I had the wonderful thought today that it would work perfectly if Eve was an honest-to-god furry. And Katze vonDue could be this immense persian in a suit with a cigar and a gold-topped cane.
More thought required!
Eve took a deep breath, surveying the scene. Ahead, the
stone bridge ended abruptly, but on either side there were metal railings, the
remains of the previous expedition. The cold sandstone walls seemed to loom
over her, just on the edge of the lanternlight, flickering shadows moving in
the corners. She moved closer to the end of the bridge and looked down. The
chamber seemed to plummet into blackness. The walls were bare, but the doors
through which they had come were covered in an amazing sculpture; ten people
with their mouths open, possibly amazed or awed. Possibly screaming. Eve took a
step back from the sheer drop, hoping they weren’t screaming.
“Tic.”
“Yes Eve?”
“I need you out here.”
The little Cog whirred out of her backpack and up to
eyelevel. He was small enough to sit on her cupped hands; A quarter-sphere sat
on a circular base, he was made of brass and heavier than he looked. Four green
crystals, moulded into his domed front, shone in sequence as Tic woke up
properly, and the clicking, whirring sound he made while floating intensified
slightly.
“Tic, how deep is the pit?”
“Bear with me,” he said in his child-like voice. It turned
and whirred off over the edge, into the darkness. Eve watched it go, once again
wondering just how it worked. Of all the discoveries she had found on her
travels, brought back to the College, this one she could never reveal. They
would take Tic apart, destroy whatever made him… well, him, just to find out
how he worked.
In ten seconds he was back.
“Deep, Eve. There’s… you don’t want to go down there.”
“Right. Can’t go across the bridge. Can’t go down; wouldn’t
be able to get back up anyway.” She began to walk up and down the edge, tapping
her chin with one finger. “Is there anything on the other side? Probably not;
the bridge has fallen. It’s broken off.” She paused and knelt, peering closely
at the dusty floor.
“I don’t like it here, Eve. Tombs; they give me the creeps,”
Tic said, his voice quavering. There was always a slight tinny quality to his
voice, the sound coming from a tiny grille behind the dome.
“It’s not a tomb, Tic. We don’t do tombs, remember?”
“From what I saw down there, it’s someone’s tomb alright,” came
the quick reply.
A simple assignment, she had asked for. Nothing too
difficult, just to get back into the swing of things. It wasn’t hard; but no.
The College team had sent back the report that they had penetrated the fourth
chamber in the Temple of Po-Foret, and then all reports had stopped. Nothing
for a week.
“There’s a dragmark, here, in the dust,” she said.
“Something was dragged to the edge, and then on from there. A sack, maybe,
pulled onto the next part of the bridge.”
Tic came to rest on the stone floor next to her knee. “Maybe
they were dragged off the edge and dropped?”
“No,” she said, pointing. “Look; there are footprints
running alongside the dragmark. This is something being pulled. For someone to
pull something over the edge they would have to be in front of it, and the
footprints just stop at the edge too.” She stood up and dusted her trousers
off. “Either someone dragging a sack simply walked to the edge and over, or the
bridge extends.” She gave a fierce grin. “That’s it!” she shouted.
The words echoed off into the darkness and, as if in answer,
a faint grinding noise came back from the opposite wall.
Eve cocked her head to one side. “What was that?”
“No idea,” Tic replied, “but it’s stopped now.” He whirred
off in the direction it had come from.
“Hey,” his voice floated out of the dark. “There’s a tiny
bit of stone poking out of the wall here.”
Eve cupped her hands around her mouth. “Can you see any
controls?”
The grinding noise came again.
“It moved! When you shouted! Eve, it’s sound-controlled!”
Tic zoomed back over and vibrated excitedly in the air, narrowly missing Eve’s
ear. “Shout something else!”
“Loud noise… the people in the sculpture, on the door.” She
grinned. “Tic, they’re singing! Ten people singing… how loud a noise can you make?”
If Tic had been a person, Eve was sure he would have been
grinning. “A loud noise? Thought you’d never ask…” He started making a sound, a
high-pitched humming, that grew louder.
“Yes, like that!” Eve said, finding that she needed to
shout. She took a step away from Tic and shielded her ears. Barely detectable
over the din, she heard the bridge mechanism working and, a moment later, saw
the bridge coming. Its end was ragged designed to fit perfectly together with
the cracked end she was stood on, and as it crunched into place Eve stepped on
to it, snatching up the lantern as she did so.
“EEEEEEEeeee ok, d’you think that’s enough?” Tic said; with
a lurch, the bridge began to retract, taking Eve with it.
“Fascinating,” she said. “The bridge stays out as long as
you make the noise. It’s so smooth; I’m not sure we have anything as
sophisticated as this.”
“I guess that’s why the College sent you, Eve,” Tic replied.
The far wall, and a pair of doors which were slightly open,
appeared at the edge of the lanternlight. A short flight of stone steps lead up
to it and, as the bridge retreated back into the wall, Eve stepped off onto the
bottom stair.
“This should be good,” she murmured, and walked up the steps
and through the door.
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