Page 80
Story: Violet Legacy
“The wayfarers,” Chaucer quietly stated.
Khalida snarled, her yellow eyes tinged with an animalistic glow and the blades of her swords untouched by the dust. “Aadya was not forthcoming about how to kill them.”
“You don’t,” Chaucer said flatly, a dull sheen on his face as he shook his head. “They survive like parasites as long as the O’hurani live.” He looked at Dante. “Kill the king, and they all die.”
“Suddenly talkative, Chaucer,” Talik said as he walked around Khalida, close enough that he brushed up against her. “How do you kill the king?”
Chaucer let out an exasperated sigh. “You can’t. Not without killing a quarter of the Atlantean population. If you carry a drop of their blood, you die.”
The pendant under Dante’s shirt continued to pulse, alternating between ice cold and scalding hot. It was as if it was trying to brand him. It was too late. Rieka had already embedded herself within him, had filled a piece of his soul he hadn’t realized he had been missing.
A high-pitched beep emitted from Talik, followed by a grimace as he looked at his watch then to Dante and Khalida. “The good news is that we have contact with the surface level.”
“And the immortals?” Khalida asked. “They should have entered by now.”
Dante had known Talik long enough to know that the good news never outweighed the bad news.
“But?” Chaucer prompted.
“Sensors are picking up a substantial number of heat signatures that appear to be converging toward us. They also seem to be part of the moving labyrinth.”
“Atlantean or human?” Khalida asked.
Talik grimaced. “Neither. If I was a gambling Atlantean, I would say they looked like serpopards.”
“How many?” Dante asked. Even with the immortals’ help, they were likely to be outnumbered. The labyrinth had been herding them to a central location, a likely ambush.
“At least twenty. I don’t know if each of the heat signatures signifies an individual or a pair.”
“Twenty beasts or forty—the numbers are significantly different,” Khalida muttered under her breath. “The immortals should be able to track us.”
Chaucer chimed in, “It is likely there are more out there. They can distort the heat signatures relatively easily. They control their body temperature,” Chaucer added. “Unless the matriarch is with them, they have a herd mentality and decimate anything that moves.”
“Well, aren’t you the fount of good news,” Talik growled. “Anything else you want to share?”
Chaucer narrowed his eyes at Talik. “Nothing else that would interest you.” He glanced at Dante, his gaze darkening with emotion. “Or help us. Idris didn’t offer his information freely.”
The situation was beyond fucked, and Dante was beginning to rely on nothing but hope. He snorted, earning a side glance from Talik. Hope had not previously been part of his vocabulary prior to meeting Rieka. “We need to find Rieka before they do.”
He did not quite trust Chaucer’s comment about the beasts guarding Rieka. They haven’t attacked her yet, but that could change in a heartbeat.
The walls continued to vibrate as they slowly moved into place. “It appears it wants us to change direction once again.”
Another wall speared through the floor with such speed he almost fell backward.
Talik swore behind him.
“It has boxed us in,” Khalida quietly stated as she knocked on the wall nearest to her.
“Do you still have comms with the surface?”
“No.”
This time the ground shifted, throwing them off balance as they dropped two feet and the walls inched closer.
Dante landed soundlessly as he took a step back, steadying himself as he surveyed their new location.
“Fuck,” Talik eloquently stated as he scrambled to keep his balance. “I didn’t think it could do that.”
Khalida snarled, her yellow eyes tinged with an animalistic glow and the blades of her swords untouched by the dust. “Aadya was not forthcoming about how to kill them.”
“You don’t,” Chaucer said flatly, a dull sheen on his face as he shook his head. “They survive like parasites as long as the O’hurani live.” He looked at Dante. “Kill the king, and they all die.”
“Suddenly talkative, Chaucer,” Talik said as he walked around Khalida, close enough that he brushed up against her. “How do you kill the king?”
Chaucer let out an exasperated sigh. “You can’t. Not without killing a quarter of the Atlantean population. If you carry a drop of their blood, you die.”
The pendant under Dante’s shirt continued to pulse, alternating between ice cold and scalding hot. It was as if it was trying to brand him. It was too late. Rieka had already embedded herself within him, had filled a piece of his soul he hadn’t realized he had been missing.
A high-pitched beep emitted from Talik, followed by a grimace as he looked at his watch then to Dante and Khalida. “The good news is that we have contact with the surface level.”
“And the immortals?” Khalida asked. “They should have entered by now.”
Dante had known Talik long enough to know that the good news never outweighed the bad news.
“But?” Chaucer prompted.
“Sensors are picking up a substantial number of heat signatures that appear to be converging toward us. They also seem to be part of the moving labyrinth.”
“Atlantean or human?” Khalida asked.
Talik grimaced. “Neither. If I was a gambling Atlantean, I would say they looked like serpopards.”
“How many?” Dante asked. Even with the immortals’ help, they were likely to be outnumbered. The labyrinth had been herding them to a central location, a likely ambush.
“At least twenty. I don’t know if each of the heat signatures signifies an individual or a pair.”
“Twenty beasts or forty—the numbers are significantly different,” Khalida muttered under her breath. “The immortals should be able to track us.”
Chaucer chimed in, “It is likely there are more out there. They can distort the heat signatures relatively easily. They control their body temperature,” Chaucer added. “Unless the matriarch is with them, they have a herd mentality and decimate anything that moves.”
“Well, aren’t you the fount of good news,” Talik growled. “Anything else you want to share?”
Chaucer narrowed his eyes at Talik. “Nothing else that would interest you.” He glanced at Dante, his gaze darkening with emotion. “Or help us. Idris didn’t offer his information freely.”
The situation was beyond fucked, and Dante was beginning to rely on nothing but hope. He snorted, earning a side glance from Talik. Hope had not previously been part of his vocabulary prior to meeting Rieka. “We need to find Rieka before they do.”
He did not quite trust Chaucer’s comment about the beasts guarding Rieka. They haven’t attacked her yet, but that could change in a heartbeat.
The walls continued to vibrate as they slowly moved into place. “It appears it wants us to change direction once again.”
Another wall speared through the floor with such speed he almost fell backward.
Talik swore behind him.
“It has boxed us in,” Khalida quietly stated as she knocked on the wall nearest to her.
“Do you still have comms with the surface?”
“No.”
This time the ground shifted, throwing them off balance as they dropped two feet and the walls inched closer.
Dante landed soundlessly as he took a step back, steadying himself as he surveyed their new location.
“Fuck,” Talik eloquently stated as he scrambled to keep his balance. “I didn’t think it could do that.”
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