Fire and Fantasy: a Limited Edition Collection of Epic and Urban Fantasy
Page 166
Five
Lorcan felt a tug at his side. He opened his eyes slightly and gradually regained his bearings. Faye’s face was very close to his as she wrapped her arms around his shoulders to lift him up. He opened his eyes wider. She startled, seeing he was awake and her face was much too close to his. If he turned his head sideways, her lips might have touched his own.
Lorcan still couldn’t move. “What are you doing?” he asked.
“Put some clothes on. I need to take you out of here, and you’ll freeze to death in this hospital gown.”
He glanced down at his body and said, “I don’t see any gown.”
She dropped him back onto the bed.
“I needed to take the gown off to put your shirt back on. I’m a nurse. You think I’ve never seen a naked man before?”
“Okay, I’m sorry. I can’t move yet, so can you please help me get my shirt back on?”
She glared at him for a few seconds before lifting his shoulders to pull on his shirt.
“I know you can’t move yet, and that your injury isn’t what caused the immobility. It’s the drug they gave you to help you recover.”
“Like a prison without the bars and shackles! Is there a way to neutralize the effect? An antidote?”
Faye smiled. It was the first time he’d gotten a close look at her beautiful face in full view. Porcelain skin, long and wavy sandy hair, large blue eyes. She wore a tight top of thin material, and layers of a soft weblike material spanned the space between her arms and her body. The material clung tightly to her perfectly toned upper body, flattering every feminine curve. She looked just like a mermaid.
That’s no typical nurse’s uniform, Lorcan thought, clearing his throat to be sure he wasn’t unknowingly drooling.
“There’s an antidote, and I’m going to give it to you now that you’re awake. But you have to push it throughout your body. It will free your muscle movement.”
“Push? You mean, with my thoughts?”
She chuckled. “Yes, believe it or not, that’s how it works. Use your mind to circulate it throughout your body.”
“I was just kidding. If I could will my way out of here, I would do that instead!”
“It’s how our medicine works. Your human makeup is very different from ours. If you circulate the drug, your body will take what is acceptable and useful.”
“I take it you’re not human. May I ask where I am? It’s okay if you’re not allowed to tell me.”
Faye smiled. But he hated to see the sadness hidden in her smile.
“I can tell you after we get out of here. Will you take the drugs? I’m not supposed to give them to you, but I disagree with them holding you captive.”
He closed his eyes. “Okay, jab me!”
He felt a prick at the jugular on his neck, and then the sensation of a cool liquid flowing through his veins.
The door of the room slid open suddenly. Faye startled and stepped away from the bed. “Doctor, he was cold, so I took the liberty of giving him back his clothes.”
A seven-foot-tall man with sandy hair, a fair complexion, and blue eyes walked in. He wore a long white coat that reminded Lorcan of a lab coat.
“Yes, I was cold, so I asked her for help,” Lorcan said.
The man looked at Faye, then back at Lorcan.
“She’s supposed to follow my orders, and my orders only.” He approached Faye. She backed away, her back pressing against the glass wall. The lazy fish floating behind the glass scooted away in a hurry. The doctor flexed his wrist and punched a red button on a shell-shaped control panel.
“No…please don’t,” Faye whimpered.
Outside the glass, Lorcan saw the immense shadow of a creature closing in from a distance. It looked like a great white shark swimming toward them. He did his best to circulate the drug throughout his body.
The doctor slammed Faye’s body against the wall and then reached his hand up toward the ceiling. Faye didn’t cry but bit her lip and stared straight into the doctor’s eyes as he lifted her from the ground.
“One day you will pay for what you’re doing!”
“Well, I’m afraid you won’t live to see that day.”
Lorcan scrambled off the bed and landed on the floor. The drug hadn’t made its way to his legs yet.
