DemiGodChapter 16 Betrayal
- 2 years ago
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World number 6,626,070,041,034
Day 140:
Welcome back Traveler, please note that your Visitor status remains defunct. You and your companion have met the Traveler criteria for World number 6,626,070,041,034. You both will now be transported to that destination.
Sygraid’s massive form disappearing from the platform was the only indicator that he’d arrived. He looked around at the uniform, unfathomable darkness for a clue, and noticed that the flames on the portal arch were now a complete rainbow of color. Even ultraviolet and infrared hues danced among the others. Nothing else was changed. Then his Sight cut out entirely.
“Uh, hello?” He tried, heart pounding.
Anything with the power to let him come to a new world through the Network could’ve killed him easily.
“Greetings to you, John Morgan of Earth.” The voice made John’s body vibrate, coming as it did from everywhere at once. It was both more powerful, and more present than anything the Network ever said to him.
John tried to look around again, with negative results. He was blind.
“You seek my form?” The voice was amused. “In this instance what you cannot see is more terrifying than the unknown. I do not apologize for removing your Sight. This conversation will be private, between us two only. The Seer knows or supposes far too much already.”
John pumped as much respect into his voice as he could. “Uh, what do I call you, then?”
“Use the one I am known by on my Challenge World: Ky’ur.” The voice told him. “It will do for this brief visit.”
John bowed low. “Greetings Ky’ur, greatest of dragons. What uh, may I do for you?”
Amusement was back. “You’ve not yet reached the stage where you can perform any service I need done. But I accept your sentiment in the spirit offered. I’ve brought you here to see if you’re a worthy candidate for my goals.”
John gulped. “A worthy candidate? To, um, do what?”
“Join my Network Administration.” Ky’ur replied. “This is the purpose for my creating Challenge World. Surely by now you realize that there is nothing natural about it.”
“Well,” John admitted, “I admit that it seems somewhat ... contrived.”
“It is entirely contrived, to use your term.” Ky’ur informed him. “I first formed it when the humans on Earth began cultivating land for food, and forming political bonds beyond their immediate families. Its appearance has changed many times, as human civilization developed. Such alterations are usually cataclysmic for the world’s population, but necessary to prepare it for the candidates I introduce. I’ve tried many methods for bringing humans from Earth there, but few are able to adapt and thrive in the unfamiliar environment.”
John’s mind raced. “So, me and the other twenty-five people, like Melvin weren’t the first?”
“Not at all.” Ky’ur assured him. “You are merely the first to get a glimpse of the world’s purpose, and pursue it with any success.”
“Thank you.” John dipped his head.
“I am curious to hear your thoughts on the additional challenges you’ve faced since beating my daughter’s Tasks.”
John thought for a moment. “Do you mean the orcs? And the Raiders?”
“And the Dwarves, the harsh environment, as well as the Remnant you so recently met.” Ky’ur concluded.
“It was all a test?” John couldn’t keep the incredulity out of his voice.
A smug tone crept in. “I do not call it my Challenge World lightly.”
John sighed. “Of course you don’t.”
“Did you think yourself unlucky, to be set upon so quickly after arriving, and without relent?” Ky’ur was practically laughing at him now.
John shrugged. “Life’s been a bitch for a while now, I didn’t really consider that I was being singled out.”
Now Ky’ur adopted an approving tone. “Your willingness to shoulder difficult decisions, and to search for honorable solutions has attracted my interest. Is your mentality common for those of your background?”
John paused. “What background are you talking about?”
“Were you not an elite warrior for your polity? Did you not endure, and find triumph in combat many times? I do not even mention your sacrifice and subsequent tribulations. I find it interesting that your culture adopted its own, smaller version of the Challenge to select its finest soldiers.”
John went rigid. “Challenge is a Selection process?”
Ky’ur made a snort so loud John nearly fell over. “Why else have an entire world devoted to the idea?”
John shook his head in disbelief. “Pretty deadly one, if you asked me.”
He got the impression of the dragon moving closer. “It is utterly deadly. Only when the stakes are of the highest order can you find a true measure of a person’s capability.”
