by Неизвестный
" What' s wrong?" he cried.
" My power, it' s being interfered with. Claybore' s countering my spell." Abasi- Abi' s voice sounded eons older. When Lan felt the arms circling his neck begin to slip, he knew that the sorcerer had reached the limits of his endurance.
They were still more than fifteen feet from safety.
Panic seized him, only to be replaced with a coldness and a calm he' d experienced before. His mind turned over the sensations he' d felt when Abasi- Abi' s spell had begun. The effects had been similar to the healing spells he knew; similar, but not identical. Working this over and over in his mind, he began itemizing the small differences, incorporating them, experimenting, altering slightly the spells he already knew until the strength again flowed through him.
He climbed briskly, no longer tired. Lan tried to expand his spell to include Abasi- Abi but felt his control slip. He decided the sorcerer was best served by reaching the ledge above as quickly as possible. When he twisted over, he heaved and Abasi- Abi gratefully collapsed onto the firmness of solid rock.
" You know that spell, also," the mage said. " And Claybore could not block you. You fight him and win. You counter his best spells. Who are you? I should have detected you sooner."
Lan Martak' s entire body went numb with shock.
He felt frostbite on his nose and fingers and toes. He gasped for air that never reached his lungs. His head spun wildly, causing him to cling to the rock for support. He passed out.
The last sight he had was Abasi- Abi sitting beside him, shaking his head, looking disgusted.
": and I solemnly tell you he knows little magic," came Krek' s voice. Lan Martak shook his head and felt as if everything inside had come loose. He groaned and tried to push himself erect. Krek said, " I believe his current condition proves my point."
" Impossible." Abasi- Abi' s voice cut through Lan' s mind like a razor. " He uses spells too proficiently. He lies back, waiting for the proper moment. He pretends to be an ignorant lout. No clod- buster bests Claybore as he' s done."
" Will you please shut up?" Lan moaned. " I hurt. All over."
" An effect of the spells he' s been using," said Abasi- Abi, a smugness to him that irritated Lan. He knew that the spider wouldn' t tolerate being proved wrong, either. He let Krek answer. The effort for him was too much.
" He heals. Witness my leg." Krek wiggled his damaged leg, showing the returning mobility. " And he uses that horrid flame spell of his to make campfires. He knows nothing else." The spider paused, then added melodramatically, " Sometimes I believe that last statement of mind is the literal truth."
" He combines spells in ways only a mage can. But it matters little if his powers are a hundred times greater if we fail to reach the summit before Claybore." Abasi- Abi hunkered down and pulled his robe in around his body.
" How many of us are left?" asked Lan. He looked around and saw Krek, the sorcerer, Ehznoll, and one other.
" Just this small band," said Krek. " The rest, alas, are gone." He rose up on all eight legs and peered over the rim downward to the earth, as if trying to figure out the paths already taken by those lost.
" The good earth has reclaimed them, one and all," said Ehznoll.
" They' re dead, is what you' re trying to say." Lan closed his eyes and tried to remember the spell he' d used on the face of the cliff to restore the strength to his limbs. The use of power took too much from him physically. He might be a superman for a few moments, but he' d quickly burn out his entire body if he tried to maintain that pace. He' d come perilously close to doing so already.
But how? He failed to understand what had happened. When he' d started up the mountain, his magical abilities had been minimal, yet he' d single- handedly fought off Claybore. The bending of those deadly ruby beams had been his doing, he was now sure. But how? He' d mended Krek' s crushed leg. Those were spells he' d known most of his adult life, but Abasi- Abi claimed the combination to be difficult, the weaving of three at once an ability of a master sorcerer. But how? He had no formal training. And had his increasing abilities really come on the mountain- or before? Krek had been beguiled by Nashira; Lan had been able to slip her seductive spells much more easily. The only explanation lay in the brief time spent between worlds, in the white fog. He' d felt a shifting of his senses. Had it also heightened his magical skill?
Lan Martak felt no different, except for being bone- weary. But he had to admit his facility with the spells he did know had improved greatly. He didn' t know whether to be thankful for that or not. He apparently held Claybore at bay; he also drew Claybore' s attentions because of his enhanced skill.
