3. THE COURT OF FILTH
Greg felt like he'd been wandering around in the dark for hours. It had probably only been a few minutes.
The corridor had turned out to be a single long passageway in some kind of labyrinth. Greg vaguely remembered some kind of trick about solving mazes that he'd learned from his little brother, but he couldn't seem to remember it now, especially since that indisctinct moaning sound kept drifting from everywhere at once. Greg was getting really sick of that moaning sound.
"Hey, Mr Walker in the Dark," he yelled. "How about how just come on over here and we can just, y'know, fight straight up?"
The Walker of the Dark declined to reply.
Greg kept wandering. After a while he started to hear a new sound. Like the moaning, it seemed to be coming from everywhere at once: a rustling sound, like wings brushing up against stones.
"Aw fuuuuck," said Greg. "C'mon, man! Let's just get it over with!"
The obsidian sword was starting to feel really heavy and Greg was starting to wish that β awesome as this adventure had been so far β he'd resisted Sofia's fluttering eyelashes and just stayed at home. He could be sitting back on his couch right now, maybe with a cold beer in one hand, a big bowl of Lays to his right, football on TV, the AC on, etc. He was not enjoying his time in the labyrinth at all. Being devoured by the Watcher of the Dark and then fed eternally to the Flaying Worms didn't sound particularly appealing either.
"Hey, Mr Duke!" Greg yelled. "Sorry about all this! Hey, how about you just kick me back to Earth-Land, buddy, we can call it square!"
Silence.
Moaning.
"Well, fuck you too," muttered Greg. Fine, he would rescue the princess. That would show the fucking bastard.
"For Princess Kitra," he said in a low voice, feeling the sword spring to life into his hand. It felt good now: light, quick, sharp. He started to jog. Walking wasn't getting him anywhere. What if I turn right at every intersection, he thought. That's bound to get me somewhere. Right? He'd never been that great at figuring out mazes.
He dashed around the corner. A tentacle wrapped itself around his leg and dragged him to the ground. He dropped the sword.
"Aaaack!" Greg yelled, moments before another tentacle wrapped around his mouth. "Frrr ktttraa," he tried to say, but it came out as an indisctinct mumble. The tentacles jerked him up into the air. The luminescent flowers illuminated a gaping round mouth, filled with rings of tiny teeth. Hundreds of tiny eyes bulged around its perimeter.
Shit, Greg thought, now I'm going to die. This fucking sucks.
He stabbed out wildly with his free leg and planted a foot into a cluster of eyes. The creature didn't appear to notice, or care. The tentacles dragged him closer to that grisly mouth. For an instant he was suspended, struggling, above it β and then the tentacles loosened and he plunged into the darkness. The awful mouth closed around him. He felt the teeth carve minute incisions into his flesh. The mouth began to tighten.
"Kittthhhrraaaa," he gasped.
He heard a faint tearing sound as the sword plunged through the monster's flesh to reach Greg's hand.
In his grasp, the sword thrust itself straight up and then cut, tearing a gaping incision in the creature's mouth. Black ooze gushed from the slash. Greg dug one foot into the side of the creature's mouth, felt the teeth piercing his shoe, and pushed off. He sprang out of the creature's mouth and rolled on the dungeon floor, choking on black bile.
Tentacles swarmed over him, but the sword slashed and cut, and the tentacles plastered the wall, severed and wriggling. He slashed and slashed and slashed, screaming incoherently, until he'd reached the creature's body, and was hacking it up into minute pieces. Gore sprayed into his face and soaked his clothes; the blade was coated in translucent bile.
Moments later, the Watcher in the Dark lay in pieces on the floor, oozing slime from its shattered carapace.
Greg stood there panting for a moment.
"IMPRESSIVE," boomed a voice. "YOU HAVE PROVEN YOURSELF WORTHY OF MY COURT. ENTER, GREG OF EARTH-LAND."
"Ugggggggh," said Greg, spitting out a mouthful of slime.
The wall beside him faded and was replaced by a faint mist. It looked suspiciously like another portal.
Greg was no longer terribly trusting of portals, but he figured anything had to be better than the labyrinth. He stepped into the mist.
*
He was standing in a courtyard of pale pink marble. Roman-esque columns surrounded a pool of crystalline water in its centre. In the distance, curious spires framed the horizon.
Greg dashed to the pool and had a sip. The water was clear and delicious. "Mmmm," he mumbled to himself. "Mmmmmmm."