Arran looked at Karanos in astonishment. "Worthless rocks?"
He almost felt offended at the words. His most prized possession was his starmetal sword, and that was nothing compared to even a single one of the hills that surrounded them.
To hear such treasure dismissed so casually caused him no small amount of shock. If starmetal was mere trash, then his own possessions were little more than the trinkets of a child.
But he knew that Karanos was neither bragging nor mocking him. From the matter-of-factly way in which the man had spoken, it was clear he considered it a simple truth. And if that was the case, then the mines contained something far more valuable.
"The people who built the city," Arran began, "what were they looking for, if not starmetal?"
"You will find out soon enough," the gaunt mage replied, gesturing for Arran to follow him as he began to walk toward the far end of the cavern. "But first, where do you think starmetal comes from?"
"The remains of fallen stars?" Arran said in a hesitant voice.
That was what the shopkeeper who had sold him his sword had said, and he"d never given the story much thought. Now, however, he began to wonder whether it was just a tall tale.
Yet Karanos nodded. "Burning rocks sometimes fall from the heavens," he said. "Those are what people call fallen stars — though I doubt that they are actually stars. Most of these rocks are unremarkable, but a rare few of them contain starmetal. To the best of my knowledge, such rocks are the only source of starmetal in the world."
"But then…" Arran shot a glance at the numerous hills of starmetal surrounding them, then turned back to Karanos with a questioning look on his face.
"Indeed," Karanos said. "The rock that fell here must have been a true monster. I suspect it fell when the world was still young. And when it fell, its outermost layers broke off and filled the surrounding lands with gems and metals. After that, the core must have lain buried for countless eons."
"Until the people who built the city came to mine it," Arran said. He wasn"t certain whether he believed the story — much of it sounded quite far-fetched — but he certainly didn"t have anything better to offer.
"If they were indeed people," Karanos said. "Which is something I have some doubts about. But yes, eventually, they arrived and built these mines."
"But if they weren"t mining for starmetal, what were they after?" Arran asked.
It was obvious that Karanos had spoken the truth about the starmetal being discarded as trash. In just a few minutes of walking through the cavern, they had already pa.s.sed hundreds of starmetal hills, s.p.a.ced out evenly with wide roads between them.
"You will see that soon," the white-eyed mage replied. "It will be easier to explain once you have seen what lies at the center of this rock."
Arran responded with a hesitant nod. Even though he was curious about their destination — and the treasures they would find there — he felt more concern than excitement. While he did not believe Karanos intended him harm, he could not escape the feeling that there was danger ahead.
They continued on through the cavern for over two miles, pa.s.sing numerous starmetal hills along the way, each consisting of neatly piled stacks of starmetal chunks. To Arran"s eyes, it seemed like the greatest treasury the world had ever seen — endless amounts of a metal whose value exceeded that of gold many thousands of times.
And yet, with some bewilderment, he realized that the miners would have probably have destroyed the starmetal, had they been able to do so. It was only because the material was nigh indestructible that they had chosen to pile it up where it could be ignored, instead.
Finally, they reached the far end of a cavern, where a tunnel led deeper into the ground. Although it was about fifty feet across, the vastness of the cavern before it made it seem small, and Arran had an oppressive feeling when they stepped inside.
The unease he felt about their surroundings was soon forgotten, however, when he realized that the tunnel"s walls were made of pure starmetal. With wide-eyed wonder, he looked at the glistening surface, curious just how the miners had managed to cut their way through the material.
"You"ll understand soon enough," Karanos replied when Arran asked him the matter. "We"ve now entered the core, and from here, it"s just a few miles to its center."
The tunnel wasn"t straight, as Arran had expected. Rather, it wound its way through the starmetal in a snake-like pattern, twisting and turning for no apparent reason.
At a guess, Arran thought the miners must have chosen this as the weakest route through the thick layer of starmetal — perhaps cutting through it had not been easy even for them and whatever tools had allowed them to delve through the impenetrable metal.
Barely twenty minutes later, they emerged into a large, dark s.p.a.ce.
Karanos made a small gesture, and the ball of bright light that had guided their way suddenly expanded in size, presenting Arran with a view that once more made his eyes go wide with astonishment.
This was no hall or cavern. Rather, it was a perfectly spherical s.p.a.ce, about two hundred paces across, with walls that consisted entirely of a smooth layer of starmetal.
Yet although the s.p.a.ce was as grand as it was alien, it wasn"t what caught Arran"s eye. Rather, what drew his gaze was what lay at its center.
In the middle of the spherical s.p.a.ce stood a large starmetal dais, and upon it sat something that Arran could only describe as an amorphous ma.s.s of pure darkness, entirely still yet somehow appearing alive.
The dark ma.s.s was more than just unsettling. Merely looking at it caused him an almost instinctive fear, and he felt as if the darkness was somehow pulling at him, trying to draw him inside of it.
With a start, he realized this was no mere feeling — the cloth of his robe was stretched in the direction of the black ma.s.s, and he understood that the pull he felt was entirely real.
Most disturbing of all, however, was that there was something deeply familiar about the formless darkness, as if it was something he had long known.
"Is this the treasure?" he asked, looking at Karanos with wary eyes.
"It is not," the man replied. "This is what brought forth the treasure. But the treasure itself was taken away long ago."
Arran frowned uneasily. Karanos did not seem as if he had any malice in mind, but the formless shadow a hundred paces before them screamed danger.
Had he not known it was impossible for him to escape Karanos if the man intended him harm, he would have long since fled. And even now, he was preparing to fight his companion if necessary.
"Then what was the treasure? And if it"s gone, why are we here?" He glanced at the ma.s.s of darkness again, then added, "And what is that thing?"
"To answer your first question," Karanos said, "this place once held shards of Living Shadow. Look."
With a single movement, he produced a long blade in his hand — a simple sword, seemingly forged from unremarkable iron. Then, in a casual stroke, he struck a blow to the starmetal wall, leaving a deep scar in the supposedly indestructible metal.
Arran looked on with wide eyes. "What is that?"
"This is Living Shadow," Karanos replied. In an instant, the blade in his hand turned as black as the ma.s.s of darkness at the center of the s.p.a.ce and took the shape of a long spear. With this, he struck the wall again, and although the blow was a clumsy one, it left another deep scar in the metal.
Karanos frowned. "I"ve never been much good with weapons," he said with a sigh. As the spear disappeared from his hand, he turned to Arran. "That is the treasure I mean to give you."
Arran looked at him in astonishment. "You"ll give me your sword?" Living Shadow or not, to Arran"s eyes it was a sword — and the best he"d ever seen.
"Not mine," Karanos replied. "And since no more Living Shadow remains here, we will have to retrieve a piece for you — because although this place was stripped clean, an endless supply lies on the other side."
"The other side?" Arran"s puzzled expression lasted only a moment, then turned to one of horror as he glanced at the ma.s.s of darkness. "You want us to go into that… thing?"
"That thing is a tear in our reality," Karanos said. "And on the other side lies a Shadow Realm. We will enter it, and retrieve your gift."
"It"s a Shadow Realm?" Now, Arran understood why the unnatural ma.s.s of darkness looked so familiar, but the knowledge brought him little comfort. "We"re entering a Shadow Realm?!"