a big duskwood, then crawled out on a sturdy limb well past the wall. He secured the line and fed the bottom out until it touched the pasture. No human rope-at least not that one person could carry-would have stretched so many hundreds of feet, but enough elven cord remained to create a large coil on the ground.
Galaeron returned to his companions and climbed down next to Keya. 'All is ready Stay away from the cliff. If you touch it, Evereska's defensive magic will cancel my spell.' 'We're all going at once?' asked Vala.
'We must all stay within ten feet of you or become visible,' explained Melegaunt. 'That thread won't hold five of us,' objected Kuhl.
'It would hold five stone giants.' Keya's tone was anything but patient. 'That's an elven rope.'
The explanation was met with a wary silence, then Vala said, 'On with you, Kuhl.' There was a lot of scuffing and grunting, then the thick branch sagged dangerously. 'We'll be waiting at the bottom, Galaeron.' I'll be along directly.'
Galaeron allowed the humans a few moments to begin their descent, then embraced his sister. 'Too long away,' he said, 'too quick gone.'
'Next time.' She smiled bravely and touched her long fingers to his cheek. 'Bring me no phaerimm eggs.'
'Of that, little sister, you may be assured.' He stepped onto the low wall, then glanced at the duskwood branch. 'You'll retrieve the rope?'
She nodded. 'They'll never know of your leaving. Sweet water and light laughter.' 'Back soon for soft songs and bright wine.'
Galaeron cast a spell to turn himself invisible, then fixed his gaze on the coil of rope far below and stepped off the wall. His plunge was at first a breathtaking blur of wind and color, but the mythal's magic prevented any native of Evereska from being injured by a plummet from the cliff tops. As he neared the bottom, his fall slowed to a mere descent He landed lightly on his feet and was there waiting when the invisible humans stepped onto the ground.
Keya pulled the cord up. Galaeron had the humans link hands, then he led them across the pasture to the perimeter of the mythal. He climbed over the wall into a field of winter wheat and stopped in a corner shade bower. 'Melegaunt?' 'Here.'
'The Spellguards will be watching the Secret Gate, and we can't pass through unnoticed. Now would be a good time to use your shadow walk to move us to the other side of Eastpeak.'
'I'd be happy to, but I think you have noticed my magic doesn't work in Evereska.' 'It will now,' Galaeron said.
'Really?' There was a pause, then Melegaunt asked, 'I wonder why would that be?'
Though he knew the wizard could not see it, Galaeron shrugged. 'You have your secrets, I have mine.'
'So it seems.' The wizard chuckled, low and foreboding, then added, 'Very well, I suppose what the master claims cannot be denied the novice. Everyone find me and grab hold.'
Though it had been more than forty years since Galaeron had considered any wizard his master, he did as instructed and took hold of an arm. Melegaunt's gravelly voice rose in an incantation, and the world turned dark and indistinct. Five blurry silhouettes appeared around him, then one of the smaller shapes separated itself from the others and started forward.
'We are walking the border between the world of light and the world of the dark,' said Melegaunt. 'It is easy to lose your way, so you must not release me. Time and distance have no meaning here. If you lose sight of me for even the blink of an eye, I may never find you.'
Galaeron found himself clinging to a small arm that could only belong to Vala. She was holding hands with one of her huge warriors, and the warrior's other hand was clamped to Melegaunt's collarbone as tightly as a vise. Though every hand between Galaeron and the wizard possessed at least twice the strength of his own, his eyes soon began to burn for fear of blinking. To one side loomed flat purple shapes. Sometimes they were as high as mountains, with jagged profiles that suggested peaks and ridges. Other times, they were slender trunks with scarecrow arms, swaying in an unfelt wind, reaching down to clutch at Galaeron with fingers of darkness that could not touch.