“Oh.” John couldn’t think of anything else to say.
The chuckle made John’s bones vibrate. “Do not worry, I know of only a tiny number who figured it out on their own.”
“So ... I’m doing a terrible job? A mediocre one?” John asked.
“How you are, or are not doing will only be measured after the final Challenge is complete.” Ky’ur said. “You may judge for yourself how you believe you perform. Know only that I am watching, and the nature of Challenge is such that I can observe any and all events that occur. Just as Delphi sees through your eye, I too may use it to observe you on other worlds. Allowing your Earthly form to merge with your Challenge avatar gives me that right. Only your un-transmitted thoughts are private.”
“You said that it’s all to find candidates for the Network Administration.” John repeated. “So if I end up doing all the Challenges, and succeed you’ll what, draft me?”
“Of course not.” Ky’ur sounded disapproving. “If I wanted a slave, I could make them by the planet-full. I need a willing, capable, resourceful being who desires of their own volition to assist me in the task of administering and policing the Network.”
John swallowed. “That sounds like a shitty job. Why would anyone want it?”
“Why indeed.” Ky’ur’s voice faded back. “You come from a tiny realm of amity and tranquility, floating amidst a vast, dangerous chaos of malignant turmoil. You’ve been left alone to pursue your petty conflicts because of my isolating protection. Should I judge humans to be a failed experiment, I can easily withdraw that shield and let your people fend for themselves against those powerful enough to find the Earth a tasty, easily-consumed morsel.”
John’s heart sank. “So, come work for you or we’re thrown to the wolves?”
“It’s the order of the cosmos that the strong inevitably find themselves set upon by others and brought low.” Ky’ur growled. “I, my own self wrested the Network from the control of a being who once so dwarfed me in strength that it would’ve laughed if told that I would soon supplant it. It’s assured that at a future point, another will come with the potential ability to force me aside. As a hedge against that day, I’ve long nurtured your species as a possible breeding ground for assistance with my purpose. You’re not the only one, merely the most promising thus far. If you bear fruit, it will allow me to devote myself to those greater concerns, possibly staving off my demise indefinitely. Isn’t that a better outcome than being consumed when I’m gone?”
“What makes us so special for you? Don’t you have nearly infinite species to choose from?” John asked.
“Infinite does not mean perfectly suited.” Ky’ur cautioned. “You developed from pursuit predators. Your ancestors tracked the most difficult and dangerous of prey, across every climate your world contains, with greater patience than any others. No matter how inhospitable the region, you thrived and turned your ability to solve a single problem: how to get food from animals that were faster, stronger and tougher than yourselves, into a general solution-finding skillset. Within a very short span your species rose above simple, uninformative superstitions as an explanation for the phenomena around you to stand on other worlds. Less than ten thousand revolutions around your star from the development of agriculture to braving the vacuum of the universe itself. This alone makes you worthy of noting, even if only to ensure you do not become pests requiring removal.”
John shrugged. “I guess so. To us it seems normal. We’re weak, slow and squishy. That doesn’t sound like a species you’d rely on to solve the hardest problems.”
“But your solution to problems is to create, adapting your tools to suit the need, not yourselves.” Ky’ur argued. “The more specialized the organism, the more vulnerable to changes in the environment or new, different challenges that arise. And you are empathetic, even with other species. Your ability to group bond with nearly anything gives you motivation to work towards a common goal instead of selfishly disregarding those outside your own selves. It is your blend of ruthless efficiency and emotional attachment which makes you useful for my needs. Is not one of your most fundamental questions about the nature of reality an inquiry into your role, your purpose in it? I offer you the loftiest of causes: standing between those who create, and those who would destroy. Is that not the essence of your own foundational beliefs?”
“Wow.” John breathed. “I don’t know how to answer that.”
