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before; thicker by far than the wardings the civil bureau maintained on the
various postern passages through the city walls. He'd guess a high templar had
hung the shimmering curtain.
"There was some light before, but there was a passage here, too." Mahtra
indicated a place now hidden by the warding. "We'd use the passage. Now-They
showed me what would happen if I touched the light."
"It must be twice as powerful as the one under the walls," Ruari said, making
a pensive face. He remembered warding from when Pavek had led them through a
postern passage on their way to rescue Akashia from House Escrissar. "At least
twice as powerful. I can feel it; it makes my teeth hurt and my hair stand up.
The other one didn't. Don't think your medallion trick's going to work like it
did last year."
Pavek shouldered his way to the front. He took his medallion from his neck and
grasped it carefully by the edges, with the striding lion to the front. "You
forget: I'm at least twice the templar I was then."
A cascade of blue-green sparks leapt to the medallion, leaving a black,
wardless space in the curtain. Pavek moved the ceramic in an outward-growing
spiral, collecting more sparks, making a bigger hole. His arm was numb and
faintly blue-green by the time he had a hole large enough to let them through.
He went last; it closed behind him, leaving them in darkness. Pavek sucked his
teeth and swore under his breath.
"What's the matter?" Ruari asked.
"One-sided warding."
"So? Then we've got no problem getting out-"
The half-elf would have walked headlong into oblivion if Pavek hadn't seized
his arm and shoved him against the rough stone wall.
"Death-trap, fool! Warding to keep curious folk out, but a blind trap for
anyone who was already inside when the wards were set."
Ruari went limp against Pavek's grip on his shirt. "Can we get out?"
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"Same way we got in-just have to make certain I'm in front and my medallion's
in front of me," Pavek said with more good-humor and optimism than he felt.
"Wish I had a bit of chalk to mark the walls. Wish I had a torch to see the
walls..."
"There're torches on the other side," Mahtra volunteered, then added: "There
used to be."
"I can see," Ruari informed them, relying on the night-vision he'd inherited
from his elven mother. "I've marked these rocks in my mind. I'll know this
place when we're here again. Swear it."
"See that you do," Pavek said, and Zvain tittered nervously somewhere on his
left. "Still wish I had a torch."
"The path's not hard," Mahtra assured them. "I never carried a torch, and I
can't see in the dark. Hold hands; I'll lead."
And she did, without a hint of her earlier trepidations. Her grip was cool and
dry around Pavek's fingers, while Zvain, behind Pavek, had a sweaty hand that
threatened to slip away with every hesitant step the boy took. Ruari brought
up the rear, or Pavek assumed he did. Between his druid training and his
innate talents, the half-elf could be utterly silent when he chose.
The air in the passage was nighttime cool and heavy with moisture, like the
air in Telhami's grove. It had a faintly musty scent, but nothing approaching
the stench Pavek would have expected from the carnage Mahtra had described.
He'd believed her since she appeared on the salt flats. He'd trusted her
unquestioningly, as he trusted no one else, certainly not the Lion-King who'd
sent her. A thousand ominous thoughts broke his mind's surface.
"There's light ahead," Ruari announced in an excited whisper.
Light meant magic or fire. Pavek took a deep breath through his nose. He
couldn't smell anything, but he couldn't see anything, either.
"Let me go first," he said to Mahtra, striding past her.
The passage was wide enough for two good-sized humans and high enough that he
hadn't bumped his head. They'd come through a few narrower spots, but none
that made Pavek feel as if the ground had swallowed him whole. He didn't
suggest that Mahtra stay behind or that Ruari stay behind with her. He didn't
sense danger ahead, not in that almost-magical way a man could sometimes sense
a trap or ambush before it was too late, but if things did go bad, he wanted
Ruari and his staff where they could be of some use-not to mention the
'protection' Mahtra claimed to possess but hadn't ever described or
demonstrated.
He thumbed the guard that held his steel sword-scavenged from the battlefield
after the battle with Escrissar's mercenaries for Quraite-in its scabbard.
"Stay close. Stay quiet," he ordered his troops. "Keep balanced. If I stop
short, I don't want to hear you grunting and stumbling."
They whispered obedience, and he led them forward. The light grew bright
enough that he could see it: a dimly glowing blue-white splotch in the
distance, not any kind of firelight Pavek knew. It grew larger, but remained
dim, even when they approached the end of the passage. Pavek left his
companions behind, then, even though they'd be trapped without him to brandish
his medallion at the upper warding. He saw the decision as a question of risk
against responsibility: he'd be responsible for them, no matter what, but at
that moment the greatest risk lay in the light he could see, not in the
warding.
The enclosed passage ended at the top of a curving ramp. Overhead, there was
open air filled with the dim light, solid rock on his left, and a slowly
diminishing wall on his right. Pavek edged along the wall, keeping his head
down, until the wall was low enough for him to see over while still providing
him with something to hide behind. After taking a deep breath for courage, he
peeked over the top-
And was so amazed by what he saw that he forgot to hunker down again.
Urik's reservoir was larger than any druid's pool, larger than anything Pavek
could have imagined on his own. It was a dark mirror reflecting the glow from
its far shore, flawless, except for circular ripples that appeared and faded
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as he gazed across it. The glow came from five huge bowls that seemed at first
to hover in the still air, though when he squinted, Pavek could make out a
faint, silvery scaffolding beneath them.
Other than the bowls, there was nothing: no corpses, no burnt-out huts, none
of the debris a veteran templar expected to find in the aftermath of carnage.
But the bowls themselves...
Pavek didn't have the words to describe their delicate, subtly shifting color
or the aura that shone steadily around them. They were beautiful, identical,
perfect in every imaginable way, and now that he'd seen them, the foreboding
he hadn't felt when Ruari first saw light ahead fell on him like burning oil.
Mahtra wasn't a liar. Lord Hamanu was trustworthy. And someone-Kakzim-had
contrived the deaths of countless innocents and misfits so these bowls could
be set in their places above the water.
Set there and left alone.
By everything Pavek could see or hear, there wasn't another living creature in
the cavern. He gave the agreed-upon signal, and Ruari brought the other two
down the ramp.
Mahtra gasped.
Zvain began a curse: "Hamanu's great, greasy-" which he didn't finish because [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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