The giant pile of bones rattled and half collapsed as dozens of worms emerged from it. Some went for the corpses. Some turned and came down the tunnel.
Mason instantly started shooting arrows, throwing traps on cooldown in a line in their way.
âKill anything that gets close,â he ordered Carl. âAnd feel free to distract them. Or do whatever it is you do.â
âRoger that.â Carl picked up a few rocks to throw, shouting and growling like one might do to frighten off an animal. The worms didnât seem terribly intimidated.
Still, as Carl advanced some turned his way. They were slow, but not that slow, and he was soon backing up against the wall. Fortunately, they had plenty of room to withdraw.
Masonâs traps started going off, the rocky tunnel exploding in shrapnel and spraying bits and pieces of worm. Masonâs accuracy with his bow was vastly improved, and whenever he saw ripped open hide he started sinking arrows into the exposed flesh.
A few worms curled up and stopped moving. Plenty more kept on.
âDonât shoot me!â Carl yelled, then charged like an insane person straight into the pack of worms. Mason was so startled he stopped loosing altogether, then blinked as Carl stopped, turned around, and warped straight back to where heâd been standing, leaving a copy of himself behind.
The worms all grabbed for the âcloneâ, which promptly exploded.
Worm goo and bits and pieces sprayed a few dozen feet. And Mason had to admit, it was pretty damn cool.
But there was plenty more, and he just kept on shooting. When a worm got close, Carl and Streak moved to either side, attacking it from behind whenever it turned. Turning oneâs back to Carl turned out not to be a great idea.
The older manâs dagger seemed to glow when it struck a target who wasnât watching, causing some kind of debilitating shock.
Damn rogues
, Mason thought, not enjoying the thought of being ambushed similarly.
A worm ripped out of the side of the tunnel and lurched at Carlâs side. Mason was about to shout a warning when the man simply vanished without even looking, appearing across the tunnel as if not terribly concerned or surprised. Mason had to admit, he was impressed.
They kept falling back, and kept taking the worms that followed apart. One or two more tried burrowing, but emerged too slowly to catch any of the trio, getting torn apart as soon as they attacked.
Then the tunnel was quiet and full of dead worms, and Mason looked at Carl and grinned.
âNot bad, old man. I think you could have taken those wolves.â
âIâll admit,â Carl smiled. âThat was fun. Having bait helps me a hell of a lot.â
âBait? Now wait just aâŠâ
Masonâs retort died on his lips as the ground shook again. This time it was more like an earthquake.
âUhh.â Carl blinked and reached for his flashlight, clicking it on down the tunnel. Mason saw it before the light lit its flank.
A giant worm, nearly the circumference of the tunnel, like a massive version of the Devourers theyâd already seen. It was maybe three times the size of a blue whale, giant maw surrounded by spikes or teeth like saw blades.
Walking out in front of it was an insectoid maybe five times the size of the ones theyâd fought so far. It looked at the many dead worms on the floor, then clicked and screeched as it came running.
Mason finally remembered to use Rangerâs Mark, and targeted the insectoid. Turn your enemy into prey, the power read, and Mason almost grinned. As he used it, the creatureâs body lit up with color and text which Mason understood instantly as its anatomy.
âOh Good. He has three hearts,â he muttered, lifting his bow and activating Crippling Strike.
The big worm still seemed mostly disinterested, crawling along with little speed. So there was only one target.
The Crippling arrow splintered and ravaged one of the charging creatureâs legs. He only had two of those. His speed slowed, and Mason loosed a Power Shot, then bullet after bullet arrow seeking organs and hoping to pierce that carapace.
The Power Shot took out a heart, and Mason didnât bother falling back. The insectoid screeched and kept coming, six arms weaving now trying to catch or deflect arrows. He wasnât fast enough.
Mason couldnât be sure, but he guessed his compound bow was loosing at nearly 300 miles per hour. His bow arm was like a damn mechanical press, the strength and endurance impossible for any normal human. And heâd grown very accustom to aiming and shooting without having to reach for an arrow, timing it perfectly as he pulled back the string.
A few feet from his position, the giant. limping insectoid crumpled, and fell. He looked like a slimy pincushion.
[Dungeon Event: âWorm foodâ defeated. Group experience gained.]
[Insectoid Brood Commander slain. Group experience gained.]
âJeesus,â Carl whistled beside him. âRemind me not to piss you off, kid. That was insane.â
Mason let out a breath and flexed his bow hand, about to make some retort about constantly pissing him off.
Then the giant, ship-sized worm made a violently loud shrieking sound and turned towards the dead insectoid. Its huge, beady eyes turned directly on Mason. Then its maw opened, and the blades started to spin as it charged.
* * *
âOh Jesus. Do we run? I think we should run.â Carl was sort of hopping back and forth beside him.
Mason threw out more traps as he Ranger Marked the thing, and started shooting.
âWeâre here to kill it, Carl.â
His Mark data wasâŠnot encouraging. The giant worm had hide so thick he couldnât possibly penetrate it with arrows. But at least he could shoot it in the mouth.
He was about to ask Carl if he could distract itâŠbut the damn thing pretty much covered the whole tunnel. All they could do was shoot and run.
