Something dark covered the sky, and a sound like a hideous siren issued from the bions far behind them, pitched high and then low like mournful keening and growling—a noise that raised the fur under her armor and set her teeth on edge. She ran faster and pushed up against Khren and Nico, both dashing for their lives, but not as fast as Herza and Frinna, stumbling up and over blocks of heaved stone and mounds of heaped black foundation and thick drifts of slow, sucking ash. The darkness dropped. For an instant Tiadba wondered if the Kalpa wasn’t giving them cover—blanking the awful sky, distracting whatever might want to find them and tempt them. But then she realized the darkness came from outside, not from within—rolling back toward the bions in slow, oily waves.
An intrusion. Like the one that separated us and scarred the Tiers—like the one that took Jebrassy’s sponsors. We were warned!
They were within a few dozen yards of Pahtun, still standing on a high block of gray stone with his arm outstretched, frantically waving them on.
“What’s wrong with him?” Khren shouted.
“Don’t stop!” Tiadba yelled. “Keep running! Cross the zone!”
The city fought back. A luminosity carved the landscape in simple, ragged patterns of black and white—no grays. The darkness spasmed. They dared not look up, but Tiadba glanced sideways at the block of stone, at Pahtun—and saw him caught in a burning coil of orange and empty black. She saw his armor break apart and blow away in rippling fragments. He shook free of the last scraps, then stood naked on the rock, and she saw—for an instant, but she would never forget—the bare truth of a Tall One, too smooth, too naked, and much too vulnerable.
And then he was gone. A cloud of sparkles rose from the block and flew off. She swallowed a moan and kept running, head down, eyes burning with shame and fear. It seemed just a few hard, thumping steps later they came to the low wall that Pahtun had described—the outer perimeter. The border of the real. They leaped over it with hardly a thought. Looming before them, where nothing had been before, they saw a magnificent, arching gate, covered with monumental figures, all breeds, caught up in some beautiful golden substance, smiling and waving a frozen welcome—the gate stretching up and breaking through the flow of the warring darkness and the defending waves of luminosity from the Kalpa.
All nine marchers slunk around the foot of the arch, squeezing between broken, jagged rocks—rocks everywhere, big and small—and then, exhausted, they slid into a hollow and shoved up against one another, hugging and shivering.
The siren’s keen fell to a grumble, then stopped.
Silence.
Tiadba wept. Herza and Frinna muttered prayers. Shewel and the other males lay still, but their eyes shifted to the broken shadows. The hollow was cramped but seemed a fair refuge—at least, it did not open like a mouth and eat them, which she could easily imagine, given all they had been taught. They had survived the zone of lies. Their armor was hiding them effectively enough, something that Pahtun’s had failed to do. He’d been caught up in the city’s defense against the intrusion, just as he warned them—or so she surmised.
He sacrificed himself. For us.
This suddenly affected her deeply. Now, if they could believe their training—she could almost hear Pahtun’s sonorous voice—they must not stay where they were. Yet they could not move; paralysis gripped them as each tried to sort through what they had been taught, what their armor was saying to their bodies, conveying the depth of their peril. They couldn’t hear a thing except their own breathing and then Tiadba’s soft, trembling words as she encouraged them to get up, to move.
“The Tall One told us to stay low,” Khren said. “Did he go back?”
“He’s gone,” Tiadba said. Now wasn’t the time to tell them what she had seen.
“We should stay here until he comes to get us,” Perf said.
“He won’t come for us anymore. We’re on our own.”
“Where exactly are we?” Nico asked, trying to overcome sudden hiccups. He tugged against his friends’
gripping hands and pushed up, trying to see out of the hollow.
“We made it,” Perf said, astonished. “We’re still alive.”
“We can’t stop,” Tiadba said. “We should travel as far as we can before we rest.”
A pleasant low tone, languid and musical, sounded in their ears.
Herza and Frinna touched their helmets. “The beacon,” Herza said. “We’re on course.”
“Time to go,” Frinna said, transformed, and Macht echoed her, their enthusiasm surging, paralysis broken—too quickly.
“What if something’s looking for us?” Perf asked.
“Something will always be ‘looking for us,’” Khren said, with a buzz of sarcasm. “Let’s move, like she says. We should take a peek first, of course.”
“That’s what I was trying to do,” Nico said.
They could all feel it. They were in the Chaos, in the wild at last, and to Tiadba, the sudden excitement and anticipation were almost as frightening as Pahtun’s destruction. They were much too eager. But they knew that whatever came next, they were where they belonged.
TEN ZEROS
CHAPTER 67
The Green Warehouse
Daniel and Glaucous stood silent and watchful by the warehouse door, too tired to speak. Bidewell had brought the new visitors inside, then left them with Jack and went off, he said, to make preparations.
“Things will be getting worse sooner rather than later.”
Glaucous dropped to the wooden bench beside the door, face swollen with fatigue, piggish eyes bleary, paying neither of the younger men a whit of attention, as if for now they were beneath notice. Daniel lowered his head and bent over, fighting nausea.
“I don’t know you,” Jack said to Daniel. “I doknow you,” he blurted at the squat, gnomish man. “If you try anything, I swear…I’ll killyou.”
Glaucous stared up at Jack. “Well spoken, young master,” he said. “You should know that I killed the pair that hunted the young lady. We all have our mixes of good and bad.”
“How did you get out of the van?” Jack asked. “Where’s the fat woman?”
Glaucous waggled his hand, demonstrating something flying off into the air.
“I wouldn’t worry about him,” Daniel said, pushing up again.
“What about you?” Jack asked.
Glaucous smiled. “So very tuned, so very sharp.”
Jack worked to keep his temper. “I don’t know why the old man let either of you in.”
“You assume Bidewell’s brought you here to protect you—to keep you safe from such as me. He hasn’t told you his story, I take it?” Glaucous asked.
“You shouldn’t talk when he’s not here.”
“Ah, we are in your charge,” Glaucous mused, then dropped his gaze to the floor.
“How many of us are here?” Daniel asked. “Shifters, I mean. I’m thinking three, me included.”
Jack shook his head, unwilling to give up information. “Where did you get that stone?”
Daniel winced. “I don’t remember. Do you?”
Jack glared.
“From your family, right?” Daniel asked. “My family’s gone. Not dead—just gone, forgotten, even before this—what’s happening outside.”
“A bad place,” Glaucous muttered. “And no escape.”
“That’s what happens to us,” Daniel said. “We get wiped out of the histories.”
Ginny had come through the aisles and stood in the shadows, watching them. “You’re not in my dreams,” she said to Daniel. She pointed to Glaucous. “Who’s this?”
“My hunter,” Jack said.
Bidewell returned with Agazutta and Miriam. The two women inspected the newcomers with expectation and dread. Ellen and Farrah joined them, and Ellen took Ginny’s arm. The circle stood in silence—except for Glaucous, whose breath came in labored, grinding snores, though he was not asleep.