Read The Crucible of the Dragon God Online

Authors: Mike Wild

Tags: #Action & Adventure, #General, #Fantasy, #Epic, #Fiction

The Crucible of the Dragon God (26 page)

BOOK: The Crucible of the Dragon God
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"What is it?"

"Trust me, Hooper, you don't want to know."

"I do. It might be important."

"Oh, I've no doubt that it is. But -"

Kali quickly leapt up next to him then, with a squeal, leapt just as quickly aside.

"Warned you."

Kali grimaced. She had been standing on - more accurately,
in
- the rotting corpse of one of the Final Faith. The slimy and bubbling remains were clearly victim of a k'nid attack, brought down on this spot as it - its gender was hard to determine - had apparently tried to run. What made it so repulsive and different to other victims they had seen was that it clearly hadn't been fully absorbed. As if, for some reason, the k'nid involved had abandoned the process part way through. But, as Slowhand rather irreverently pointed out, it wasn't like them not to finish a snack.

"So what happened?" he asked.

"I don't know. Maybe it was interrupted by something."

"Interrupted?" Slowhand repeated, panning Suresight about him once more. "By what? The place is abandoned. Isn't it?"

"That's the theory."

"
Right
."

"I know one thing, though," Kali added, nodding ahead, "and that's that we're on the right track."

Slowhand looked. "Ohhhh, hells."

"Exactly."

Kali and Slowhand moved into the passage they had found and, at its end, onto a bridge between spheres - half overgrown with trees - picking their way carefully past more of the Final Faith; ten or so, all similarly and horribly dead. As they crossed, the
Kerberos
sphere shook once more behind them, more violently than ever.

"I guess these are the ones that didn't make the airship," Slowhand commented.

Kali swallowed. "Do you think your sister abandoned them?"

Slowhand took a second to answer, the face he pictured in his mind not Jenna, then said through gritted teeth, "I'd like to think she didn't have a choice."

The pair reached the far end of the bridge and entered the sphere Kali had designated
Twilight
.

The first thing they noticed was that the difference between it and 'Kerberos' couldn't have been more marked. For one thing, this sphere was not hollow like the other, possessing a floor at the level they entered which was divided into corridors and chambers. For another, its style of interior construction was distinctly opposed to the sphere they had left. Where
Kerberos
and all its heavy machinery had struck her as being predominantly dwarven, the almost organic and membranous make-up of
Twilight
was unmistakably elven. The fact that both spheres co-existed in the same complex - together with the presence of the elven glamour field in the dwarven
Kerberos
- led Kali to only one possible conclusion: this was a joint venture of both of the Old Races. That in itself wasn't unknown in the latter years of their civilisations' existence - where their magics and technologies had combined for the good of both - but in a place such as this, in such a way and on such a scale? What had brought them together to do this?

Kali and Slowhand began, slowly and cautiously, to explore the corridors and chambers about them. Some of these, however, were not immediately accessible as their doors were either sealed with thick membranes or they appeared to have been barricaded by the Final Faith in some desperate attempt to stave off the k'nid. The latter tactic had not been overly successful, judging by the number of bodies they found littering the place. Kali found it astounding that the Faith had sent so many of their people here - top-ranking academics judging by their robes - and realised that they had obviously attached great importance to the complex's capabilities, whatever they were.

Some clues started to present themselves as they explored further, not only
in situ
but also in a number of containers the Faith academics had packed with carefully preserved anatomical and biological diagrams of ancient origin as well as information crystals of a type Kali recognised from previous sites. That these containers were found in laboratories filled with vials, test tubes, examination slabs and other kinds of scientific trappings, including complex and delicate machines beyond understanding, suggested that they were records of experiments the Old Races had conducted - perhaps that the Faith wished to replicate - but experiments into what, with what, and for what purpose? A further clue came when Slowhand somehow triggered the opening of a number of small and strange, crystalline drawers in an adjacent chamber. Kali looked and saw that, indexed with elven pictograms, were what appeared to organic tissue samples of every animal that she knew existed - and many, many that she didn't. There was the grank at the top of the food chain, to the bassoom in the middle, all the way to the humble worgle at the bottom. There were samples of insect life, too, of avian, reptilian and aquatic lifeforms, and there, in a section of their own, those of elves, dwarves and - Kali swallowed slightly - humans.

