Laura’s face was emotionless. ‘He’ll be fine. He’s tougher than you bunch of wimps.’ She turned away from them quickly.
Shavi suddenly became animated, involuntarily clutching at his alien eye.
‘What’s wrong?’ Veitch asked.
‘Hurry! We must leave this place immediately!’ Shavi said urgently. ‘Something is coming!’
Church peered into the blizzard as faint tremors ran through the ground, growing stronger. ‘Okay, let’s move on.’
‘What about Hunter?’ Laura snapped. ‘If we leave here, he’ll never find us.’
‘He’ll find us. He’s good.’
Tom grabbed Church’s arm as they struggled up the slope. ‘I don’t like this. There have always been terrible things in this place.’ The words died in his throat as one of the beasts emerged from the snow behind them. Inky black, at first glance it resembled a giant spider, rising up above them on long, sharp legs that looked as if they were made of iron. It wavered for a second so they felt they were under the scrutiny of a cold, alien intellect, and then it began to change. Armoured plates resembling an insect’s carapace unfolded out of the black body and locked into place. Spikes and a horned ridge emerged, along with other razor-sharp appendages.
‘Bloody hell!’ Veitch gasped. ‘Fomorii!’
The others scrambled up the incline as fast as they could, but Miller continued to gape. Veitch hit him like a runaway train and propelled him away. ‘Stand still, you’re dead,’ Veitch hissed. ‘They’re killing machines.’
The way became much steeper, littered with outcropping rocks and huge boulders that made it difficult to advance. Behind them, the Fomor raced only feet away. Breath burned in their lungs as they wound around the obstacles.
Echoing through the howling gale came the sounds of more Fomorii joining the pursuit, a haunting, deep call and response that became more frenzied, as though the creatures recognised their prey.
They came up hard against a cliff rising high over their heads. A path wound around the foot of it, barely wide enough for one person, with the ground plummeting away steeply.
As Veitch and Miller passed the last boulder before the path began, they caught a glimpse of someone crouching out of sight. When the Fomor pounded up behind them, Church jumped out at the last and swung Caledfwlch in an arc, a trail of Blue Fire sizzling through the snow. Sparks flew as the blade hacked into one of the creature’s front legs. As the creature half-rounded on Church, it lost its balance. With a roar, Church rammed into it with the sword, bracing against the boulder and levering it onto the slippery, snow-covered slope. The Fomor hovered for a second and then went crashing down until it was lost in the swirling snow.
‘Nice one, mate!’ Veitch called as Church caught up with the group.
‘Let’s not start cheering yet,’ Church shouted back. ‘The others are coming up fast behind.’
With the wind lashing them, they pressed their backs against the cliff face and edged around the path. ‘We’re still going in the right direction,’
Tom said, ‘as long as we don’t fall to our doom. This path, in such a deserted landscape, is here for a reason.’
‘What are they?’ Miller asked again, struggling to cope with the terror surging through his system.
‘Race enemies of those golden-skinned bastards.’ The flickering black flames of Veitch’s sword were a stark contrast to the snow. ‘We fought them before. Beat ’em, too, at the Battle of London.’
Miller glanced back and almost lost his balance. ‘It changed shape.’
‘They do that a lot.’ Veitch looked to Church. ‘You think there’s just a handful of ’em?’
‘All of them disappeared after the Battle of London. What if they came here, to lick their wounds?’ Church paused. ‘What if this is the Void’s secret army, just like we have the Army of Dragons and the gods?’
‘You stopped them once, right?’ Miller said hopefully. ‘You can do it again.’
Looking out into the blizzard, Veitch had the odd sensation of a sea of white in which they could float.
‘They’re coming!’ Church said. ‘Let’s move this along!’
Behind them, the call of the Fomorii echoed off the cliff-side; it contained a note of jubilance, perhaps that their old enemies were finally in their grasp, and it was followed by a metallic grinding that set their teeth on edge - the beasts’ limbs dragging on the rock-face.
From the rear, Church urged them to move faster, but the path soon became more precarious as it crawled up and around the lower stage of the mountain they knew was hidden above their heads in the blizzard. As they rounded a bluff, they became more sheltered from the buffeting gale and visibility improved. They could see the path dropping down towards a horseshoe-shaped area enclosed by the towering rock. A single, twisted, ancient hawthorn stood in the centre.
‘Bleedin’ great,’ Veitch said. ‘No way out. We can’t go back. You old bastard - you’ve led us to the perfect place for a slaughter.’
‘Shut up!’ Tom snapped. He examined his ring and Church could see from his face that he feared Freyja had planned this all along.
The hunting cries of the Fomorii rang out through the blizzard, ten joining twenty, more each second, echoing from out across the Great Plain as they converged on the mountains.
‘You know what - I’m starting to think you’re right,’ Veitch said. ‘All the Fomorii are here in Winter-side. We’re screwed.’
After they’d skidded down the path into the horseshoe-shaped area, Church and Veitch moved quickly around the rock walls looking for any sign of a hidden passage or footholds that would help them climb to safety.
