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They were introduced to a new routine. After they were left to roast in the sun for a few hours every day, with only the foul-smelling brown gruel to sustain them, the prisoners were unceremoniously hauled out of the commons by gargoyles and returned to the darkness of their cells. Vampires with bone launchers and large-bored handguns watched from high up on the walls as the bestial winged creatures moved the prisoners. Considering how lethargic the inmates were, Cross thought the vampires needn’t worry too much.
Back in his cell, he drank foul water and tried not to fall unconscious and drown. He slept standing up. He dreamed of the cold inferno as it clawed its way up the mountain, and of a female figure as she died in the pale doorway. Sometimes Snow was there, as well, burning next to him.
Every day, he was removed from his cell and taken to the commons, where he met with Dillon. They saw no sign of the others.
The gruel and dirty water never changed. They were being kept alive, but not healthy. Cross’ insides burned like he’d swallowed an acid pill.
“ They’re going to Turn us,” Dillon said at one point.
There was no telling how many days had passed since they’d been first been brought to Krul. On those rare occasions when his head felt clear, Cross remembered being led through the labyrinth of dark halls by black-clad vampires in masks, then flown up a massive cylinder shaft by blank-eyed gargoyle warriors with bodies as solid as stone before he was brought into open air and dropped into the commons.
The gauntlets they fit him with every day ached and cut into his wrists, leaving them raw. His leg wound still throbbed, but it ached less than it had before. It may have even started to heal, though he couldn’t imagine how that was possible without some sort of medical aid.
It was never night, or at least it seemed that way. They were only brought outside in the blazing sun of midday. The rest of their time was spent buried deep in the tower.
He and Dillon sat with their backs against a wall and talked. They couldn’t actually see the sun, as it hid behind layers of dull clouds that looked like sand. The clouds in no way impacted the heat, so their senses remained dull and their limbs were heavy.
“ They’ll take their time doing it,” Dillon continued. His voice was slurred and his eyes were half-shut, like he was drunk. There were tears in his voice. “They’ll do it slow.”
“ We have to hold on,” Cross said. The commons seemed less crowded than it had before. The other prisoners huddled in groups, largely segregated by race, but a few inmates remained isolated. One man with wild hair and greasy stains on his face muttered to himself constantly. One Gorgoloth had lost an eye, but the brute sat hunched and played with the crusty orb like it was a marble. A pale-skinned Vuul stood quiet and stoic and stared up into the sky as if it waited for something to descend.
Everything smelled like an outhouse in summer. The air tasted fetid.
Cross thought about Snow. She hadn’t been taken to Krul — it had been the undead of Koth who’d broken her, not the vampires of the Ebon Cities, and she’d been broken in spirit rather than actually Turned, but in the end it was much the same as where Cross found himself now. He wondered if she’d been subjected to the same treatment as he, isolated and malnourished. He wondered if they’d also found a way to keep her awake for days on end.
“ Jeraline,” Dillon said. His words came slow, like he had difficulty remembering them. He seemed only half awake.
They heard the roar of turbine engines as vessels passed outside the city walls, and the roar and groan of Krul’s chains as the city realigned itself. Cross felt the metal rattle beneath them whenever Krul folded and shifted, a gargantuan puzzle piece being rearranged.
His spirit held on to him. He felt her warmth, different than that of the desert air. She was distant and faint. He wondered if he could channel her if not for the gauntlets, or if doing so would burn her out like a candle. It didn’t matter — there was no way the vampires would leave that option open to its prisoners. Doubtless there were a ridiculous number of safeguards and spirit dampeners all over the prison city.
The groups of prisoners shifted around every now and again, and some individuals roamed on their own. They wandered and talked quietly, held handfuls of food that looked like fecal waste. There was nowhere for them to go, and nothing to do. The upwardly sloped walls bore no cracks, handholds or protrusions aside from the spikes, which jutted straight out at the top of the walls a good fifty feet over their heads. Without shade, prisoners were left with nothing to do but bake beneath the sun on the sand-covered metal floors.
