She turned from him and mounted Jessup. Her voice was cold and distant. “We must be on our way.”

Richard settled into his saddle and followed after. He hoped the little gar would have a chance at life, after the meal it had needed. He said a silent good-bye to it as he rode into the night behind Sister Verna.

Though he had meant what he said about giving her the sword, he felt strangely relieved to have it back. It belonged with him, and somehow made him whole. Zedd had given it to him; it was what had changed him, but it was also all he had to remind him of his friend and home.

Chapter 25

The horse was exhausted, but still ran with wild abandon. Adie held a tight grip on Zedd’s waist as he leaned over the horse’s withers, clutching her mane. Muscles bunched and flexed rhythmically beneath him. Trees in the dense forest flashed by in an endless blur. The horse leapt over rocks and logs without pause.

The skrin was only a heartbeat behind. Being taller than the horse, it struck branches as it ran. Zedd could hear the limbs snap and splinter. He had tried felling trees across the way right behind them, but it didn’t slow the bone beast. He had tried tricks and spells and wizardry of every sort. None had worked, but he refused to admit defeat. Admitting defeat established a mental state of resignation that would make it certain.

“I fear the Keeper has us this time,” Adie called at his back.

“Not yet he doesn’t! How did he find us? The bones of the skrin have been in your house, hiding you, for years! If they have been hiding you, then how did he find us?”

She had no answer.

They were running the path where the boundary had been, headed toward the Midlands. Zedd was thankful the boundary walls were no longer there, or they could have inadvertently run into the underworld by now. Boundary or not, this couldn’t go on for much longer, and then the skrin would have them. Boundary or not, the underworld would have them. The Keeper would have them.

Think, he ordered himself.

Zedd was using magic to lend strength and stamina to the horse, but even so, heart, lungs and sinew could not endure long past their natural limits. He was nearly as weary as the frightened animal. This couldn’t go on much longer.

He had to stop trying to slow the skrin, and put his mind to solving the problem. But that could be a dangerous shift in tactics. It could be that although what he was doing wasn’t stopping the skrin, it was keeping it from them.

He thought he saw a flash of green light to the left. A shade of green he had seen from only one place: the boundary. From the underworld. Impossible, he thought. The horse’s hooves thundered on.

“Adie! Do you have anything with you that the skrin would recognize?”

“Like what?”

“I don’t know! Anything! It has to have found us by something. Something to connect us to the underworld.”

“I have nothing. It must have found us by the bones at my house.”

“But the bones have been what have been hiding you!”

There was no mistaking the flash of green light this time. It was to the right. Another came to the left.

“Zedd! I think the skrin be bringing up the underworld, to force us into it!”

Bones.

“Can it do that?”

Her voice wasn’t as loud this time. “Yes.”

“Bags,” he muttered into the cold wind at his face.

Eerie green light flickered between the trees. It was closer. If he didn’t think of something, they were going to die.

Think.

Suddenly the green light seemed to ignite into a solid wall to each side. It made a thump he could feel deep in his chest when it arrived, whole, in this world. The horse galloped down the path between them. The way between the walls was narrowing.

Bones.

Skrin bones.

“Adie! Give me the necklace around your neck!”

The luminous green walls of the boundary pressed in to each side. They were out of time. They were out of options.

Adie pulled off her necklace and put her arm around him again, holding out the bone necklace. Her hand was slick with blood. Zedd yanked his own necklace over his head and snatched hers in the same hand.

“If this doesn’t work, I’m sorry, Adie. I just want you to know I’ve enjoyed sharing time with you.”

“What are you going to do?”

“Hold tight!”

The green walls of the boundary closed together ahead of them. Zedd held the horse firmly and gave her a silent command.

She dug in her hooves and spun around to a halt just before the trail ended in a wall of the underworld.

Zedd flung the two necklaces made with skrin bone into the green light, between a wide gap in the trees.

The skrin was upon them. Without pause, it followed the necklaces as they sailed into the boundary, into the green light. There was a flash, and a booming clap, like a lightning strike, as the skrin went through.

The green light, and the skrin, flickered and were gone. The dark forest was silent but for ragged breathing.

Adie laid her head wearily against his back. “You be right, old man. Your life be one act of desperation after another.”

Zedd patted her knee before sliding off the sweaty horse. The poor animal was so exhausted it was at the brink of death. Zedd held its head between his hands and gave it a dose of strength, and his sincere thanks. He laid the side of his face against her nose as he closed his eyes and gave reassuring strokes to her cheeks for a moment before going to check on Adie.

Blood still oozed from the wound on her arm. The size of the horse made Adie appear smaller than she really was. Her slumped shoulders and hanging head didn’t help diminish the illusion. She didn’t acknowledge any pain as Zedd inspected the wound.

“I be a fool,” she said. The whole time I thought I be hiding under the Keeper’s nose, he be hiding under mine. He knew where I be the whole time. All these years.”

“We can take solace in the fact that it earned him no profit. He has wasted his investment. Now hold still. I must tend to this wound.”

There be no time for that. We must get back to my house. I must get my bones.”

“I said be still.”

“We must hurry.”

Zedd scowled up at her. “We will go back when I’m finished, but the horse is exhausted; she must be walked. I’ll walk and let you ride, if you give me no further trouble. Now be still or we will be here the whole night quibbling.”

By the time they reached Adie’s house, dawn was breaking, offering a cold, weak light. It was a sad sight. The skrin had torn the place to splinters. Adie disregarded the leaning, holed walls as she rushed inside, stepping over debris, picking up bones, holding them in the crook of her other arm, as she worked her way toward the corner where they had last seen the round, carved bone.

Zedd was inspecting the ground outside when he heard her calling to him.

“Come help me find the round bone, wizard.”

He stepped over a fallen beam. “I don’t expect you will find it.”

She pushed a board aside. “It be here somewhere.” She stopped, looking back over her shoulder. “What do you mean, you don’t expect we will find it?”

“Someone has been here.”

She looked around at the ruin. “You be sure?”

Zedd waved his arm vaguely toward where he had been studying the ground. “I saw a footprint, over there. It isn’t ours.”

She let the bones in her arm drop to the floor. “Who?” . He laid his hand on a beam that hung from the ceiling, its end resting on the floor. “I don’t know, but someone has been here. It looks to be a woman’s boot, but it isn’t yours. I suspect she will have taken the round bone.”

Adie pawed through the rubble in the corner, searching. At last she stopped. “You be right, old man. The bone be gone.” She turned, seeming to inspect the very air with her white eyes. “Banelings,” she hissed. “You be wrong about the Keeper wasting his effort.”


Перейти на страницу:
Изменить размер шрифта: