15. Infiltration Spider’s Den “Today a strange turn of events in the palace has shocked the entire kingdom,” the news anchor said. “Earlier this morning, prince Philip addressed publicly that he personally warned prince Ryan of the consequences should he choose to accept the challenge of the enemy of the state, Stardust. This shocking bit of information reveals that prince Ryan chose to become his father’s enemy. This afternoon, the King made his own proclamation.” The scene on the television switched from the newsroom to a recording of what had happened on the palace steps. The King began speaking. “Earlier today, it was made apparent that prince Philip tried to bring assistance to his brother at the time when he warned him about his choices. This assistance, which will remain unspoken, was so treasonous that the crown prince has been imprisoned and will be hanged tomorrow afternoon.” The King then turned and walked back into the palace. Ryan turned off the television in disgust. “What kind of help did he try to give you?” Spider asked from a large cushioned chair in the corner of the living area. “That’s just the thing,” Ryan said. “The assistance he gave me was the warning. That and nothing more.” “That’s not enough to throw him into prison,” Spider protested. “No, it is not,” Sandy agreed, finally speaking from her spot, reclined on the bed. “Which is why the offense was ‘unspoken’ instead of told to the public. It was a very clever tactic on the King’s part to imply that there was something besides the warning to imprison Philip.” “You know what that means, don’t you?” Spider asked with a grin. “Yes Spider,” Ryan said, “you get to infiltrate the palace.” “Why is she going to do it?” Sandy asked, thinking Spider a normal, though somewhat witchy, heiress. “Because everything in this cavern is stolen,” Ryan told her. “Spider is a thief and this is her hoard.” He turned and addressed Spider. “Can you call the guys and tell them what’s going to happen?” “Of course,” Spider said. “I wouldn’t dream of leaving Sean out of this.” “Ryan,” Sandy said, “what kind of people do you hang around with?” To which Ryan merely grinned. In lass than a half hour, Sandy had made portals and brought in everyone they decided to include. Spider, of course, who had already been there. Scott and Jack had been at Jack’s, which Sandy knew from her attack, so they hadn’t had to go to a place Sandy already knew. Sean, being the daredevil he was, went to Ryan and Sandy’s apartment, nearly getting himself killed by assassins, and caught his portal. Lastly was Sandy’s pick, just so she would have someone there she was used to working with, Ayre, who went to his “office”. Spider didn’t mind all of these people being brought in by portals, since none of them would know where they were or how to get there without Sandy’s help. “You all know what you are supposed to do, right?” Ryan asked. All six of them gave him affirmative nods, and Sandy raised her staff, focusing. She had only seen the place she was making the portal to once, so it took more concentration to connect to it. If she had wanted to, she could have made a portal to a general area in the palace, as she had done when Spider brought them to southern France, but Ryan didn’t care to risk the chance that the portal would be seen and all of them imprisoned and executed. Instead, she had to connect to a place that was secure, but outside of the palace to be safe. Sandy made the portal on the floor and Ryan jumped through. Ryan found himself standing in a small silo, filled with grain of several kinds. Sandy had inspected this place, just inside the outer walls of the palace grounds, one week to determine if it would be a good thing to sabotage and cause a battle right outside. Sandy had deemed the plan to be stupid, but she remembered the place anyway. Ryan quickly stepped out from under the portal, which looked like a black smudge on the low ceiling, and looked around. Besides the grain which had served as a cushion for his landing, this nearly full silo was deserted. Ryan reached up into the portal and gave the hand signal that the coast was clear. One after the other, the others jumped down and moved out of the way until they were all there. This silo had a door at the top with a walkway that led to a platform between the silos, and that platform led to the third floor of the palace. It was the royal walkway the king used to inspect how much food he had in reserve for his people...or at least he had used it years ago when he still seemed to care. Jack took his pistol out, which was custom made to be silent, and buried himself in the grain opposite the door. His job was to keep their escape route secure, just in case something happened that kept Sandy from making another. The other six left through the only door that