Read Beyond Hades: The Prometheus Wars Online
Authors: Luke Romyn
"Heracles," corrected the warrior.
"Uh huh," Wes nodded. "Anyway, how about you give us some of the juice that made Hercules -" Heracles shook his head in frustration, but said nothing. "- so fucking buff?"
Zeus stared at him blankly. Even with the language adaptation he had unlocked within Wes, it seemed Zeus still had no idea what the commando was talking about. Finally he just nodded. "Maybe later."
This seemed to placate Wes, and he grinned, no doubt imagining some ancient otherworldly version of steroids.
"We must go," said Heracles abruptly. "While the difference between our worlds keeps time separate, the rift on your side is still expanding."
"But wouldn't time be faster there?" asked Talbot. "I mean, it's only been a few years for you since these rifts were originally opened, but it's been thousands of years for us."
"Not necessarily," said Zeus. "Our times are completely separate. The way we know that the Syrpeas Gate hasn't expanded too much is because Olympia still exists and hasn't been consumed by its growth... yet. Once it begins to accelerate it will devour all dimensions."
"What happens then?" asked Talbot.
Zeus looked at Talbot, his eyes seeming to weigh his strength. "The universe will collapse. Nothing will exist. Time itself will implode as all dimensions become one."
"Shit eh? So Gigantor here is right," said Wes, indicating Heracles. "We'd better go before the whole fucking roof comes down."
Zeus shook his head bemusedly. Talbot merely grinned at the Australian's simplistic way of putting things into perspective.
With a brief nod of farewell to Zeus, Heracles led Talbot and Wes to the back of the temple-like structure, placing his hand on a panel scrawled with script that Talbot recognized as Elder-tongue. The entire white wall slid aside soundlessly, revealing something akin to a massive control room.
Talbot's eyes were dragged towards the stone circle which bore a striking resemblance to the structure at Stonehenge. Great, gray monoliths of rock stood in a circular formation, approximately thirty yards across. Upon these stones others were placed horizontally, creating a crossbeam-like effect and thus completing the circular pattern.
Heracles moved to a flat stone panel, and Talbot watched him pressing symbols in seemingly random combinations. With each touch the stone seemed to glow slightly under his hand. After a moment of watching, the pattern became blatantly clear to Talbot. Each broke down to equations, just like the binary symbols in the cave at Ayers Rock; it was so simple! Heracles moved to another panel and began following a similar pattern on it.
"Do you want me to prepare this one?" asked Talbot, moving to a third panel.
Heracles looked up, shock evident upon his features, almost losing the pattern on his own panel. He frowned slightly before nodding to Talbot. "If you think you can. Do not make any mistakes, or we may end up somewhere we do not wish to go."
Heracles's tone left no doubt in Talbot's mind that such a place would probably involve a hideous death, and doubt momentarily flooded him. Staring at the panel before him, however, he realized it wasn't very difficult at all, and raised his hand to press the first symbol.
Within moments, Talbot's hand was blurring between the symbols as he struggled to keep up with his brain's instructions. He felt like a man possessed! Knowledge flowed through him, and he fought to keep up as the symbols began to glow beneath his touch. He hit the last one....
The stones of the Stonehenge-like erection began to spin, slowly turning faster and faster until, with a loud crack like thunder, they disappeared completely to be replaced with -
A rift!
It wasn't as large as the Syrpeas Gate in Atlantis had been, but Talbot assumed it was otherwise identical. This brought an unpleasant thought to mind.
"Will this affect us the same way as the one we took to get here did?" he asked Heracles.
The massively-muscled warrior shook his head. "There were protective measures placed on that gateway to prevent anything entering Olympia. It was differently designed, and as such we were unable to close it as we can this one and the Syrpeas Gate. Which brings up the question: why did you not close the Syrpeas Gate using the controls in the place called Atlantis?"
Talbot stopped, staring from the ancient hero to the rift and back. He'd been told the rift couldn't be closed on their side, but had not questioned it. Perhaps they'd merely not known, or maybe the machinery on that side had been so ancient as to render it inoperable after they had opened the rift.
Or maybe he was merely an idiot who didn't question things....
Talbot shook the problem aside. He had no answers and looked at Wes who merely shrugged.
"I don't know" said Talbot. "They told us it wouldn't work from our side."
Heracles looked at him, confusion etched upon his features. "Due to the differing times between our realms, the gate controls were designed to last for a thousand millennia. If they worked to open the gate, they should have been able to close it as well. Father said it was your brother who opened the Syrpeas Gate. What happened to him?"
"He died when they went through. Cerberus attacked them."
Heracles nodded sagely. "Cerberus was one of the first to break through into Hades once the gateway to Tartarus was opened, and was swiftly expelled once our forces arrived there. He is a mighty beast and will create a perilous obstacle once we arrive in Tartarus, but we'll worry about that when we reach there. How did your people escape from him?"
"They told me my brother spoke to Cerberus, allowing them to escape."
Heracles seemed to ponder this for a moment, and then shrugged. "I suppose it is of no matter," he said, his voice a deep rumble.
"Are we gonna go through this fucker or what?" asked Wes.
Heracles actually grinned. "After you," he said amiably.
Wes didn't need to be asked twice. He readied his M4A5, Chiron's sword still securely tied to his back and held in place by his pack, and dove straight into the rift. Heracles appeared astonished for a moment, as though he hadn't expected Wes to be so audacious, but then turned to Talbot.
