed with fervor and creativity, holding the wand still in one hand as she stabbed with the other at the runes on the collar of her suit. Sealing wards relaxed, and she tugged awkwardly at her helmet until an attendant pulled it off for her. Hair the color of bronze was gathered away from a softly angular face whose most striking features were a set of lips and eyes that spoke volumes with the tension of a single muscle. At this moment they mourned eloquently the loss of her one million, five hundred ninety-seven thousand, nine hundred forty-seventh fellow citizen. The burnished tresses spilled in a straightforward braid to the middle of her back. Her skin glinted under the lights with a softly metallic sheen and her ears jutted in cupped fashion on either side of her skull.
She submitted with bare grace to the attendants who swiftly removed the rest of her armor. Useless, she thought, kicking one dropped greave across the reception room. Might as well have been up there in formal party dress! Ladies smile only that the data we gathered might help. Another wasted death –
“Father?” The voice calling from the doorway was too young for the horror which plucked and frayed at its edges. “My father? Milady Most High?”
Milady Most High’s remaining escort moved forward to intercept the youth, who stared at the monarch with the irreverent demand for answers that only those so slight of years could manage. She waved him off, crossed the room, and dropped to one knee in front of the child.
“Hate me if you wish,” she whispered. “Your father went to his death on my order. But know that to the last, his actions were driven by love for his city and his family.” Her own eyes burned with fresh tears, and she did not try to blink them away.
The others present stood awkwardly by as their newest ruler and freshest orphan embraced in shared grief. They hadn’t been dismissed, but knew they were intruding on a moment which did not include them. At length the older male who’d also survived their foray stepped forward. Iarazyn, he hailed mentally in complete violation of protocol, addressing his Lady Most High by her born name. The data.
Maintaining her grip on her bereaved subject with one arm, Iarazyn held her other hand aloft, offering the wand for collection. The rest present also took advantage of the silent order to take their leave, sliding around Iarazyn and the child as they passed through the doorway.
I promise you, Iarazyn vowed, I will find what killed your father. What is killing us all.
“Welcome to Struyck Worldwide!”
San Diego sunlight was tinted green as the windows blocked other wavelengths from getting through. Bronzed struts and girders supported the high, arching glass walls. The floor was lightly cushioned by a short carpet the color of rust. Planters distracted visitors with brilliantly choreographed tableaux of botanical color while their unyielding concrete and metal frames unobtrusively guided their footsteps. Corridors curved sinuously off into dimly-lit mystery, but no forbidding closed doors or security checkpoints damped the soothing, welcoming atmosphere.
This place always reminds me of Atlantis, Euell thought as he hailed the latest group of tourists to enter the visitors’ lobby. Outside the Sorrento Valley hills baked in September heat and the parking lot shimmered with refracted light. Once through the inner doors of the foyer sweat cooled and dried without chill under gentle climate-controlled breezes. Not literally of course. But some fantasy artist’s interpretation, after they adapted to life underwater…
“Oh, it feels so good in here!” Euell smiled at the outburst from a forty-some-year-old woman. The matron arched her neck, offering her blissful face to the respite of the air conditioning. During the summer and fall when San Diego was hottest at least one of every group could be trusted to utter such sentiments.
“It’s like an underwater cathedral!” marveled the woman’s daughter. There could be no confusion on that point. They both shared the same olive complexion, prominent cheekbones, and aquiline nose prevalent in the eastern Mediterranean. “Like – Atlantis!”
Euell blinked and let his professionalism slip just a touch, taking a more appraising look at the young woman. Her nose isn’t that big, he argued, and she has nice eyes. Besides, Atlantis!
“Who’s that?” This question came from a boy barely into his second decade of life, with all that implied. At once towheaded and sunfreckled, his blue eyes were sharp and wide. His arm stabbed out and up, finger aiming at a figure which stalked along one of the terraced balconies which rose at a steeper angle than the outer wall, until they met under the building’s cap. “Is that Xander Struyck?”
“That’s not Struyck!” his older sister rebuked him, taking the opportunity to cuff him on the back of the head.
“How you know?” the boy challenged, turning to glare at her as he rubbed the abused part of his skull. “There’s no clear pictures of him!”
“Because I know who that is,” she replied smugly. “That’s Nicholas Chandler!”