What disturbed her the most was that, in almost every case, the indexing attached to the specimens were cross-referenced to others - sometimes two or three, sometimes seven or eight, or sometimes as many as twenty other specimens in the collection.

"What
is
this?" Slowhand said.

"Disturbing," was all Kali could say in reply.

Again, she and Slowhand moved on, working their way towards the hub of
Twilight
now, passing chambers even more mystifying than those they had already investigated.

Here was a chamber whose circumference was lined with membranous booths, most of which stirred with what looked like variously coloured gases; here one whose laboratory equipment was, bafflingly, positioned on the ceiling; and here a considerably larger and perfectly circular chamber whose only content was a strangely shaped chair suspended on the end of a metal arm looking like the hour hand of some giant clock. The purpose of these devices was, for now, beyond their ken and, shrugging to each other, they ignored them, coming at last to a point where the corridor joined -
became
- a circular affair surrounding the hub itself. This was clearly a centre of activity as other corridors joined it at regular points but, like some of the earlier doors, they had all been barricaded by the Faith. Neither Slowhand or Kali were very much interested in what lay along them, however, because their attention had instead become fixed on what actually lay at the heart of
Twilight
.

"Slowhand?"

"Don't look at me. I haven't a clue."

They were staring at another sphere within the sphere, or at least half of one. For a broad hemisphere lay in front of them - one that perhaps would take a hundred men to surround with arms outstretched - but this one was transparent, made of a substance that felt like soft glass, and its interior slowly roiled with a thick green fog. From what Kali and Slowhand could see through the fog, the interior of the hemisphere did not end at floor level but went much deeper, and they realised that they were looking through some kind of observation dome into the lower half of
Twilight
. There was some kind of chamber down there, a completely organic space whose uneven floor was punctured by perhaps fifty circular holes, each the size of a farmstead's well. They appeared to contain liquid, too, but it was not water. Instead, there was a slowly bubbling, lava-like gloop the colour of the mist it produced that was slightly overflowing their edges.

"Looks like pea soup," Slowhand commented.

"Oh, I think it's
some
kind of soup, all right. Just not the kind you'd serve at dinner."

Kali studied the chamber further, noting three demi arches that arced over the wells, their tips almost meeting above their centre. An odd looking runed prism was suspended between the tips, though it looked damaged and skewed. But even so, every few seconds, it discharged spidery, slowly dancing bolts of energy into the wells themselves, as if it were in some way
vitalising
them. Kali's attention turned to the hemisphere itself, and here she noted that it was not completely transparent but instead etched all around its circumference with the same pictograms that had indexed the specimen drawers. Thousands of them, one after the other. The fact that these etchings glowed slightly suggested they were more than simple decoration. They reminded her of the 'orchestral' selection controls she had once used in the Forbidden Archive and knew instinctively that if she danced her palms over them she would be combining one species with another in whatever combination she wished. Merrit Moon had been right when, back in Gargas, he'd said that the Old Races had been playing Gods. The wells beneath them were not wells, they were
birthing pools
for whatever was created within them.

"The Crucible of the Dragon God," Kali said. "We've found it."

"So we know where the k'nid come from. Unfortunately, I don't think we've come at the best time."

"What?"

"Time's up, Hooper. They're spawning again."

Kali snapped her gaze back into the fog and thought,
dammit
.

