"Fire?" A voice said.
Two flaming arrows thudded into the backs of the brackan and suddenly the things rolled over, desperately defending. Not that it did much good, their panicked flailing setting fire to the others in turn, transforming all of them into thrashing torches. Kali and Freel booted the brackan off them and backed out of the bajijal roots, soot-streaked but otherwise unharmed. Their weapons remained cautiously trained but the brackan began to break apart, collapsing into a pile of burning wood. Kali and Freel watched as a dishevelled, tall, blond figure walked to the fire's side, sat, and casually began to roast a chunk of meat skewered on the end of a dagger.
"Hells of a morning," Killiam Slowhand said.
"Nice shots," Kali responded. "Is that breakfast?"
"Mmm. How you doing, Hooper?" As an afterthought, he added, "Freel."
Jakub Freel waved away the offer of a piece of meat which Kali then took and devoured.
"You two don't seem particularly shocked to see each other," he commented.
"Oh, you'd be surprised how we keep popping up together."
Freel's expression became more serious. "Other survivors?"
Slowhand looked up, swallowed, and shook his head slowly. The gesture might have seemed casual but there was pain in the archer's expression.
"Guess it's time for Plan B, huh?" Slowhand said.
"Plan B," Kali said. "The three of us finish the job ourselves."
She stared up through the dense forest canopy, which, while it defeated most attempts by daylight to brighten the murk, could not fully obscure the brilliance of the pillar of souls as it lanced into the sky.
"We're close enough to the necropolis to make it without portals now," Freel observed. "But we still have a journey ahead of us."
Slowhand stood and snuffed the remains of the brackan with his boot. "Then the sooner we get started…"
They moved on into the forest, trying not to think of the dead they were leaving behind. For some hours they worked their way through the treacherous terrain, which grew still denser as they neared the necropolis. The vegetation was changing, from the vines and sub-tropical plants Kali associated with the Sardenne to thick patches of dry scrub and coarse, thorny bushes. They felt wrong somehow, tainted, and the further they moved, the more hostile the plants became, until at last there was little doubt that they formed a defensive barrier around Bel'A'Gon'Shri, likely conjured by Redigor himself. As Kali and the others hacked their way through she reflected that the Pale Lord had missed at least one trick by not infusing the vicious barbs with poison. Still, knowing that bastard, she supposed there was time yet.
Kali approached Slowhand and spoke quietly.
"What were you doing, talking about me to Freel?"
Slowhand looked surprised. In truth — considering what had happened on the train and all — he wasn't really sure.
"What? Hey, it was a trek, Hooper, and you and Dez were busy with girly talk."
"Girly talk?"
Slowhand nodded. "Nothing wrong with that. Nice to see you making a friend." He paused, smile fading. "Kal, I'm sorry she didn't make it."
"Me, too. Don't change the subject."
"What is the problem? I'm willing to bet you talk about me, don't you? Don't you?"
"Actually, no. What would I tell people? About the collection of underknicks pinned to your bedroom ceiling? Or how a girl would be lucky to get through a first date without your clothes falling off?"
"Hey, I took the underknicks down, didn't I?"
"Pshyeah. And then kept them labelled in a drawer. How was Luci Lastic, by the way? Or Nikola Start? Those were their names, ri — "
Slowhand suddenly slapped his palm over Kali's mouth, and her eyes widened in shock and rage. She was about to pull free, demand to know why it was she couldn't get a full farking sentence out today, when the archer nodded between thorn bushes, at a feral shape moving towards them fast.
Breaking apart, he and Kali readied bow and knife while Freel dashed into cover, his whip to hand.
A second passed and something wild-eyed, torn and filthy burst into view. But rather than some slavering denizen of the Sardenne, it was human. Garbed in the shredded remnants of a green robe and considerably older than any of their party, however, he wasn't one of their own.
The man collapsed at Kali's feet. "Help me. Lord of All, help me, please."
"Where the hells did you come from?" Freel breathed.
"The Lord… the Pale Lord," the man gasped, pointing back through the thorns.
"Easy," Kali said, kneeling. "You've come from the Pale Lord?"
The man nodded, taking slugs of water from a skin Kali handed him. As he drank, Freel studied him warily. The man was terrified, but beneath the dirt and sweat he was well-groomed. He did not belong in the Sardenne.
"Be careful," Freel suggested. "This could be Redigor's doing."
"No, wait a minute, I know this guy," Slowhand said. "We've met before."
"Before?" Freel queried.
"It doesn't matter where."
"Yes, it does."
"Fine. In court, if you must know. He gaoled me for a longnight for… well, let's just say I know what colour sheets cover a lot of beds in Kroog-Martra." He stared at Kali. "And before you say a word, Hooper, it was a bet and I had no time to collect their underknicks, okay?"
Kali gave Slowhand a weary shake of the head. "This is the magistrate of Kroog-Martra?"
"Yeah. A magistrate in the middle of the Sardenne. A fat lot of use he's going to be."
"Liam, hang on. If you're right, this guy is one of the twelve taken for Redigor's High Council. He might know something about what we can expect at Bel'A'Gon'Shri." Kali took the magistrate by his shoulders, forcing him to look at her. "How and why are you here? Did you escape? Did you escape the necropolis?"
"Kroog-Martra was attacked. By things hardly alive. Something came. A coach as black as night. Brought me to that place. Oh, Lord of All, that place…"
"Hey, m'lud!" Slowhand pressed. "The lady knows that, okay? You maybe wanna cut the pie and get to the meat?"
"In the depths," the magistrate went on. "Tombs. Vast, cold tombs. There they lie, still. The elves." He struggled in Kali's grip, remembering, suddenly desperate to get away. "But they're coming back. Lord of All, they're coming back!"
Freel strode to the magistrate and gripped him by the head. "How did you escape?"
"The Anointed Lord," the magistrate said, flinching. "She was taken with myself, the others. The Pale Lord took something from us, everything seemed like a dream, a nightmare. But the Anointed Lord she fought him… she was defiant… she was strong."
"Makennon escaped with you?" Kali asked.
"Makennon?" The magistrate repeated, and shook his head. "No, no. But while the Pale Lord fought to bring her under his control, I felt his magic weaken. Not much… not much at all… but enough for me to run, to flee the Chapel of Screams."
"The Chapel of Screams?" Slowhand repeated "Oh, the day just keeps getting better and better."
Kali sighed, looked up at Freel. "I think he's telling the truth."
Freel nodded. "The Chapel of Screams sounds like where the ritual is going to take place."
"The ritual," the magistrate said. "Yes, yes, the ritu — "
He stopped abruptly, eyes widening with fear. The forest had begun to resonate with a slow, bass tolling.
"The ritual begins," the magistrate said. "The Time of the Bell."
"Time of the Bell?"
"The summoning."
Freel snapped Kali a look. "Does that mean we're too late?"
Kali bit her lip. "I doubt it," she said, although in truth she wasn't really sure.