When the doctor turned around and saw him on the floor, he dropped Faye and, crouching, turned toward Lorcan. “What have we here? Are you so strong that you can snap out of the drug yourself, or did she give you the antidote? Either way, I’ve been thinking my tiger might be hungry. I think he’d be satisfied with you as his lunch.”
A tray of medical equipment rained down on him as Faye grabbed the tray and swung it as hard as she could at the doctor’s head. The strike didn’t cause him significant harm. He winced, more from discomfort than from pain, and turned his head toward Faye.
Lorcan grabbed a scalpel from the ground. Using one hand to prop up his body, he grabbed the doctor from behind with his other hand, pulling him to the floor. In one swift move, he slit the doctor’s throat with the scalpel. Blood spurted from the wound. The doctor toppled over, staring up at the ceiling with dead eyes.
Blood had spattered on Faye’s clothes, and her body shook with fear. Biting her lips and ignoring the tears streaming down her face, she darted toward Lorcan.
“We have to get out of here.”
“You go. My legs aren’t working yet. And I’m too heavy for you to carry.”
Outside the glass window, drawn by the stench of blood, the shark smashed its jaws against the glass over and over, baring its sharp teeth. Unable to bite its way in, it turned around and started slamming the side of its muscular body against the glass.
Lorcan felt the whole room shudder with the impact of the attack.
He heard a haunting sound, and then, from the dark water in the distance, a school of sharks swam toward them.
Six
The Key master clutched the baby angel tightly in his arms and charged up the hill. Behind him, packs of wolves on spider legs had swarmed to the top of the cliff. They didn’t look like ants now but more like hungry, menacing predators.
He put the baby down to the ground quickly and gathered some small rocks, arranging them around her. “I’m afraid I can’t take you to the Daimon Gate. I might not be able to take care of you at all.”
He picked up a black rock and jabbed his knife into it. “This is a common safety lock,” he said to the baby, not expecting her to understand. “If I can’t get back to you, someone with good intentions toward you will be able to unlock it.
He didn’t look to see if the baby responded. He concentrated solely on the key. He had made these hundreds of times. He had his safety key with him now as well, and he could go. But he would not leave the baby unprotected.
The rock had formed a round talisman shape, and he injected his energy into it. It glowed in response.
The spider-wolves were racing toward hism. He needed more time. He blew gently on the key in his palms. It glowed once more.
Patience, he reminded himself. He couldn’t afford to make a mistake now.
He glanced up quickly at the coming wolves and then looked back down at the key. It glowed again, and then its halo simmered down.
Done. He held the key in his palm and slammed it down to the ground in front of the baby. A white light appeared on the earth, encircling the baby.
He smiled. The baby angel would be safe. Now he could leave.
He reached into his pocket for his own key but felt the hard push of spider legs at his back. The sharp spines on its legs dug into his flesh and tore his gown. He knew they could easily gut him from behind.
His key dropped to the ground, and the spider wolf kicked it away from him with one of its legs.
Warm blood spurted from his wounds. For the first time in the several hundred years of his life, he feared that choosing this human form had been a mistake. He felt his end was near.
Through blurry vision, he saw the spid
er-wolves pushing against the safety lock he’d put around the baby.
They couldn’t get to it, and he smiled in victory. He was the key master. He was the best, and no creature could take that away from him.
As he enjoyed his last victory, another spider leg stabbed at him. He fell to the ground and lay still. He looked at the baby angel in the circle of light. She was happy, smiling, and making cooing noises.
Did she know her parents had just died? Probably not.
His vision started to dim. He knew he was dying. He didn’t know why he cared, but he hoped someone would take care of the baby angel. He hoped someone would care enough to unlock the safety key.
Then something exploded. A thunderous sound exploding simultaneously with the body of one of the wolf spiders.
He squinted. The baby angel looked at him, smiling and clapping her hands in glee.
Another thunderous noise—along with another wolf-spider.
