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Authors: D.P. Prior

Best Laid Plans (51 page)

BOOK: Best Laid Plans
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‘Excuse my language, Divinity,’ Rhiannon did her version of a curtsy, ‘but this needs to stop.’

The Ipsissimus smiled and gestured for her to continue.

‘Emperor,’ Rhiannon offered Hagalle her hand and helped him to his feet. ‘I’m sorry, I know I’m out of my depth here—’

‘At least you’re a bloody Sahulian,’ Hagalle said. He leaned in closer and whispered something to her.

Rhiannon blushed and gave a polite chuckle. Shader had seen her do that before; knew she must be fuming, but playing along anyway.

‘I’m also a Nousian,’ she said, straightening her robe.

Hagalle frowned at that, but said nothing. Like everyone else, he seemed to be waiting for her to go on.

‘I’ve seen what we’re up against,’ she said. ‘And I do mean us—all of us.’

She took in the black-cloaks, the White Order, and then indicated the two armies drawn up on either side of the plain. ‘This Cadman captured me.’ She looked at Shader, but he couldn’t read her expression. ‘Thought he could use me to repay a debt. When that didn’t work out there was a fight with a demon. You know the one I mean.’ She spoke directly to Shader this time and he shuddered at the memory. ‘Cadman won. Whatever else that statue is, it’s bloody powerful, and he only had two pieces of it. But then something happened. The skies opened and a man came through. He was seated on a throne or something. He…I don’t know how to describe this. He went inside Cadman.’

Huntsman nodded. ‘Sektis Gandaw. He has found a way back, but how, I do not know. He has never had the power. Not since my gods took last of his plane ships.’

‘He already had two pieces of the statue,’ Shader said. ‘Mine and Maldark’s. Maybe that’s how.’

‘Yeah, maybe,’ Rhiannon said. ‘But that means he’s now got four.’

The Ipsissimus fingered the Monas on its chain. ‘Then what should we do?’

‘An army of corpses marches on Homestead,’ Huntsman said. ‘This is why we have come.’

‘More undead?’ Hagalle said.

‘Many more,’ Huntsman said. ‘Cadman—Sektis Gandaw—is ravaging sacred sites of my people. Ancient graves are being opened. Ants tell Sammy this army is more numerous than grains of sand in Great Desert.’

‘But they’re heading to the Homestead,’ Hagalle said. ‘Why should we care? Even your people seldom go there these days. It’s just a rock in the back of beyond.’

Huntsman drew himself up and cocked his head. ‘It is home of my gods, last of their kind. They it was who rescued statue from Sektis Gandaw in Dreaming. We cannot let them die.’

‘Not convinced,’ Hagalle said. ‘I’m not sending Sahulian forces into the outback when there are cities to be defended.’

‘Against what Sektis Gandaw plans,’ Huntsman said, ‘there is no defence. First he will slaughter my gods, and then he will come for you.’ He looked directly at the Ipsissimus. ‘Archon shields you for now, but Gandaw will find a way.’

‘Wouldn’t it make more sense,’ Shader said, ‘for him to come for the Monas first, make the statue complete?’

‘He is careful. Very patient,’ Huntsman said. ‘He must know last piece cannot be hidden from him for long, not now he has all others. But he will take no chances. My gods defeated him once before. He hates them beyond all imagining. He will not leave them unpunished.’

Hagalle turned on his heel and strode away from the group. He stood with hands on hips, staring up at his army. Rhiannon followed him and spoke in his ear.

‘Then we should go to the Homestead,’ the Ipsissimus said. ‘One final battle to decide the fate of the world.’

‘It is not just this world that is at stake,’ Huntsman said. ‘If Sektis Gandaw wins, he will start Unweaving. This world, Dreaming, even Abyss itself, will be unmade. All that exists will cease.’

Hagalle nodded to Rhiannon and walked back to stand with the Ipsissimus and Huntsman. ‘You should make use of a lass like that,’ he said to the Ipsissimus. ‘She might well be infected with your disease, but she’s still Sahulian, and she has the Sahulian gift of common sense. I’ll go, if you will, but only on the understanding that you leave as soon as this is over.’

