The Source (42 page)

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Authors: Brian Lumley

BOOK: The Source
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“Some time later Lardis and his Travellers found me, and now I've told you everything …”
 
In a little while Jazz said. “There are a couple of other things I'd intended asking you. One of them was about that warrior creature which caused all the destruction at Perchorsk. Well, you've answered that—it was Lesk's creature—but there are other things. The great bat, the wolf, the thing in the tank.”
Zek shrugged. “Maybe the bat and wolf got through accidentally. Blinded by the light, the bat flew into the sphere. Like us, it was guided one way through the Gate. Similarly the wolf, which was old, nearly blind. As for the thing in the tank: it was a vampire. As coincidence would have it, it numbered among its ancestors both a wolf and a bat. In its metamorphic state,
it was likely to take on characteristics of both. The slug characteristics are typical of its swamp origin. Maybe it entered the gate looking for prey. I don't know …”
Jazz blinked tired eyes, said: “Too deep for me. I begin to half understand, but then I bog down. I suppose I'm just weary. One last thing. What about the others from Perchorsk, the men who came through before you?”
“I wasn't told about them,” she grimaced. “Khuv—the lying dog—didn't mention them! But I did learn about them from Karen. Belath took the first of them; mutated, he's now one of Belath's warriors. The other was a man called Kopeler. I used to know him.”
“Ernst Kopeler, yes,” Jazz said. “An esper.”
Zek nodded. “He could read the future. When he came through the gate Shaithis's familiar bats saw him. Shaithis took him, but before he could make use of him Kopeler shot himself dead. If I'd been able to read the future, maybe I'd have done the same.”
Jazz nodded his agreement, said, “It's time we got on down. I've still got a spot of weapon-training to do. And after that … I want you very much. That's assuming I can still manage it, of course.” He grinned—but only for a moment.
Wolf, who had been still and silent for some time, began to growl low and throatily. His ears twitched nervously, went flat to his head.
“What—?” Zek stiffened, looked startled; and for the first time Jazz noticed how quiet it had gone, and the thickness of the mist where it rolled down from the mountains. Zek clutched at him, her eyes suddenly flown wide.
“What is it?” he husked.
“Jazz,” she whispered. “Oh, Jazz!” She half-closed her eyes, put a slim hand to her forehead. “Thoughts …” she said.
“Whose thoughts?” Gooseflesh rose on his spine, his forearms.
“Theirs!”
Panicked shouts came echoing up to them; shockingly, an explosion tore the night; one of Jazz's grenades, left with Lardis. A weird, bestial roaring commenced: a primal sound. “What the hell—?” Jazz lifted Zek down from their niche in the rock, turned from her to begin making the descent.
“No, Jazz!” she cried, then clapped a hand to her mouth. And: “Oh, be
quiet!”
she whispered. More explosions followed, hideous screaming, then shouting in blunt, commanding tones. Following which all was a tumult of sounds—battle sounds, and desperate!
“They were waiting for us!” Zek hissed. “Shaithis, his lieutenants, a warrior, hidden away in the deepest recesses of the rock. And there are other warriors out here!”
Something huge launched itself from a position higher than their own. It throbbed in the thin mist that curled over the treetops, a dark shape speeding down the sky, trailing appendages which tore through the higher branches of the trees almost directly overhead. It, too, began to roar.
Jazz took his SMG from behind his back, automatically loaded up. “We have to help,” he said. “No, I have to help. You stay here.”
“Don't you understand?” she clutched at him, stopping him before he could get started. “It's all over! You can't help. That was a warrior, one of several. If you had a tank and crew you
still
couldn't help!”
As she spoke there came a last, booming explosion and dull orange fire blazed momentarily through the screen of trees and mist. There sounded a fresh bout of screaming: human screaming, nerve-shattering, from many terrified throats. Then through a barrage of lesser shouts and yelps, Shaithis's booming voice, reaching up through drifting cordite-stink and mist:
“Find them! Find Lardis and the hell-landers! As for the rest: destroy them all! But don't let the warriors glut
themselves. I have been hurt and now I take my vengeance. Now it is my turn to inflict pain! Now find the ones I want, and bring them to me!”