He had never liked the annoying sounds babies made, but he loved them now. The baby angel cooed, giggled, and clapped her hands again and again. And one by one, the wolves exploded into nothingness. The rest of the pack realized what was happening. They turned and fled.
The baby continued to clap, and the retreating wolves exploded as they ran.
The baby angel no longer needed him, and he couldn’t see anyway. He closed his eyes. He could leave now. Forever.
Seven
Lorcan pushed the dead doctor under the lab bench and turned toward the shaking Faye.
“Are you okay?” he asked.
Faye shook her head. “We killed… No one has the right to kill…”
“It’s not we. It’s me. Killing isn’t okay, but if I hadn’t done it, he would have fed us to the sharks. We have to get out of here in one piece.”
Faye nodded and wiped her tears away. The room shook whenever a shark hit the glass wall. Lorcan wasn’t sure how many more body slams the room could take before the glass cracked, and the walls gave in.
He had no intention of being the sharks’ lunch. His weakened legs were wobbly, and he wasn’t confident he’d win a swimming competition with the sharks, but if he could hold them back, Faye might be able to get away.
He stood and limped toward the glass wall.
“What are you doing? The door is that way.” Faye pointed toward a door in the opposite direction.
“One of us has to stay, Faye. The sharks are here because of me. You need to get away while I hold them back. It’s the least I can do for you.”
“And you plan to hold them back with your bare hands?”
Lorcan slipped his hands into his pockets, finding the artifact but none of his weapons. He sighed. “I’ve got no choice.”
“You do. Run with me!” She pointed toward the door. “Hurry!”
“I bet you can swim like a fish. But I can’t.”
She rushed over to him and pulled at his elbow. “Let’s go. The sharks are stupid. It’ll be a while before they figure out we’ve gotten away.”
Lorcan was reluctant. “Just one flick of their tails, and they’ll get from the window to the door of the room. If we open that door now without me standing here as bait, we’ll both be shark meat.”
“That’s what you’re worried about, you silly? The door and the window lead to two different and unconnected sections. The sharks can cross, but it will take time. But they’ll certainly have a quick lunch if you keep standing here and they break the window.”
Lorcan scrambled toward the door with Faye, his legs moving a bit faster now. He was almost a hundred percent recovered. “Why didn’t you say so before?”
“I didn’t know how limited your knowledge was about our world.”
Faye pushed the door open. Not only were they in a giant fish tank, they were at the bottom of it. Astonishingly, the water stopped at the door’s opening as if banking against a solid wall. Faye’s body penetrated the invisible wall and entered the water as if there were no barrier. She walked right into the water.
He pulled her back into the room, and once back inside, her body felt completely dry.
She saw the expression on his face. “All right, I guess I should explain. The water beyond the glass and the air in this room are two separate dimensions. The elements of water and air, in two different dimensions, don’t mix. But the citizens of our world can cross between the two . We live in the air and travel via the water. Does that make sense?”
“No. I mean, not yet. But for now, do you think I can cross into the water dimension?”
“I’m sorry, but you can’t.” She whistled, and two sleek, dark shapes swam toward them, seemingly from nowhere.
Lorcan yelped in fright before realizing they were dolphins, not sharks. Both were equipped with saddles, and they had pouches hanging down along their sides, not so obtrusive that they would impede the animals from swimming. Behind them was a glass cabin, looking strangely like a carriage.
The dolphins swung around quickly, dropping the round glass carriage into the air dimension. The door of the carriage slid open. Faye pushed Lorcan inside. As soon as he had settled and the door had closed and sealed, the dolphins pulled the carriage out into the water. Faye dashed outside and closed the door to the room.
Through the crack in the closing door, Lorcan could see that the sharks had broken the glass window and entered the room.
As Faye had said, the room was a different dimension. Thus, the water didn’t flow in from the broken window. The sharks flopped into the room and wriggled on the floor. In an instant, they stood up as sea creatures with human-like limbs, smooth sharkskin, and lizard-like faces.