The boy spun back around just in time to see the dark-haired man turn away from the balcony and vanish. “That was Nicholas Chandler?” he echoed. “Wow!” Suddenly he frowned as he replayed the sight in his mind. “Why’d he look so mad?”
Mistaken identity and public adulation were so far from Nicholas Chandler’s thoughts at that moment. They weren’t even in the same mental time zone. Nor was he angry. Those more conversant with his manner would easily recognize the flat, parallel lines of his eyebrows and moustache as signs of intense concentration. His mind had a puzzle in its jaws and was worrying at it, searching for the fault that would crack it open and let him suck out the answers.
Security cameras watched him pass. They transmitted his likeness to the facility’s security network. Olfactory sensors in the hall pulled in molecules of his scent and analyzed its structure, confirming his identity and his right to walk that hallway. The process was so efficient that doors opened at just the right moment to allow Nicholas entrance without making him break his pace.
The door at the end of the hall was just as cooperative, swinging open at his approach and shutting nearly on his trailing heel. The room beyond was sparsely furnished to the point of asceticism. A crescent-shaped desk sported clean lines of chrome and pine, its only appointment a monitor pane. Twin chairs of matching décor stood at attention in front of the desk. If there were to to be more than two visitors, the question of who stood would have to be addressed by seniority, thumb-wrestling, or who got to the chairs first. Nestled within the curve of the desk sat a chair similar in pattern to the others, but of more regal line. I’m where the guy in charge sits, that seat proudly proclaimed.
Nicholas stalked into the office and dropped himself into one of the lesser chairs. He slumped into its mesh contours, but didn’t really relax. He glowered across the desk at the most powerful man in the world.
“No answers yet,” Xander Struyck ventured a guess.
Nicholas snorted. “Eight months,” he growled, “and I’m just now figuring out the questions. Answers?” He sighed. “The Blasted Lands have infected Shenn for five thousand years. I admit hubris in thinking I could cure them on my own.”
“Who do you need?” Xander asked.
Nicholas threw exasperation into the air with his hands. “There’s nobody,” he retorted. “Nine people in the world have the background to understand what I’m facing. But none of them know about Feyside. They can’t help unless they have the whole story. Given what’s at stake, I can’t take the chance that if they found out they’d keep it to themselves.”
“You’re not giving up,” Xander stated. It wasn’t a command or implied question, but a prompt to keep the conversation moving.
Nicholas actually appeared to consider the idea for a sliver of a second, then shook his head. “I can’t,” he told Xander. “Even if it hadn’t nearly killed me, the fact that Shenn – that any world has an open sore like that, offends me. The Shennese have learned to live with it by avoiding it. But they shouldn’t have to!” He slumped in his chair again. “I’m going to cure the Blasted Lands,” he reaffirmed. “It will just take longer than I planned.”
“I have somebody who can help you,” Xander stated conversationally.
Nicholas’ gaze lanced across the desk in amber ferocity. “What?” he said in a tone which belied the intensity of his eyes.
“Somebody who knows as much as you about molecular engineering,” Xander continued, “who has pioneered no less than twenty-seven breakthroughs in the state of the art in the past nine years. And whose discretion is one hundred percent guaranteed.”
Xander knew he’d dropped enough hints for Nicholas to figure it out. Nor did the other man’s reaction when he realized who Xander was referring to come as a surprise.
Nicholas leaned forward in his chair. His leonine eyes seemed almost to light with an inner fire. “The deuce you say,” he whispered.
“You again,” she said to the phantom as it approached. “Must be Thursday. Don’t you have anything better to do after all this time?”
“Don’t you?” it challenged in return.
Neither of them was fooled by her flippant manner. Repetition did nothing to dull the horror, and she never knew when an unfamiliar ghost would introduce itself with a new kind of torture.
They came less often now than they had at first. Then, they would stand in line for their turn at a piece of her, exacting revenge for what she’d done to the people they pretended to represent. Now it was as if she sat or slept most of the time, waking up for the latest visitor. Am I Scrooge, she wondered wryly, or a hospital patient needing regular medication?
“What’s my name?” They always asked that. Part of the therapy. Create empathy by forcing the killer to think of the victim as a person. That way the killer is more likely to feel remorse for the pain they caused, especially if they’re forced to experience it first-hand. Sound theory, probably works great on your average perp.
Too bad I’m anything but average.
“Get on with it,” she told the ghost. Not even really a ghost. Just a memory, part of a looping program. Stimulus intended to provoke a given reaction.
