"Will Crow and Malen make it through?" asked Milla.
"Crow"s done it before," said Tal, though it took him a few seconds to get breath enough to answer. "He can help Malen. Or they could wait for Ebbitt, I guess."
Tal looked at his Sunstone, to check the time. "Fourteen minutes gone," he said. "But we must be more than halfway."
They started to run again. Above the Veil, there were no more transparent doors, though there were side entrances every now and then, blocked by solid portals of metal or some material that might be wood.
Tal"s st.i.tch got worse, twisting deeper into his side. Finally he had to stop and bend over, almost retching from the exertion.
"I will go on," called Milla, but Tal reached out and grabbed her sleeve.
"No," he gasped. "Sushin is too powerful... and if Sharrakor is there... Adras, please, can you carry me?"
"See, he thinks I"m a servant," grumbled Adras. "I said please," Tal coughed out.
"He did say please," confirmed Odris. "Shall I carry you as well, Milla?"
Milla frowned for a moment, then nodded.
"Yes," she said. "We should have thought of it before. The corridor is high enough, and it will be faster."
"I can"t go too fast," said Odris. From the tone of her voice she already regretted her offer. "I get tired as well, you know."
Milla and Tal held up their arms and felt the cool shadowflesh ripple across their wrists as the Spiritshadows gripped them. Adras and Odris were strong in the full, clear light of the corridor, and they lifted the Chosen and Icecarl with ease, and quickly accelerated up and around the bend.
It was much faster than the two humans could have run, though Adras had a tendency to cut corners and smack Tal into the side of the corridor, and Odris dipped every ten stretches or so and dragged Milla"s feet along the ground.
After at least twenty more turns around the steadily steepening spiral corridor, Tal was dizzy. His st.i.tch had gone, but he felt just as bad from the dizziness. If they kept going he would be in no state to face Sushin. He wouldn"t even be able to see straight, let alone do any Light Magic.
"Stop!" he called. "We must be close!"
The Spiritshadows slowed to a halt and let go of their pa.s.sengers. Tal staggered around for a few seconds, shaking his head until the dizziness pa.s.sed.
"It can"t be much farther," Tal said again.
He consulted his Sunstone. "Nineteen minutes. We have ten minutes until the Veil is gone."
"We should make a plan," said Milla. "What if Sushin has free Spiritshadows with him?"
Tal nodded. He had seen many free shadows in the Red Tower, above the Veil, brought across from Aenir to be the vanguard of an even larger force that would follow when the Veil fell.
"I think we have to concentrate on Sushin," he said. "Strike at him, as he"s the one who can use the Violet Keystone. Adras and Odris can try to keep the free shadows off our backs."
"I cannot offer any better plan," said Milla. "We must hope fate favors us, and be bold and brave."
She held out her hand and turned her wrist up, showing the scars of her oaths.
"We have many vows between us, Tal," she said. "Let us add one more, without blood, for there is no time. Let us go together to save our world."
Tal held out his wrist, similarly scarred, and held it against Milla"s.
"Together, to save the world. We will defeat Sushin and Sharrakor!"
Tal met Milla"s eyes for a full second, and both of them saw something of themselves in the other"s eyes. Somehow the Chosen had become almost an Icecarl, and the Icecarl was almost a Chosen. Emperor and War-Chief, both of them blending the best of their two peoples.
Then they broke apart and started off up the corridor, with their Spiritshadows behind. Two people of the Dark World, striding out together to face their enemy, the enemy of all life under the Veil.
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO.
The Chamber of the Veil was similar to the room at the top of the Red Tower, only larger and more impressive. It had four wide, arched windows that looked out to blue sky and sunshine. The floor was not checkered, but set with tiny Sunstones that shone with soft violet light that mixed with the golden sunshine.
Tal and Milla came to it sooner than they expected, the corridor simply turning steeply and merging into the floor of the chamber. They ducked down as they saw the edge, then peered up over the lip of the ramp.
There was no tree of bells as in the Red Tower, Tal saw, but there was a somewhat similar pyramid-shaped plinth in the center of the chamber. Parts of it shone like a Sunstone, in distinct colors. With a shock, Tal realized that the entire plinth was actually carved out of an enormous Sunstone, one that must have had a diameter of three stretches or more. He didn"t know you could carve a Sunstone into any shape--let alone a pyramid.
As Tal watched, the horizontal band of yellow light in the pyramid went dark, and he saw with a feeling of terror that this was a" progressive darkness, and that more than half of this enormous Sunstone had ceased to shine. Five distinct bands were dark, from the base of the pyramid up, and only two still shone. Orange and Red.
Then Tal saw Sushin. The bloated Chosen was on the far side of the pyramid, holding the Violet Keystone in his hand. He was sending pulses of Violet into the pyramid, pulses that Tal instinctively knew were closing--no, what was the term the Codex had used? Shutting down the Veil.
