Lords of the Seventh Swarm (32 page)

BOOK: Lords of the Seventh Swarm
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Chapter 36

Felph stood beside Lord Karthenor aboard the dronon vessel
Acquiescence
, watching the viewscreens on the dome above them, the dronon cameras displaying hellish nightmares.

In one region deep in the tangle, dronon Seekers had captured Maggie’s scent, only to find that it led down a huge shaft. A giant mistwife rose up to greet the dronon, and now hundreds of dronon engaged the monster, trying to fight their way past, with no assurance that Maggie had ever escaped the monster’s grasp.

The presence of hundreds of thousands of dronon in the tangle aroused every mistwife in the region, so that on nearly every screen, the monsters hunted through the tangle, shrieking in pain, madly swatting dronon who did not fight so bravely as they did mindlessly.

Yet, for the Felph, other screens displayed far more interesting battles. Dronon Vanquishers high in the tangle were blasting through sfuz hunting parties.

The sfuz had the element of surprise. In dozens of places, the creatures boiled out of secret holes by the thousands or dropped from above or clambered around trees.

The small sfuz were no match in single battle for Vanquishers, with their thick carapaces and heavy battle arms. The sfuz died easily enough. But there were so many, so many, and they were so fast, and they were learning.

The sfuz concentrated not on direct assaults, but upon ambushes and trickery.

Dronon warriors were marching down an apparently safe path, then suddenly dropped into a pit. Another dronon stepped into a snare, went flying against a tree, his carapace cracking open like a melon. Elsewhere, a dronon battalion came upon the bodies of scouts who’d been bludgeoned by sfuz who wielded clubs.

In many battles, when a dozen sfuz suddenly dropped from a ceiling, the dronon instinctively fired their incendiary rifles—the Vanquishers’ customary ready weapon. Yet a single shot fired in these close quarters raised choking smoke from the moldering tangle smoke that strangled the dronon in minutes. Dronon lungs were less efficient than those of a sfuz or a human.

Indeed, across every monitor, the caverns had begun boiling with dark smoke. In places, dry logs burned out of control. Everywhere on the screens, dronon were choking, dying by the tens of thousands.

Felph was astonished at the carnage, dismayed to the core of his soul. Tens of thousands of troops died in sfuz attacks, yet Felph saw cameras that focused on only a sixth of the dronon forces.

Elsewhere, others were also falling prey to the sfuz.

“My god, my god,” Karthenor swore, shaking his head in dismay, the rings of his golden mantle tinkling. “Why didn’t you warn us?”

Felph shook his head, “I suspected the sfuz had a stronghold, but I never imagined …” he answered truthfully.

There were more sfuz than he’d believed possible, perhaps millions of them. He’d envisioned a battle for the city but nothing like this.

Now he saw it had been folly to imagine that he, Gallen, or anyone, would ever reach Teeawah. Folly. Utter folly.

Yet on one monitor, he saw something intriguing. A dronon contingent marched down a broad highway unlike any he’d ever seen in the tangle, and came to ancient cliffs of sculpted yellow sandstone. The dronon cameras distorted the colors, giving everything a yellowish hue, but they could not hide the thing Felph hoped to see.

There in the cliffs were holes, thousands on thousands of clooes excavated by Qualeewoohs, each a perfect dark oval.

“There! There!” Felph shouted. “There it is!”

As soon as he had said these words, monstrous black forms began wriggling from the holes, hundreds upon thousands of sfuz, hurling themselves down on the dronon, boiling from holes one after another, racing across the roof and walls of this vast cavern.

They reminded Felph of spiders, thousands of horrid black spiders seething from their lair.

The dronon troops began shooting. A firestorm ensued, tracers of white-hot plasma erupting through the dark caverns. Everywhere the sfuz were falling, burning, dying. And for a minute it looked as if the dronon would take the city. But the sfuz were too many, too many.

The camera caught images of dronon, struggling beneath dozens of dark forms, thrashing with large battle arms, firing into their own ranks. The camera’s holder had several sfuz leap on him from above, and the jumble of images that ensued showed fangs and purple blood flying, flashes of light.

Suddenly the cameraman was free again, and the dronon continued firing in a desperate attempt to drive off the sfuz. The boiling plasma that issued from the rifles burned in a thousand hot spots, white lights shining, brightening the cavern through layers of dark smoke that crept along the ground, over the ceilings.

The vast chamber was clogged with smoke. Dronon Vanquishers began pumping their legs rapidly, trying to force oxygen into the intake holes on their massive rear legs so they could breathe. The dronon cameraman tried to retreat from the killing ground, stumbled to the road, and left the camera going. Under the eerie glow of a thousand burning incendiary charges, Felph watched the fearless Vanquishers strangle beneath a roiling wall of smoke.

Felph shook his head in dismay.
If the dronon die, if the dronon suffocate, the sfuz will, too
, he considered.

“These holes?” Karthenor asked, pointing to the clooes on the monitor. “You’re sure these are part of the ancient city Gallen is searching for?”