was now accessible. Outside, the walkway was deserted. The stone path was walled on both sides to keep anyone from being able to get more than one shot at the King. After the first, the King would duck behind the walls and crawl into the palace with no one below knowing where he was. It was clear though, from the virgin snow filling the path completely, that this path hadn’t been used or maintained for years. They would never have been able to open the door had it not been made to swing inward. Ryan reached into the small pack he had brought and removed a small gift Jack had given him: Stingray. Crouching low, Ryan aimed and channeled the smallest amount of electricity he could into the weapon. The beam only reached a few feet, but it created a circular tunnel of ice nearly two feet in diameter. Ryan crawled along it, thankful for remembering gloves, making a path in the direction of the platform in the center of the silos. As he reached it, he turned the beam gently, making an arc, which ended up pointing down the walkway to the palace. He continued on until he reached a door at the end and ceased giving Stingray power. Placing the hair dryer shaped weapon back in his pack, he removed a set of lock picking tools and handed them to Sean. Sean squeezed past him and quickly got the door to swing inward, revealing a dark corridor. “We are in the crisis center of the palace,” Ryan told the others as they slid out of the smooth tunnel. “This is where the King would go with his advisors if the need arose. There are kitchens, bathrooms, bedrooms - anything they would need for a long planning session, without the need to go downstairs. This level is also fortified so that everyone in the palace could retreat here and stay relatively safe for a long period of time.” “Interesting design,” Sandy said, being the only one with a head for offensive and defensive strategies. “Quite ingenious.” “If you two are done with your discussion of palace architecture,” Spider said, “I suggest we get on with what we came here for.” “By all means,” Ryan said, starting to walk down the corridor. “Follow me.” After passing countless doors and alcoves, they came upon a stairway. Ryan stopped them before they reached a point where they could be seen by anyone on the second floor. “Once we get down there,” he told them, “we will have to split up and work quickly. Each team will be divided up as equally as I can make it. Sandy will lead the team on the second floor, and I will take the one going to the dungeon. That way there will be someone with magic, or something close to it, on both teams. We will also need someone skilled with locks on both teams, so Sean will join me while Spider goes with Sandy.” “Let me guess,” Ayre said, “I am on the girls’ team.” Spider glared at him. “The second floor is less dangerous,” Ryan said, “and Scott has proven to me that he can handle danger. Besides, Sandy picked you for this mission, so she can have you on her team.” Ayre looked crestfallen at Ryan’s lack of faith in him, but Ryan couldn’t do anything about it. He didn’t have time for diplomacy. Apparently, however, he would have to use some, but with Spider. “If the second floor is less dangerous,” she said, “why am I assigned to it?” “A few reasons, actually,” Ryan told her. “First, I think you would rather work with Sandy than me.” “That’s true,” Spider stated bluntly. “Second,” he continued. “I am going to have to have several cells opened down there, and that is Sean’s specialty. I’m going with experience on this one.” “Fair,” Spider admitted. “Third,” Ryan concluded, “I love Sandy and I want her to come out of this alive and uncaptured. I know you will protect her for me if she becomes unable to protect herself. And fourth, don’t question me, I am your prince and I know what I am doing.” Spider stifled any other objections she might have been able to come up with. “I will protect Sandy with my life,” she said with as much nobility as she could muster. “Good, and thank you,” Ryan said, his voice softening to show heartfelt thanks. “Are we all ready?” The others nodded and they split into teams. “Good. Sandy, take the stairs and search for Philip’s room. If he is only under house arrest, he will be there under guard. The rest of us will take the elevator down to the basement and go on to the dungeon from there.” Sandy’s team crouched near the top of the stairs and peered down, waiting for a window of opportunity where no one was coming down the hallway. As soon as it came, Sandy led the way to the second floor and into a supply closet. “There has to be one here somewhere,” Sandy muttered, rifling through the whites on the shelf. “One what?” Ayre asked. “A maid’s uniform,” she replied. “Help me look.” All of them began searching through the linens, but they only found one. Sandy sighed