“Your answer is not required at present.” Ky’ur told him distantly. “Much will happen between this meeting and your improbable Completion. Should you make it to the end, we’ll speak again and you can explore your options at that point. They will be greater, if you are the first to do so. Those who excel should be rewarded the most. I warn you, regardless of your choices, both now and later if you complete all nine, you face extreme adversity on both worlds. Few will aid you, you’ll be declared an outlaw and traitor by many, and betrayal stalks your every move. Even those you call fellow countrymen will try to subvert you for their own ends. Look not to my daughters, either. They haven’t ever been, and never will be your allies. They are your testers and evaluators, nothing more. Be wary with all you meet. This is my warning to you.”
“Well, shit.” John muttered.
“And my Geas will prevent you from telling anyone else of our meeting, until enough events have passed that it will not matter.” Ky’ur finished.
“And then?” John pressed.
“By then, if you are still alive and successful, I find it likely that you will take up the task of administering my Challenge World.” Ky’ur predicted. “Or forge your own path through the cosmos.”
John was speechless.
“Now, explain to me your reasons for settling in a town filled with people you clearly detest. Why aid the Raiders in their piracy if you loathe the practice?” Ky’ur asked.
Dam Neck Naval Base, Virginia, U.S.A.
The very next day:
“Fuck!” Chief Special Warfare Operator (SOC) Adam Brown hurled his helmet into his equipment bay.
As angry as he was, he still intentionally aimed at a soft target: one of his countless uniforms. The hard-shell brain-bucket, with attached low-visibility vision, communication and shared reality (VCR) equipment thwacked into the heat and radar-reducing camouflaged fabric and fell atop a dive tank right-side-up.
“Ha!” One of his teammates laughed from behind him. “Bet you can’t do that again, Blade!”
“Probably not!” Adam admitted, laughing as well.
The tension rushed out of him. They’d spent weeks practicing the mission until every single operator on his team knew every inch of the target, and could fill any fellow team member’s role without hiccup. Following that, they’d been on stand-by at the airfield, with pilots ready around the clock for three days as the National Command Authority (NCA, i.e. the President and their National Security team) dithered. Just when they’d been convinced that the Joint Special Operations (JSOC) Commanding General (CG) would prevail and the President would finally order their strike, came the stand-down order.
“The State Department has the matter in hand.” Came the non-explanation from the White House National Security Advisor. Not even from the President herself. “Your mission would be counterproductive at this time. Scrub it.”
And that was that. It wasn’t the first mission they’d had called off, just the most disappointing recently. The United States was flirting with disaster; back to ignoring the threat posed by unofficially state-sponsored groups with access to funding and weapons of mass destruction from former dictatorships like North Korea and Iran. The chaos engulfing both of those hot-spots was far worse than anything reported publically, even by independent organizations and conspiracy theorists.
But that’s what you get when the ol’ U.S. of A decides it’s tired of conflict and sends a milquetoast anti-war campaigner to the White House. The insane directives issuing from the Oval Office were enough to make a military man weep for the country. Wishing for their enemies to like the U.S. because some diplo-moron gave a concession to a scumbag was the pinnacle of idiocy.
“Chief Brown!” A voice barked, startling Adam and his teammates.
Adam turned to find Senior Chief (SOCS) Eduardo Beldad standing in the team bay door.
Eduardo jerked his head at Adam’s glance. “Master Chief Chatman wants a word.”
The collective indrawn breath was audible.
“If you fucked up, you better tell me immediately.” Beldad hissed as Adam passed him.
Adam shrugged helplessly. “Sure Chief, but I’ve been with you for the last week, so you know as much as I do.”
Beldad waved him off and strode into the team bay.
As he walked away, Adam heard Beldad order, “Hot wash in thirty.”
“Hot wash?” One of Adam’s men scoffed. “We didn’t go anywhere!”
Beldad didn’t reply verbally, but even down the hall Adam could hear the non-response-reply as the men scrambled to clean up.
Master Chief (SOCM) Ornell Chatman was the most senior enlisted Special Operator in the entire Naval Special Warfare JSOC unit. Formerly known as SEAL Team Six, then Navy Special Warfare Development Group (NAVSPECWARDEVGRU, or DEVGRU for short), it was now buried under an innocuous title that changed so frequently none of the members bothered to use it.