“So much for Lardis's defences,” Jazz groaned.
“He was ambushed,” Zek sobbed. “His people didn't stand a chance. Come on, we have to get out of here.”
Torn two ways, Jazz ground his teeth, turned his head this way and that. “Please, Jazz!” Zek dragged at him. “We have to save our own lives—if we can.”
They couldn't go down, so they started up. But—
Before they could take more than two paces there came a hoarse panting from below, a scrabbling amidst the shrubbery. White-faced, Jazz and Zek shrank back into the shadow of the rock, stared at each other. A figure came reeling up through the trees, clawing at the base of the rock, thrusting itself from bole to bole. In Zek's ear, Jazz whispered: “A Traveller?”
Her face strained in concentration. The panting was louder, frightened, almost a sobbing. Jazz thought:
it has to be a Traveller.
He let the stumbling figure come closer, reached out from cover and grabbed him. At the same time he heard Zek's hiss of warning:
“No, Jazz! It's—”
Karl Vyotsky!
Vyotsky, seizing his one chance to make a break for it—or perhaps simply fleeing from the horror of what was happening below.
The two men recognized each other in the same moment. Their eyes bulged. Vyotsky's mouth flew open in a gasp of complete astonishment; he started to bring up his gun, drew breath for a mighty shout—which went unuttered. Jazz clubbed him in the throat with the butt of his SMG, tried to kick him and missed, slammed a blow to his face. Vyotsky's head rocked on his shoulders; he went crashing backwards, off balance, probably unconscious into brambles and mist-damp shrubbery. The ground mist rolled over him as he went sliding out of sight.
Jazz and Zek listened with bated breath, their hearts pounding. They heard only the hoarse, unending screams from below, a gigantic snuffling and bellowing, loud crunching sounds. And in another moment they started in again to climb.
They forced aching muscles to the limits of effort, drew level with the dome of the rock and climbed above it, ran waist deep through clinging mist and tearing undergrowth where the ground levelled out a little. Then they were climbing again, still not daring to pant too loudly, hearts and lungs straining as they forced weary legs to pump and tired arms to drag them through the foliage. But the sounds from below were gradually fading, and trees and mist both were thinning out.
“A vampire mist,” Zek gasped. “They cause it to happen. Don't ask me how. I should have known, should have heard them in my head. But they knew about me and were shielding themselves. Wolf knew, I think. Oh!—where is he?”
She needn't have worried; the animal hounded her heels like a faithful dog. “Save your breath,” Jazz growled. “Climb!”
“But I might have heard them, might have given a warning if I wasn't so tired. And if—”
“If your mind hadn't been on other things? You're only human, Zek. Don't blame yourself. Or if you must blame someone, blame me.” Jazz dragged her up onto a shale-covered ledge in a slippery rock-face. They had come through the tree-line to the cliffs, the feet of the very mountains themselves. Clear of the mist, they could see a fading orange glow far to the south. It was the sun, and it was down. Sundown, and nowhere was safe now. But at least in the clean light of the stars they could see where they were going.
The ledge was wide but sloped outwards a little; it ran crookedly, steeply upwards. Echoing cries still rang from far below where the mist boiled as before; fewer
screams now, mainly the signal calls of monstrous searchers and the answers of their fellows. Then—
Zek gave a massive start, drew air in a plainly audible gasp of terror. “Vyotsky—he's coming!” she said. “He's following us—and Shaithis himself is not far behind him!”
“Keep still!” Jazz grabbed her.
“Shh!”
They listened, watched. Down below at the edge of the tree-line, the mist parted and Vyotsky came into view. He looked left and right but not up, started toward the base of the cliffs. Perhaps he thought they'd skirted the cliffs, and maybe they should have. But at least on the ledge no one was going to surprise them.