Sushin"s Spiritshadow, a monster of spikes, with four hooked claws and two ma.s.sive horns sprouting from its head, loomed up behind its master. But there were no other Spiritshadows in the Chamber, at least that Tal could see. He felt a rising hope build inside him. Sushin was a dangerous enemy, but he was alone.
"Attack on three?" he whispered to Milla, and she nodded. Tal saw that the Talon on her hand was already glowing as she held it out from her body.
Tal held up three fingers. Closed one, his heart pounding. Closed two, his heart going faster than it ever had before, red light pulsing in his Sunstone. Closed three-- "Go!"
Everything happened too quickly then. There was no time for thought, only instinct.
Tal jumped forward and fired a Red Ray at the Spiritshadow, because Sushin was protected by too many Sunstones. It hit the thing between the eyes, and it reeled back, clasping its head with two hooked hands.
Milla charged straight at Sushin, the Talon fully extended, a long lash of light twisting and curling from it as if it had a life of its own.
Sushin didn"t move. He stood there like a statue, the Violet Keystone on his finger continuing to pulse at the pyramid stone.
The Orange band of light went out. Sushin"s Spiritshadow dashed forward, only to be met by another Red Ray from Tal as he advanced. Adras and Odris zoomed ahead, to grab the enemy Spiritshadow.
Milla struck at Sushin with the Talon, and Sunstones flared on every hem of his violet-colored robe. The lash of light from the Talon was deflected, whipping back over Milla"s head. Without a second thought, the Icecarl flipped a bone knife out of her sleeve and tried to stab Sushin with a more physical weapon. But the Sunstones flared red, and the knife was burned away in an incandescent flash.
Milla howled in fury and tried to punch the Talon into Sushin"s face. More Sunstones flared, this time blue and green, and she found herself picked up by some unseen force and thrown over the Chosen"s head. Somersaulting in the air, she landed on her toes and rushed back, as Tal ran forward to join her, half his mind focused on forming the beginnings of the Violet Unraveling in his Sunstone.
Milla struck again first, and was once more thrown aside by Sushin"s defensive spells, sliding across the floor with an angry scream. On the other side of the chamber, Adras and Odris were twisting the Spiritshadow"s claws behind its back and holding it so it couldn"t use its horns or teeth. Then they proceeded to tear it apart, bellowing and thundering with every wrench.
"Stay clear!" shouted Tal. A Violet cloud was spewing out of his half of the Violet Keystone. With a flick of his wrist, he sent it spinning into Sushin.
Every Sunstone on Sushin burst into brilliance as the Violet Unraveling hit. For a moment, it looked like they might resist it, or even turn it back. Then they started to explode, one by one, as the Unraveling bit into them.
Yet Sushin still didn"t move, keeping his half of the Violet Keystone on the pyramid. Even as his last Sunstone vaporized and the Unraveling started to eat away at his clothes and exposed flesh, he did not look away or lower his hand.
Then the last band of color in the pyramid went out. All seven bands were dark.
Sushin moved swift as a cavernmouth, turning his part of the Keystone back to bathe himself in Violet light of a different shade from the Unraveling. They canceled each other out, in the very second that Tal and Milla attacked again.
Tal"s Red Ray was the strongest he"d ever dared, a finger-thin beam of vicious light aimed directly at Sushin"s head. But Sushin caught it on his Keystone, deflecting most of it to the ceiling, though his hand was burned.
Milla came in low, sweeping the lash of light from the Talon across Sushin"s legs. With inhuman speed, Sushin countered with a shield of Violet, but he was not quite fast enough and the lash cut deeply into his legs, just above his ankles.
As before, when Milla had thrown her Merwin-horn sword at him, no blood came out of these wounds. But Sushin did fall to the ground, his hamstrings cut. He wriggled like a Wormwalker around the pyramid, shrieking as he scuttled. "No, it"s not me! It"s not me! Don"t kill Sushin!"
Then another voice came from somewhere inside him, a deeper, stranger voice, louder and more horrible than anything that came from any human mouth.
"You have lost! The Veil is destroyed! The time of Sharrakor has come!"
Then it spoke a quick series of words, words that neither Tal nor Milla knew, but somehow still recognized.
"Nvarth! Ghesh gheshthil lurese!"
Then it spoke words they did know, words that hit them like physical blows.
"Adras eris Aenir! Odris eris Aenir!"
With those words, Adras and Odris disappeared. To Tal and Milla it was like having something torn out of their bodies, a pain so terrible that both of them were instantly felled, toppling to the floor like chopped trees.
Through a haze of crippling pain, Tal saw Sushin crawling back around the pyramid, crawling toward him. He tried to focus on his Sunstone, but everything was blurry and he could not make his hand do what he wanted.
Milla tried, too, and actually managed to drag herself closer to Tal and raise her hand with the Talon. But no light whip came, and she could not keep going. All her strength was gone.
