The Source by Brian Lumley

Oh? And you know all about this place you’re searching for, do you? (A certain amusement in Faethor’s tone.) Get in, rescue your loved ones, or whatever, and get out again. As simple as that. . .

‘Something like that, yes.’ But Harry was less certain now.

Again Faethor’s shrug. Well . . . possibly. But I see it differently. For after all, you are Harry Keogh! And the fact is that in your use of your special talents you have been a dire force against vampires in this world. You’ve dealt with my treacherous son Thibor, with Boris Dragosani, Yulian Bodescu – the list is impressive. My feeling is that when you enter into the source world, then things are almost bound to happen. I believe that you are the catalyst which will change, perhaps even destroy, the old balance. So all I require of you is this: that if the time should come and someone should ask you, ‘Who are you?’ — then you will answer him that Belos sent you. Is that too much to ask?

‘No, you have a deal,’ Harry agreed. ‘So now tell me what you know. First about Perchorsk.’ Eh? (Surprise.) / never heard of it. Harry quickly explained.

That may well be one way into, or out of, the source world, Faethor answered, but it is not the old route. Now listen: this is what Old Belos told my father, which he in turn told me. The Wamphyri sent him into the hell-lands (this world) through a shining white door in the shape of a sphere. Yes, the very duplicate of this sphere you’ve mentioned at Perchorsk. But Perchorsk is in the upper Urals, and Belos’s exit-point was far removed from there. ‘So where did Belos surface?’

‘Surface’ is the wrong word. Rather he ‘descended’. Inside the sphere he fell. He was aware of falling – as if into hell! It was as if he plunged down the throat of a great white luminous shaft whose walls were so far distant he could not see them. He fell, and yet at no great speed, or so he believed. And he must have been correct in that belief, for when he emerged he was still falling! He fell out of the sphere – the gate of entry – into this world. ‘Where?’ Harry was eager again.

Underground!

‘Like at Perchorsk?’

Unlike Perchorsk. Belos gathered his senses, looked all around. The sphere he had fallen through was embedded in the ceiling of a great horizontal borehole, over a ledge of smooth dripstone. Through the bed of the bore rushed a black, gurgling river. Belos knew not where it came from, nor where it went. All around the sphere where it hung suspended, great holes were apparent in the ceiling – like these magmass holes of yours at Perchorsk. Likewise in the ledge where Belos had landed. The extent of the cave, and its ledge, was not great. Where the river rushed from cave into darkness, the gap between ceiling and water came down to a few inches. The ledge was large enough for a man to walk maybe ten paces this way, ten paces that, before it narrowed down and smoothed into the glistening wall of the bore. There was no way out. Or there was, if a man had the stomach for it.

‘A subterranean sump!’ said Harry.

Exactly. The river might run for miles. It might never surface at all! That was Belos’s predicament. . .

Others had been there before him, and some of them were still there. He found their remains, ossified. Things he called ‘trogs’, and ‘Travellers’, even the skulls and mummified remains of Wamphyri, who’d preferred to sit here on the ledge and wither rather than risk the unknown. But Belos’s heart was bigger than that.

‘He dared the river?’ Harry was fascinated.

Faethor’s shrug. What else could he do? First he tried to re-enter the sphere, of course, but it rejected him. When he held up his arms to plunge them into its light, they were repelled. The Gate into the hell-lands had closed on him. But to sit here with these others and stiffen into stone was not his way. He would go now, while he still had all of his great strength.

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