‘You have my word,’ the Ipsissimus said.

‘Then I suppose that will have to do.’ Hagalle turned to Huntsman. ‘I take it you have some plan for marching thousands of troops across the centre of Sahul without them dying of exposure and dehydration.’

‘Sammy,’ Huntsman said. ‘With rest and food he will regain his strength. Together, he and I will open a portal.’

‘Better hope you get your aim right,’ Hagalle said.’

‘We will.’ Huntsman nodded, gazing into the distance. ‘Homestead is most sacred site of my people. It will draw us.’

 

 

ROGUE’S LAST STAND
 

A
lbert stepped out of the plane ship into a cathedral-like cavern. Natural phosphorescence bathed the walls in a greenish glow. The floor was a forest of twisted stalagmites, and stalactites hung from above, dripping with moisture. It was like standing in a dragon’s jaws.

He turned back to the plane ship but saw only the rectangle of light from which he’d just emerged, and nothing but air and rock where the craft should have been. Judging by the immensity of the corridors he’d traversed with Shadrak, the craft was too large even for the cavern. Perhaps its peculiar nature allowed it to merge with the walls, or maybe it was somewhere else altogether.

Shadrak appeared in the light carrying a large metal box. He set it down before Albert.

‘The globes explode when shattered,’ he said, opening the lid and lifting a glass orb for Albert to see. ‘These tubes spit fire in long gouts, and there are lengths of cable and pitons.’

‘Fascinating,’ Albert said. ‘I would thank you for your generosity, but I have no idea why you’re giving them to me.’

‘You had a choice back there,’ Shadrak said, glaring at Albert with those unnerving pink eyes. ‘Stay and fight, or come with me and do what you’re told.’

‘Yes,’ Albert said, rubbing his chin. ‘I must have missed that last bit.’

Three shapes moved from the shadows surrounding a cluster of gigantic stalagmites. Albert took a step back, but Shadrak put a hand on the small of his back.

‘I was told to expect this,’ he said.

‘Told?’ Albert said. ‘Told by whom?’

Albert flicked a look over his shoulder at the entrance to the plane ship. Perhaps if Shadrak was distracted he’d be able to nip back inside. How difficult could it be to pilot the thing? If Shadrak could manage it then Albert was sure it would be a doddle for him.

The figures edged closer to the accompaniment of a sibilant hiss and deep throaty croaks. Albert’s mouth hung open as he began to descry what they were.

The central figure had the body of a huge black man, thickly muscled and ridged with veins. His head, however, was serpentine, bobbing and swaying at the end of a sinuous neck. To his right loomed an even larger man, this one bronze-skinned and with the head of a crocodile. Its tawny eyes watched him the same way Albert would have eyed a crème brulée. The third figure was much smaller, a squat humanoid with the head of a toad and a tongue that flicked out as if tasting the air.

The three stopped a few paces from Albert and Shadrak. The albino placed the orb back inside the box and shut the lid.

‘I am Mamba,’ said the black man with the snake’s head.

‘And I am Baru,’ Crocodile Head said.

Toad hopped closer and shot his tongue towards Albert. ‘Thindamura.’

‘Shadrak,’ the Albino said, ‘and this is Albert, your protector.’

‘Their what?’ Albert said, inching back towards the rectangle of light.

A shadow passed overhead and Albert looked up. He dropped into a crouch as it seemed the ceiling fell towards him, but then he realized that something was making a controlled descent. Something massive, with eight long legs dangling beneath it. Shadrak pulled him back to make way for a gigantic spider.

‘The Archon said he would send aid,’ the spider said with a clacking of mandibles. ‘Yet he sends us only you.’

‘I don’t know what he promised you,’ Shadrak said. ‘Just told me to bring help and that’s what I’ve done. Albert’s the best in the business and he’s got a box of tricks that’s as good as a small army.’

