Read The Blood Solution (Approaching Infinity Book 3) Online
Authors: Chris Eisenlauer
Set was incensed. He was too far away from the ocean to summon enough liquid to remake Un Azameio. He bolted for the axe man as another day-bright flash lit the heavens then made the sea light up with a dazzling reflection. Set ignored the light, and as he drew near his quarry, he casually struck the depending torso which snapped off and fell to the ground. From the icy top of the partial corpse came actual ice cubes, this time not back but bright red, spilling out over the ground like morbid candy. The other support men had run, and though the man called Jarro stood ready to fight, he would not get the chance.
Before the two were close enough to engage each other, a gleaming silvery man descended between them. From the descriptions he’d heard, Set thought that this must be a Gun Golem, but then it spoke.
“I will take this one, Jarro,” the steely man said, a white-gold Halo rising up from his shoulders to surround his head.
“Yes, Sar Fosso,” Jarro said and was gone.
Set barely heard. He stared, transfixed for the tiniest moment. The Halo writhed like a ribbon of light in the wind.
Abanastar used a variety of arrangements of lenses to keep an eye on the front line from his rearward position. In this way, he watched thousands and thousands pour through the rip in space. The gene soldiers were not a complete waste. They were well-equipped to engage a percentage of the enemy, but the remaining percentage, along with the steady flow of reinforcements would wipe them out in time. Abanastar stopped, allowing the rest of the line to continue on without him, and looked to the sky. Immediately above was a thick pall of smoke and fine, particulate debris, but his senses were not halted there. High above, through the still-roiling blacks and grays, he could see the sun, and he would bring the power of that sun down upon the natives, turning their warm source of sustenance into death.
For a full minute Abanastar stood staring at the dark, shifting sky through the inscrutable Focusing Lens. When he lowered his head to look forward again, the undersides of the clouds, all moving and beautifully textured, were lit with lightning light which spread instantly like molten gold and then, just as quickly, winked out. A hole opened up in the heavens and a column of focused sunlight, two hundred meters in diameter, yellow-white and solid, struck the ground just before the rip in space.
Even as far back as he was, Abanastar heard the screams unaided, but through his lenses, he watched bodies rising up, burning to ash as they climbed the super-heated air left in the wake of the spent sunbeam. He saw with some satisfaction that the rip began to close. Space began to reknit from both ends, closing, closing, racing towards a shrinking aperture at the center until that too was sealed.
After another minute, a new arrangement of lenses—the previous ones destroyed by the intensity of their payload—was in place with a new target selected, this time a couple hundred meters from where the rip had been, to singe the rear of the enemy advance. The hole in the clouds flashed white, and molten gold returned to flow through the velvet ridges and under valleys of the cloud bottoms. This time, though, before the column of light could touch town, it struck something unseen high above ground, bending at a right angle and then scattering in a fan out over the sea.
Abanstar started. He was wholly unprepared for anyone or any
thing
co-opting his power. Once more he set about arranging the lenses, but was skeptical about how effective they might be from here on out, nor was his skepticism unwarranted. The sunbeam came with all its glorious light play among the clouds, but again, it bent ninety degrees, this time losing none of its focus, and lining straight for the Root Palace.
The bar of light lanced the Palace, blackening its surface and igniting a great, though strangely transparent, blaze of red-orange. Thick oily smoke rose up from the fringes of the flames to join the lid that blotted out most of the sky.
Despite what it looked like, Abanastar knew his power, knew that the Palace and its occupants were in no real danger. There would be injuries certainly, but no fatalities, and the fire would burn itself out or Palace personnel would extinguish it. He sighed, realizing that he could no longer rely on broad strokes, that he would have to bloody his knuckles. It wasn’t the first time. And as if to punctuate his resignation to the inevitable, Abanastar found himself beset by a flood of enemy soldiers.
Vays couldn’t stand to wait. After signaling his intentions to his fellows, he broke from the rear line, sprinting forward as he drew the Titan Saber from his helmet. The Saber flashed, cutting through the first three who crossed his path. He sank into the mire of gene soldiers and enemy troops, those with faces and those without, the latter with Haloes of light and dark surrounding their heads, Haloes that inspired a new species of dread in him. For the second time in his life, the first on the battlefield, he experienced panic, though it was mild and served to supplement his adrenaline.
