The glow brightened. It stuck to the floor and walls of the cave. It revealed the contours of rock, the stalagmites rising from the floor, the tumbled piles of broken stone like waterfalls rendered with a child’s blocks.
And then, beneath her bare feet, the electric zap of the barrier, forcing her to climb for safety up onto pieces of the gaiaphage itself.
She could feel the gaiaphage move under her, like stepping on a million ants all packed tight together; the cells of the monster seethed and vibrated.
Drake cavorted across the chamber, snapping the air with his whip, shouting, “I did it! I did it! I brought you Diana! I, Drake Merwin, I did it! Whip Hand! Whip! Hand!”
Justin. Where was he? Diana realized she hadn’t seen him in a long time.
Where was he? She looked around, frantic, amazed to have eyes to see with. Her vision blurred green. No Justin.
Penny caught the frantic look. Her face was grim. She, too, now realized they’d lost the little boy somewhere along the bloody miles leading them here.
Penny, too, had not fared well. She was almost as battered, bruised, and bloodied as Diana. The trip down a jet-black tunnel had not been good to her. At some point she must have hit her head very hard, because a gash in her scalp bled down into one eye.
But Penny had already lost interest in Justin. Now she looked with narrow, jealous eyes at Drake in all his joy. Drake was ignoring her. He hadn’t introduced her. Gaiaphage, meet Penny. Penny, gaiaphage. I know you two will get along.
The image would have made Diana laugh if not for a contraction that forced her to her knees.
It was in that position that Diana felt a sudden wetness. It was warm and ran down her inner thighs.
“Impossible.” She wept.
But she knew in her heart, and had known for some time, that this baby was no normal child. Already it was a three bar, an infant with powers not yet defined.
The child of an evil father and a mother who had tried, had wanted to … had tried to … but somehow had failed.
Repentance had not saved her. Burning tears had not been enough to wash away the stain.
The water that had gushed from inside her had not washed away the stain.
Diana Ladris, beaten and scourged and crying out to heaven for forgiveness, would still be the mother of a monster.
Brianna had a little roasted pigeon in her backpack. She had a more than healthy appetite, and she liked to always keep food handy. A history of starvation did that to people: made them nervous about food.
Now she tore a piece of the pigeon breast away from the bone, felt through the meat with dirty fingers for any fragment of bone or cartilage. Then she found the little boy’s hand and put the meat into it.
“Eat that. It’ll make you feel a little better.”
They were deep inside the mine shaft. She’d almost laid into Justin with her machete before realizing he was sniffling, not snarling.
Now what, though? She could walk him out to the mine shaft entrance, but what difference did it make? It was dark in here, and it was dark out there. Although at least out there that oppression of the soul that came with proximity to the gaiaphage might be lessened.
“What can you tell me, kid? Did you see the thing?”
“I can’t see anything.” He sniffed. But he was cried out. More like shell-shocked, that was how he sounded. Brianna felt an unaccustomed stab of sympathy. Poor kid. How was it right that this kind of stuff happened to a little kid? How was he ever going to forget it?
He’d forget when he was dead, Brianna thought harshly, and that wouldn’t be too long from now, most likely.
Then, surprisingly, Justin said, “There’s a really long drop.”
“Up ahead, you mean?”
“That’s where they forgot about me.”
“Yeah? Right on, kid, that helps me to know that.”
“Are you going to save Diana?”
“Kind of more thinking about killing Drake. But if that means I save Diana, I can live with that.” She tore off another piece of her precious pigeon meat and gave it to him. What did it matter? This was a suicide mission. She wasn’t coming back. She wouldn’t need much to eat.
Not a happy thought.
“The lady. Diana. I think her baby is going to come out.”
“Well, that would make everything just about perfect,” Brianna said with a sigh. “Kid. I have to keep going. You understand? You can keep heading back to the entrance. Or you can just sit tight right here and wait for me.”
“Are you coming back?”
Brianna gave a short laugh. “I doubt it. But that’s me, little dude. I’m the Breeze. And the Breeze doesn’t stop. If you get out of this somehow, and you get out of the whole FAYZ and get back home to your mom and dad and everyone out in the world, you tell people that, okay? Maybe find my family some—”
Her voice choked. She could feel tears in her eyes. Wow, where had that come from? She shook her head angrily, pushed her hair back, and said, “I’m just saying: you tell people the Breeze never wimped out. The Breeze never gave up. Will you do that?”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“Ma’am,” Brianna echoed in an ironic tone. “Anyway. Later, okay?”
She began to make her way down the tunnel. She had worked out a way to move a little faster than a normal person might. She used her machete, twirling it ahead of her in a variety of different patterns to avoid getting too bored—figure eight, a five-pointed star, a six-way star. She could swing the machete maybe two, three times as fast as a regular person. Nowhere near her usual speed, but one had to adapt.