Read The Romulus Equation Online
Authors: Darren Craske
âVery well, Antoine. Come closer and show it to me,' replied Sirona.
Renard hissed as he lifted his jacket and shirt, displaying his bandaged stomach. Although it clearly pained him, he tore at the blood-soaked material and it fell to the floor. The flesh around the wound was badly scorched, courtesy of Mr Markham's haphazard job on the ship, and the wound itself was as black as coal, split open at the seams where Markham had stitched him up.
As Renard stepped to her side, the old woman edged herself closer to him, laying her hands flat on his wound. âYou had better be grateful for this. My ability takes an undue amount of stress on my physical body. And speaking of which, I'm amazed that you've survived as long with a wound like that!'
âHence my rush to get to your side, my Lady,' said Renard.
âThe stench!' said Sirona, turning her face away. âKnow that I can do nothing about your scarred features, Antoine. My gift only works on current illnesses.'
âThat is fine, my Lady, I prefer to keep them. As a reminder.'
With the guards holding him, Prometheus tried to edge closer to Destine, hoping that she would give him a clue to what was happening. âWhat's she doing to him, Madame? Who
is
she? She seems to know you. And you know her!'
Destine exhaled slowly, gathering her composure. âMy premonitions were toying with me once again, it seems⦠only showing me the aftermath of Cornelius's pain⦠not exactly who caused it. I presumed that it was Remus⦠although now what he faces is someone far more powerful than Remus could ever be.'
âHow come?' asked Prometheus. âAre they old enemies or something like that?'
âNot at all,' said Destine. âAlthough now I am not so sure.'
Prometheus scowled. âWhat's that supposed toâ?'
âHush!' hissed Destine. âJust watch.'
Closing her eyes, Sirona placed her hand onto Renard's wound. She began to temper her breathing, soft and shallow and then with deep inhalations, her withered old frame rising and falling â and then something occurred. Her hand began to glow and Renard suddenly screamed. In pain, in joy â it was hard to tell. Like a thing alive, the light seeped into the Frenchman's wound like golden water and flooded it completely, leaving golden sparkles across the surface of the skin. Sirona was incandescent, the energy flowing all around her body as if she was lit from within. Beneath her paper-thin skin, her veins throbbed. With a gasp, the light quickly faded away and she flopped back into her wheelchair, sweating profusely. Renard broke away too, crashing to the floor. As the last vestiges of the light faded away, his hands darted to his guts. When he removed them, there was no blood. His wound had been healed in its totality, taking all the pain with it.
âYou are injured also, I see,' Sirona said, pointing a crooked finger at Prometheus.
Prometheus had yet to make sense of what his eyes had seen. He was woefully out of his depth and he knew it. He was useless in these situations, preferring to exert his brawn rather than his brain. He looked down at his mangled fingers. Although the pain was still there, with all the excitement around him, he had almost forgotten about it. âYou⦠you can fix me up? Mend my bones, I mean?'
âBring him to me,' Sirona said, and the guards guided Prometheus to her side, with the Irishman reluctantly obeying. He could do little but watch as tiny sparks flowed from Sirona's fingers and into his. In only a moment, where there were once broken bones, now they were healed. He felt no pain â only utter astonishment.
âBut⦠how didâ?' he gasped.
Sirona smiled. âI thought you were supposed to be Cornelius's friend. Have you never seen magic before?' She didn't wait for a reply. âAntoine, now that you are recuperated, if you would be so kind as to escort our friends to the prison level. See to it that they are restrained securely until I have need of them.'
âAs you wish, my Lady,' bowed Renard, fully healed and back to his murderous old self. âI hope the accommodation will be to your liking, Mother. And just so there are no
other
distractions.' He smashed his metal hand across the back of Prometheus's neck and he crashed unconscious to the floor. âGuards, take them down to hell.'
Soon Destine's ankles were chained to the wall in an iron-barred cell and she contemplated her fate â and moreover, what more of it there was to come. Prometheus was still unconscious in a cell next door to her, and the guards had chained not just his wrists but they had also fixed an iron collar around his neck, fastened to the wall like a dog on a lead.