Cross’s mind felt lost, adrift, and asleep. He remembered that Dillon had spoken, and that suddenly seemed like it had happened hours ago.
“ Who’s Jeraline?” he asked.
“ My…my sister.”
“ Yeah,” Cross answered.
I’m so weak. I can’t think straight. Have they drugged us, or is this just the fatigue, the malnourishment? Am I sick? He felt his leg. He didn’t think the wound had festered, but he couldn’t recall the last time he’d actually checked it. He hoped he wasn’t feverish.
“ I miss her cooking,” Dillon said. He laughed.
“ Was…was she a good cook?”
“ Nah, man, she was terrible!”
Dillon laughed, a booming, half-mad and infectious laugh, and Cross found himself laughing, as well. It didn’t matter that he didn’t know why they were laughing. It didn’t matter that nothing was funny.
A memory came to him. Black and white shadows, colliding in a storm. A maelstrom over a frozen lake. Obsidian glass and cold smoke. A Woman in the Ice.
Focus.
He felt his spirit there at the edge of his thoughts. He felt her pain, a distant and lingering ache like an old wound that was almost healed, like some fading scar.
Focus.
“ Dillon,” he said. He blinked his eyes, shook his head. “We have to get out of here.”
Lucan. The Dra’aalthakmar. The Sleeper. A shadow over the ice. A battle.
“ I know,” Dillon said.
They sat for a time. Another day might have passed and they wouldn’t have known, since their routine had become so ingrained in his mind Cross didn’t even notice it any more. Time melted and blurred.
His clothes were disintegrating. He was so covered in grime he felt like he wore someone else’s skin.
At some point, he and Dillon talked about Krul, and assessed what little they knew about the prison city. The longer they talked, the clearer their minds became, even though it was still difficult for Cross to track the passage of time. But he knew one thing clearly: they had to escape. If Lucan and his primal spirit had lost the battle with the Sleeper, it might have already been too late. But, if Lucan had weakened it, or even just fought it off for a time, there was still a chance. There was even the chance that Lucan had somehow defeated the Sleeper, and that the mission was done…but Cross sensed that wasn’t true, even if he wanted to believe it. Either way, they still had to escape. He did not intend to sit in Krul and rot.
But before they could escape, they had to plan, and in order to do that they had to catalog everything they knew of their surroundings. That was true of any tactical situation. Going back to that routine — their training from years back, when Cross had been a green recruit afraid of his own shadow, and Dillon was a foot soldier — helped them both focus, and it kept them sharp when fatigue or drugs or heat or malnourishment or sickness or all of those things threatened to drag them down into mental oblivion.
Cross had been there for what felt like an eternity, a black prison of the mind with tighter bonds than the gauntlets or the shackles he was forced to wear every time they brought him to and from the surface. He’d floated in that mire, a semi-conscious soup. Now, there with Dillon, recalling his days in Viper Squad and Dillon’s days in the infantry, talking and planning, laying out strategy, carefully weighing options and making crude maps in the sand, made Cross realize that he wasn’t dead yet. That prison in his brain was still there, a deep and dismal shaft, but Cross finally felt he had a chance to claw his way out.
Focus.
Krul. The City of Scars. It was the prison metropolis of the Ebon Cities, a place where the vampires sent exiled captives that they wanted kept alive. It was a monstrosity of steel and chains, a gargantuan complex nestled in the center of an arid wasteland several days travel from a blighted sea.
Most of the prisoners in Krul were tortured for information, or else they were used as slave labor in the vampire’s production facilities. Even more were used as fodder in spectator gladiator games, events of blood and mayhem staged for the pleasure of the undead aristocracy.
The rest of the prisoners were Turned into vampires.
The Southern Claw had learned quite a few things about how vampires corrupted and Turned creatures. Arcane venom was injected into the bloodstream via a bite, and it spread quickly. Tiny necrotic insects in the venom festered and multiplied and turned the victim’s entire metabolic system into an undead engine, until the victim became an automaton of flesh. These new vampires were vicious, strong, powerful, and utterly loyal to the vampire collective, possessed of some vast and dark consciousness that all of the vampires of the Ebon Cities shared. But these vampires were also brutes, possessed of only modest intellects. They were grunts; foot soldiers.
