Part 35 (1/2)

His seventh life leaped into flame all over at once. The Dright hung on to its shoulders as it blazed, grimly trying to quench it, but Christopher had been right. Fire magic was the Dright's weak point. His attempt to reverse the spell was slow and hesitating. But he kept trying, and hung on to the life by its shoulders, until he had to let go or lose both hands. By that time the front of his lion-skin was on fire too.

Christopher glimpsed him trying to beat it out and coughing in the smoke, as he collapsed himself into a writhing heap on the turf. It was worse than being crisped by the dragon. He was in agony. He had not realized it would hurt at all, let alone this much.

Tacroy scooped him up, threw him over one shoulder in a fireman's hoist, and raced for the Gate. Every step b.u.mped Christopher and every b.u.mp was torment. But his watering eyes caught sight of the G.o.ddess seizing Gabriel's arm in at least three hands and dragging him to the Gate in a mixture of bruteforce and magic. They all reached it together and plunged through. Christopher kept just enough sense to cancel the spells and slam the Gate shut behind them.

21.

The pain stopped the instant the Gate shut. Tacroy lowered Christopher gently to the floor, looked at him to see if he was all right, and made for Miss Rosalie.

”Gosh-look!” said the G.o.ddess, pointing at Gabriel.

Tacroy did not look. He was too busy hugging Miss Rosalie. Christopher sat on the floor and stared with the rest of the people in the operations room. As the Dright's magic left him, Gabriel was growing up in bursts. First he was a young man with a floral silk tie and a keen, wistful look; then he was an older keener man in a dingy suit. After that he was middle-aged and bleached and somehow hopeless and desperate, as if everything he hoped for was gone. The next instant, this man had pulled himself together into a brisk, silvery gentleman; and then the same gentleman, older and grimmer. Christopher stared, awed and rather touched. He realized that Gabriel had hated being the Chrestomanci, and they were seeing the stages by which he had come to terms with it. I'm glad I'm going to find it easier than that!

Christopher thought, as Gabriel finally became the grim old man that Christopher knew. At which point, Gabriel tottered to Tacroy's trance-couch and folded down onto it.

Beryl and Yolande rushed forward with cups of tea. Gabriel drank Beryl's (or Yolande's) at a gulp. Then he took Yolande's (or Beryl's) and sipped it slowly with his eyes almost shut. ”My heartiest thanks, Christopher,” he said. ”I hope the pain has gone.”

”Yes, thanks,” Christopher said, taking the cup of tea Erica handed him.

Gabriel glanced to where Tacroy was still wrapped around Miss Rosalie. ”By the look of him, Mordecai has even more to thank you for than I have.”

”Don't let him get sent to prison,” Christopher said. And there was the bootboy to ask about too, he thought distractedly.

”I'll do what I can,” Gabriel promised. ”Now that I know the circ.u.mstances. That fearsome Dright has much to answer for-though I may be right in supposing that Mordecai went on working with you for your equally fearsome uncle because he knew that any other spirit traveler your uncle chose would have turned you into a hardened criminal before long. Would you agree?”

”Well,” said Christopher, trying to be honest. ”I think some of it was because we were both so keen on cricket.”

”Really?” Gabriel said politely. He turned to the G.o.ddess. She had found Proudfoot and was holding her lovingly in both hands. Gabriel looked from the kitten to the G.o.ddess's bare feet. ”Young lady,” he said.

”You are a young lady, are you not? Pray show me the sole of your left foot.”

A little defiantly, the G.o.ddess turned around and tipped her foot up. Gabriel looked at the purple-blue mark. He looked at Christopher.

”Yes, I am really Asheth,” said the G.o.ddess, ”but you're not to look at Christopher like that! I came here of my own accord. I did it quite capably.”

Gabriel's eyes narrowed. ”By using the G.o.ddess Asheth as your second life?” The G.o.ddess looked down from his eyes and nodded. Gabriel put down his empty cup and took the full one Flavian handedhim. ”My dear girl,” he said as he sipped it, ”what a very foolish thing to have done! You are clearly a powerful enchantress in your own right. You had no need to use Asheth. You have simply given her a hold over you. The Arm of Asheth is going to haunt you for the rest of your life.”

