Venjiminâs maps proved imperfectâas expectedâand resulted in a lot of back-and-forth flying across the land before Mark spotted the mineâs entrance.
Set on the side of a mountain overlooking the remains of a settlement, the mineâs mouth was a small clearing with a couple of abandoned mine carts almost entirely buried by snow.
Mark had almost missed the site at first, only just spotting the former settlementâs foundations and a crumbling stone temple through the snow. Turning his ship toward the ruins, he flew over at low altitude and just barely managed to spotlight reflecting off the edge of an old mining cart.
This has to be it.
The spot was close enough to where Venjimin noted, and the cave tunnel delving into the foot of a mountain with a short terrace overlooking the once capital of a major barbarian clan was exactly as described.
There was barely enough room, and the throne ship took up almost the entirety of the little terrace when Mark brought it down into a shaky landing.
âAlright,â Mark said, pulling his hands free and dismounting his cockpit chair. âLooks like weâre here.â
His crew unbuckled as he walked toward the hatch. Mark waited for them before opening it. He wasnât sure what awaited them in this abandoned mine and figured it was probably a good idea to have everyone ready before opening the hatch, just in case.
âWhat are you doing?â Mark eyed Elowen as they worked through a pile of belongings.
âGetting my things,â Elowen replied as she stuffed books and trinkets into her pack.
âDo you really need all that? It could be dangerous in there.â
Elowen looked up with a glare that softened into a forced smile as she caught Markâs eyes. âFine, Iâll only take a few things.â
What an obviously fake face.
âAre the rest of you ready?â
The two mercenaries nodded and grunted, swords drawn and held at the ready.
âYes, sir,â the acolyte smith apprentice barked, straightening into a salute.
âYe, I am, boss man,â one of the students Venjimin sent with them said.
Okay, thatâs new.
âGood,â Mark waved toward the hatch. âLetâs get a move on then.â
Icy wind whipped up around them as they stepped out of the throne ship. Mark waited at the mineâs mouth; his hand held slightly up at the ready while waiting for the others to gather around.
âOnly got two notepads,â Elowen huffed, stepping up to Markâs side. âWe better not make a too valuable discovery. I would hate to miss the chance to record what we find.â
âYou can always come back, Elowen.â
âIâm not sure you realize how busy I am these days. I just have to hope the acolytes I left in charge donât let the whole thing fall apart while Iâm gone.â
âIâm sure theyâll do a fine job. We also have Venjiminâs cartographers here. We'll be fine.â
âYou call them cartographers?â Elowen narrowed her gaze on the two scruffy-looking feral students as one of them picked his nose down to his knuckle. âCan they even read?â
âYou know what? Iâm not sure,â Mark said. âBut I trust Venjimin. If he thinks they can get the job done, Iâm sure theyâll be fine.â
âSuuure, if you say so,â Elowen said.
âAlright, alright,â Mark turned around to his party. âAre we all ready?â
A variety of affirmatives followed, and Mark stepped toward the mine entrance.
"Let's see what this thing has for us."
The party at the entrance lit several touches, fighting back the dark and revealing the narrow passage beyond, but Mark kept his hands free. He wanted his lightning at the ready.
A few dozen yards in, they came to a rotting timber wall, the remains of a door once connected to it lying on the ground with mushrooms growing from its rotted wood.
âIt's certainly been a while since anybody came down here, from the looks of it,â Mark mused as he stepped through the passage.
âCreepy,â Elowen said as she followed.
âHuman remains,â one of the mercenaries said, poking a skeleton sitting against the caveâs wall with his sword.
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âNot very reassuring,â Mark muttered. âAt least it looks old. Letâs keep moving. Whatever happened to this person clearly happened a long time ago.â
âRight,â the other mercenary said, knocking another skeleton over with his sword and following.
The tunnel continued for a couple of dozen yards before opening up into a larger cavern, which the path continued to skirt around the edges of as it spiraled down.
They walked the yard-wide ledge with a rock wall to their left and a drop that disappeared into darkness to their right. Rubble slid under Markâs foot as he stepped, sending several pebbles and small rocks tumbling down to the cavern beneath and freezing him in place.
âWhat happened?â One of the ferals asked.
âShhh,â Elowen hissed, turning back to the man at the rear with a finger pressed against her lips.
Mark listened for a long moment before whispering, âLetâs continue. I'm fairly certain the mine is abandoned anyway.â
At least, I hope so.
The rocks took a long time to hit the ground, and the echo they sent back sent a chill tracing down Markâs spine, but nothing else happened, and there was no sign of anything living down here, so he continued to walk cautiously.
The path continued to wind down, tracing the cavern's wall several times on its spiraled pathway to the bottom.
Elowen swallowed, and Mark turned to spot her shivering. It wasnât warm down here, but they were dressed for a Frontier winter, and it certainly wasnât as cold as the surface.
âYou okay?â
She shook her head and tightened the book she held to her chest.
Torchlight illuminated old mining carts and skeletons, but they spotted no weapons or any signs of a fight.
