Hazror fell down the stairs, screaming all the way. A third of the way down he catapulted straight into the path of his three Vengenarls. All four of them got tangled together and fell another thirty steps.
Tal didn't wait to look. He raced back to where he'd come in. A wall of light blocked the steps to the surface, drowned in sand. Tal had already thought of how to deal with that.
He would make a Hand of Light and use it to carry himself up to the surface.
There was only one slight flaw in this plan. Tal had only ever seen a Hand of Light made once, by three Guards who were all much more experienced light mages than he was. But he had found that making the Stairway of Light in the Pit had opened up his mind to all sorts of Light Magic that he couldn't previously do or hadn't ever known about. Tal was pretty certain he knew how to make a Hand.
Actually there were two flaws. The other one was that he had to make the Hand in the few minutes he had before Hazror and the Vengenarls stopped falling down the stairs and came ravening up them instead.
Tal put all those thoughts to the very back of his mind and concentrated on his Sunstone. He had two other stones now, taken from Hazror, but the one in his ring he knew best.
He knew Orange light best, too, so it was with that he decided to weave his hand. First of all he sent out a thin beam. He gradually widened that until it was like a band of cloth, which he wove backward and forward to build up his Hand.
Because time was short he actually made more of a Mitten than a Hand. It had a thumb, but no fingers. It hovered a stretch away from him, as tall as he was and four times as wide.
Tal concentrated on the Hand. Slowly it drifted toward him. For a moment he thought he'd made it too insubstantial, but when it touched him it felt solid.
The Hand closed with Tal inside it and backed away from the wall of light that covered the exit.
Then it rushed forward, knuckles out, Tal braced inside for the shock.
The Hand hit the wall of light and smashed straight through. Orange light flared and sand started geysering in through the V of the thumb, where there was a slight gap.
Up!
thought Tal urgently, his head bent over his Sunstone in intense concentration.
Up!
The Hand pushed its way through the sand. Tal's Sunstone shone so brightly he had to close his eyes as it pumped power into the Hand.
Behind him, sand poured like a tidal wave through the broken wall of light into Hazror's lair. Tal hadn't planned it like that, but the sand was covering his retreat. With his best Sunstones taken, Hazror would be hard put to stem the flow of sand. He would not be able to pursue immediately.
Tal kept urging the Hand up. Even when it burst out on the surface, flinging sand and slabs of stone in all directions, he kept it going.
He was almost two hundred stretches up in the air when Adras caught up with him and said, "Tal! What are you doing?"
Distracted, Tal lost concentration. The Hand rippled from Orange to Yellow and then through the entire spectrum.
"Dark take it!" cursed Tal.
He lost control completely. His Sunstone went dark. The Hand vanished and Tal started to fall.
He didn't start screaming until he was halfway down, because he'd thought Adras would catch him.
Unfortunately Adras didn't realize he was needed until it was almost too late. He came diving down and snatched at Tal's hands when the boy was certain he was about to die.
Tal kept screaming after Adras saved him, but this time it was because his arms had been almost pulled out of their sockets.
After a moment he recovered and stopped his panicked howling. They were still quite high up, and there was no sign of movement in the sand below.
"Fly east!" Tal croaked. He could stand the pain in his shoulders a bit longer. "Fly as far as you can."
"Sure," said Adras. He craned his head down to look at his companion. "I guess Hazror wasn't so bad after all. He gave you one… two… Sunstones. And what's that other thing?"
"I think it's a key," said Tal. He was shivering now, in delayed shock. "And Hazror didn't give it to me, or the Sunstones. That's why we have to fly as far as we can."
"Why?" asked Adras. Then, in a slightly different tone, he added, "Oh. I see. Hazror will want them back."
Then later still, the Storm Shepherd gingerly asked, "How bad and terrible is he, by the way?"
"Very. Both," said Tal. Worse than he'd imagined, because he was not an Aeniran creature.
How could a Chosen become like Hazror? Why did he live like he did, preying on innocent young Chosen?
Then a much nastier thought came to Tal's mind.
