“Mathers!” Atkins called at intervals, hoping for a reply. “Mathers!” The place was a labyrinth. Even supposing they heard him, they might never find him.
Chandar wandered alongside, ostensibly as a guide, but scent-blind as it was, it seemed just as lost and disorientated as the men and just as unwilling to be there. Atkins regarded the chatt with repugnance. Its featureless ivory white face plate and rasping monotone voice revealed nothing of its own feelings. It toyed with the tasselled knots of its shoulder throw, its stunted middle limbs clicking together lightly. Nerves? Impatience? Who knew? Atkins pressed on, deliberately trying to ignore it. He hated the fact that this creature was somehow drawn to him, that this Kurda thing had somehow bound them together in its eyes. Well, not this soldier, no sir. He wasn’t beholden to this creature.
The incline levelled out and they came upon a small rubble-strewn concourse that once might have been a major thoroughfare. Various passages and chambers ran off it. Haphazard shafts of sunlight punctured the gloom from collapsed roof sections above, the holes draped lazily with questing vines and roots.
Atkins spotted a doorway, ornately inscribed with chatt hieroglyphs round the entrance. He’d seen one like it in Khungarr.
“The chambers of their Anointed Ones,” Chandar said, making its deferential gesture, touching the tips of its long fingers to its forehead and thorax.
It was their temple. He nodded to Gutsy, who ordered the section to cover the other entrances to the concourse. Gazette, Pot Shot and Prof took up positions using what rubble there was as cover. They didn’t want to be caught out by whatever haunted this place.
“Hold this position, Gutsy. I’ll check this out. Porgy, Chalky, Mercy, with me. The rest of you stay here. Napoo, stay out here with Miss Abbott.”
Atkins and Porgy entered first, Chalky just behind, holding the torch high above his head. The great domed chamber was twenty yards across, but in comparison to the great one at Khungarr, this was a country chapel. Several openings led off the main chamber and Porgy and Chalky covered them with their rifles as Atkins and Mercy slowly circled the room, checking each of them in turn.
The first went several yards before a roof fall blocked it. The second curved round the outer wall of the chamber, at a steep incline, before debris blocked it, too.
“Well, Mathers didn’t come this way,” said Mercy.
They retraced their steps back down to the sacred chamber. Chalky held up his torch. Above, on the domed ceiling, Atkins caught sight of a broken pattern of lines and dots, the remains of a painted fresco, the rest of which had crumbled from the ceiling. From the patches left, it looked like a night-time sky marked with constellations.
“The sky web of GarSuleth,” hissed Chandar. The chatt grabbed Atkins’ arm and pulled him back. Chunks of the ceiling had fallen down. They lay on the floor under a sifting of dust that crunched under his feet. “Watch where you walk,” it chattered, after its asthmatic fashion. “The representation of the sky web is still sacred, whether on the ceiling or in pieces on the floor. Stepping on it is blasphemy.”
Around the walls of the circular chamber, there were niches that looked as if they might have held statues. Each was empty but for hieroglyphs that covered the surfaces in whorls and spirals, some separate, some interlinked.
The chatt hobbled eagerly over to the alcoves, avoiding the fallen chunks of fresco. Stepping into one and facing the wall, its long fingers traced the inscriptions with light, rapid touches, before moving to the next.
“Well?” asked Atkins with impatience.
“If it’s anything like our trenches it’ll be rude jibes about the last mob,” observed Porgy.
“The niches contain sacred texts for contemplation and prayer. The glyphs on the wall between seem to be a history of this colony. They called themselves the Nazarrii. This One was aware of such splinter colonies, but never thought to see one. They did not act in Kurda. If a false queen and her retinue escaped, all mention of them would be expunged from the colony’s records. It would be as if they had never existed. They were outcast. Even among Khungarr’s aromatic annals there were but the vaguest references to such dishonourable incidents and then only in far gone spira.”
“He’s actually happy about this,” Gutsy commented.
“Well, he’s about the only bleedin’ one,” said Mercy. “The place fair gives me the willies, it does.”
It was true. The incessant piping tone from the air vents soon began to grate on their nerves, like the whistling of whizz bangs.
Chandar moved to a section of wall between niches. “At first, all went well, but the Queen fell prey to a grave sickness. Large numbers of eggs were laid to become workers but they were born malformed.” It paused and clicked its mandibles. “Such a sickness also affects the Queens of Khungarr.”
“Tell me about it. We saw some of those things in the Khungarr nursery. Ugly buggers. Haunted my dreams for bloody weeks, those things did,” said Mercy, with an affected shudder.
“This One thought Khungarr alone in suffering such a curse,” hissed Chandar, moving to the next section. “The Nazarrii began to fail within the first few generations. There were not enough healthy workers hatched to sustain the colony’s growth and expansion.”
“So the place was doomed?”
“Without workers, it could not succeed.”
“I thought your mob used urmen slaves.”
“It is true. GarSuleth provided.”
“Well, that’s one way of looking at it,” said Porgy.
“But it seemed that it was GarSuleth’s will that this colony fail.” Chandar bowed his head towards the wall, and its antennae stumps waved in a wistful fashion. “Here, the script ends. The colony was failing, that is beyond doubt. Even the Nazarrii recognised the fact.” It turned to face Atkins. “But something else happened here.”
“What?” asked Atkins uneasily.
“The glyphs do not say. Some catastrophe befell the edifice, causing them to abandon the place.”
“Or be killed.”
“Perhaps the coming of the evil spirit that now dwells here?” Chalky offered.
“Perhaps, yes. There may be so much more here, but so much more information that is lost to this One.” Chandar lifted a finger to touch its antennae stumps. “Why would any Ones abandon their edifice? This One does not know. This One cannot read the scent text.”
“I can,” said a voice from the gloom.
THE MEN OF the section wheeled round, their rifles raised and bolts ratcheted, training their weapons on the opening even as the clipped voice reverberated around the chamber.
Mathers stepped from the shadows, with his crew behind him grinning like jackals.
“Lower your weapons,” said Atkins, with a scowl.
“I can read your scent texts,” repeated Mathers.
“You, sir?” asked Atkins, barely trying to suppress his sarcasm.
“Yes, Corporal. I am open to so many things, now.” He gestured expansively at the darkened vault above them. “I see things. The air here is full of them. My senses are flooded.”
“Well, he’s flooded with something all right,” muttered one of the Fusiliers. “I wouldn’t bloody trust him if I were you.”
Mathers beckoned. “Perkins will agree with me, won’t you, Perkins?”
Alfie Perkins stepped unsteadily out of the gloom, held upright by the big boxer, Tanner, and Atkins saw his eyes; black like oil slicks.
Atkins shook his head. “Not, you, too?” He turned to Mathers. “What have you done?”
The bantam driver sneered. “Oh, he’s with us, now, good an’ proper.”
Reggie smiled apologetically. “Well, he always was. He just didn’t know it. Our own doubting Thomas, if you will, until the Sub granted him his own personal Pentecost.”