Where there had been darkness, now we saw everything. And what we saw was that even beyond the runes Autumn had read to us, the front door was one giant warning to just stay away. Bones littered the ground. That was the first thing you saw as Moon Vision allowed you to take in exactly where you were. Bones. White and bleached. They were everywhere. Every one of them broken, fractured, crushed to powder in some instances. Among all that, and it took time to understand what exactly you were seeing, but among all the broken and bashed-in skulls and fractured tibias and femurs, lay ancient weapons of every kind.
These too were broken and smashed. Broken and smashed weapons among broken and smashed bones of what might once have been humansโฆ and sometimes definitely were not humans.
Swords and axes. Some rusting, others shining brightly in the luminescent blue of our Moon Vision. But nothing was whole. Everything had been destroyed at some prior date, to some extent.
โWhat in the everโฆโ
It was Brumm. His voice dry and low. I turned away from Autumn, still smiling in her dream of our escape, and followed the gunnerโs gaze upward as he spat out a stream of dip, splashing it across the skull of a horned and fanged humanoid that lay cracked and forgotten on the cavern floor.
Carved into the living rock above was something like a sphinx. Except its head was a grinning human skull. The carving absorbed most of the rock ceiling and looked as though it had been fashioned out of the stone up there long ago. But there was more.
Behind the skull of the looming sphinx were two crossed arrows. Massive and crossing the whole ceiling. And jutting up through the skull was a sword. The hilt reached the floor of the cave below, and in the hilt was the fractured remains of a door. The entrance to the tomb. A giant bronze door that had turned green with age and lay broken in the frame.
All of us, even the snipers to the rear, stared up at the incredible carving above our heads. Weโd literally need to walk under the skull and step through an opening in the hilt of the sword to enter the tomb.
โHuh,โ said Kurtz.
No one said anything after that. We all waited for Kurtz to expound. He didnโt. It was as silent as a graveyard in that cave and only the sound of the waterfall back at the entrance could be heard.
Silent as a grave was ironic. Because it was a tomb after all. โWhat, Sarโnt?โ asked Tanner.
Again, the sergeant said nothing for a long moment. Then, โDonโt know,โ he almost whispered to himself. โButโฆ that seems familiar somehow.โ
I knew what he meant. It was almost like, and maybe this was because of the Huntersโ Fellowship and that momentary ability to read each otherโs minds, but it was almost like I could see his mind working the problem of trying to decipher the image of the skeleton sphinx looming above us. See him paging through files in his mental office, trying to find the information the image of the statue in the cavern had evoked on his hard drive.
Or maybe this was that thing Vandahar had hinted at. My talent. My revealing. Maybe my peek in his mind was that. Because I didnโt feel anyone else in Kurtzโs mental file room looking around for a clue. Just me. I was there.
I saw, or felt, I donโt know exactly, him toss aside a 4187. Which is a form you fill out in the Army when you want to go to a specialized training school. You can fill it out for other things. But for some reason this one was about a request for specialized training. Heโd picked it up for a second because it was interesting, and then mentally flipped it aside thinking it wasnโt what he was looking for. I could practically see all that. Maybe this was because my supply of instant coffee was down to just three packets. Maybe rationing, the lower levels of caffeine that came from not having my usual excessive amounts as often as possible was unlocking some kind of incredible new mental powers. If soโฆ I still choose coffee.ย Youย bend metal beams with your mind, Magneto.ย Iโllย take a solid pour-over from Costa Rica any day of the week. Nice try, Devil.
I crossed and picked up the 4187 that lay on the floor of Kurtzโs mind. Studied it.
Applicant Requests Q-Course Selection Phase. SF.
It almost glared up from the page into my eyes. Like it was forcing me to read it.
I still had no idea what it was about though. Why the image of a
skeleton with two arrows and a sword sticking up through its jaw had anything to do with Special Forces, the Green Berets, what Chief Rapp was. But I knew this was the thing out of all the images his tired brain was trying to find, that would put it together for him. Heโd just discarded it. My mind saw it was what he needed to solve the puzzle.
This place is weird.
โSF,โ I said to Sergeant Kurtz in the glowing darkness as he studied the fascinating structure above us.
Kurtz turned toward me. The look on his face was pure murder. Which was a good thing. Kurtz had two looks. Murder and contempt. Murder meant he was dealing with you as something important. Murder meant Iโd scored a direct hit and sunk his battleship. Or in this case, connected the dots for him.
He nodded slowly as it all came together. Then he looked back at the statue.
โThis ainโt totally the logo for SF. But itโsโฆ weirdly similar. Iโve even seen somewhere they put a skull between the arrows. Usually with a green beanie. Unofficial. Butโฆ yeahโฆ itโs kinda like the SF unit insignia.โ
The rest of the Rangers began to agree once they saw it. Thanks to me.
Even Kennedy piped up. โThe Latinโฆย De Oppresso Liberโฆ thatโs missing though. But itโs almost spot on if you take out the big weird skull. Maybe another detachment got here before us from Fifty-One?โ
โWell,โ said Tanner. โThen they would have to have gone through the QST and been on scene a long time ago. They didnโt make this overnight. Or even within the last two weeks. This has been here for a while.โ
The SEAL had said twenty years. Had others arrived before that?
Centuries before?