How did the young Chosen find Hazror? Why would they go there in the first place? It wasn't as if his lair was easy to locate, or in any well-known place for finding and binding Spiritshadows.
Had they all been sent by the Codex, like he was? Sacrificed to try and get the bone whistle that now hung around his own neck?
Or had someone else sent them to their deaths?
Lenan had been a very smart boy, Tal recalled. He'd graduated first from the Lectorium last year. Maybe he had discovered some of the things that Tal had been finding out.
Tal had a lot of questions. He hoped he'd find the Codex soon and that it could answer some of them. Even if he was afraid of the answers.
"I will help Tal with the Codex," coughed Milla. The smoke had thickened so fast that she was already choking, and she couldn't see Odris at all. Even so, Milla tried to speak slowly and with pride. She was not begging to be saved from the fire.
"Excellent!" said Zicka. "Catch!"
He drew an arrow from his quiver, tied an almost invisible cord of spider silk to it, and with one elegant arch of his arm and back, fired it close to Milla's hand. She caught the arrow easily. Out in the Dark World, she had caught bigger arrows that were actually aimed at her. It was a rare skill and another mark of her prowess as a warrior.
"You are connected to the outside now," said Zicka. "Grab hold of Odris and walk slowly outside. Do not break the cord!"
He started stepping backward, uncoiling more spider silk as he did.
Milla reached behind her and grabbed something soft and squishy that she hoped was Odris. The Storm Shepherd didn't feel like she usually did, but Milla's eyes were streaming so much from the smoke she couldn't see.
Bending down low to find the clearest air, she stepped out.
Smoke billowed out with air but she kept on walking, to make sure Odris was completely out as well.
"Good!" cried Zicka. "Now we have to outrun the Nanuch before they wake up."
"Which way?" asked Milla. She could only see out of one tear-swimming eye.
"This way!" shouted Zicka, and he was off. Milla staggered after him, still dragging Odris. The Storm Shepherd was silent.
The amount of smoke that billowed out covered their escape, so that none of the Nanuch noticed they were gone. Even so, Zicka led them at a run through the gray wood for a long time. Milla was gasping from the exertion when the wood suddenly came to an end, the trees stopping all along a perfectly straight line.
Beyond the wood lay an ordered expanse of trimmed hedges and lawns, interspersed with flower beds alive with color.
Zicka stopped just past the trees.
"We'll rest here," said the Kurshken. "Then we can follow the edge of the forest north. It is best not to go into the Garden."
"Why?" asked Milla. It took an effort to find the breath to speak.
"I don't know," replied Zicka. "Only that anyone who goes past the first row of hedges does not return."
Milla stared out over the perfectly ordered garden. It stretched as far as she could see and looked entirely harmless. There were insects of some kind flying around the flowers, and she could see birds in the distance. Small ones that darted in and out of the hedges.
"Are you sure about this?" asked Odris. "I can see a pool not too far in, and I do need water."
"I only know that it is not safe. The Codex may know the secret of it," said Zicka. "Or the Hollow Oracle, or the Old Khamsoul. Since we cannot ask any of them, I suggest we simply avoid the place."
"But I really do need a drink," wailed Odris. "Can't I just fly over there a little bit?"
"No!" ordered Milla. Zicka had proved to be truthful about the dangers of the Dawn House. Milla had to presume the Kurshken was also right about the Garden. "I need a drink, too, but it isn't worth risking our lives."
"I bet it's just walking creatures that have to worry," said Odris petulantly. "Look at those birds. They're perfectly all right."
"They are bait," said Zicka, his voice ominous. The lizard started walking along the line of trees, not bothering to check if the others were following.
Milla followed immediately. Odris hesitated, taking one last look at the pool of water just beyond the first hedges. It did look rather too perfect, she realized with a shiver, and followed Milla.
They walked north for a long time. The sun was almost directly above them when they came to a broad river more than two hundred stretches wide that marked the northern border of the gray forest and the Garden. Beyond the river lay a stony wasteland of sinkholes and terraced hills of stone.