â
Je suis désolée, mon cher ami
,' she whispered, âfor getting you into this mess. I was a fool to believe that I could save Cornelius⦠and now we are in desperate need of salvation ourselves⦠whilst he is nowhere to be seen.'
âOh, I'm sure he'll turn upâ¦' sneered Renard, entering the prison with a grin on his face, â⦠in pieces, if Baron Remus has his way.'
âI see that you are still skulking in shadows like the monster you are,' Destine said to him, her eyes flooded with tears, her words coated with hatred.
Renard approached Destine's cell, with a smirk on his face. âI should thank Cornelius when we next meet, for were it not for him I would be without my little accoutrement here.' He grabbed hold of one of the bars to Destine's cell and, wth the slightest of flexes, his metal fingers bent the bar with ease. âThink what this hand could do to him, Mother. It would be such exquisite torture. I think I'll start with his ankles, breaking the bones so he cannot run⦠and then his hands, his ribs, his spine⦠and then when I run out of bones to break, perhaps I might take my hand to his lungs, or squeeze the juices from his heart. Not even Lady Sirona would be able to put him back together once I am finished.'
âWhy do you call her that?' snapped Destine. âYou
know
who she is!'
âAnd so do you, it seems.'
âWhat is the reason for this deception, Antoine?' asked Destine. âThe Hades Consortium has poisoned her mind, just as it poisoned yours!'
âThat shows how little you know, Mother,' sniggered Renard, enjoying the look of distaste on his mother's face. âI was always a vicious bastard⦠my father's blood flowed within my veins⦠all the Hades Consortium did was cultivate it. They
embraced
it! That is what they do! They even took in a monster like Remus, for god's sake. Poor Cornelius⦠he really has no idea what hunts him.'
Destine felt a lump rise in her throat. âWhat are you talking about? According to your
mistress
, Cornelius is not even in this place!'
âThat may well be true, but we've heard from an impeccable source that he will be very soon,' said Renard.
âSource?
What
source?' demanded Destine.
âWhyâ¦
you
, dear Mother,' said Renard. âYour clairvoyance has confirmed that Cornelius will come. So all we need do is wait.'
Destine felt her body compress. âYou knew⦠all this time, you knew.'
âWhy else do you think I made it so easy for you? Or did you really think you had that strong a grip on my mind? I led you here because had I not, I would have died from my injuries. Only Sirona could save me, and that is why getting to the Hive was exactly what I wanted. I
allowed
you to think that I was under your spell. Honestly, Mother⦠you are so naïve. Just because you have good intentions, it doesn't mean that you stand a better chance of survival⦠as poor old Cornelius will soon discover.'
âWh-what do you mean?' mumbled Destine.
âHe picked a very bad night to mess with the Baron,' said Renard. âAnd he will pay the price for it.'
Oblivious to events occurring high above their position, Quaint, Viktor, Romulus and the remaining members of his band, made their way through the tunnels deep beneath the foundry. Quaint's nerves were on fire. This deep inside the Hive, their progress should not be this easy. He had expected guards at every corner. Not that he was complaining. Every so often the tunnels branched off with steps leading above and below, but the band kept to the main tunnels, following Romulus's lupine senses.
âRemus is on the move,' he said, raising his hand to halt the group. âWe must head deeper.'
â
Deeper
?' asked Viktor, sweating profusely under the intense heat of the tunnels. âHow much further do these tunnels go? And why is it so damned hot down here?'
âThe Hive is aptly named, Viktor, for it is a nest⦠deep below the earth,' explained Romulus, wiping sweat from his own brow. âWhen the creators of this foundry discovered a dormant volcano on this spot, they constructed this place around it, and used its churning fires to power their machinery⦠before the Hades Consortium took it over.'
âWhen you say “dormant”, how dormant are we talking?' Quaint asked. âWe've got enough on our plate as it is without worrying about an erupting volcano!'
âRelax, my friend⦠we are quite safe,' Romulus said. âWe would get plenty of warning if the volcano were about to erupt. Right now we must concentrate on tracking down Remus. He is constantly moving, changing his location with every minute.'
âDo you think it's possible that he senses you?' asked Quaint.