On occasion, the Ebon Cities desired a human convert to retain the skills they’d possessed in life. This required a separate and slower process, one that preserved the intelligence and abilities of the living being. That process belonged to the wardens of Krul.
The prisoners in the open commons were never molested by the guards. There seemed to be no agenda aside from letting the inmates bake in the sun. The fact that food was provided indicated that they weren’t meant to die, so Cross could only surmise this routine was all a part of the breaking process, some psychological means by which their resistance would be eroded.
Cross’ leg still throbbed with pain, but even though he still clenched his teeth every time that he shifted his weight the wound itself felt much less tender. Whatever infection it was that had furthered Cross’ disorientation was finally starting to pass.
“ How many?” Cross asked Dillon.
“ Judging by the size of the city…there are a thousand vampires, at least.” They couldn’t be sure of how many prisoners there were, since they didn’t understand the function of most of the buildings they’d seen during their initial “tour” of Krul. Every once in a while they heard the throaty whispers of the undead float at them through the walls, a hissing rhythm that grated the senses. Krul wasn’t exclusively a prison, they knew that much: it also housed a good number of vampire aristocrats, as well as a half-dozen or so refining facilities that processed metal, obsidian, and other raw materials used in manufacturing plants located elsewhere. The prisoners of Krul were put to good use, and it was only a matter of time before Cross and Dillon joined those ranks.
“ Could we get out over the wall?” Cross asked. He knew that it was a stupid question, but it was the way they’d agreed to do it. Neither of them was fully cognizant, even after what felt like weeks of getting used to the routine of being shuffled back and forth from their cells and meeting up on the rooftop of the tower prison, so asking even the dumbest questions would hopefully allow them to avoid making dumber mistakes.
If you can still ask the stupid questions and know that they’re stupid questions, you’re ok, Cross decided.
“ Even if we make it past the spikes and the gargoyles,” Dillon whispered, “…which we won’t, by the way…we’re still on a damn skyscraper…probably one of the tallest buildings in Krul.”
Crap. Hadn’t thought about it that way.
“ And we have no weapons…” Cross said.
“ And we have no weapons,” Dillon echoed with a nod.
They couldn’t take weapons from the prison guards even if they tried, as all vampire armaments were unusable by humans. Vampires used a method, created by the cruel race of arcane engineer giants called the Cruj, which enabled them to craft a protective resonance hex field around their weapons, a sort of permeated magical barrier that hovered less than an inch away from blades, guns or cannons. That field prevented any non-vampire from being able to use the item in question. Depending on the hex settings, the consequences of attempting to do so varied from simply not being able to grip the device, receiving an electric shock, or setting off a low-grade hex field detonation that could cost the would-be thief a limb.
Cross doubted vampires truly needed weapons there in the prison, in any case. A vampire could physically overpower almost any other humanoid creature in a one-on-one matchup, with the exception, maybe, of a Vuul, a full-blooded Doj, or a Sorn. Even then, a second or third vampire was all that was really needed to bring those tougher creatures down.
But worrying about the lack of arms was rudimentary. The cold, hard fact that neither of them wanted to speak aloud was quite simple: there was no escape.
Even if they somehow managed to get their hands on working weapons, they had an entire garrison of vampire prison guards to battle their way past. If they managed to somehow escape through use of stealth, they had to navigate through an unfamiliar city populated with undead, a city doubtlessly filled with toxins and gases and poisonous fluids that had no effect on vampires but that would make the terrain all but impossible for living beings to survive in. And even if they managed that, Krul was still over a hundred miles behind enemy lines, in largely uncharted lands controlled by the Ebon Cities.
Cross had to believe that someone else would be sent to complete his mission: that the Sleeper, the long-buried fear called the Dra’aalthakmar, could still be stopped, if it hadn’t already.
