Zoe hadnât even realized tunnels branched off from the larger cavern. To her mind, it was a random bubble in the rock only accessible by the path carved by the fire child. The reality seemed to be something more akin to a termite mound. Tunnels opened constantly in the walls as she followed Antonâs silver eye â it reminded her of a set of lungs cast in stone â she couldnât be sure if this cave was natural, system-derived, or some combination of the two, but then she never really knew anything about caves.
Zoe followed the silver glow through one winding tunnel where it opened into a cave with three openings ahead. Without hesitation, Antonâs eye flew down the leftmost path. Zoe had memorized the same map as him, but he demonstrated the worth of high Insight.
They continued racing through the rock, sometimes ducking, sometimes leaping chasms, but always maintaining their high speed. If it werenât for the silver glow of Antonâs eye, Zoe wouldnât have been able to move like this even though she knew the route.
âI expected you to reprimand me,â she said as they ran.
âNot my place,â Anton said through his eye.
âItâs exactly your place,â she retorted. âI donât want blind followers.â
Anton was silent for a moment.
âYou should have finished Oriz yourself.â
His flat voice made the accusation all the harsher as his eye zipped down a gash in the floor. Zoe leaped after and fell. A chimney of black rock rushed past her. She hit the ground and sprinted forward.
âBella deserved to finish things herself,â she said.
âYour decision put Bella in danger. Thereâs no place for ceremony in such dealings.â
Zoe knew she could have held Oriz in place if she still had her chains. This wouldnât have happened if the Black Star hadnât betrayed her. Had anything good come out of Purgatory? She struggled to adjust to the Black Starâs absence. Even conjuring chains out of Mirror was an awkward stopgap solution, and she wasnât sure about pursuing such a path. Maybe she should move on completely.
Regardless of excuses, her decisions had repercussions.
âThank you for your honesty.â
âI donât want Bella to die,â he said.
âNeither do I.â
âBefore, I would have told you I donât want Oriz to die either. I saved her from her curse, and I thought that might be enough, but some people wear shackles so long they carry them even when theyâre gone.â
Zoe snorted.
âYou saying you saw this coming?â
âNothing happens in a vacuum. Her actions might make no sense to us, but sheâs following a thread of logic.â
âNever expected such philosophy from you.â
âIâm writing a book, remember?â
âHowâs that coming?â
âYou tell me, boss,â Antonâs voice grew softer. âNext chapter resolves Bellaâs fate.â
His words spread like ice through her chest, but Zoeâs rage burned away any tension.
âAre you saying I should try to understand Oriz? I should spare her?â
âHell no, she kicked me into the roof of a cave. Rip her to pieces and burn the shreds. If the fire gets out of control, maybe Iâll piss on it.â
âDamn, Anton.â
âWhatever,â she could hear his shrug. âBella is up ahead.â
Iridescent light filled the tunnel from around the corner. They slowed their pace and Zoe peeked around the edge. Ahead lay a chamber with an open floor. The fluid, hallucinogenic light of the inky sky spilled up on the rushing wind and illuminated a vast network of grassy threads. It looked more like a spiderâs web than anything else. Various lumps hung along the threads like beads on an abacus, some were the size of a football while others might hide a person or a horse. The threads overlapped in a way that hurt Zoeâs eyes. There was more to the shape than mere complexity, some kind of technique worked against her comprehension.
âI canât make it out,â she said. âItâs like trying to understand a dream. How about you, Anton?â
âGive me a momentâ¦â
His eye hovered and glowed before it split apart. Two eyes floated before Zoe. One remained beside her while the other drifted toward the grassy threads.
Zoe bounced from foot to foot. Whatever fear lingered, whatever rage burned, was replaced entirely by eagerness. Her friends wanted her to be decisive. They wanted her to act.
So did she.
Hesitation was a thing of the past, but she needed to know what lay before her rather than charge in blindly.
âI didnât know you could split your eyes,â Zoe whispered to Anton. âI didnât know you could carry multiple conversations either.â
âBeauty of my New Flesh,â he replied. âIâm still working out what it did for me, but the synergies between my techniques are amazing.â
Zoe nodded. Curious how her flesh had granted her a new ability, whereas Antonâs had streamlined his. She wondered if she was approaching her flesh wrong, or if it reflected their personalities. Too bad the Earth System could no longer explain anything.
Antonâs eye floated between the strands. The silver glow rippled as it passed deeper into the web. It would vanish behind one woven strand and appear behind another further away as though it skipped the intermediary distance. Zoe frowned as distortions played before her eyes as though the scene were sand drifting through disturbed water.
âAnton?â Zoe asked after a couple of minutes. âWhat do you see?â
âItâs strange in here,â he said.
âI see nothing abnormal,â he said.
âSomethingâs hunting me,â he said.
Zoe frowned as Antonâs voice overlapped out of the silvery eye floating beside her.
âWhat do you mean?â she said. âAnton youâre not making sense.â
âItâs an illusion,â he said.
âItâs a dream,â he said.
âItâs just grass and Iâm trying to find the cocoon that contains Bella,â he said.
Zoe stared directly at the eye beside her.
âAnton I think you should pull out of there. Youâre sending multiple answers.â
The silver eye bobbed beside her, innocuous and silent.
âAm I?â he said.
âNo, Iâm not,â he said.
âYou deserve to die,â said someone that wasnât Anton.
The last voice sounded perverse, like the hissing of reeds as they rubbed together in the wind.
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âI presume Iâm speaking to Oriz,â Zoe said.
âNo?â came Antonâs voice.
âWhatâs going on, boss?â he said.