"We must follow him swiftly. Once we are through, the rift will close automatically behind us. There will be no return this way. We must complete our mission or else never return to our home realms." Talbot had no time to answer as Heracles grabbed him and leaped into the rift.
A kaleidoscope of color hit Talbot as they passed through the center of a rainbow, the effect slowly petering out into a smeared version of reality. It felt almost like swimming through water, but in place of water was nothing - a vacuum. It wasn't a vacuum as experienced in space walking; it was more like the total absence of life, rather than the absence of atmosphere. Talbot imagined space couldn't have this soul-sucking effect.
And then they were through.
Talbot stumbled as gravity hit him once more. He attempted to focus, and the first thing he saw was Wes at the bottom of the hill they stood on - a lifeless mound of slate rock beneath a gray, cloudless sky - and the commando was battling two tree-thick snakes.
No
! It wasn't two snakes; it was one enormous serpent with a head at either end of its body. As he watched, Talbot saw Wes firing furiously with his M4A5 at one of the creature's heads. The second head snapped forward, snatching his weapon, crushing it like a twig.
"The Amphisbaena!" hissed Heracles. "I must help him." So saying, Heracles drew his huge golden sword, crackling with inhuman power, and charged down the hill. But Talbot knew he would be too late. The beast, as long as a bus, had now encircled Wes, shielding him from Talbot's view. Without a weapon, even Wes's skills would be useless.
Suddenly the Amphisbaena screeched, both in pain as well as what sounded like surprise. Heracles was only halfway down the hill, and Talbot saw the beast's thick, serpentine body suddenly part in the middle - sliced through. The two halves of the creature flipped, each head letting forth a hideous death rattle before both dropped to the slate, shuddered, and died.
And then Talbot saw him, like a still point in the midst of a maelstrom. Within the carnage of the two-headed beast stood Wes, his pack lying on the ground beside him. In his hands was the sword of Chiron, humming with power and unstained by the green blood of the beast it had just slain. For a moment, Talbot's breath caught in his throat, and he wondered once more at the power of the SAS commando. Not merely physical power, more like the power over life and death. Some people were skilled musicians; Talbot suspected Wes had a talent for death.
Heracles strode down the rest of the hill, staring at the two halves of the Amphisbaena, nodding his approval, and Talbot was struck at the similarity between the two warriors. Though Heracles was almost a full foot taller than Wes, and much more thickly muscled, there was a certain cocksure assurance both men carried. Each bore himself proudly, as though challenging the world, and both seemed balanced at all times on the balls of their feet, like dancers.
Something slammed into Talbot's back, and all breath instantly shot out of him. Falling heavily to the ground, he rolled, swiftly getting his feet beneath him, rising to face his attacker. Snarling before him was a beast about twice as large as a big dog, but otherwise very similar to one. The hind legs were a bit lower, like those of a hyena, and a huge, solid plate of what appeared to be bone replaced its teeth, but otherwise it was a mongrel.
The creature opened its mouth. "Help me! Help me!"
Talbot stepped back in shock at the voice emitting from the creature's mouth, but soon heard answering calls of, "Help me! Help me!" approaching. It wasn't speech so much as a sound made by the creatures. They somehow had the ability to mimic human voices. It was most disconcerting.
But Talbot didn't have time to ponder the situation. Within moments, a pack of the creatures had surrounded him, and Talbot spun around, lashing out as one, and then another would try to rush in at him from behind, cowering again as he turned on them. The creatures seemed very skittish and unwilling to attack him outright.
Footsteps rustled on the rough shale of the hillside, but Talbot feared turning, knowing the beasts would attack his back. Wes and Heracles suddenly appeared among the creatures, their golden swords flashing through flesh which appeared thicker than the toughest leather. Within seconds three of the animals were dead and the rest had fled.
"Thanks," gasped Talbot, still trying to gather his breath.
Heracles gazed down on the deceased beasts. "They're called leucrota - much like the wolves of your world. They must be hungry to attack a person."
"They're attracted to me, coming for me wherever we go."
Heracles stared at him. "I have heard of this connection between the denizens of Tartarus and the holders of the Elder-tongue. This will make things more difficult." Looking around, he gestured widely. "Welcome to Hades."
The vista before them, viewed from atop the hill, was nothing short of underwhelming. The entire land appeared dead. Not a tree, not a blade of grass. Nothing of color for as far as the eye could see. Talbot glanced at his hands and his companions to make sure there was nothing wrong with his eyesight, for it seemed as though everything he gazed upon was struck in monochrome, like an old movie, but their flesh remained vibrant and untainted. He stared back out at the vista.
Hades was indeed the land of the dead.
"We must go beyond those peaks," said Heracles, gesturing toward mountains upon the far horizon. "We can eat nothing from this world, nor drink from its waters. Everything in this place will kill you."
"Lucky I brought my supplies then," said Wes, indicating his pack still lying at the bottom of the hill. "And you thought I was an idiot for lugging it all this way."
Talbot said nothing, knowing the words were not really intended the way they sounded. He'd forgotten about the provisions in Wes's bag, in fact he hadn't even thought about the need for supplies. They made their way down to where the backpack-style combat bag still lay on the ground, and Wes opened it to reveal an assortment of brown, vacuum-sealed bags.