and handed it to Spider. “I guess I am going to have to waste some of my magic on a disguise,” she said in resigned tones. The sphere on the top of her staff began to glow and a ripple of light flowed out of it, down her body, changing her clothes into a maid’s uniform as it went. “Put that uniform on, quickly,” she told Spider, who hadn’t moved. “I am going out to get Ayre a disguise. You two stay in here until I get back.” With that, she left the supply closet. “I am not going to change with you in here,” Spider said. “Get out,” she ordered. “I can’t,” he replied. “Sandy told us to stay in here. I’d get caught out in the hallway. Besides, you’re not my type,” he added with a grin. “Would you at least turn around?” “Trust me, I was planning on doing just that already.” In a much shorter time than Ayre had expected, Spider had changed and stashed her clothes behind some linens on the top shelf. As her feet touched the floor and she and Ayre faced each other, they heard voices in the hallway and both of them froze so as not to make a sound. The two women were gabbing about men and coming closer to the closet. They stopped right at the door and the handle moved a bit. Ayre thought quickly and did the first thing that came to mind - he grabbed Spider and started kissing her. “And you know I’ll never find someone as passionate as that man Jana found for herself,” one of the women said as she opened the door. “Hello!” she exclaimed as she saw one of the maids making out with a boy in the closet. “Excuse me, I’ll only be a second,” she said nervously, reaching in and pulling out a set of sheets. As soon as she had them in hand, she retreated and shut the door so quickly she almost took her own hand off. “Now that’s the kind of passion I was talking about...” the woman continued as she and the other maid walked off. Ayre began wiping his mouth calmly and Spider spat several times. “That was disgusting,” Spider said. “A genius move, but disgusting.” “I’m used to it,” Ayre said, “acting is in my blood.” “Next time, warn me,” she growled. “You’re welcome,” he sniped back. Spider decided that, under the circumstances, she would let it slide. The two of them waited in silence until Sandy returned, holding an outfit over each arm. “I lucked out,” she said. “In one of the nobles’ rooms, I found these in a wardrobe. They must have teenagers. Dress quickly. I will be right outside waiting.” In a few minutes, two teenage nobles walked out of the supply closet, even though one of them was really in her early twenties. “Very good,” Sandy told them. She was now wearing a black dress that covered everything, including her neck, feet, and the backs of her hands. Her hair was up in a bun, and her staff was a cane. Her posture was incredibly stiff and erect and her face looked like it hadn’t smiled in centuries. “Time to go to your lessons, children,” she said with a wink. “Why do you get to be the teacher?” Ayre whined. “Because I won’t fit into those short clothes,” she said sternly. “Now eyes front and backs straight,” she ordered as she led them down the corridor. *** Ryan, Sean, and Scott stepped out of the elevator into the quiet basement. Scott hadn’t thought anything could have been as gloomy as the crisis center, but this basement made it seem like a grassy knoll on a summer’s day in comparison. The sudden sound of footsteps sent them scurrying. They quickly dove behind a stack of boxes, crouching, as three of the King’s guard walked past. “Which way,” Sean asked quietly once the guards were out of earshot. “The way they came from,” Ryan whispered back. “They were guarding the dungeon, but their shift is over.” He stood up fully and stretched his legs back out. “The next shift change isn’t for two more hours,” Ryan told them, still speaking softly. “We can come almost right up to the guards without them noticing.” Ryan led the brothers through the maze of boxes and appliances and anything else the palace wasn’t using at the moment as if he had spent a lot of his time down there. He led them to a spot behind some boxes and gave them a silent hand signal to wait. He pointed to a crack, through which Sean and Scott could both see the two guards sitting at a table, playing chess. Ryan held up three fingers and pointed to the dungeon entrance, signifying that the third guard was patrolling inside. Ryan told them in hand gestures that they were to make no noise whatsoever, pointing once again to the dungeon door, which meant that the one inside would be a problem if he knew about the intruders. Ryan made the signal that the two of them should stay, while he went around to a place on the other side of the guards. In moments they could see his face behind another set of boxes across from them. He put his hand over his mouth and pretended to cuff the side of his head. Scott