âThere is no Oriz,â the reedy voice laughed. âThere is no Bella. Do whatever you want, but know that love conquers all.â
âWhat you have isnât love,â Zoe said.
âBoss, whatâs happening?â Anton said.
âI feel kind ofâ¦â he said again.
âAnd what do you know of love?â hissed the reeds.
âAnton, cancel your second eye.â
âI donât want to,â he said.
âI canât!â he said.
âYou have no power here,â said the reeds.
Zoe sighed.
âAnton, this might hurt. When I find you, Iâll apologize again.â
âWhat are ââ
âNo, please ââ
âNothing you ââ
Zoe extended a Mirror finger into the heart of Antonâs eye and popped it like a soap bubble. Silvery fragments of static drifted down like snow. She sighed. An echoing vibration came from within the grass nest where his other eye disintegrated.
âJust you and me now, Moth. You feeling up to it?â
In answer, the Mirror creating her fingers crawled up her arm and over her body. Hallucinogenic light swirled off her armor.
âOf course you are. Back to back until the end of time, right?â
Zoe cracked her neck and strode forward.
The grass coated and connected dozens of floating rocks. Though the canopy obscured most of the gem-studded ceiling, the mineral wealth flashed with the colors of the lurid sky below. A sense of inversion flipped her stomach, but then it passed.
Summoning her hounds, Zoe strode into the nest, and she felt the rippling pressure of a dream lay its fingers up her mind. Fear built its pressure at the back of her neck, but she remained as unwavering as the steel in her veins and pushed forward. It didnât matter what Oriz sent her way, she would not hesitate.
###
Skidmark looked over with a raised brow as Anton shouted in pain.
âWhatâs wrong?â she asked.
He had one hand clapped over his left eye. A trickle of blood leaked down his cheek.
âNothing,â he snarled. âZoe canceled my eye, but Iâm not sureâ¦. No, I know why. Oriz is using Dream Skein, or at least mimicking the effects of it. Itâs interfering with our minds.â
âI thought she only had Grass,â Skidmark said. âHow worried should we be?â
âWho knows?â Anton said as he wiped away the blood with his finger. He blinked and looked around the tunnel where they stood. Behind them stood the few dozen survivors with their dogged expressions and the glowing toddler walking amongst them. âSo many plants contain poisons, hallucinogenics, drugs, you know? She could do anything. Iâm not an expert.â
âI thought you were the Skein nerd?â
âShut up.â
He kept wiping, and Skidmark pursed her lips in concern.
âThatâs a lot of blood,â she said as she turned to the survivors. âHey, you, give me your shirt. Yes, you, no I donât care that youâre not wearing anything else.â
She took the shirt and tore a ragged strip. Somehow or other the shirt was mostly clean. Maybe some kind of technique, but that was Antonâs department. She would stick to normal science thank you very much.
With deliberate care, she dabbed at the blood leaking down Antonâs cheek.
âHowâs the boss?â she asked conversationally, as though the world wasnât about to melt out from under their feet, though she supposed it was fairer to say it was about to melt out from over their heads. âShe in a killing mood?â
Anton sighed.
âShe is almost overjoyed with murderous intent, but I know this will weigh heavy on her if anything happens.â
âItâs sort of her fault though, isnât it?â
Seven eyes opened on Antonâs face as he fixed her with a hard look. Skidmark fought to suppress a shiver. She failed but replaced it with a sneer.
âDonât ogle me unless you plan on doing something about it.â
âYouâre insufferable,â he replied.
âDonât know the meaning of the word,â she said as she stuck out her tongue and threw the bloodied bandage at the survivor who gifted her the shirt. âYouâre all cleaned up, so lead the way, Mr Looking Glass.â
Anton sighed, and they continued down the tunnel. They jogged at an even pace since all the survivors had at least a couple of levels, but some didnât even have a Body Path. Luck, more than skill or grit, kept them alive.
Skidmark still felt like a human, she still believed she had a heart beating in her chest, but she couldnât help feeling weighed down by those weaker than her.
âI wish we didnât have to play babysitter,â she said loud enough for everyone to hear.
Several survivors cast their heads down in shame.
âWe do what the boss told us,â Anton said. âShe does her part and we do ours.â
âI hope she does her part.â
âHave faith.â
Skidmark met his gaze.
âI remember Hell,â she said. âIâve seen what she can do, and Iâve also seen how she acts...â
âSo have faith.â
She sniffed in response.
âStill, I wish we didnât have them around.â
âMe too,â Anton said with a shrug. âBut thatâs why we have Bella. She cares so we donât have to.â
âIs that how it works in that machine brain of yours?â
âSay whatever you want, Skidmark, I see more than you think.â
âYou see us finding a bed after we finish this mess?â
Anton stumbled as he ran. She felt his eyes staring, and she pointed a finger gun.
âYeah, try to figure out if that one was real, why donât ya?â
He scowled.
âThereâs an obstacle coming up ahead.â
âWhen is there not?â Skidmark said with a roll of her eyes.
The tunnel widened into a large, tall chamber like the inside of a vase. Stalactites glittered overhead as Antonâs eyes danced around them. Water dripped down into a river that cut through the stone floor. The rushing waters were wide. Maybe Skidmark and Anton could leap them, but the other survivors? Skidmark glanced at the way they huffed for breath. Yeah, no chance.
She studied the water.
âThis is the black rain,â she said. âItâs eating away at the bedrock.â
As though to punctuate her words, the river edge crumbled away with a hiss. She stepped back just in time. Damn it! Not only was the fast-running water a hazard, but it was getting worse by the second.