Judith flailed wildly as she was dragged further and further down into the choking blackness. It was like being enveloped in tar - thick, hot, and putrid. She didn't dare to open her mouth for fear that the inky darkness would rush into her throat and cut off her ability to breathe.
Celerity
slashed back and forth, yet seemed to do nothing to the cloying void around her.
She turned her focus inward, setting her jaw as she thought as loud as she could.
Lord, I beseech you, bless me with the power of your angels so that I may free myself from this void and fight back against this nightmare!
While God himself didn't intervene, the conviction of her words summoned her internal might to the fore. The inked words on her arm glowed bright, and Judith thrust her palm down towards the tentacle dragging her down. A blast of holy light lanced out and incinerated the disgusting appendage, shearing through the rotting flesh. Despite what she expected, there was no screech of pain or suprise from whatever was dragging her. It simply kept slithering further and further away until it was lost to her view, leaving her floating in the void.
Judith felt as though she were swimming, her lungs burning from her holding her breath. She couldn't hold it anymore. She opened her mouth and took a deep breath. To her surprise, air rushed in, cold and stagnant. She took another breath, less shaky this time. She twisted in place, holding up her glowing arm to try to see anything in the darkness, but it was impenetrable.
"Well how the hell do I get out of here?" she muttered. She muttered a quick Hail Mary to amplify her available power, then directed it to
Celerity's
blade. The sword flared bright, growing a foot-long extension that shimmered with faith's power. By way of experiment, Judith swung the supercharged sword in a wide arc.
The darkness parted like soft cheese with the swing, but then quickly snapped back shut. Through it she glimpsed a light, faint, but there. Judith set her jaw. "Oh no, you don't."
Celerity
was light enough that swinging it required little effort, and Judith set to it with a will, holding the blade in both hands as she cleaved mightily to and fro. Like an explorer clearing jungle foliage she forged ahead, cutting methodically again and again until the morass around her began to give way. Soft, muted light filtered through the gap she was making, but it was better than all-consuming darkness.
"No darkness can hold me," Judith grunted as sweat slid down her face. "I am the Lord's sword." She repeated the two phrases over and over like a mantra, her swings growing ever more forceful as she hacked herself free. The gap was taking longer and longer to close, and after a particularly vicious swing cleaved it wide open, Judith surged forward, tearing herself free of the oppressive blackness.
She promptly fell flat on her face, cold stone scraping her cheek. Judith rolled over and kipped up, her boots thudding on the floor.
Celerity
blazed with light as she held it aloft. She was in a stone corridor with a low ceiling, the air around her stale and musty.
Then she realized what was missing and spun back and forth. The all-consuming darkness that had held her simply... wasn't there. As if it had never existed at all. "What the..." she muttered, slowly lowering her sword. The Sanctum Templar was the deepest subterranean structure under the Vatican. There was nothing further below other than bedrock. So where in God's earth - literally, in this case - was she?
Judith raised
Celerity
again, turning in place slowly. The light from the glowing sword illuminated the dark edges of the corridor further away from her, and Judith saw the tunnel widen into a chamber of some kind. She crept towards it, her ears tuning out her breathing and footsteps in an attempt to pick out any other noise that might be audible in the tunnel. Her blood was up, but at least now she was ready to fight if something new lurched out of the darkness at her.
She stepped into the room at the end of the tunnel. It was a small semicircular space, holding a pair of coffins. Old adages about disturbing the dead flickered through her mind, but she had to know where she was. Judith slowly approached the coffins and held up
Celerity
. Inscribed on the coffins were simple crosses, below them short messages in Latin. "Wherever one shall go, the other shall follow, into the arms of the Lord," Judith translated under her breath.
A husband and wife then, buried together in their own crypt. Likely wealthy, if they could afford such a private place on their own. Judith wracked her brain for all the cemeteries in Rome and the surrounding area, remembering that there were, indeed, quite a few. But none of them extended under the Vatican last time she checked.
She turned and moved out of the burial chamber back into the tunnel, doubling back past where she'd escaped the darkness from and moving further up the passage. In theory, if she kept going this way, she'd hit the way out rather quickly. After all, burial crypts were hardly designed to be explored by the living.
At least that's what she thought. Judith stopped short as she came to a four-way fork in the passageway. She made a face as she turned in place. "The undercity?" she wondered.
Rome had an extensive network of tunnels underneath the surface, remnants of the more ancient cities that the modern one had been built on top of. But few ran directly underneath the Vatican. Those that did were supposed to have been filled with debris to avoid enemies of the Church using them for nefarious purposes. Had they missed one, and that was where Judith had wound up? It was certainly possible, but if so, why had she wound up in a burial crypt?
Judith shook her head.