Jazz aimed his SMG, scowled and lowered it. “Can't be sure of hitting him,” he whispered. “These things are for close-quarter fighting—street fighting. Also, the shot would be heard.”
Again the mists parted and the awesome cloaked figure of Shaithis flowed out of them. He looked neither left nor right but inclined his head to stare directly at the fugitives. His eyes glowed like small fires under the stars.
“There they are!” the vampire Lord shouted, pointed. “On the ledge, under the cliff. Get after them, Karl. And if you'd be my man, don't let me down …”
As Shaithis glided forward, Vyotsky passed out of sight into the angles of the cliff face. Jazz and Zek heard shale sliding, Vyotsky's surprised yelp and his cursing. He was on the ledge and had discovered how slippery it was.
“Move!” said Jazz. “Quick—climb! And pray this ledge goes somewhere. Anywhere!” But if Zek did pray, then her prayers weren't answered.
Where the cliff was notched and bent back sharply on itself, the ledge narrowed to an uneven eighteen inches. In the “V” of the notch a chimney of rock had weathered free, leaning outward over dizzy heights. Behind the chimney scree had gathered, forming the floor of a
cave. The stars gleamed down on the ledge, but in the deeps of the cave all was inky blackness.
Shaithis, too, was on the ledge now; his commands came echoing: “Karl, I want them alive. The woman for what she may be able to do for me, the man for what he has already done to me.”
Edging along the ledge toward the chimney and the cave behind it, Jazz asked Zek: “Why hasn't Shaithis called up more help?”
“Probably because he's sure he doesn't need it,” she groaned. Even as she spoke a knob of rock crumbled underfoot where she stepped, causing her feet to slip. Her legs and lower body shot sideways, out over empty space. Jazz let his weapon swing from its sling, grabbed Zek's flying hand. He dropped to one knee, raked the cliff with his free hand to find a hold. His fingers contacted, grasped a tough root in the instant before the girl's weight fell on him.
Zek was dangling now, one elbow hooked over the rim of the ledge, the rest of her kicking and swinging. Only Jazz's grip on her offered any stability at all. “Oh, God!” she sobbed. “Oh, my God!”
“Drag yourself up,” Jazz groaned through gritted teeth. “Try not to put too much leverage on me. Use your elbows. Squirm, for Christ's sake!” She did as he said, came slithering up onto the ledge in front of him. He grabbed her belt, hauled her unceremoniously against the face of the cliff. “Now go on all fours,” he said. “Don't try to stand up or you'll be over again. If we can just make that chimney …”
Oh, and then what?
But he refused to think about that.
Finally Zek crawled onto the scree beneath the overhang, collapsed face-down there and spread-eagled herself, dug her fingers deep into loose rock fragments and hung on. Jazz stopped, caught her under the arm and drew her upright. “We have to get under cover,” he said, “otherwise—”
Ch-
ching
! came that unmistakable sound from behind them.
Jazz half turned. Vyotsky had appeared round the sharp corner. His cruel lips drew back from his teeth as he lined-up his SMG on the pair he pursued. But from behind him:
“Alive,
Karl, do you hear?” Shaithis's voice warned, that much closer now. Vyotsky's eyes went wide with fear. He glanced back. Jazz took the opportunity to swing his own weapon in Vyotsky's direction, squeezed the trigger. To hell with keeping quiet!
The gun chattered, and whining bullets chewed at the cliff like metal wasps, hurling chippings in Vyotsky's face. Instinctively he fired back, and a lucky round snatched Jazz's gun from his hands, sent it spinning out over the abyss. As the sling was yanked from his shoulder, only the chimney of rock stopped him from being drawn after it.
Zek clutched at Jazz and they clung together. And—
“Step over here,” said a cool, low voice from the shadows.
A figure was there, in the cave under the overhang, tall, slim, cloaked. Male, he wore an impassive golden mask over his face. Starlight gleamed on the gold. Jazz was struck with the thought that he looked like the Phantom of the Opera! “Who—?” he gasped.

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