Hand in hand, Ninmah and Sparrow warped to the very back of Immanu where a giant cave was hollowed out in the largest blackrock mountain in the region.
As Ninmah stopped for a second to greet a few older children warping in and out of the cavern—most still younger-looking than her—Sparrow beheld the mouth of the Barrows, a gaping maw in the ice-clad rock that stared back at him. Chilly drafts billowed out from the cavern, but even just at the entrance he could see the walls were lined with raw glowing crystals, the ceiling was dripping with frozen rainbow icicles; it wasn’t going to be dark inside at all.
“We’ll walk from here,” Ninmah said, snatching his hand and shooting him a nod as she did. “No warping inside the Barrows. They don’t like it when anyone does it.”
He’d half a mind to press her on who ‘they’ were, but he figured he’d see for himself soon enough.
A great weight pressured upon his shoulders the moment he stepped off the village’s snow and onto hard crystal ground that crunched beneath his boots. The cavern was crystal, uneven, jagged and rugged and just ever so slightly inclined downwards. It really was like descending into the nest of a giant insect, or through the hollowed carcass of one judging by the strange circular ridge marks running around the walls—he’d not been in the carcass of one of those giant titan beetles in the far northeast before, but the webbings of glowing vines and glass-like leaves and fleshy bluish pear-like fruits growing on the walls were like nothing he knew from the Attini Empire.
Once again, he was reminded that Immanu was only very technically in Empire territory.
Alabaster stalagmites stood bright and eerie as they travelled deeper into the cavern. Footsteps echoed all around as children passed by in groups every once in a while, hauling heavy baskets full of radishes and cabbages and all sorts of vegetables he'd never thought could be grown in the snow. The more children they passed and the more Ninmah greeted each of them with head rubs and a handful of snack worms, the more Sparrow felt he knew where he was being taken—the ingredients for the simple stew he'd been eating the past two weeks had to come from somewhere, after all.
In the end, it took fifteen minutes to walk down from the entrance to the single largest cavern he'd ever seen.
… This cannot be natural.
Did the Worm Mages hollow this place out?
He stared. He breathed. The air in the cavern was fresh but chilly, clouds of crystal dust glimmering and fluttering everywhere, the walls slick with patches of luminescent flowers. He couldn't immediately tell where the gusts of wind were coming from, but if he had to hazard a guess, they were from the chasm separating the cavern in two in front of them—a twenty-metre-long chasm, not nearly as massive as Death Rope Passing, but more than eerie enough to make up for its smaller size.
Peering over the edge, he quickly came to the conclusion that if there was a bottom, it wasn't going to be a survivable fall. The luminescent flowers didn't grow on the walls ten metres down; it was an abyss that sucked out all light, a dark warning sign to those looking to cross the chasm without the proper resolve… and for that matter there were no bridges leading across the chasm. No ropes to balance on, no narrow rock formations protruding out the walls. Without warping, the only way he could think of getting across to the other side was if he swung using the giant icicles on the ceiling or crawled using the webbings of flowers on the walls.
Neither icicles nor flowers looked nearly sturdy enough to withstand his weight, and he figured the point wasn't to cross the chasm, anyways.
This was as far as humans could go.
Ninmah pointed forward, but his eyes were already there, watching ‘them’ slither through the fields of tall crystal weeds on the other side of the chasm.
If the cavern on this side still belonged to Immanu and humanity, the cavern over there belonged to the giant white worms. They were… eyeless. Pale like snow. Thread-like beasts each the length of a century-old pine and thick like one, their skin hardened with crystal plates and their heads fitted with crowns of pure alabaster teeth. Even from across the chasm he could tell there were dozens of them patrolling the fields, even more hiding in the tunnels leading deeper into their nest, their every squirm and wriggle making the weeds sway and clink like chimes in the morning wind—not giant insects whatsoever.
For a split second he'd thought they might've been part of the Swarm, but it was just as immediately apparent that they were about as far removed from ‘insects’ as they could be.
… Worms are not insects.
Not Swarm.
But… do worms usually get that big?
