They did not have to go far before they came to the end of Kruza’s tracks. A starbridge had been grown from the material around it. Some of the wall, crates, and the contents of the crates, had been used to create it. The starbridge seemed to have grown from the surrounding bits, like they'd melted down and then been stretched into the archway of a starbridge before solidifying.
Whlle the starbridge was awe inspiring to look at, it was not what drew Izine’s attention. A few hundred yards beyond, at the back of the storage room they were in, was. Large amer metal door. The walls around it had been stretched, growing towards, and becoming part of the starbridge, the amber door had not. There were what appeared to be scratch and scorch marks on the thilayer of dust that coated the door, but other than that, it was untouched.
Kruza had used the technology to make his own starbridge, and in so doing had hoped to destroy the door. It had not worked.
’So he can’t get close to the doors, and they can’t be distorted by the starbridge created,’ Izine mused. The more she learned about the strange metal, the more it intrigued her.
”What’s the name of this metal?” Sue asked XIM.
“Aurynthaxium,”XIM replied. “It’s an alloy derived from a number of rare and heavy metals that is ideal for construction on machines where corrosion and rust are a concern.”
“How is it made?” Further asked.
XIM took a few seconds before responding. “The formula is exceptionally complex and some of the steps are not in my database. It seems one of the important steps is to introduce it to sub space energy.”
”I see,” Izine said. She made a mental note to tell Shaifur about this. He’d asked HEL the same question about their metal, but HEL had responded that the information was classified and he could not access it without the highest clearence. But sub space energy and the repulsion it had on Kruza could be related.
”What’s beyond that door?” Izine asked the next presssing question.
”Nothing of importance,” XIM responded, but Izine heard a strange tone in the AI’s voice. Like with HEL, despite having a monotone mechanical voice, even XIM seemed to have specific tones to convey what were almost emotions. Perhaps that was a byproduct of the AI’s being turned on for so long.
”Peraps we should take a look,” Izine persisted. “Kruza obviously wanted to get through there. It couldn’t hurt to look.”
XIM’s answer was short and abrupt. “No.”
”We can’t leave anything to chance and…”
“I will not grant access,” XIM stated, and Izine for sure heard menace in his tone.
”Alright,” she relented. “But we need to figure out where this starbridge led. I’m not willing to just walk through and find out.”
XIM agreed that was the most prudent course of action and agreed to assist as best he could. “I wish I knew about starbridges,” Izine mused outloud, wishing not for the first time that Shaifur was there to assist. ”Too bad you don’t have a sensor probe or something.”
”That’s an interesting idea,” XIM agreed, “Perhaps I can rectify that. Searching database…” There was a pause that lasted nearly a minute until he started talking again. “Yes, there’s a crate with prototype survey droids somewhere in here. If we find them and reactivate, then perhaps Ican take remote control of them.”
It was a solid plan. “T had, can you and Petra try to locate them?”
”We can,” Tunha said, not even bothering to check with Perfa.
”I’m going to stay with Wyllu and check on her wounds,” Izine said.
Gunnar set off with a still angry Perfa following along. She could hear XIM describing what they should be looking for. Izine sat next to where they’d laid Wyllu. Her bleeding had stopped, Tunhar’s bandaging was excellent, but she was still getting weaker and Izine could see her having trouble breathing.
One by one she redressed Wyllu’s wounds. When Izine leaned in to check the coal hound scratch on Wyllu’s shoulder, the Shyanar leaned close and whispered, “He does not want us to open door.”
”I know,” Izine whispered back. “We need to find a way to get through there anyway.”
”Is he watching us now?”
Izine shrugged. Could XIM actually see them? “Hey XIM,” Izine called out. There was no response. “XIM are you there?”
Still no response. She could hear his mechanical voice off in the distance talking to Tunhar, but he did not respond. Could he only actively control the bases systems in only a small area. Perusals only the communications network was limited and he could still ‘see’ what they were all doing. There was only one way to tes that.
She got up and walked over to the metal door. If he noticed, XIM didn’t say anything to her. She kept going, reaching out and touching the door. It was slightly cool to the touch and where she traced her fingers she left streaks in the dust. Still nothing was said to her.
She decided to push her luck a little further. From her coat she pulled one of the devices for opening doors that HEL had provided on Helgadae. She found the hidden panel to the side of the door and used the device to force the door open. There was a barely audible click and then the door moved open a few millimeters.
Izine stopped to listen, expecting XIM to say something at last. When he didn’t she took that as confirmation he had a limited scope of control over the ancient facility.
She retrieved a glowlamp from her supplies. “If they come back and wonder where I’m at, say I’ve gone to take a look among the crates. See if I can find anything useful.”
Wyllu nodded her acknowledgement. Izine pushed the door open just enough to slip through. Shaking her glowlamp to activate it she pulled the door closed behind her, careful not to seal it. She raised the lamp to see where she was. There was a short hallway before her, that ended at what appeared to be a window, beyond which was nothing but complete darkness. To each side were rooms with glass windows looking into them, three on the right, two on the left.Beyond the last room was an area with a computer console and two very old chairs.
She moved forward, peering through the glass windows into each room she passed. Inside each was a nearly empty cell, only a bed at the far wall and a pile of what appeared to be fossilized bone flesh and bone. ‘A prison?’ Izine wondered.
