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The beast was playing with him, trying to shake him loose from his perch without an effort. Blood dripped from his fangs onto Kall’s face. When Kall didn’t move, the beast stepped back, and a veil of darkness descended around them.

Agony exploded in Kall’s injured hands. Sickeningly, he realized the demon had sunk his jaws into the backs of them.

With a shout of pain, Kall let go, and found to his horror that his hands were impaled, tangled in the thing’s mouth. Curling his legs, Kall kicked out against the bridge, away from the demon’s face. The demon’s hot breath was a furnace of filth and rot. He pulled his hands free, and then he was falling.

He passed out of the globe of darkness in time to see a shower of magical bolts streak above him, into the sphere. Kall prayed the magic came from Dantane, that the wizard would be able to save the others.

He looked beneath him, but all the bridges were out of reach. He plummeted past the last one and down into another, greater darkness. His vision failed as the light from above faded. His ears filled with rushing air, then suddenly, nothing. His descent came to an abrupt halt.

Kall waited for his bones to shatter against the stone. His chin struck his chest, mashing his tongue between his teeth, but other than that small pain, he felt whole.

Groaning, Kall rolled to his stomach. A wave of vertigo swept over him as he realized he was staring into the bottomless chasm, suspended by some invisible string. Pumping his legs, he felt the fly spell propel him upward.

Dantane, he thought, or Meisha. Could it be she survived? Trepidation warred with giddy relief that the Harper might still be alive.

Kall put his boot against the cavern wall and pushed off, hurling himself back to the battle.

When he emerged into the light, his suspicion was confirmed. Meisha and Dantane stood on the bridge with Talal between them. Meisha saw Kall coming and motioned to the demon, which stalked cautiously down the walkway toward the group. The globe of darkness had gone, and Dantane continued to hurl spells, but the demon kept coming, measuring the wizard’s strength.

Kall flew up from beneath, his sword leading. He slashed along the demons flank and kept going, up out of his reach. On the bridge, the advantage was temporarily theirs. As long as they could stay out of the demon’s reach and resist his aura, they could fight. If he managed to herd them back into the tunnels, they were mice in the snake hole.

A massive, clawed paw struck out at Kall’s face. He flipped over backward and came from beneath with his blade out straight. He stabbed for the demons chest, but he dodged away.

Kall pulled out of the roll and floundered, losing precious time as he righted himself. His grasp of the flight spell was tenuous at best. He took a claw to his shoulder for his mistake, a wound that burned down the length of his arm.

Kall circled under the bridge and came up in a burst of speed, hoping for surprise, but the demon was gone. Weary of the wizard pricking at him, the beast chose to charge down the bridge to the spellcasters and Talal.

Dantane threw out a hand as though to ward off an attack. In response, a wall of thick stone sprouted from the bridge, growing like a blunt spike to intercept the demon’s charge. The demon slammed into the wall, shaking the entire bridge, but the spell held firm.

“The rope!” Kall yelled up to Garavin. He grabbed the dangling end and flew over the wall. The demon continued to pound and claw against the barrier. He would wear it down quickly, Kall knew.

He floated down, putting the rope in Talal’s hands as Garavin retied it from above. Meisha flew beside him, helping the boy scramble to the relative safety of the upper bridge.

“He’s breaking through,” said Dantane. The wizard weaved on his feet, drained by the force of all the released Art.

“You have to keep him on the bridge,” said a new voice.

Kall reacted instantly. He swung his sword with all his strength.

Aazen’s blade caught it. Steel sang loudly in the cavern.

Kall cursed. Now they were pinned from both sides.

Aazen lowered his weapon, motioning the man behind him to stay back. “I’m not going to kill you at the moment, Kall,” he said.

“A pleasant fact to know,” Kall remarked, keeping his sword raised.

“At least not until the demon is dead. Get to the other bridge,” Aazen said, addressing his man.

“No. Over there.” Kall pointed to the closest walkway below, well out of range of his friends above.

Aazen nodded, and the thief tossed a grappling hook out over the chasm. Aazen remained with Kall and Dantane.

“I will guard the wizard,” he offered.

This elicited a sardonic laugh from Kall. “How generous of you.”

Aazen waved a hand impatiently. “We have no time to argue. Fly and work that sword while you have the opportunity.”

“He’s right,” said Dantane unexpectedly. “Go.”

Kall shook his head. “Don’t trust him.”

“I do not,” Dantane snapped. “I’m not as blind as you. But he has it aright. Go, while you can.”

Kall’s gaze remained on Aazen, silently promising what would happen if he betrayed them. He stepped off the walkway, allowing himself to float in the air. He turned, flying toward the disintegrating wall.

He landed on the top in a skid. Using the spell to aid his balance, Kall slid down the opposite side. He brought his sword down vertically just as the demon came at the wall again. This time the demon couldn’t dodge, and his blade sheared into the beast’s ribs. Kall twisted aside, expecting an immediate retaliation, but the demon fell back, surprised, favoring his side.

Kall pressed, stabbing him in the haunch, anywhere he could reach, using his sword as leverage to propel himself back into flight.

Recovering, the demon followed and struck out, snagging Kall’s leg with a massive claw. The demon dragged him back down to the ground. Kall felt the claws penetrate his boots, burning, adding to his other wounds.

Not enough, Kall thought as he felt himself rolled onto his stomach, his arms trapped beneath his body. He would run out of fight—they all would—long before the demon was finished.

“Keeper of knowledge—sever the link.”

Garavin turned from the battle at the sound of the voice, compelled by a force impossible to resist.

The ghost of one of the long-dead Howlings stood before him, spilling silver light from the sockets of his vacant eyes. Garavin looked involuntarily at the light, and the symbol at his throat began to burn. He heard the voices of the others, screaming at Kall, screaming for Garavin to help him, but the dwarf stood frozen. Couldn’t they see him? Even Borl wasn’t reacting. How could they not see?

“Dumathoin,” Garavin spoke, in a voice rigid with awe. He slid to his knees. “Lord Under Mountain, we cannot defeat the demon. Aid us, please.”

The god’s essence spoke through the ghost. “Secret keeper, call to him.” The avatar reached out to touch his forehead. “Show him.”

Tears spilled from Garavin’s eyes, hissing as they touched Dumathoin’s holy symbol. He felt the power grow inside him, and he knew what form it would have to take. “I understand, Lord Under Mountain. I obey.”

Kall felt Dantane’s energy spells reverberate through the demon’s claw, knocking the beast off balance. Whether it had any effect other than to incense the creature, Kall didn’t know, but he used the distraction to crawl out from under the demons bloody paw and free his sword. Gripping the blade, he realized the vibration wasn’t coming from the demon.

The magic came from his sword.