Read Tara The Great [Nuworld 2] Online
Authors: Lorie O'Claire
that spot now, we are.”
Tara forced herself to remember everything she had been told since the clan
returned from the eastern mountain range. She needed to focus on their mission, not on
the pain from her injuries. Staying focused seemed to subdue the pain. “I never had
time to read Patha’s briefing from the clan’s visit with the cave people. But if the clan
visited the eastern mountain range, why are we entering the northern mountain
range?”
“While the clan spent time with the cave people living in the eastern mountain
range, Patha received transmissions from another group in these mountains.” Darius
didn’t look up from his landlink.
“Did he hear disturbing news?” Tara stared at the top of Darius’ head.
“We believe they’ve invented a type of weapon, yes.”
“What type of weapon?”
“We’re not positive. So far, information is hearsay. We’ve heard it’s some type of
gas that can kill entire cities at once, it is.” Darius met her gaze. “What we need to
determine is why they would want to create such a weapon, if it does, in fact, exist.”
Tara began reconfiguring her small handheld landlink. “What do you know about
this entry location?”
“There’s a hidden panel of sorts. We’ll have to look for it, we will.” He stood and
moved toward her. “Tara,” he said softly, and his hands touched her shoulders.
“We’ve got work to do.” She shot him an icy glare, then looked away from his dark
gray eyes quickly. They only made her think of her children…and that other child. Her
hands began shaking as she reconfigured her landlink so she could search through the
iron in the rock.
Darius stood over her; his closeness rattled her nerves. But dwelling on Darius only
brought her pain, which fogged her thinking, and she wouldn’t allow that. She couldn’t
allow that. The man would not break her heart again. So she said nothing about his
close proximity and ran the scanning programs loaded on her landlink. If there was
trouble among these cave people, she would do her best to determine the problem, then
report back to Patha.
“It’s hollow behind that rock over there,” she said, breaking the weighted silence.
Darius moved the rather large rock himself. It must have been hollow, because it
shifted with ease.
A long hallway, filled with shadows, appeared before them. It was wide enough
that several people could walk side-by-side, and tall enough that even Darius didn’t
need to duck when he entered. Tara could smell the dirt around them when she
entered, and touched the tunnel wall to confirm that packed dirt had been painted with
some kind of sealant, more than likely to keep roots at bay.
Tara entered while Darius moved the rock, concealing the entry way once again,
and leaving them in the dark. Using the beam he’d brought, Darius flashed light along
the walls and floor while they walked.
Their footsteps echoed in the passageway as they walked in the damp darkness
toward a light ahead. After several minutes, they reached the end of the tunnel and the
light source.
Tara stood stunned at the sight before her.
They looked out into a cavern large enough to hold a city. In fact, it was a city. An
underground city.
Roads lined with buildings several stories high, trees and bushes, all created the
scene in front of them. Tara looked at the busy street, then beyond it, at the different-
sized buildings with outside stairwells and many windows.
The size of the cavern impressed Tara even more than the thriving city within it.
She couldn’t see to the other end, but she could tell that buildings ran along several
roads, at least.
The height of the cave overwhelmed her. Crystallized rock made up the roof of the
community, and even buildings several stories tall did not come close to touching it.
Tall white lamps lit the streets and appeared to be the source of light. Although
everything was illuminated, the light couldn’t compete with sunlight. The community
appeared to be in a permanent stage of twilight. Moss replaced grass and the trees were
spongy, looking more like large mushrooms.
Then there were the people, so many of them that Tara and Darius weren’t even
noticed in the teeming throng. Tara observed that everyone walked as if late to an
appointment. There were no greetings of familiarity as people passed each other.
Instead, most focused on the ground and amazingly didn’t run into each other. The
town seemed to be set in high speed.
All of this Tara took in within a matter of minutes. She had entered enough new
societies to look for the ways of the people so she could assimilate. Glancing at Darius,
she noticed he observed the people around him as well. She wondered how he reacted
to this new community, having never been out of Gothman. The man, as always, wore a
neutral expression, until he looked down and noticed her watching him. His gray eyes
warmed, and she looked back toward the crowd.
“Come on,” he whispered into her ear. He guided her through the crowd so her
injured arm was next to his body. “Over here.”