I remembered Last of Autumn, maybe just Autumn now after the dream of the boat and the city. More specifically, I remembered her and Vandahar telling the stories of the Ruinโs ancient past. The old wizard saying theย Ilnerย had come onto the scene before the Dragon Elves. And as far as my knowledge of history since weโd gone through the QST was going, that would be over eight thousand years ago.
Theyโd sought eternal life. Theyโd made a deal with the Saur. Someone named Sรปt the Undying.
โCโmonโฆ time to do this. Nightโs burning,โ said Kurtz. And it was.
The assault team moved up to the broken bronze door within the hilt that came down through the leering skull. The door was open, technically, but the Rangers stacked and went in just like you learn to do in the shoot house. A moment later we got the โall clearโ and the rest of Team Rogue entered the tomb.
We had all of thirty seconds before the first trap sprang. Inside we saw along the walls the image of about ten or so six-armed skeletons. Maybe carved into the stone, maybe free-standing statues. They were tall. Each bony arm carried a curved sword like a scimitar. Their black eye sockets, deep-set in the stone, glared sightlessly out as their bony smiles seemed to await our next step.
Thatโs what I saw in the seconds before they came to life. Or un-life.
Or whatever.
โCreepy, Sarโnt,โ I heard Tanner say in the stillness of the place of the dead.
Thatโs when the things simply stepped away from their places in the wall, all six arms apiece waving swords. The skeletons didnโt wave them and dance around, circling to attack like they might in some movie. Giving the heroes the opportunity to take them one at a time. No. They rushed all of us at once. Straight at us, swinging all six swords. Sixty swords in total. It was like an unexpected flash flood of killer skeletons.
I heard Jabbaย yipย and scramble away while carrying ammo drums and an impossibly overloaded ruck Soprano had set up for him.
SOP for the team was not to use the two-forty or any of the un- suppressed weapons while we made our creep toward the objective atop the Lost Library. We wanted to keep this quiet. If McCluskey heard gunfire coming out of the tombs, even five hundred feet below through solid rock, heโd know he was under attack. Then most likely the Rangers hitting the front gate would be walking into an enemy force fully expecting something to be up.
No surprise advantage for us. We had to be the epitome ofย Quiet Professionalsย on this one. Everyone on the team had fashioned a garrote back at the elf camp, with many being genuinely excited about their potential use during this op. Several talked about the hope of crossing a strangle off their bucket list.
Rangers. Literally your worst nightmare. One of the top reasons why if youโre a third world bad guy, youโd best not piss off the United States of America.
We didnโt have the ammo for anything but surprise. And just one shot to do it in.
The assault team engaged immediately with reflexive suppressed fire. Their weapons were already up in the low and ready position, and they immediately moved into aimed quick-kill shooting. Shoot house SOP. No praying and spraying. These guys hadnโt only trained on breaching and clearing operations, theyโd done them for the real deal in situations where everyone inside the building was filled with nothing but bad breath, worse intentions and ill-will. Plus AK-47s and suicide vests.
Wild waving, weaving, running skeletons exploded in sudden dull, dustyย smaffs of bone as the shooters engaged in the few seconds they had before the skeletons got into โmelee range.โ
PFC Kennedyโs words.
The room was wide, maybe thirty meters, meaning the skeletons had to cover fifteen meters to the center of the room where we were. On the far wall ahead of us stood a pair of bronze doors like the first, except that these were whole whereas the first door had been fractured.
No one needed to tell the Rangers not to work standard controlled pairs in their shooting. Two to the chest and then two to the head. The skeletons had no chests. They just had bony rib cages. But they did have skulls.
I picked up a running skeleton with my sights. I was next to Autumn. She raised her hand, and in it was a small silver cross. She held it straight out at the three skeletons running right at us as I fired.
I had to slow it down and confirm my sight pictures before I broke the trigger on those shots. A moving object running and weaving slightly side to side is tough on any given day. Inside a tomb, and that running, weaving thing happens to be a skeletal warrior with six bony arms waving shiny pirate cutlasses when just seconds before you thought they were carved reliefs along the wallโฆ that makes it a little more difficult.
Just a bit.
But Chief Rapp had next-leveled our shooting skills on the way down. Running small ranges and dry-fire exercises when he could. Giving us tips and showing us techniques that make SF some of the best shooters in the
world. There are reasons why the rest of the Army refer to them as the Super Friends. One of the most important reasons is that theyโre pro-level shooters in extremely tense situations.
This was tense. Max pucker factor. I wonโt lie to you.
I pulled the trigger and watched dusty explosions smash ribs and sternum. I may have winged the thingโs clavicle, bone fragments flying away in every direction, never mind the carnage all around as the Rangers unloaded on the skeletal ambush with their suppressed weapons.
Then all three skeletons Autumn had pointed her silver cross at started burning up like old paper. Catching fire at the edges and then working in from there. I remember doing something like that once when I was a kid and I was trying to make a pirate map for my yearly visit out to my dadโs ranch. Had to make it look old, you know? But instead of the skeletons just burning up around the edges, they went all the way and turned to nothing but dusty gray ash.
In seconds, the skeletons were dead. Again.
One of the spotters had taken a pretty serious slash across the cheek and scalp when one of the skeletons and its six sabers got too close. Lots of blood.
โSecure the room,โ Kurtz growled at Brumm. โWatch to see if any more come out of the walls.โ
Then he was on the wounded spotter with Sergeant Thor, evaluating the injury.
โAinโt bad,โ Kurtz said after a few seconds. โWeโll superglue it and itโll be fine.โ