Tucking the rocks into the various cargo pockets in his pants, he kept one in his hand, “Good idea, probably should get a mount for these so we don’t have to keep our hands full. You know…when we have a bunch of downtime, and needles and thread, and probably a bunch of other stuff we don’t have.” Katie laughed as Drew put the final light in another pocket.
Mitch just shook his head as he picked up this room’s fire axe. “Let’s do this,” Mitch said, nodding towards the door.
Drew stood a few steps away casting both his shield buffs, causing three small swords to begin rotating around him. He then took a ready position, both hands pointed towards the door, motioning for Mitch to open it. Juan stood to the other side of him, both of them ready to throw their spells through the door if there was anything waiting on the other side. “Don’t forget to look up,” Drew cautioned, but nothing seemed to be lurking in their little alcove. The knight moved through the door, instead of the clank of metal on metal, the knight’s movements were only distinguishable by the heavy footsteps.
Again, nothing attacked the knight, so Mitch followed him out. Drew was a few feet behind him, and Katie behind him, both hands holding lights above her head.
As Drew glanced around the atrium, he caught a flash of movement in the distance. He immediately reached into his pocket, grabbing a light rock and throwing it down the hallway. It bounced several times before coming to a stop 80 feet away, a circle of light in the darkness. “Possible contact,” he whispered to the others. His hands held in front of him ready to cast spells. “It’s far enough…let’s try this.” The atrium was long, 300 feet from end to end, but only about 80 side to side, with 14-foot ceilings. He put his hands together and began performing seals. “Crap, it’s a two-handed cast.” The spell also wasn’t instant but took about five seconds to perform the rather tricky finger movements.
When it was over, the boom of lightning echoing down the hallway was nearly deafening. The wind blew debris around too fast to see. The glowrock itself was caught up in its turbine-like effects, sending chaotic white light echoing around the storm while lightning flickered an angry purple-white, reflecting off ice chunks and water droplets. Rain lashed the ground and solid chunks of ice smashed against the concrete, breaking off small rocks with their impact that in turn would fly around in the storm, obliterating themselves to pieces against the walls, floor, and ceiling. The panels of the dropped ceiling long since stripped away, exposing pipes and cabling.
The silence that followed the thirty-second-long ice storm was as deafening as that initial boom had been. The three stared wide-eyed down the hallway. Katie finally blurted out, “Ho. Ly. Shiiit.” The individual syllables stretched out in amazement.
“Please tell me that was your biggest gun,” Mitch whispered into the silence.
“Second or, uh, or third probably,” Drew said, staring at the remnants of the atrium as dumbstruck as the others.
“Well, that’s bullshit. I get the ability to make a lightning fist, and you get Zeus’ fucking lightning bolt.” Mitch looked around, “Well, I think that probably scared away whatever it was that you saw. Let’s get some food.”
They all turned away and headed in the other direction. Another door received the same treatment as the one outside the safe room. They entered the stairwell on the third floor, the blood trail leading down, “Down or up first?” Drew asked, his eyes focused on the chasm in the middle, afraid of whatever that furry beast was reappearing.
“Up, I’m starving,” Mitch said with a grunt.
“Hold up, let’s leave a glowrock here, I’m pretty sure I can cast it again.” She uttered a few short words and another glowrock replaced the one she had dropped before casting the spell. “Alright, let’s go.”
They followed the blood trail up the stairs, “I can’t believe you did this in the dark,” Katie whispered to Drew.
Drew snorted, “Wasn’t completely dark; I had the mop. Besides, what else was I going to do?”
He couldn’t see it, but Katie looked at him and shook her head, incredulity written on her features.
The group reached the top without incident. The cart was still there, untouched. Mitch ran over to it and grabbed a bag of chips; they seemed to disappear into his mouth without touching his hands.
Drew looked around, it didn’t seem like anything had been here. It was weird to think that he had only left the cart here a few hours ago. So much had happened since then.
Katie was eyeing the restroom though, “I don’t suppose you cleared the ladies’ room too?” She asked Drew. He shook his head.
“No, but give me a minute and I can. Wait, what were you guys using in the…? Never mind, I don’t want to know.” Drew nodded and walked towards the door.
“It wasn’t pleasant. I made some walls for privacy,” Katie responded.
“We can take turns watching,” Drew said, opening the door, while tossing in a glowrock. The light showed the small room to be empty. Clearing the bathroom took another few seconds and he left, nodding to Katie, “Ladies first. Not that Mitch is going to care.” The tank was on his third bag of chips, a soda in one hand and an opened bag of peanuts in front of him. “Easy big guy. We gotta bring some back for the Ensign and Juan.”
Mitch nodded but didn’t slow down on the stuff he had already opened. Drew watched the hole, worried about the furry beast. They rotated through using the facilities, Drew and Katie taking the chance to eat some food while they waited. Then Katie and Mitch carried the cart down the flight of stairs, both insisting that they wanted Drew’s hands-free to cast when he offered to take Katie’s spot.
They left the extra axe and cart on the third-floor landing. Katie threw up some walls around it to prevent any scavengers, explaining that she could dissolve any conjured wall at will and that the spell had a really short cooldown.
They got to the queen’s room and both stopped in their tracks. In the much better lighting of the glowrocks, the room was even more grim. Red blood-both from whatever had been dragged here and Drew’s fight with the spider-mixed and blue ichor covered the entire floor. The body of the queen herself was easily 7 feet long and three feet tall.
“You killed that thing alone?” Mitch asked, a hint of awe in his voice.
Drew nodded his head once, “Mitch, watch the stairs, I don’t want to get ambushed again.” He and Katie advanced on the spider queen, doing a visual inspection. Drew saw something shiny on the ground and bent down to pick it up, “Bullet casings,” he said, holding them for Katie to see. “Must have been a guard…looks like he got off a few hits on the queen before he died. He looked the corpse over again, the bullet holes now obvious. “She must have already been injured. Don’t see a body though.”
“Me either…maybe she ate it?” Drew glanced at the queen’s mouth, which was too small to fit a whole human being into it.
“I don’t think she could have, not that quickly. Spiders normally web and drain their prey, not consume it whole.” He looked around at the room that was free of webbing. “This is weird, no webbing anywhere near here, the little ones had lots of it.” He kicked some of the clutter on the floor away and then saw the black matte shape of a SIG Sauer P229 pistol. He picked it up, checking the chamber and then sliding the magazine. “Empty,” he spoke, showing the gun to Katie. He slid the magazine back into the gun before handing it to her. She shook her head.
“I don’t think we’re gonna get any answers here. We should destroy the eggs and go back.”
“No, I’d like to try and harvest her forelegs. They were sharp, and we could use some more weapons. Maybe make them into spears; that’s probably the easiest thing to use,” Drew said, as he walked around to the front of the queen. Both legs seemed to be in good shape. “Hey Mitch, come use the axe on the queen’s front legs. I’ll guard the rear.”