Predation
Fisco, Denner, and Diana rode eastward into the wild forest from Wurzelberg for just over an hour before they were forced to remove the angel’s spell to allow Denner to concentrate on the location of Cyrryc Adda. Within moments of the spell’s removal, Denner collapsed in a convulsion that toppled him out of his saddle. Mercifully, he was unhurt in the fall, and he was able to stay awake and alert. Concentrating through the pain, Denner was able to correct their course immediately. When Diana reached over to replace her spell, however, Denner refused. Fisco and Diana shared a glance, but said nothing. Wordlessly, the three continued on toward Cyrryc Adda and the blood sample Denner needed in order to survive.
Another hour of riding, and two more slight course corrections from the Delver, brought them to the mouth of a cave. The cave opening was sunk somewhat into the ground and was overgrown with trees and vines from the forest around it. Fisco looked around for a long time, frowning deeper with each passing moment. Diana sat perfectly still atop her horse, her eyes locked on Fisco and her staff resting almost casually across her lap. Denner concentrated first on Cyrryc and then on the blood sample, and then finally pointed toward the cave.
“He’s in there,” Denner said simply.
“Well, obviously,” Fisco murmured. “I don’t like this. I expected…something.”
“What?”
“It doesn’t matter ‘what.’ Something. Anything. There’s nothing magical here at all. No enchantments, no warnings, nothing. There is nothing here that’s going to warn him about us.”
Denner shook his head. “But that’s good, isn’t it?”
Fisco didn’t say anything. He simply continued to scan the forest floor and the mouth of the cave. He was just about to spur his horse onward when the animal suddenly lurched upward. Instantly, Diana was out of her saddle and next to him, thrusting her long metal staff at the ground where the horse’s front hooves had been. With a sickening sound of cracking and squirting, the staff’s tip broke through the carapace of a large scorpion. Even with its fatal wound, the scorpion managed to sting at the metal staff three or four times before it died.
Diana looked up at Fisco, who had managed to calm his horse. “I sense dozens, perhaps hundreds of similar lives within. They are varied, but all seem strong. Predatory.”
Fisco nodded. “Are they…?”
Diana nodded.
“To you?”
She nodded again.
Fisco Vane sighed deeply. “Fabellian, I think you should stay out here. Actually,” he said, pausing for a long time, “maybe you should head back to my cottage and wait there.”
“I can’t do that,” the Delver said.
“I know how important this is to but, but listen. If Diana eases your pain, you’re no good to us, and if she doesn’t, you could go into one of your convulsions, and not get up again.”
Denner took a deep breath. “I’ll be careful.”
Fisco shook his head. “You did hear her, didn’t you, kid? Predators. Do you know anything about poisonous predators?”
“Of course, I do. I’ve read seventeen different books on the subject, the most complete of which contained seven hundred and ten artist renderings of venomous species that…”
Fisco frowned. “Is an artist’s rendering going to jump off the page and kill you?”
For a long moment, no one said anything. Finally, though, Denner broke the silence. “I know you don’t think much of me, Fisco. I know I get on your nerves. And if you don’t want to do this with me, I can’t blame you. But my life is hanging by a thread, and that thread is in that cave. I can’t…I can’t leave it to someone else to retrieve it. My life’s already at risk. I’m going.”
Fisco sighed. “You’re an annoying know-it-all, Fabellian, and sometimes you talk too much for your own good, but you’ve got fight. That counts for more than you know. A lot of people in your place would have curled up and died by now, especially when the alternative was to come to me.” Fisco paused and looked away. When he continued, his voice was quiet. “I want you to make it through this, kid. I want to help you make it through this.”
Denner hung his head. Finally, he spoke in a broken voice. “I need to be there, Fisco.”
Fisco stared for a long time, then looked at Diana. Silent words seemed to pass between the Shark and the Angel, and then Fisco nodded. “Alright, kid. But you better look away from that cave, or else you’re going to be blind and dumb, instead of just dumb.”
Denner was about to question what Fisco meant when he saw Diana step toward the entrance of the cave and hold her staff up. As the tip of the staff began to glow, Denner looked away. Even through his closed eyes, he could see the flash of blinding light, and could hear the sound of rushing energy fly into the cave’s mouth. A moment later, he looked back as Diana turned around. She was looking at Fisco as she spoke.
“The entrance is clear for perhaps a hundred paces. Beyond that, we must be careful with every step.”
Fisco nodded, and slipped down from his saddle, landing cautiously on one leg and then steadying himself with his cane. Denner followed the other ‘walker’s lead, and winced as pain shot through his body as he landed. His entire left side started to convulse, but with a sudden, stubborn surge of will, Denner managed to suppress it. He hoped that Fisco and Diana hadn’t noticed, but luck, as was usually the case for the Delver, was not with him.
“If that happens one more time,” Fisco warned slowly, “we’re leaving you behind no matter what you say.”
Denner turned around to look at Fisco, and was surprised to see the other ‘walker wasn’t even looking his direction. “How did you know?”
“Remember when I asked about predators? Well, predators sense weakness. It’s just what they do. And a shark is a hell of a predator.”
Denner said nothing, and the three of them ventured slowly into the cave. The scorch marks from Diana’s spell were visible along the walls and the floor, but soon, the darkness of the cave began to obscure everything. Diana compensated by conjuring a celestial light which hovered at the tip of her staff. The light was effective, with their path forward lit just enough to reveal the glinting eyes in the darkness around them. Diana led the way, with Fisco behind her, and Denner behind him. The Delver, therefore, found himself looking backwards more and more frequently as they moved deeper into the cave.
