be down to an agonized handful that the Dark Helms were toying with, stabbing the scaled hides at will. Several Dark Helms had turned from this to start stalking toward the burial yard. They were still some strides away, across the street. Rod thrust his sword into the slot and heaved sideways, toward the slab.

For once in his life, he'd guessed right. There was a moment of stony grating, when not much happened. Then the slab swung aside, moving on some sort of hidden pivot, and leaving him staring down into a hole.

The feeble moonlight showed him stone steps leading down into darkness, then promptly went away as fingers of cloud slid over the moon.'

'Taeauna?' Rod turned to the Aumrarr. He could just see the glint of her sword in the returned darkness; it wasn't moving. He stumbled over to her. 'Taeauna?'

She was slumped over her blade, silent and unmoving. Great.

Hearing the boots of the Dark Helms crunching on the gravel of the street, Rod sheathed his sword, tucked Taeauna's under his arm, and started tugging the limp, heavy Aumrarr toward the hole. He could move her, but could he get her down those stairs before a Dark Helm diced them both? Darkness didn't seem to much bother them, as far as he could tell thus far.

Huh. Thus far. As if there were going to be any 'later' for him to leisurely observe the Dark Helms.

He got Taeauna down the hole by the simple stratagem of tripping on the edge of one of the lip-stones and falling into the unknown, her body tumbling atop his.

The landing hurt, his shoulders and elbow slamming numbingly down on very hard stone, before Rod bumped and slithered sideways down unseen steps to the sound of loud stony grating overhead.

Silence fell. He was lying on his back, on hard and smooth stone, somewhere cold and damp, with Taeauna lying half atop him. His own breathing was loud in his ears, but he could hear none of the faint night sounds of Arbridge, and the faint touch of night breezes was gone. That grating noise must have been the tomb closing.

Had the Dark Helms shut him in here to die slowly in the dark? Or had he hit something in his fall that moved the slab, and the Helms were waiting above it right now, swords poised to stab?

'Happy choices,' he said aloud, hearing his words fall into dead and empty darkness.

Well, at least nothing felt broken, and he hadn't clonked his head. Until greeting the slab with his nose, he hadn't even…

Taeauna! God, he must have hit his head to forget her!

She was dying, or dead already, leaving him alone in the dark in a tomb in Falconfar. Some Lord Archwizard and Doom he was! Hah. Doomed, yes, but…

Her sword was lost somewhere in the darkness- he remembered it clattering during his fall-but she was right here. Lying on top of his scabbarded sword, limp and heavy.

He couldn't bear to deliberately slice himself with a sword anyhow. He would have to use his dagger, or one of hers; whatever he could reach. He found her mouth with his fingers, traced the line of her jaw, and trembled at the sudden thought of losing her. His other hand, scrabbling awkwardly up and back along his ribs, found the pommel of his dagger.

He slapped it, to fix in his mind where it was, and began the heaving and wriggling process of getting Taeauna off his other arm without cracking her head on anything, or losing track of her in this pitch darkness.

When he could move both arms, he drew the dagger, reached with his other hand to her mouth again, and found that she still wasn't breathing, but at least her lips were parted. He then put the dagger against the back of his hand, his gorge suddenly rising, and… sliced.

It made him feel sick; he thrust the thumb of his dagger-hand into the warm wetness to make sure he was bleeding, and then put his cut hand to Taeauna's mouth, rolling over to make sure his blood could drip between her lips.

Blue fire kindled on her tongue, and grew like a blue-white candle, showing him her face, blue fire trickling down her throat.

She coughed, convulsed, swallowed, and whooped for air. Then her hands came up and gripped his cut hand like two iron-hard gauntlets, forcing him over onto his face as she turned his hand so she could suck… suck greedily, blue fire leaking out around her mouth as she shuddered, twisted, and sucked more.

Only to fall back, panting, letting go of Rod's healed hand. Her eyes were closed, and she moaned.

A moan of pain and… hunger?

The blue glow was fading fast; Rod fumbled with the dagger and stabbed himself through his palm.

'Arrghh!' Jesus, it hurt! God damn!

He found himself sobbing, drenched with sweat and over on his face again on the stone, bright blue ribbons of blood running down Taeauna's cheeks as she sucked at him so fiercely he thought skin and flesh, tendons and all were going to be drawn out of him and down her throat.

Rod's glowing blood slowly pooled on the stone beside his face, flowing outwards to seep down old cracks in the stone.

And the stone suddenly heaved under them!

Taeauna tumbled out of sight, over the edge, and Rod found himself pitching off the tilting slab, too, as a cold and eerie light flooded up into the tomb from below.

Rod rolled over, fear sudden and icy rising in him. Fingers of bone, trailing tatters of grave shrouding, were curled around the edges of the slab, thrusting it up from beneath. The slab was cracked across in two places, and was beginning to come apart…

'Shit! Oh, God bloody shit!' Rod scrambled to his feet and away, almost weeping those words. He'd never realized they'd fallen onto the top of a huge stone coffin, not the tomb floor, and now… and now…

He pounced on Taeauna, who was lying in a limp heap just two strides away, and shook her, yelling, 'Tay! Taeauna! Wake up! What do I do? What do I do?'

She groaned, her eyes still closed, and in a frenzy Rod turned his back on whatever was rising out of the tomb, refusing to look at it, and stabbed at his hand again.

Blood spattered Taeauna's face, then glowed blue once more as he slapped his hand across her mouth and held it there. She made a muffled moaning sound, and moved feebly in his grasp. 'Wake up, damn you!' he cried.

Which was when something bony and very, very cold touched Rod Everlar's shoulder.

CHAPTER SIX

Rod's scream was lost in a loud and sudden grating of stone overhead that brought back the moonlight and Arbridge-and a Dark Helm, hastening down the tomb steps, gleaming sword first.

The black-armored warrior's face was hidden behind his helm, but the trembling-in-terror writer saw that helm lift to regard whatever cold and bony thing was behind Rod, pass over Rod with eyes glinting in excitement, and fall on the blue fire of his blood, running down Taeauna's chin as she sucked.

The Dark Helm descended another two steps. Face to face with Rod, he hissed, 'So! The Master must know! You are the Dark Lord!'

Her chains chimed and winked again, which meant that she had moved.

'Stop that,' the wizard Arlaghaun commanded coldly, not looking up from the thick tome of spells. The symbols moved-by the Shapers, they did! — so pages he'd studied many a time before suddenly revealed new magics…

More chiming, a gasp of pain, and the candles flickered.

He looked up to give his apprentice one of his sharper glares. In the mirror behind her, his reflection glared too: the man in gray with a nose as sharp as a sword, brown eyes blazing and lips thin with anger.

She trembled under his glare, her tear-filled eyes very, very blue beneath sharp black brows. He could smell her cooked flesh. The candles she was holding were filling her palms with hot wax as they melted, but what of that? The strength to ignore pain is vital to casting spells in battle. Perhaps he should affix barbs to her chains, or weave fresh nettles through them, to truly teach her suffering.

She tried to smile at him through her tears. 'S-sorry, master.'

'You will be,' he told her calmly, letting his gaze slowly wander the length of her bared body, to see if

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