Read Tara The Great [Nuworld 2] Online
Authors: Lorie O'Claire
forgotten merchandise. Something was burning nearby and the tainted smell in the air
made it hard to breathe.
Tara kept her face down and focused on the ground as she allowed Darius to guide
her. Suddenly she came to a dead halt causing Darius to lose his grip on her hand. He
turned quickly to look at her.
“Look.” She pointed to the ground. Someone had drawn a circle with a tear shape
drawn in the middle. The symbol of the Blood Circle Clan.
Tara looked up, first at Darius’ face, then at the buildings surrounding them. There
was no one in sight. She absently fingered the necklace Darius had given her a long
time ago, knowing it matched the symbol on the ground. The circle was drawn outside
a closed door. Tara took her foot and quickly wiped the evidence away.
“Come on,” she said, reaching for the handle.
The heavy stone door opened slowly into a dark room. Once inside, the two closed
the door. Tara reached inside her cloak and fumbled through the pockets of her clothing
until she found the small beam she’d brought with her from the trailer. Pulling it out,
she flipped the switch and a dull bluish light illuminated the room.
In the corner, surrounded by many candles, stood the dog-woman.
* * * * *
Darius had seen her in dreams after Tara had disappeared in the southern
continent. The dreams had stopped after he’d raped Tasha. He’d never seen her in
person and was stunned. The old woman looked up and smiled, but her eyes didn’t
appear to see them.
She seemed smaller and more fragile than in his dreams. He had seen her as a
vibrant old woman, with a calm demeanor that soothed him when he had experienced
her presence. But now, as he faced her for the first time, Darius felt nothing calming
about this person. She appeared disconnected with them somehow, and he admitted a
small amount of disappointment that she wasn’t the spirit of peace and reassurance that
his dreams had conjured.
“Come children, beg forgiveness from Crator.” She opened her arms to them and
bowed her head.
“Beg forgiveness for what?” Darius stood tall and his voice sounded cool.
“For your greed, child.” The old woman didn’t look up.
Tara stepped closer to the old woman. Something was odd. The candles
surrounding her didn’t appear to let off any light. “Why were we greedy?” She watched
the old woman warily.
“Child, you have come here to steal a weapon. Crator knows that.”
Tara studied the old woman. Her head was lowered and she appeared to be looking
down at something. Tara saw nothing but the ground. The old woman wore the same
clothes she had on the day she died. Her hands appeared to be doing something but
there was nothing in them.
“No one is here to steal a weapon,” Darius barked. “Gothman doesn’t need a
coward’s weapon!”
The old woman didn’t speak. In fact, she didn’t move. Tara looked closely at her,
then placed her hand on Darius’ arm, instinctively trying to make him read her
thoughts. Something was wrong here. The old woman still hadn’t moved.
“Come, kneel and tell Crator your sins.” The dog-woman spoke without focusing
on either of them, but kept her gaze on some unknown object on the ground.
“What have we done wrong?” Tara asked.
“You know what you’ve done wrong,” the old woman said.
Tara realized the woman’s mouth hadn’t moved. She knelt and Darius stood firmly
behind her. Surreptitiously, she picked up some small pebbles and tossed them at the
dog-woman. The pebbles brushed against the dog-woman, and sparks appeared as the
small rocks disappeared into nothingness.
Tara jumped back quickly and pulled her laser.
“Why did you do that?” The dog-woman lifted her head and looked at Tara with
her unseeing eyes. Her mouth moved this time, but it didn’t match the words that came
out. “Crator didn’t like that.”
“Crator knows why we’re really here.” Tara pointed the laser at the dog-woman.
“You need to come tell Crator why you’re here. He wants to hear you confess.”
“Crator has nothing to do with this,” Tara said and shot the dog-woman. The laser
hit her in the chest. She didn’t move. The laser went through her, filling the room with
sparks, and hit the wall behind her. The old woman remained positioned as she had
before.
Tara backed up; her beam now attached to the top of her laser. She scanned the
entire room with the laser. Darius pulled his weapon as well.
“That’s not the dog-woman,” she whispered to him. “Something is very wrong
here.”
At that moment, light flooded the room. The dog-woman and all her candles
disappeared. Another door banged open.
Tara and Darius didn’t hesitate. Firing their lasers simultaneously, they blanketed
the entrance with fire. Anyone on the other side would not be able to see them until
they stepped into the line of fire.