âFall back to the pool. Now!â
Streak bolted first, with Carl close behind. He sprinted at top speed and probably warped while Mason loosed an almost certainly useless Crippling Strike just to see if maybeâŠ
Nope.
Power Shot was more like Gentle Poke Shot for all the damage it did. Though Mason thought he maybe knocked out a tooth. Too bad the thing had about ten thousand.
The worm was upsettingly fast considering its size, and Mason had to turn and run. His traps, the dead worms, and the insectoid all vanished like speed bumps made of marshmellow as the Devourer just kept sliding ahead.
The tunnel opened slightly near the pool and the door. And Carl moved in from the wormâs side, crazy enough to leap at the creature andâŠwell,
mildly scrape
it with his blue-charged dagger. The damn thing actually turned, twisting its terrifying maw to completely swallow Carl whole.
Mason almost cried out before he heard the explosion. Then Carl appeared several feet away, running with a sly smile he probably didnât deserve.
âOne day youâre going to get killed and Iâm not going to have any idea!â Mason shouted, still loosing arrows, trying to hit the wormâs eyes.
Almost by accident as the creature turned, he actually connected. White juice sprayed from the wound, and a roar like a foghorn filled the tunnel and shook the ground. It was music to Masonâs ears.
Whatever urge to kill this thing heâd had coming down was only magnified as he saw it. The incredible amount of eggs, the almost sacrificial corpses, the horrifying smell of rot that permeated its lair.
The unnatural, corrupting nature of the thing felt as clear as day. This place, this feeling, it wasnât meant for his druid side. It was for his ranger. Heâd come here to cull.
He loosed arrow after arrow for mouth or eye as the beast thrashed and looked for its targets. His traps were useless against the hide. But he could use something else? Carl was throwing the occasional rock, and with a shrug Mason lifted one and tried to trap it.
It worked. And started to glow.
âShit.â He ran forward and threw the thing like a baseball, which promptly struck the creatureâs hide and exploded.
Well. Currently useless. But bloody good to know.
The worm finally got itself righted and moving back down the tunnel, and Mason and Carl had no choice but to flee the other way. That they had no idea what was down it seemed not entirely goodâŠ
Mason kept on shooting, now occasionally trapping a rock and lobbing it into the wormâs mouth. Carl and Streak just kept running, mostly useless against the massive beast. After literally hundreds of arrows lodged in its mouth, the worm finally growled and closed, covered now entirely in the impossibly thick hide.
But it just kept on going. And its body would be more than enough to crush Mason and the others.
âNow what?â Carl shouted over the constant grating noise of the beastâs movement.
Mason had no idea. He kept shooting, but it was a bit like stabbing a mountain. They fell back and fell back, and when Mason looked down the tunnel he soon realized it simply justâŠstopped. They were going to be trapped against a solid wall of rock, and crushed.
âI have to get him to open his mouth,â Mason muttered. âCarl, tempt him with another clone. Just be careful.â
The older man nodded and wiped sweat from his brow, then ran forward to pull it off.
They could have maybe escaped up that corpse-hole, but there was no way to reach it now. Carl did his thing, and the worm happily crushed the clone with its body, more vulnerable maw not moving an inch. It just kept on coming.
Mason saw only one way out, and ran to the wall to use Speak with Nature with the same weird vibrations. Before he actually activated the power, the wall broke open.
âVioletâ ripped out of the wall, then turned around and went back the other way. Mason could have kissed it. WellâŠmaybe notâŠ
âCarl!â He was about to tell Streak to get inside but the wolf dashed inside on his own. Carl came running back, and Mason felt a weight lift off his shoulders. Then he ran back into the tunnel, and kept shooting.
âWhat are you doing? Letâs go!â Carl called when he reached the smaller tunnel.
âGo,â he shouted back. âIâve got a plan.â
âAh hell kid what are you going to do?â
Mason just grinned and kept shooting, then fell back so he didnât have the option to run. The giant worm soon overtook the little tunnel, and that was that.
Nothing for it now
, he thought,
succeed, or die.
This thing wasnât just an animal. That was clear. The insect servants, the sacrificial pit, the reaction to its damaged eye. This worm had a brain.
Mason activated Speak with Nature, channeling it straight at the Devourer.
[I enjoyed killing your little friend. Now Iâve made you afraid even to open your mouth. Afraid of my weapon. Pathetic. Here.]
Mason threw his bow back as far as he could, standing with his arms out as he summoned his Claw.
[Iâm not afraid to die.] He channeled. [Will the Great Devourer take his prize? Eat me if you can, you overgrown, pathetic worm. Show me how you kill your enemies.]
It came on, even faster, growling and scraping the stone with thunderous violence as it moved. But it didnât open its mouth. For a moment Mason thought heâd made a terrible mistake. He was out of room, about to be crushed, with no way out that he could see.
Then less than a hundred paces away, the Devourer growled and opened its maw, the huge, circular darkness opening and loosing a disgusting, acidic wave of air just as the beast reached him.
Mason activated Aspect of the Cheetah, sprinted straight ahead, and dove with his Claw out like a spear.