“If you run into the enemy on your way back, just chalk it up to bad luck.”
As D pelted her with one heartless remark after another, Irene could only stare dumbfounded at his lips. This man was about to abandon her, yet she couldn’t hate him. The young man’s beauty was such that it undermined her emotions with confounding ease.
“My mind is made up. I’m going with you.”
“Yeah, you should do that,” Strider said with a nod.
“Make her go,” said D.
“We’re all supposed to be on the same team,” Stanza interjected. “So that makes it two votes against your one. Majority rule.”
Silence flowed by.
“Do as you like,” D said in a resigned tone. He had two “partners,” and more baggage. In all truth, it probably didn’t matter either way. “But you two are responsible for looking after her.”
“Understood,” Stanza said before turning to face the girl. “You don’t have any weapons, do you?”
Not even waiting for Irene to shake her head in reply, she pulled an old-fashioned gunpowder revolver from one of her coat’s inner pockets and put it into the girl’s pale hand.
“Just pull the trigger and you can get off six shots. It’s got a pretty good kick to it, so take aim well. For a beginner, about fifteen feet’s a good range. Let them get close before you fire. Don’t be scared—got it?”
Nodding, Irene tucked the weapon through the belt on her slacks. Perhaps she was at peace with the weapon, because her movements were calm.
“Let’s get a move on,” Strider said, getting to his feet.
D was already headed toward the door.
Just then, heaven and earth shook. Cracks shot through the concrete-reinforced ceiling and walls, and pieces of them started to rain down.
“Wh—what the hell is going on?” Strider stammered, batting away falling concrete with the tip of his longsword’s sheath.
“Bombing, I take it,” said Stanza. Her eyes were turned up toward the ceiling, as if evaluating its strength. “I heard something about that a long time ago. They say the ancient mercenaries who covered the Florence Highway attacked the enemy from the sky. They’re doing it again, I guess.”
At that very moment, the biggest blast yet knocked D back from the doorway. The lights in the ceiling faded. Shock waves plowed across the central chamber.
In the darkness, a light sparked to life. Was it the work of D, or one of the warriors?
Actually, it wasn’t any of the three.
“Is everybody okay?” Irene asked. Though she still lay on the floor, her right hand was raised, and it held a lit fire cord.
“More or less,” Strider replied.
“It’s a good thing you had that with you,” Stanza called out from not far away.
“Nights on the Frontier are too dangerous not to have some source of fire. I had it stashed in my shoe. Can you walk?” the girl asked, and just then another blast assailed them.
The ceiling made an unsettling sound. Cracks formed.
“If we don’t hurry up and get out of here, we’ll be buried alive!” Strider said, his shadowy form getting back up.
“The enemy intends to do just that. And if we go out, they’ll kill us!” said Stanza.
As if to deliver the coup de grâce, a voice of iron informed them, “The entrance has been sealed off.”
“What are we supposed to do, then? Isn’t there any other way out?”
The question was directed at Irene.
“No.”
“Shit!”
“At least, not a
regular
way.”
Irene’s form and the flame flowed along. Away from the entrance.
Where the floor met the wall, there was one spot that had a natural-looking bump. When Irene reached out for it and applied pressure, it easily spun around, sliding back into the depths of the wall. The eyes of the four were greeted by a new cavern just big enough for an adult to squeeze through.
“Go,” Strider said, giving Irene a push.
Perhaps used to doing things like this, the girl quickly scurried into the hole like an insect.
“See you,” Strider said, smirking as he made his way in.
With a wry grin, Stanza remarked, “Aren’t you the gentleman. Are
you
set?”
Shrugging her shoulders at the silent D, Stanza slipped into the hole.
On the other side of the hole was a slanting passageway. It was rather steep. Crawling forward on hands and knees, the warrior immediately began to slip. Just then, there was a roar behind her and she felt the blast.
“D!” Stanza shouted, just managing to turn her head, but she saw only a cloud of dust blowing in, and then she slid down the steep incline. Unexpectedly, it opened up before her. Below, she could make out figures.
