"Oh, Crow"s gone off to rescue Tal," said Ebbitt airily, waving his hand around as if it suddenly had a life of its own. "And since Sushin is going off to destroy the Veil with his half of the Violet Keystone, it is hardly likely anyone will want to call him Emperor."
Milla shook her head. She felt like she wasn"t hearing properly. Crow and Tal were practically sworn enemies.
"You"ve sent Crow to rescue Tal? And who is going to stop Sushin from destroying the Veil?"
Ebbitt stopped waving. He pulled his arm back and bent his hand as if he were imitating a bird for children, moving his thumb and fingers like a beak. Then his hand-puppet spoke, with Ebbitt throwing and changing his voice so realistically that the Icecarls jumped.
"Crow feels bad about Tal, so he will do his best to save him. I think he will succeed. Who will stop Sushin? Why, Milla, of course! And Ebbitt and all the little Icecarls will help."
"Should we kill him?" asked Saylsen, frowning. This sort of madness could be contagious.
"No," sighed Milla. "I fear that he is speaking the truth. We will have to stop Sushin. Only I don"t know how, or even where we should go to find him."
"The Seventh Tower," said Ebbitt, dropping his hand and speaking in his normal voice. "The Violet Tower. Everything will come together there, for better... or worse."
CHAPTER EIGHT.
Tal looked down at the pathetic remnant that had been Fashnek. Adras stood next to him, still rumbling with distant thunder.
" "It was Sharrakor who wounded me, in dragon-shape, and Sharrakor who gave me life. I should not have taken it from his hands," " Tal said quietly, repeating Fashnek"s last words. "What in Light"s name does that mean? How can a dragon have hands?"
"Jailer die," said Adras, which wasn"t much help. "Where do we go now?"
Tal considered for a moment, biting his lip in anxiety. There was no point in looking for the Underfolk, not since he"d accidentally killed Crow, Ebbitt, and the others. But perhaps he could join the Icecarls who were attacking the Castle. Adras had sensed that Odris was with them, so Milla must be there, too. At least Tal fervently hoped so. Otherwise she would have gone to the Ice, and that would be another death on his conscience.
But Tal knew he couldn"t just go and join the Icecarls. There was Sushin, always the enemy. Tal had to admit there was very little chance his mother had taken the stone before he pa.s.sed out. Sushin almost certainly had Tal"s half of the Violet Keystone, so he finally had the ability to destroy the Veil.
"I guess we have to go up," Tal said slowly. "Up to the Violet Tower. The Icecarls won"t know what Sushin can do, at least not until it"s too late. Even if Milla suspects Sushin, she won"t know how to stop him."
"Sushin is the one who throws poison?" asked Adras. He puffed himself into a ball that was a reasonable imitation of Shadowmaster Sushin.
"Yes."
"I don"t want to go there," said Adras. "I want to go to Odris."
"We have to go to the Violet Tower," repeated Tal. The more he thought about it, the more the urgency grew inside him. Sushin could be using the Violet Keystone right now, as they wasted time talking. They had to get to the Violet Tower and stop him from destroying the Veil.
"I"m not going," announced Adras, folding his arms. "You can"t make me."
Tal was about to let his anger burst out into words when they both heard someone open the door. Instantly Tal ducked behind one of the workbenches, and Adras shot up to the ceiling and spread himself out among the shadows there.
The unknown intruder was trying to be very quiet. The door only opened a little way, and Tal saw someone slide in. In the dim light he couldn"t even tell whether it was a Spiritshadow or someone wearing black.
Adras drifted over, ready to drop on the intruder. Tal lifted his Sunstone, and it began to swirl with red light in preparation for a Ray of Destruction.
It was a person, Tal saw, not a Spiritshadow. All dressed in black, with a black hood drawn tightly around his face. Tal saw a dagger in the hand held close by the intruder"s side. He moved from shadow to shadow, until he could see the open globe and the body of Fashnek. He stopped suddenly then and looked around.
"Tal?"
It was a voice from the past, a voice from the dead.
