Iced on Aran

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by Brian Lumley


  A fishy belly offered itself, and Hero obligingly sliced it open. Fish guts stained the water red and yellow, webbed hands scrabbling desperately. Eldin cut his creature gill to gill, scared off the female with a lunge of his grisly knife. Then the Wanderer looked around, sought Hero.

  Hero!

  The younger quester was just about all in. His feet kicked—or more nearly twitched—very feebly as he drifted surfaceward, his head tilted back and glassy eyes gazing straight up. And this time he wasn’t faking it. Eldin drove his great legs as never before, grabbed Hero’s hair in passing, hauled him along behind.

  And looking down worriedly on Hero as he blazed for the surface, Eldin could also see into the deeps beneath—could see the horde of gill-beings even now speeding in his wake!

  The surface, the blessed surface! Eldin’s head broke through in glittering droplets, and a moment later Hero’s. Then the younger man was drawing air with a noise like badly-holed bellows, and Eldin scrambling aboard their vessel, crying: “Up, quick! Come on, climb up! Give me your hand, I tell you!”

  But Hero simply floating on his back, too exhausted even to struggle. Eldin flinging himself on the deck face-down, grabbing Hero under the arms and hauling him unceremoniously aboard.

  “Don’t—gasp!—interrupt me—gasp!—when I’m breathing!” Hero complained, flopping there while Eldin thundered headlong into the cabin. A moment later came the throb of Quester’s flotation engine at full throttle, then Eldin storming up again on to the deck.

  Hero propped himself up on one elbow. “Knackered!” he coughed, by way of explaining his inactivity.

  Scaly heads broke the surface close to Quester; webbed hands came up over her sides; Hero was on his feet in a trice. “But not that knackered!” he gasped.

  And of course, the rest of it is known.

  The surface was pink where severed fingers and hands, even a fishy head or two, floated in profusion, when at last Quester cleared the water and drifted skyward; and only then dared the pair put down their swords and rest. After that:

  A storm came up out of nowhere (conjured, perhaps, by the thwarted gods of the submarine temple?) that blew Quester across the sky like a tuft of thistledown. But battened in the cabin Hero and Eldin didn’t give a damn between them. “Few reefs up here to strike against,” the Wanderer commented, sinking muth straight from the bottle.

  “I say top the bags brim-full,” Hero nodded, shivering, not quite fully recovered. “Let’s climb clear of the storm and only come down again when it’s blown itself out. It’s a mite cold up there, but safe as safe can be!”

  “Agreed!” said Eldin, turning the pumps up full. “As for getting cold: why, there’s booze enough in store to keep us warm for a week, even in upper atmosphere!”

  And as the dreamlands fell away beneath their keel, so the adventurers started in on one of their very best binges.

  THE END

  But there are more dreamquests in store!

  Look for these Tor books by Brian Lumley

  The DREAMLANDS series

  Hero of Dreams

  Ship of Dreams

  Mad Moon of Dreams

  Iced on Aran

  The PSYCHOMECH series

  Psychomech

  Psychosphere

  Psychamok

  The NECROSCOPE series

  Necroscope

  Vamphyri!

  The Source

  Deadspeak

  Deadspawn

  Demogorgon

  The House of Doors

  Blood Brothers

  Fruiting Bodies and Other Fungi

  The Last Aerie

  The Vampire Wakes

  The seven stone coffins stood upright in a half-circle, with that of the Black Princess in the center of the row, flanked by her six warriors. Weird, black wine now gushed over the open sarcophagi, drenching the shrunken mummies within.

  The watchers’ eyes were fixed fearfully upon the gaunt figure of the Black Princess, where her coffin faced the reopened passage to the outside world. And all saw her eyes crack open! Petrified, the entire assembly stared into the pits of burning sulphur which were Yath-Lhi’s eyes.

  The wine shone like oil on her wrinkled limbs. And like oil it eased those wrinkles, soaked into and made soft the leather of her flesh. Her yellow eyes opened wider and her lips cracked apart in a hideous grin. Creaking like rusted hinges, she stepped forth out of her coffin!

  The Black Princess beckoned with a still-stiff arm, and a man stepped forward, zombie-like, to stand before her. She reached out her hands and touched him, all ten of her fingers, widespread, contacting his shoulders—and the man began to twitch and flop like a strangled chicken. He did not scream, made no attempts at flight, merely jerked and throbbed and fluttered; he withered, deflated, and became a bag of bones in Yath-Lhi’s sucking hands.

  This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious, and any resemblance to real people or events is purely coincidental.

  ICED ON ARAN

  Copyright © 1990 by Brian Lumley

  All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book, or portions thereof, in any form.

  A Tor Book

  Published by Tom Doherty Associates, Inc.

  175 Fifth Avenue

  New York, N.Y. 10010

  Tor® is a registered trademark of Tom Doherty Associates, Inc.

  Cover art by Tim Jacobus

  eISBN 9781466818675

  First eBook Edition : April 2012

  ISBN: 0-812-52422-5

  First Tor mass market printing: March 1994

 

 

 


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