Pain blazed through her, a manufactured sense-memory of spontaneous human combustion She heard her own organs gurgle, felt them swell and burst from the heat while still inside her ribcage. Fluids evaporated before they could puddle, bursting through ears, mouth, and nostrils in gouts of steam. Tissue blackened and fell off dessicated bone in fine ash. Unlike a true immolation she was denied the relative bliss of numbness as nerves burned away as well. Every moment was literally white-hot agony. The sooner I produce the desired response, the sooner I can break out of this program.
Fuck that.
“Susan Bradford,” the ghost re-introduced itself as it withdrew. “You put an incendiary biotrap in me.”
“Enjoyed… every… minute of it,” she retorted between gasps. So stupid. I’m probably not really breathing, why should I be gasping? Damn primal autonomic centers.
“Stargrave.”
“What… is this?” she panted. “T-tag team… Tuesday?” Then she placed the new voice. It had never introduced itself, but conversation with it never meant pain, so she was willing to listen to it. “Oh. It’s you.”
“I have a puzzle for you.”
“Of course you do,” she retorted. “You never come by just to chat.”
In her mind’s eye she lived on a stage in a deserted theater. The ghosts would drop from the rafters, enter from the wings, or squeeze up from between the boards. The puzzle fell from empty air fap! on the stage, a typewritten script bound between covers of mottled brown cardstock. She picked it up and flipped to the title page, then fanned the pages between her fingers. Fwwwwwwwiiiipppp! Instead of “The End,” the words at the bottom of the last page read “And then….?”
Like everybody else she’d heard the phrase “My mind reeled.” Of course she’d considered it so much hyperbole. As she digested the contents of the file, the worst she felt was some minor vertigo. Even that minor upset of her mental equilibrium muted her normally facile tongue as if she’d taken a sharp blow.
Another world. A region contaminated by multiple simultaneous psychic events as well as massive release of zero-point energy, so toxic it maddens and rots any living organism after only a brief contact. Contamination is both aggressive and adaptive, but so stable it’s maintained itself for over five thousand years. Another world!
“And?” she asked in a bored tone.
“That’s my question to you,” the voice answered.
“Why should I care?” she retorted.
“You don’t need to,” it assured her. “You can ignore it as you please.”
“You care,” she challenged, “or you wouldn’t have brought it to me.”
“Since when do my interests factor?” it asked.
A small corner of her mind spoke up without being asked. Because you’re the only person whose voice hasn’t meant excruciating pain, and who I’m sure isn’t a product of my own subconscious.
“You’re right,” she replied aloud. “I’ll pick it up and look at it sometime, when I can fit it between therapy sessions.”
“Talk to you later,” the voice answered, and was gone.
Don’t… go just yet, she protested too late. Damn you, the invective directed at herself. Some world-class disaffected sociopath you are. A little sense-deprivation and pain torture and you’re a slut for any human contact!
Xander turned away from the interface console to face Nicholas’ glower.
“Pointless,” was Nicholas’ opinion.
“In the short term,” Xander agreed. “She may not have sounded it, but she’s interested. The possibilities it presents will be irresistable, especially if it keeps her demons at bay.”
“Why bother?” Nicholas challenged, turning away from the console and the suspension tank which sat nearby. “Why even wake her up?”
“She’s a sadistic, amoral, self-interested terrorist,” Xander acknowledged. “Every expert who’s examined her profile agrees. Regardless of what others have done with the advances she’s made, every single one was intended to hurt or kill people.”
Xander stepped forward, closing the distance between Nicholas and himself. The two of them were alone in a small room anchored in the bedrock. A catastrophic earthquake might manage to cut off access to the surface, but nothing short of crushing the chamber itself would interrupt the computers and suspension tank inside. “But she’s also one of the greatest scientific minds of this or any age. After constant effort, we managed to break through whatever your sister did to her only two weeks ago.”
Nicholas turned to face Xander again. This time the parallel lines of his eyebrows and moustache were expressions of displeasure. “Cut to the chase, Xander.”
Xander nodded. “I don’t want to bring Stargrave back,” he assured Nicholas. “And I’m sorry she didn’t give you what you need right now. But if there’s a chance of decanting a person who has her genius and skills, who cares about helping the world instead of pulling its wings off for fun…” He shrugged. “This was an opportunity I felt deserved a shot. Even now, I’ll lay money she’s picking through the data.”