As Ninmah greeted and hugged a few children coming and going from the edge of the chasm—all of them touting big baskets in their arms—he resisted the urge to pull out his rifle and chamber a shot he knew he didn't have. His throat was tight. His shoulders were tense. His training taught him to be wary of any giant insects, and while he was sure they weren't insects, the worms he knew in the Attini Empire were critters to be crushed underfoot. They were grubs for the poor, or mashed to paste as medicinal ingredients for the sick. Worms weren't supposed to be giant.
“... For decades and centuries, the Brightworms have been tending to the crystal farms inside the blackrock mountains,” Ninmah said, pushing down the barrel of his rifle as he drew it from his back. “They’ve been here longer than any of us, and they're the ones who made the systems we children of Immanu use. There's no need to be afraid of them. As long as we don't try to cross the chasm and enter their world, they won't try to enter ours; I was just joking when I said they’d visit you at night.”
The fact that she had to clarify they wouldn't try meant they could, but he didn't ask how they could.
He just had to take her word for it.
Reluctantly, he lowered his rifle and slipped it over his back. Ninmah, then, was quick to pick up two weed-woven baskets from the simple rows of shelves the Worm Mages had evidently carried all the way from outside—there were dozens of baskets filled with small quartz crystals just sitting by the walls leading into the cavern—and she wasted no time shoving one into his hands, gesturing for him to follow her closer to the edge.
Skipping down the slight inclined slope, Ninmah stopped right before she could slip off the edge and held out an arm to stop him from slipping, too. She knelt and raised a finger to command his attention—then she stabbed it forward like a knife, drawing a person-sized circle that opened into a wormhole the moment she stood back up.
A rush of cold wind blasted into his face as the circle connected the human world and the worm world.
“Don’t step through the wormhole no matter what,” Ninmah whispered, glancing at him with a wink as the wormhole opened completely—and then he flinched, his teeth gnashing together as he came face to face with a ten-metre-class Brightworm on the other side of the chasm.
It was much bigger up close. The crystal plates of its body were marked with rings to separate each segment, and the Brightworm immediately lifted half its body off the ground, ‘standing’ upright as it stared at them through the wormhole with its pearly crown of teeth. It had exactly four of those giant teeth curving inwards like a drill, standing guard before rows of rows of smaller pebble-like teeth he could see peeking out from inside its mouth, and the way the entire length of its body seemed to be constantly vibrating and shimmering and warping the very air around it… reminded him very much of the Worm Mages themselves.
He felt he just now realised the ‘how’ in how they could possibly cross over to the human world.
If Ninmah’s words were to be taken as truth, and they were the ones who’d created the worm systems, then it stood to reason they could warp and open wormholes and do everything the Worm Mages could as well.
…
And, while he was still struggling to unclench his muscles, Ninmah picked up a palm-sized quartz from her basket and leaned forward, holding it slowly out at the Brightworm.
The Brightworm squirmed and wriggled its head around a little, looking back and forth between him and Ninmah. He felt its jittery warping movements meant it didn’t trust him specifically—he was an outsider, after all, though he had no idea if they were intelligent enough to remember faces—but when Ninmah started humming a soft song in her own warping voice, it snapped its head over with its four giant teeth pried apart.
Wreathed in milky-white, cryogenic mist, the Brightworm started humming back; it matched Ninmah’s volume, it matched her intonation, it matched her subtle head swaying movements as she waved the quartz in her hand around. Sparrow took a small step back out of caution, but stepped back in with his hands gripped around his rifle as the Brightworm suddenly lunged forward–
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And it plucked the quartz out of Ninmah’s hand with its crown of teeth, tossing it into the air before jumping to swallow it, devouring its snack with an awful crunch.
Ninmah clapped her hands cheerily and offered it another quartz from her basket, all the while kicking Sparrow’s shin and clicking her tongue at the weeds in front of them.
“They like eating the crystals that grow only on our side of the chasm, so we have a tentative agreement with them,” she whispered, motioning for him to pluck the weeds with her free hand. “Every day, children on harvesting duty come here to feed them crystals through the wormholes, and in exchange, they turn a blind eye and let us harvest some of their crops in front of them. Everybody wins. As long as we don’t overdo it on the harvesting, they won’t go back and tell their friends they were bribed with a little snack!”
