wizards worry!'
'Let us hope, sisters mine,' Ambrelle called back, as the four Aumrarr burst through, the deserted room and out into a passage beyond, 'that they worry for more than a fleeting moment or two, this time. I want to be more than a mere annoyance, casually slain.'
'Now that's an epitaph,' Lorlarra commented, as they parted to swoop past a stiffly striding titan of spell- animated armor on either side. Its arms ended in bristling fists of bared swords affixed at all angles, but it was too slow to harm them.
The Aumrarr ducked under the arms of another lurching automaton to glide past a grisly assemblage of undead human parts; two naked and rotting men joined together by a long metal frame from which sprouted many waving human arms that were far too short to clutch at the passing sisters.
They ascended to the ceiling again in a flurry of beating wings, slowing as they came out into one of the cavernous halls and found it full of restless guardians and tower creatures.
'Ult had a far-viewing glass in one of the halls,' Juskra mused, peering down at some wildly lurching constructions of mismatched limbs and heads that were probably abandoned experiments. 'Do you think it's still there?'
'Worth looking for,' Ambrelle replied, brushing back an errant lock of her long purple-black hair. 'Finding it will save us having to go through room after room, which will take forever, by the Falcon, if all Arlaghaun's creatures are out and active, like these.'
A group of lorn came streaking out of a high gallery to pounce on the four Aumrarr and were met with laughter, ready swords, and hard-swung maces.
The first lorn to taste that greeting tumbled toward the floor with a shredded wing, and was diced bloodily by a reaching automaton before it could strike the tiles.
Another two lorn were wounded only slightly, but flapped hastily away, freeing Dauntra and Juskra to strike from behind at the lorn fighting their sisters. Aumrarr blades promptly met in writhing lorn bodies; what fell into the clutches of the waiting automatons this time was dying or dead.
Triumphantly the Aumrarr flew on, ducking around the tallest guardians, until they came out into a hall where Dauntra pointed and said, 'There, sisters!'
The mirror, taller than a man, was affixed to a wall on some sort of frame in which it had been slid sideways, to reveal a dark and narrow opening it obviously concealed much of the time.
Scenes were moving in the depths of the glass. The Aumrarr circled, swooped, hacked, and soared aloft again, not tarrying to fight, but wounding and rushing back up out of reach, until they'd sworded guardians enough to clear one end of the hall and win themselves some time to look into the mirror.
They beheld armies massed in front of soaring fortress walls, stones and fiery trees soaring into the air.
'Bowrock! Under siege!' Ambrelle snapped.
'Galath goes on tearing itself apart,' Lorlarra said bitterly, trailing the straps and shards of most of her once-magnificent dark armor. 'Let's look at other places and things, sisters, before we go racing off to join any frays.'
Besides, something was waiting for him in the second room, beyond the tangle of interlocked stone: two eyeballs that floated in the air above a skeletal jawbone and two hands. He could see no skull, nor any other bones, but the floating remains watched him, turning to keep him in view as he struggled through the rubble.
So at last he went where he'd always known he would go: up the grand stairs to the upper floors of the castle. The light grew as he ascended, and he found nothing more sinister on the steps than a line of rusted flakes that had once been a sword; a sword that had not been there in the vision the golden horn had brought upon him, of the old man in the chair whose face he'd never managed to see.
In that vision, Rod's travel up the stairs and through the rooms had been a lightning-swift, flying whirlwind. This time he trudged, but found every room just where and how it had been in the vision.
Instead of turning into the darker rooms that would lead to where the old man had been sitting, Rod turned the other way, into a large chamber whose windows opened onto a view of not the forest outside or waiting lorn, but a bright void of milky white mists. The room was empty except for something dark-a discarded cloak, perhaps-lying on the floor in a distant corner.
There were doors farther along the wall he'd come in through. He headed for them and halfway there, became aware that the thing in the corner was stirring.
He stopped and watched it come for him, flowing over the floor. It didn't seem to be moving fast enough that he couldn't outrun it, but then, he had no idea just how swiftly it could travel. It looked pinkish-white, where it wasn't covered in dark green blotches of what looked like mold. There was something familiar about its shape…
It was about three of his strides away when he saw hairs bristling in it, and knew what it was: a boneless, empty human skin.
Face down, arms trailing behind, rippling as it crept along the stone floor. Somehow he thought it might be female, but how could one be sure?
Rod knew one thing, though, as he stepped sharply to one side and it veered to follow. He didn't like the look of it at all.
His dagger might shred it, but what then? To cut it he'd have to almost touch it, and what sort of horrid life-drinking, poisoning, flesh-melting things could it do to him, if it sprang up his wrist and touched him?
Rod broke into a sudden run, around behind it and toward that row of doors. Would it turn to follow, or just reverse its flow, or fold over on top of itself to come after him-and how fast?
It half-turned, and then folded over, quickly. Not so quickly that it caught up to him, though. Rod hauled open the first door, saw nothing perilous in the little chamber beyond, and that at least two more, larger rooms opened out beyond the little chamber, and was through the door with it slammed behind him in a few lightning-swift instants.
He was panting a little as he stood in the sudden silence, listening and peering. Nothing moved, and he could hear nothing, certainly nothing slithering on the other side of the door.
So he walked carefully around the walls of the little chamber, to the open archway in its far wall, where it gave into a much larger chamber, and stopped to listen and look again.
Several closed doors and an archway opening into a smaller, darker room could be seen. A gallery or balcony stood to his left, looking down into an open area to his right that held only a throne. A throne with a cloak draped over it.
Rod approached it very cautiously. This looked very much like a waiting trap, and what better place to put a trap for fools, but a throne?
There was no way he was going to sit on that stone seat, but he wanted to get a look at it. Was anything written on it? To look properly, he'd have to move the cloak, and
Rod looked up, in search of ropes or wires or seams in the stone that looked like they might herald a stone block that would crash down. Nothing that looked suspicious, beyond a few cobwebs in the corners. Then he peered around at the walls, looking for holes that might spit darts. None that he could see.
Then he shivered again. Jesus glorking Falconfar on a stick, he was cold! There was something about this place that made the chill creep into your very bones… Or was this something done by that ghostly cloak, melting into him, somehow lurking inside him now?
And what did it matter now, anyway, without Taeauna?
In sudden brisk impatience, Rod strode to the throne, and from behind the seat used his dagger to pluck up the cloak and whisk it away.
Nothing happened. Nothing tumbled out of the cloak as it fell onto the floor, and there didn't seem to be anything unusual about the garment itself; just heavy wool, dyed dark red and lined with dark brown linen of some sort. It was just a cloak, with no hood nor pockets or armholes or even a stitched yoke; just a rectangle of thick, warm fabric with lacings joining two corners to bind them together across the breast of a wearer.
Warm. Oh, how he wanted to be warm. Rod dug his fingers into the fabric, pinching and flexing it with cruel force. It seemed to be mere cloth, not any sort of lurking creature; not that he cared much if it were.
He shrugged, swung the cloak over his shoulders, and laced it up, settling it around himself. It swished