Their exploration of the spheres had obviously taken longer than they had reckoned because something was indeed happening down there. Something they had come to prevent but were now forced to be witness to. From each of the birthing pools a small platform was rising and atop each platform, gloop dripping from it's irregular, angular flanks, was a k'nid. The dark, unnatural creatures did not move until they had fully risen from their pools but then they burst into frantic activity. Some sped up what appeared to be a circular pathway just discernable around the wall of the chamber and a second later could be heard battering at one of the Faith erected barricades, others headed out of view of the observation dome and did not return, perhaps finding some other exit from the chamber. Still others, sensing Kali and Slowhand above, launched themselves the not inconsiderable height towards the dome itself. One actually made it, thudding upside down against the transparent substance, and was followed in quick succession by another, and then another.

"Whoa!" Slowhand said, backing up. He unslung Suresight and aimed at the dome.

"I wouldn't worry too much. This stuff is probably tougher than it loo -"

The soft glass tore before her eyes, rent by the scrabbling of the k'nid. Fog billowed through - noxious and foul.

"Yeah?" Slowhand said, loosing three rapid arrows while coughing. "You wanna think that one through again?"

"Shit!" For a moment Kali considered blasting the k'nid with her crackstaff, but she had no idea how volatile the fog that accompanied them might be. There was only one alternative. "Run!"

"Where?"

"Anywhere!"

The sound of the dome tearing accompanied Kali and Slowhand's footfalls. These were soon drowned out as more of the k'nid trailed the others through the newly created exit. Kali didn't look back to count, but from the noise she reckoned at least another five of the things were in pursuit. It didn't take an arithmetical genius to work out that eight k'nid was eight too many. Nor did it take a genius to work out that if they didn't get the hells out of their way, they were dead. But where to run to? All of the laboratories they had explored so far were open and offered no protection, and the sealed doors were out, but there had to be somewhere. Finally, she noticed one of the chambers they had passed earlier - the one with the gas filled booths - and ran towards it. One of the booths appeared clear of gas and, hammering on it to test its strength, Kali punched a panel on its outside which she hoped would open it. The front of the booth slid aside.

She grabbed Slowhand and threw him into the chamber, before following him. As she squeezed up to the archer the door slid shut. A second later, the k'nid slammed into their makeshift refuge, shaking it but otherwise unable to gain entry.

Slowhand stared out at the scrabbling things, the sound of their assault muted, his face pressed up against the side of Kali's head. "Cosy."

"Cramped is the word I'd use."

Kali shuffled round so that they were face to face, trying to avoid as much body contact with Slowhand as she could. But it wasn't easy - thigh pressed against thigh and breasts against torso - she could barely raise her arms before they were touching the smooth walls of their circular confinement.

"Closet?" Slowhand hazarded.

"There's nothing in it."

"We're in it."

"I'd noticed."

"Okay. One of those elevators then?"

"Not going anywhere."

"True." Slowhand smiled as the tips of their noses touched, and he puckered up. "Maybe it's a private
lurrrvv
chamber."

"Then maybe Endless Passion would like to join you in here." Kali said through gritted teeth.

"Hey, I already said, nothing happe -" The archer stopped, looking taken aback. "Hooper, are you
hissing
at me?"

"I
do not
hiss." But she had heard the sound herself. "I thought it was, you know... your problem."

"What problem? Hooper, I do not have a prob -"

If Kali had been able, she would have put her fingers to his lips, shushing him, but all she could do was body-bump him to keep him quiet. "I think you do now."

There was indeed a hissing but neither of them were responsible for it. For a second, Kali worried that the chamber was flooding with gas like the others, but if it was it had no colour or odour. Then, both isolated the source at the same time and looked up. There was some kind of fan above, rotating ever more swiftly, and as Kali watched it was time for Slowhand's hair to progress in an upward direction. Amusing as that was, it clearly wasn't right. Neither was the fact that she was having difficulty breathing.

"Slowhand, do you feel hot, breathless, as if you're expanding?"

"Every time I'm near you," the archer said. The fact that he wheezed and his eyes bulged, took some of the humour out of it.

"I think something's sucking the air out."

"Oh, come on! Why would someone build a room that sucked the air out? Hooper, are you making eyes at me?"

"No. The pressure's dropping, fast, and if we don't get out of here right now, we're dead."

BOOK: The Crucible of the Dragon God
2.02Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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