Darius set his laser to automatic fire and pulled an Eliminator from underneath his
robe.
Tara was shocked that he’d brought it. At this particular moment, however, she was
also elated. He manipulated the Eliminator until he held it comfortably in one hand.
Tara reached over to take his laser from him, which he willingly gave up. She covered
him, holding both lasers at the door, firing at will.
Darius leapt to the center of the floor, landing on his belly. He aimed the Eliminator
straight into the open doorway and fired.
A huge explosion followed. Screams and echoed cries filled the small room. Tara
moved over Darius, to cover him if necessary. The two of them looked down a long
hallway as the ball of fire from the Eliminator rolled toward an unknown destination.
They strained to see through the falling rock, raised dust, and smoke, but couldn’t
determine how many people were in the passage, though they realized many bodies
were falling, appearing as shadows through the thick haze of smoke. Some fell into the
room.
An entire army had been sent to capture them, using the guise of the dog-woman as
a trap.
“Let’s go!” Darius grabbed Tara and bolted toward the door leading to the street.
Their chances for escape were minimal. Both of them knew that. They ran down the
street, this time in the direction of the entrance into the large cavern, with the city of
Korth on fire around them.
One glance over their shoulders told them a large number of soldiers chased them.
More soldiers appeared in front, forcing them to a stop.
They were surrounded.
Men and women in dark brown uniforms, stood attentive with long black pistols
pointed at the two foreigners.
“I shouldn’t be so surprised by this demonstration of your abilities,” a tall robed
man spoke as he moved through the soldiers to stand within ten feet of Darius and
Tara. “Your reputations precede you.”
An equally tall woman came up from behind the man. Her pale skin looked like
death as the hood of her cape hung around her face. She walked into the circle of
guards and stood before Darius and Tara.
“I’ll admit it’s an honor to have captured you. For a second, it appeared we
wouldn’t be able to do it.” The woman smiled a toothy smile as if she had just
pleasantly introduced herself. “Get them out of here,” she said, still smiling.
Chapter Seven
A half-dozen guards surrounded Darius and Tara and took their weapons, before
forcing them back the way they’d come.
Tara looked around as their small procession marched down the street. Piles of
rubble stood where buildings once had been. The air smelled of burnt rubber, possibly
electrical fires, and smoke from the explosions. The stench clogged her senses.
Tara studied the piles of rock and small fires that so recently had been a functioning
city. The citizens of Korth seemed to have disappeared, or at least watched in hiding.
The streets were barren except for the horde of soldiers escorting their captives.
A hallway similar to the one Tara and Darius had left in rubble appeared at the end
of the street. Tara wondered how many of these lit hallways disappeared into the rocks.
Two guards led them into it while the remaining troops marched behind them. Tara
could only assume the man and woman in charge brought up the rear.
Her sore arm had been nudged repeatedly by the guard’s pistols. Her ribs had been
poked one too many times as well. The pain made her irritable, and she began resenting
her captors for the way they treated her. Whoever these people were, they treated her
like a criminal, and although she and Darius had arrived here incognito, they had
committed no crime she knew of.
Finally, the end of the hallway appeared. Two immense white doors opened. They
walked into a large room, also white from the tile on the floor to the smooth stone walls.
The ceiling soared at least twelve feet above them and consisted of white panels, hiding
the fact they were in a cave.
Attached to the ceiling panels, large yellow bulbs filled the room with bright,
artificial sunlight. Tara could feel their warmth.
Each of the four walls had a white-framed door in its middle. The double doors
swung closed behind them, and she stared at the three closed doors in front of them.
Several guards searched Tara and Darius one more time for any hidden weapons,
and Tara felt a wave of relief when the laser inserted in her right boot was overlooked.
To be held captive without knowing her charges, or who her captors were was one
thing, but to be rendered unarmed would have been more than Tara could have
handled at the moment. Her body ached, she felt like a common criminal, and she
needed what little security her one hidden weapon provided her.
Tara watched as a door opened. The four guards forced them through the doorway
and down a long flight of stairs to another large room, similar to the one they’d left.
Tara began to feel disoriented as they traveled through this mazelike underground
structure. Even though her body distracted her with aches and pains, she struggled to
focus on every turn and hallway; so, hopefully, they could get out of there, if escape
became an option.
“In there,” one of the guards mumbled, and pointed as a door to their right slid