There’s no way that the battle between Lucan and the Sleeper will have gone unnoticed. It’ll be handled.
And yet…that didn’t help his situation. He looked at Dillon, a quiet and stalwart man, a lonely soldier doing his duty no matter what was asked of him.
You got more than you bargained for, Dillon. I want to promise you that you’ll get to eat your sister’s crappy cooking again. I want to tell you that you’ll get to see your nephew. But I can’t. I can’t promise you those things, but I can damn well do everything in my power to get us out of here. That I can do.
“ Cross…” Dillon began, his mind obviously hinged on the same overwhelming scenario. “Listen…”
“ I’m not giving up,” Cross interrupted. Dillon’s eyes were glassy, and his lip trembled. He suddenly looked very old, and yet the fear in his eyes was that of a boy. It’s amazing what they can do to you. “Don’t give up,” he repeated. “Not yet.”
“ You might as well,” said a third voice. “Whatever you think you’re going to do, it’s never going to happen.”
The gravelly voice that interrupted them was somehow familiar, but it took Cross a moment to recognize it.
The Gol stood over them with a handful of brown lard. His short shadow blocked out the dull orange fire of the desert sun. His hood was drawn, but his face-wrap was down, revealing a grayed face lined with scars, cuts and pores. He looked like a leper, but such was the case with all of the Gol. They were a race of hostages. Once, they believed, they’d held another form, a larger form closer to that of humans. But that larger race’s collective consciousness was ripped away during The Black and deposited into new bodies, those of vile dwarves.
The worst part was that the Gol seemed to have no memory of who they truly were, what they’d been, or where it was they came from. Just like Earth itself, they had been re-written by The Black, forever cast into an unfamiliar shape with no means of escape, doomed with the knowledge that they had once been something different, something greater, but cursed to have that memory suppressed from their ever destabilizing minds.
“ Say what?” Dillon said.
“ You’re not escaping,” the Gol said. His teeth were black, as were his jagged fingernails. “No one does. To think otherwise is…pretty stupid.”
“ We have to get out,” Cross said. Even seated on the ground, he only barely had to incline his head to look right at the little man’s ugly face.
“ Oh, well, that’s different!” the Gol croaked with what passed for a smile. “Just tell the vampires that! I’m sure they’ll let you go.”
“ Do you want something?” Dillon said angrily. “Or are you just lonely?”
“ Of course I’m lonely!” the Gol barked with another laugh. “Most of the other humans here are farmers or criminals…not my class of people at all. We don’t get many Southern Claw Hunters.”
Cross stilled at that.
“ How do you know that we’re Hunters?” he asked.
“ Because I’m a genius,” the Gol smiled. “But only you are a Hunter. He’s a ranger,” he said with a thumb at Dillon.
Cross and Dillon exchanged glances.
“ They already know,” the Gol said, addressing the unasked question. “That’s probably why you’re still alive.”
“ Who in the hell are you?” Dillon asked him.
“ Tega Ramsey,” the Gol answered with a short bow. “Smuggler. Negotiator. Acquisitions expert. Obtainer of rare and difficult things. And just as fucked as you, at least at the moment.”
“ And what brings you to this little paradise?” Dillon laughed.
Cross gave him a look. He didn’t share the ranger’s amusement at the odious little troll.
“ Vampires don’t like when their weapons technology is sold to other races without their knowledge or permission,” Ramsey smiled. “I suppose in this case, ‘without their permission’ is the more accurate statement on its own, since they obviously had some knowledge, lest I wouldn’t be here…”
“ We’ve got it,” Cross interrupted. “What can you tell us about this place?”
“ What would I know that you don’t?” Ramsey asked in return.
“ How long have you been here?” Cross asked.
“ How long have you been here?” Ramsey asked in return. Cross almost answered him, but realized he couldn’t. Reading his confused look, Ramsey smiled. “Exactly.”
“ Look, you know something,” Dillon said impatiently. “Or else you wouldn’t still be alive.”