Crow"s voice.
But that was impossible. For a moment, Tal thought he might still be under the control of the nightmare machine. But the Sunstones on their silver stands were dark, the globe still open.
"Tal?"
Tal stood up slowly. Crow faced him and slowly undid his hood. He was very pale, and there was a partly healed scar across his forehead.
"I thought I killed you," whispered Tal.
"Ebbitt saved us," said Crow.
"Ebbitt"s alive, too?" exclaimed Tal. He felt relief flood his entire body, making him feel weak. He needed to sit down.
"We all survived," said Crow. "I thought I"d killed you.
And I did hit you on the head. I... I"m sorry. I guess I went crazy... There is so much the Chosen have done to my family... "
"I"ve been in the nightmare machine," said Tal. He didn"t need to say anything else.
Crow nodded and went over to look down on Fashnek"s body.
"It took too long to come to this," he said.
"I"m sorry, too," said Tal after a moment.
"For bringing down the roof. For everything my people have done to yours."
"It"s all changing now," said Crow. "The Icecarls will win. They have agreed that we will be free."
"I hope that happens," replied Tal. He was surprised to find that he meant it. He had come to learn that there was no such thing as the natural superiority of the Chosen over everyone else. In fact, Tal realized with surprise that there were more Underfolk and Icecarls who he admired and looked up to.
"I came to rescue you," said Crow. "The Codex told Ebbitt where you were. Or so he said. Only you seem to have rescued yourself."
Silence fell awkwardly between them then. Tal still wasn"t absolutely sure Crow could be trusted. Too much had happened between them in the past. Could the Freefolk boy have changed so much?
"Um, I have to go," Tal said after a few more seconds of uncomfortable silence.
"Where?" asked Crow.
"The Violet Tower," Tal answered slowly. "Sushin has part of the Violet Keystone. It"s probably enough for him to destroy the Veil. The Sun will come again and melt the Ice. There will be an invasion of shadows. Thousands and thousands of shadows. I have to... I have to stop him."
"You will need help," said Crow.
"Like you helped me in the Red Tower?" asked Tal.
Crow shook his head.
"No. I swear it in my parents" names. We fight together now."
He clapped his fists, Icecarl-style, then drew out a Sunstone. For a moment Tal almost shot a Red Ray at him, but he forced himself to wait. Crow simply gave light in respect, and Tal let out the breath he didn"t know he"d held.
"All right," Tal agreed. He clapped his fists, too, and let the red light fade from his Sunstone in order to give light in return. It was Violet that shone forth, though he had not tried to make it so. Perhaps even without the Violet Keystone something of the imperial majesty clung to him.
"We"ll fight together."
"Adras fight, too," boomed the Spiritshadow from the ceiling. "Only can we fight someone easier, not Sushin?"
Tal ignored him.
"You said Ebbitt told you where I was? He didn"t get hurt too much?"
"No. He was hurt, but he"s all right now." "And Milla is with the Icecarls?"
Crow laughed for a moment, then grew suddenly serious again.
"Milla is the leader of the Icecarls! She has a magical fingernail of crystal and Sunstone chips they call the Talon of Danir, and she is called Milla Talon-Hand, War-Chief of the Icecarls and Living Sword of Asteyr. She has grown, I think--if not in size, in something... something you can"t see. You have grown, too, Tal."
"What do you mean?" asked Tal. He looked down at himself. He didn"t seem any taller or stronger or anything.
"You seem... more important," Crow said hesitantly, as if he wasn"t sure himself. "Less a boy, and less a Chosen. You have become something else, something more."
"You have changed, too, at least in your choice of color," Tal said, with a slight laugh. He wasn"t sure he liked Crow being strange and mystical any more than he had liked him being aggressive and antagonistic.
Crow looked down at his black robes, so different from the white normally worn by Freefolk, or the white with black lettering of the Underfolk.
"It"s true I"ve changed," he said. "Deeper than my clothes. I know what"s really important now."
Tal tried to smile again, but found he couldn"t.