Focus.
She needed to get back to the surface, to join the fight that was surely raging there for the sanctity of the Holy See. Unless the defenders had been overwhelmed already. Devout men in the heart of the holiest city on the planet should not have simply been susceptible to whatever had made them swell and burst like balloons, yet it had happened. Had every member of the Swiss Guard and the Templars met their fate in such a manner? Was she all that was left?
No. She'd been swallowed by darkness and was still alive. So had the Archbishop and Luca. They'd been taken as well, rather than simply obliterated. For some reason or another, she was still alive. And she intended to stay that say.
"Survey says..." Judith muttered as she placed
Celerity
on the ground and spun it. The blade twirled in three neat circles before stopping with the point facing down the hallway in front of her. With a flicker of thought the sword snapped back into her hand, and she set off down the tunnel.
As she ventured forth, Judith poured more of her power into the sword until it blazed like a star, illuminating the way forward. Without any kind of bearing on where she was, all she could do was have faith that she was going in the right direction. The real question was, what
was
the right direction? The Sanctum Templar was almost dead center in the city, and if Rome had been overtaken by darkness, the heart of it was where she needed to be. If she wound up going outside the city limits, she would have to double back. She also needed to go up, not down, in order to assess the situation on the surface.
A rumble passed through the tunnel, making her stop short. Judith dropped into a fighting crouch, her ears cocked to hear anything coming. Her heart thundered in her chest.
Nothing happened after several minutes, and she stood back up, loosening her grip on her sword. She set off again, moving as quick as she dared. Up ahead, a big metal door was illuminated by the glow of her sword. It looked as though it hadn't been touched in several hundred years, the metal warped from centuries in the dark. Judith set her shoulder against it and gave an experimental shove. It swung open wide with almost no resistance.
Before her was a yawning black void, the tunnel turning into a landing of sorts that dropped off into the abyss. She dimly heard wind howling somewhere in the distance, which was a good sign. It meant she was near the surface, or at least heading in a direction with a flow of air to follow
to
the surface. By way of experiment Judith held
Celerity
out over the gap and let the sword fall from her fingers. It spun lazily downward before clattering against a stone floor below her. Judith called the sword back to her, then looked around with it's light for a path downward. Grooves on the walls indicated there had been stairs to her left at some point, but they were long gone. Judith sighed, then tossed
Celerity
again and leaped off the landing.
She landed like a cat, slowly rising to her feet and calling her sword back. As she walked forward again, she felt vestiges of faith around her, faint and flickering like fireflies. She held
Celerity
aloft, and turned in a slow circle. After a moment, she began to pick out ancient architecture among the ruins around her. Marble columns lay shattered and broken, while others stood tall and held up the ceiling high above her. Something crunched under her boot, and she looked down to see a broken wooden spar from a pew.
"How long have you been down here?" she murmured. Further forward she found what was once an altar, though time had shaken loose dirt and debris to carpet the stone. There was no crucifix in evidence, but Judith wasn't about to go searching through the rubble for it. She had bigger problems.
As she was about to leave the once-sacred space, however, something caught her eye. It was a book sitting on a chair on the altar that had somehow escaped the ravages of time in this sunken place. Judith wiped dust off the cover and picked it up. The script on the cover was written in a language she didn't recognize or understand. Neither was any text on the pages as she flipped through it quickly. She was about to put it down when a picture in the book caught her eye: that of a massive, unblinking eye, surrounded by innumerable tendril appendages. Around it were words in yet another language, a bizarre kind of chicken scratch. Though she didn't know the words, she recognized the eye well enough.
"Azathoth," she scowled.
It seemed a dream still. Her being catapulted into another dimension by Satan himself, working with the demon and succubus who had broken and violated her to kill a creature that possessed a power unlike any Judith had ever seen before. It called itself a god, yet Judith had been the one to deal it a mortal blow, supercharged with angelic energy from the being known as Lilith. Though that level of power hadn't remained in Judith's clutches, ever since she's noticed her faithful magics packed a fair bit more punch. But along with that had come the dreams, the reminder every time she slept of what the Infernals had done to her.
A part of her wanted to leave the book behind. However, the pragmatic part of her knew that, should the Templar Order survive this, the tome could be a wealth of useful information. It was just big enough to fit into one of her gear pouches.
With the book stowed away, Judith left the broken church behind, following the whistling of the wind as it snaked through the passages around her. Every breath grew a little more clear, and she knew she was on the right track. Her early pondering about where was best to end up ceased to matter - so long as she was on the surface, she would figure things out.
Another rumble rippled through the tunnel, and again Judith stopped.
An earthquake?
she thought.
No, not intense enough. Just a single tremor. Still, that doesn't bode well.