“Indeed!” Felph said. “That is the place.”

Karthenor sighed heavily, gauging the damage done, the casualties of the battle, then. turned and shouted over the hum of the room. “Lord Kintiniklintit, have your forces engage the city. Gallen and Maggie may already be secreted inside.”

Lord Felph’s jaw dropped in awe. Teeawah had eluded him for six hundred years. Now he saw that it would have eluded him forever.

At this very moment, a window of opportunity opened. The dronon were liberating the city, but in a day the dronon would be gone. They’d find Maggie and Gallen and kill them, then withdraw their troops.

In only a few hours, the sfuz who’d drunk from the Waters of Strength would begin rising from the dead, once again begin defending their lair.

The sfuz that infested the ruins would return, feeding off the carnage. Felph would never again be able to mount such an intensive invasion into this region.

But today the dronon would take the city, probably never realizing what treasure they held.

Today, Felph could drink from the Waters of Strength.

“Lord Karthenor,” Felph said, “I’d like to go down to the city, now, before your troops demolish the archaeological ruins.”

Karthenor turned, studied Felph with an enigmatic smile. “You want to go there?”

“Indeed,” Felph said. “I’ve searched for the site for ages. Now I see that once your troops leave, I dare not ever return.”

“What are you searching for?” Karthenor asked. By his tone, Felph knew he suspected something. “Chances are you won’t get in or out alive. What could be worth the risk?”

The great statesman Kenrand once said, “A politician’s greatest asset is his ability to create a facile lie when confronted by constituents.” Felph hoped he was up to the task.

“I have a dozen clones who await wakening back in my palace. This body is but the raiment I wear. If it dies, I’ll put on another. But knowledge, knowledge of the philosophies of the ancient Qualeewoohs, now there is something of abiding worth!” He smiled, with just a bit of a gleam in his eye, as if he were mad. It was a role he played often, to good advantage.

Karthenor stared down at him, impassive behind his golden mask. The lord fingered his robe, nervously rubbing. the fabric between two fingers.

“Send a dronon escort with me, if you don’t trust me,” Felph said. “I have nothing to hide, and nothing to gain. I can be of no further help in this quest. I swear, you know as much about Gallen’s whereabouts as I do.”

Karthenor frowned. He wouldn’t send a guard with Felph. He was a counselor to the dronon, but apparently didn’t have the authority to order Vanquishers about. Felph had counted on that. But Karthenor did have resources. He smiled, turned to an elderly slave in a dirty tunic who wore a silver Guide. in his silvering hair. “Thomas Flynn, go with our friend here. Guard him with your life, then make certain he returns safely to me as soon as Maggie is captured.”

Karthenor pulled a heavy pistol from his own holster, tossed it to Thomas Flynn. Karthenor nodded toward a Vanquisher, spoke rapidly into a translator, ordering a shuttle for Felph’s and Thomas’s use.

Chapter 37

The dirt shifted beneath Maggie’s feet, and she felt herself sliding. She screamed. Gallen reached, grabbed her arm. Detritus rumbled down from the ceiling. As the ground opened to swallow her, Maggie had but one thought:
my baby!

Gallen must have thought of the child, too. As he fell, he pulled her on top of him, to cushion her fall with his own body.

Maggie’s breath left her, expecting they’d tumble dozens of meters, but instead the floor dropped only one. Dust filled the air in a cloud. Maggie squinted through the dust and smoke, spitting dirt out of her mouth.

Their path ran along the spine of an ancient dew tree. A section of it had given way, spilling only a meter. The tunnel to the sfuz was blocked by a cave-in, but the path back to the ship remained open. If anything, now that the floor had dropped, the passage was more open than before.

Fresh air was rising from somewhere beneath them.

“This way. Quickly,” Gallen said, grasping Maggie’s hand, pulling her back down the trail toward the ship.

She looked around. Orick and Tallea seemed fine, indestructible as bears are. Zeus crawled about blindly. A chunk of dirt had struck his head.

Gallen stopped at his side. “Can you stand?”

“Uh, uh, fine.” Zeus waved Gallen away with his pistol.

Hurry,” Gallen urged Maggie. “The sfuz might dig through.”

Perhaps, Maggie considered, but they wouldn’t dig soon. The plasma discharged from Zeus’s pistol would stay at ten thousand degrees for several minutes, longer if buried beneath this dirt.

Still, she pressed forward. She stumbled over the trail, thick with fallen rubbish, following Gallen, checking to see that Zeus got up.

When they reached the fork in the trail, Gallen stopped. One path led to the sfuz graveyard and the cliffs beyond. The other led back toward the ship.

Distantly, Maggie heard the ground rumbling. Another cave-in? A mistwife? Another firefight? She couldn’t be certain. She stopped, unwilling to run until she knew where the danger lay.

Gallen looked up. “Gunfire. Somewhere above.”