They were dying, Tal realized, though he could not think clearly for the pain. This was what had happened to Ethar and the other Chosen outside the Audience Chamber. Sushin--or whatever was in Sushin--had sent their Spiritshadows back to Aenir and the sudden shock had killed them.
"I shall take that," said Sushin in his normal voice, as he crawled up next to Tal. One blubbery hand reached across and slid the Violet Keystone from Tal"s finger. The Chosen boy tried to resist, but it was no good. His arm just flopped and the pain stabbed through his eyes into his brain. "I think this is best put back together."
Sushin sat up and inspected the half Keystone he had taken. But before he could slip it on his own finger next to the half he already had, a beam of intense red light shot out and struck him full on the hand. The Keystone ring fell to the floor and bounced away.
The voice inside Sushin growled then, a sound that drove fear even through the pain in Tal.
Another Red Ray struck Sushin in the chest, smoke curling up as it drilled a hole right through him. He growled again and struggled to get to his feet, forgetting his hamstrings and bulk. He fell over again and started to slither along the ground like a snake or worm, toward the pyramid.
Through the deep cuts and rents in the Chosen"s robe, Tal saw not flesh and blood, but shadow.
Tal rolled over, crying with the pain, and saw Crow standing near the entrance. The Freefolk boy was holding out his Sunstone in the approved manner taught in the Lectorium, his face wrinkled in concentration. Red light bathed his hand, growing in intensity as he prepared another Red Ray. A second later, it shot out, striking sparks as it cut through some metal on Sushin"s robes.
But it still did not slow whatever Sushin was. He reached the pyramid and dragged himself up, using it as a prop so he could aim his Sunstone at Crow.
"Not! Not a man!" screamed Tal, the words interspersed with sobs. "A shadow! Malen..."
He could say no more, his strength exhausted.
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE.
As Tal"s words echoed in the chamber, Sushin fired a globe of shimmering Violet back at Crow and Male"s voice filled the air. A quavering, uncertain voice, speaking the words of the Prayer to Asteyr.
Crow dived aside and the Violet globe sailed past him, struck the wall between two windows, and exploded straight through, out into the air beyond, followed by a great plume of stone chips and dust.
The effect of Malen"s voice was equally spectacular. Sushin froze, his mouth open, his hand extended. Then his whole body blurred. There was his human form, and then there was a dark double that was separating out of him, stepping back from the human version.
It was a shadow leaving the flesh it had hidden in. As it came out, it changed and grew, growing larger and more menacing. Slowly it a.s.sumed the shape that only Tal had seen before.
A monster. A dragon. Sharrakor himself.
Fully out of his fleshly host, his reptilean body stretched from floor to ceiling. His head was long and spiked, his many-toothed mouth big enough to snap up Tal in a single bite. His wings were furled, as they would not fit in the chamber. His tail was long and ended in a bone shaped like a butcher"s cleaver.
"Asteyr herself could not bind me alone," roared Sharrakor. "How could you succeed where she failed and died for her failure? I do not see Danir, Susir, and Grettir come to do her work!"
The shadowdragon"s voice momentarily drowned out Malen"s, and for a moment Tal thought she had stopped. But then her voice came back again. Quiet, slow, but unafraid. Whether her prayer could bind Sharrakor or not, he clearly didn"t like it.
"Speak your spell!" he roared again. "I shall not stay to hear it. But you I shall seek out, witch of the Ice, if you still live when I return. Go now and tell your peoples that the Veil is destroyed! That Sharrakor will soon finish the war your ancestors so foolishly began!"
With that, the shadowdragon"s head flashed down and bit off Sushin"s hand. It held it in its mighty jaws for an instant, then the Spiritshadow disappeared, and the hand fell to the floor--minus the Sunstone ring that had been there a moment before.
Malen kept reciting the Prayer to Asteyr, even though the object of it was no longer visible. Crow rushed over to where Tal and Milla were writhing on the ground.
"What happened?" he asked. "Where are you hurt?"
"Spiritshadows," said Tal. He could barely speak between sobs of pain. "Sent back. Aenir. We... must... follow. Get Ebbitt. Get ring. Please... please..."
Tal watched Crow turn and pick up the ring. This is where it happens, his shocked brain thought. This is the betrayal. This is where Crow takes the ring and walks away. There, he is turning now. This is the end.
He was still thinking that when Crow slipped the half Keystone back on his finger.
"I know the Way to Aenir," said Crow. "Ebbitt showed me once. But I never went. Now seems the time."
"Get Milla," whispered Tal. He couldn"t concentrate. "You... reflect the light into our stones..."
Milla had already crawled a little closer. She did not speak or make any sound of pain when Crow grabbed her and dragged her next to Tal, rolling them both onto their backs and resting their Sunstones on their chests, their heads on his lap.
"Milla," muttered Tal. "Watch... Sunstone... follow... repeat..."
Crow began to visualize the colors and speak the Way to Aenir. His Sunstone flashed and he directed beams from it to the Sunstones clasped in Milla"s and Tal"s hands.