Suddenly they were outside, scrabbling across a sloping roof, under the dark sky ablaze with stars and a slender sickle of moon. A moon ... âChed!' cried Calwyn. âThe moons are up!' Ched nodded. Then he slid down a pillar, and dived through a tiny window, and they were inside again, facing a wall whose pattern of fern fronds was beginning to blur and melt.
Panting for breath, Ched held out his hand and sang a throat-song of ironcraft, and an opening appeared in the sagging wall. He and Calwyn plunged through it, into a suite of private rooms. A noble lord and lady were seated on cushions, huddled in talk; they looked up in surprise, but nothing was beyond belief this day.
âFollow us!' cried Calwyn. âYou must escape from the Palace before it' s too late!' But the courtiers didn' t even rise to their feet as Ched opened a breach in the far wall and led Calwyn through.
âGotta go down!' cried Ched when they came to a wide, curved staircase. âGotta get to the ground â'
Calwyn slowly became aware of a very low, quiet groaning, like the roar of a distant forest fire. Every part of her wanted to scream to Ched,
hurry, hurry
! But they could only go as fast as Ched could open the way, through wall after wall, until Calwyn didn' t even notice the rooms they passed through.
And then Ched gasped, âThis is the last.' His face was pale, and he was stumbling; Calwyn put out a hand to steady him.
They emerged into a hollow space between the outermost wall and the inner ones. It was neither a room nor a passageway but a narrow blank area, unadorned, with walls so high that they couldn' t see its roof. Calwyn forced herself to breathe calmly. The immense walls seemed to press together like two hands trying to crush them. Dust was falling all around, white powder drifting down; it coated their hair, their faces, their clothes, so they looked like ghosts. Calwyn called out silently,
Halasaa! Where are you? Are you safe?
But there was no reply.
Ched' s thin chest heaved as he fought for breath. The little boy stood before the enormous ivory wall, one hand outstretched, fingers drooping with weariness, as he called up one last low throat-growl of chantment that mingled with the distant groan of the Palace' s slow disintegration. A wild fancy flashed into Calwyn' s mind: that the Palace itself was singing, singing the low mournful song of its own destruction.
As Ched sang, a crack opened in the last thick wall. Slowly, painfully, he cleaved the wall in two and a jagged line grew wider with every note. And finally there was something that Calwyn could do: with a light song of windcraft, she brushed away the dust and stones to clear the opening. This last wall was as thick as the length of
Fledgewing
and, as Ched prised it apart with the steady drone of his song, the whole weight of the stone above pressed down on it.
Ched' s voice croaked, and failed, and he dropped to his knees. Without thinking, Calwyn took up his song, the two notes at once, as Darrow had tried to teach her: one in the back of her throat and the second inside her mouth. The song of ironcraft leapt from her lips like a living creature, and the force of it shuddered through Calwyn' s whole body. The crack shifted, and held. She sang on, more strongly, and the gap widened. Now she could see all the way through the wall to the other side: the sand, metallic under the moonlight,
arbec
plants soft as beaten silver.
Calwyn knew that she wouldn' t be able to hold the crack open long. She swung Ched up in her arms and leapt through, growling the chantment as hard as she could, forcing the breath out of her lungs.
She was just in time. She heard it begin: a tremendous groan of crushing stone that drowned out her chantment, and then a roar like an avalanche as the whole Palace began to collapse.
Calwyn felt the bite of hard rock under her boots, and then she was running down the steep ridge, running faster than she' d ever run, running until she thought her lungs would burst, still clutching the little boy in her arms. A cloud of dust engulfed them, and the roar built and built like a wave about to break, a wave of crushing stone that towered above them. Calwyn ran, without breath; the moment seemed endless. She felt as though she were drowning, her earliest and strongest fear. She was trapped in the dream she' d had often as a novice priestess, the dream that she was crossing the black ice of the sacred pool, and the ice opened and swallowed her. The black water dragged her down, and she was fighting, fighting her way to the surface, but it was so far off, she kicked and kicked toward the light . . .