Chatman was standing outside his office when Adam marched into view. The tall, black-skinned man looked like he should’ve been playing professional basketball rather than living in military-packed Virginia Beach. How he’d endured insertions in the SEAL Delivery Vehicle (SDV) underwater mini-sub, Adam would never know. Without a word, the Master Chief beckoned the younger SEAL to follow him into the command Sensitive Compartmented Information Facility (SCIF) room across the hall. He pointed Adam to chair and secured the door behind him.
“Chief Brown,” he asked without preamble after sitting down across the table, “you’re friends with retired Delta operator Sergeant John Morgan, are you not?”
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Day 8: They camped in the storeroom over night. Watching the stairs with a fire at their back made the time more bearable. They each took slightly longer shifts, so Hal could have a short one last. His fire-warmed, dry armor felt like heaven when he got up. “Thank you all.” He told them when they got up in the morning. He scouted up the stairs to the next level while they packed up. He found another storage floor at the top of the flight. This one was bigger, wider, with pantries and meat...
Day 9: The dragon settled back into the center of a massive stadium carved from the mountain itself. The doorway they’d entered through had a mirror image on the opposite side of the arena floor. At the end, in the same direction as the stairs they’d come up, was the only break in the oval stands. It was narrow at floor level, but widened into a wedge shape leading out to what looked like massive siege-resistant walls behind. Ice coated the cavern ceiling, reminding John of the domes...
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A week later: Veronyka and John pulled into the dirt beside the Fort Laird airport. The entire town of Fort Liard covered about three square blocks, off the number 7 highway, which the locals also called Liard. It sat at the junction between the wider Laird River, and the smaller Petitot. The only gas station in the entire place was out where the partially paved road intersected Liard Hwy. The airport itself covered the southeast side of town, and boasted a whole two hangars, with a few...
Day 26: The End’s snow-covered tundra flashed into existence once Veronyka made her decision. In a blink, she was a couple inches taller, several pounds of muscle heavier and wearing what John thought of as ‘Valkyrie standard armor’. The only difference in what she wore was the complete lack of wings sprouting from her helmet. A shield and spear appeared in her hands as she flashed him a grin and a wink. John meanwhile was checking out the area. He spun around, so she could access his...
Day 27: John’s eyes snapped open at the soft treads in the hall beyond his door. Two? Yes, two sets of feet moved cautiously until they were standing just outside. He heard leather creak, and the occasional click of metal on metal. His hand slipped off the pallet to find the Tooth’s haft. What is it? She asked. Someone just outside, be ready. I am always ready, even when you’re busy stabbing your woman. John had no reply to that, but whoever it was seemed inclined to wait. He debated...
Day 28: A dwarf John didn’t recognize shook him awake sometime during the ‘night’. He put fingertips over John’s lips to keep him quiet, but helped him get dressed quickly and made sure John had his ax and knife. Apparently, Dard made sure to give it back before departing. The new dwarf hustled John down another hall, through many rooms, some occupied and some empty. When they got to another sturdy looking door, they were met by another pair of dwarves, these wearing armor identical to the...
Day 29: John jerked awake, snorting sometime after nightfall. Inside the room it was pitch black, but his Sight allowed him to see the worgh females and pups clustered around him. Their own sleeping noises ceased when his did. Heads came up, both adults watching him warily. Keeping his movements slow and obvious, he held a hand out for each to sniff. To his surprise, a pair of tongues, like large-grain sandpaper scraped across his palms after a few minutes. He tentatively gave neck scratches...
Day 65 “Filthy, no-good, back-stabbing, traitorous bastard!” Syg came storming down the stairs into the brazier room. It was a lot less crowded, now that those fighters with family could camp with their loved ones. Those without family used the other room, the one connected to the tunnel that the Adepts had completely filled with ice. All that remained in the room with John were Rorik and his family, to include Syg and Treb of course, plus the Captains and their families, though Khapu and...
Day 75: “Sygraid and I will go first.” John told Rorik as they stood at the exit to the Valkyrie’s no-longer-secret passage. “Yes lord, and I will keep the group together as we move.” Rorik acknowledged. “I await your signal.” Only way through it is to do it. John mentally steeled himself. He Scanned the valley ahead. It was a wide gully between peaks, still snow covered and dotted with ice-coated rocks. It sloped up to a small ridge in the direction they wanted to go and offered...