nodded and Ryan held up three fingers, then two, then one, then... Scott and Ryan each silently but swiftly stepped out from their hiding places and placed their hands over a guard’s mouth. Sean used the heel of his palm to deliver a blow to the temple of the guard Scott was holding, knocking him out. The one Ryan was holding, however, pushed back with more strength than Ryan was ready for, and sent the two of them crashing into a stack of boxes, creating a horrible clatter. “What was that?” the guard inside the dungeon yelled out. “Stupid boxes,” Sean yelled, making his voice a bit lower. “They sure don’t give us any room to stretch out down here, do they?” The guard on the other side of the door laughed. “No, they sure don’t,” he agreed. Scott quickly went and cuffed the guard Ryan was holding and helped Ryan out of the mess as quietly as he could. “That was close,” Ryan mumbled. “Good thinking, Sean,” Scott said just as quietly. “Thanks,” Sean replied, “but how do we take care of the third?” “Leave that to me,” Scott said. He had them set the two unconscious guards back up on the chairs, and Sean and Ryan crouched behind them to keep them sitting. “Checkmate,” Scott said in nearly the identical voice Sean had used for the guard. He gave it a higher register and said, “ok buddy, it’s your turn. I’ll take your watch if you whoop him for me.” “You’re on,” the guard in the dungeon answered. The door opened and soon the guard was as unconscious as his fellows. “So far, so good,” Ryan told them as they entered the dungeon. “Philip,” Ryan called in a loud whisper, “are you down here?” He walked down the line of cells, repeating his brother’s name, but there was no answer. “Ryan?” said a stunned voice from one of the cells at the end of the row. The voice was definitely no Philip’s, but it was vaguely familiar. “Sean, come here. I need to get in this one,” Ryan beckoned. Sean nodded and began fiddling with the lock. In seconds, the door swung open, revealing a haggard old man. “They don’t make locks like that any more,” Sean said. “Too bad, they are simple to pick. I’m surprised there are any prisoners left in these cells.” Ryan, not paying attention to Sean’s lock appraisal, scrutinized the old man, trying to figure out why he looked so familiar. Suddenly, he was stunned with the realization of who he was facing. “Sir Trevor?” he said. “But you are harmless, a teacher for the young nobles. Why are you down here.” “I don’t know,” Sir Trevor said. “One minute I was teaching the children how to read, and the next guards were breaking the door down and dragging me in here.” “This makes no sense,” Ryan said. Sir Trevor’s eyes showed immense sadness. “I was only the first of many. Over half of these cells were palace staff, having done nothing wrong. The guards took others, but they were brought into the interrogation chamber and never came out. Those of us in the cells are the old, sick, or weak.” “Is my brother down here?” “No,” Sir Trevor said, “he isn’t. If they took him, I can only assume he’s in the interrogation chamber.” “I don’t think they would kill him in stealth,” Ryan told him. “They have him slated for a public execution tomorrow.” “What was his crime?” “He is accused of treason.” “I take it from your tone that you do not agree with the accusation.” “I know what Philip did, and it wasn’t treason. In fact, it was compassionate, a new style for him,” Ryan mused. “Is that why you’re here,” Sir Trevor asked, “to rescue Philip?” “Yes,” was the answer, “but there are two groups of us. The others are already upstairs searching. My two friends here are going to help me get all the people who shouldn’t be in here out to safety.” “How can you do that?” “It is too long to explain. Just help us get our people out of the cells, and I will take care of the escape. Less than ten minutes later, Sean opened the last door Sir Trevor indicated and pushed out a young woman in a wheelchair. Ryan took the handles and led the way to the elevator. Those who were well enough to walk helped those who weren’t, and the first car full of escapees were on their way to the third floor with Scott to show them where to go. Once they were all up, they made their slow progress to the door of the tunnel, where they had to slide each person through individually. This, along with the portal on the ceiling, was going to take a while. *** Sandy was getting tired of searching for the imprisoned prince, and decided to take a risk. “Excuse me,” she said in haughty tones behind one of the maids. The maid jumped up in surprise and was about to say something, but Sandy cut her short. “My pupils and I are new here. We were told that there was a room being set up for classes three doors down from Prince Philip’s room, but they declined to tell us where that was. “Two halls down, take