Chapter 7

 

Liora touched Tariq’s back. She watched his muscles tense beneath his shirt. Instinct bade her to draw the knife at her side in case he attacked her again. She pushed the feeling away.

“You shouldn’t touch me.”

Tariq’s voice was tight like his muscles. He had his forehead pressed against the wall and his hands strained on the softly glowing surface as if he wanted to shove through it. It looked like he did everything he could to control himself.

“You’re stronger than this,” she said quietly.

Tariq shook his head. His eyes were closed tight.

“Not against this,” he said. “I can’t fight it. All I want to do is tear apart everything around me. I don’t need a reason; I just want to kill, maim, and break anything I can get my hands on.”

There were confusion and agony in his voice as though fighting against the compulsion brought physical pain.

“They said they would remove the chip as soon as we defeat the Vos,” Liora told him.

He tipped his head to one side to see her. When he opened his eyes, the light blue gaze was filled with torment.

“They also told you I was dead, remember? Why do you trust them?”

“I don’t,” Liora replied. “But we need them to get to the Dreyer Galaxy. Arriving there with an army would be handy.”

Tariq nodded. He stepped back from the wall, his hands curled into fists as he maintained careful control over his will.

“You need to stay back,” he told her.

Liora shook her head. “That’s the last thing I’m going to do.”

Tariq’s gaze was pleading when he said, “Liora, I could break you like a stick of vogum cane. You need to keep your distance.”

“You’d have to catch me first,” Liora told him. She stepped back when he advanced. She kept her tone light when she continued, “And you’d have to outfight me.”

“That’s all?” he replied.

A hint of the teasing light she loved surfaced in his gaze.

“That’s all,” she repeated. “Simple enough.”

He reached a hand out for her. She stepped inside of his grasp, kissed him swiftly on the lips, and spun out of reach again faster than he could react.

A smile touched his face. “You’re impossible, you know that?”

“That’s why you love me,” she replied.

Softness brushed the edge of his jaw and his fists relaxed. He nodded. “I do.”

Liora stepped into his arms. She kept alert in case his rage took over, but it appeared that he had found a way to control his aggressive emotions, at least for the time being. Liora put a hand on his chest and looked up into his blue gaze.

“We’ll figure this out together, alright?”

Tariq looked down at her, his eyebrows pulled together and his gaze piercing through her to her soul. He brought his hands up and tentatively wrapped his arms around her. When she didn’t flinch at his touch, he held her closer.

“Alright, Liora.”

Liora leaned against his chest and closed her eyes. The sound of his heartbeat pounded beneath her ear. She remembered the absence of the familiar sound in the escape pod. It was something she never wanted to experience again.

“You’re sure you can handle a psychotic rage beast for a boyfriend?”

Liora looked up at him. “Is that any different than the boyfriend I’ve had all along?”

“Very funny,” Tariq replied with a low chuckle.

Liora was quiet for a moment before she said, “Tariq, if there’s anyone in this Macrocosm that understands bloodlust and aggression, it’s me. That’s a battle I’ve fought my entire life. There’s a reason everyone fears a Damaclan.”

Tariq let out a slow breath. “Yes, but do the Damaclan fear themselves?”

The question lingered in the air between them. The door opened before Liora could come up with an answer.

“They are ready,” the Cherum announced.

Tariq glared at him when they passed. Liora checked her weapons, glad to be in her Ventican clothing once more. The weight of the blades felt right at her thigh and her belt. She tightened the sheath around her wrist and pulled her sleeve back down. At least she wouldn’t have to use a jawbone to fight the Vos this time.

They were led along a winding hallway to the floor of the huge, domed training room. Rows up on rows of the Cherum’s army spread out before them, each holding a staff tipped by a serrated blade.

“You don’t have guns?” Liora asked.

“The Vos are simple-minded creatures. We don’t feel that guns will be necessary against our army.”

“Of course not,” Tariq muttered from Liora’s other side.

