Chapter Six - Annette
If the forest beyond the
glas
still holds onto its fetid, muggish dampness like a stubborn houseguest, the forest underneath the
glas
possesses it as a hound refusing to give up a bone - fangs and fight and all. The air fills the lungs with musk and the aching weight of the underground. The murky light may as well have been filtered through coffee grounds, sporadic and bitter. The untrodden surface underfoot sponges back underfoot with each timid step, giving the impression that a thick blanket of podzol holds back the ocean underfoot.
Annette's chest and arms are wet with sodden bark, painting her front end with rusted pine. Her cheek stings with debris from shoving her face into a trunk as she nearly slipped on the climb down, and her hair plasters against her face with dripping water and sweat. She doubles over when her boots finally make landfall on the rank earth, heaving out a breath and thinking to herself that it had been far easier to scale such giants when she was a little girl. How invincible childhood had been.
Underneath the rolling green, the
glas
presents to her a truly ghastly scene. The lumbering Kerish pines which usually fluff out into a spiraling star of bristles and pines instead seem sun-starved, withering - collapsing under the deprivation. Here, only the highest branches retain any foliage at all, fighting one another for the tiny glow of sunlight flittering through the soil covering. The lower rungs bear a starvation like winter, as though autumn had come and stolen all of its green and deposited it onto the ground without ceremony.
Pines are evergreen - to see them wounded like this feels, to Annette, alien and unsettling. The sky may as well shine green, or the rivers turn orange, and they would instill within her the same strangeness of feeling.
And where she might expect to see the soaked, discarded remains of needles covering the detritus, they've all since been claimed by the worms and fungi and decomposers of the soil. There had been time enough under the
glas
for the pines to shed their lowest blades, for the critters of the ground to consume that material, and to leave behind no trace of such a battle.
What could have possibly caused this?
Cordelia seems to share her confusion though not her dread, leaping down the final few feet to the ground and spinning in a large, bewildered circle. With much the same grandeur as a child on Christmas, she gleefully marvels, "This shouldn't be here."
Annette kicks her boot against a trunk, hoping to shake away an itch at the bottom of her foot that'd be impossible to indulge without worrying off her shoes. Tired from the climb down, she simply says, "I'm not sure the forest agrees."
"This shouldn't be here," confirms the Detective, just as enthused.
Beyond the bright rays of the sinkhole above, the light exists only in dim patches. She feels her eyes strain from the effort of adaptation, resenting the conditions. The forest continues on past where her eyes will allow her to see, trickling off into the unknowing, impossible darkness.
Cordelia's delight is interrupted as she makes a low, groaning noise, barely audible. Annette turns to see her hand quickly retreating from massaging her temples, as though embarrassed by the action. She looks up and down Annette, stoically neutral, and flicks her neck away as though dismissing her worry.
Annette suffers through her concern for the Detective, who once again seems content to let Annette be the only one of the pair who cares for Cordelia's wellbeing. Stomaching her nerves, she steps away, gazing out beyond the haphazard and tiltering pines to try and discern a proper way forward.
A hand grips her bicep, fingers twisting trepidatiously around the muscle and halting her in place. Annette's boots squelch to a stop. She closes her eyes and forces patience to win the day. "Frightened of the dark, dear?"
"Just..." A burdened breath. Hesitant. Cool. "Just stay close to me."
"And here I was, intending to scurry off into the haunted forest on my lonesome," she masks her fretting by habit. She swallows and tries to bring her focus to bear on the mystery at hand. "What is this place? This cannot be natural."
"No. I think..." Cordelia's voice is interrupted by another grimacing noise, and her hand releases from Annette to fly up to her forehead. A grim feeling corrupts Annette's sternum, bristling against the Detective's request not to disclose her clear-and-present issues. Cordelia paces away a few steps, and without further context, simply utters, "We ought to consider the possibility."
Keeping herself on task, she replies, "The scale of this place is massive. It would've required dozens of people, and I can't even
imagine
how one would go about-,"
The Detective stumbles, catching herself against a trunk to keep standing. Her palm grips into the coppery bark, fingernails digging into the canyons between chips. Her breath is forced and heavy, her forehead contorting with stress and beads of sweat.
Annette steps close. "I recognize you asked me to be patient with your disclosure, but you're not well." She places the back of her hand on Cordelia's forehead, then removes it quickly. "You're burning up. Do you feel a fever?"
"No," Cordelia dismisses, in a tone that clearly means
yes
. She purses her lips, and even quieter admits, "Perhaps."
She guides the Detective to sit, placing her back up against the bark. "A fever and a headache, are you feeling any other-,"
"I've not said anything about a headac-,"
Annette silences her with a look. "What else are you experiencing?"
She holds her face steady and gazes off into the distance behind Annette, thinking to herself. She watches as those emerald eyes dart back-and-forth, never settling for more than a heartbeat - a clear sign some debate is working underneath the surface. Cordelia was never famous for her interoception, and Annette suspects it may take some effort for her to take stock of her feelings and come to a full awareness of how she's-
Quite suddenly, Cordelia twists to the side and jams a finger down her throat. Her whole torso heaves with her as she retches all over the horrid ground, calling forth a smell of acid and sap. Annette has hardly any time to give her space, falling back onto her ass and catching her palms on the twigs and mud.
"
Jesus
, Cordelia, why would you-,"
With just as little warning, the Detective repeats the disgusting act, coughing out the contents of her stomach onto the earth without reverence. She remains bent over herself, panting out her urgent breath over the grisly scene, eyes shut tightly. She swallows, then makes a repulsed face as the palette makes a new trip down.
"Christ, that's a horrid taste," is all she says.
Annette shoves away the need to mirror the retching, slowly pulling herself up to bundle Cordelia's soft, raven hair between her palms and hold it back out of her face. From the corner of her eyes, the Detective flashes a non-understanding glow.
With an air of resignation, Annette mumbles, "How am I to know you won't try for a third?"
Cordelia shrugs and sits up, running her hand through her hair to shove off Annette's hold and to tuck the strands back behind her. She shivers and suffers through the discomfort for a moment, and without ceremony surmises, "Annette, I suspect I've been poisoned."
And, as though it is comforting, adds, "With luck, not fatally so."
Annette feels her nerves burst as she wonders, "When could you have been poiso-," and then her nerves are quickly replaced by a frustrated heat in her cheeks. She closes her eyes and whispers, "Please don't tell me there was more than salt in that soil you ate."
"I didn't taste anything other tha-,"
"Many poisons are famously tasteless," she hisses back. Annette stands quickly and surveys the area. "We need to get you to a doctor."
Cordelia is unhurried in her effort to stand, brushing off the dirt from herself without any sense of priority to her being. "I feel worlds better."
"I am
not