Chapter 10 - Cave of the Anth
Arch Demana - Book Two of the Blessed Saga
They pressed deeper into the cave's mouth. The long, grueling day and their life-or-death sprint to escape the giant lizard had taken its toll, leaving the group drained and quiet.
After setting the box down on the sandy floor of the passage, Will slumped onto the ground next to Maya, exchanging a weary glance that said, What next? Life with Jack and Kleo had been anything but predictable. Their adventures were filled with danger and discovery, but this⦠Jack and Kleo were on a whole other level. It wasnât the first time Will wondered if he and Maya might be getting too old for this sort of thing.
He and Maya had always chosen this lifeâexploring the unknown, chasing mysteries, and untangling the threads of the worldâs secrets. Maya for knowledge; for him, even on bad days, it beat working.
It was also what they did best; theyâd made peace with the risks long ago. He yearned for the quiet days ahead: Maya buried in her research, him tending to their little garden or fixing whatever broke around the house. It felt like it would be nothing short of a miracle if they lived to see those days.
Maya broke the silence. âDo you think we underestimated Thespis?â
Will glanced toward the younger man, leaning against the cave wall, his eyes closed, chest heaving as he tried to catch his breath. For once, he looked more like a survivor than an entitled hanger-on.
âNo,â Will said finally. âHe just exceeded expectations. Letâs be honestâgiven what we knew, the bar wasnât set very high.â
Maya smirked. âFair point.â
Rugr stood nearby, arms crossed, as if guarding the box by sheer will alone. Kleo sat with Jack, her head leaning against his shoulder, while Bug Bug perched higher on the wall, his stillness unnerving as always.
âWe need to find a place to camp. And water. Water would be nice,â Maya said.
The air inside the cave hinted at moisture somewhere deeper.
âWhat are the chances?â Will asked, his voice low.
âReasonable,â Maya replied. âThis cave feels openâthereâs airflow. That should mean condensation somewhere.â
Will nodded, pushing himself to his feet and dusting off his hands. He glanced at the rest of the group. âOnly one way to find out.â
Maya rose beside him, and the others followed, shaking off their exhaustion. Rugr lifted the box without a word while Jack summoned a pale yellow glow from his orb to light the way.
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They pressed deeper into the cave, the tunnel narrowing, forcing them to move single file, their footsteps echoing off the uneven walls.
Bug Bug clicked his forelegs against the stone, his antennae twitching as he led the way.
A sound rose, a faint, rustling whisper that seemed to originate from nowhere and everywhere. Jack paused mid-step, his eyes darting upward. âDid anyone else hear that?â
Then, a frantic flurry of wings, a torrent of leathery chaos, and high-pitched squeaks surged through the passage. Jack ducked, the rush of displaced air whipping past his face as the bats poured through like a living tide, their high-pitched squeaks stabbing at his ears.
âBats!â Jack yelled, shielding his head with both arms.
The bats swooped low, their tiny bodies zipping past with astonishing speed, the cacophony drowning out the groupâs hurried shouts.
Maya pressed herself against the wall, her eyes wide as the swarm funneled past, and Thespis crouched low, his hands clamped over his head as if the bats might carry him off.
Kleo stood her ground, her eyes following the swarm as the bats streamed toward a crack in the ceiling at the far end of the passage. One by one, they vanished into the darkness, their squeaks fading as the last of them disappeared.
The group stood stunned for a moment, the tunnel eerily quiet once more. Jack straightened, brushing off his shirt and looking a bit shaken.
Rugr smirked faintly. âItâs a cave, Jack. Why wouldnât you expect there to be bats?â
Jack rolled his eyes, muttering, âYeah, I missed the class on âcave survival.ââ
As the group resumed their journey, Jack glanced back at the crevice one last time. âYou think they were running from something?â
Kleo shook her head. âNightâs falling, Jack; thatâs when they feed. Theyâre just hungry.â
"Yeah, me too."
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They pressed on, wary of another encounter, but it wasn't long before the tunnel opened into a vast chamber.
As Jackâs orb cast its light forward, the group froze.
At the chamberâs center sprawled a skeleton of monstrous proportions, its bones arranged in chaotic disarray as though the creature had died mid-battle.
Elongated and angular, the skull dominated their gaze, its head adorned with serrated ridges cutting back toward curved, ram-like horns. Its jaws lay open, revealing rows of jagged teeth, each as long as Jackâs hand. The wingsâor what might have been wingsâjutted at an angle from the ribcage, spindly and vast, their joints too delicate to seem real. A long, barbed tail extended across the chamber floor, its tip embedded in the far wall like a weapon that had struck too late.
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Jack swallowed. âWhat⦠is that?â he whispered.
Maya approached the skull, her fingers hovering inches above its serrated ridges. âIt looks like it could fly,â she murmured. âMaybe⦠a dragon?â
Will crouched by one of the massive ribs, his hand brushing the fossilized surface. "None of the stories I've heard mention barbed tails like this," he said, quiet and contemplative.
Jack forced himself to move, drawn despite his unease toward the creatureâs empty eye sockets. They were deep and cavernous, and for a moment, he could almost imagine a glint of malevolent life staring back. A shiver ran through him, and he quickly averted his gaze.
Kleo stood apart, her eyes drawn not to the bones but to the chamber's far wall, where faint markings etched the stone. She brushed her fingers along the weathered lines. Symbols radiating out from a central depiction of a beast. It was vast in size and winged, its claws outstretched as if descending from the heavens.
