Read The Defiler Online

Authors: Steven Savile

Tags: #Science Fiction

The Defiler (8 page)

BOOK: The Defiler
5.91Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

They followed the curve of the street down to the next level, the insects swelling and surging around them, following their passage back down to the lower tiers of Purgadair.

"We could just torch the place," Ukko said, hopefully. "The way the buildings are cramped so close together the whole place would go up in smoke in no time." The little runt looked delighted at the prospect.

"The buildings are made of stone," Sláine pointed out, fending off another curious insect with a thrust of the brand in his hand.

"Doesn't matter, the roofs are made of wood, in this heat it'd be an inferno in no time."

Sláine shook his head, "No, we'll just make our way out nice and slowly. We don't need to bring the whole place down around our ears, as appealing as it might be. We aren't here as destroyers. Besides, I don't fancy having to fight every insect
and
all of those demonic man-animal guards down there just to get out into the desert and have the Goddess alone knows what looking to skewer us."

They continued to work their way slowly down the twists and turns of Purgadair's streets, each declination offering tantalising glimpses of the whitewashed walls and rooftops of the lower hovels, and the desert beyond the city walls. Many of the hovels were two and three storeys high, or rather deep, these upper levels opening out on the tier below. The lower they went the more the sharp turns began to resemble the staggered steps of a huge ziggurat, descending a few hundred feet every turn of the street.

All around them the insects crowded in, drawn by the scent of their flesh. Sláine lit a fresh brand and handed it to Ukko, then lit another for himself. He resisted the impulse to toss the almost-spent torch up into the middle of the encroaching insects. Barely. His instinct as a warrior was to drive them away, to cleave and crush and smear their viscera across the ichor-slicked streets and stand amid their broken carapaces, victorious, blood pumping, Earth Power firing his veins. Sláine's fist clenched and unclenched around the splintered chair leg as it burned down in his hand. He felt its heat on his face and hand as the flames licked both ways, consuming the wood.

There were hundreds, thousands of the huge insects swarming across the low rooftops.

Ukko let his torch drop for a split second, reaching down to scratch his armpit with his spare hand - and almost paid for the momentary lapse of concentration. Two of the creatures reacted instantaneously, launching themselves from the rooftop at the dwarf. Sláine lunged forwards, thrusting his own firebrand into the giant insect's labrum, forcing the creature to eat the fire. Grabbing Ukko by the collar Sláine shoved the dwarf, sending him sprawling indignantly across the sand. Sláine ducked and rolled away from the creature barely a fraction of a second before it was engulfed in flame as its own gases erupted and the explosion pasted its guts all across the street. The second insect skittered away and up onto the roof on the other side of the street, barely escaping the explosion.

"So much for no sudden movements," Sláine said, smearing a charred strip of intestinal tract across his brow.

"I had an itch," Ukko mumbled defensively. "What was I supposed to do?"

 

A swarm of angry insects blocked their path; their bodies were crushed together en-masse so that they formed an impenetrable living wall.

Sláine stopped, pushing the burning stave in front of them and waiting for the fire to open up a path through the insects. They were packed too close together to allow for retreat. It was impossible to tell how deep the black-carapaced wall was. Their only chance of getting to the other side of the wall of insects was to burn their way through, but looking at the endless wave of antennae and mandibles Sláine doubted the practicality of charging the wall, fire or no fire. Which meant there was no chance they could leave the way they had come - meaning, in turn, there was no route back to the hillside where the Morrigan had opened the door between yesterday and today for them.

There was no way out.

They were trapped.

"What now?"

The wall of chittering and shrieking insects surged towards them.

"We're not dying here, not to some flaming bug."

"Flaming bug, that's almost funny."

"Just give me your torch."

Sláine hurled the centre of the living wall, triggering a series of deafening explosions as first one and then dozens of the gaseous insects burst into flame. He didn't wait to see the extent of the damage. The harsh series of detonations and the desperate shrieks of the insects was enough to tell him too many had survived. Without thinking, Sláine shouldered open the nearest door and bundled Ukko through it. He planted his own firebrand in the doorway, praying it would keep the creatures at bay long enough for them to find a way out of this hell hole.

The room was barren, the walls smeared with what looked like dried blood. There was no sign of the hovel's previous inhabitants, either here or in the lower rooms, as they descended the rickety wooden stair set into the corner of the corridor leading off the main living quarters.

"We should burn it," Ukko said, looking back over his shoulder at the stairs, "so they can't follow us."

"No point, they'd just cover over the rooftops," Sláine grunted, kicking down the door. "Come on, before they realise where we've gone."

The pair of them ran out into the street, looked left, saw the huge wall of seething insects pressing into the narrow street, multi-faceted eyes blazing, saw-toothed blades dragging a
screeee-scraaaaw
against the baked stone, and ran right, arms and legs pumping furiously.

The air burned in Sláine's lungs. The incessant
screeee-scraaaaw
rasping swelled to fill his head until it was all he heard; a death sentence scratched out on the very fabric of the nightmarish city.

The street ahead divided into three branches, left, right and straight on. Sláine took the sinister path. Beside him, Ukko gasped and panted, his short legs struggling to match Sláine's powerful stride. Sláine stooped low and scooped the dwarf up, hoisting him over his shoulder. The dwarf wriggled around like a lizard, struggling to break free of Sláine's iron grip. "Just lie still and tell me if you see them coming!"

Thirty yards down the left-hand path the shadows of the huge insects returned, crushing down on them from the high rooftops of the hovels. Sláine didn't waste energy or momentum looking at them, he ran for his life, Brain-Biter in one hand, Ukko in the other.

This time there was no fire to keep the insects back.

 

The street opened up into a vast square, outside of the city walls and yet not a part of the desert proper. The centre of the square was dominated by a towering leafless tree. It was a remarkable sight, soaring into the blazing sky, a thousand skeletal branches reaching out over every inch of the square. Their emaciated shadows crept into every crack and crevice, worming into the hard-baked ground, between the stones of the walls of the hovels.

"They're gaining!" Ukko gasped into his ear, kicking Sláine in the chest frantically as though trying to spur him on.

Sláine grunted, and looked around, trying to decide which way to run.

The choices were rapidly disappearing as, street by street, the wall of insects became a noose, tightening around the square until no avenue of escape remained. His heart hammered in his chest. He tried desperately to draw upon the Earth Serpent, but was answered by the sucking emptiness of the void where the Goddess ought to have been.

They had been corralled in this direction, herded into the square.

He lowered Ukko to the ground and grasped his axe, ready to fight.

Beside him, the dwarf pulled out a short pig-sticker of a blade. He looked utterly terrified. Sláine had no words to comfort him.

"Stupid bloody quest," Ukko mumbled, looking despairingly at each and every one of the blocked streets and then at the floor, hoping against hope that it might open up and swallow him before the creatures of Purgadair could. His face curled up into a bitter sneer. "Just so you know, I've got no intention of dying here, so you'd better work something out."

They edged back, step by precious step until their backs were pressed against the mighty tree, and still the creatures poured out into the square.

"Can you get another one of those torches lit? Maybe we can burn the tree or something?"

"Urm, Sláine, you might want to look at this."

Sláine twisted, trying to see where the dwarf was pointing: but all he saw was the trunk of the great tree.

The sea of writhing black bodies parted, and through the centre walked a monstrous regiment of deformed and perverted creatures, blades drawn, feral faces hungry for blood.

"What?"

"I think we found him."

It took a moment for the dwarf's words to register. When they finally did, they made no sense whatsoever. "What?"

"The Skinless Man, I think we found him."

Sláine risked another backwards glance, trying to see what the dwarf was going on about. This time he saw it: in the folds of the bark, the silhouette of a man's anguished face. Fingers of wood reached out of the knotted bole, clawing at the life that had been stolen from the man as he was locked within the wood.

This was their saviour? A man trapped within a dead tree in the middle of some hellish desert?

Sláine laughed bitterly. "You stupid bloody fool, this is what you get for listening to the Morrigan."

"What are we supposed to do now?"

"Die," Sláine said.

"How about we don't?"

Sláine thought about it for a moment, and made his choice. "Burn the damned tree down. Let's go out fighting. The music of their hunger excites me," Sláine roared, a terrible boiling anger surging through him. "I will teach them a thing or two about death."

