Read Heights of the Depths Online
Authors: Peter David
The Spires
It was exactly as she
had seen it.
The place where the Traveler had brought her, the street, the building…it was all precisely as she had seen in her dreams. The difference was that here she could smell the air, truly feel the street beneath her feet. She tried to imagine thousands of humans like herself pouring out of the entranceways that were sunken into the sidewalks, but the entire street remained eerily empty and silent. The only ones there were herself, the two Travelers who had found her upon the ship, and several other Travelers who were simply standing there, looking on.
“Is the Overseer going to meet us here?” she said to the Traveler who had brought her there, the one whom she had come to think of as her Traveler.
“Stop talking,” he said tonelessly.
“Does he have a name other than ‘Overseer?’ For that matter, do you have a name? We were together so long, I feel as if—”
“My gods!” he sighed. “You never stop. Don’t you understand what’s going to happen here, you stupid woman? The Overseer is going to kill you.”
“Why would he do that?”
The Traveler who was standing next to him tried to say something to him in that same eerie, whispering manner that she had heard earlier. The Traveler ignored his friend. “Why? There is no why involved. He is the Overseer. Questions such as ‘why’ do not concern him.’”
“Questions of why concern everyone. Everyone has reasons for what they do.”
“If they are bad reasons, what does it matter?”
“It matters,” she said softly. “It just…it matters. What is your name? I think it’s time you told me your name.”
“Graves!”
The Traveler jumped as if jolted and he turned toward the voice that had just spoken.
A Piri emerged from one of the stairways that led down into darkness. “Graves!” he said again, and began to run toward the Traveler.
“Gant?” said the Traveler.
“Gant?” echoed Jepp. She couldn’t quite understand why this Piri was being addressed as Gant. She knew what Gant looked like, and this certainly was not him.
Then the Piri abruptly staggered and started screaming in pain. His skin began to redden, to blister under the influence of the daylight. and he staggered back toward the stairs, screeching.
More Travelers were now emerging from the stairs, and they were blocking Gant’s means of escaping from the glare of the sun.
“Gant!” shouted the Traveler. Jepp forgotten, everything forgotten, he ran toward the Piri, pulling off his cape and hood as he did so. He remained clad entirely in black, but Jepp gasped as she saw him for the first time in the full light of day.
He was beautiful. She had not thought that any living thing could be so beautiful. Long, purple hair framed his face, but the rest of his face looked like living silver that glistened in the light.
He threw the cape and hood over Gant, who collapsed to the street, gasping for breath. “Thank you…thank you,” Gant managed to gasp.
“Why are you still in that form?”
“I…didn’t want them to see…I didn’t—”
That was when Karsen emerged from the darkness.
Jepp could not believe it. It seemed impossible. It had to be impossible. For a moment she thought that she was dreaming. That was the simplest explanation. Her dreams had become so vivid that she was no longer capable of distinguishing the imagining from the reality. She could not even find the breath to say his name, so stunned was she to see him.
It wasn’t necessary. He saw her.
He cried out her name and ran toward her. Jepp dashed toward him, calling out to him, and when she drew close enough she literally leaped into his arms. He held her so tight that it threatened to squeeze the life out of her, and at that moment she would not have cared. She would have been content dying in his arms, because there was nowhere else in the whole Damned World she would have preferred to be.
The other Bottom Feeders were emerging as well, with expressions that ranged from surprise to pleasure to annoyance (the last naturally being Zerena.). The Travelers said nothing, although they were taking care to give the one called Graves a wide berth. It was as if they were somehow embarrassed to be anywhere near him, as if he had violated some sort of code of conduct for Travelers.
“How did you get here?” she said to Karsen.
He laughed at that, sounding weary but happy. “It was a lot of work,” he said. “But it was worth it.”
“If we die, I have to think that diminishes the worth somewhat,” said Zerena.
That was when the ground began to shake steadily beneath their feet. Something was coming from a nearby street. Karsen held Jepp tight, but she gently—but firmly—slid his arm off her. “It’s going to be all right,” she said. “But I have to face him. I have to be strong. There has to be…”
“What? Be what?”