Day 85: When the Raiders came to rouse them the next morning, they found the group already awake and ready for whatever the day might bring. Kort led the contingent, his blood-shot eyes zeroed right in on John. He beckoned the leader over, and shook his head when Rorik and Sygraid made to follow. “Good morning.” John smiled at the man’s wince. “Feeling it this early, are you?” “Aye.” Kort grunted, frowning. “I have asked the blacksmith to use someone else for his anvil, but he continues to...
Day 86: “King Kort?” John called. “Your, uh majesty?” Kort was wasting no time moving into the King’s House. A small army of slaves, male and female were taking furnishings out, and replacing them with items the new King wanted. The Raider himself was directing the process from just inside the massive double doors that marked the demi-palace entrance. John paused at the threshold, his Sight quickly locating his new ruler. “Jyon? How are you this morning? Have you come to post yourself as...
Day 86 & 87: The two men popped into existence at the Final Harbor portal just as Svend and Skyald were departing the Arena. Both stopped dead, staring at John and Ellis. John nodded a greeting, but received only blank stares in return. “Just my luck.” John muttered. Ellis was rubbernecking, as much as he could in the fading sunlight. “What’s that?” He asked. “Those two,” John pointed, “I was hoping to keep my Traveler ability secret. It’s not like I can trust anyone here.” Ellis’s...
Virginia, U.S.A. Mid Twenty-first Century A.D. (Gregorian): Colonel Herb “Spooky” Mason checked the connection ID when his latest ‘burner’ rang its silly tone. He couldn’t stand the sound, but if he spent time fiddling with the settings on every disposable phone he bought, he’d never get anything else done. The ID wasn’t familiar, but that wasn’t unusual. When you go dark, every contact becomes a one-time thing. Too easy to track you down otherwise. And given that his girlfriend had been...
Day 119: “Land ho!” The cry from one of the Far-eyed crew drew every eye on the ship. A hand pointed off into the distance, at a slight angle from their course. Judging carefully, Svend adjusted to head directly for the distant shore. Their sister ship, with Kort’s prime lieutenant Aric at the helm, mimicked their move. The two ships had been at sea for most of the last month, and John was itching for some action. Or even just a break in the monotony. At first it had been interesting. John...
Day 120: John’s shoulders ached. As did his back. And buttocks. Hell, even his toes hurt. He had no idea how long they’d been rowing, but guessed it had been a couple of hours at least. Modi sat on the bench opposite his and was matching his new boss stroke for stroke. So long as he was still conscious, John refused to let one of his men get the best of him. Each of them had a chained slave seated on the bench, closer to the hull. Both of those men were already beyond exhaustion. Neither was...
Day 121: Welcome back Traveler, please note that your Visitor status remains defunct. You have a total of seven previously-encountered portals that you may choose to exit using. You have also made a Moral Choice, which places you at odds with your current political master. This meets the Traveler criteria for World number 6,626,070,041,034. Please indicate which destination you desire. “You’ve got to be fucking kidding me!” John exclaimed. “What the fuck does that mean? Argh!”` “Okay,...
Days 122-129: When he was growing up, no ‘action’-labeled entertainment was complete without at least one chase sequence. As time went on, these scenes got more and more outlandish, with all manner of vehicles speeding, dodging, and swerving in and out of the most complex environments imaginable. The drama lay in the audience’s expectation that the main character would narrowly avoid disaster by the barest of margins, often with at least one glancing blow that they miraculously survived. In...
Day 130-140: The Islanders of Sweetwater Port refused to allow anyone off the boat when they anchored. A swarm of canoes launched from shore a short while later. “No dock?” John asked. Vasin shook his head. “No, and the ground underneath the water is quite shallow near the shore as well. The natives consider it part of their protection.” One Islander, obviously the leader climbed up onto deck first, followed by a small, well-armed entourage. “You are a Raider vessel.” The Islander...