I’m gonna fall
, Stanza thought, and she curled into a ball at that instant. She could judge the height of the fall by the distance of the figures. Doing a flip, she executed a remarkable landing.
Seemingly chasing her, dust rained down from overhead. Leaping out of the way, Stanza looked up. Apparently it was coming from a hole in the wall about ten feet above her. Whether going head or feet first, the average person probably would’ve been injured by the fall. But her skills as a warrior had saved her.
They were in a cylindrical chamber that was about fifteen feet high.
“D didn’t make it in time?” Strider asked, his voice beside her.
Stanza nodded. She then changed gears. Turning to where Irene stood next to an elliptical hole, she asked, “Where are we?”
“I don’t know. My grandfather told me this was here back before the emergency bunker was built. He said it was the home of some ancient race that used to live nearby.”
Stanza surveyed their surroundings. Though she’d thought the walls were made of stone, on closer inspection, she found they had the smooth surface of black earth. She’d heard that in civil engineering projects they used chemicals to harden the dirt and prevent cave-ins, but in this case the soil literally seemed to have been turned to stone. She touched it. Her fingertips found the surface cold and hard. It was definitely stone. Stanza couldn’t imagine what kind of technology could achieve such a result.
“There’d be no surviving that. Not even for a dhampir. Let’s get going,” Strider urged them.
The trio began walking toward the hole. Above them, slight tremors traveled through the ground. Apparently the supernatural soldiers even now continued their bombardment.
—
III
Leaving the chamber, they found a passageway tall enough to stand in that ran on and on. Like the chamber, the walls, floor, and ceiling here all gave off a glow, so visibility was no problem. When the soil had been transformed into stone, some luminescent substance had undoubtedly been added to it.
“This
is
gonna get us outta here, isn’t it?” Strider said skeptically.
Up in the front, Irene bluntly replied that they’d be fine. After this, she didn’t answer any more of his questions.
“What now?” Strider groaned.
Irene had halted. A stone wall loomed before her. It was a dead end.
“Hey, what the hell are you trying to pull?” the warrior said, his hand going for his longsword’s scabbard, but Stanza clapped him on the shoulder to stop him.
“She wouldn’t have taken us this way if she couldn’t get out.”
“Right you are,” Irene said, breaking into a grin. “There’s no regular escape route, but there happens to be a special one.”
Picking up a rock at her feet, she threw it as hard as she could at the wall to her left. The part that began to recede was about six feet high by six feet wide.
“Climb through there and you can get out. Get going.”
Taking a single step, Strider halted and said, “Get going? What are
you
gonna do?”
“Don’t worry about me anymore.”
The pair of warriors finally noticed something strange about the girl’s tone of voice. But it was a kind of strangeness that they understood.
“She’s possessed,” Stanza said, looking to all sides of them. Quiet was returning to the passageway.
“Ever since we came in here, I’ve felt this tingling in my spine—hey, what are you gonna do?”
“You can get out through there. But if you do, you’ll have to leave the matter of the girl completely to me,” said Stanza.
“I really can’t do that.”
“In that case, tag along behind us.”
She said this because Irene was leading the way. Wondering what to do next, the female warrior stared at the girl’s face, which retained some of its youthful innocence.
Finally, Irene reached out her left hand and touched the wall of earth turned to stone. This time, it didn’t open up. Instead, Irene walked toward the wall. When her body sank into its surface, the pair she’d left behind realized the magic at play there. Without hesitation, they headed for the earthen wall. They met no resistance as they passed through it.
“The wall’s an illusion?”
“There has to be a holographic projector around here somewhere. That ancient race must’ve been pretty scary,” Stanza replied, but she didn’t look scared at all.
The pair began walking down a passageway just like the one they’d been in. Presently, the sound of rushing water became audible.
“Is that an underground river?” said Strider, his words like a moan.
They came to another chamber. The bodies of both warriors were bathed in a white glow. If there’d been heat to accompany it, they’d have known it was from a form of combustion.
