reported that there wasn’t anything there that warlockry could touch. Whatever the stuff was, though, the floor could hold it, and the warlocks could touch the floor, so they were cutting a chunk free, intending to lift it up to the Transporting Tapestry. It meant doing serious and permanent damage to the overlord’s Great Hall, but the Seething Death would do that anyway—had already done that. The rest of the mess Tabaea had made could be cleaned up fairly easily, Tobas thought, but this might be difficult. He supposed a good stonemason could handle it, somehow.

At the thought of Tabaea he glanced around nervously. The would-be empress had vanished without a trace that morning, after announcing her abdication—which meant she was still around someplace, and could spring out at them at any time, complicating matters.

Once the Seething Death was dealt with, the Guild really would have to track down Tabaea and kill her. Maybe they should go ahead and throw a death-spell after her right now—but Tobas didn’t want to take the time and was reluctant to act on his own in any case. The Guild might want to use something especially horrible.

“We almost have it, wizard,” one of the warlocks said—a tall, black-clad man whose name Tobas did not know.

“Good,” Tobas said. He bent down and picked up the tapestry that lay at his feet. He hoped that Sarai and Karanissa were well clear; in theory the stuff would be completely harmless the instant it passed into the dead area around the fallen castle, but Tobas had his doubts about just how fast it would lose its virulence. The Seething Death was not just another spell.

Teneria helped him unroll the tapestry, lift it, and smooth it.

“It’s free,” another warlock announced.

“All right, then,” the black-clad man said. “Lift!”

The marble circle, four feet in diameter, shuddered, and then began to rise, up out of the surrounding floor.

Unfortunately, the Seething Death did not rise with it; instead, Tobas stared in horror as the steady hiss of dissolving marble suddenly became a roar, and dust and smoke boiled up from the circular hole in the center of the ascending marble cylinder.

A warlock coughed; then another.

“Stop! Stop!” Telurinon shrieked from below.

The steady ascent slowed; the stone cylinder wobbled, and still more smoke and powder spilled out of the central hole.

“You might as well keep going,” Tobas said. “It’s too late now.”

A warlock doubled over, coughing, as more of the reeking cloud of smoke rolled over the magicians.

The marble cylinder, four feet across and fifteen inches high, was clear of the floor now—and clear of the Seething Death. Still following the original plan, the warlocks started to move it toward the tapestry.

“No!” Tbbas shouted, suddenly realizing what they were doing. If they sent the chunk of stone through the tapestry, the tapestry would no longer function—not until somebody hiked out to the fallen castle, in the mountains between Dwomor and Aigoa, and removed the cylinder from that hidden chamber.

The warlocks paid no attention, and in desperation Tobas simply dropped his end of the tapestry’s hanging rod; Teneria, not entirely sure why but following the wizard’s lead, dropped hers as well. A moment later the marble cylinder hung suspended in the air, touching nothing, above the tapestry.

“Put it down somewhere,” Tobas called. “Somewhere out of the way. It didn’t work.”

The cylinder wobbled, then glided to the side and settled to the floor.

Tobas stared at it for a second, then turned his attention to the Seething Death. It was hard to see clearly through the swirling vapor, but at last Tobas convinced himself that he was not imagining it.

The Death was hanging there, totally unsupported, exactly where it had been before, in the center of a ring of empty air. It was a perfect half sphere, flat side up.

Not that the flat side was truly flat; it bubbled and, just as the name said, seethed.

“It’s dripping all aver now!” Telurinon wailed from below. “You people aren’t holding it, are you?” Tobas asked the nearest warlock.

“No,” the woman assured him, smothering a cough. “We couldn’t if we wanted to.” “I was afraid of that.” Tobas stared at the Death. This was not a possibility he had considered. This meant that his back-up plan, of having relays of warlocks transport the entire thing to Aigoa, was totally impossible, not just incredibly difficult and impractical. The only way to get it to the dead area would be through the tapestry.

Well, if he couldn’t move the Seething Death to the tapestry, he would just have to bring the tapestry to the Seething Death. “All right,” he said, “time to try it another way.” It took another half hour to cut away more of the floor, so that the tapestry could be suspended flat beside the expanding hemisphere; the first faint light of dawn was beginning to show in the dome’s skylights, high overhead, as Tobas and Teneria maneuvered the hanging into position. In the interim, Telurinon had established that Kandir’s Impregnable Sphere did not live up to its name; the Seething Death had burst it, popping it like a soap bubble.

And afterward, the Seething Death had still touched nothing but air.

The circle had grown at least an inch in diameter, though; Tobas was certain of that. He and Teneria had to approach it much more closely than he liked; he moved with exaggerated caution, dreading the possibility that he might lean out too far and touch that stuff, or worse, lose his balance and fall into it. Finally, though, the tapestry was in position, hung through the floor, its lower edge dangling into the meeting room below, its supporting bar in Tobas’s and Teneria’s hands. Several of the warlocks had left to escape the fumes; those who remained, though no longer involved now that they had cleared away the chunks of marble flooring, watched from the sidelines with interest.

“Now what?” the young witch asked.

Tobas had maneuvered the tapestry as close as he dared, without touching the stuff; whatever was to be transported had to come to the tapestry, not the other way around, to be certain the spell would work.

“Now we wait,” he said. “When it expands far enough, it’ll touch the cloth, and then poof! It’s gone!” He smiled; then the smile vanished, and he added, “If we’re lucky.”

They waited, seated cross-legged on either side of the hole, the tapestry between them.

At last, after a quarter-hour of growing nervousness and worsening sore throats from breathing the foul air, the Death touched the tapestry—and did not vanish. Instead, stinking white smoke billowed up from the point of contact.

Teneria looked up and stared across at Tobas, looking for some sign as to what she should do.

Tobas stared in horror.

“My tapestry,” he said weakly. He could see the fabric dissolving, the threads unraveling, where the Seething Death had touched it.

“What should...” Teneria began.

“Pull it out!” Tobas shouted, before she could finish her sentence, but he knew it was already too late.

They pulled the tapestry back, away from the Death, then lifted it out and spread it out on the floor; Tobas studied the semicircular hole, six inches across, and the blackened, frayed edges around it.

“It’s ruined,” he said. “A four-hundred-year-old Transporting Tapestry, ruined.”

“You’re sure?” Teneria asked. “It won’t still work? It can’t be repaired?”

“I’m sure,” Tobas said. “The tapestry has to be perfect, or the spell is broken, and you can’t put it back without reweaving the entire thing.” He looked up from the hanging and glared angrily at the Seething Death.

“There must be some way to stop that thing!” he growled.

“Maybe the dagger Tabaea had,” Teneria said. “It stopped all the other wizardry.”

“Maybe,” Tobas agreed, “but that’s in Dwomor with Lady Sarai right now.”

“Tobas,” Teneria asked, “what about Sarai and Karanissa? How will they get back, without the tapestry?”

Startled, Tobas looked at her. “Oh, they couldn’t come back through that anyway,” he said. “The tapestries are only oneway. They’ll have to walk to Dwomor Keep, and then they can come through the other castle and the new tapestry the Guild-masters gave me to replace this one. They should be back here in a couple of days.”

“Is it safe?”

Вы читаете The Spell of the Black Dagger
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