Day 140: The angry blue reptilian form charged across the small island, neatly sliding around the central gazebo without pause. She jerked to a stop on the cliff overlooking Nefiume as the undead emperor hoisted Ozur’s body above his head. Typhon raised one double-thumbed claw, pointing at their foe. Nefiume appeared to finally notice the dragon, head jerking in a double-take right before a fountain of water welled up from the sea beneath. The instant wave crashed over the emperor’s body,...
Day 91: After armoring up, including her sword, spear and shield, and stepping out of her tiny barracks cell the Flight Leader led her up a stairway she’d been warned never to use. They passed several passages branching off, until reaching the very top. Geiravuir hammered the iron bound door they found there, and a grim faced Hrund opened it from within. She frowned at Veronyka, but motioned both women to enter. Beyond was a spartan office, holding a desk, several chairs, a weapons rack on...
Day 91-92 / Unknown / Day 140 continued: Shouldering their way through the crowd of standing death made Veronyka’s skin crawl and her stomach heave. The stench was awful, clogging her nose with its eye-watering pungency. Bits of desiccated skin, scraped off by the rough exterior on their armor, clung until scraped off by yet more decaying flesh. The wet smack of still-damp tissues hitting the ground, and liquid squishing as their boots crushed the bio-litter underfoot were enough to make...
Day 90-91: Welcome back Traveler. As you have achieved a journeyman rank from completing a recognized course of study in a field applicable throughout the Network, your provisional status has been removed. You have a total of four previously-encountered portals that you may choose to exit using. You have also met the Traveler criteria for any other portals connected with your organization on World number 5. Please indicate which destination you desire. Veronyka grinned. “The one outside the...
Day 91-92 / Day 140 continued: The ice melted, revealing a woman easily mistaken for Hrund’s twin, with pitch black hair instead. Eyes as clear and cold as the glacier above their heads regarded her expressionlessly. Her shield was round on top, but elongated below like an inverted teardrop, and had a large metal boss in the center. Her other hand carried a long spear, with an axe head sticking out at the base of the blade, and a spike sticking out the other side: a halberd. It was the first...
Day 141-143: The sun was just beginning to light up the Tower’s watery exterior when John and Veronyka got up. The former doctor had strung up a hammock, with enough material for two, between two of the pavilion posts at the island’s north end. In an amazing display of nonverbal communication, Sygraid, Hal and a few others comprehended Veronyka’s desire for privacy. They kept others away while the two lovers reunited. They spent the night pressed together, touching, caressing and finally...
Day 143: John couldn’t be sure from the distance he watched, but this dragon felt like it was the largest yet. If not the biggest, then definitely the scariest. Her head reminded him of the worgh, with sharp spines lining every contour. A ‘mane’ of more horns flared at the base of her skull, leading to a row of them dotting her spine. Her wings were folded, and every joint, including her legs was defined by a jutting tapered spike. Her scales were deep red, with shiny platinum and gold...
Day 149-153: Sergeant Major (Retired) Jeffrey Ellis jumped to his feet as Veronyka barged into the meeting. The unruly looking filthy men and women who’d been seated at the large table with him all stood quickly as well. Dead eyes and hopeless expressions greeted her entrance. It had taken her a week to fly across the Bay of Chaos and track the Ender population down. The high-altitude westward Jetstream sped her trip, but every Raider city she checked, starting at Final Harbor was deserted...
Day 153-158: Though John was unmistakably a prisoner, the Legionnaires never tied or locked him up. They appointed two minders, who rotated every day. This meant he couldn’t make friends, since it was never the same two repeated. But it did mean he could interrogate them, subtly of course. None seemed to be operating under any restrictions on their tongues, so he took full advantage. The unit who captured him occupied a full section of subterranean ‘apartments,’ which emptied out onto the...
Day 179: On the twenty-sixth day that John woke up in chains, he finally followed the formation out into open air. They’d diverted off the Great Road that morning, using a much rougher-hewn ramp to the surface. His head barely cleared the tunnel roof to find a road running straight and true sloping across broken foothills and out into farmland-rich plains. Off in the distance, he could see a wide levee-bordered river formed by the joining of several runoff streams trickling down from the...