“Order,” she said. “Things have to be…just so. I have to make them just so.”
“I don’t understand what you’re talking about.”
“I’m not sure I do either.”
The Travelers converged around the Bottom Feeders, Eutok and Jepp. It was clear why that was so: in order to forestall any thought they might give to fleeing.
Slowly, ponderously, the powerful armored figure of the Overseer stepped out into the intersection. He simply stood there for a time, looking at them.
Then, finally, he spoke.
“What have we here?”
No one answered at first. And then Jepp stepped forward, squaring her shoulders, and if she could not look him in the eye, she could at least take a guess as to where his eye might be and look there. “I am Jepp,” she said. “I am a human.”
“Yes. I know that.”
“And I…”
“You what?”
She took a deep breath and let it out slowly, tremblingly. She realized that she was being seized with an almost primal urge to flee the scene. She had never heard the term “fight or flight,” but if she had, she would have understood how it applied right then.
“I want there to be people again,” she said. “People like me. Lots of people like me. I want the streets of this city to be filled with them. So many of them that, no matter which way you look, there are just…
just people. Lots of them. And I just…I don’t see why this world can’t be big enough for the Twelve Races and human beings. I don’t understand why the few humans who remain alive have to be slaves. I don’t understand why everyone cannot be free to live their lives.”
“You do not understand that? Would you like me to explain it to you?”
“I…I wasn’t looking for an explanation actually. I just…”
“Human have always been slaves, child. Slaves to their desires. Slaves to their sex organs. Slaves to corporations. Slaves to their stupidity. To their greed and arrogance. To their endless, unrelenting pursuit of more and more pointless possessions, or drugs, or mindless entertainment. Corporations enslave employees. Religion enslaves minds and souls. Everywhere you looked, even when mankind was at its height, there was nothing…nothing but slavery. And the sick thing—the truly sick thing—is that everyone believed that they were free. They all thought they had free will. They all thought that they were masters of their own destiny, or at least could be if they had enough money or power or sex partners or whatever they needed in order to feel good about themselves. But it was all a joke. Just a big goddamn joke. Do you know what Voltaire said? No, of course you don’t. He said that God was a comedian playing to an audience too afraid to laugh. Well, look where we are now, big guy. Look. You killed the audience. Absolutely killed them. Now who’s laughing?”
Jepp just stared at him. “I have no idea what you’re talking about,” she said.
“No. No, of course you don’t.”
He strode toward her, the ground shuddering beneath him.
Karsen’s leg brushed up against hers and she could feel that he was trembling. She put a hand on his shoulder reassuringly. “Breathe,” she said softly. “Breathe steadily.”
“So you want to repopulate the Earth, then? Is that it?”
“The Earth? What’s—?”
“My God, is there anyone with a brain left on this planet? How many times am I going to have to explain it! This! Here! This planet! Where you are standing! It’s called ‘Earth’. All right? Not ‘the Damned World.’ Earth! Urrrrrrth. Earth! Are we all clear on this?”
Jepp nodded, not knowing what else to do.
“And I am supposed to just do what? Wave my hand and bring humanity back in full force? In case you haven’t noticed, I am not humanity’s biggest fan. The fewer humans there are, the better. And I would just as soon get rid of the ones we have. Which reminds me, Travelers, did you get rid of the ones who were scurrying around underneath the streets?”
One of the Travelers bowed slightly in a manner that indicated an affirmative.
“G
ood. There aren’t all that many more. A handful out west, I believe, hiding out. Or at least they think they’re hiding out. But they’ll be found and dealt with. Just as you will be now, my dear…Jepp, was it? Yes. Jepp. And these are your…dare I say it…friends? You will all be dealt with.”
“What do you mean?”