”But I thought that the magic I can do came from Asheth!” the G.o.ddess protested.

”Oh no,” said Gabriel. ”Asheth has powers, but she never shares them. The ones you have are yours.”

The G.o.ddess's mouth dropped open. She looked as if she might cry. Flavian said apologetically, ”Gabriel, I'm afraid the Arm of Asheth is all around-”

There was a violent CRASH from below as the Lobster Pot came down.

Everyone raced for the stairs, except for Gabriel. He put his cup down slowly, obviously wondering what was happening. Christopher dashed to the stairs and then, for speed, did what he had always longed to do and slid down the rosy curve of marble banister. The G.o.ddess followed him. When they tumbled off at the bottom, Gabriel was already there, standing by the black rope gazing down at his limp transparent life. But no one else had eyes for that.

Uncle Ralph had come through the pentacle in a suit of armor, carrying a heavy mace. Christopher had thought he might. If he had brought any anti-cat spells, however, these obviously did not work on Temple cats. The Lobster Pot had come down precisely over the pentacle, trapping Throgmorten in with Uncle Ralph, and Throgmorten was doing his best to get Uncle Ralph. Through the wreathing smoke of dragons' blood, Uncle Ralph could be seen tramping slowly around and around inside the cage, smas.h.i.+ng cat-saucers under his metal feet and taking violent swings at Throgmorten with his mace. Throgmorten could move faster than Uncle Ralph, or his mace, and he could climb the walls of the Lobster Pot, but he could not get at Uncle Ralph through his armor. All he could do was make shrill metal scratches on it. It was a standoff.

Christopher looked around to find Gabriel beside him. Gabriel's face had a most unusual big wicked smile on it-no, not unusual, Christopher thought: it was the same smile Gabriel had worn when they levitated the man in Eleven.

”Shall we give the cat his chance?” Gabriel said. ”For one minute?”

Christopher nodded.

Uncle Ralph's armor vanished, leaving him in his foxy tweed suit. Throgmorten instantly became a seven-legged, three-headed, razor-clawed, flying, spitting fury. He was up and down and all over Uncle Ralph several times in the first second. So much blood got shed that Christopher was quite sorry for Uncle Ralph after fifteen such seconds. After thirty seconds, he was quite glad when Throgmorten vanished with a snarl and a jerk.

Throgmorten reappeared kicking and struggling over the G.o.ddess's arm. ”No, Throgmorten,” she said. ”I told you before you're not to go for people's eyes. That's not nice.”

”Nice or not,” Gabriel said regretfully, ”I was enjoying it.” He was busy winding something unseen into a careful skein over one hand. ”Simonson,” he called. ”Simonson, are you in charge of the cage? I got his magic off him while his mind was elsewhere. You can move the cage now and shut him up until the police can come for him.”

This produced another standoff. Throgmorten leaped for the s.p.a.ce under the cage as soon as it started to rise. Uncle Ralph screamed. In the end, one of the stable lads had to climb up and unhook the cage fromthe chandelier chain. Then the cage was shoved across the floor with Uncle Ralph stumbling inside it and Throgmorten prowling after, uttering low throbbing sounds.

As soon as the cage was off the pentacle, a silver pillar rose out of the blood-spattered floor. The pillar looked human, but it was impossibly tall for a human, a good foot taller than Gabriel. Up and up it rose, a woman robed in silver, wearing a silver mask and carrying a silver spear.

The G.o.ddess wailed with terror and tried to hide behind Christopher. ”Silver,” he warned her. ”I can't help against silver.” His teeth chattered. For the first time, he realized how naked and soft it felt to have only one life.

The G.o.ddess dashed behind Gabriel and clutched his black frock coat. ”It's Asheth! Save me!”

”Madam,” Gabriel said politely to the apparition, ”to what do we owe the honor of this visitation?”