The only difference between the cells was where the remains had fallen. One on the bed, another in a corner, another up against the glass, another in the center of the room, the last curled up underneath the bed. She could not tell what they were, but she assumed Archons, though one of the corpses seemed to have long claws on what was left of its hands.
The computer console was no help. It was long dead, the components in the terminal having been ripped out, likely when the facility was abandoned. No hope of restoring it to working condition. She brushed against one chair and it crumbled into a pile of dust. No one had been here in a long time.
She looked at the last window which showed nothing but darkness. Perhaps it had once been a display screen, but now it showed nothing, the glass only reflecting the cool blue light of the lamp.
The darkness was not still, but moved as her light moved across it. It was as if the darkness reacted to the light, as if it swirled. Her blood ran cold, remembering the shadows that had gathered around the faceless as they came for them in the depths of the Pelacon on the Tomb.
As the realization hit her out of the depths a form emerged, pale white with black claw like fingers and an unmistakable blood red mouth. But this was not like any other faceless. For starters, there was a face. A small, nearly nonexistent nose without nostrils, and two round yellow eyes that stared unblinking at Izine.
The form was unmistakably feminine and nude. And out of the top of her head grew six horns. A set grew from her neck, another grew outward from the side of her head, and the last set grew out of her forehead curving up and over the top of her skull.
From the creature's mouth harsh language-like sounds emerged. A language of guttural clicks, glottal consonants, and sibilant hisses. Izine turned to flee but then stopped midway through the turn. Something had commanded her to stop. Not a voice, but a command from within her own head. She could feel something crawling around in her mind, searching.
Izine fought back, pushing with every bit of her mental faculties to move. To finish her turn, to get away. Her hoof slowly moved to comply. She continued to turn, but very slowly as if she was swimming through jelly. ‘Faster,’ she commanded her muscles. ‘Faster! Move!’
“You resist?” a voice said. She thought at first it had come from her mind, but as the voice continued to speak she realized it was the strange creature at the glass. “Not even the guards could resist. That’s why they eventually replaced them with machines. They could then question me, perform tests on me, without ever getting close.”
“Who are you?” Izine asked, surprised she still had full control of her mouth to speak.
“The question is who are you? Or what are you? You are certainly no Archon.”
“Release me,” Izine commanded.
“If you promise not to run away,” the creature said. “I’ll let you have control of your body, but if you run away I will make you stop. You resist my control, but you can’t fully stop it.”
Izine agreed and in an instant her muscles finally obeyed her commands. She nearly lost her balance and fell over as her muscles came back. She caught herself, regained her balance and turned back to face the glass.
“Let’s get back to my questions,” she said to Izine. “What are you?”
“I’m a Frondauri,” Izine answered.
“You’re not from the Cooperative. Otherwise I would have heard of your species.”
“I assume you’ve been there a long time. A lot has changed.”
“I cannot calculate the passage of time but it has been an eternity of eternities.” The creature stopped, its eyes glazing over as it pondered. “I suppose all I knew is gone. Now tell me, who are you?”
“I think it's only fair that you introduce yourself first,” Izine said coyly. She was still annoyed at the creature’s attempt to take control of her.
“Very well, my name is Arralith, daughter of Korlopos and Delpana. Citizen of the Cooperative and native of Irulaes.”
“You’re an Archon?” Izine asked incredulously.
“Hard to believe? I know my appearance is not what you’d expect, but at one time I looked no different than a member of the Aristocracy. Now? Now I am this twisted thing you see.”
“What happened to you?”
“No, oh no, I already answered two of your questions. So now it’s my turn again.” She peered unceasingly with her yellow eyes at Izine. Though uncomfortable, Izine strived for the mental control not to break eye contact. “Go ahead,” she said.
Arralith smiled wickedly. “My first question, what has happened to this facility?”
“I don’t know,” Izine answered honestly. “It was abandoned a long time ago. I fear longer than my species has had the gift of speech.”
The answer did not seem to phase Arralith, though Izine doubted she could recognize if it did.
“My question. What planet does your species hail from?”
Once again Izine decided to be truthful. It had gotten her this far. “We call it Primadzhwerdz, though the Archons called it Atasha.” There was no reaction again from Arralith, so Izine took her chance. “It's my turn now. Are you a faceless?”
“I don’t know what that is,” Arralith answered, though something told Izine she knew something. Perhaps the creature claiming to be an Archon could be read, or maybe she was still telepathically connected to Izine. “Are there any Archons left on Atasha?” she asked, taking her turn.
“Not for over two hundred thousand years,” Izine answered and then took her turn. “Did your transformation occur when you traveled through a starbridge?”
This time there was definitely a reaction. Not a physical one, which led Izine to believe she was picking up on Arralith’s thoughts. “Yes,” she answered. “You seem to know a great deal more than the idiots who imprisoned me here. I think we shall dispense with the game we were playing. What you really want to know about is the Watcher Beyond.”
Izine kept her own reactions in check, both physically and mentally. She didn’t want Arralith to know for sure yet what she really knew. But the mention of this Watcher Beyond, while she didn’t remember where she’d heard it before, triggered something deep in her memories. ‘This whole planet does that,’ she thought to herself. Out loud she asked, “What is the Watcher Beyond?”
“It is the void. It is everything outside our universe. It is a consciousness beyond our scale and comprehension. It is malevolent and cruel. It despises everything outside itself. And it is now aware of us and this universe. And the Archons woke it up.”
Something Dark Is Coming - Bear McCreary