“ That’s why you’re talking to us, isn’t it?” Cross said. “You have something to offer us. In return…” Tega Ramsey was obviously fishing for friends, and for protection from other inmates. He’d likely survived in Krul by goading or coercing others into protecting him; he had to have done so, based on his size alone. One could only go unnoticed in an environment like Krul for so long, especially when the Gol made such easy prey. Most of the other inmates would have eaten him alive without someone watching out for him.
“ You’re smarter than you look, mage,” Ramsey told Cross.
“ Obviously not,” Cross said bitterly. “Or else we wouldn’t be here.”
“ Sometimes, you can’t control where you end up,” Ramsey smiled. “Sometimes the fates just have it in for us.”
Dillon nodded, but Cross shook his head.
No. For some damn reason, I think I’m supposed to be here.
Follow and you will find.
“ So tell us,” he said aloud.
“ Tell you what?”
“ Anything useful.”
Tega, it turned out, knew quite a bit, though little of it would prove terribly beneficial in terms of securing their freedom. Cross and Dillon also learned very quickly that it was best not to ask exactly how Ramsey came by his information. Cross believed every word of what he told them. If Ramsey was lying, he was a fantastically dramatic liar, but his words still rang true.
Besides, what the hell else are we doing to do aside from listen to what he has to say? And if he is completely full of shit, he deserves a medal for his storytelling.
Ramsey told them that Krul was five-hundred vampires strong — which was actually a much smaller number than what Cross and Dillon had guessed — and that there were twice that many prisoners. At least half of those prisoners were human commoners, farmers, laborers and criminals purchased from the corrupt wardens of Black Scar. He knew that the city was controlled by a vampire named Morganna, who among other luminaries had under her command the infamous Talos Drake, the same vampire smuggler to whom Cradden Black had planned to sell Lucan Keth. Ramsey knew that the tower they were housed in was one of the three tallest in all of Krul, part of a triad of towers called The Talons: Scar, Blight, and Fist. Scar was the prison tower, Fist was the command tower, and Blight was where prisoners were taken to be broken, experimented on, Turned, tortured, or transformed into some useful substance for the vampire legions. He knew that arcane dampeners made it so that nothing inside of the walls could be tracked from the outside, just as no arcane messages or missives could pass in or out of Krul.
But most importantly, Ramsey knew that there were other prisoners brought in with Cross and Dillon, and that they were still alive.
“ Two of the women,” he told them as they sat baking in the sun, nibbling on dried bits of brown food that looked and tasted like horse dung, “are in Fist. I don’t know why, and that bothers me. I like to know things.” Ramsey had covered up his face. His eyes were dull yellow, the pupils so faint they were almost impossible to see in the glaring sunlight. “The other two are in Blight. I wouldn’t count on seeing them again.”
“ Which two women are in Fist?” Cross asked.
“ The brunette and the redhead.”
Black and Cole. Which means Kane and Ekko are in Blight, and likely dead by now, or worse.
“ What the hell are they doing in Fist?” he asked Dillon, but it was Ramsey who answered.
“ They’re from Black Scar,” he said with a shrug. “Black Scar deals with Krul often. The trafficking of live flesh between the two cities is quite lucrative, I understand.”
“ Son of a bitch,” Dillon laughed.
Cross tried to think about what that would mean for Dillon and himself. Probably nothing, he decided. Likely any chance he and Dillon had that Danica Black would exercise her influence with the vampires to buy their freedom were dashed the moment Dillon shot and killed her brother. Cross looked at Dillon, and the ranger’s sullen nod told Cross he was thinking the same thing.
There was no reason to ask Dillon why he’d shot Cradden Black. It didn’t really matter anymore.
“ Even knowing all of this,” Ramsey said after he let them ruminate on the information, “the truth is still quite simple: there’s no getting out of here.” His gray and milky eyes were unblinking. “Others have tried, and failed. And so will you.”
Bone-white trees protrude from the earth like enormous stakes. He is deeper in the forest this time, on the shore of a dark lake with a surface like fused glass. The air smells like cold smoke and ancient mold. Lichen dangles from the pale trees and lifts and sways like silk in the hot wind. He sinks ankle-deep into a blood marsh.