She glanced at him. He watched the warriors before them with a guarded expression. Liora felt the same way. Heading out into Basttist’s vast desert with a violent, anger-enhanced army felt like a bad idea; unfortunately, it was the only option they had at the moment.

“We will show you to the tunnels. Return when the Vos are destroyed.”

Liora didn’t like the Cherum’s presumptive tones. The Cherum hadn’t been able to rid the complex of the Vos, and now the creatures were simple-minded targets waiting to be picked off without even the need for modern weapons.

“They’ve already been informed of your leadership,” the Cherum continued. “They will follow you to their deaths.”

“That sounds promising,” Liora replied dryly.

“It is promising,” the Cherum said, missing her sarcastic tone.

Tariq let out a single, low chuckle on her other side. Liora elbowed him. His eyes flashed with anger and her muscles tensed in anticipation of attack. Tariq looked away, his fists clenched and gaze haunted.

Liora realized that she wasn’t going out with an army of thousands and her friend at her side. Tariq was a part of the army. He was ready to follow her to his death as well. Without the ability to turn from a situation when his instincts told him it wasn’t survivable, the outcome was very possible.

Liora walked beside the Cherum to the far wall of the compound. At a single word from the being, the army fell in behind them. When they neared the wall, a massive hole appeared. It was wide enough to accommodate twenty warriors abreast, and the hallway beyond was the same. However, instead of the smooth glowing walls of the compound, the walls of the tunnel appeared rough, hewn from the yellow stone of the planet.

“Do the tunnels take us all the way to the Vos?” Tariq asked.

The Cherum motioned with his long fingers. “The Vos live within the tunnels and without. The temperatures on the surface of Basttist are too hot for the Cherum, but the Vos are able to transverse both. Be wary for attacks from above.”

Liora stepped into the tunnel with a feeling of trepidation tightening her muscles. Bars that glowed like the walls ran above them, but the light wasn’t quite enough to break the shadows beyond. Liora unsheathed her knife.

Tariq glanced at her. “Edgy?” he asked.

Liora looked over her shoulder at the rows upon rows of men and women of every race imaginable following them into the tunnel. Their footsteps were soft shushes in the fine sand that covered the bottom of the passageway. There was no talking and the impassive gazes that met her eyes seemed wrong. The silence from the warriors was unnerving.

“I’m not sure where the enemy lies,” Liora replied.

Tariq nodded in agreement. “We didn’t sign up for this.”

Liora thought of the microchip in his head. “We didn’t sign up for any of this,” she agreed quietly.

Smaller tunnels branched off from the main one. Liora kept to the larger path. The thought of being caught in one of the smaller holes with Vos in front of her and the warriors behind set her on edge.

The sounds of claws on the rock turned her head. She peered down one of the smaller tunnels, but the light from the bars above didn’t pierce the darkness.

Liora realized the warriors’ staves with serrated blades on the tips would be hindered in the hallway. She grabbed the weapon from the closest warrior and held it over her head.

“Break your weapons in half,” she commanded. “It’ll give you a better chance to kill the enemy and not each other in this close quarters.”

She brought the staff down on her knee and it snapped. She handed the warrior back the two pieces. The others followed and the command ran down the line so that the sound of cracking staves echoed back and forth. The fact that the army followed without question was at least reassuring of her position as their leader. Perhaps they would have a chance.

The further they walked, the more the sounds of claws in the darkness followed until Liora peered into a tunnel and found the round black eyes of a dozen Vos staring back at her.

“We’re under attack!” Liora shouted.

The sound of the army spacing themselves to fight was loud in the passage. They didn’t have armor or any type of defense for combat besides the broken staves in their hands. Liora could only hope that the battle training they had received from the Cherum would be enough.

A hiss sounded and black spray shot from the tunnels around them. Liora shielded her face with her arm. The Ventican clothing took the brunt of the spray, saving her from the acidic effects. All around her, the warriors cried out in pain as their skin melted and smoked.

Instead of cringing away, however, the Cherum’s army turned from pain to anger. Liora saw the battle lust in their eyes, the rage brought on by the programming of the microchips. The warriors surged forward, storming down the tunnels on every side.