Afternoon (Chronological coordinate set undetermined): Welcome back Traveler. You have a total of four previously-encountered portals that you may choose to exit using. This list excludes your Sanctioned portal, and one deemed too hazardous for your use at this time. You have also met the Traveler criteria for any other portals connected with your organization on World number 5. Please indicate which destination you desire. Veronyka sighed in relief. Her entry into the Network via the...
Day 193-200: John had a problem, and Dulgan was its source. Oh, the Dwarf was a fine traveling companion. After departing the camp, the Dwimar led them to a well-concealed entrance back underground. The Obsidian Peaks were honeycombed with passages and caves where far more Clans than John had figured made their homes. They zig-zagged their way between Dvergyr and Dwimar clan areas, never moving in a straight line. At first, Dulgan’s inquisitive nature charmed John while they walked. The...
Day 202: Their second night in the jungle was when things came apart. They’d traveled for two days, turning to head directly into the thickest, wettest, deadliest part after midday that first morning. The trees they walked between emitted a rotting musk, and their boots squelched deep into soft, clinging, stinky mud. Detouring around puddles eventually devolved into slogging across putrid, stagnant ponds. Anything deeper than their knees had to be avoided, and they lost count of how many...
Day 217: John and Dulgan were being followed. They were a day’s walk into the swamp, on a direct line toward the Hidden Ziggurat. Though he’d been occupied at the time, Vorigan sent his retainers to escort the duo back to their drop-off point via his boat. In addition, Jashul and the three Vampyri who comprised Cain’s embassy to the Dwarven clans traveled with them to the same landing spot. The four would cut across the north end of the swamp and enter the Onyxhart gate to begin their...
Day 219: “Head for that one! Run!” John shouted, pointing at the door to their right. The group veered to that side, picking up speed as they moved downhill. Jashul lagged behind the sprinting duo, and John’s longer legs carried him in the lead as they ran. The gap between all three widened as they closed with the two undead bracketing that opening. On the ledges above, the patrols congregated, staying on their level but clustering abreast of the group as the trio neared the ground-level...
Day 225: “That ... you ... you ... how? Goddamit!” John cursed, unable to explain. “Your Task was your own.” The Patriarch admonished. “Not for any other to know. As you have finished the most difficult part, you are eligible for all three rewards. Are you prepared to select them now?” John held up his other hand. “Just a moment.” He turned around and closed his eyes. Don’t kill him. Don’t even attack him. You have no idea what would happen if you did. Let it go. Something even the...
Day 236: John and Adam brought up the rear of their little procession as they began the second day of their trek into the Endless Sands, the morning after leaving Southern Oasis. Vorigan and Dulgan were in the lead, with the Vamp interrogating the Dwimar about his newfound enchanting abilities, as well as the subject generally. On John’s advice, the day before when purchasing supplies for the trek, they’d gotten several serviceable daggers for each person, which Dulgan agreed to enchant...
Day???: John dug a divot into the sand with his heel, then climbed back up onto the square stone platform. As a test, he walked through the ‘doorway,’ facing away from the Pyramid. Instantly he was turned around, and a glance at the hole in the ground showed he hadn’t moved to another spot. Okay, what do you think? He thought at Duin. And got no response. So he hopped down onto the sand. What do you think I should do? He asked again. Stand on the dust-cloud side of the platform and walk...
Day??? Adam was leaning in the open doorway when John walked up. “You solve it already?” John asked hopefully. Adam snorted. “I wish!” “Oh? What happened?” John wanted to know. Adam’s headshake was rueful. “You were right; it wasn’t that easy. After I pushed the octagon, there was a sound of lots of feet stomping around, and rock grinding like bricks rubbing together. While I was feeling my way over to the last button, I ran into a column that wasn’t there before. It was about a yard and...
Day??? “Well, that was ... interesting.” John said to Adam as he approached from the floor’s entry spot. The SEAL was leaning against the opposite side of the corridor by the now blank door that had borne Dulgan’s name. “Can you ... talk about it?” Adam asked. John shook his head. “I got a headache last time, so let’s go do yours.” “I wonder.” Adam mused. “Do you think all three of the hidden doors are on this level?” “Let’s keep an eye out.” John suggested. Back in the SEAL’s...