‘Do you see anything here?’ Ruth asked Shavi. He turned in a slow arc, letting his alien eye focus on everything. After a moment, he shook his head.
‘Fucking brilliant!’ Laura blazed. ‘First you lose Hunter, now this!’ Tears stung her eyes.
The low hunting calls grew louder. From out of the blizzard emerged the Fomorii, some descending the winding path, others clinging to the rock-face, still more rising up on the edge of the horseshoe-shaped area from where the land fell away precipitously.
Church and Veitch faced them, drawing their swords so that blue and black energy sparked between them. Ruth joined them, Blue Fire crackling around the tip of the Spear of Lugh.
Laura brushed away her tears to take a flank, but when she saw Shavi joining them, she urged him back. ‘Let’s face it, Shavster, you’re about as useful as a wet towel in a fight like this. Go help Team Loser find a way out of here.’
‘We have travelled the worlds together and you are all more dear to me than anyone else in my life. We have truly lived together and we should die together,’ he replied.
She set her jaw. ‘We’re not about to die, because Hunter’s going to come over that hill with the cavalry and crush these bastards dead. Now, go!’
In Shavi’s look of sad fondness, they both accepted the lie in Laura’s words, and then he turned and hurried to Tom and Miller who were scrambling around the foot of the cliffs. Virginia watched them blankly.
An oily flow of Fomorii washed into the horseshoe area until they stood ranged from cliff to cliff. It was like looking into a haze as their edges blurred with the constant shape-changing: armour plates snapping into place, human forms becoming insectile, cruel spikes and horns bursting from the hard skin.
‘I’ve not missed them,’ Church said.
‘You know what makes me sick?’ Veitch said. ‘There’s nobody here to write about how bleedin’ brilliant we’ll be when we go down fighting.’
Ruth smiled to herself. ‘That’s all you’ve ever wanted, isn’t it? To be seen as one of the heroes.’
‘Yeah, I want my name up in lights, why not?’
‘Not going to happen, you tattooed psycho.’ Laura crouched down and buried one hand in the snow until she was touching the ground. Concentration darkened her face, and after a second a row of bramble crawled slowly from the frozen gro
und along the ranks of Fomorii. With a gasp, Laura sagged back onto her behind. ‘God, this place is too frozen. I’m as useless as Shavi.’
‘You tried,’ Church said. ‘Drop back with the others.’
The Fomorii held back for a second, and then they broke like a wave at the shore.
‘No,’ Ruth whispered defiantly.
A sound thundered at the base of Church and Veitch’s skulls. Ruth had uttered a word of power, her eyes rolling back to reveal the whites. She appeared greater than the mere dimensions of her form, magnificent, and with each passing second, more terrifying.
The wind roiled into a fist and slammed into the approaching line of Fomorii, smashing them back. Bullets of snow and ice tore into them and lightning crashed from the sky, leaving charred circles in the snow and the twisted remnants of bodies. In a trance, she levelled the Spear of Lugh, and Blue Fire surged from the tip. The Fomorii recoiled from contact with it.
Only one of the creatures made it through Ruth’s assault, but Church and Veitch were ready for it. They attacked from either side, hacking and thrusting. Screeching, the Fomor lashed out, its limbs changing shape as it moved to find the most lethal aspect. One glancing blow sent Church sprawling, but Veitch was already in the space Church had occupied before he hit the ground, preventing the Fomor from delivering a killing blow.
At the cliff wall, Miller and Shavi were drawn by the furious battle, but Tom continued to search furiously, Virginia observing him. With angry frustration, he took a step back and shouted at Shavi, ‘Something’s here. You’re supposed to be a saviour of the universe. Find it.’
‘I see nothing,’ Shavi responded. ‘No hidden door or path—’
‘Wait.’ Miller pointed hesitantly to the lifeless tree. ‘That stands in such a perfect position in this space . . . is it natural?’
Shavi ran his hands over the bark.
‘Yes,’ Tom said. ‘Yes! Symbolic. It’s a sign. A message—’
‘Here, in this desolate, frozen, rocky place,’ Shavi continued with a smile, ‘is life.’
As he moved his hands over the rough bark, he felt the faintest pulse deep within. Resting his forehead against the trunk, eyes closed, he held it, fanned it, drew it out from the sleeping core. Miller’s hand went to his stomach where he felt an involuntary connective warmth.
A faint blue light appeared on the trunk. Breathing in the smell of burned iron, Shavi concentrated, forcing the long-dormant power to grow stronger. The light became a single flame that appeared to die in the cold breeze, until suddenly it erupted along the length of the trunk and the entire tree blazed with the Blue Fire, each shimmering finger now a leaf on the once-dead branches.
At the foot of the tree, the earth energy crackled into the snow, moving in a rapid, dizzying spiral until it sizzled in a direct line towards the cliff wall and up the rock face where it illuminated the sign of a dragon eating its tail.
‘Here!’ Tom yelled. ‘Here, now!’
Shavi raced towards it and slammed his hand into the centre of the symbol. A flash dazzled them all for a second, and then with a judder that threw them from their feet, the rock tore itself open to reveal a door into a dark space.