Nicholas considered the argument. “Just remember the adage about dining with the devil,” he warned.
Xander grinned. “Remember it? I live it! Do you have any idea how many people bring long spoons to my table?” His expression sobered just as suddenly. “So now what?”
Nicholas thought about it. “I need somebody who has the necessary education and skills,” he stated. “Who won’t play games or keep secrets, and who cares as much about curing the Blasted Lands as I do.” He stopped to consider his own summation, then concluded, “Nobody on this world fits those criteria. So I’ll have to go next door.”
“Lieutenant!” The call ululated across the twilit valley. To the untrained ear it was a yipping howl punctuated by a short bark. Divining its true meaning required an understanding of a language so arcane many didn’t even recognize it as more than animal sounds.
Bolt’s ears pricked up at the sound, flicking one way and the other to pick its location out of the fading echoes. Sudden motion below and to one side drew his gaze down. He grinned at the aerin who stood by his hip, recovering from a reflexive cower at the sound. Zefin ethereality blended with Nerin fluidity, with tinges of the other Kin spicing the mix. The result was uniformly grey. Raincloud-colored hair framed an oval face the hue of the sea under an overcast sky. The eyes were dark enough to stand out against the skin, but missed being black by several shades. The blandness of his coloring made the rich maroon and gold of his uniform all the more striking.
If the aerin was a restrained study in shades of grey, Bolt was earth and prairie grass and as big as all outdoors. Four long, sturdy legs supported both equine and humanoid torsoes, palomino-gold below blending into smooth sun-bronze above. A shock of hair had started out blond but been bleached ivory by decades in the sun and wind was thick enough to defy all but the most skilled or determined brush. That thicket framed a broad, square face to which mischief was a frequent visitor, which impression was further strengthened by one brown eye and one blue. And big? A tall man might reach his withers, but looking him in the eye required a climb if Bolt weren’t inclined to simply lift the petitioner bodily at the end of one hugely-muscled arm.
Bolt hailed from a land called Tantarel, a region of rolling mountains dotted by brush and short, hardy weeds. Desert winds kept Tantarel warm and dry even in the winter, the centaurs there enjoyed the top seat of the local ecology, and their bulk generated such heat that winter needed teeth before they felt it. With all that, the only reason for any clothing at all was to carry tools. Bolt had compromised his breed’s standard nudism just to the point that the residents of Embron would take him seriously as Lieutenant of the City Guard. His old trail harness, a network of plain leather straps, buckles, hooks, and pouches, had been replaced by one of similar cut but dyed and sewn in Embron’s maroon and gold colors. The largest concessions were the carnelian-studded bars glittering atop his impossibly broad shoulders.
“’Samatter, Tryl?” Bolt asked the aerin, who was trying to disguise the defensive jerk of his arms as a sudden need to press wrinkles from his uniform tunic. “Still getting’ used t’yer fellow Guards’ ways?”
Tryl started to deny it, but realized the attempt would only make him look more foolish. Professional indignation held more promise. “There’s no knowing who might still lurk in these hills, Lieutenant,” he pointed out with a pinch of peeve in his voice. “Is that not the point of these patrols, to root out any remaining Razored Shade brigands? Noises of that sort will only alert them to our presence!” He plucked at his belt and held up a hand-sized square of silvered glass in a frame of coiling iron. “Beside which, the Captain saw to it that all Guards are provided with mirrors for communication. Why bother with such –“
Bolt tilted his head down, mismatched eyes regarding Tryl with sudden keenness. “Aye?” he prompted. “Your next word was going to be?”
Tryl bit down, choked back, and swallowed the adjective “primitive.” It did not elude him that Bolt’s Tantareli brogue had suddenly flattened to enunciation befitting the most courtly noble. Tryl had been accepted to the Embron City Guard less than two months ago. Like many others he’d been attracted by the stories that sounded so fantastical in telling, but were borne out with witness. Embron was an aerin city in that it owed fealty to the Upper Court House of Shad, but its population was a mix of nearly all the races graced by the Ladies with sentience. The City Guard reflected that in its own membership. This was evidenced strikingly by the centaur Lieutenant before him, and by the ‘fellow Guards’ for whose howling ways Tryl struggled to find a description at once accurate and not bound to awake Bolt’s displeasure.
