The tree line remained distant, as if it were receding as quickly as they could run toward it. Apart from the squawking of the vultures wheeling ominously overhead and the groans of the zombies, the only sounds came from those faraway trees. Wood split and palms toppled noisily. If anyone in the hidden logging camp had heard Artus’s calls for help, they’d chosen not to answer. Not that Lugg blamed them. If he didn’t like the explorer so well, he’d wish himself well out of this jam, too. The worst part about it was the sun. Lugg hated being caught outside during the day more than anything.
“Come on, then,” the wombat said, squinting fiercely. “We’d best be off again.”
“Right,” Artus mumbled. He tried to push himself up, but his arms wobbled and he collapsed back to the ground like a felled oak.
“This is worse than watching after Byrt,” Lugg said truculently. “Like bloody children, the both of you.” He nudged Artus with his snout, but got only a grunt for a reply. Narrowing his eyes, he bared his teeth to nip the explorer into action.
Fortunately for Artus, he chose that moment to roll over. “Are they close?”
“Too close for my ’appiness,” the wombat grumbled.
With a grunt, the explorer pushed himself to his knees. The zombies had closed the distance to their prey by half, but that still left a comfortable enough lead for Artus and Lugg. They started off again toward the tree line, the wombat trundling at a steady pace, the human staggering like he was undead himself.
Artus pulled his hood over his face. The breeze blowing across the plain was hot and smelled of smoke and decay. “How long can you keep up this pace, Lugg?”
“As long as it takes before I’m off the menu for that lot what’s following us.” The wombat glanced back at his companion. “As long as it takes for us to get back to rescue Byrt.”
“We’ll get back to Mezro in time to save him,” Artus said sincerely. They had regained their earlier pace, loping forward at a good clip. “Byrt’s safe. I—”
The promise was lost on the breeze as Artus sank to his waist in a pool of loose ash and thick, gummy water. He thrashed about for a moment, but that only mired him more soundly. Stand still, his mind cried, though his limbs threatened to lash out frantically. The quicksand rose over his stomach.
Lugg skidded to a halt, still on solid ground. “Grab ’old,” he said. The wombat bowed his head and edged toward the explorer.
Artus warned him to stay back. The ash now covered half his chest. Its stench was overpowering, and the explorer had to fight to keep from gagging. Where the soot had splashed over his wounded shoulder, it burned like molten metal.
“I won’t let you sink like a scuttled boat,” Lugg said. He narrowed his beady eyes. “You won’t get out of rescuing Byrt that easy.”
Slowly Artus shook his head. “You need to have solid footing,” he said as calmly as he could. With slow, deliberate movements, he pulled an extra bowstring from his pocket then reached toward his boot for his dagger. That got him a mouthful of bitter ash, but he managed not to drive himself down too much deeper. As quickly as he dared, he tied the string to the dagger and tossed the blade toward Lugg. “Take hold of this with your teeth.”
The wombat did as told, grabbing the dagger in his mouth. When Artus wrapped the sturdy cord around his hand, Lugg began to back slowly away from the sinkhole.
“That’s it,” the explorer murmured, letting himself be dragged toward solid ground. “Just a little farther….”
Artus felt his foot bump against something solid—the ground, he hoped fervently. The ash was up to his neck, but it seemed at that instant it would get no higher. Then something grabbed the hood of his tunic. Artus thought a branch below the mire’s surface had snagged him, but as Lugg pulled him forward and the ash receded from his shoulders, he saw it was a skeletal hand, the bones and cartilage stained gray by the filthy water. He wanted to reach around to free himself from the ghastly thing, but he didn’t dare let go of the bowstring.
“Pull, Lugg!”
The wombat’s vitriolic reply was thankfully muffled by the dagger and his clenched teeth.
A second hand reached up from the muck, dripping fetid water. It reached around and tried to get a hold on Artus’s face. Bony fingers pressed into his mouth and nose and eyes. Suppressing a scream, Artus shook his head violently. The prodding hand slipped away, four thin scratches marking its wake. Finally it settled for a viselike purchase on the explorer’s shoulder.
At last, Artus’s feet found solid ground. He slipped and scrambled out of the quicksand, releasing the bowstring as he went. The skeleton clung to the explorer’s back like a desperate child, arms on his neck and shoulder, legs wrapped around his waist. It was little more than bones and tendons, with cracked ribs and twisted feet. The skeleton’s lower jaw was gone—a good thing for Artus, since the undead creature was trying frantically to bite him, rotten teeth scraping over his neck and back.
With the sudden release of tension on the line, Lugg lost the dagger and tumbled backward, snout-over-tail. He landed on his wounded side. “I wish I’d never left the island,” the wombat said mournfully.
When Lugg righted himself, he saw Artus grappling with the skeleton. The explorer had found his knife and was using the handle like a cudgel. He brought the blunted end of the weapon down on the creature’s skull, the blow sending a spider web of cracks through the gray bone. “Enough!” Artus shouted. “Enough!”
With its sharp, bony fingers, the skeleton clawed at Artus, tearing bloody ribbons from the backs of his hands. But the pain did not penetrate the fury clouding the explorer’s mind. Again and again Artus struck, crushing the weird life from the bones. Like a monstrous crab, the skeleton tried to scrabble backward into the mire, but Artus shattered its arm and pinned its legs in place with his weight. Another blow caved in its skull, and the skeleton clattered lifeless to the ground.
As Artus wiped the stinking water and ash from his face, the pack of zombies came toward him with slow, deliberate steps. He flipped the dagger around in his hand. Holding the blade out like the most mighty of enchanted swords, he stood. “Where is your master?” he shouted.
The decaying creatures shambled forward, moaning and clutching the air before them. They were close enough for Artus to see the glaze of starvation in their eyes. Still he did not move.
“We’d better get running,” Lugg said, hiding behind Artus’s grime-covered boots.
The explorer shook his head and reached into his pocket. The third of T’fima’s enchanted diamond slivers slid reassuringly into his palm. Carefully he raised the gem, ready to transform it into a lightning bolt. “No more running, Lugg.” He turned back to the zombies. “Where is your master?” Artus shouted. “Where is Ras Nsi?”
It was as if an invisible wall had suddenly been thrown up before the zombies; they stopped in midstride, throwing back their heads to wail in agony. The deafening, unearthly chorus rang out over the blasted plain. Then the zombies turned their wide eyes back to Artus and started forward again.
The explorer opened his mouth to shout the name again, but a gentle hand on his shoulder shocked the air from his lungs. “There is no need to call me, Master Cimber,” said a cool, soothing voice.
His reflexes had been honed by years of facing untold dangers and his nerves were frayed raw by the afternoon’s confrontations with the walking corpses. Without thinking, Artus slashed at the man behind him. The move was executed expertly, with the skill of a Shou ninja, and the enchanted dagger ran a razor-straight course across Ras Nsi’s throat. The knife had barely left its target before Artus fell back, rolling to a defensive crouch a sword’s length away. He brandished the blade before him in one hand, the diamond sliver in the other.