comrades to seek out a stream.” Then she glanced at Liand, smiling to reassure him. “Yet we would be abject indeed, unworthy of ourselves, if we had failed to secure some meagre store of
Liand stared, uncomprehending and frightened; but Linden’s anxiety for the Cords eased. She remembered
Grinning, Grueburn and Stonemage reached under their armour and brought out stone flasks that looked small in their massive hands. By some application of Giantish lore, the flasks had been fashioned flat and slightly curved so that they fit comfortably inside the shaped armour.
Grueburn gave her flask to Liand; let him care for Pahni while Stonemage tended to Bhapa.
Relieved, Linden turned to consider the state of her other companions.
The Giants were visibly tired. They had been under too much strain for too long: their huge vitality had begun to fray like overstressed hawsers. But they still had reserves of endurance. And a few swallows of
At need, they would fight with the force of gales.
When Galesend released him, Anele moved, blind and sure-footed, toward the centre of the crown. There he sat down, wedged into a snug crack between boulders. Bowing his head, he began to stroke the stone and hum as if he wished to soothe it.
Less certain than Anele, Mahrtiir felt his way around the rim of the crest, apparently examining the stones. Then he said to Stave. You comprehend the worth of this vantage?”
“I do,” replied Stave impassively. “As will the Humbled. I honour your foresight, Manethrall.”
“I merit no honour, Stave of the
“Manethrall,” Rime Coldspray put in like a reprimand. “your tales are as mournful as Linden Avery’s, and as bitter in their concision. Do not speak of them here.”
“Aye,” Mahrtiir growled under his breath. “I hear you.” His bandage obscured his eyeless mien.
Muttering empty curses, Linden scanned the region around the tor.
When she looked to the west, she saw Clyme emerge from the forest. He ran easily; flung himself at the steep sides of the tor without obvious difficulty. She saw at a glance that he had told Stave the truth: his injuries were almost entirely healed.
A few moments later, Branl approached from the northeast. He sped to join Linden and her companions, unhampered by the rugged climb, as if he were as much an acolyte of stone as the Giants. He, too, was nearly whole.
Linden felt Galt’s absence like a burr in her mind. She wanted to wait for him; to hear his report on the movements of the skurj. To postpone as long as possible the moment when she would need to concentrate on white gold. Every life around her depended on her ability to wield Covenant’s ring. Fearing failure, she hesitated to make the attempt.
For that very reason, however, she could not afford to procrastinate any longer. She could not. Her companions had trapped themselves, and her. The skurj did not yet impinge upon her health-sense, but they were near. Kastenessen was not the Despiser. If Roger had described him honestly, his driving agony would make him impatient, intolerant of delay. She did not know why he had waited so long-
Now, she commanded herself. Do it now.
Liand still hovered over Pahni. Nevertheless Linden called his name as if she were callous to his apprehension. When he turned toward her, she said simply, “Here,” and handed him the Staff of Law.
Instant possibilities flared in his eyes. He had asked her to do this. Perhaps he thought that holding the Staff would enable him to channel more Earthpower through his
Linden nodded to him, accepting the promise of his nascent excitement. Then, half cowering as though she felt naked without her Staff, exposed to shame and inadequacy, she clambered awkwardly toward a flat sheet of basalt within ten paces of the crest’s eastern rim. There she seated herself cross-legged, folded Covenant’s ring in both hands as if she were praying, and tried to think her way to wild magic.
Around her, the Giants drank small sips of
Two or three paces beyond the old man, Liand stood alone with the Staff and his unspoken desires.
For the first time, Linden noticed the breeze that gusted over the tor, rustling like whispers among the treetops on all sides. Its touch made her aware of tiny lines of pain like damp streaks on her cheeks and forehead. She had been scratched during the rush of the Giants through Salva Gildenbourne. Bits of scab crusted her small hurts.
But some of the branches must have caught at her shirt hard enough to snag and tear the red flannel. Minor rents were scattered over her shoulders and down her arms. A few of them held droplets of dried blood. Like the bullet hole over her heart-like the cryptic grass stains on her jeans-the tears and plucked threads seemed trivial; meaningless. They did not reveal her doom.
Jeremiah needed her. She needed Thomas Covenant. Nothing else mattered.
The door that opened on silver fire lay within her somewhere. She only had to find it.
But when she reached inward, there was no door. Instead a twist of nausea squirmed in her stomach.
Oh,
Hardly realising what she did, Linden dropped the ring. It dangled, useless, from its chain as she sprang to her feet-
— and Esmer materialised in front of her as if he had created himself out of wind and sunlight.
Kastenessen’s grandson, by theurgy if not by blood.
Without hesitation, Stave stepped between her and Cail’s son; the son of the
“Mane and Tail!” Mahrtiir snapped. “Esmer,
If Liand reacted, Linden did not hear or feel it.
Esmer’s presence precluded wild magic. Beyond question, this was what Kastenessen had been waiting for.
Yet Linden’s terror became dismay as she stared at Esmer. Unconsciously she had expected him to heal himself; to appear immaculate and severe, poised for power. But she was wrong. His graceful cymar hung in tatters, fouled with dirt and blood. And the wounds which he had suffered in his bizarre struggle with the Harrow, Roger, and the Demondim-spawn remained. His flesh had been burned and torn because he had declined to defend himself. Now his hurts stank of filth. Some of them were festering.
The green seethe of his gaze resembled weeping seas. Dolour and gall twisted his countenance. He looked like he had come to ensure Linden’s death; to make certain that both the Staff of Law and Covenant’s ring fell to Kastenessen-or to Roger and Lord Foul, if Kastenessen disdained such powers.
Coldspray stood behind him. “Is this indeed Esmer?” she asked through her teeth. “Then I will dismiss him.” Raising her stone sword, she demanded, “Turn, caitiff cateran, and make the acquaintance of my glaive.”
Without glancing away from Linden, Esmer cried, “Hold!” The word was a yelp of chagrin.
Sharply Stave said. “Do not, Rime Coldspray. His powers are unfathomable and virulent. Should he so choose, he will shatter this mound, sweeping us into the maws of the skurj. Your strength will merely provoke him. You cannot prevail.”
Coldspray hesitated, but did not lower her sword. “Linden Avery-” she began; then stopped as if in shock.
Until Mahrtiir barked her name, Linden did not see that the peak of the for teemed with ur-viles and