his fingers broke into clear air and he emerged from the grass under the light of Pale Moon Luna.
He pushed himself up onto the Manor lawn, which was crawling with tiny Dark Ones.
Oke and Dye raced by in their green spirit forms, snarling and biting, seizing one Dark One after another in their teeth and ripping them to wisps. But there were far too many now, and Yorik knew the valiant hounds had no hope of fighting the enormous
He heard crashes and shouts from the Estate’s far meadow. Turning as he raced across the lawn, he saw the black shadow of the
Yorik sprinted toward the aviary glade, evading the dark voids gliding everywhere. He dodged through the forest and along the wooded paths. Horses were running free, and shots could be heard, along with the screams of men and women. The deadly pale light of small fires sprang up all around.
As he neared the glade, he glimpsed through the trees what looked like a wall. It blocked his way, and he was forced to stop before it, puzzled. The wall was broad and made of nothing at all, and for an instant he felt again as though he were gazing into the black void of the universe. He reached for it, and his hand grew cold. He pulled back. He could see what this was now—a blockade of
He found the Princess sprawled facedown beside the grass cradle. Erde had dwindled to the size of an acorn at the bottom of her bed.
“Princess, Princess,” he said, shaking her shoulder. “You have to get up!”
The Princess raised her tear-streaked face to look blearily at Yorik. “No,” she said. Her face plopped back onto the grass.
“Please,” begged Yorik. “I know what Thomas did. I know how the Dark Ones managed to return. There’s a portal under the Manor. It had been sealed with a tablet, but the Dark Ones made Thomas break it. The tablet had runes on it. I think they had the red lion’s blood in them—”
The Princess lifted her head again and sniffed. “Runes? What runes?”
“I don’t know, I’ve never seen them before—”
“Draw them,” ordered the Princess. She waved her leafy twig, and a patch of dirt appeared on the grass.
Yorik used his finger to draw what he had seen on the tablet. His whole hand tingled as he drew.
“Hmph,” the Princess said, sitting up. “That’s a powerful spell. Humans did that? I’m impressed. Those were the old humans, though. These new ones are worthless.” She gestured toward the world generally.
“Can the runes help? Can I fight the Dark Ones with them?”
“Too late,” the Princess said. “And anyway, you’d need a new lion, and … oh, it’s completely beyond your capacity to understand.”
“Then
Her eyes filled with silver tears. “No, he wouldn’t,” she croaked. “You don’t understand. Gods don’t think like humans. I can’t defy him!” The Princess dropped her twig and threw herself into the dirt, sobbing again.
Yorik was about to reply when he was interrupted by a rackety, droning sound in the sky overhead.
He looked up. The
The rackety sound was wrong. The dirigible normally purred as it prowled the sky, flying straight and proud in the service of Lord Ravenby and his guests. Now it careened over the trees, and Yorik could see people running through the cabin brandishing weapons. Flame burst from an engine, and then the ship disappeared from view.
Yorik stood, counting the seconds.
Even the Princess had looked up from her sobbing. “Now that is the most ridiculous way to travel I have ever—”
The aviary glade shook with the power of a massive explosion.
The speed and direction of the dirigible told Yorik the terrible news. “The topiary garden,” he said to the Princess, and then he was running.
Chapter Fourteen

The dark blockade around the glade was becoming taller. Yorik barely cleared it with his leap, the tips of his toes growing cold as they brushed the void.
“Yorik!”
A cry on the Wooded Walk slowed him. The Matron held a blazing torch and was stumbling through the dark, her dress muddy. She was staring at him with wild eyes. There were no
“Yorik!” another voice thundered. This time Yorik stopped.
The Kennelmaster was striding along with torch and shotgun. Beside him was Oke, limping and bloody.
“Can you see me?” asked Yorik, astonished.
“Aye,” replied the Kennelmaster. “The Dark Ones are victorious. The worlds of man and spirit are joined.”
“No,” said Yorik desperately. “There’s still time.”
Mr. Lucian spat. “Perhaps a bit o’ time, to flee. But too many have flooded in from the outside. We can fight them no longer.”
“But they didn’t come from outside—they came from within. From beneath the Manor.”
“Ah, then I was wrong all along.” The old man slumped wearily. “Ye fought yer best battle, I know, lad. Run while ye can.” He went forward with Oke at his side.
“Where are the others?” called Yorik after him. “The other hounds?”
“Dead,” came the reply. “They shot them all.” Then Mr. Lucian and Oke disappeared around a bend in the path.
“No,” Yorik pleaded.
He found the topiaries burning, each of them—lion, elephant, swan, even the great hare—a pillar of flame. The garden was sundered by an enormous furrow of earth where the
In the smoke and firelit shadows, a human figure crawled from a smashed cabin window.
Lord Ravenby.
Two dark things were with him—not
Behind him, the engine exploded, and Lord Ravenby was thrown forward onto the grass, the mammoth rifle clattering away.
Yorik recognized the two shadows.
“Doris,” he said. “Thomas.”
The Thomas shadow looked at him.