Muted yellow light rains down from above in clouds of ash colored amber and jade. The shadows of avian raptors cut across the ground as the distant fliers pass overhead through the pulsing orange sky.
Behind him, the valley of the lost is on fire. Cold flames race up the face of the steep black mountain. The air turns to frost before the advance of the roaring blue-white flames, and it cracks and shatters like crystal. Clouds like skulls reflect the fires back in a haze of blue shadow.
They move as if frozen. He feels his spirit with him, he can even almost see her, and she clings to him like a layer of clothing pasted against his panicked skin.
Ahead, the pale doorway shrinks. The female silhouette that is trapped there melts like a black snowflake.
The manic breathing of angry and ravenous mouths fills the air. Something bleeds across the sky and turns the world black. They try to run, but they are utterly consumed and crushed by a vast and hungry shadow.
Cross woke as he was pulled from his cell.
His muscles were stiff. His bones felt weak, like wood left too long in the rain.
The dreams, or the visions, or whatever they were, had grown more and more vivid and more difficult to shake off. They were different than before. A year ago, he’d started experiencing visions of women dying in a mountain glade, slain by black unicorns. That vision, it turned out, had been his glimpse into the obelisk prison of arcane spirits, the place where they were held until called upon by their witch or warlock masters.
This was something else, something far more dangerous, and entirely alien to him. He felt like an intruder on that dark mountain, and the presences that chased him — the fires, the shadow, the eyes and the teeth in the trees — didn’t want him to reach the woman in the doorway. There was something familiar about her, something he felt he should have known, and he was so close to understanding it threatened to drive him mad. It was like a song whose music he could hear, but he couldn’t remember the words.
The gauntlets were locked in place over his hands, as ever. By now his wrists had been rubbed raw from the constant treatment. He’d taken to drying out his feet in the sun during his “exercise” time. His clothes were a ragged mess, barely held together by filth and their last few rotting threads. His skin was so covered in grime he looked like a burlap sack. His skin itched all over.
I’ve been worried about trench foot or an infection, and here instead I’ll get some skin disease.
Gray-skinned gargoyle minions, hulking brutes with leathery wings and faces like bladed bricks, lifted Cross into the hollow tower shaft with ungentle claws. They did not take him as far as usual. Cross noted the change in the mind-numbing routine immediately, and while he tried his best to maintain his composure, he panicked inside.
What had happened? Was it because he and Dillon had spoken to Tega Ramsey? Cross had been suspicious of the Gol from the start, but it had taken him a while to realize it. The little bastard knew too much to be just a common prisoner. But to what purpose had they decided to haul Cross away now? Or had this been their plan all along? Did this even have anything to do with Ramsey?
Rather than lift him all of the way to Scar’s apex, the gargoyles set Cross down on a platform next to a dark metal hall roughly halfway up the tower. The hall led into darkness.
Cross wasn’t afforded a chance to hesitate. Vampires in pale white armor emerged and took hold of his arms with iron-clad hands. He smelled foul musk and charnel breath. Their claws had been honed to a razor’s edge, and they wore featureless masks. They seized him with stone-hard grips and plunged him forward into shadow. Cross steeled himself, as he expected to be shoved into some hard surface at any moment.
A door opened into a pale and featureless room. The vampires tossed Cross inside. His leg stung with sharp pain, and he almost blacked out as he collapsed on bruised knees and sore hands. The door slammed shut behind him with an echoing boom.
A cold white flame dangled in a smoking iron pot. The eye-numbing light shone on the other occupant of the room, Danica Black, who stood near the opposite door.
Any notions Cross might have had that Black was getting special treatment were dispelled by Danica’s appearance. She looked pale, thinner than before, and while he was sure Black looked a far cry better than he did, Cross still thought the Revenger’s eyes were sunken and distant, and that she held the restless and nervous demeanor of someone who hadn’t slept for days. And while her dark leather armor — the uniform of the Revengers — looked relatively clean and well kept, its wearer was unquestionably worse for wear.