âI cannot tell. But we must be cautious from here on,' replied Romulus. âIf my brother really is aware of my presence here, he will not announce himself until he knows why I have come. Otherwise, he will always be one step ahead of us.'
In silence, Quaint and Viktor followed Romulus deeper into the tunnels, and they guessed they were heading closer to the volcano too, as the heat was stifling, making it difficult to breathe. Spying a small squad of guards up ahead, they clung to the tunnel's wall.
âCornelius, this stress is too much for me at my age!' whispered Viktor. âThe next time your ex-governess asks me to keep an eye on you, I will hastily refuse!'
âAnd miss out on all this fun?' asked Quaint. âWhere else would you get the chance to crouch in shadows, hide from guards, accompany werewolves and fight to the death in the belly of an extinct volcano?'
âI do not know, but if I ever find out I will do my utmost to see that I avoid it!'
Quaint opened his mouth, just about to speak to Romulus, when he noticed the look of pain on the Italian's dirt-smeared face. âAre you all right?'
âI⦠I am ashamed of myself,' he whispered. âThose guards⦠I lost control.'
âMomentarily,' said Quaint.
âYou saw me back there, Cornelius⦠a moment is all it takes.'
âYes, but now you're back!' grinned the conjuror. âAnd they worked for the Hades Consortium, so it's not like it really matters, is it?'
Romulus glared at him. âIt matters to me! And it should matter to you too! Just because I look like a monster, it does not mean that I must become one. Those guards were menâ¦
human beings
⦠and I took their lives.'
âSo did I! So did
all
of us!' said Quaint. âmore than half our men. Those guards knew what they were getting into when they signed up for the Hades Consortium, so don't you waste an ounce of pity on them. The more of them we kill on our way in, the less we'll have to kill on our way back out!' He nodded at the small group of guards up ahead. âShall we?'
The band leapt out of the tunnel and crashed into the red-clad guards. Even though the guilt was eating away at him, Romulus was no easy target. His claws cut as easily through flesh as they did the robes of the guards, but he stopped as he saw the last of his men fall to the ground. Quaint and Viktor were still fighting their foes, but there were two guards left. Romulus leapt, grabbing hold of one guard around the neck. He twisted his torso and the guard's neck snapped. Romulus side-stepped the swing of a sword and slashed with his own weapons, dragging his claws across the guard's neck, and he too fell. Meanwhile, Quaint was trading punches with one guard, and Viktor was flat on his back trying to stop his guard from strangling him. The German glared at Romulus.
âAny time you wish to lend a hand,
ja
?'
Lend a hand Romulus did, grabbing Viktor's enemy under the armpits. Viktor got to his feet and unleashed a barrage of punches into the guard's stomach, with Romulus holding him upright. With one last punch, the guard slumped to the ground.
âI'm doing fine, if anyone's asking,' said Quaint, as he brought his knee up into a guard's groin. As the man's hands darted to his wounded privates, Quaint struck his fist across his jaw, breaking it with a loud crack!
âWe must keep going,' said Romulus, watching Quaint and Viktor panting for breath as if they'd just run a mile. âRemus is on the move again. This way!'
The tunnel that Romulus indicated led them to the edge of a gigantic pit. It could almost have been mistaken for a hole in the ground, but the thick, acrid plumes of black smoke said otherwise. The heat from within the vast chasm was unbearable. All around the circumference were indented alcoves, caves and passageways; leading to where was anyone's guess. Quaint had no idea how deep underground they truly were by this time, but they had at least found the source of the intense heat. He peered over the edge of the pit. It seemed endless. A blanket of charcoal smoke covered the entire mouth, with tendrils of black plumes escaping, rising up to the cave's roof. A low rumble emanated from below, as though a great beast slumbered within the cloud.
âThis must be the volcano,' Romulus said. âIt looks as if it served some sort of function for the foundry before the Hades Consortium took it in residence, do you see?' He pointed to a wooden platform erected on the far side that looked like a set of gallows extended across the mouth of the pit, with a thick chain attached to the arm, leading down into the thick smoke. âPerhaps it was used to mine the iron ore used for manufacturing.'