And as she ran, the wave broke.
Before she heard the final deafening roar, she felt the force of it, a hard blow to her back that knocked her to the ground. She lost her grip on Ched; he slipped out of her arms as she rolled down the slope and onto the plain, striking her head painfully on the stony ground. The world turned upside-down.
She could see the wave of destruction ripple the length of the Palace of Cobwebs. The vast silvered edifice crumbled, piece by piece, fragile as meringue. Shada' s thin spire crumpled, then a smaller spire toppled, and a row of battlements folded on itself. The great dome on the eastern side caved in, and a slow silent cloud of white dust engulfed the ruins. The stately stone of the Palace of Cobwebs was melting, dissolving, evaporating like sea foam. The image of the huge half-eaten marzipan model of the Palace at the Summer Feast flashed into Calwyn' s mind. Now the real Palace looked the same. Nothing was left but a rubble of white crumbs.
She lay there, while the rumble of the falling stones diminished. She was alive. She took in one rasping breath, then another, and choked. Her mouth and nose were full of sand and dust. Ched lay a few paces away. Behind them spread a mountain of white stone. There were lumps of rock scattered all around, and the desert gleamed with a thick layer of white dust, dazzling bright in the moonlight. Calwyn was reminded of the mountain meadows of Antaris after a snowfall.
She crawled over to Ched. âAre you all right? Can you hear me?'
He was facing away from her; she laid her hand on his shoulder. He rolled over at her touch, and she drew a sharp breath, for his eyes were wide and staring, and his body was limp. âNo! No!' Frantically she shook his shoulders. âChed! Ched!'
But she knew. There was no doubt. The side of his head had been crushed by a falling chunk of stone; he would have died at once. Tears slid down Calwyn' s cheeks as she cradled Ched' s small, bloodied body. I can take care of him, she had said to Keela. She bent her head and wept.
Another roar rumbled out across the desert as a final avalanche of white rock poured onto the red sands. Shakily Calwyn stood up; the ruins were so unstable, it wasn' t safe to remain here. But she couldn' t leave Ched' s body exposed on the plain, to be nosed by
wasunti
. Swiftly she gathered stones and piled them over the little boy. It did not take long. She stood with her head bowed for a moment, holding her palms upward to the Goddess' s light, and under her breath, she recited the prayer for the dead.
When that was done, she took a deep breath. She had to turn all her attention to her own survival. âHalasaa!' she shouted, turning slowly. âMica! Heben!'
All around, the lumps of white stone lay still and silent. âMica!' she called, fighting the sobs that threatened to choke her. âHalasaa! Mica! Heben!' But her voice was swallowed by the indifferent desert. She called with mind-speech.
Halasaa!
Can you hear me?
There was no reply.
Suddenly she realised how cold it was; her teeth were chattering. She could not stay here.
Ahead, to the left and right, stretched the endless plain, scored with ravines. Calwyn felt a moment of panic. Where was the gully where they' d left the
hegesi
?Was it this side of the Palace, or the other? She looked up at the moons, and her racing heart calmed. She was facing north, and the campsite lay to the north of the Palace. She would have to go around to the other side.
Slowly, laboriously, she picked her way across the desert, giving the remains of the Palace a wide berth. The ground was baked hard as rock underfoot; it crunched beneath her boots. Calwyn stumbled onward, looking around for her friends, starting at every flicker of movement, every scratch of tiny
nadu
claws.
Suddenly the earth shuddered beneath her. Calwyn threw herself to the ground; she heard the clink of armour and the stamp of boots. An Army patrol, perhaps ten or twenty men, Calwyn guessed. She pressed herself flat to the red dirt. She was utterly exposed; she could only hope to be overlooked if she kept completely still.
âHalt! Fall out!'