" Abasi- Abi and Morto will stay here," Krek said, " while I explore upward. Friend Lan Martak, are you and Ehznoll up to examining a more inward route? This ledge provides a space much too small for you humans. I find it cozy, but from past experience, you will no doubt say it is cramped."
" It is."
" See?" the spider said haughtily. " I go. Meet back here in one hour."
Krek flashed out with his web and vanished upward. Lan swallowed hard, thinking of the long drop under the spider' s legs.
He glanced over at Abasi- Abi and Morto, the only survivor of the sorcerer' s original group of assistants. Morto fixed a small dinner for the mage.
" Well, Ehznoll, are you up to exploring?" he asked. " We can eat some of our rations as we climb."
" The climb is easy because the earth now aids us. We are the true believers, the ones most beloved of the good dirt." Ehznoll piously crossed wrists over his breast.
" Stuff it," said Lan in a tired voice. " I just want to be done with this."
He chewed on jerked meat, drank melted snow, and climbed. The effort proved less strenuous than Lan would have thought. Krek had left the two humans an easy path to reconnoiter. The slight upward grade soon turned into a level expanse that opened into a chasm in the side of Mount Tartanius. A small, barren valley with high, rocky walls meandered back into the mountain.
" Easy climbing," said Lan, " if the valley goes anywhere we want to go."
" The good earth provides," intoned Ehznoll.
" It provides more than dirt, I see," said Lan, pointing. " Those look like some of Krek' s arachnid kinfolk. Their webs are strung all over the valley."
Feathery arrays of spider silk fluttered in the gusty winds blowing through the canyon. Spiders much smaller than Krek- but still larger than human size- darted along their aerial walkways. Lan noticed a small cluster of them dangling more than fifty feet over his head, waiting, watching, no doubt wondering at the rare human incursion into their mountain fastness.
" They' re probably as intelligent as Krek," he said. " Hola! Greetings, friend spiders." Lan waved his hand to draw their attention. A thin strand of silk drifted down on the wind and lightly brushed his wrist. It clung. He wiped it off with some difficulty.
" Martak, they are not of the earth. These creatures: they are of the sky. They are evil. Like your unholy friend, they are evil!" Ehznoll began backing away.
" Nonsense. They' re smaller than Krek, but no less intelligent. Look. They' ve formed a greeting party. Maybe it' s their Webmaster come to welcome us."
Lan Martak stepped forward- and a dozen strands of silk dropped down on him. He stood absolutely still, wondering about the protocol of meeting their Webmaster. When new strands came floating down, he began to get mad.
" Look, I' m not going to hurt you." He tensed his muscles and broke through the silken threads. " I mean no harm. We just want a path upward to the summit."
More web- stuff fell.
" Stop it! Ehznoll, I:" Lan turned and saw what had happened to the pilgrim. He had been unable to break the strands cascading over him. He lay trussed up in a small cocoon, futilely struggling against his silk bonds. One strand of sticky web had closed his lips. A dozen spiders, all human- sized, worked busily around the fallen man.
" Stop that! He' s not food!" cried Lan. Unbidden, the pyromancy spell cam
e to his lips. Blue sparks erupted from his fingertips. The nearest spider ignited in a fiery ball of shrieking fury. " Wait! I didn' t mean to do that," he pleaded.
More strands fell, tangling his feet. Lan fell face forward. He twisted and began working his knife from its sheath. Overhead fifty or more of the spiders worked their spinnerets. A net of silk dropped, imprisoning him. He cut, sawed, slashed. For every silk thread he severed, two more fell. In less than a minute, he lay as immobile as Ehznoll. Only good luck had prevented one of the sticky strands from closing his mouth.
The spiders chittered to themselves. He felt their hard claws prodding him, turning him over, more silk swirling about his body. He cried out as he surged aloft, head down. The spiders worked diligently for another fifteen minutes. When they' d finished, he hung upside down twenty feet over the rocky terrain.