Through the chaos, Vays only knew that the armor provided by the Titan Star was proof against nearly all that was brought against him. He felt knocks and tugs, heat and cold, but nothing as yet had penetrated. The Saber was equally as effective offensively. The normal enemy troops he split in half, through torsos or down through crowns. The other ones, the ones with the Haloes, were more durable, required more effort in the way of both speed and strength. But these, too, he cleaved and killed, or at least he thought he did.
He moved through the crowd, sometimes taking a gene soldier along with one of the enemy, and began to notice a pair of baleful eyes boring into him. Whichever direction he turned, from behind an opponent, from between two gene soldiers with their backs to him, that same pair of bloodshot eyes, nearly jutting from their sockets, stabbed him, pressed him, crushed him with accusation. It was uncanny how the owner of those eyes seemed to be everywhere at once. There was something different about him as well, some knowing quality, which was ultimately meaningless since the Viscain brought only death with them. But those eyes, clear and perfectly visible through a gap in shroud rags, were always in a position to meet him.
Vays was weary. He’d worked so hard, killed so many already; his energy was draining away. Sleep might be the answer. The eyes with the pressure of their accusation seemed to squeeze the resolve from him. He was dully aware of a flash that lit his surroundings, that turned day back to day from the false, cloud-induced night, but it seemed separate, outside, and only an unnecessary distraction to his much needed rest.
Though Vays felt himself move more and more slowly, he hadn’t actually moved at all for the last several minutes. He stood inert on the battlefield, his sword held loosely in his right hand, its tip digging slightly into the ground. Terrible acts of violence went on all around him. Sometimes he was the target of that violence, but the regular soldiers of this sixth planet could not breach the Titan Star’s defense. There was one among them Entitled by God who was having more luck, however.
All sound was becoming muted and merging together, like the insulated thump of a heartbeat, a return to the isolation and comfort of the womb. Vays had decided. The crippling accusation he felt, he realized, was his own nagging conscience. He’d done enough, and his conscience would abate once he let up and allowed himself to rest. He was so tired. But something clashed with the rhythmic pulse that was lulling him to oblivion, some discordant note that persisted until it rose to just beneath the surface of his impending slumber.
“Vayswhyarentyoumoving?” He heard the words as one unbroken stream of noise in his head.
“What?” he thought absently.
“Vays!”
“Who’s that?” Vays thought this, but wasn’t terribly interested in finding out.
“Vays! Wake up!”
“Kalkin? Kalkin, is that you?”
A moment later, Vays looked into the single filmy pearl that was Kalkin’s eye in his Darkened state. Kalkin’s giant hands gripped his shoulders and had been shaking him.
“Kalkin!” Vays cried, snapping to attention.
Still holding Vays’s shoulders, Kalkin scanned the crowd. “Someone in the middle of all this,” he said, “perhaps more than one, has powers subtle enough to bypass the Titan Star. Others may also be at risk. For now, stick with me. My RMP should be high enough to prevent domination. Are you all right?”
Vays nodded. “Thank you, sir.”
“What happened?”
Vays struggled for a simple explanation, but managed only to blurt out, “Eyes.”
“Eyes?” Kalkin cocked his mound of a head inquisitively and incredulity was clear in his voice.
But Vays was preoccupied once again, and once again it was with a pair of eyes. As before, through the crowd, beyond perhaps twenty men and gene soldiers, he saw the eyes, but he was certain of their reality now. His mind was clear and his ego in need of some repair, so he launched past his senior, breaking the bones of those in his path against the hard angles of his armor. He raised the Titan Saber high over head to bring it down viciously, separating those baleful eyes and the shroud rags that framed them, extinguishing their power for good and all. Before the halves of the freshly made corpse could fall, Vays unleashed the Star Factory upon them. The tip of his blade pistoned one hundred and eight times to create a wet red cloud of blood and meat.