They moved along a path of flat, rock-shaped clay, and Darius quickly matched the
hurried pace of the townspeople, keeping a firm hold on Tara as he maneuvered them
down the street. They crossed an intersection, and Tara noticed tables set along the
edges of the path. People huddled around the tables, and bartering filled the air.
Darius slowed and Tara watched the activity in the market area. Men, women, and
children walked from table to table, intent on their purchases. Owners of merchandise
called out their specials, making the street a noisy, chaotic scene.
Darius escorted her to a table in the middle of the commotion. “I would like yellow
silk, like the sun, can you do that?” He faced a man who stood behind a booth, which
was piled high with folded material.
“It will cost you.”
“I have gold.”
The man looked at Darius and Tara for a minute, then almost whispered, “Come
back at half break, and I’ll show you the silk I have.”
Darius nodded, and he and Tara returned to the crowded path. They walked slowly
through the market place, looking at the different booths. While they recognized bags of
rooted vegetables and fish from the surface, most of the food products were unfamiliar.
Clay bowls and pots painted with bright colors adorned one booth. Another had
ready-made clothing for men, women, and children. All were dyed with bright colors
and in a variety of fashions. Tara noticed that under the brown capes, all the cave
people wore colorful clothing.
A loud siren sounded and Tara looked around quickly.
“Half break.” Darius’ breath was hot against her ear.
The man at the booth looked up when they returned and said, “I can show you that
silk now.”
He led the two along the street and entered one of the buildings. Inside, they
climbed stairs to the third floor and walked silently down a dimly lit hallway.
After hiking up the mountain and now the stairs, Tara’s injuries throbbed,
threatening to consume her focus. She managed to keep pace with the others, not
wanting to draw attention to her injuries and cause unwarranted questions from this
man they followed.
He placed his palm against a flat disc on one of the doors. After a minute, it beeped
and the door slid silently into the wall.
Tara studied the flat disc for a second as she walked past it, seeing only a round
dark glass plate secured on the wall. Possibly, these people maintained security by
using handprints to verify identity. That might make it hard to travel without one of the
denizens, she reasoned. The thought of having to rely on someone else when a ready
escape might be needed didn’t sit well with her.
Tara followed the two men into the room, and realized it appeared to be more like
personal housing. Simple, plain furniture was adorned by the bright colors of a blanket
tossed over a couch along the wall. Pictures hung on one of the walls, and Tara
recognized the man with them in several of the poses. The door slid silently behind the
three of them, and Tara wondered if the man’s hand offered the only means of opening
it again. She suddenly felt trapped.
“Pee-coo?” a woman’s voice spoke from an adjoining room of the small apartment.
“Pee-coo-mee, come here. We have company.”
A young woman with pale skin and sandy hair came around the corner and stood
before them. She was petite, almost frail, and wore a loose-fitting, bright pink dress that
modestly displayed her attractive body.
“This is my mate, Pee-coo-mee. She handles all the books. I’m no good with
numbers. I sell the material. Oh my, where are my manners? Let me take your robes
and please join us for half break.”
Darius pulled off his robe and handed it to Pee-coo. Tara followed his lead.
“Oh my,” Pee-coo said again when Tara took off her cloak. He smiled, showing
several black holes where teeth once had been, and his pasty skin turned pink around
his cheeks and ears. He scratched sandy hair of identical texture as his wife’s and
cocked his head as he stared at Tara. Then after glancing at Darius, he turned and
looked at his mate.
“What my mate means to say.” Pee-coo-mee walked over and slid her arm through
his, discreetly elbowing him. “We were expecting two men.”
She smiled quickly at Tara. “You’re most welcome. What we have studied of
Gothman…I mean, we were under the impression that Gothman women, well, that they
stayed home.”
“I’m not Gothman.” Tara returned the smile.
“Oh my.” Pee-coo suddenly looked very nervous and wrapped his arm around Pee-
coo-mee.
“Now I’ve forgotten my manners.” Darius sounded so pleasant that Tara looked up
at him quickly. He affected a gentle smile that she was sure she’d never seen before. “I
am Soray, and this is Kara. She’s a Runner.”
“Are you mated?” Pee-coo asked politely.
Darius looked down at Tara affectionately but she avoided his glance. “Yes, we
are.” And he gallantly wrapped his arms around Tara’s shoulders.
“Now this might work out nicer than we anticipated.” Pee-coo smiled at Pee-coo-
mee. “We always like working with mates. Everything is so much more thought
through. Don’t you agree?”