“Inefficient,” he managed finally. “When all one needs do is speak quietly to the mirror, to be heard and seen clearly at a distance?”
Bolt appeared to consider the argument. “Hm,” he grunted. “Ye may have a point, at that.” He inhaled suddenly with such force that the inflation of his chest seemed to shove his head skyward. A nearby flock of dracolets screeched to flight as he bellowed, “OY!” by way of answer to the howl.
Quick on the echo of his shout a triumphant keen returned. “Found it!” was the import for ears that kenned.
Bolt grinned. “Come on!” he invited. Tryl realized the offer was a formality. A hand as long as his shoulders were wide hooked the back of his tunic and bore him aloft. He flailed in futility, then grabbed in desperation at whatever parts of his Lieutenant’s uniform harness were most convenient as he was deposited atop Bolt’s rear torso. Landscape blurred around them for a second before falling just as abruptly back into focus.
Lupine eyes full of amusement watched Tryl slide from Bolt’s back to land in a clumsy crouch. Half-digested lunch splattered over weeds and soil, to the accompaniment of the aerin coughing and spitting. A throaty sandpaper voice said, “Tantareli speed and a recent lunch are not friendly playmates, eh brother Guard? Here.” A pungent mix of spice and extract vaulted up Tryl’s nose into his sinuses. The scent was so strong it guided the aerin’s hand to the proffered flask without the aid of sight. Tryl took a long pull of the heady beverage. “Hooooo,” he exhaled as the soothing molten liquid burned the nausea from his throat and gut.
“Thank you,” he said, clambering upright and returning the flask to its owner. He tried not to stare. The proportions were only slightly off, favoring long arms and torso as well as shoulders and thighs bulging with muscle . The overall effect was that while the being stood upright of a height with Tryl, it seemed to hunch – no, thought Tryl, it crouches, coiled as if to leap at any moment. The face was unremarkable but for the lambent eyes and exaggerated triangular line of cheek and jaw, crowned by a cropped brush of sepia hair. The mouth demonstrated how easily it could smile, showing twin rows of long, gleaming white teeth.
Ever the real question with a hnzruu, Tryl told himself, is which is their true form?
“Oy,” Bolt said in slight abashment, “sorry fer that. Dinno ye ‘ad a problem w’speed.” The Lieutenant’s front hooves shifted one side to the other.
“Don’t concern yourself, Lieutenant,” Tryl assured him gamely. “I knew the job was dangerous when I took it, didn’t I?” He remembered hearing the Captain recite those very words in response to others’ complaints about various hardships. From the grin which split Bolt’s face Tryl knew he’d chosen the right sentiment.
“Right!” Bolt pronounced, clapping a hand between Tryl’s shoulders. The gesture of camaraderie was restrained, and Tryl’s equilibrium was restored enough that he was driven forward only one staggering step. Bolt turned toward the hnzruu Guard. “What ye got, Tiy?”
Tiy stretched one arm toward the nearby hillside. The local landscape boasted granite knuckles punching through the surrounding loam, studded with thick brush and trees alternating between sinuous and gnarled. Tryl saw nothing unremarkable about the hillock, but tried to match Bolt’s knowing, intense stare as they approached the rocky abutment. Ladies let me see it before I stumble and fall through it!
“Nice work,” Tiy commented. “We almost missed it.”
“Well they ‘ad long enough t’ get it right, din’t they?” Bolt returned. “Ye don’ raise a secret army within a day’s travel of a city without knowin’ how t’ hide things!”
Tryl pulled up short as both Tiy and Bolt passed through what appeared to be a solid face of stone. Hnzruu were known for their stealth so Tiy’s feat was only slightly startling. A creature of the Tantareli’s mass vanishing so suddenly was something quite else! Tryl slid his feet forward, hands stretched before him, closer to the impenetrable wall.
His right foot kicked a small rock. The stone skidded a few inches before stopping short in a crack. Tryl’s foot struck it again, but this time the stone was braced and ready and not about to surrender a second time. Tryl’s foot stopped short against the stone while the rest of his body sallied onward. He saw the solid granite wall approaching and shut his eyes, ready for the bruising, scraping impact.
The surface he struck was unyielding, bouncing him off and striking sparks in his vision. Somehow it didn’t hurt as badly as previous experience said it should. Still Tryl stumbled back, flailing for balance. One hand brushed something smooth and dangling, and reflex curled his fingers in a desperate grab.