“You want to know? Really? All right, then. You have obviously gone to a great deal of effort to come here, and I feel it only right and proper to make it worth your while. And, most importantly, you deserve to have my personal attention. So here is what is going to happen:
“There is going to be a hunt. A huge, magnificent hunt. The lot of you are going to scatter, or stay in one group; it doesn’t make any difference to me. I will give you a full day’s head start. Go as far as you want. Run as fast as you can. Feel free to breathe a sigh of relief because you think I cannot possibly find you, and pat yourselves on the back for your own cleverness. And then I will hunt you down. I will use all the resources at my command, and I will track you and come after you, and I will kill you. You will all die, because that’s just the way life goes in the big city. I will hunt you, Jepp with no last name, would-be savior of humanity. I will hunt you and I will kill you, and your friends, and your little dog, too.”
“My little what?”
“Never mind. It’s not important. What’s important is that humanity never, ever get a toehold on this godforsaken world ever again. You will die, and those who have tried to befriend you will die, and the handful of humans will die, and then—if we’re very, very lucky—everything else will follow. Because the late Nicrominus told me that without humans, everything goes dark, and I’m fine with that. And even if it doesn’t, well…at least this was a way to kill some time.
“Now run, little Jepp with no last name. You and all your friends. Run!”
“No!” said Jepp defiantly. “I’m not going to run. We’re not going to run!”
“She doesn’t speak for all of us,” said Zerena.
“I’m not going to run because humans deserve more than you’re willing to give them! They deserve more belief than you’re willing to have in them! You all do!” and she turned and shouted to the Travelers. “You don’t have to stand by and allow this! You can stand up to him! Together we can accomplish anything!”
“This is your last chance, child. Run. You have until the count of three or you die right now. One—”
“I’m not afraid of you!”
“Two—”
“Humanity will live! I’ve seen it! And there’s nothing you can do to stop it—!”
“Three!”
He advanced on Jepp, his hands outstretched toward her.
There was an explosion of thunder, but it was like no thunder any of them had heard. It was short and abrupt and repeated itself several times.
The Overseer staggered and looked down at his armored body. Three holes had appeared in the chest. Blood was seeping out of them. As if he was studying with great fascination something that had happened to somebody else, he touched one of the holes with his gloved finger.
“Teflon bullets. Armor piercing. Has to be. I’ll be damned.”
A figure was slowly approaching. It was a female Mandraque. She was holding something made of gleaming blue metal in front of her with both hands. Jepp recognized her immediately; she had seen her in a dream.
The Travelers were frozen in place, looking as stunned as anyone else.
“She is right. We should all be free. Oh…and you killed New Daddy. You shouldn’t have done that. So I gifted myself with this.”
“I’ll be damned,”
he said again.
“That’s the plan,” she said, and fired once more.
The fourth bullet slammed home and the Overseer fell backwards like a great tree and slammed to the pavement.
All was silent for what seemed an eternity. Finally:
“You stupid bitch,” Graves said. “You’ve just destroyed the world.”
“Have I?” said Norda Kinklash. “My. How very exciting.”
# # #
Don’t miss the concluding chapter of
The Hidden Earth
Book Three
Order of the Chaos
About the Author
Peter David is a prolific author whose career, and continued popularity, spans nearly two decades. He has worked in every conceivable media: Television, film, books (fiction, non-fiction and audio), short stories, and comic books, and acquired followings in all of them.
In the literary field, Peter has had over seventy novels published, including numerous appearances on the New York Times Bestsellers List. His novels include
Tigerheart
, D
arkness of the Light
,
Sir Apropos of Nothing
and the sequels
The Woad to Wuin
and
Tong Lashing
,
Knight Life
,
Howling Mad
, and the
Psi-Man
adventure series. He is the co-creator and author of the bestselling
Star Trek: New Frontier
series for Pocket Books, and has also written such Trek novels as
Q-Squared
,
The Siege
,
Q-in-Law
,
Vendetta
,
I, Q
(with John deLancie),
A Rock and a Hard Place
and
Imzadi
. He produced the three
Babylon 5
Centauri Prime novels, and has also had his short fiction published in such collections as
Shock Rock
,
Shock Rock II
, and
Otherwere
, as well as
Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine
and
The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction
.