Doctor Barkham had had a frustrating time since she
entered the obelisk. Firstly she had
found herself alone in the midst of a maze which seemed specially designed just
to annoy her, all short corridors and and endless succession of geometrically
impossible corners. To make matters
worse there were obstacles thrown up in her course to slow down any progress
she might have been making - walls which appeared out of nowhere, pitfalls
which opened up beneath her feat only to dump her back in a place which, for all
intents and purposes, was where she had started and clues which led around in
circles as if placed there deliberately by some trickster. By the time the Former Baron appeared to add
insult to her injury, she was thoroughly fed up.
"Oh my," he had said as he turned one
corner and she the other to find themselves at opposite ends of the short
stretch of meaningless corridor.
"Brilliant," she had replied acidly,
"the day just gets better."
"I was thinking much the same thing
myself," the rambling old Philosopher replied.
Doctor Barkham sniffed, arms folded in front of her,
then let out a sigh. "I don't
suppose you've had any more luck figuring this place out, have you?"
"None whatsoever," the Former Baron
replied with one of his irritating, thin smiles, "but it brightens my day
to know that you're getting no further than I am."
She allowed herself her own, cruel smile as the
thought of snapping his spindly neck crossed her mind in quick flashes, but she
knew she would get further towards her own goals with his help than without, so
she lowered her hands to her sides, smoothed her skirt and attempted to be
civil.
"Perhaps we'll achieve more together," she
said calmly.
"Oh, I doubt it," Von Spektr said with a
sudden, cracked laugh, "but it's not like I've got anything better to
do. Oh, no, no, no!"
The image of his brittle frame shattering like the
stem of a wine glass flashed across her mind once more and, irritated, she
pushed it away.
"Lead on, then," she said instead and then
watched as the old man strolled past her down the corridor the very way she had
just come.
She was further irritated when she rounded the
corner after him only to find a room which had not been there before. It was filled with switches and pulleys and,
at the far end, clearly operated by some or all of those mechanisms, an
impressive looking door.
"Looks like we have a puzzle to solve,"
the Former Baron said with just a hint of glee.
"Indeed," she replied drily, "but
let's not take all day about it."
She was already trying to fathom out the mechanism,
following it from where it lifted the door locks up to the ceiling and then
through an incredible number of pulleys, gears, flywheels and- just staring at
it made her feel dizzy, and she was one of the greatest minds in the world.
Stop, she thought, take it in piece by piece, do it
logically, just like everything else in your life.
And it was true, she had done everything according
to the logic of her own self-importance, manipulating her older sister Yvette
so that she would take the adventuring risks she so enjoyed, increasing the
odds of the inheritance landing solely in Rosetta's lap, which it did, on the
day she had appointed, through the clever use of a few inflammatory letters
'accidentally' left in a place where a visiting
nobleman, known both for his paranoia and his penchant for exotic poisons,
should see it with plenty of time to prepare himself for dinner. It had been the same story with her studies,
always making sure that she had the best resources to hand, eliminating rivals
like the annoying, buzzing insects they were.
An entire career had been built on being the best,
or, if that weren't possible, becoming the best by eliminating the competition
and internalising all their resources.
One way or another, she had got where she was today through the skills
she had and the same, implacable logic
She turned that terrible mental force on the problem
at hand, only vaguely aware of the Former Baron moving around the room,
caressing sections of clockwork and sniffing at levers. Instead she examined the complex mechanical
pathways available to her, followed each switching point towards it's
conclusion and saw the various traps that would be activated with a reckless
decision. That one leading towards a
section of capped-off piping in the wall would probably flood the room with
acid, or some kind of noxious gas. The
one leading towards the rear of the chamber would seal the entrance and crush
them beneath the the unstoppable force of the false wall. Another clearly connected to a false panel
behind which there would be blades, or spikes, or a lethal horde of scuttling,
blade-mouthed thornshells. And the lever
at the far side of the room, the one the Former Baron was considering as he
stroked his chin, that would be worst of all that one would-
She watched in horror -mouth working to shout out a
warning even as her throat seemed to seize - as the aging philosopher leaned
forward, reached out, and pulled the lever.
And the gods-damned door opened!
"How did you do that?" she snapped. She had been so sure. Her logic had been infallible. THat lever should have killed them both by
combination of all of the traps being activated at once, and yet their escape
route lay open and no acid, gas, blades, walls, nor vicious insect stood in
their way. She pointed with inarticulate
rage at a small switch on the wall.
"It should have been this one!" she
screamed.
"Oh, goodness, no," the Former Baron
replied, looking surprisingly shocked, "if you'd flicked that switch you'd
have been vapourised by venting hypostatick energy from the vent beneath your
feet!"
