This life saving incline continued skyward, the flow itself however would travel no higher than the labyrinth walls — filling its narrow corridors and patterns with a luminous, mesmerizing glow. It remained briefly at this high tide, before sinking through the many open vents — stripping all life from the surface and leaving but steaming puddles over the labyrinth floor.
26. Parts Broken
Our life-saving slope did not soar as high as the opposite steps, and after resting a while, the scale to the top was easily achieved. There we faced a flat wall covered in soot, with five indistinguishable slate doors lining up side by side. "The second door will lead you the quickest and safest route to the 9thFortress,” I said. "That's what Virgil told us. What do you think, Harmony?"
"Me?" she asked, innocently.
"You're the reason for his advice. What door do you suggest?"
She shrugged shyly then recoiled behind Eddinray's arm, keeping that good opinion to herself.
"But should it really be that easy?" the knight pondered. "That bloody ghost did not mention a thing about killer rats, nor flow of incinerating lava! I suspect he didn't think we would make it this far. Underestimated us he did!"
"We wait,” Kat muttered, causing me to sigh. That would be that. Kat would crouch now, caress his handfuls of earth and consider the options. Nightfall now upon us, here we would wait it out.
***
As the seven suns set, Kat shivered. Sitting on his backside with legs crossed, he daydreamed for a solid hour over the five slabs, while an oblivious angel and knight overlooked the various contours of the labyrinth puzzle, most of it concealed in darkness.
Before sleep, I decided to check our status with the samurai, and looking him over, I recognized his withdrawn expression — it was that same hollowed-out human I had seen in the centre of the labyrinth.
"My gown is all bloody,” complained Harmony, in the background.
"Completely ruined!"
"Kat?" I whispered. "Are you there?"
His teeth chattered, and a growing saliva bubble burst from his lip. I bent and roused him with a delicate touch, and after his long held blink, his spirit seemed to return. "Fox?" he said, confused to find me near him.
"Yes, it's me…How are you?"
"Beat it,” he snarled, wiping his face of any fever.
Glancing back, Harmony implored me to continue, thus I shrugged off Kat's objections and did just that. "I want to talk,” I started, hearing his growl as I took my seat next to him. "We're all concerned about you."
Agitated, Kat searched over his shoulder to witness Harmony's caring smile and Eddinray's thoughtful nod; he then returned his sight to the slabs.
"You're our friend,” I said.
Appearing slightly embarrassed, Kat deflected his face from my mine.
"Are you in pain?" I asked, pointlessly, for if Kat were in excruciating agony, he would hardly express it, let alone share. I prepared myself for a night of this, but the man surprised me by asking a question — an easy question with a difficult answer.
"What happened?"
"What," I stuttered, "do you mean?"
Words teetered on the edge of Kat's lips, his mind searching for precious moments and misplaced memories. Like a child with learning difficulties, he was profoundly frustrated, and I became careful.
"What don't you remember Kat?"
"Fox," he hissed, leaning closer. "I do not remember that labyrinth. Not a thing."
His armor coated in a dry blood, the disturbed samurai had no idea how it got there, no notion either why his body was so thoroughly exhausted, why his sword wielding palm was raw from overuse; and no possible explanation for the hideous new scar covering a large portion of his face.
"We…ran into some trouble,” I said. "Rodents, hundreds and hundreds."
He did not respond, so I continued to refresh his memory. "It was insane. Mad. Swords flung threw the air and blood everywhere. We made it to the centre of the labyrinth when you were stabbed by…" I found myself stalling.
"By?" he pressed me.
"By…one of the rodents. It came out of nowhere and got lucky. There was just too many — even for you."
Kat dabbed three fingertips over the rough red scar. "Then?" he asked.
"Then we put you into the well; the two of us went under the water. It was unbelievable Kat. I could breathe under the bubbles; hands scrubbing me clean surrounded my body. Somehow, it rejuvenated your body and restored my sight. The rest…was a fucking fight."
Adequately content by this fact, he grunted. There was a reason I didn't inform him of the Wisp and wizard running him through with a spear. If aware of the facts, Kat would no doubt seek his vengeance, and in doing so would rob me of mine. I had unfinished business with Scarfell, and I alone would settle it.
Allowing my boiling emotions to cool at one side, I wandered a frown over the lonely and haunted samurai warrior. "Maybe it's a good thing you don't remember Kat. I'm sure you've plenty memories of…slaughter."
"I do,” he replied, barely audible.
"Will you sit with us?"
"Why?"
Again, I struggled for the words. "It is not nice being alone — you'll have plenty memories of that too. We all care about you…That is all I have to say."
Kat suddenly delighted me with a novel expression for his rugged face — the hard edges of his lips softened slightly, and his black eyes were no longer hostile, but grateful. He may well have been appreciative of my words, company or friendship, but his mouth wasn't ready to express it.
"Leave me be,” he said. I slapped my dusty thigh in submission then joined a more talkative pair.
"Is he okay?" asked Harmony, hopeful.
"He is…himself,” I said, sitting.
"Did you see him with those swords?" whispered Eddinray. "Never seen anything like that, and I've seen it all!"
"Kat has a gift,” Harmony added. "God help anyone who wants to see it."
"Thirty?" mused Eddinray. "Forty? How many did he slay?"
"Enough,” I snipped. "The man doesn't need reminding."
Eddinray slunk apologetically, then silently and for some time, we three watched the broad back of our vanguard.
***
"The second door will lead you the quickest and safest route to the 9thFortress."
"Have to choose one?" said Eddinray, watching the rising suns this morning. "Sooner or later."
"Can't go back the ways," added a bored looking Harmony. "Certainly can't split up."
"We take the second,” said Kat, at last. "Yes. The second."
"You trust the ghost's advice now?" I asked him; and failing to disguise his anxiety, Kat bit his bottom lip then grimly replied — "I do not trust my own."
Advancing to the second slab reaching near ten feet tall, Kat placed both of his palms flat on the slate and beckoned me to help push. The slate screeched inward like an ancient hinge as we shoved it, and the escaping air reminded me of Bludgeon's many doors and dangerous surprises.
Rejoining Harmony and Eddinray, we surveyed the ominous entrance. Thankfully no bogeymen leapt from the dark and smoking gap, but we did expect one.
"What will come of it?" Harmony sighed.
"There's a way to find out,” I returned, finding my nerve and venturing first through the portal.
It was cramped inside. Badly. The suns orange revealed walls of soil rubbing against my arms, the shimmer of a ledge by my feet. Beyond that ledge was a hair-raising slope to a deep and swarthy void.