Jared"s shadow darkened the doorway and he came in slightly breathlessly. "Sorry, Claudia."
He swung himself up into the saddle, and as she put her foot in Job"s linked hands, she said quietly, "What did you forget?"
His dark eyes met hers. "A certain object that I didn"t want to leave unguarded."
His hand moved discreetly to his coat, the high-necked Sapient robe of dark green.
She nodded, knowing it was the Key.
As they rode off she wondered why she felt so oddly ashamed.
THEY MADE a fire from the dried fungi and some snapping powder from Gildas"s pack and cooked the meat while the whirlwind raged outside. No one spoke much. Finn was shivering with cold, and the cuts on his face stung; he sensed that Keiro was still weary too. It was hard to tell about the girl.
She sat slightly apart, eating quickly, her eyes watching and missing nothing.
Finally Gildas wiped greasy hands on his robe.
"Were there any signs of the inmates?"
"The sheep were roaming," Keiro said carelessly. "Not even a fence."
"And the Prison?"
"How should I know? Eyes in the trees probably."
Finn shivered. His head felt echoey and strange. He wanted them to sleep, to fall asleep so he could get the Key out again and talk to it. To her. The girl Outside.
He said, "We can"t move on, so we may as well rest. Don"t you think?"
"Sounds good," Keiro said lazily.
He arranged his pack against the back of the hollow.
But Gildas was staring at the image carved in the tree trunk. He crawled closer, reached out, and began to rub at it with his veined hands. Curls of lichen fell.
The narrow face seemed to emerge from dinginess and the green fur of moss, its hands holding the Key so carefully drawn, they seemed real.
Finn realized that the Key must be linking into some circuitry in the tree itself and for a moment a blur of vision caught him off guard, a sense that the whole of Incarceron was a great creature in whose entrails of wire and bone they crept. He blinked.
No one seemed to have noticed, though the girl was staring at him.
Gildas was saying, "He"s leading us along the way he took. Like a thread through the labyrinth."
"So he left his own picture?" Keiro drawled.
Gildas frowned. "Obviously not. This is a shrine, created by the Sapienti who have followed him. We should find other signs on the way."
"I can"t wait."
Keiro rolled himself over and curled up. Gildas glared at his back.
Then he said to Finn, "Take the Key out. We need to take care of it. The way may be longer than we think."
Thinking of the vast forest outside, Finn wondered if they would wander in it forever.
Carefully he reached up and removed the Key from the hexagon; it came away with a slight click, and instantly the hollow was dim and the whistling splinters of foil blurred the distant Prison lights.
Finn was stiff and uncomfortable, but he kept still, listening. After a long while he knew by the old mans harsh breathing that Gildas was sleeping. He wasn"t sure about the others. Keiro had his face turned away. Attia always seemed silent, as if she had learned that keeping still and being overlooked kept her alive.
Outside, the forest roared with the storm. He heard the cracking of its branches, the turmoil of its contempt surge from far distances, felt the strength of the wind batter the trees, shudder the iron trunk above him.
They had angered Incarceron. They had opened one of its forbidden doors and crossed some boundary. Perhaps it would trap them here forever, before they had barely begun.
At last, he couldn"t wait any longer.
Cautiously, taking infinite pains to keep the rustle of the leaf-litter down, he tugged the Key from his pocket. It was cold, frosted with cold. His fingers left smeared imprints on it, and even the eagle inside was hard to see until he had rubbed condensation from its surface. He held it tight."Claudia" he breathed.
The Key was cold and dead. No lights moved in it. He dared not speak louder.
But just then Gildas muttered, so he took the chance and curled up, bringing it closer.
"Can you hear me?" he said to it. "Are you there? Please, answer."
The storm raged. It whined in his teeth and nerves. He closed his eyes and felt despair, that he had imagined all of it, that the girl did not exist, that he was indeed born in some Womb here.
And then, as if out of his own fear, came a voice, a soft remark.
"Laughed? Are you sure that"s what he said?"
Finn"s eyes snapped open. A man"s voice. Calm and considering.
He glanced around wildly, afraid the others had heard, and then a girl said, "... Of course I"m sure. Why should the old man laugh, Master, if Giles was dead?"
"Claudia." Finn whispered the name before he could stop himself.
Instantly Gildas turned; Keiro sat up.
Cursing, Finn shoved the Key into his coat and rolled over to see Attia staring at him. He knew at once that she"d seen everything.
Keiro had his knife out. "Did you hear that? Someone outside."
His blue eyes were alert. "No."
Finn swallowed. "It was me."
"Talking in your sleep?"
"He was talking to me," Attia said quietly.
For a moment Keiro looked at them both. Then he leaned back, but Finn knew he was not convinced.
"Was he now?" his oathbrother said softly. "So who"s Claudia?"
THEY CANTERED quickly up the lane, the deep green leaves of the oaks a tunnel over their heads.
"And you believe Evian?"
"On this I do."