Sandkings Read Online Free

Sandkings
Book: Sandkings Read Online Free
Author: George R.R. Martin
Tags: Science Fiction/Horror
Pages:
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menacingly.
    “Come on,” Rakkis urged. They all gathered round the tank. Simon Kress found his magnifiers and slipped them on. If he was going to lose a thousand standards, at least he wanted a good view of the action.
    The sandkings had seen the invader. All over the castle, activity had ceased. The small scarlet mobiles were frozen, watching.
    The spider began to move toward the dark promise of the gate. On the tower above, Simon Kress’ countenance stared down impassively.
    At once there was a flurry of activity. The nearest red mobiles formed themselves into two wedges and streamed over the sand toward the spider. More warriors erupted from inside the castle and assembled in a triple line to guard the approach to the underground chamber where the maw lived. Scouts came scuttling over the dunes, recalled to fight.
    Battle was joined.
    The attacking sandkings washed over the spider. Mandibles snapped shut on legs and abdomen, and clung. Reds raced up the golden legs to the invader's back. They bit and tore. One of them found an eye, and ripped it loose with tiny yellow tendrils. Kress smiled and pointed.
    But they were small , and they had no venom, and the spider did not stop. Its legs flicked sandkings off to either side. Its dripping jaws found others, and left them broken and stiffening. Already a dozen of the reds lay dying. The sand spider came on and on. It strode straight through the triple line of guardians before the castle. The lines closed around it, covered it, waging desperate battle. A team of sandkings had bitten off one of the spider's legs, Kress saw. Defenders leaped from atop the towers to land on the twitching, heaving mass.
    Lost beneath the sandkings, the spider somehow lurched down into the darkness and vanished.
    Jad Rakkis let out a long breath. He looked pale. “Wonderful,” someone else said. Malada Blane chuckled deep in her throat.
    “Look,” said Idi Noreddian, tugging Kress by the arm.
    They had been so intent on the struggle in the corner that none of them had noticed the activity elsewhere in the tank. But now the castle was still, the sands empty save for dead red mobiles, and now they saw.
    Three armies were drawn up before the red castle. They stood quite still, in perfect array, rank after rank of sandkings, orange and white and black. Waiting to see what emerged from the depths.
    Simon Kress smiled. “A cordon sanitaire ,” he said. “And glance at the other castles, if you will, Jad."
    Rakkis did, and swore. Teams of mobiles were sealing up the gates with sand and stone. If the spider somehow survived this encounter, it would find no easy entrance at the other castles. “I should have brought four spiders,” Jad Rakkis said. “Still, I've won. My spider is down there right now, eating your damned maw."
    Kress did not reply. He waited. There was motion in the shadows.
    All at once, red mobiles began pouring out of the gate. They took their positions on the castle, and began repairing the damage the spider had wrought. The other armies dissolved and began to retreat to their respective corners.
    “Jad,” said Simon Kress, “I think you are a bit confused about who is eating who."
    * * * *
    The following week Rakkis brought four slim silver snakes. The sandkings dispatched them without much trouble.
    Next he tried a large black bird. It ate more than thirty white mobiles, and its thrashing and blundering virtually destroyed their castle, but ultimately its wings grew tired, and the sandkings attacked in force wherever it landed.
    After that it was a case of insects, armored beetles not too unlike the sandkings themselves. But stupid, stupid. An allied force of oranges and blacks broke their formation, divided them, and butchered them.
    Rakkis began giving Kress promissory notes.
    It was around that time that Kress met Cath m'Lane again, one evening when he was dining in Asgard at his favorite restaurant. He stopped at her table briefly and told her about the war games,
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