...
As he gingerly did as he was asked, kneeling and yanking melons and cabbages and all sorts of impossible snow vegetables from the soil beneath the happily snacking worm, he felt it wasn’t that far-fetched of a mutualistic relationship. He wasn’t too knowledgeable about it, but he vaguely knew the Attini Empire harvested most of their food from the Great Fungi Forest; workers with the designated harvester ant class would grow fungus within their bodies and routinely spread them around the forest, ensuring the forest is always nurtured and protected to feed the rest of the Empire.
Here, the Brightworms get to chew on quartz crystals, and the Worm Mages get to harvest vegetables for their daily meals.
… It was still a bit of a stretch. There were giant insects employed within Empire territory, but they were mostly captured giant ants tamed by the legendary Tamera from the east, used as simple caravan-pulling beasts or as giant war mounts. There were certainly no giant ants crawling freely around the Great Fungi Forest helping with fungi harvesting.
The ‘worm world’, huh.
What a strange place this is.
He couldn’t stop himself from stealing glances up at the Brightworm every once in a while, but Ninmah was whispering at him to hurry—she was running out of quartz crystals to feed it—so he quickly filled the rest of his giant basket with as many vegetables as he could fit in it before nodding back at her. The moment she emptied her basket and feigned tossing a quartz up into the air, she snapped her fingers and closed the wormhole with a soft whoosh, separating both worlds in an instant.
On the far opposite end of the chasm, Sparrow spotted the Brightworm she’d been feeding staring at them sullenly, and for some inexplicable reason he thought it looked rather… ‘sad’.
A giant beast it may be, he found himself wanting to pet it.
Ninmah cupped her hands around her eyes and mouthed a single word: ‘to-mor-row’. He wondered briefly why she didn’t just use her warping voice and talk with it directly, but as another pair of children slid down to the edge next to them and opened another wormhole, he realised this really was just another daily chore for them—one of them would randomly pick a Brightworm to feed, and the other would busy themselves harvesting the crops. Maybe Ninmah didn’t want to disturb the other children by using her voice?
Regardless, she looked giddy enough for the two of them as she took his basket from his hands and set it aside by the shelves. He didn’t know how many meals she could whip up with that one basket, and she probably didn’t know, either; that was why she picked up a second basket full of quartz crystals and skipped back over to him, placing it between his legs.
“Now you try!” she whispered excitedly, grabbing his hand and making him extend his index finger. “Make a wormhole and pick a random Brightworm you wanna feed! They do remember scents and faces, so if you keep doing it day by day, they’ll eventually open up to you and let you harvest more crops before having to refill your basket!”
He stood in silence for a moment as Ninmah backed off a single step, giving him space to breathe, to relax—but nothing had really changed since he saw her open a wormhole to connect two worlds together. He hadn’t been taught anything. He still didn’t know the ‘in-between’ feeling he needed to make light bleed out from under his nails.
… Did he?
He tuned out the rest of his environment and zeroed in on Ninmah: through the slight wiggle of her body, through the fiddling of her hands, he saw the easily excitable young girl who hid under the cool and dependable village chief she clearly wanted him to see her as. She clearly hoped he’d had some sort of mental breakthrough seeing her feed a Brightworm, which meant if he couldn’t make a wormhole now, he’d probably be seeing ‘disappointment’ on her face soon enough.
…
And then he had a curious thought.
An interesting idea.
He remembered what Ninmah had said before he controlled his warping step for the first time.
Life moves around the worm in natural passing.
The worm lives ‘in-between’.
Walk, and let the world walk around… you…
…
… ‘A’ wormhole.
He raised his finger, pointed it straight forward at the opposite end of the chasm, and imagined ‘one’ wormhole; not two that he had to draw both the opening and exit to. He couldn’t possibly draw the exit wormhole without already being at the exit, after all, and from his point of view, both the opening and the exit were one and the same—it was only when he’d been looking at Ninmah that he saw two wormholes, but to her, she could see one wormhole hovering in front of her.
One cut in reality to connect two worlds.
One ‘in-between’ to connect two worlds.
Cut it open.