“Oy,” drawled Bolt. “Sorry, dinna know I was in yer way.”
Tryl opened his eyes. The entrance to the cave was behind him. How he’d passed it was a mystery he’d have to turn around to solve. This was at the moment impossible. His eyes were locked in goggled horror at the sight of his right hand. It was clenched in a fist around several strands of Bolt’s tail. Otherwise filling his field of vision were the massive rounded mounds of the Guard Lieutenant’s buttocks. Sense memory filled in the details and Tryl suddenly realized what he’d bounced his face off of, instead of the rock.
“Guard,” Bolt prompted. His fore torso was twisted completely around, his mismatched eyes regarding Tryl with good-humored bemusement. “Y’have hold o’ me tail. I’d like it back, if ye please.” He tugged gently but insistently with the contested appendage. Tryl released his grip, gaping up at Bolt in apologetic horror. Pack your kit when you get back to the city, he advised himself. You’re done with the Embron City Guard.
“Thanks,” Bolt replied, and turned his attention back to the grotto before them. Tiy joined him, shoulders shaking with contained mirth. “’S big enough,” Bolt judged. “Y’had much chance t’ check through it?”
“Just the main grotto,” Tiy answered. “There’s a warren of passages and chambers. We’re searching them now.”
“Nae fresh scents in the entrance?” Bolt asked.
Tiy shook his head in confident negation. “Nothing has been through here for at least several months. Also no scents of recent cooking or waste inside. Anybody who was here has long since starved to death. The shroud ward on the entrance keeps wildlife and weather out. I guess they weren’t worried about thieves.” He barked at his own joke.
Tryl turned around and marveled at the entrance. From inside it was a yawning aperture tall and wide enough for Bolt to pass without ducking. His eyes traced the carved runes which lined the sides and floor of the gap, quietly humming with power. He remembered how impenetrable the rock had looked from outside, the afternoon sunlight spearing through the serpentine trees and glaring off it in convincing solidity. “How did you know?” he murmured, unaware he was speaking the question aloud.
Tiy turned to him. “The lay of the land,” he answered. His tone held no rancor but the implied addendum was clear. It’s so obvious, how could you even ask the question?
“Uncle!” Another hnzruu burst from a darkened passage into the grotto. Sprinting on all fours, the shapeshifter leaped from the main floor far below them and cleared the ledge inside the entrance without effort. She changed in mid-air, landing and saluting her superiors as a lithe, russet-haired maid. The cuff on her right ear pulsed with power as she leaped, surrounding her in faint streamers of energy that coalesced into a Guard tunic, slacks, and boots.
“Farni,” Tiy said in mild reproof. “I’m Uncle on our own time. Who am I now?”
Farni bowed her head to accept the reproach. “Please pardon, Sergeant,” she replied. “We’ve found – something! A library, or a museum. I’m not sure! Would you come see?”
Farni in the lead, they wound deeper inside the bedrock. When the light grew too dim for centaur or aerin eyes they uncapped lights, short wands tipped with luminescent crystals. At first it was hard to tell they’d passed from a passage into a room. There wasn’t much more space than before. But the narrow confines were bounded by stacks of books and boxes, not walls of stone. Two other hnzruu Guards awaited them.
“Virtues,” Tiy invoked, looking around. “This isn’t how I’d envision brigand treasure.”
“Aye,” Bolt agreed, for once without humor. He lifted a large volume which was bound in planks of wood, and large enough to use as a small table. Holding the book in one hand, he angled the cover so he could see the writing on it in the glow of his light. “Ztraq,” he swore.
The invective caught the attention of everybody in the room. “What?” Tiy asked.
Bolt sighed. “Wonder if we could just collapse the entrance,” he wondered aloud, rhetorically, “an’ ferget we ever found this place?” He plucked at a pocket on his harness, drawing out a mirror. He gently tapped the glass and said, “Captain from Bolt.”
The mirror’s pane lit with the image of a city street in Embron. “Give me good news, Pony,” advised the voice of the Embron City Guard Captain.
“Would that I could, Spoons,” Bolt answered. “Well, I reckon I sort of can. We found the Razored Shade’s main camp.”
“But?” the Captain prompted.
“They’ve got a cache of Steel War lore,” Bolt told her.
“Ztraq,” she swore.
