'We need to get Eleanora,' the sergeant major said. 'This is her area of expertise. And we'll need to crossfeed from Spyros to Roger.'
'Julian,' the NCO said.
'I'm on it, Sir,' the intel sergeant replied, keying his helmet communicator. 'I'll get her headed for the command post.'
'Let's get to it, people,' Pahner said, and stepped back out the door. Once it was safely closed against observation, he stopped and shook his head. Julian and Kosutic. He snorted. God. Like he had time to think about that right now.
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
Rus From led the prince and his bodyguards to a back corridor of the temple/palace and an inconspicuous door that revealed a long spiral staircase which appeared to have been hammered from the bare rock of the Diaspra outcrop. The dank, Mardukan-sized stone steps were both steep and slippery with condensation, and as the party descended, the temperature dropped precipitously.
The stairs seemed to spiral downward forever, but they finally reached bottom at last and emerged into a dark, soot-streaked room illuminated only by a few sputtering torches. The cleric led them from there down a curving hallway/tunnel that was at least partially natural. There were chisel marks in places, but most of the walls seemed to be natural, water-worn limestone.
Then they turned a curve, and the priest paused as the passageway disappeared ahead of them into a curtain of plunging water.
'I must ask your warriors to leave their helmets at this point,' he said.
'May I ask why?' Roger asked, eying the curtain of water dubiously. 'And am I to take it that we have to pass through that waterfall?'
'Yes, we do,' From said. 'There are two reasons to do so. We are about to enter one of the most holy of the Secrets of the God. Beyond that Curtain of the God is His other self: the Dark Mirror of the springs above.
'We chose to use this place as a meeting ground for that reason, but also for the same reason you must first remove your helmets then pass through the curtain. It is believed that this will disable your 'transmission devices.' They are, I believe, susceptible to damage from water, yes?'
'Yes,' Roger said with a sinking feeling in the pit of his stomach.
* * *
'Georgiadas!' Pahner snapped. 'Tell the Prince to agree. Then set your helmet on retrans and we'll monitor the feed from your toots.'
* * *
'Sir,' Georgiadas said with a swallow, 'it would probably be best to go with the priest's suggestion. That's what my . . . intuition says, anyway.'
Roger looked at the lance corporal, then at his helmet.
'Right. Georgiadas, Willis, off helmets.' He looked down at his practically new suit and winced. 'Kostas is going to kill me.'
* * *
'We can monitor, Sir,' Julian said as he manually adjusted the gain on the video, 'but we can't send them audio.'
Pahner nodded in understanding. The toots pulled video and audio off of the appropriate nerves and rebroadcast them, but while the broadcast could be picked up and boosted by the helmet systems, the Marines' toots were not designed to
'We can send them text if we need to,' the captain told the sergeant. 'Bounce it through the helmets, then to the guards' toots, then to Roger. Input isn't that big a deal; I think Roger's going to be walking out of that meeting unmolested, and I've got the rest of your squad armoring up in case he doesn't.'
'I hope it doesn't come to that,' O'Casey said pensively. 'If Rus From is being used as a messenger, we can assume that the group behind this plot is even larger and more powerful than we'd thought. If we have to use force, it will gut Diaspra at exactly the moment it most needs solidarity.'
'If we know that, then
'Let's hope so,' Kosutic said, then smiled. 'But, take it from me—His Evilness knows partisans aren't always reasonable.'
* * *
'Well, that was refreshing.'
Roger shook the droplets from his fingers and wrung out his hair, then looked around the torch lit room at the circle of hooded, lantern-carrying figures and fought down a smile.
The room was part-cavern and part-construct. The back wall had been mined out to enlarge a natural grotto, but the far wall was mostly natural, and a small spring welled up at the base of a wall of sculpted limestone. It was surrounded by stalagmites and stalactites, and the light of the lanterns shone through the stone and water with a hollow translucence. Behind the spring was a small, natural ledge, the edge of a dry waterfall. It had been scrubbed immaculately clean, but fine discolorations indicated that something other than water flowed over it from time to time.
The site was probably as secret as they came. And it was still lousy tradecraft.
'This is the Dark Mirror,' Rus From said, stepping up to the spring. 'It is the brother of the God of the Sky.' He nodded at the gathered figures and waved his lower hands in a gesture of deprecating humor. 'And this is the dark mirror of the Council.'
'Unless I'm much mistaken,' Roger said dryly, glancing around the gathered figures in turn, 'it
'Whether it is or not, is beside the question,' one of the robes replied.
* * *
'Chal Thai,' Julian said. The voice print recognition was almost instantaneous. 'Shit.'
* * *
'We represent the dark mirror of the surface,' the robed figure continued. 'On the surface all is agreement, but in the shadows there are questions.'
'We seek to change the society of our city,' From clarified. 'To break it of its dependence on the temple.'
Roger blinked.
'But . . . you're a
'Yes,' the cleric replied with a gesture of resignation. 'So I am. But what I am more than anything else is an artisan. An . . . artist. I create things with my hands, things that move and work, and that is my true calling. But to do that?' He made the gesture of resignation again, this time with a negative emphasis. 'To be a creator of things in Diaspra, I must be a priest.'
* * *
'The Creator,' Julian said.
'
'Yes, Sir.'
* * *
'So why am I here?' Roger asked.
'We feel there is a need for change,' another figure said. 'The power of the temple has grown too great. It