The wormhole that is ‘in-between’ two worlds.
So he exhaled coolly as he closed his eyes, imagining his nail not an unfamiliar painter’s brush, but the sharp tip of a bayonet he was beyond familiar with—and then he imagined cutting through space, twirling his wrist a full circle with a snap to carve open a wormhole the size of his fist.
A Brightworm was already waiting there, peering at him through his tiny wormhole.
[Strain: 6% → 78%]
[T1 Branch Mutation Unlocked: Wormhole]
Then the wormhole winked out of existence, as a fist-sized one was the best he could muster; his knees buckled and he dropped like a sack of vegetables before he even knew it, blood dripping out from under his nail where he’d felt a tangible resistance stopping him from making the cut. It was a physical ability after all—even if he didn’t know how a mere mutation could possibly let him connect two worlds together—which meant there was a chance that increasing his toughness level would help keep his blood in his fingers next time.
But it looks like making a bigger wormhole is impossible for the near future, huh?
His toughness level was one thing, but he’d also have to increase his strain limit by a massive amount if he wanted to not fall over after carving a single wormhole. The points wouldn’t appear out of thin air, so maybe for the time being he shouldn’t focus so much on trying to master making wormholes as second tier one branch mutation—that he knew how to make one now meant he’d already gotten past the most difficult hurdle.
Right now, all he had to do was lay there on the ground and breathe.
‘Satisfied’.
“... You’re pretty bad at this, too!” Ninmah teased, kneeling next to him and leaning over his head, a few strands of her hair just barely tickling the tip of his nose. “Seriously. One wormhole and you’re already out? You know, all of us designated harvesters for the day have to deliver at least fifteen baskets to the village for our daily meals. Your wormhole wasn’t even large enough for me to fit my hand through!”
He didn’t try to speak. He didn’t try to change his expression. He simply scoffed and slapped a hand over his forehead, trying to whack the throbbing ache away, and suddenly she shoved a fresh soil-pulled melon into his mouth; the fruit was bursting with sweetness like he’d never tasted before.
“Tasty?” she asked, bobbing her head up and down as though she already knew what his answer was going to be. “Hey, why don’t you talk at all? I’ve been meaning to ask you this for a while now, but we can teach you a lot more and you can have an easier time with the chores if you just talk. Is it that you can’t talk because your tongue’s injured or something? Do you want me to look into it?”
He didn’t respond.
Even if I could speak, I am still a weapon.
Weapons do not–
“If it’s because you’re not allowed to talk where you came from, then… at the very least, can you tell me your name?”
…
He couldn’t speak, he didn’t know how to write, and he most certainly wasn’t a good artist, but while she fixed him with that glittering, brilliant gaze, bare hands clasped over his chest… he wondered if it might be okay to at least communicate with her through drawings and symbols. After all, it wasn’t against the laws of the Attini Empire for a lowly ant class soldier to communicate to their superiors when explicitly asked to; it should be acceptable if he kept his methods of communication to gestures and simple drawings.
So, while he chewed on the melon Ninmah was having so much fun feeding him, he unscrewed the bayonet from his rifle and started carving the crystal ground next to him.
And judging by Ninmah’s knowing look, he felt she understood his message.
“Ah!” she said, clapping her hands as her eyes twinkled with amusement. “That’s the early bird! The… the ‘Sparrow’! Is that your name?”
It was his designation as a bullet ant soldier, not his name—he’d forgotten his name the moment he stepped foot in the Attini Empire as a war orphan—but he nodded regardlessly, thinking Ninmah was already incredible enough to have gotten his designation right with his first ever shoddy drawing of a bird.
There was no need to correct her when she was already looking so ‘happy’.
“... Well!” She stuck her hand out at an odd angle, trying to get him to shake it. “Just in case you didn’t catch it before, I’m Ninmah, Immanu’s village chief! You can feel free to call me ‘big sister’ if you like!”
He stared at her hand for a while.
Pondering.
Hesitating.
Before shaking her hand and thinking he really, really didn't have to think about it too hard.
The children of Immanu were rather simple in that regard, after all.
… But just you watch, Ninmah.
This time, I will master making wormholes by the end of the day.