Lorcan couldn’t help but gasp. “Walking sharks!”
Faye entered the carriage after giving the dolphins instructions. She smiled at Lorcan. “We call them shark-elves. They’re bad news.”
She pointed to the dolphins to their left. One had a sparkling seashell on the middle of its head just above and between its eyes. “That’s Miracle.” Miracle turned around and winked at Lorcan.
The other had a pink seashell dangling from its tail, which it wiggled when Faye pointed at it. “That’s Flipper.”
Lorcan glanced back toward the hospital room to be sure the sharks weren’t breaking out. “And where are we going?” he asked Faye.
“Nepolymbus. And before you ask, it’s a dimension, not an undersea city on Earth.”
“It’s certainly not Atlantis!” Lorcan said.
“What?”
“Never mind.”
They heard a bang, and a loud noise reverberated throughout the water, pushing the carriage slightly askew.
Faye glanced outside. “They’re faster than I thought.” She opened a window of the carriage, this one with a real glass barrier to stop the water from getting inside. “Miracle and Flipper, let’s go now.”
The dolphins wagged their tails, emitted some cheerful whistles, and then dove deeper into the endless sea of water. Lorcan closed his eyes and promised himself if he could get back to the surface alive, he would never again accept a job with water involved.
“Do you see that?” Faye asked.
“See what?”
Faye pointed upward. It felt like they were in the bottom of a deep well, looking up into a wedge of light shining down from above. It was the light of hope. But that wasn’t what Faye was talking about. Lorcan was sure of that.
“The carriage!”
Lorcan squinted. Beneath the light’s surface, he saw a round object hovering in the deep water. He knew it was the submarine he’d been in when it exploded.
He wasn’t sure whether he should tell Faye but cleared his throat and asked, “Is the light the water’s surface?”
“Yes, that’s the shallowest spot in the area. Sometimes I can see human boats. But don’t think about swimming up there yourself. Vision is only one aspect of reality. The surface and the human world is another dimension. You can see it, but crossing it is a totally different matter.”
Lorcan sh
rugged. “All right then. I won’t swim up there. Not without your help. The floating object there, I think it’s the same as the carriage we’re using now.”
She shook her head. “Not possible. The transport dolphins only release their carriages if they’re dead. I haven’t seen a report of an accident.”
He felt guilty for lying to her, but he pressed on. “So nurses at the hospital process traffic information as well?”
She smiled. The sadness in her smile intensified his pangs of guilt. He looked again and asked no more questions.
Eight
Lorcan bolted up, hitting his head on the ceiling of the carriage. He didn’t realize he had fallen asleep.
Faye smiled. “The drugs are still having an effect on you. You passed out for a bit.”
He grunted a response but didn’t think it possible he’d passed out at the crucial point when he’d seen the shallow surface, a way to escape the deep water. But he said nothing.
He glanced out the window. The architecture of the buildings was beyond anything he’d ever imagined. Every building had holes where doors and windows should be, and the merfolk swam in and out of them. The structures themselves seemed delicate and in danger of collapsing. The water made it the rock more buoyant, and that had to be what was keeping the buildings up.
“Is this Nepolymbus?”
“No, we’re on the outskirts. You can see it’s still underwater. In the city, there’s both land and air. Like what you have on Earth.”
“Have you been anywhere above the water?”
Faye turned and looked him in the eye. “I don’t want to lie to you. So don’t ask.”
Shortly, they entered an area where the water was clearer. Lorcan could see the city from the outside, and it seemed the water simply stopped at the magnificent stone arch, as if banking up against a glass wall. It looked like the water he’d seen from the inside of the hospital room.
The city was magnificent—light, bright, and bursting with activity. It seemed like he was entering a modern version of Rome, Greece, or even New York. Lorcan shook his head and chuckled to himself. He should have been able to come up with more places to compare it to, but those were the places he’d visited. Perhaps he should travel more when he went back to Earth.