“What’s this?” Strider mused, his voice dissolving in the white light.
Oddly enough, he could gauge distances quite well now. Irene stood about ten feet ahead of him. Another fifteen feet beyond her was the source of the light, a light that didn’t stop at merely providing illumination.
“It’s moving,” Stanza muttered, as if she were talking in her sleep.
The light was flowing. Clearly possessing mass, it shifted from left to right. It made the pair of warriors think of the strange metaphor of a rushing torrent of viscous soup. What’s more—
“There’s something inside it!” Strider pointed out, almost whispering.
Stanza nodded. “People!”
Now the eyes of the pair were catching the delicate shifts in the glow the light produced. The light gave rise to forms. And those forms were human in shape.
“Is this some sort of joke?” Strider said, giving voice to his question.
The answer wasn’t verbalized.
This is a subterranean energy flow.
The words that echoed in the brains of the two warriors came from Irene’s psyche.
The plant above it only succeeded in tapping a small portion of its power, but this is its main concentration. By now, the two of you must realize what it is.
The pair of warriors nodded. It would be safe to say they’d never been more certain of anything in their lives. This was a rushing torrent of rancor. The quality of the energy that pierced their armor and sank into their flesh told them as much.
This subterranean energy had been created by something that lived here before the Nobility built their society, probably even before the birth of human civilization. Obviously that race was well versed in the darkness harbored by the human psyche, and the power it could produce. And that was why they’d created this. Over tens of thousands of years, they’d taken hundreds of thousands—if not millions—of lives as sacrificial offerings. All had been killed in the cruelest manners imaginable. There had been no honor or pride in being an offering to a god, merely a painful and protracted death. And it was safe to say that it’d proved successful.
All the people they’d tortured to death had been full of malice: For those who were taking their lives. For the compatriots that survived them. For their families. For a god that wouldn’t save them from a hellish death. For every other living thing. Undoubtedly the death bringers had possessed the means of transforming that malice into energy. The rancor of the dead then became a subterranean energy flow that benefited the ancient race. It burned the enemies who descended on them, leveled mountains to crush the living, and froze heaven and earth alike to take the lives of hundreds of billions of creatures. Battles ultimately come down to attrition. But loss had no meaning when dealing with a hatred that couldn’t be erased. Enemies that stormed in with superior numbers were all slain, and the race took pride in their invincibility.
Even after that race was no more, the torrent of malice and rancor coursed relentlessly through the bowels of the earth, occasionally erupting on the surface after tectonic shifts and drowning those it met. Thirty thousand years before, a certain group learned of the existence of the malevolent force, and after a thousand years and many generations, they finally succeeded in sealing it away, and the energy had flowed deep in the earth ever since. A mining facility that’d been built on the surface not long ago managed to tap a small portion of that trapped energy, but with no way to control the rancor, the facility had ultimately been destroyed.
And now a girl and two warriors had come into contact with the fearsome flow. They heard it. The angry voices of all those sacrifices. Cries of anguish from their death throes. A swollen hatred without a focus. And delight.
The voices told the trio to join them.
Irene turned around. Her hand came up. From the wrist to the fingertips it slowly curled and uncurled.
“She’s beckoning to us,” Strider said in a fuzzy tone. The look in his eyes had changed. “This is serious . . . We’ve gotta run for it.”
“You’re right.”
They couldn’t even converse in an ordinary fashion any longer.
Irene was calling to them. Behind her, figures beyond numbering had come into view. And as they flowed by, they called out. They beckoned.
Come to us
, they said.
This is bad
, Strider thought in the depths of his brain, keeping himself from speaking.
Mustn’t go
, Stanza heard herself say. Despite that, her legs were moving. Her body was no longer under her control. It was a strange feeling, one she’d never had before.
And so they both walked toward the light. They took their place beside Irene.
A smile rose on the girl’s lips. It was difficult to imagine that such an evil grin could lurk in the depths of a human heart.