Kall went down in a protective crouch. He swung around and saw the halfling reloading his sling. Aazen motioned the halfling back and stepped to block Kall’s path. Behind him, Varan rolled Dantane’s unconscious body over, feeling inside the wizard’s robes. He removed the portal key and turned. Kall saw his face clearly for the first time.
Varan looked terrified.
Kall sprang up. He raised his weapon to cut a path, but Aazen was there, his blade ringing off Kall’s enchanted sword. “I need him alive,” Aazen said, shoving Kall back.
“He’ll kill us all!” Kall swung the blade high, angling it at his best friend’s head. He did it without thinking, putting killing force behind the blow.
Aazen ducked, maneuvering to attack from Kall’s wounded side. Kall twisted and blocked, but was forced to retreat a step away from Varan.
“That’s it, Kall,” said Aazen, stalking forward, inviting Kall to continue his attack. “This is exactly how I need you to be.”
Kall swung again, bewildered. Had Aazen gone mad as well? “Meisha!” he shouted. If she could get Varan’s attention, get through to him, they might have a chance.
Varan took the key and crawled to the dark pit. Tears streamed from his good eye, and he clutched the empty socket, making pitiful mewling noises as he moved.
“Please, don’t!” Varan cried as he approached the edge of the chasm. He stared down into the dark, his terror magnified by whatever he saw. “Don’t make me!” He grabbed the pouch at his neck, as if to tear it away. His hands locked into claws around the bag, and he screamed. With a violent motion, he reached inside the pouch and pulled out something small and black. Fumbling, he pressed the object against his empty socket.
It was an eye, Kall realized, but it was no human orb.
Black, with thready gray veins bulging from the sides, the eye was too large for the space Varan intended. Kall watched, sickened, as the wizard forced the organ into place with a howl of agony.
Varan lifted the stolen portal key in his other hand and slammed it down against the rocks. Words of power, dredged up from some unwilling place deep inside him, spilled out into the darkness.
The cavern began to shake in great, wracking tremors. Light flared, a halo that burst from the chasm, momentarily blinding everyone in the cavern. Meisha tried to fly, but a falling stalactite struck her out of the air. The blow knocked her senseless. She dropped, straight toward the pit.
Kall saw her fall, saw her body disappear into the green light. He cried out in wordless grief that manifested in a jarring blow against Aazen’s sword.
She was gone, Kall thought. He hadn’t been able to save her after all.
Grief melted into rage. Kall batted aside Aazen’s unresisting blade and knocked him to the floor. For a moment, he fought the urge to keep going, to run his blade through Aazen’s heart. “Kall!” Morgan cried.
Chest heaving, Kall tore himself away from his friend’s prone body and ran for the chasm. The cavern was still shuddering. The tremors seemed to come from deep below ground. More stalactites and rock shook free of the ceiling and dropped in a deadly rain. He dodged a spear that plunged to the floor where he and Aazen had just been fighting. Aazen had gotten to his feet and was looking to his own remaining men, issuing commands Kall could not hear over the rumbling.
Kall made it to Dantane. He hauled the wizard up into a sitting position. Varan had collapsed on the stones.
Dantane opened his eyes. They widened—he grabbed Kall by his uninjured forearm. “ ’Ware!” he cried.
Kall reversed his blade, stabbing backward blindly, but Garavin was already there, using his maul to pluck a Shadow Thief off his feet like a rag doll.
“We have to go!” the dwarf shouted over the rumbling. “The place’ll come down on our heads.”
“Tunnel’s blocked!” called Laerin from the far side of the cavern. He held Morgan by one shoulder, Talal the other. They limped across the room to join the group. The Shadow Thieves left alive had ceased their attacks in light of the greater danger. “It’ll take a while to clear it.”
“We don’t have any time,” said Kall.
“It’s another portal,” Dantane said, pointing to the glowing green halo, which had formed over the chasm rather than the shaft above. “The wizard wanted someone to go through it.”
“Like Hells,” said Morgan. “I say we go back through the shaft—take our chances with the Shadow Thieves.”
Kall stared down the chasm. “Meisha’s down there,” he said. “She may still be alive. The rest of you use the key to activate the other portal once I’m gone, but I’m going through this one.” Garavin called Borl to his side. “I’ll take my chances with ye,” he said simply.
“As will I,” said Laerin.
Morgan spat. “Don’t be believing him!” he said. “He’s just doin’ it to make me look bad.” He faced the portal reluctantly. “Let’s go then, if we’re goin’.”
Kall helped Dantane to his feet. One by one, they stepped off the stones, into the green light, until only he and the wizard remained.
“What about him?” asked Dantane.
Kall knew he meant Varan, but Kall stared across the room at Aazen. He’d gathered his remaining forces under a protected shelf of rock near the blocked tunnel, but even that meager cover was cracking, coming apart like the rest of the cavern.
“He’s on his own,” said Kall. “So are you, Dantane, if you leave now.”
The wizard shook his head. “I haven’t gotten my reward yet. I go with you.”
“Suit yourself.” They stepped off the edge, into nothingness.
Chapter Twenty-Six
Balram stepped into Morels main hall. He felt as if time had reversed itself. Suddenly he was back in Esmeltaran, his men at his side, seeking Morel’s death.
But the setting had changed, and it wasn’t Morel or his son who faced him from the top of the ballroom staircase. A woman stood there, wrapped in a hooded cloak, her face painted in forest colors. A long spear rested comfortably in the crook of her right arm. She looked like a savage carved from stone—beautiful and cold—staring at him as if she craved his death.
“Lady Morel.” He bowed in greeting, allowing his men to fan out across the hall. If she was intimidated by the show of strength, her expression did nothing to give it away. She walked down the stairs, her soft boots padding against the wood. She stopped on the first landing.
“Might I have the pleasure of knowing you?” Balram asked when she said nothing.
Certainly, sir, she replied, but Balram could not hear her voice. He could only follow the movement of her lips to make out her words. She tipped her spear horizontal and threw. A soft, singing chime filled the ballroom. The spear impaled the man standing just to Balram’s left, one who’d been taking slow steps toward the base of the stairs.
Keeping his eyes trained on the woman, Balram bent to see that the man was dead. As he did so, his eyes fell on the druid’s spear. Tied among its decorations was the emerald-stone symbol of Morel. When Balram’s fingers brushed it, the woman spoke again. This time her voice rang out clear across the hall, making Balram startle.
I am Cesira of the Starwater Six, Quiet One of Silvanus, and the lady of this house—she inclined her head stiffly—and the doom of Balram Kortrun. She glided back a step and pressed her hand to the banister rail in a certain spot.
Balram’s eyes widened in shocked recognition. Gods, she couldn’t know the locations of the …
“Fall back!” he cried, much too late.
The floor tiles running down the center of the hall creaked from years of lying stationary, but the trap still functioned.
Spikes exploded from the floor, catching the men behind him in a deadly hedge. Two went down as the sharpened edges burst through the backs of their legs. The rest managed to leap away, but the trap had cut them off from the exit.