“Stay together!” Liora yelled. “Don’t separate!”

Unable to hear her command in the chaos, the warriors lashed out at the Vos in the darkness. A figure brushed past Liora. She stared at Tariq’s form as he charged into the depths of the channel after the Vos. She couldn’t let him go alone. Against her instincts, Liora followed Tariq into the obscurity.

Her blades met Vos right and left. Their scales were tough, but the metal of her weapons bit deep. In the half-light, she aimed for throats and stomachs until the floor was slick with blood and entrails. Her Ventican outfit proved strong against the sharp claws and hooked teeth.

Liora let out a yell when a Vos’ claws scraped along the side of her head. She spun and sunk her knife deep into the creature’s throat, then sliced downward to spill the contents of his stomach along the floor.

She heard Tariq grunt in pain. Turning, she saw huge bloody rents along his arms and chest. A Vos had latched onto his shoulder with its hooked teeth. He stabbed the creature repeatedly with his serrated blade. It tried to get away, but the teeth held it fast until that was the only thing holding it up.

With one swipe, Tariq separated the Vos’ head from its body. The carcass fell to the floor with a thud. Liora shoved her knife between its jaws and pried the teeth from his mangled flesh. She got it free and was about to drop the head when an image struck her.

Three pillars of light hit the ground, scattering members of the family. They hid among the boulders and watched tall, pale creatures float down the light to land on the yellow sand.

The image had been burned into the Vos’ mind with such strength it was the creature’s final thought. Liora stared at the head in her hands. A fine eyelid made of delicate, translucent skin covered its dark eye; she guessed it was to protect the Vos from the sand. The slight scales that made up its snout showed a variety of orange in softly hued patterns she hadn’t noticed before. Fine hairs covered the slits that made up the Vos’ nose.

There was a delicacy to the head she held that increased the foreboding in Liora’s chest. She looked at the bodies scattered along the ground. Though their padded feet were tipped in long claws, the claws appeared better suited to digging than fighting, especially given the short stature of the legs. The creatures were built for speed and the sunlight, yet they hid in the tunnels of Basttist.

“Liora?” Tariq asked.

She glanced at him. Blood from the fight colored his face. His expression still showed the battle fury inside of him, yet there was a gentleness to his gaze when he said her name that seemed to calm him.

“I think we’re making a mistake,” Liora said.

She had to know for sure. She set the head down carefully beside its body and took off back up the way they had come.

“What do you mean?” Tariq asked, catching up.

“I think we’re fighting for the wrong side,” Liora said above the din of the battle.

She saw Tariq stop short out of the corner of her eye, but she didn’t slow. She had to verify what she thought, and there was only one way to be sure.

She reached the opened into the larger tunnel to see the warriors in the midst of combat against the Vos. Blood was everywhere. Bodies of both the Cherum’s army and the Vos lay in every direction.

Tariq reached her side. “What do you need me to do?”

“I need a Vos; a live one,” she told him.

Without showing any emotion about the enormity of the task, Tariq reached the closest battle and bulldozed a warrior fighting one of the Vos. As soon as Tariq reached his feet again, he tackled the creature, pinning its legs beneath it. The Vos writhed, its tail thrashing and black liquid spattering the wall he pinned it against. Tariq didn’t release his hold.

Liora dropped to her knees next to the creature and put her hands on its head. The Vos immediately stopped moving.

Liora searched through its thoughts. She didn’t know what she was looking for. The mind of the Vos appeared similar to the felis from Verdan, but there was an intelligence to its patterning that surprised her. The thoughts were coherent, the memories bright. Liora searched until she found what she was looking for.

The complex was built in less than a week by the army of creatures the tall ones commanded. Any attempts to communicate were rebuked. A member of the family was slain, her head skewered on a staff outside the compound. Others were sent and the number of heads grew.