Black also bore a trace scar near her right eye, just on the outer edge of her face. It hadn’t been there the last time he’d seen her. It still looked raw, and it resembled some sort of collapsing star of blood. Her deep red hair hung loose around her shoulders, a bit longer than it had been before.
“ Hello, Cross,” she said quietly.
Cross hesitated. She was unarmed. He felt no trace of her spirit, which he guessed had been suppressed, just like his own had.
“ Are you okay?” he asked after a moment. The room seemed unnaturally still.
She regarded him quietly. He could already tell she had unpleasant things to tell him.
“ Yes,” she nodded. “I suppose I am.”
“ Cole?” he asked.
Black hesitated before she nodded.
“ She’s been better,” she answered. She watched him carefully. “I saw that Dillon was doing all right.”
“‘ All right’?” Cross said bitterly. He nodded. “If being locked up in a half-submerged fish tank, isolated in darkness, half-starved and left to bake out in the sun for a few hours a day is ‘all right’, then…yeah, Dillon is doing all right. So am I.” His icy stare was reciprocated in kind. “So what’s going on, Danica?”
Black smiled a sad and knowing smile.
“ Being a Revenger, I carry some…clout, I guess you could say, with the Ebon Cities. They don’t think of me as an equal, by any means, but they recognize the relationship they have with the Revengers, the group that I belong to.”
“ Which you weren’t representing when you were taken,” Cross said quietly. “And that’s why you’re here, hip-deep in shit with the rest of us.”
“ I’m the only reason we’re still alive,” Black said. Her look and voice made clear she didn’t care if Cross believed that or not.
Black leaned back against the wall. The air was sweaty and rank, like the underside of a dock. The stillness Cross had sensed before was abruptly broken as something groaned far away, and the walls shook. Likely Krul was changing again, its buildings re-aligning to form another new paradigm.
“ Danica,” Cross said, not caring that he could hear the desperation in his own voice. “We have to get out of here. That thing that Lucan was fighting, that shadow…that’s what Dillon and I were sent to gather information about, why we were sent to find the Woman in the Ice. It’s called the Dra’aalthakmar. The Sleeper. And it will kill a lot of people if we don’t figure out a way to stop it before it reaches Southern Claw territory.”
“ I know,” Black interrupted. “But right now you have to worry more about how we’re getting out.”
Getting out. We’re getting out.
Cross’s heart skipped a beat. He almost went to tears. Emotions that had welled up and been lost in the time spent in that dank and burning hell suddenly threatened to tear him apart. He felt his own irrational response, and he didn’t care.
“ How?” he blurted. “How will we get out?”
Black hesitated.
“ They’re going to…give us a chance,” she said. Cross swore she was near tears, which seemed very unlike her. “A fighting chance. The same chance they’ve given Kane, and Ekko.”
Cross nodded, relieved, but only for a moment. Pain seized his shoulders and his gut.
He remembered where Kane and Ekko were being held. He remembered what they had done in Krul before they’d escaped the first time.
He looked into Black’s eyes, and the fear that he saw in them matched his own.
“ Did you say ‘a fighting chance’?” he asked quietly.
Black nodded. Her scar caused the tear that ran down her cheek to take on the color of blood.
“ We have to fight in their arena games,” she said. “You, and me, and Kane, each fighting on our own. If we don’t…the ones we care about are going to suffer.”
Cross felt like he was spinning. He thought he was going to be sick. His insides rattled and his arms and legs almost went numb.
“ Fight?” he asked, hearing the fear and exhaustion in his voice. “How am I supposed to fight? Christ, Danica, I can barely walk!”
“ You have to,” she said. Her composure was gone. She was all anger and fear and distress, just like he was. “You have to, or else Dillon is going to die…slowly. They’ll do the same to Cole. They’ve already started in on Ekko.” She looked him dead in the eyes. Cross saw the truth there, the belief that there was no other way. “You’re going to fight, Cross. If you don’t, then Dillon is going to suffer, and then Dillon is going to die.”