Protector? Box of tricks? Small army?
What on earth was Shadrak playing at? Albert turned to ask him, but Shadrak had already slipped back into the rectangle of light. The door panel started to slide down.

‘Good luck, Albert. I have to be some place else. Hold as long as you can and we may yet get out of this alive.’

‘Get out of what? You can’t just leave—’

But the rectangle of light had gone, leaving only rocks and air in its wake. There was a shimmer like a heat wave, a muffled drone, and then nothing.

The great spider shuffled towards Albert, watching him through rows of red eyes.

‘I am Murgah Muggui. We are the last of our kind. If indeed you have the skills to aid us, we will be forever in your debt.’

‘Aid you? I’m a poisoner, for goodness’ sake. I kill people for a living.’

‘I fear that is exactly the sort of help we will need,’ Murgah Muggui said. ‘An old enemy comes, and soon the last battle will be fought. Console yourself that your are labouring to preserve more than your own life. You are fighting for the survival of worlds.’

‘Then I think you’ve been sent the wrong man,’ Albert said. ‘I’m way too much of a cynic to give a damn about all that. A vintage Sauvignon and some mature cheddar is the only thing on my mind right now.’

That and a million other things. Such as how he was going to repay Shadrak for this; how he was going to capitalize on the weakness of the Sicarii following their unprecedented losses at Dead Man’s Torch; and…’

A muffled boom shook the cave.

‘What the—?’

‘They are coming!’ Thindamura hopped excitedly. ‘They are coming!’

‘Who?’ Albert said. ‘Who’s coming?’

Baru turned his great head to look up at the ceiling towards the rear of the cavern. ‘The dead of Sahul,’ he said. ‘And creatures from Aethir.’

Mamba flexed his bulging muscles and bared his fangs. ‘Sssektis Gandaw comesss. After all thisss time he hasss not forgotten.’

Another boom, this one louder and more urgent. Rock clattered from the ceiling and a crack raced across the rear wall of the cavern.

‘We will be trapped down here,’ Murgah Muggui said. ‘Quickly! There is an old fault that runs all the way to the summit. If we go now we may yet evade them.’

The three hybrid creatures ran from sight behind the stalagmites. Murgah Muggui rose into the air on a ropey strand of silk and scuttled across the ceiling.

Albert looked around helplessly, thoughts consumed with a thousand ways of killing Shadrak. Another explosion nearly threw him from his feet. Cursing under his breath, he stooped down, lifted the metal box, and ran.

He got no more than a dozen paces when the rear wall exploded. Rock spewed into the cavern and a chunk struck Albert on the temple. He fell in a daze, cracking the back of his head against stone. He heard the metal box crash to the floor and for a moment feared it was about to detonate. The contents rattled and chinked, but did not break.

He rolled to his front and tried to rise, his head pounding and groggy. He couldn’t quite focus on the ground beneath him—it seemed to pitch and roll as if he were at sea. Cold hands grabbed him and hauled him up. He probably should have screamed, but he was too disoriented to care. He grinned like an idiot as rotten teeth pressed towards him, red eyes glaring from a face that resembled off meat. Scores of corpses shambled about him clutching with cyanosed fingers. Albert retched and his vision cleared. The stench of rot filled his nostrils and screams bubbled up from his gut.

Suddenly Baru was amongst the dead, ripping with his great jaws, pummelling with his fists. He tore Albert from his attacker and slung him into the arms of Mamba. The snake man passed him to the care of Thindamura and then leapt into the fray, bludgeoning the dead with his tree-trunk arms.

Toad led him towards a fissure in the cavern wall, but Albert pulled away and ran back for the box. Putrescence sprayed and limbs flew as Baru savaged the undead. A corpse lurched towards Albert, but Mamba clubbed it down. Hundreds more were still pouring through a cavity in the rear wall. Lifting the box, Albert struggled towards the fissure. Toad was hopping and gesticulating for him to hurry. Mamba and Baru fell back, flattening the dead with thunderous blows. They were both bleeding from dozens of cuts, but they seemed not to notice.

BOOK: Best Laid Plans
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