The tall ones were not there to live in peace. They would destroy anyone who attempted to stop their progress. The family fell back, but the tall ones directed skirmishes to pick off those they could. The impact of loss made the family desperate; the Father sent half of them to attack. They weren’t heard from again. Fearing that the absent members of their family were trapped within the compound, the Father commanded them to advance and wait in the tunnels until the time came to attack and defend their right to their home.

Liora took her hands away. Horror filled her.

“We’re fighting the wrong people,” she said to Tariq. “The Cherum are taking this planet by force; they’re killing anything in their path.”

Tariq backed up a few steps and Liora let the Vos go. It watched her, its eyes not blinking and muscles tense as though it was ready to run if need be.

Liora pushed her thoughts toward it. She showed the Cherum complex and the rows upon rows of warriors. She showed it the Cherum, meek and quiet as they put microchips in the heads of their army.

“I need to know why the Cherum are here,” Liora said.

If the Cherum were indeed taking the planet by force, she had to understand the reasoning behind it before she allowed the army to slay more of the Vos.

“How do we stop them?” Tariq asked.

Liora followed his gaze to the slaughter that continued down the tunnels. The Vos and the warriors were both taking heavy losses. Liora didn’t know how to protect them from each other, but she had to try.

She closed her eyes and pushed. The Vos didn’t speak in a language she could understand or emulate, so instead, she chose to go with emotions. Using her adrenaline-fueled strength, she forced feelings of peace and acceptance down the tunnel and along the branching paths.

The minds of the warriors she touched met her with confusion. The anger and aggression caused by the microchips were hard to combat. She answered with feelings of contentment and amity. In the minds of the Vos, she found fear and protectiveness. She returned with reassurance and understanding.

The sounds of fighting in the tunnels slowed, then ceased altogether. Liora barely dared to open her eyes. It took all of her concentration to keep up the push. Surprise almost undermined her efforts when she saw the Cherum warriors and Vos crowding in front of her in silence.

A circle roughly five feet in front and behind her was kept clear as if by some unspoken agreement, but beyond that, warriors and Vos stood side by side as if they couldn’t get enough of the emotions she was pushing. The hostility was gone from both sets of faces. The warriors waited quietly, their staves abandoned and wounds bleeding.

The Vos were in similar shape. Of those closest, one was missing an eye and several had gouges out of their scaled hides; yet they waited, and the sound of breaths through their heaving chests gave the only sign that the battle still remained in their hearts.

Liora carefully eased back on the push. She felt Tariq’s hand rest on her shoulder. She was touched by his offering of strength, but she pulled the emotions not because she couldn’t maintain them any longer, but to see if the calmness could continue without her blanketing them with the soothing emotions.

She was able to ease up much further than she thought she would. When signs of agitation, shifting from foot to foot or reaching for weapons began to surface, Liora pushed just enough to calm them again. Maintaining careful control, Liora lifted her voice.

“I think we’ve all been fooled,” she told them. “The Cherum are taking this planet by force for themselves and the Vos are defending their home.”

At the sound of her voice, several of the Vos started, but Liora pushed at them images of a land free of the complex. She was met with feelings of happiness.

“I need to know for sure,” Liora continued. “I need to return to the complex to find out for myself what the Cherum are up to.” She paused, then said, “It may be that we need to change our objective.”

Silence met her words, then a warrior called out, “Whatever you say, Commander.”

Nods went through the gathering. Warriors holding bloody arms and torsos appeared less concerned about their injuries than they did her words. She wondered how the Cherum would feel about having their channeled aggression turned.

“I have to be sure,” she said. “I will go alone.”

“I won’t let you do that,” Tariq replied.

Liora set a hand on his arm. “If they guess my intentions, I won’t get past the door. As it is, I need you there to let in the others.”

Tariq shook his head. “I don’t like it.”

Liora gave him her most confident smile. “We’ve got an army at our backs. Let’s make sure we’re fighting for the right side.”

She informed the Vos of her course of action with an image of her speaking to the Cherum. To her relief, the Vos followed quietly as she led the way back up the long tunnel.