Wind coming from the canyon blew his cocoon so that he turned slowly, treated to a full upside- down three- hundred- sixty- degree view. A dozen feet away hung Ehznoll, similarly imprisoned.
Struggle as he might, Lan Martak didn' t budge the silk strands around him. He wondered when the hatchlings would come and feast.
" Krrrrrrek!" he bellowed. The action caused him to bob in a sickening up- and- down motion. He turned in the wind and only occasionally saw the form of the giant spider below. " Get us ouuuuut!"
Krek ignored him. The spider trotted over to the left side of the canyon, paused a moment, then walked up the rock as if it had steps cut into it. His feet found purchase where no human' s could, and he used tiny lengths of his own web to dangle in places where even he found no footing. Lan slowly turned and saw the giant spider gingerly walk out onto a web. A dozen of the smaller arachnids gathered about.
Much of what Krek said was swallowed by the wind, but Lan heard enough.
": no harm. They are silly- looking, but harmless."
" Food. Hatchlings need them as food."
" Your hatchlings are better served with more standard fare. Humans provide too much protein for such spindly offspring."
" Don' t insult them, Krek. Don' t!" Lan called. The giant spider ignored him.
" Grubs. Those are most tasty."
" We have them. We keep them." The spider in the center of the group bounced up and down, sending vibrations throughout the web.
" Do not get agitated," soothed Krek. " I have no desire to take them from you."
" Take us from them, you silly spider. Get us out of here!"
" They provide too much protein for your young. You wish strong, lithe hatchlings, not big, grossly overweight ones."
" No good for hatchlings?"
" Not in the least."
Lan Martak breathed a sigh of relief. The tone of the small spider indicated he' d come to believe Krek.
" Then we eat. Adults need protein. We eat. You join us."
" Krrrrrek!"
" These little fellows have a single- minded determination I find most stimulating after so much human company. They seem intent on devouring you, friend Lan Martak."
" Don' t let them!"
" Why the concern? All life survives by one form feeding on another. From the most minute protozoan to the largest squid, this is the way of the universe."
" I don' t want to be any damned spider' s supper!"
" That is very unsporting of you. They did capture you fairly."
" To the Lower Places with fair. Get us down!"
Lan felt the commotion on the web rather than seeing it. He looked downward- overhead for him- and saw a rusty- furred animal skulking into the valley. The frenzy displayed by the tiny spiders was out of proportion for the meek, unannounced entrance of a single doglike creature.
" What' s happening, Krek? Tell me. I can' t see."
" The canine has severely agitated them. They have even left you and Ehznoll alone."
" Then get us down, dammit. Now!"
" Such impatience. I am curious about the dog. Have you lost all desire to learn from the world around you?"
" I' ll learn right side up."
" You humans depend too much on orientation to the ground. A good spider knows where his web is, what crawls over it, nothing more."
" We' re not spiders. Or spider food."
Krek' s mandibles made a clacking noise. Lan fell ten feet before the giant spider snagged the cocoon silk and held him. A tiny hissing and Lan felt the silk rotting away. He finally broke free of the remaining strands on his own, flipped, and landed feet first on the rocky ground. Never had solid rock felt better. Ehznoll followed soon after, failing to perform the midair somersault. Lan helped him to his feet.
" The earth!" the man cried out, when the web- stuff over his face had been brushed away. " I worship the good earth. Bless you." He dropped and kissed the thin soil along the bottom of the narrow canyon.
A gout of flame lanced above Lan' s head. He ducked and collided with Ehznoll, who remained on his knees, praying to the earth. A second lance of fire ignited a strand of web- stuff dangling from above.
" Fire!" shrieked Krek. " The dog spits fire."
Lan Martak saw his friend was right. The small rust- colored animal had backed up against the far rock wall. While the general shape and size of a dog, the beast had a snout more like a pig' s. Twin columns of fire blasted from that snout. The threat of fire drove the small spiders crazy. Some attacked and were cremated. Others launched themselves for their aerial hideaways, only to find the fire travelling along their webs more swiftly than they.
" It smells of filth," said Ehznoll. " I prefer the scent of the earth."