Rosetta looked down.
She was standing on a solid piece of glowing stonework. THe old man was talking nonsense, he-
No. She saw
it. The tiny, dark holes lining the edge
of the stone, hidden by the masonry's own dark colour and tracery of glowing
lines which carefully avoiding the gaps without drawing attention to them.
"You're just so clever, aren't you?" she
replied, having cooled her blood a little with a bit of deep breathing. "Here I am, with my five doctorates, my
endless years of study and hard work, the blood still staining the cracks in my
hands, the tears as yet unshed... and you... you just buble around in your shameless,
sham-lunacy, stumbling across the correct answers as if by accident."
She took a step closer.
"Don't think I'm fooled by your act,
Franck."
"It's not an act, my dear. I really do have a great deal of trouble
thinking in a straight line... but yes... I do know a lot more of what is going
on that often appears."
"Good," she said with a sudden, cruel
smile, "then you'll already be expecting this!"
The knife was in her hand in a moment, and there was a
brief moment of satisfaction as Von Spektr’s eyes widened in surprise before
the blade cut through the loose, raggedy fabric of his suit and sank into his
flesh. He gurgled just once, a
ridiculous, pitiful moan, then collapsed to the floor.
“Don’t worry,” she said, staring down into his fading
eyes, “it’s everything personal”. She
turned and, without looking back again, walked out through the now-open door.
That had been half an hour ago.
“Next-to-last, maybe,” Diana said, dropping into a
crouch.
Rosetta knew well enough her daughter’s
capabilities, and so was not surprised when the crouch turned into a
tremendous, feral leap across the space between them, to land on the very spot
where she stood. She was not surprised
at all – had been anticipating it, in fact, and, before Diana was even halfway
towards the zenith of her jump, Rosetta had taken action in her defence. There was no one better at Hypostatick
equations than she, and no one could direct their energies, or write with them
as quickly as she could. The symols
appeared before in an instant, her hand barely visible as it sped left to
right, the slender index finger crafting each character to perfection. She performed the final function, there was
that sense of reality shifting which only the writer of the equation would ever
feel and then-
Diana rebounded off thin air just a few feet above
her mother, some invisible energy shield throwing her backwards through the air
to land in a heap.
It was hard for Rosetta to contain her
laughter. “Gods, child,” she called to
the bundle on the floor ahead, “how did I ever give birth to something so
stupd? That’s twice now that you have
attacked me and twice you have forgotten that I am just so much better at this
than-”
The blow from behind was as unexpected as it was
unstoppable. It was like being swept off
ones feet by an avalanche, or hit by a brick wall, only, as she rolled over
herself in painful somersaults, Rosetta was able to see the real culprit – a
seething, beast-like Stoneskin, whose blue-white eyes blazed with an intensity
she had rarely seen before in that race.
Those eyes seemed familiar, they…
“Frostfire?” she croaked from the ground as the
Stoneskin advanced.
“I didn’t think you would remember me,” the
Stoneskin said as he took another step.
“But… of course I did. You were the greatest of them, the best
Lithoderm commander I ever had you-”
“I led my tribe to their brutal, bloody deaths…
because of you.” Sudddenly his talons
loomed above her, long, sharp and horribly bloodied. This creature had killed very recently, there
was no reason to believe he wouldn’t do the same to her.
“No, that was Franck, the old man! He was the one who unleashed the
daemon.” Somewhere inside Rosetta was
dimly aware that she was babbling, that she was pleading for her life in the
most pathetic way possible. It was
monstrously humiliating and yet she didn’t care. There would be time to worry about dignity
later, if only he’d listen to reason. “You
have to understand, I had no control of it whatsoever. I barely escaped myself!”
“You left us all to die!”
A shadow loomed up from the other side and Rosetta
let her terrifying, flickering gaze dart towards its source. Dian was on her feet again, a blade in her
hand.
“Hold her down, Frostfire,” she said.
“No, no, you can’t do this,” Rosetta shrieked as the
stoneskin’s talons sank into her shoulder blades, “I’m your mother, your own
flesh and blood!” She tried to wriggle free,
but any movement was agony. She must
have broken several bones when Frostfire had barrelled into her.
“Don’t struggle, Mother,” Diana continued, calm as
ever, “it will only make it that much slower, and we don’t have all day now, do
we?”
The shadow of the blade fell upon her and, finally,
Rosetta truly screamed.
Apologies for the delay with this week's Shadow. I did not have reliable internet access and, due to unforseen circumstances, didn't have as much time to finish the episode as I had expected. Chances are next week's will be delayed also, but I hope to be back on track after that. Anyway, this episode features some pretty shocking developments which, I hope, will have you talking about it for a while!
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