Maybe they were just left down here or something⦠or maybe these are the remains of ferals that sought refuge in the cave and passed away peacefully. It is pretty cold out in the Frontier; there wouldnât be anything particularly strange about that.
âOkay, we may as well set up camp here while we test samples,â Mark said, turning to one of the Imperial mercenaries. âGo collect more wood from the ship. Weâll set up a fire here,â he added, pointing to the cavern's center.
âWill do,â the man nodded, dropped the gear he had brought with him, and turned to make his way back up the path.
Elwoen set her own equipment down, brought out a book, and began writing down what they had found so far.
âAnd you, can you start the fire?â Mark said to the second mercenary.
âYes, sir,â the man said, albeit with a tinge of snarkiness that set him apart from the acolytes.
âYou two,â he turned to the ferals. âStart mapping out the cave and how we got here, but keep an eye on our surroundings, okay?â
The men nodded, and Mark turned to the young apprentice smith. âCheck the carts for rocks containing metal. Weâll see what we can learn of the mine from this chamber and then consider investigating the deeper chambers based on what we find.â
âYes, sir!â
Mark hoped he was right about the mine being abandoned because they didnât have any means to fortify the cavern. If something was down here, it would mostly be up to him to defend the party.
The mercenaries did rounds up and down for a few hours, bringing their supplies down into the mine.
Mark didnât care about trying to hide the ship. They had spotted no signs of life near the mine or abandoned settlement above, and every bit of information they had said that the wargs were gathered into the armies that were attacking the south, so there was no reason to suspect anyone attacking from above.
None of that calmed people and the unease in the camp was undeniable, but once the fire burned brightly, spirits rose a little.
The apprentice gathered and cracked rocks, visually inspecting them. He poured vinegar onto some of them and checked the reactions as he tested their worth.
âSo, howâs it going?â Mark asked.
âThereâs definitely metal down here,â the apprentice nodded. âBut I suppose we already knew that.â
âAnd? What kind?â
âI see signs of both iron and copper so far, but there could be more around.â
âGreat. That's a good start.â
âYes, but the thing is, that only proves they were mining it. Without going into the shafts, we wonât know how rich the remaining deposits are.â
âRight, I should have expected as much,â Mark said. âHow far away is supper?â he continued, turning to ask the mercenary working over the pot by the fire.
âNot long,â the man shrugged. "But don't rush me. It'll spoil the broth."
âLooks like food is close. Alright, weâll eat and recover a little then we can delve into the shafts and find out what this place has install for us.â
âImperator,â Elowen ran from a corner of the chamber. Come, you need to take a look at this,â she waved him over.
âWhat is it?â
âJust come look,â she nudged her red curls toward where she had been writing notes.
âAlright,â Mark nodded and followed her to the cavern's edge.
Pointing the torch she held at the wall, Elwoen pointed out colorful drawings along the wall. âSee this?â
âWhat am I supposed to be looking at?â Mark said, eyeing the cave wall drawings.
âCave drawings, obviously. But look how primitive they are.â
âYes,â Mark nodded. âAnd?â
âBarbarian artwork might not be as advanced as ours in the Imperium, but they donât look like this.â
âThey donât?â Mark furrowed his brow.
âNo. Absolutely not. Iâve read about cave art like this. Imperial scholars think it is the work of ancient civilizations. Long before anything we built.â
âOkayâ¦â Mark said slowly. âAnd what exactly does that mean? We are in a cave. Is it really surprising that some ancient civilization once lived down here?â
âYeah, but thatâs the problem. These drawings are not ancient. Look,â she said, pointing at the canyon-like material flaking away from the wall. âSee this?â
âI do.â
âYou donât get this on ancient artwork. These shavings are from whatever they used to paint the wall. Now, do you see how the shavings hang to the drawings like this? It means they are fresh, relatively speaking. If this was thousands of years old, they would have fallen away by now, leaving a somewhat smooth surface.â
âSo, you think some primitive creatures painted this wall recently?â
Elwoen shrugged. âIâve no idea. I just know it isn't ancient and I doubt a feral drew this.â
Mark turned to glance around the chamber.
"Could they still be here?"
"That's what I want to find out," Elowen said.
"What do you mean?" Mark swung back around to her.
âI better go get the rest of my books from the ship. This could be the discovery of a lifetime,â Elwoen said, waving as she ran toward the path leading up and out of the mine.
âI thought you were scared?â
âI was,â she said. âBut an inquisitive mind needs to be strong,â she turned to nod. "I'll be back in a few minutes."
Just when I thought she couldnât get any weirder.
Mark turned to the half dozen shafts that were connected to the central chamber they were within. The idea that some primitive civilization might be down here set alarm bells ringing, but he also couldnât just walk away from this potential asset. Too much was riding on this trip. It was exactly what they needed.
Damn it, weâre going to have to see this through, arenât we?
Exhaling, Mark thinned his gaze as he looked around. Suddenly, he go the feeling somebody was watching them and it gave him the creeps.