" It snorts something volatile, then ignites it just in front of its nose," said Lan, fascinated by the creature.
" It is a flamer. A creature most unclean."
Lan started to say something about Ehznoll calling anyone or anything unclean, then stopped. Arguing between themselves solved nothing.
" If you are so captivated by the creature, friend Lan Martak, why not stay?"
" Sorry. Let' s get out of here."
Lan, Ehznoll, and Krek backtracked toward the mouth of the canyon. At the top of a small rise, Lan looked back. A full quarter of the spiders' webs were afire. A black pall hung over the scene, and the stench from burned fur and spider and web turned his stomach.
" They' re intelligent," Lan said firmly. " They need help. I' m going back."
" To die?" came Krek' s soft question.
" Don' t you feel any compassion, Krek?" he demanded. Lan pointed into the valley. " They' re arachnids, just like you. Smaller, maybe, but still of your kind."
" Do you rush to save every human you see?"
" I try."
Krek let out a gusty sigh.
" That does explain many of our problems."
" They' re intelligent."
" Moderately so," conceded the spider.
" We can' t let them die. The flames are sweeping through the valley. Every last one of them will die."
" It' s the earth' s way of cleansing its cloaca," said Ehznoll.
" What?"
" The fire cleanses and purifies. The interior of the planet is afire constantly. Magma erupts to purify the unclean land. This fire is good, even if it is brought by the flamer."
" I understand Krek more than I do you, Ehznoll. He' s afraid of fire. He can see what it' s doing to those spiders. But you? Aren' t those creatures of your earth?"
" Are they of the worm, burrowing through precious soil? No! They eat worms."
" They eat anything they can capture." Lan held back a shudder as he thought of how close he' d come to being one of those meals. " They' re thinking creatures. They need help."
" Abasi- Abi awaits us on the ledge," pointed out Krek. " He and his servant Morto might press on without us."
" You found a way up, off the ledge?"
" An easy path, even for humans, after the initial climb."
Lan felt torn between rejoining Abasi- Abi and continuing up to the summit and aiding the spiders. Whe
n the flamer snorted a gout of fire directly at one of the arachnids, catching it on fire, Lan made his decision.
" I' m going back, with or without you."
He pulled his sword and rushed back down the slope. The flamer turned bloodshot eyes on him, then seemed to scowl. The spiders it understood. They were enemy. This two- legged beast was about the same size but of different texture and color. This slowness to evaluate Lan and his intentions gave the man the opportunity he needed.
He danced around one hesitant spurt of fire, then lunged. The sword tip pinked the flamer' s haunch. It tried to howl in pain and spit fire at the same time. Whatever volatile it spat choked it. The flamer began kicking, clawing, snapping, trying to avoid Lan' s thrusting sword. Finally realizing its tactics didn' t work, the flamer raced down the valley faster than Lan could follow. By the time the man caught up, it had relit its flame.
Lan faced a wall of guttering flame. He might get lucky and penetrate the curtain of death; he probably wouldn' t be able to come close enough to do anything significantly dangerous to the flamer.
He glanced overhead. They stood under a suspiciously hanging curtain of snow. Tiny cracks ran up from the bottom hoar to vanish into a softer, newer layer above. The man had seen similar blankets of snow before. He began backing away from the flamer. Emboldened by what the animal thought was fear on Lan' s part, it advanced.
Lan thrust his sword into the frozen ground before him and clapped his hands. The sharp sound started an avalanche over the flamer. Lan didn' t stay to see how much snow eventually thundered down; he ran for his life back up the valley until he came to the spot where spider webs swung in the gusts of air caused by the rapidly falling snow.
" There," said Lan with some satisfaction. He saluted the surviving spiders aloft, then sheathed his sword- and found his legs pinioned by new strands of silk.
He fell to one side. More strands fell on him. He ripped skin off his left arm as the sticky hunting webs clung to his flesh.
" Krek!" he bellowed.
" Oh, very well, you silly human." Krek shrieked and chittered and drove back the horde of spiders trying to again bind Lan. The giant spider excreted the chemical needed to dissolve the cords.