"Spoken like a true hero," Ukko grimaced.

 

Ukko had no idea how long Sláine could hold the animal guard off without the
riastrad
, his fierce berserker warp-spasm, roaring through his veins, swelling his musculature to transform him into the juggernaut he was.

Minutes, no more, surely. Less.

Every instinct cried out: run! But there was nowhere to run to.

Ukko couldn't let himself think about it.

He needed to burn the tree: Sláine was counting on him. He wouldn't let him down - at least not deliberately.

Shaking, fear coursing through his limbs, the scoundrel emptied his pack out across the sand, pawing through the pile of junk until he found the tin of grease. He unscrewed the lid. It was all but empty. He scooped out the last smears of grease and rubbed them into the gnarled face trapped within the bark. He looked around desperately for anything else that might burn. There was nothing.

He fumbled with his tinder, trying to strike a light but he was shaking too much. He dropped the flint and straw and scrambled around in the sand trying to find it.

"Crap, crap, crap, ah
there
it is!" His quick-bitten fingernails snagged the jagged splinter of rock.

He looked up. There was a shadow over the sun, a black winged shape. For a moment Ukko imagined it was some hideous Other Realm winged daemon come to add insult to his injuries, the way it flitted against the burning sphere, and then it gained more solidity and definition: one of the Morrigan's birds coming out of the sun.

He never thought for a moment he would ever be glad to see one of those damned crows. He was wrong.

"Sláine! Sláine! Look!"

And then the battle was joined with a hellish chorus of animalistic growls and roars as Sláine launched himself at the advancing beasts.

There was a dark need in the barbarian to cause pain; that was the true Sláine, not the surly companion he walked with. Sláine was a warrior to the core. Fifty beasts, one hundred, a field of fiends, he did not think it too many. Ukko looked from the bird to the warrior and back to the huge circling bird.

Brain-Biter dripped with the gore of the dead.

"Kiss my axe, dog breath!" Sláine raged; his battle cry drowned out the screams of the animal-men as they threw themselves at the lone axeman. There was no compassion, no humanity, only naked savagery as the Sessair drove his axe in a glorious dance of death as he charged to meet his foe head-on. Even without the blazing power of Danu surging through him, the barbarian in battle rage was an awesome sight. The front ranks of the dog-faced guards broke, howling their frustration as Brain-Biter tore into their flesh and fur. Their cries ululated over the chitinous taunts of the insects. Their death-rattles punctuated the chorus.

In moments the sun-blasted square reeked of slaughter and Sláine was in the thick of it.

A dog soldier's arm fell at Ukko's feet, blood gouting from the ragged stump where it had been severed. The blood stained the sand a dark red.

Ukko shuddered and kicked it aside.

He struck the tinder, desperately trying to cause a lethal spark, but his trembling hands betrayed him. "Come on, come on, come on," he urged himself, almost dropping the damned flint again. He swallowed, mouth raw. He couldn't stop the shakes now that they had taken hold. "I've been in worse messes than this, just concentrate, you can do this with your bloody eyes closed." He fixated on his grubby fingers fumbling with the flint and steel, striking them again and again, begging the grease to catch one of the sparks and burn.

He couldn't bring himself to look at the face trapped within the ancient tree, fearing what he might see in its ancient eyes.

And then one of the sparks caught and the grease smeared into the tree smouldered. Ukko blew on it gently, encouraging the flame to feed on the tree. A moment later grease and bark crackled, the spark spreading. Ukko fanned the tiny flame, desperately trying to get it to bite...

And the bark-covered eyes flared open, the face trapped within the tree wracked with pain and sudden fear as the flames caught, searing into it. The bark withered and blistered, splitting beneath the sudden intense bloat of heat. And as it cracked and flaked away, the flesh beneath emerged like a snake shedding its skin.

BOOK: The Defiler
5.91Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Black Beast by Nenia Campbell
The Longest Ride by Taylor, Kelly
Burning the Reichstag by Hett, Benjamin Carter
Six by Storm, Hilary
Gold Dust by Chris Lynch
Sand Angel by Mackenzie McKade