‘Church! Ryan! Ruth! Come, now!’ Shavi called.
Church and Veitch continued to whirl around the remaining Fomor, their swords leaving fiery trails in the air. They were both covered with cuts that spattered blood onto the snow. But Ruth was almost unrecognisable. She hovered six inches above the ground, arms outstretched, head back, the blue light from the Spear washing around before driving out intermittently at the storm-tossed ranks of Fomorii still closing in. She held them back, though just barely. To Shavi, she looked like one of the gods, as frightening and enigmatic as a force of nature.
He ran to her, but when he placed his hand on her side, her head snapped around, her face filled with fury and he was thrown ten feet back with a blast that left him close to unconsciousness.
Church’s cry shocked Ruth from her trance, and she crashed to the ground. Still dazed, she was at first unable to comprehend Shavi’s smoking form as he staggered to his feet, but gradually realisation dawned on her. Her devastation was clear in her face.
‘Ruth!’ Church called urgently.
The lines of Fomorii gradually recovered and prepared to attack. Although they held their enemy at bay, Church and Veitch could not find an opening to escape towards Shavi. Gathering herself, Ruth dived beneath the attacking beast and rammed the Spear of Lugh up into the creature’s belly. Amidst a burst of blue light, the Fomor exploded. As the body parts rained down, Church and Veitch grabbed Ruth and half-dragged her towards the gaping hole in the cliff-face where Shavi beckoned urgently. Behind them, the howls of the approaching Fomorii echoed.
Diving through the open doorway, they had one last look at the horde of shape-shifting beasts bearing down on them before the door slid shut and they were plunged into darkness.
As they caught their breath, Tom struck his flint and found a cobweb-festooned lantern hanging on a hook next to the door. The flame guttered, then leaped. They stood in a vast entrance hall amidst blocks of fallen masonry and discarded swords, spears and shields as if a final battle had been fought there. Columns soared up into the dark and ahead of them a few cracked steps led up to a towering archway beyond which lay only shadows.
Tearfully, Ruth hugged Shavi. ‘I’m so sorry. I could have killed you.’
‘A slight singe here and there, but I am fine.’
‘We’d all be dead if not for you,’ Church said.
‘You’re a scary woman,’ Veitch added. ‘Where did all that come from?’
‘The power’s been growing in me for a long time.’ She ran a shaking hand through her hair. ‘Back on our world, I could feel it, but didn’t really know how to get to it. Here . . .’ She chewed her lip. ‘I’m afraid I might not be able to control it.’
‘It’s always about you,’ Laura snapped. ‘Hunter’s still out there. And Jack. We can’t leave them.’
‘We can’t go back out,’ Veitch said sharply.
Sensing the mounting tension, Church stepped between the two of them. ‘Hunter’s one of us and we don’t abandon anyone. And we can’t go on without Jack. We need him. Maybe if we wait until the Fomorii have dispersed—’
Shavi shook his head. ‘I can find no way to open this door from the inside.’
‘There’s got to be,’ Laura insisted.
‘You are right,’ Shavi replied, ‘but there is no source of Blue Fire in here. There must be a different mechanism for opening it.’
Cursing loudly, Laura booted a rock furiously into the shadows where it bounced off walls with a series of echoes that was unnerving in the stillness.
‘What is this place?’ Miller scraped his boot through the thick, white dust on the floor. ‘It doesn’t look like anyone’s been here in centuries.’
‘These,’ Tom replied, ‘are the Halls of the Drakusa.’
5
In the narrow view of snowy ground from the crevice, Hunter counted the passing Fomorii as they ranged by, their resonant call and response rumbling through the rock itself. He estimated at least twenty were still hunting for him and Jack, and they were drawing close to their hiding place. Even with the Balor Claw, he guessed he wouldn’t last more than a moment or two out there. Beside him, Jack shook violently from the cold and Hunter could barely feel his own feet. As far as he could assess, he had only two options: freeze to death or get torn apart by the beasts.
As he turned his head away from the opening to whisper more words of encouragement to Jack, he felt a current of air move across his face. Instantly, he registered that it had come from within the crevice.
He urged Jack to move to one side so he could crawl to the back of the crevice, where he found a dark hole leading in and down, barely big enough for him to squeeze inside. He motioned to Jack and said quietly, ‘There’s a draught. That means it leads to a cave system with some kind of egress.’
&nbs
p; ‘You’re insane,’ Jack hissed. ‘Look how small it is! We’ll get stuck in there and die. Horribly.’
‘We’re going to die horribly if we stay here and that’s the truth. You need to take my lead on this, Jack.’
Jack examined the hole anxiously. ‘Look at it, Hunter. If we get in there and find it’s too small to go on, we’re not going to be able to back out. We’ll be trapped in a space about as big as a coffin. I think I might go mad.’
‘I know I’m asking a lot of you, Jack, but this whole business is asking a lot of all of us. We’ve got to rise above our fears, because everyone is depending on us. If you die here, the hope that Church is fighting for dies with you.’
‘Have you done anything like this before?’
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