The Patryn snorted and continued on in silence.
The tunnel widened, grew lighter. Other tunnels branched off from it, heading in several different directions. The air was cooler, more moist, easier to breathe. Gas lamps hissed, formed pools of yellow light that alternated with pools of darkness. Haplo had no doubt they were nearing the city.
What would they find once they reached the top? Guards posted, waiting for them? All exits blocked?
Water. That was all Haplo cared about at this moment. At least, there would be water. He’d fight an army of the dead for one swallow.
Behind him, the prince and Jonathan spoke together in low tones. The dog trotted along at their feet, a quiet, unobtrusive spy on their conversation.
“Whatever happens, it will all be my fault,” Jonathan was saying. His tone was sad, regretful. He was accepting blame, not whining in self-pity. “I’ve always been heedless, reckless! I forgot all I’d been taught. No, that’s not quite true. I chose to forget it. I knew what I was doing was wrong when I worked the magic on Jera.... But I couldn’t bear to let her go!”
He paused a moment, added, “We Sartan became obsessed with life. We lost our respect for death. Even a semblance of life, a horrible mockery of life, was better for us than death. Such an attitude came from thinking of ourselves as gods. What is it, after all, that separates man from the gods? Ultimate rule over life and death. We were able to control life with our magic. We worked until we were able to control death—or thought we had.”
He’s speaking about himself and his people in the past tense, Haplo realized. He might have been eavesdropping on a conversation between two cadavers, instead of one.
“You are beginning to understand,” said the prince.
“I want to understand more,” Jonathan spoke humbly
“You know where to look for the answers.”
Back in that damn chamber, no doubt. Or just have good, old Alfred sing his blasted runes at you again. What is it I’m supposed to remember? I saw it all so clearly.. . . Saw what clearly? ... I understood . . . understood what? If only I could recall. ...
The hell with it! I know everything I need to know. My lord is all-powerful, all-wise, all-knowing. My Lord will one day rule this world and all others. My duty is to My Lord and to his cause. These doubts, these confusing vagaries are a trick of the Sartan’s.
“Haplo .. .” Alfred’s voice.
“What now?”
Turning around, Haplo saw that the Sartan had again come to grief. Alfred lay sprawled on the stone floor, his face twisted with pain. He raised his hand, held it palm out.
“If you think I’m helping you, forget it. You can lie there and rot for all I care.”
The dog hurried up to Alfred, began to lick the man’s cheek. Haplo turned away in disgust.
“No, it’s not that! I think—that is ... I’ve found water. I—I’m lying in a puddle.”
Alfred had, unfortunately, soaked up quite a bit of the water on his clothes, but once they had a small amount of the precious liquid, they could magically replicate more. Haplo searched until he discovered the source, a steady drip of water draining through a crack in the ceiling.
“We must be near the upper level. Best stay alert. Don’t drink too much,” he cautioned. “It’ll cramp the stomach. Slowly, in small sips.” He found it difficult to follow his own advice. The liquid was muddy and tasted faintly of sulfur and iron, even after magic had purified it. But it quenched thirst, kept the body going.
“Some gods we are,” said Haplo to himself, sucking on a piece of cloth he’d dipped in the puddle. He caught Alfred’s swift glance and scowled, turned away in irritation. Why had such a thought crossed his mind? The Sartan had put it there, no doubt. . .
The dog lifted its head, ears pricked. It growled low and softly.
“Someone’s coming!” Haplo whispered, twisting, catlike, to his feet.
A figure in black robes emerged from the shadows at the end of the corridor. It moved slowly, haltingly, as if injured or greatly fatigued, and made frequent stops to look back over its shoulder.
“Tomas!” cried Jonathan suddenly, although how he could tell one black-robed necromancer from another was beyond Haplo’s ability to fathom. “Traitor!” Before anyone could stop him, the young duke sprinted forward, robes flapping behind him.
Tomas whirled around to face them, his panicked shriek echoed through the corridors. He tried to run. An injured leg or ankle gave out, and he fell to the stone floor. Crawling on hands and knees, he attempted to drag himself away. Jonathan caught up with him easily, placed a hand on the man’s shoulder.
Screaming fearfully, Tomas lurched over on his back, raised his hands over his face. “No, please! Don’t! Please! No!” he babbled, over and over, writhing in a paroxysm of terror, his body twitching and rolling on the floor.
The duke stared at the man. “Tomas! I’m not going to hurt you! Tomas!” Jonathan attempted to catch hold of the wretched man, soothe him. But the sight of hands approaching him only increased his panic.
“Shut him up!” ordered Haplo furiously. “He’ll have every guard in the palace down on us!”
“I can’t!” Jonathan looked helpless. “He’s ... he’s gone mad!”
Alfred knelt beside Tomas, began weaving his hands over him, chanting the runes.
“Don’t put him to sleep, Sartan! We need information.”
Alfred shot Haplo a stern, reproachful glance.
“You want to carry him through the corridors with us?” Haplo demanded. “Or just leave him here, unconscious?”
Abashed, Alfred nodded. The motion of his hands formed an invisible blanket over the man. Tomas’s cries ceased, he began to breathe easier. But he continued to stare at them with wide eyes, his limbs shivered and shook. Haplo crouched on the floor near the man. The dog, coming up alongside, sniffed and pawed at Tomas’s robes with intense interest. Haplo reached out and touched the robe’s fabric. It was wet and sodden. He held up his hand to the light, his fingers were stained crimson.
Alfred shoved the man’s robe aside, looked at the leg beneath. It was bruised, but otherwise uninjured. The blood wasn’t his own. Alfred went extremely pale.
“You know this man?” Haplo asked Jonathan.
“Yes, I know him.”
“Talk to him. Find out what’s going on up there.”
“Tomas. It’s me, Jonathan. Don’t you recognize me?” The duke had forgotten his anger in pity. He reached out his hand, gingerly.
Tomas’s eyes followed the hand, his gaze suddenly shifted to Jonathan’s face. “You’re alive!” he gasped. He grasped Jonathan’s hand convulsively, held it fast. “You’re alive!” he whispered over and over, and burst into dry, heaving sobs.
“Tomas, what happened to you? Are you hurt? There’s blood—”
“Blood!” The man gasped, shuddered. “It’s in the air. I can taste it! Breathe it! It stands in pools, burns like the magma. It drips, drips. I can hear it. All cycle. Drip, drip.”
“Tomas ...” Jonathan urged.
The man paid no attention. He clutched the duke’s hands, stared out into the shadows. “She came... for her father. His blood seeped down through the floor . . . drip, drip.”
Jonathan’s face went livid. He let loose Tomas’s grasping hands, sat back on his heels.
Haplo decided it was time to intervene. Roughly crowding the duke aside, he caught hold of Tomas and shook him. “What’s going on in the city? What’s going on up there?”
“Only one alive. Only one—” He began to choke, his eyes bulged from his head, his tongue protruded from his mouth.
“Sartan! Do something, damn it! He’s having some sort of fit! I have to know—”
Alfred moved to minister to him. Too late. Tomas’s eyes rolled back in the head, his body stiffened, then went limp.
Haplo felt for a pulse, shook his head.
“Is he—? Is he ... dead?” Jonathan’s voice was barely audible. “How?”