snatches of sonorous, solemn speech. The words made no sense, yet vague rumours rose unbidden — half- remembered conversations between Cythonians, overheard ages ago, about their most secret and sacred place. A place where none of them would think of venturing, the very conduit between creation and destruction, life and death …
Could this shaft be part of the Abysm down which Cythonian souls were said to pass after death? It must be, and her presence here was a dreadful sacrilege. Tali’s cheeks were scalding — not even in war would she willingly trespass on her enemy’s sacred places, but she did not know how to get out. There was no sign of the crack through which she had entered.
Way down, as far as she could see, something reflected brightly, the colours changing constantly as it moved. It was a tiny figure of a man, apparently carved from black opal. No, not tiny, it was life-sized, with furious, glaring eyes that could almost have been alive. It was drawn down, only to bob up again, over and over, as if something prevented it from going deeper. Was it a relic or offering cast into the Abysm to accompany a soul as it passed
It had nothing to do with her. Focus! Why had Lyf hidden the pearl here? For its protection, or did he haunt the Abysm because he had not been given the proper rituals after death? Because his spirit had never passed on, Tali knew that the sacred king-magery had been lost upon his death, and without it no new king could be crowned. Was that why he was so desperate to get the five pearls? To gain a new source of magery?
The pearl was still now. The rush of threads past her slowed, the snatches of speech faded, then Tali’s hair stirred in a warm up-current that carried with it a familiar oily-sweet odour with an underlying bitterness. Alkoyl — the deadly chymical fluid that had eaten that young woman’s leg off in the back tunnels of Cython, the stuff Wil had used to set the sulphur ground in the Seethings ablaze. Why was she smelling it here?
‘I’ll have to send down the Hellish Conduit for more,’ the master chymister had said, ‘if I can get anyone to go.’
He had shuddered as he spoke. Was the Abysm linked to the conduit, and if so, what lay at the other end of it that contained such awful power?
Tali dismissed the distracting questions she could not resolve. Take the pearl and run. She was reaching out for it, and it was trembling as if it yearned for her touch, when she heard that strident, angry,
The facinore must have scented her and it was moving her way. Was the shadow shifter in the Abysm, or outside? Terror numbed her for a minute; Tali fought it down. Outside, she thought. Lyf would not allow that foul creature into such a holy place.
If she went out, it would attack. But she could not stay here either, because Lyf could return at any time. To take on the facinore, however, she had to have magery and lots of it.
She edged towards the pearl, trying not to alarm it. It occurred to Tali that, when she had used her gift as a child, she had also seen tangles of colour in her head. Each time, in a fury, she had snatched at one of those tangles and hurled it at her foe, not realising she was using a clumsy kind of magery.
The spectible revealed spirals of colour spinning out of Lyf’s pearl in a complex pattern where the smallest part contained the whole. Prudence told her to fly with Lyf’s pearl, but when would she have a better chance to decipher her own pearl than here in the Abysm, where the patterns of magery were so bright and clear? I’ll give it one minute, she thought, and if I learn nothing about my pearl, I’ll go.
She concentrated on the tangles writhing through her inner eye, trying to reconcile them with the endless spirals coming from Lyf’s pearl. The colours in her head were whirling and twisting randomly — or were they?
What if she was only seeing a tiny part of the pattern, because she was looking at it from
She fixed the spiral from Lyf’s pearl in her memory, tried to imagine a similar spiral coming from her own pearl and, for a moment, Tali glimpsed the whole glorious pattern radiating from her pearl, and
Tears stung her eyes. At last!
But a long time had passed. Quick! Grab the pearl. Go!
The instant she snatched at it, Tali knew it was the wrong thing to do, but the realisation came too late. The pearl shot backwards out of reach, shrieking the
She sensed him attempting to separate from the unpleasant mind he was possessing — a magian and killer who had
Trapped! Why had she delayed? Outside, in the flaskoid chamber, the facinore howled and clawed at the crack.
‘
The pearl spun away towards its hiding place. She dived after it, but it vanished, then the crack opened and she was ejected into the main chamber.
She raised her hands to blast the facinore but her magery sank out of sight like the water level in an over- pumped well — as if only in the power-saturated Abysm was it possible. A repulsive stench blasted up her nostrils then something scabbed and slimy clamped around her ankle.
The facinore had her.
CHAPTER 83
Rix saw a golden nimbus form around Rannilt only to be slammed back into her. She yelped, clenched her pointed jaw and the nimbus reformed, brighter. Again it was driven back into her. Rannilt let out a strained groan, pressed her hands together like a diver and thrust them upwards at the blur.
The facinore was clinging to the wall like a chameleon to a branch. It reached up, yanked and Tali appeared there, upside-down, suspended by the ankle from its right hand.
‘Rix?’ Tali wailed, ‘why did you bring Rannilt
Rix was asking himself the same question. The facinore had felt Rannilt’s great gift before, and it would not be long before Lyf knew she was here.
Its arms shifted to wings, to crab claws and back to arms; the shadows writhed and fluttered all around it. It drew Tali towards it, hissed a visible breath in her face and a silver aura appeared like a halo above her head. The facinore snatched at it, tore part of it away and swallowed it. The rest of the aura faded.
Rix’s skin crept. Was it trying to feed on her psyche, attacking her mentally as well as physically? He raised the sword, wondering if he could hurl it true and impale the beast. No, the risk was too great.
Rannilt shrieked in fury and thrust her folded hands up again. The facinore reared backwards, Tali tore free, tumbled and landed hard on her feet with the beast close behind.
She darted towards the shelves, looking around desperately. The facinore’s legs shifted to frog’s legs; it leapt over her head and blocked her, spreading its arms wide. Bare feet skidding on the black floor, she shot back towards Rix. It sprang over her head again.
Its back was to Rix, only three steps away. He lunged, aiming to pierce its heart from behind, but it shifted and the sword tip skidded off thick, ridged armour, then it leapt over Tali again, out of reach. Rix cursed and went after it.
‘Tali, you can kill the beast,’ cried Rannilt. ‘I know you can.’
Tali was trembling, her eyes darting. What was she looking for? A moan burst from her but she strangled it. She made hand-over-hand motions as if raising a bucket from a well, then extended her right hand towards the
