Lindon and Orthos lay on the stone, panting and groaning. Painfully, Lindon inched his neck over to the side to see the fish he’d grabbed.
Half of it was gone. He held a chunk of silver-scaled meat on the end of a wiry tail.
He spoke around his cracked ribs. “We need a new plan,” he said.
Ekeri stood watching the stone, tapping her claws together and thinking.
There had been a construct in that gem yesterday. Today, it had escaped its vessel and opened the door independently. Meaning it could operate on instructions and had a measure of control over Ghostwater.
Even more interesting, they had evidently known she was here. The Lowgold had come out wrapped in a veil, and hadn’t retreated at the sight of her shelter or shown any surprise at her attack.
Was the construct spying on her? Or could they send their spiritual perception out from the tunnels, even though she couldn’t send hers in?
Most importantly of all, they didn’t have another way out of the tunnel. Otherwise they would never have fought in and out of this entrance, knowing she was here.
Together, this convinced her that she was right. That construct was the key to Ghostwater—if she could take it for herself, it would lead her to greater treasure than anyone else. She might leave this world stronger than Akura Harmony.
And she could have it. The black dragon-spawn was dying, and the Lowgold wasn’t worth mentioning. They had risked her wrath for the sake of food, which meant they had no provisions in there.
So they would be coming out of this door. Soon. And she was in no hurry.
Lindon didn’t sleep. Instead, he drank from the Dream Well.
The world sharpened, which in turn drew his attention to his robust catalogue of aches and wounds. He was covered in cuts and burns, his madra channels still gave him sharp pain, and his ribs were definitely cracked. He’d even coughed up blood, and his Bloodforged Iron body was concentrating his madra on healing internal injuries in his chest and stomach.
“Oooh, that looks painful,” Dross said, from back in his seat in the jewel. “I’m sure you’re looking for a way to restore your spirit, eh? Of course you are, every sacred artist is. Lucky for you, I have the perfect solution!”
Every time he left his vessel, he lost a little essence, but thanks to what he’d taken from the other information constructs in the storage room, he shouldn’t be in any immediate danger.
“There is a Spirit Well,” the construct continued. “Oh, it’s beautifuclass="underline" blue as a summer sky. So I’m told. I’ve never seen it myself, and for that matter, I’ve never seen the sky either. Or summer. Anyway, it promotes growth in the soul, stimulating recovery and increasing madra density. That was another reward for the workers: a glass or two could take a Highgold to the brink of advancement. Quite a coveted bonus, I can tell you, and I’m sure it’s been piling up just like the Dream Well. This is an opportunity not worth missing, I can assure you.”
Lindon pushed himself up to a sitting position, leaning against the wall. “Where?”
“Ah, that would be in the tablet library. It’s where the dream artists pursued their project: they thought that they could condense a type of mental madra that, when focused on the brain, increased performance.”
“It didn’t work?”
“In small doses, it worked like a charm. In less-small doses, it drove all test subjects violently insane.”
“And how do we get there?”
A brief violet light flashed, pointing straight out the door. “It’s roughly five hundred yards in that direction.”
Right through Ekeri. Of course.
In any case, if he wanted to recover, he needed to keep his strength up.
Lindon looked to his fish. He would love to start a fire—not only would he prefer to cook his fish, but he needed something to generate Blackflame aura. If he simply waited on his soul to recover madra naturally, it would take weeks to refill his core, and that would be without refining or adding to his power in all that time.
But he wasn’t sure he was capable of rising to his feet. Instead, he used his Remnant arm to peel the skin and scales away from a stretch of pale blue-white flesh. Ripping off a stretch of meat, he popped it into his mouth raw.
It exploded with flavor in his mouth, a sweet but metallic taste. It wasn’t unpleasant, but it was intense. He almost spat it out in surprise. The meat was tender, melting like butter on his tongue, and he swallowed it without having to chew.
He gasped with relief after swallowing, reaching for a flask of Dream Well water to wash it down. “That has quite a taste to it,” he said.
Orthos cracked one eye. “Bad?”
“It’s...a lot.” His right arm flopped to the ground instead of grabbing the nearest water vial. With an inward sigh, he reached out with his left arm.
When that didn’t follow his directions either, he knew something was wrong. Little Blue, who had been curled up on the floor nearby, piped a questioning note.
“Orshoth,” he mumbled, “shere’s shumfing...”
Heat crawled out from his stomach and slid through his blood. Sparks of lightning danced inside him, and his muscles started to tremble. A moment later, they began to dance.
His eyes rolled up into his head as he felt his body shake against the stone.
Poison, he realized. He’d been poisoned.
That was exactly what the Bloodforged Iron body was meant for, but he’d used up all but a fraction of his madra fighting Ekeri. He could feel it draining his spirit, but once he was dry, he’d be helpless.
“Cycle it!” Orthos demanded. “Take control!”
Cycle it? Lindon wondered. The heat from the fish wasn’t traveling through his madra channels, but through his bloodstream.
He tried anyway, forcing his lungs to inflate and focusing on the warm, crackling energy. He pushed out a breath, and the energy moved through his body a little more.
It was like trying to push a millstone uphill one inch at a time, but he stuck with it one breath at a time.
As he did, he noticed something: he wasn’t running out of madra. His Iron body should have been pulling from his spirit to heal him, but instead, it was feeding on the power from the sacred beast’s meat. Now he focused on the cycling process eagerly.
Some time later, he lay on his back, staring up at the blue lights of the ceiling, breathing slow and even. His Bloodforged Iron body had seized on the last of the fish’s energy, dispersing it through his limbs. Even his Remnant arm fed on it with relish.
Lindon sat up. His ribs were still tender, his spirit still aching, and his cores as empty as ever...but much of the pain had vanished. Not only that, but his arms and legs felt tense, and somehow lighter than usual.
“...was I poisoned?” Lindon asked.
Orthos took a huge bite out of the fish, tearing away half the remaining flesh and raising his head up so it fell down his gullet. Lindon could see the lump of meat sliding through his throat.
The huge turtle let out a breath of satisfaction a moment later, shaking himself like a wet dog. “Now that is meat fit for a dragon.” He eyed the remaining chunk of fish tail. Extending one nail, he slid off a hand-sized piece and slapped it skin-down on the ground next to Lindon. “Make that last,” he said.
Then he snapped up the rest of the tail, bones and scales crunching between his jaws.
“You know, I’ve thought of something that you might have wanted to know a few minutes ago,” Dross said, his gem flashing. “It’s not too big of a deal. Hardly worth mentioning, really. But those fish? They’re called Silverfang Carp, and they are not meant to be eaten by humans. They were raised here like cattle, you know, to feed some of the, ah, larger specimens of Ghostwater.”