Hero Rising. Shane Hegarty

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Hero Rising - Shane  Hegarty


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said we should have gone left. I said we should go right,” said a third.

      A noise startled them and the assistants lifted the Desiccators they’d brought.

      But it was only Hugo, throwing out a basin of dirty, rabbit-poo-filled water.

      They kept their weapons raised. He paused, liquid slopping about the edge of the basin.

      The assistants lowered their weapons. Hugo threw the water along the ground, so that it lapped and splashed at their gleaming shoes, then returned inside.

      As if a single entity, the assistants turned to clatter and bump their way away from the dead end back towards the main street, still arguing about which direction they should have gone in.

      But someone else remained unseen. Emmie had followed their movements, knowing they’d be so wrapped up in the thought of catching Legends that she could shadow them easily.

      She crouched to the ground, found a patch of dust, exactly the sort created when something comes through a gateway. But there was only one smattering, as if a large foot had been placed in this world, and immediately withdrawn. Otherwise, there was no sign of scratch marks on walls, or bite marks on bins.

      Nothing.

      She was about to leave the scene when something else caught her eye. A small bottle of Shampoodle rolling across the ground, spilling a dull blue chemical from its open top.

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      Emmie walked to it, rolled it with her foot and glanced back at the door of Woofy Wash.

      Something was wrong, although she couldn’t quite figure out what it was. Finn would know what to do, she decided.

      She set off to find him.

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      Finn woke.

      He was trapped in a small space, so dark he could see nothing at all, not even the hand in front of his face.

      Hold on, he thought, maybe my hand is missing.

      No. He wiggled his fingers and it felt like they were all present and correct. But he still had no sight. No light. Only a sandpapery surface at his back and a gooey, ribbed roof he could feel inches from his face.

      Panic grabbed him, even as his mind was slow to get moving, heavy, dopey, unable to quite fix on where he was or how he had got here. He tried to stay composed, to figure it out.

      The sharp sting on his neck. Passing out. He must have been drugged, Finn thought, and dragged here. Wherever here was.

      The smell was so deeply terrible it was invading every pore in his body. He would need a change of skin if he ever got out of here. He tasted it on his tongue, wanted to pull his tongue out in disgust.

      It would be pointless trying to find a way to describe the stench in Earthly terms, because there was nothing on Earth like it. It was a smell that belonged only to one place.

      The Infested Side.

      Finn’s breath quickened. He groped for a wall either side of him, and found bars of some sort, surrounding him on at least three sides. And those bars were wedged into a hard but slippery surface. The fourth side was narrow and soft and his hand couldn’t quite find the wall.

      It made his stomach crawl. Or maybe that was the movement he now realised he was feeling in jolts. He was moving. In fact the whole room was moving.

      Up. Drop.

      Up. Drop.

      A damp breeze blasted through each time it rose, heating his ears. There was also a deep, unnerving gurgle from somewhere terribly close.

      Finn wriggled on to his tummy, feeling the roughness against his face, giving him the shudders as he reached out and pushed his hands through the bars, whose dark outlines he could just make out against the redness of the walls.

      He prised open a gap in his prison, working it wider with his fingers, just enough for grey light to pour into the space and show him the bars were, in fact, large fangs.

      He was lying on a tongue.

      A pink tongue, rough and pulsating with each of the breaths pushing up from the throat at which his feet dangled.

      A giant tongue, in a giant mouth.

      Finn allowed himself to panic some more. It had been a bad day already but now he was something’s lunch. Could this day get any worse?

      Pushing his face towards the crack in the mouth of whatever creature was carrying him, Finn saw water rushing past outside, a blur of dark waves, getting closer. And closer. He retreated just before the creature hit the sea, brine leaking through the mouth as Finn breathed hard and shallow.

      Yes.

      His day could get worse.

      Up. They were out of the water.

      Drop. Whooosh. Back into it.

      A few seconds later, the creature hit something hard, slid to a sudden halt. Finn gripped on to a long tooth to stop himself being thrown back into the deep cavern of the creature’s gullet.

      Blurpp. A rumble was building from deep within the throat, getting louder, closer.

      Oh no, thought Finn, at the precise moment a belch hit him.

      The mouth opened and he was propelled into the grey light of the Infested Side.

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      He looked around, dazed. He was lying on a shoreline, a beach of smashed rock in the shadow of a looming mountain, chunks missing from its slopes and most of it swallowed by heavy cloud.

      The sea creature retreated into the waters before Finn could even get a proper look at it. He was instead distracted by a huge figure approaching up the beach, feet stuffed into boots with three clawed toes stabbing through. It had granite hands, muscles popping from the wide shoulders. Glancing up, Finn realised this was the single-eyed giant, the Cyclops that had grabbed him from Darkmouth in the first place. This must be one of Gantrua’s goons, out for revenge.

      It snarled something at him.

      Finn jumped to his feet, his skin sticky with sea-creature saliva, his hair flattened and damp, his legs numb from being trapped in such a small space for … well, he didn’t know how long. But they had enough feeling left to help him scramble across cutting stones among which were scattered splintered and broken tools – axes, knives, picks, hammers.

      He stumbled, saw the nearing shadow of the Legend. He needed a plan. Perhaps he had an expert move learned over many hours at training. Maybe he could threaten to explode, just as he had done before in this world – draw himself up and stare even the mightiest of them down with his power. Even if he didn’t really have it any more.

      Instead, Finn did what he had so often done best.

      He ran.

      He heard the roars and shouts of other Legends joining the Cyclops. He didn’t look back. He needed to keep pushing along the shifting rock and broken tools of this beach, which sloped upwards now, away from the sea towards the scarred mountain and, he hoped, some sort of shelter. The Legends were closing. His legs burned with adrenalin. He needed to keep climbing this slope, to get somewhere safe.

      Finn reached the top of the slope and went straight over a cliff.

      


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