a right. After three more hallways, head left. The room with all of the guards in front of it is the prince’s,” the maid without the slightest hint of pleasantness. Without bothering to thank the woman, Sandy led her “pupils” in the indicated direction. They turned left and were in what seemed to be a main passage, being larger than the others. When they reached the third hall, there were four guards by a door near the end: two with their backs against the wall on either side of the door, and two facing them on the other side of the doorway. Sandy chose a room in the main hallway and led Ayre and Spider in. “What now?” Spider asked. “Now we wait,” Sandy replied. *** Ryan waited for Sean to give the “all clear” call from the other end of the tunnel, signifying that the woman he was sliding through the smooth ice-tunnel was through and out of the way. “Can I go first?” Scott asked. “Go ahead,” Ryan said, not wanting to be the first one to test Scott’s idea. Scott backed up a few steps, ran at the tunnel, and dove in head first. Ryan ducked down to watch him continue sliding around the corner and out of sight. “Damn,” he heard Scott say from the end. “What happened?” “Nothing,” Scott replied with something less than enthusiasm. “I just didn’t get enough speed to go all the way.” “So it is safe?” “It’s a smooth tunnel with a silo full of grain to land in. Of course it’s safe,” Scott called back. “Your turn.” Ryan turned around and walked down the hallway. The door was at the end of a long passage, long enough for him to get a running start. Two of his father’s private guards came out of a door with a box of weapons. They saw Ryan and all three of them froze. Ryan was the first to break the stillness. He took off and sprinted at the hole, going about three times as fast as Scott had gone with his three steps, and dove. The speed Ryan shot through the tunnel was phenomenal. Before he knew it, he was rising up the wall of the right-turning curve so high he reached the top and came down on the left side. He saw the opening approaching quickly and braced himself for a landing, which was much softer than he had anticipated. “Man, Ryan,” Sean exclaimed, “you shot out like a human cannonball.” Ryan spat the raw grain out of his mouth. “Close the door, quickly, and hold it shut.” Scott, Sean, and Jack slammed the door and put all of their weight against it. Almost immediately, there was a loud CLANG and the three at the door were jarred. A minute later, the second guard began yelling at them. “I don’t know what you were doing here, but now you can add murder to it.” Ryan, glad that they had at least loaded the prisoners up through the portal as they brought them through, now tried to figure out how they were going to escape without bringing guards with them. *** It was nearly an hour before Sandy saw the four guards approaching down the empty passage. For a palace, this place was sure deserted. She decided she would ask Ryan about it later when their mission was over. She stepped out of her room and walked right for the guards, making as if to walk right through them. The four of them, in a square formation, parted to let her pass, but she had no intention of just going by. She raised her staff and four bolts of light shot out to his the guards in their heads. They froze momentarily, long enough for Spider and Ayre to rush out of the room and catch two of them. Sandy caught the third in her arms and the fourth in a beam of light. They brought them into their room and quickly donned the guards’ uniforms. This time, none of them acted shy about changing in front of the others. Once they had changed, there was still the problem of the fourth guard. If they went with three, the others at the door would be suspicious. Sandy kneeled by one of the guards’ bodies and placed her hands on the sides of his head, concentrating. The guard’s eyes opened, but it was clear that the guard’s mind wasn’t there. “You two will have to lead,” Sandy said. “It will take most of my concentration to walk and bring this man along like a magical marionette.” They responded by standing and walking out of the room. Ayre and Spider, as Sandy had instructed, stood side by side, and Sandy brought the guard and stood behind them. Their formation as they went, wasn’t particularly graceful, but it was passable. “You’re late,” one of the guards reprimanded them. “Someone,” Ayre said, turning to cast a nasty gaze at Spider, “had to use the bathroom, so we all had to wait.” “Don’t let it happen again,” the guard said and the four that had been in front of the door marched off in unison as Sandy and the others took their places. As soon as they were out of hearing range, Sandy let the fourth guard slip to the floor. “Gods, he is heavy.” Spider opened the door and led the way into the prince’s