Many of them were marching all in the same direction, but others ran off in swarms. It was all very abstract and puzzling, until they reached a village Annaïg guessed to be Hereguard Plantation, one of the few farms still run mostly by Bretons. She could see a group of them, drawn up behind a barricade.
It wasn’t long before they were fighting, and Annaïg’s horror mounted. She wanted desperately to look away, but it was as if she no longer controlled her muscles.
She saw a wave of Argonians and sea monsters wash over the barricade, and like arrows of mist, the moth-things plunged into the fray. Wherever they fell, a silvery thread followed, striking the body and reeling back up, brighter. The moths simply vanished.
The wave passed, leaving the bodies of the dead Bretons behind, pushing on into the village.
But then the dead stirred. They came to their feet and joined the march.
Annaïg was sick then, and although there was little in her belly to lose, she bent double, retching. It spent her, and she lay trembling, unable to watch more.
“So,” she heard Glim say after a moment. “So this is what the tree wanted.”
She heard the pain in her friend’s voice, and despite how she felt, dragged herself back to the edge and opened her eyes.
Again her first impression failed her. She imagined she was seeing an Argonian army, standing shoulder-to-shoulder, ready to slay this foul enemy as they had the forces of Dagon in times past.
But then she got it.
“They’re just standing there. They aren’t fighting.”
Glim nodded. “Yes.”
The air was thick with fliers and threads.
“I don’t understand,” Annaïg wailed. “Why does the tree want your people to die?”
“Not all of us,” Glim whispered. “Just the Lukiul. The assimilated. The tainted. The An-Xileel, the Wild Ones—they’ve gone away. They’ll come back, after this is over, and every Imperial taint will be scoured.”
“It’s mad,” she said. “We have to do something.”
“What? In three hours every living thing in Lilmoth will be dead. Worse than dead.”
“Look, we’re here. We’re the only ones who have any chance of doing anything. We have to try!”
Glim watched the slaughter below for another few breaths, and in that moment she feared he was going to fling himself down to join his people.
But then he let out the long, undulating hiss that signified resignation.
“Okay,” he repeated in Tamrielic. “Let’s see what we can do.”
They left the edge and walked back into the crack. The holes that the fliers had come through were high, and the climb looked difficult, but the split in the island continued back, gradually sloping down. Daylight was soon behind them, and while the ghost of it followed them for a while, eventually they were in near complete darkness. She wished she’d foreseen this—one of her earliest concoctions had been to help her see at night. But without any proper materials or equipment, there wasn’t any way to make one now.
The going was easy enough, though—the walls remained about twice her shoulder-width apart, so it was easy enough to keep a hand on each rough surface. The floor was a little uneven, but after a few stumbles her feet grew cautious enough.
She could hear Glim breathing, but after they left the ledge, he hadn’t said anything, which was just as well, because not only would it be foolish to make any more noise than necessary, she didn’t feel like talking, either.
She reckoned they had gone a few hundred yards when she saw light once again, at first just a veneer on the stone, but soon enough to see where they were stepping again. A good thing, too, because the path led them to another cliff.
This one opened in the belly of the mountain, a vast, dome-shaped cavity open at the bottom so they could once more see the destruction of Lilmoth. They were already over the old Imperial quarter, where her house was.
“Taig,” she whispered.
“I’m sure he left,” Glim hissed. “The tree couldn’t affect him.”
She just shook her head and turned her sight away, and through tear-gleamed eyes she saw masses of the threads shooting down—so many it looked almost like rain. She followed their course and saw them, thousands of them, in every nook and cranny of the stone. She couldn’t make out much; they, too, seemed vaguely insectile, but she saw the thin, stone-colored tubes the threads issued from, because the rest of whatever-they-were were concealed in circular masses of what appeared to be the same material. They looked a lot like spider egg sacs, but larger, much larger.
“Here,” Glim murmured.
She had almost forgotten him. She turned to follow his pointing knuckles and saw steps hewn into the stone, leading up.
There wasn’t any other way to go except back, and so Annaïg started up, filled with a sudden, panicked determination. She had to do something, didn’t she? If she could get up there, cut those things loose, maybe the horror would end.
The steps wound up a few feet and vanished back into another tunnel. This one was illuminated with a palpable phosphorescence. It twisted to curve steeply skyward, and Annaïg realized they were making their way up above the domed space. Almost immediately it began branching, but she kept to her left, and after several breathless moments they came to a silvery-white cable, emerging from the stone below them and vanishing into the ceiling.
“It looks like the threads,” she whispered. “Only bigger.”
“Not bigger,” Glim said. “More.”
A little closer, she saw what he meant. The cable was composed of hundreds of threads wound together.
She reached out to touch it.
“Well, that’s not smart,” Glim said.
“I know,” she replied, trying to sound brave. Closing her eyes, she touched the back of her hand to it.
Something whirred about in her head and she felt a sudden giddy surge.
She saw now that the hole was larger than the cable that came up through it and, lying flat she was able to make out the jungle floor again. Below her, the ropelike structure unwound itself, sending threads off in every direction. She could see some of them vanishing into the web sacs.
“If we cut this, we’ll get a lot of them,” she said.
“What do you mean, ‘get’ them? What do you think will happen?”
“They’re all connected here.”
“Okay.”
“Then if we cut it …” She flailed off, gesturing.
“You think it will, what, shut this whole thing down? Destroy this island?”
“It might. Glim, we have to do something.”
“You keep saying that.” He sighed. “What will you cut it with?”
“Try your claws.”
He blinked, then stepped forward and experimentally raked his claws across the thing. He shivered and stepped back, then hit it again, with such force that the cord vibrated.
It wasn’t scratched.
“Any other ideas?”
“Maybe if we can find a sharp rock—” She broke off. “Do you hear that?”
Glim nodded.
“Xhuth!”
Because somewhere in the passages, she could hear voices shouting, several of them.
“Come on,” she said, and started up another branch of the tunnel.
They kept going, taking random branches, but the voices were gradually growing louder, and there was little doubt in her mind now that they were being pursued.
Whenever they came to a turn that seemed to go down, she took it, reasoning that so far they hadn’t been bothered by anything from that direction, but inevitably the passages seemed to move them upward.
She couldn’t have known, could she? How big this was all going to be, how utterly beyond her? It was ridiculous.
As if the gods had decided to punctuate that thought, the tunnel suddenly debouched onto a steep ledge that vanished into the interior space of the island.
She drew up short, panting, but Glim grabbed her arm and they were suddenly skittering down the tilted surface. Her surprise was so complete that all thought was pushed from her brain by white light, so when the Argonian caught a knob at the edge and swung them sharply down and under, she had nothing to be relieved about. She found herself on a rounded, springy surface.