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They rounded another corner and abruptly stopped. Kara swore.
“It’s a door,”
Djaren announced. “Our turn, Jon.”
“Is it safe to
risk a light now?” Anna asked.
“Fine,” Kara
said. “Just do this quickly. They’re coming.”
The flare of
Anna’s match illuminated all their dirty, frightened faces. She lit a long
taper and held it up to illuminate a stone door, not entirely unlike the one
that had led them here in the first place.
“Sharnish,”
Djaren said, “and Ancient. No easy languages, I’m afraid.”
“I thought you
were supposed to be clever,” Kara said acidly.
“We can do it.
It will just take time.” Jon found his notebook in his pocket and squinted at
the Sharnish words they knew.
There were
shouts down the passage behind them.
“We don’t
have time,” Anna said.
Djaren adjusted
his spectacles, and frowned at the Sharnish letters. “Here falls, er, here
lies, the god-warrior, stranger to the people.”
Jon read the
Ancients’ script as well as he could. “Something, the humble, or is it small,
servant of the One, fought and um, served well his job, er, mission.”
“Get on with
it,” Anna urged, before Kara could interject first. Kara looked a little
surprised.
“In rest
forever, remembered as a hero, liberator of the age of peace,” Djaren read.
“I think. Slayer of Elush-bel-azzer.”
“May he hold,
or um, take a place among the, ah, ascendant, I think,” Jon added, perusing
the Ancient.
The sounds
behind them were getting more disturbing, and ever closer.
“Hurryhurryhurry,”
Ellea whispered.
“Let none
disturb the sleep of the god-slayer,” Djaren said. “That’s all. How can that
be all?”
“The brother
lies here with his weapons, er, arms. Let none disturb this sacred place.”
Jon looked up. “That’s all.”
They stared at
each other is dismay.
A scream
sounded quite close around the corner.
Kara threw
herself at the door with an angry cry. The stone moved back an inch. They
all looked at it.
“You just
push it open?” Tam said. He set his hands against the stone and pushed.
The door scraped open another inch. They all pushed together at the door
then, as hard at they could. With their combined efforts, at last the door
slid open wide enough for even Tam to squeeze through.
“Now shut the
door again!” Djaren ordered, after just one glance about.
They all pushed
as hard at they could from the other side and succeeded in settling the door
back in its place. Tam slumped down to the floor to sit down, breathing
heavily. “That won’t hold them,” he said.
Anna lifted her
candle, and the children looked around them. They were in a large room with
no other exit. It appeared to be the tomb chamber of the ancient warrior.
“We need more light,”
Djaren said.
Anna dug in one large
pocket and brought out a bundle of paint stained rags. “These are for my
turpentine, they’ll light fast.”
Kara grabbed them from her
and wound them around a stick of something she grabbed off the floor.
They had the makeshift
torch lit and blazing in moments, bright enough to light the whole room.
There was a large coffin in
the center of the room, surrounded by the decaying rubble of a hero’s burial.
Bronze weapons were scattered on the floor, jeweled daggers and ornate spear
heads. Flaking gold lumps marked ruined gilt chests and rotted wooden
furniture. The air was old, and stale, but not as bad as Jon had read that
the air in tombs could be.
“We shouldn’t
touch or tread on anything,” Djaren said, eyes gleaming. “This is amazing. We
have to document this.”
Kara gave him a
dirty look, and picked up a nasty looking little dagger. “We’re being hunted
by a living corpse with a fanatically loyal band of cultists. You want
documentation. I want a weapon.”
“Good point,”
Djaren admitted. “Right. Arm up.”
Anna reached
down and adjusted her skirts, pulling a very nice boot dagger from its
sheath. “I turned thirteen last birthday, and got my knife,” she explained,
at Kara’s surprised look. Tam found two sturdy old bronze swords. Ellea bent
down to look at an enameled statue. Jon himself was drawn to the coffin. It
was rectangular, and grey, all made of stone. It was covered in scripts and
carvings. In the middle of the lid the Ancient’s star was visible, encircled
by the script of the Ancients.
“We have to
block that door,” Kara was saying.
“Hold this high, alright?”
Djaren handed Jon the torch.
It was heavy,
mostly something bronze. Jon held it as high as he could, and stood beside
the coffin, where he could light most of the room at one time. Jon peered at
the writing, curious, while Djaren, Tam, Kara and Anna shoved blades and spear
heads into the cracks around the door, attempting to wedge it shut.
“He served the
One with honor,” Jon translated the words, and spoke them softly. “Let his
brothers take up his memory, let his brothers take up his arms, and his
shield. May his deeds be remembered and repeated in the war against the
darkness. May those who come after be worthy.” Jon smiled. He had read the
whole thing. He was getting better at this. He braced the end of the heavy
torch on one knee in order to free a hand, and touched the star pattern. It
unfolded under his palm. Something silvery and shining rose for a moment upon
the stone, sending shivers through Jon’s hand. He pulled away, startled, and
the silver came away along with him. Jon turned his hand to look at what was
sticking to it. There was a lacy silver emblem, about the size of a pocket
watch, cupped in his palm. It wasn’t a pocket watch though. Jon didn’t know
what it was, but thought he’d seen it before in a dream somewhere. While he
watched, amazed, it melted, or sank into his skin. A light tracery of silver
lines lay upon his hand as if someone had tattooed the emblem there. Jon
stared.

©2007 Ruth Lampi
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