âWorshipped,â Kleo said, her voice tinged with reverence and unease. âOr feared. Probably both.â
âWhatever it was,â Will said, rising to his feet, âitâs been dead a long time. The bones are hard as stone. That means this thing was here long before any of us.â
Rugr swept the chamber, his gaze lingering on the tail embedded in the far wall, the violence of the gesture as unnerving as the rest of the scene. âThis isnât the best place to make camp. Itâs dry as a bone hereâliterallyâand that thing gives me the creeps.â
âIâm with Rugr,â Jack said, stepping back toward the entrance. âSleeping next to that? Hard pass.â
As Bug Bug led them into another tunnel, Jack glanced back again. The creatureâs empty eye sockets seemed to follow him, a silent reminder that the mysteries of the desertâand its dangersâwere far from over.
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They trudged deeper, finally emerging into a vast chamber. Its cathedral-like ceiling soared high overhead, where stalagmites glistened. Their mineral deposits reflected Jackâs glowing orb with faint, ghostly glimmers.
At the chamberâs heart lay a pool, its surface like a mirror. The steady drip of water echoed through the space, giving the impression of a giant, living heart deep within the earth.
âThis will do,â Rugr said, setting down the box. âWe make camp here.â
Thespis slumped against one of the columns, his breathing still labored. âFinally. I thought Iâd collapse halfway through that last tunnel.â
Jack sat beside him, offering a water skin. âYou and me both.â
Kleo stood by the pool, staring into its glassy surface. She ran her fingers over the surface, and her reflection wavered with the rippling water, distorted and surreal. âThe tunnels lead down from here,â she said. âThatâs where weâll be heading after we sleep.â
Rugrâs gaze fixed on the sloping passage behind them. âAnd the sanctuary is up. Demana signs are carved into the walls. The wayâs marked.â
Kleoâs eyes flicked toward Rugr. It was nearing the time for him and Thespis to make their way and deliver the box to the sanctuary. She would follow the malevolence that pulled from the depths below. The pull consumed her focus, its rhythmic drumbeat growing and becoming impossible to ignore. If Jack was right about Sela, they didnât have time to waste. There was also the chance that Thespis would insist on joining themâa complication they didnât need.
âLetâs gather water and eat first,â she said. âWeâll discuss the plan after that.â
Jack moved to the pool, crouching as he filled their water skins one by one. The water was icy cold and clear, its surface revealing nothing but smooth rock beneath. He peered into its depths, hoping to see signs of lifeâa fish, an insect, somethingâbut the pool seemed barren.
Maya and Will were studying markings on the wall behind the pool when he joined them, holding out full water skins.
âWhat are we looking at?â
Maya traced her fingers over the weathered etchings, her eyes bright with fascination. âThese markings were made by a tribe of early humans called the Anthâor so Iâd guess. Thereâs not much known about them, but I can tell you these carvings are ancient. Thousands of years, maybe tens of thousands.â
âSame as the ones near the skeleton?â Jack asked, his curiosity piqued.
âYes,â Maya said, her voice reverent. âThe same.â
Jack studied the symbolsâcrude but deliberate. Some were obvious: a circle with radiating lines for the sun and another with wavy lines for water. Most were abstract, their meaning locked away in a long-forgotten language.
âThe Anth were a lot like us,â Maya said, her tone warm and instructive. âThey were curious, filled with wonder. They told stories and created rituals to make sense of the world around them. They didnât just ask, âHow do we survive?â They asked, âWhy are we here?ââ
Jackâs gaze lingered on a spiraling glyph that drew his eyes inward. âAnd these are their answers?â
âNot answers,â Maya said with a small smile. âMore like observations. They revered the sun, water, and life itselfâforces they couldnât control but depended on for survival. They worshipped these forces to create order out of chaos, turning survival strategies into sacred practices.â
Will, leaning against the wall, gestured toward a depiction of a winged beast with claws and fangs. âLike the skeleton back there. If I had to guess, they saw creatures like that as godsâor monsters worth appeasing.â
Maya nodded. âThe Anth likely worshipped what they feared, hoping to transform larger-than-life creatures into protectors. Pictographs like these werenât only art; they were rituals in themselves. A way to say: âWe see you. We honor your power. Spare us.ââ
Jack smirked. âSo, what you're saying is that not much has changed. People in Cabal still worship what they donât understand and what they fear.â
Maya tilted her head, impressed by the insight. âThatâs an excellent point. We like to think weâre more advanced than the Anth, but weâre still asking the same questions. Still trying to make sense of a world that doesnât care whether we live or die.â
âLifeâs great mysteries,â Will added.
Jack grinned. âYou know what feels like a mystery to me right now? Why we havenât eaten yet? Iâm starving.â
Maya and Will exchanged amused glances. Jack had a knack for cutting through tension with simple, grounded concerns.
âAnother good point,â Maya said, gesturing toward Kleo, who waited by the pool. âI'm sure she's wondering whatâs taking you so long. Go on. Weâll join in a minute.â
Maya leaned into Will as Jack wandered off, lacing her fingers through his. For better or worse, they had tied their fate to Jack and Kleo. Kleo's power and purpose were undeniableâbut Jack was the wild card. He stumbled into answers, not by skill or strategy but by sheer audacity or fate.
Mayaâs thoughts darkened for a moment. Caught in whatever web the Fates were spinning, she wondered if they were supporting players or if they had roles yet unseen. What she knew was this: she wouldnât let the Fates break her and Will again. No matter the stakes, no matter the cost, she would protect their bond. They would endure. If the Fates wanted them to suffer, they would have to build it around the unbreakable truth of their love.
She tightened her grip on Willâs hand, grounding herself. âCome on,â she said. âLetâs get some food before Jack eats it all.â
Will smiled, brushing a kiss against her temple. âLead the way, Professor.â