The command rang out some distance away. Cautiously Calwyn shifted her cheek against the hard-packed sand and squinted toward the sound. If only she had the Power of Seeming, so she could hide herself! She could hear the harsh scrape of metal as the soldiers laid down their heavy shields. A murmur of talk drifted toward her, and Calwyn strained to hear.
â. . . turn back here.'
âNo sign of rebels â' âRebels?This ain' t down to them. Sorcery did this, brother.'
âSorcery? You' re dreamin, brother. The generals and the sorcerers work together. This is the work of them sea-town scum . . .'
So the rebels were being blamed for the destruction of the Palace. It was agonising to lie so still, while insects crawled into her eyes and up her nose, and sand crept inside her robes, but Calwyn wanted to hear what else the soldiers had to say.
âKnow what our next job' s goin to be?'
âI heard we' re takin over the Palace, brother.'
âWhat' s left of it!'
Someone laughed. A chill ran down Calwyn' s spine as she thought of the polished armour and shining sword-blades of the Princes. Perhaps they would see some action at last. If the Army was planning a coup, should she try to warn the courtiers? No, she decided. They would have to fend for themselves.
âWe' ll show em who' s boss!'
âThere ain' t no boss, now the Emperor' s dead. . .'
âThere' s always a boss, brother!'
There was hearty laughter.
âMy money' s on the Fifth Prince.'
âHim! He ain' t got the wits to tie his own bootlaces!'
âThat' s why the generals are settin him up on the throne, you idiot â' âWatch your mouth, brother.'
âAll right, men, that' ll do! Fall in!'
There were grumbles and groans, a shuffle of feet and the muffled clank of weaponry, and then the steady rhythm of marching boots shook the ground once more. Calwyn made herself count ten full breaths before she scrambled to her feet. She had to keep moving. Soon, it would be dawn.
Darrow leaned on the tiller, and
Fledgewing
' s white sail puffed out before the wind. Tonno, standing by the mast, his curly hair ruffled by the breeze, turned to grin at him. They had come a long way since leavingTeril and they were not far now from the mining town of Phain. But Darrow was not yet ready to land. He and Tonno would sail on for some days more, past Phain and Geel, through the Southern Straits, along the meandering golden shore around the Heel of Merithuros, as far south as any ship from the Westlands or the Isles ever sailed. But
Fledgewing
would go even further, sailing through those hostile seas, toward the bottom of the world.
Tonno had been shocked when Darrow abandoned his own boat in Teril.
â
Heron
has served me well,' said Darrow brusquely. âBut
Fledgewing
is faster.'
âDon' t expect her to be waiting for you when you come back,' growled Tonno. âTeril' s packed with thieves like a melon full of pips.'
Darrow did not reply. As they drew closer to Merithuros, closer to the Black Palace, the ruby ring that Samis had worn began to burn in his pocket like a hot coal.
Heron.
âYour name is not your own,' says Samis. âI will give you another.You will be Heron.' Darrow didn' t know what a heron was until Samis told him: a bird of the marshes, lean, keeping to itself, stalking the water in solitude. âExcept, of course, there' s no water here,' drawls Samis.
Darrow says nothing. The description is wrong in another way, too. He is not solitary any more: he has Samis. The two are always together. Darrow is freed from the dreary round of daily tasks and lessons. He and Samis go where they please, demand answers to their questions from whichever chanter Samis chooses to summon. They practise their chantments extravagantly, for the pleasure of wielding power, ignoring rules that bind the other sorcerers. They go hawking in the desert, and on hunting expeditions to the shore. Unlike the other sorcerers, cloistered in their dim rooms with their murmured secrets, the prince and his companion leave the Black Palace and return at will; they have a wild freedom that Darrow has never dreamed of.
The sorcerers hate and fear Samis, yet they dare not gainsay him, not just because he is the Emperor' s son, but because he is stronger than any of them. It is exhilarating to Darrow to live in the shadow of such casual power, as if he walked beside a whirlwind or a lightning bolt, and called it friend.