Retribution Falls - Chris Wooding [61]
He lifted the door on its hinges to minimize the squeak, pushed it open, and immediately recoiled. The room beyond reeked overwhelmingly of cheesy feet and stale flatulence, strong enough that Frey had to fight down the urge to gag. He glanced briefly at one of the gas masks hanging on the wall, then took a deep breath and slipped inside.
The place was a wreck. Every surface was covered in discarded plates of food, half-drunk bottles of milk that had long gone bad, and pornographic ferrotypes from certain seedy publications (Frey saw several women he recognized). In the corner, on a pallet bed surrounded by discarded chicken bones and bottles of grog, lay a mound of hairy white flesh entangled in a filthy blanket. It took Frey a few moments to work out where the head was. He found it only when a gaping wet hole appeared in the crumb-strewn black thatch of a face, and there emerged a terrible snore like the death rattle of a congested warthog.
Frey kept his sword pointed at the quivering mass of the caretaker’s naked belly and edged through the room toward the door at the far end. Finding it locked, he cast around the room and located a key under a scattering of toenail clippings. He extracted it gingerly, slipped it in the lock, and went through. The caretaker, deep in his drunken slumber, never stirred.
IT TOOK HIM SOME time to find his way to the dormitories. A quick search established that the basement level of the building was a maze of gloomy corridors and pipes, sealed off from the hermitage proper, presumably to stop the caretaker from getting in and giving the acolytes a nasty shock. There must have been another entrance for the caretaker, since the storm doors had been locked on the outside, but Frey never found it. What he did find was a chimney flue, which he climbed with considerable difficulty and much discomfort.
When he emerged, sooty and disheveled, from the fireplace, he found himself in a small hall. Doors led off to other rooms, and a wide staircase went up to the floor above. The place had a clean, quiet, country feel, the cool, pensive atmosphere of an old house at night. Bulbs shone from simple iron sconces. Decoration was understated and minimal. There were no idols of worship or shrines, such as the old gods might have demanded. The only evidence of this building’s purpose was a shadowy gold-framed portrait of King Andreal of Glane, father of the Awakeners and the last ever king. He’d been painted in his most regal pose. It betrayed none of the madness that later took him and set him to burbling prophecies, which ended up having far more influence over the country than he ever did while he ruled it.
There was little here to distract the mind from its devotions. Instead, there were only paneled doors, strong beams, smooth banisters, and the frowning sensation of trespass that settled heavier on Frey with every passing moment.
There are no guards. Only women inside, he reminded himself. Since when have you been scared of women?
Then he remembered Trinica Dracken, and he felt a little nauseous. Of all the people in the world he never wanted to see again, she was top of the list.
Forget her for now, he thought. You’ve a job to do.
He dusted himself down as best he could, though he was still covered in sooty smears when he finished. Having made himself as presentable as possible, he looked through the nearest doorway. A short corridor led to an empty wooden room, with only a small brazier in the center. Mats were laid out in a circle around it. A skylight let in the glow of the moon.
A meditation chamber, Frey guessed, backtracking. The Awakeners were very keen on meditation, Crake had told him. Sitting around doing nothing took many years of practice, he’d added with a sneer.
Other doorways let out onto other corridors, which took him to a small study, a filing room full of cabinets and paper, and a classroom with desks in rows of three. Any windows he saw were set high up on the wall, too high to look through without using a stepladder. Obviously, interest in the outside world was discouraged.