They moved slowly and paused often. Partly, it was Fisco’s movement that slowed them, partly it was Denner’s consistent pain, and partly it was Diana stopping to kill or scare away one of the venomous denizens of Cyrryc Adda’s cave. As they progressed deeper, the cave began to widen and grow and, oddly, the vegetation began to increase rather than recede. At first, the walls and floor of the cave had been covered by varying thicknesses of moss, but now, full bushes and vines slowed their progress. In time, even these grew to full-sized trees and a thick canopy. Finally, Fisco called a halt and brought the angel and the Delver in closer to him.
“What’s going on here?”
“There are large swaths of the cave’s ceiling that have crumbled or are otherwise missing,” Diana said. “The sunlight is mostly covered by the canopy, but it is there. I suspect much of this place has been artificially cultivated to provide a suitable ecosystem for something.”
“A snake!” Denner said suddenly.
“And other things, I bet,” Fisco said, frowning.
Denner shook his head and pointed at a nearby branch. “No, I mean there’s a snake!”
The other two looked over to see a massive snake coiled around the branch, staring at them through glowing but obscured eyes. With its length and proximity, it could likely have struck at any of them, and it seemed preparing to do just that. Diana squared up to the serpent, her staff glaring and ready. The snake hissed loudly at the threat, but darted away into the trees. Fisco spoke, but Diana did not turn to look at him as he did, instead keeping her angelic eyes trained on the darkness of the strange, subterranean forest.
“You ever seen anything like that in one of your books, Fabellian?”
Slowly, Denner nodded. “Yes, actually. It was a death-hood cobra.”
“Venomous?”
“Extremely. One bite kills in seconds.”
Fisco found a way to frown even deeper. He started looking around, seeing only cave and forest in front of them. Then he looked up. “You can fly, right, kid?”
“Well, I can sort of levitate a bit.”
Fisco sort of grunted as he continued to look around. “We may need to fly over this mess.”
“Um…” Denner started, then stopped.
Fisco groaned. “What is it, Fabellian?”
“I just… I don’t think that’s a good idea.”
“Why not. You afraid of heights?”
“No,” Denner said. “Well, a little, I guess. You never know when a levitation spell is going to cut out on you, but…”
“Get to the point.”
“Oh, right. The death-hood cobra can slither vertically faster than it can horizontally. And these trees go straight up to the cave’s ceiling.”
Fisco looked upward and swore. Without any further word, he and Diana continued on into the thicket, even more slowly and cautiously than before. Denner hurried after them, careful to put his feet down precisely where the others had placed theirs. The cave forest was almost completely black, and the thick trunks of the trees prevented Diana’s light from piercing more than a few paces in any direction. The sounds of the forest assaulted them constantly, and all of them, even Diana, found themselves scanning the darkness in every direction for any sign of movement, knowing that seeing it might mean they were already too late.
They had been walking for nearly half an hour when they came to a small clearing in the trees, only barely wide enough for the three of them to stand shoulder to shoulder. They stayed back for a long moment, wary of some sort of trap, before Diana ventured forward. She had taken only two steps into the clearing when a serpentine form dropped from the canopy above with an audible hiss. The death-hood cobra launched itself directly at the angel’s upper body, and before she could react, its fangs sank deep into her neck.
And they continued to fall until they hit the ground, and Diana disappeared completely.
The snake was visibly confused, but it did not have long to consider its mistake. The real Diana burst into the clearing almost instantly, her metallic staff coming down with a brutal thud on the creature’s skull, shattering it. Its entire length shuddered as it died, and the extremity of its tail continued to shake as Fisco and Denner cautiously stepped into the clearing. Keeping the venomous foe at a distance, Diana, forced it down, fangs first, into the soil, so that no one was at risk for stepping on them.
“Nice work, kid,” Fisco said to Denner. “How’d you know that snake was there?”
Denner just looked at Fisco.
“Oh, right. The thing.” He pointed to Denner’s head, as if to emphasize. “Speaking of, how long until we get to the other snake?”
“Not long,” Denner said, fighting back against the pain running through his body. “He’s very close now.”
Fisco nodded, looked Denner up and down one more time, and then indicated for Diana to continue on. Somehow, the underground forest seemed less dangerous after killing the cobra. Perhaps it had been the alpha predator, and the other creatures Cyrryc Adda had placed there were too afraid to attack its killer. Perhaps they had merely gained confidence, both in their victory and in their proximity to their goal. Whatever the reason, they pushed past the clearing quickly and without incident, and soon after, the trees began to thin and the cave opened up into a wide cavern.
Diana allowed her light to die down. It was no longer needed. The cavern walls were lined with iron sconces, each one blazing with flickering flames. The ground was smooth rock, and completely clear of the moss that had permeated the cave forest behind them. Along a far wall were set several large tables, each of them crowded with various tubes, vials, and other alchemical equipment. And in front of the center-most table, wearing his strange cloak with the false cobra’s hood, was Cyrryc Adda.
The snakefolk was facing away from Fisco, Denner, and Diana, but turned his head slightly in their direction as they emerged from the forest. “Welcome to my little pit,” he yelled over the wide distance of the cavern. “Which of you would like to die first?”