Orick grumbled, “Gallen, we can’t keep running. Between the dronon, the mistwives, and the sfuz, one of them will get us.”

Gallen stared at the dirt roof, held by cross-fallen bits of timber. He shook his head in frustration.

Maggie felt worn to the core. It wasn’t just the physical work of dragging herself through this maze, it was the stress of worrying about her child. Gallen held her tenderly.

“All right. We’ll hole up. I’ll go down the trails and see if I can find a path to the city. There has to be one.”

He led them past the sfuz burial pit, until they reached a small chamber near the cliffs, perhaps five meters wide and ten meters high. It looked fairly defendable, should it come to that, and any attack could come from only one direction. Maggie only hoped that she wouldn’t get cornered in here.

Gallen opened his backpack and set out a blanket for Maggie to rest on. Then he drew food from his pack—a bottle of juice and fresh bread. Maggie bit into the bread, surprised at how good it tasted. It seemed she’d come down here ages ago, not hours.

Zeus just threw himself to the ground, lay dirty, exhausted, holding his head. The bears next to him panted. Maggie smelled smoke. She remembered she hadn’t reloaded her pistol. She pulled out the clip, inserted a hundred caseless cartridges.

Gallen knelt at her ear and whispered. “Maggie, I’m going to search for a way into the city.”

“No, stay here and rest with us,” Maggie said, uneasy at the thought of Gallen leaving.

Gallen shook his head. “The dronon are attacking up above us. I don’t know how many there are, but my mantle is picking up thousands of signals—up above us, in the tangle. We need this diversion. We need the dronon to draw the sfuz off, but I can’t be asking you and the others to run constantly like this, not in the shape you’re in.

“I’ll try to find a way into Teeawah—sneak in if I can. Or if I can’t, I’ll come back for you. If I’m not back in six hours—”

“—Three hours, just let me rest for three hours,” Maggie said.

“Four hours, then,” Gallen said. “If I’m not back in four hours, I probably won’t be back at all. Do you understand?”

Maggie’s heart pounded. The stress was making her chest and arms ache. She nodded dumbly. “I love you.”

Gallen brushed some fallen hair from her eyes. “I love you, too. Don’t take my robe off. Maybe it can hide your scent. I’m going to cover your tracks up ahead, where the trails cross. But keep your eyes open. Don’t take the safety off your weapon.”

Maggie licked her dry lips. Gallen kissed her, long and slow. She savored the taste of his lips, the smell of his hair. She held him for a moment. When he pulled back, it felt as if he’d been wrenched from her. She had an odd feeling.
I’ll never see him again
, she thought. It was a fear she’d never faced before, one she’d never conceived. Not when Karthenor took her prisoner on Fale, not when the Inhuman took his mind on Tremonthin. She’d never believed she would lose him.

Yet now the fear came, as if the future held a black certainty.

When Gallen pulled away, she almost grabbed him and held. When he turned his back and hurried into the darkness, she almost followed. He carried no light, just jogged into the shadows, relying on his mantle to help him place his next step.

Maggie sat with her weapon across her knees and ate her bread, no longer noticing its taste. Everyone remained awake.

Zeus came up beside Maggie, stood watching her for a moment. “Will he come back if he finds a way into the city?”

Maggie shook her head, staring at the ground. The soil here was so thick, so rich, she imagined. She wished she’d found such soil elsewhere, in a place where she could have planted a garden. “I don’t know. No, he won’t come back. Not unless he has to.”

“He’ll go searching for the Waters alone?” Zeus asked.

“He will, if he thinks it’s safest for us,” Maggie answered.

Zeus said nothing, but after a moment she realized he was breathing hard, just staring off into the darkness, as if he could peer through the dirt and darkness of the tangle.

“He’ll come back,” Maggie said.

Zeus nodded, then asked, “Do you have an extra glow globe?”

“Check your pack,” Maggie said. “I’m sure Gallen left each of us one.”

Zeus went off, a little nearer toward the entrance to the tunnel and sat. It was a good place to take guard duty. He laid his pistol over his knee. then opened his pack, pulled out his light, some grenades, and a bit of food, began munching something that Maggie couldn’t make out.

Nervously, he watched the opening to the tunnel.

Maggie felt the ground shake from time to time, evidence that fighting still continued above.

She measured time by the beating of her heart. No one spoke for many, many minutes. No one dared disturb the silence.

Orick and Tallea began whispering softly, Orick telling her of the saving ordinances of the gospel, and after a few moments, they headed farther back into the tunnel, back into the wider chamber, where the tunnel met the cliffs. Maggie imagined that they wanted to be alone.

Zeus held his light, letting it grow dimmer and dimmer, until it gave no light whatsoever.

Maggie busied herself by recalling songs she’d sung as a child, songs about green trees and young girls in love.

And death. Songs about death. Really, there seemed to be no theme to the songs that came to mind, just one senseless tune after another.

After a long time, her eyes grew gritty and tired. She closed them, and might have slept.

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