Rhun said:
I agree with Brogarm...I love Dar. And I can't wait to see how they escape a purple worm.
Escape?
* * * * *
Chapter 30
SERIOUSLY SCREWED
For once, Tiros didn’t feel his old body protesting as he and Varo ran full-out across the cavern, retracing their steps back toward the narrow staircase to the second level of the dungeon. Brown toadstools went flying as they trod through patches of fungal growths, and the flames from their torches flickered wildly with the speed of their movement.
The ground rumbled all around them. It sounded like the end of the world.
Tiros saw the stairs ahead of them. He glanced over his shoulder, and saw Dar, lagging behind. The fighter was fresher than he, but Dar was burdened by his arsenal, and by the pounds of gold and silver he had poured into his backpack from the ghoul horde.
There was no sign of the worm, but by the shaking of the ground, it was still coming, somewhere beyond the light of the torches.
“Run, damn it!” he shouted. Just ahead, Varo hesitated, halfway between Tiros and the stairs. “Run, you bastard!”
The fighter lowered his head and put on a burst of speed. Driven by the marshal’s urging, or perhaps a more primal need to live, Dar rushed over the ground, his boots crunching heavily on the uneven surface.
There was still no sign of the worm.
Where in the hells it is... Tiros thought, just as the worm exploded out of the ground a scant fifteen paces behind the fighter.
Dar heard it, but he didn’t look back, only continued running toward the shelter offered by the stairs. Varo had made it to the foot of the staircase, and Tiros knew that if he charged, he could join the cleric before the worm could get to them.
But as for Dar...
“Look out!” Tiros yelled, turning and running back, toward the fighter and the charging worm. The thing was...
huge just didn’t seem to fit. The creature was gigantic, its segmented body fifty, sixty, seventy feet long? More of it was still coming out of the ground as its head, along with the gaping maw, dove at Dar.
Tiros hit the fighter and knocked him aside just as the worm shot forward. Something hard clipped him on the shoulder, spinning him around, flinging him roughly to the ground. A noise like an earthquake filled the cavern. It took him at least a full second to recover enough to see what had happened.
The worm had overshot, its head driving into the archway that overhung the entrance to the staircase. With forty thousand pounds of mass driving behind it, the creature had pierced
through that barrier, its head and about fifteen feet of body jammed deep into the narrow staircase. Its lower body flailed out behind it violently, and Tiros could see that its tail had finally emerged from its tunnel, the end tipped with a gleaming black stinger larger than a spearhead.
Dar was already attacking. The fighter slammed his club heavily into the creature’s body, which reverberated from the force of the impact. The sheer...
gall of the mercenary’s action stirred something deep within the marshal, but before he could do anything else, he saw the worm’s tail swing around, its deadly head clearly fixing upon its target.
“Look out!” he shouted again.
Dar turned around, but he could not avoid the stabbing head that drove into the center of his breastplate like a ballista bolt. The fighter bounced off the worm’s body and fell. Tiros could not tell if the stinger had penetrated, but at least the mercenary hadn’t been impaled, as he’d feared.
Stone exploded outward as the worm’s head tore free from the staircase entrance. Tiros’s spirits fell as he saw a shower of collapsing rubble descend in the worm’s wake, closing off the hope of escape with it.
Huge, long, twisting, shadowy forms appeared around the edges of the battlefield. Tiros’s brain struggled to take it all in...
More of them? But as the creatures entered the radius of the feeble light of his torch, he saw that the things were not more worms, but giant centipedes, three of them, each dozens of feet long, looming over the humans, but small in contrast to the gigantic worm. The centipedes had red and black shells, hundreds of stubby yellow legs, and mandibles like daggers that snapped at the air as they surged forward. All three converged on the worm, attacking its body with those piercing jaws.
The worm counterattacked at once. Its head snapped down and seized a centipede, tearing its prying mandibles free and lifting it high into the air. Its sting impaled a second, but this one kept holding on, its body twisting as the worm’s stinger continued to penetrate deeper into the wound.
Still overwhelmed by the sheer insanity of it, Tiros knew that the distraction offered by the appearance of the other vermin would not help them for long. He pulled himself up, and turned to flee. But then he saw something that changed his mind.
Dar was up again, and somehow, incredulously, he was attacking. The fighter had lost his club when he’d been knocked down by the worm’s initial rush, but now he was hewing at it with the two-handed sword they’d found in the ogre lair. As the marshal watched, amazed, the fighter tore a gash three feet long in the worm’s body. Dar lifted the sword to strike again, but the worm’s shifting body caused his strike to go awry. He staggered and fell to the ground, the sword flying from his grasp to fall clattering to the ground a good five paces away.
The worm’s head came around, still carrying the struggling centipede in its jaws. That ring of jagged teeth snapped heavily shut, and the centipede was cut cleanly in two, the fifteen-foot segments flying out into the darkness to either side. The head shifted, focusing on the diminutive human even as its sting continued to worry deeper into the body of the second centipede. But instead of seeking to fly or hide from the inevitability of destruction, Dar merely reached around and drew out another weapon, the heavy warhammer they’d uncovered in the ghoul lair.
Without realizing consciously what he was doing, Tiros was running forward,
Valor leaping into his hand at his call. As the worm’s upper body came around to face Dar, the creature came within his reach, and he leapt forward and swung with all his might.
Valor flared with blue light within his hand, and the marshal felt
something surge within him, or within the sword; in the fury and chaos of battle, he could not be sure.
The tip of the sword cut through the worm’s rubbery hide. The attack did not do as much damage as Dar had inflicted upon it earlier, but it must have hit something vital inside, for the worm immediately shifted its attack upon the marshal. The dark opening, almost a full five feet across, filled Tiros’s view, accompanied by a terrible stench that rose from deep within the creature.
He tried to get away, to do anything to avoid that fate, but the worm was faster. Pain exploded within his torso as the worm seized him. He struggled, tried to bring his sword down to hack himself free, but he was pinned, and could not move. The worm’s grip was like being held in a steel vise, and he could hear as well as feel the bones popping in his body.
“Tiros!” he heard Dar yell. He was vaguely aware of being lifted into the air. He glanced down, and saw a point of light on the far side of the creature. Varo. The cleric had not fled, after all. For an instant the cleric’s eyes met his, and the dark follower of Dagos nodded.
The worm’s jaws opened. Tiros took a final breath. He knew that this was the end.
And he fell, vanishing into the darkness as the worm swallowed him.