Day??? John stepped through the portal and found himself in a place very similar to the Labyrinth entry, where he’d written his name in the sand, and accepted the Rules. Same doorway with walls extending into the distance, like the first and third base lines on a baseball diamond. Unlike the other however, his stone platform this time was only as big as the ones out in the desert, that he’d looped through three times to enter. Beyond its small, square boundary was an endless sea of sand...
Day 251: As Adam and Master Chief Chatman walked out of the planning meeting for Adam’s upcoming trip to the portal stone in South America, Adam signaled the older man with his chin. “Want to grab a quick bite before we split?” He asked, overly casually. “ ... Yes, let’s.” Chatman replied, after figuring out what Adam really wanted. Chatman put the sound dampener between them while they ate. “Is it just me,” Adam inquired, “or is there definitely something going on that I’m not privy...
Day 258/259: John and company were most of the way to the double-peak Ariel indicated as their navigation landmark when a massive wind and rain storm rolled in from the north. Within minutes, visibility in the air dropped to a yard or two, and the gusts were so rough that they decided to land and continue on foot. The group spent that night miserably trying to camp on the best rocky hill they could find. The rain stopped before dawn, but if anything the wind picked up with the sun’s rise....
Day 259/260: “Ho there, we see you!” The voice floated down from the darkness above. The sound carried an echoing quality indicating that the speaker was using a megaphone, or something like it. None of the four were surprised, given how high the walls of Gluboskal were. After separating from the Wardens: Ililyan and Sygraid, plus Rhys the other four companions flew up and around the double-peaked mountain, Gananora Heralis which Dulgan informed them was the backbone of the city’s...
Day 261: Right before the group departed Dadem’s house, Veronyka took a minute to leave Hal a message before bringing up the rear. A very young Dvergyr, Hotric Oakfall worked as the house doorman slash receptionist slash butler. He promised to pass along Veronyka’s words when Hal returned, and to keep an eye out for any unusual interest in their group. That Dulgan and Thedus had a longstanding relationship was apparent to all, as the two chatted continuously during their hike out of the...
Day 261: With herculean effort, John staggered upright, and brushed off the debris coating his arms and helmet. He searched frantically through the too-slowly-dissipating dust cloud for his friends. After tripping twice on the churned-up slope, he stumbled onto both, crumpled into a pile and covered with a thick layer of earth. Heart in his throat, he pulled the pair apart and laid them side by side on a slightly less-torn patch of ground. Uncapping his canteen, he splashed water over...
Day 262/263: “What the hell’s an Arcane Magi?” John wondered. Duin’s unmissable mixture of excitement and trepidation was palpable. “As I said, tha’s tween you’n th’ other one.” Dulgan insisted. “Then why doesn’t he want me to let you leave?” John wondered. Dulgan blinked in surprise. “He doesn’o’? I dunno. Le’s ask.” Repeat my words, so the Magi can hear them as well. Duin instructed. “Before the Arrival, there was a powerful, and secretive organization of Dwarves called the Dark...
Day 263: “See ‘em how?” Dulgan pressed. John’s hands motioned aimlessly. “Like they’re really here. In this room with us right now. There. There, and there.” He pointed. Dulgan walked over to one spot he’d indicated. Vafthundryr shifted, so they wouldn’t ‘collide’. “Here?” The Dwimar asked. “He moved.” John’s finger indicated. Dulgan peered in the direction curiously. “I see nothin’. Wha’ do they loo’ like?” John kept his finger indicating Vafthundryr. “A Frost Giant, Vafthundryr is...
Day 263/264: Mokul kept John awake for several hours as the man from Earth described his adventures. He avoided giving too much detail about Earth and his life before becoming trapped on this world. But otherwise, he saw no reason to lie about anything he’d experienced since coming through the portals. Dulgan knew almost all of it anyway, and John knew all too well how impossible it was for that one to keep a secret. The Dwimar Huntmaster listened intently throughout, though many of his...