"It is safe to drink here," said Zicka. "I also have food aboard my ship. It is not much for someone your size, Milla -"
"Any food is welcome," interrupted Milla. "But where is your ship?"
Zicka pointed at the river's edge. For a moment Milla couldn't work out what the lizard was pointing at. Then she realized he must mean the partially submerged log that was lying in the shallows.
"That is a ship?" asked Odris. She didn't need to add that it looked like a piece of debris thrown up by the river.
"Come," said Zicka proudly. "I will show you. She is called `Roquollollollahahinanahbek' in our own tongue, which is to say, 'The Fire of Many Suns on First Blue of Deep Water,' in the shared speech. She is an heirloom of our people, a gift from long ago."
"It's a log," whispered Odris to Milla. "A piece of a tree. The Kurshken's mad."
"Quiet!" ordered Milla.
The lizard jumped down to the log, and ran along its length. Milla stopped at the shore. One end of the log was buried under mud and earth. There was no chance that this log could be pushed out into the river to make even a raft.
Then Zicka bent down and put his head underwater. Bubbles came up and Milla heard a burbling noise.
The Kurshken was talking underwater.
For a moment Milla was in agreement with Odris. The lizard was mad.
The moment passed quickly. For as Zicka pulled his head out of the water, there was a disturbance in the middle of the river. Ripples suddenly spread where the water had been calm.
A mast shot up out of the water, a slender pole that was quickly followed by a carved bow and stern and then an entire ship. Water gushed off and out of it as it rose and the bow turned to the shore where Zicka was waiting.
Milla stared. The ship, apart from its lack of runners, was an exact replica of a small Icecarl iceship, of the kind called an Orskir. It was a three- or four-person vessel that a Sword-Thane might have, or a Shield Maiden messenger. It even had similar carvings on its bow and stern, whorls and curves that mimicked cloud and wind.
Its hull was not bone, or even wood, as might be expected on this world. It was metal, the same deep golden metal that the Ruin Ship was made from. But it was also set with many Sunstones, hundreds and hundreds of them that glittered in the sunlight.
Milla found herself kneeling on the log. She knew this ship from the tales told by the Crones when the whole clan was huddled in the hold, while the worst of the winter storms howled about the many-times-anchored vessel.
This was Asteyr's ship. Asteyr, the mother of Danir and Susir and Grettir, who in turn were the foremothers of all the clans. But in the stories the Orskir of Asteyr traveled on ice. What was it doing here in Aenir, on a river, in the possession of a lizard?
"Asteyr's ship," croaked Milla. "How… how did your people come by this?"
"Yes, yes," replied Zicka, his purple tongue flickering. "It was Asteyr's ship, in the faraway times. We did her a service, but the ship was given to us later, from the hands of her daughter Danir. That is why we agreed to the Codex's request to help a daughter of Danir."
"What service?" asked Milla, still staring in awe at the ship. "What did you do?"
"I cannot say, even to a daughter of Danir," said Zicka. "It is a secret of our folk. I cannot speak of it without the permission of the Kurshken Allthing."
The fabled ship had drifted up to the log. Zicka leaped up and gripped the gunwale, then vaulted over. Milla climbed up reverently and stood upon the deck.
The ship was completely dry and there were no pools of water, nothing to show that it had been submerged. Milla stood near the bow, strangely afraid to go farther, to walk where Asteyr and Danir had once walked. She felt like she should clean her boots, or change her clothes, or something.
Odris drifted across above her, and settled around the mast, rather like a sail. There was no sail, nor boom, nor any of the rigging that Milla would have expected of an iceship. There was also no wheel or steering oar. Nevertheless, the ship swung out into the river and began to move.
"Where do we go?" asked Milla. But Zicka had moved to the stern and didn't hear her. Reluctantly, Milla tiptoed toward him, keeping close to the rail.
"Where do we go?" she repeated.
"Four Rivers Meet," said Zicka. "Close by Cold Stone Mountain. The Chosen Tal should be there, too, all being well."