antechamber. “Wait,” the prince protested, “it is not time yet.” Sandy raised her staff and transformed into Stardust. She opened a portal which Ayre and Spider walked through. “We are the ones saving your life,” she said. “Are you coming?” Philip didn’t waste any time deciding. He followed the two through the portal and was tailed by Stardust, who closed the portal when she was through. She was greeted by about fifty sick and elderly people. Looking at Spider and seeing the same shock on her face which she herself felt, she knew that this was Spider’s Den. What were all of these people doing here? She waded through the crowd and found her original portal. She jumped down into it and was tailed by Spider, who spoke first. “What the Hell is going on?” she demanded. Stardust noticed that Sean, Scott, and Jack were pressed up against the silo door, holding something back that kept jarring them. She raised her staff once again and fired a stream of sap from one of the trees of her homeland. The three who were holding the door moved out of the way and she finished the job. “I asked a question,” Spider said loudly. “We had some prisoners to break free,” Sean said to her. “Don’t worry, you, Ryan, and Sandy are still the only ones who know where it is.” Stardust floated back up through the portal and lowered a rope. Jack and Ryan followed while Sean placated Spider. “Hey you two,” Sandy yelled down, “got up here! That sap will not hold much longer.” Reluctantly, the two of them stopped their argument and shinnied up the rope. Stardust watched as the silo door broke open and guards began flooding in. She smiled and waved to them from Spider’s Den as she closed the portal, cutting off the various shouts of the guards. She reverted back to Sandy and turned to Spider, who was still furious. “Worry not,” she said. “I will get them out of here.” Sandy raised her staff for what she hoped was the last time that day and opened a portal to the apartment she had briefly rented in Tyre when she had first arrived on the planet. “All right,” she yelled over the low din, catching everyone’s attention. “Everyone who was set free today, not including prince Philip, step through this portal. You will be in Tyre and safe.” In an orderly manner, the crowd funneled through the portal, finally leaving the eight who were supposed to be there. “My brother,” Philip said to Ryan, “I am extremely grateful to you for coming to my rescue. What can I do to repay you?” “Repay me?” Ryan said incredulously. “I am your brother. I have to keep you out of trouble. Family is the most important thing we can have in our lives. Why can you not understand that?” “Let’s not have this conversation again,” Philip said. “We discussed it enough at that massage place where you were working. You know my position.” “I had rather hoped that your position would have changed by now,” Ryan retorted. “I still insist that the needs of the Kingdom come before our own needs. In saving me, the Kingdom owes you a great debt.” “The Kingdom wants you dead.” “Our father wants both of us dead. I no longer consider him the voice of the Kingdom, as he has clearly lost his senses.” “At least we agree on something,” Ryan said. “Let us just leave it at that.” “I concur,” Philip said, then turned and walked to the bed, occupying it as his own. “Tell me again, why did we save him?” Scott asked softly, standing close enough that only Ryan could hear. “What an irritating little man,” Spider said, not checking her volume. Philip either didn’t hear or chose to ignore it. “Can we send him somewhere?” Ayre asked Sandy. Sandy was on the verge of collapse. “I can’t send anyone anywhere tonight,” she groaned. “I used all of my magic today, including my reserves. There’s nothing left.” “Move,” Spider told Philip. “Excuse me?” he asked in an offended tone. “Get up,” she demanded. “The bed is needed.” “I am the Crown Prince,” he said. “The bed is mine now.” Spider grabbed the mattress and tipped it, knocking the prince to the floor with surprising strength for someone so small. “How DARE you!” Philip raged, standing up. “Begone little man,” Spider said, looking up defiantly into his eyes, “before I get angry and stop being nice.” “People have been hung for less.” “Look, you sorry excuse for a male, get a clue,” Spider began, “Sandy has run herself ragged for you. She ran all over a palace she didn’t know, risking her life, and used up every ounce of strength she had. She busted her ass to save yours, and now you think you have more right to the bed than her? If you even think about trying to take this bed from her, I will personally tie you down and gag you.” Philip opened his mouth to berate Spider, but a sharp growl from her silenced him. Sandy remembered an intense feeling of gratitude and sisterhood for Spider before she passed out.