"I"m glad Milla leads the Icecarls," he said. "She knows about the danger from Sushin. How far have the Icecarls penetrated into the Castle? And where is the current fighting? I know a few ways to get to the Violet levels, but they may be blocked off or defended."
Crow nodded. "Come, let"s talk as we go. There is no fighting close by, at least not yet. There are also Underfolk ways to the Violet levels. I will show you. Follow me."
CHAPTER NINE.
"I have to find out what is happening with the main force before we can go anywhere," Milla said sternly. She looked across at Malen, who was once more standing still in absolute concentration.
Ebbitt looked at the Crone and wiggled his eyebrows, trying to distract her. But Malen did not see him, though her pure blue eyes were open.
"There are many of your people in the lower Red levels," said Graile. She was lying down, exhausted, supported by both her own and Ebbitt"s Spiritshadows. "At least, that is what I overheard a Chosen saying. Thousands of them, he said. I am still not entirely sure why you are invading our Castle. But Uncle Ebbitt says we need you to stop Sushin from destroying the Veil, and I find myself believing him, which is not always the case. And my son sent me to you, not to any Chosen."
"Thousands?" asked Milla. "The main host must have arrived!"
Saylsen shook her head. "The Chosen may simply be afraid. Remember, "In fear, nothing is certain. A single sharik becomes a swarm. Only the calm Shield Maiden can count."
Malen"s eyes clouded. There was an instant hush. All the Icecarls leaned forward, as if they, too, might hear what Malen heard.
"There is a Crone at the exit from the heatways below. She will come no farther. She says that she has counted two thousand of our folk through and still they pa.s.s. Some wounded have come back, they say... They say we are victorious in the Red levels, and the Chosen retreat upward into Orange!"
"Ask her to tell a Shield Mother that Milla Talon-Hand lives," instructed Milla. "That I must now fight my way to the Violet Tower. Tell her that the most senior Shield Mother should a.s.sume command, and that they must keep attacking up through the levels, and try to join us in the Violet Tower as soon as they can."
"Feyle One-Ear will command if she still lives,"
said Saylsen. "We should send her a messenger as well, to be sure."
Milla looked around the green and dripping walls of the room.
"How do we get out of here?" she asked Ebbitt. "And how do we get to the Violet Tower?"
"It is a secret, but some can go by steam to the topmost Violet level," whispered Ebbitt, holding his finger upright next to his nose. "But first we must all jump in the bucket."
He pointed at the wall opposite the stairway they"d come down. There was no sign of any bucket, or a hidden door or stairway, but the Icecarls moved apart so Ebbitt could press his palms against various stones in a complicated sequence.
Nothing happened. Ebbitt scratched his head. Then he pressed his ear against the wall. Whatever he heard satisfied him, and he stepped back.
Everyone waited for another minute, watching the wall, before Odris spoke to Milla in her Storm Shepherd whisper, which could probably be heard through the wall as well as by all the Icecarls and Graile.
"Is something supposed to happen?"
"Yes," said Milla.
As she spoke, she felt a rumbling underfoot.
All the Icecarls shifted nervously. It felt like breaking ice, and their instinctive reaction was to run away from it as fast as possible.
"Um," said Ebbitt. "Perhaps it was the floor--"
He jumped back as the floor suddenly slid away under his feet, revealing a deep hole. Two Shield Maidens caught him and rushed him back still farther, joining the general dash to the other wall.
When the rumbling stopped, almost a third of the floor had slid away, revealing a ramp that led down into a dark and stagnant pool of water.
"Damp," said Ebbitt. He started down the ramp, his Spiritshadow easing out from behind Graile to glide along at his heels. The old man paused at the edge of the water, pulled his breastplate away, and spoke down, apparently to his own chest. "I advise you to hold your breath through here."
Before anyone could ask him what he was doing, his Sunstone shone brightly and a globe of green light formed around his head. His Spiritshadow went first, then the old man followed it confidently farther down the ramp. Both of them disappeared underwater.