Icsain had witnessed countless wars, with weapons ranging from clubs to space-based particle beam cannons, but he had never personally participated in any of them. The weapons at one’s disposal generally determined one’s strategy, and while Icsain had little to fear from the resident humans or their slightly more-evolved fellows, he did not fancy the idea of unnecessarily blemishing his perfect body. Using the Relic Cords, he fished, snaring hundreds of the enemy, mostly the normal human variety, but a few of the others. From these latter, he learned of their designation as Entitled by God, though what god was still a mystery. This information he spread among the rest of the Shades, only because he’d become rather tied to names and naming over his span of millennia.
He kept these enemy soldiers around him like a living shield as he progressed forward, making them fight for Viscain. His contribution was not at all dynamic, but it was methodical. He added more enemy normals as he went, feeling out the Entitled and taking them when possible as well.
Gran Kwes moved inexorably forward and did not step lightly. None caught under its massive hooves rose again. From atop its head, Barson pressed the first two fingers of his right hand downward, crushing distant individuals and small groups with localized gravity wells. Given the tumult below, there was no other tactic that made sense. He could descend and engage the enemy with his bare hands—his Dark bare hands—but so far that hadn’t proved necessary. If the need arose, he would respond to it.
As they progressed, Stafros Lowe keeping pace in the air thirty meters away at Barson’s left shoulder, they began to see a variety of powers being thrown against them. The normals carried small armaments with them, which made them, to some degree, negligible, but some of the others seemed much more capable. Barson could easily see from his vantage point that these others housed some unknown form of energy which manifested itself as Haloes of rippling light. This light ranged in color across the visible spectrum and in both directions beyond. He speculated, and was not wrong, that some of these individuals may be on par with Shades, that one of them had been responsible for the rift in space which had brought the them so close so fast. There had been the ring of light, the black smoke serpent which had reduced Gran Kwes’s leg, and now a great blaze of fire attempted to assault Un Azameio. It was just that, though, an attempt, and Set had matters well in hand.
Most of Tia’s harpy soldiers were further ahead, sniping the enemy from the air or swooping down to deliver hit-and-run attacks with their high-frequency pikes. They were making good progress in spite of some apparent weapons malfunctions until they started to drop from the sky like hailstones.
Barson and Stafros Lowe shared a concerned look, and Barson understood the other’s unspoken request. “Go,” he said through his Artifact.
Lowe nodded and shot forward with an unprecedented burst of speed. As he went he occasionally felt small projectiles ping off of his metallic skin. Less frequently, he felt more powerful impacts, but these did not penetrate and only forced him to correct his course. Focusing his attention on the scene below, he noticed the weapons that the majority of enemy troops carried. Some had rifles, but most had pistols. These weapons were a nuisance, but not a threat.
Continuing towards the massed harpy soldiers and noting his former squadmate’s progress, Lowe couldn’t help grinning beneath the faceplate of his steely frog helmet. Even now, Bela Fan exerted her power, a cone of white flashing out before her, freezing everything in its path, leaving frost draped statues, most of them frozen solid. Those who were not killed instantly in this manner, each one of them with a strange halo about his or her head, she addressed personally, either with another dose of her cryokinesis or with the expert application of her heavy, sinuous tail.
Current Squad members were doing no worse. Raus, a giant towering above the tide of swarming bodies, struck and crushed with his massive hands. At times electric current surrounded him like a glittering fog, causing skin to smoke, eyeballs to burst, and bowels to release. Jav, too, was tearing a path through the enemy, only slowing for—what was it Icsain called them?—those Entitled by God. Some exhibited a fair degree of martial prowess, but Jav was one of the most talented fighters Lowe had ever seen, and in his twelve hundred years of life, he’d seen many. Barson, his martial art well-complementing his psychic facility, was perhaps the strongest he’d ever encountered, but as for skill, Dolma Set was tied with Laedra Hol, and Jav was on par with them both. Neither Jav nor Raus had summoned additional troops from the ground as yet, and Lowe wondered if doing so would be of any benefit. Raus’s troops, with their renewability might, but let that be a trump to be played later.