Opposite the shadows shimmered a vast horizon of yellow radiance, blinding and bright and as hot as the Anauroch sun. Despite Melegaunt's warning, Galaeron found himself longing to walk into the light Its familiar warmth was an enticing contrast to the cold eeriness of the shadows, and there was something young and frightened inside him that longed to be away from the darkness. He fixed his gaze ahead, forcing himself to concentrate on Vala's back. Finally, slivers of radiance began to break off the horizon and tumble along to both sides of the companions. Some rolled completely by and passed out of sight. Others landed flat on the ground or lodged themselves between shoulders of purple darkness, creating a ghostly landscape of gullies and hills. Despite the cascade of splinters, the light never grew smaller. The yellow horizon merely flattened out and spread itself into a rolling plain that Galaeron soon recognized as the sands of Anauroch.
Instead of continuing toward the desert, Melegaunt dropped to his knees and tipped forward. Galaeron thought the wizard would fall, but his body merely extended itself at a slant and hung over the ground until the rest of the party followed his example. When they were all leaning forward at the same angle, Melegaunt had Galaeron cancel his invisibility spells, then led them downward into darkness as black as coal. The sensation of descent vanished within a dozen steps. A few minutes later, they stopped, and Galaeron's dark sight began to function.
'Your shadow vision will work now,' Melegaunt whispered to the humans.
Vala and her men briefly touched the hilts of their swords, then blinked the sight back into their eyes. The group was standing in a small chamber hewn from solid rock. The walls had been cut so smoothly they seemed almost polished. Along one side of the room lay a sleeping berth, covered with a billowy black mattress of shadow made solid. On the other side sat a small stone desk.
From the front of the chamber came the sound of grunting and scuffling. Galaeron turned and found himself looking through a foot-wide crevice, where a haggard human was scuttling past in a high squat. The man's hair and beard were long and unkempt, his gaunt body coated in sweat-streaked filth. He was dragging a wooden chest crammed so full of parchments, books, and scrolls that the lid would close only partially. Melegaunt motioned for quiet and stepped to the crevice. He ran through a series of mystic gestures, both cupping his hand to his ear and rubbing the tips of his fingers on his forehead. Galaeron and the others cast puzzled looks at each other and wondered where they were. Their answer came a moment later, when a huge-toothed maw surrounded by arms floated into view. Galaeron raised his hands to summon a bolt of magic, and the humans reached for their black swords.
Melegaunt stepped away from the crevice. 'No!' He pushed Galaeron's hands down. 'Your magic would have them on us like crows on a battlefield.'
Galaeron glanced toward the crevice, but the creature floated past with no hint that it had seen them, its thorny body writhing through the air in a motion part fish and part serpent.
'It's angry with its slaves for being so slow,' whispered Melegaunt. 'It's complaining that the best holes will be taken. They'll be faster next move, or they'll be egg bags.'
As the barbed tail rippled out of view, Galaeron asked, 'Where's it going?' 'And where are we?' added Vala.
Melegaunt answered Galaeron first. 'I think you know where it's going.' 'The dwarven workings?'
'Somewhere in the Sharaedim,' Melegaunt corrected. 'They must consider it safe haven now.'
'Safe haven!' Galaeron could not keep the outrage from his voice. 'Never!'
Melegaunt touched a finger to his lips. 'Quietly. This cloaking magic was meant to muffle snores, not shouts.' He answered Vala's question next 'We're in my last refuge, not far from our rendezvous point in the dwarven workings. The phaerimm will place their WarGather at the breach in the Sharn Wall, to make sure it stays well guarded.' 'So we came to their side of the wall?' she asked.
Melegaunt nodded. 'The phaerimm are as intelligent as they are evil. They'll be ready for scouts. With luck, they won't expect them from this direction.'
Galaeron thought of his father, riding out of Evereska on the mission Melegaunt described. 'But the Swords-'
'Are still in the Secret Gate,' said Melegaunt. 'Time is different in the Shadow. If we are lucky, we will have discovered everything Evereska must know before the Swords leave the High Peaks. If we are not lucky… In that