Part 2 (1/2)
”A deal, an agreement, your Spiritshadow for my miserable life,” Fashnek whimpered. ”Oh, your generosity--”
Tal held his Sunstone high. Red light flared, bathing Fashnek in its glow, making the sweat on his face look like beads of blood.
”In the shadowbottle over there!”
Tal looked where Fashnek pointed. There was a bottle of golden metal on one of the worktables. But there were other bottles and containers strewn around the room.
”You open it,” Tal instructed. ”And I might let you live.”
”Yes, of course, great lord,” Fashnek replied. He slowly levered himself up and hobbled toward the table. Tal kept his distance, the Sunstone ready.
”You will be Emperor, I am sure,” mumbled Fashnek as he struggled with the stopper on the bottle. ”I saw the Violet in you. I know these things. And an Emperor always needs a Master of Nightmares, no? I will serve you as I served Her Majesty. Sus.h.i.+n, why, he is nothing, a n.o.body--”
”Shut up!” ordered Tal. ”If I am ever Emperor, there will be no Hall of Nightmares at all!” ”So you say now, Master, so you say... ah!” With a last heave from his good hand, the stopper came free. A shadow erupted forth, a great stream of roaring darkness that rapidly a.s.sumed the familiar shape of Adras. A very angry Adras, shadow-lightning flickering not just from his hands but also from his eyes.
”Jailer, die!”
With that, Adras grabbed the shadow-half of Fashnek around its insectoid head and began to twist, shadow-lightning flickering all around and thunder rumbling.
Fashnek screamed. Tal started forward, shouting, ”No!”
But it was too late. Adras bellowed in triumph as the Spiritshadow's head came off. He threw it on the ground and trampled on it, letting Fashnek's body fall to the floor.
”No one will lock Adras in a tiny bottle ever again!”
Tal knelt down next to Fashnek. The Master of Nightmares stared up at him, his eyes gla.s.sy with shock. The shadow-half that had sustained him was already fading into nothingness. Where it had been, there was no skin and Tal could see bone and internal organs, even though he tried not to look.
”It was a mistake,” whispered Fashnek. ”A terrible mistake. I was afraid of dying... yet there are things worse than death... It was Sharrakor who wounded me, in dragon-shape, and Sharrakor who gave me life. I should not have taken it from his hands. But perhaps it has all been only a nightmare, all in my dream machines...”
”No,” said Tal, thinking of Bennem and Crow's parents and Jarnil and all the people who had been tormented by Fashnek and his machines, many of them to their deaths.
”You were the nightmare.”
But Fashnek didn't hear him. He was already dead.
CHAPTER SIX.
There were no Spiritshadows left in the cavern, which was good, thought Milla. But there was nothing left of the makes.h.i.+ft fort, either, and her little band of Icecarls was tiring rapidly as they dashed from side to side in their efforts to avoid the Violet wave. It hadn't lessened in size or power at all, though it was becoming more erratic in direction and harder to predict every time it rebounded from a wall.
”Left!” shouted Saylsen, and they all ran left, until the s.h.i.+eld Mother shouted ”Stop!” and then, ”Dark take it! Right a bit!”
The Violet wave missed them by a few stretches, hurtling past toward the far wall. It would be a few minutes before it came sweeping back in at a new angle.
”Have you tried reversing whatever it was you did?” asked Malen. She didn't look at Milla. Like everyone else she kept her eyes on the wave.
”No,” snapped Milla. Every time she started to focus on the Sunstone the Violet wave would come back. Someone would grab her and drag her out of the way, and her concentration would be gone. Besides, all she could think of was the avalanche. Trying not to think of an avalanche only made the image even stronger in her head. So even if she could concentrate on her Sunstone, it was likely she would just create another Violet wave. Two would kill everyone for certain.
”We'll have to try one of the doors again,” Saylsen said grimly. ”We can't run away from this thing forever.”
”Odris! Have a look and see what's behind that one,” ordered Milla, pointing to one of the doors. There were only two exits left to try, out of the five. One stone door and part of the corridor behind it had been totally smashed by the wave and was now impa.s.sable. Two others were so heavily barricaded and defended that there was no chance of getting through.
”I'll get my head pulled off if I poke it through,” Odris protested. ”You have a look if you want!”
”I can't stick my head through a closed door,” said Milla. ”You can. Would you prefer to get swept up by the wave?”
”I'm not tired,” said Odris mulishly. ”I can keep away from--”
”Left!” shouted Saylsen. ”Left!”
Odris was the only one who hadn't been watching the wave. As Saylsen shouted, she moved right instead of left.
”This way!” yelled Milla. ”This way!”
The wave rushed on. Odris, caught in front of it, didn't follow Milla. Instead she ran in front of the wave, before launching herself into the air and hurling herself at the door Milla had indicated. A second after she went through it, the wave hit with a deafening crash. Once again, it rebounded to groans from all the Icecarls.
”Surely it has to stop soon,” puffed Malen. ”I did not think Sunstones were so strong.”
”Neither did I,” muttered Milla. All the Light Magic she had seen before had only lasted as long as the caster concentrated on it. This thing she had created seemed to have a life of its own.
Milla anxiously looked at the door Odris had gone through. She could feel the Spiritshadow's absence--a sort of dull ache that was hard to pin down, rather like a toothache. But at least there was no worse feeling. If Odris was being hurt by other Spiritshadows, Milla would feel some of her pain.
”Head for the door,” Milla ordered after a quick look to make sure they would still be able to avoid the wave's return pa.s.sage. ”Odris isn't fighting, so maybe we can get through.”
They were halfway over to it when the door opened. But instead of Odris, there was a Chosen woman, a Sunstone in her hand and an unfamiliar Spiritshadow at her back, a huge bird-thing with eyebrows like horns.
Milla opened her mouth to order a sudden charge, but snapped it shut as another Chosen emerged behind the woman. This time it was someone she knew. Tal's eccentric great-uncle Ebbitt, now clad in a weird a.s.sortment of crystal armor plates in many different, s.h.i.+ning colors. To top it all off, he was wearing a golden metal saucepan on his head, cus.h.i.+oned by a scarf of bright indigo.
Milla couldn't help smiling. From their very first meeting when Tal had taken her to his great-uncle's lair, she had liked Ebbitt. That meeting seemed very long ago. Now Tal was who knew where, she was surrounded... but just the sight of Ebbitt brought sudden hope.
”Quick! Quick!” Ebbitt called out. ”This is an escape in progress!”
The Icecarls needed no urging. The wave was already rus.h.i.+ng down upon them. Despite their weariness, they started to run for the door, which was wide enough for three people to pa.s.s through at one time.
”What is that?!” exclaimed Ebbitt as he saw the wave. The woman with him exclaimed something, too, then both of them raised their Sunstones as one, and twin beams of intense white light shot out to meet the wave.
As the White Rays. .h.i.t, the wave faltered and slowed. But it did not stop fully, nor disappear, as the two Chosen seemed to expect.
”Too strong!” gasped the woman. ”I cannot hold it!”
Her light snapped off, and she fell back to be caught in the gentle claws of her Spiritshadow.
Ebbitt kept up his White Ray, but the wave began to speed up again. Ebbitt started to back up, pa.s.sing through the doorway with the last of the Icecarls, the Wilder Jarek, who was still in his post-fury state. He could move and fight quickly enough, but would not speak and his eyes remained strange and distant.
”Get... ready to... slam door,” instructed Ebbitt. Sweat was pouring off his face as if he were physically holding back a great weight. His Sunstone was so bright that Milla could not look at it, and the White Ray was equally blinding.