And now Pepper was sliding jerkily through the desperately clutching fingers of the people below him. Pepper was falling down and down as the rope swung wildly, Brand roared, and the guards milled around, shouting in astonishment because their prisoners had vanished. Moaning in shame and terror, Pepper was crashing into Bird, who caught him but could not stop him. Pepper was snatching at Sonia, succeeding only in tearing off the black cap so that her coppery hair fell about her shoulders. And then Pepper was sliding helplessly over Rye and, making a last, frantic effort, grabbing Rye’s shoulder with one hand, and with the other pulling the silken hood back from Rye’s head.
The watchers in the balconies leaped to their feet, gaping and pointing at the prisoners who had suddenly appeared in mid-air. There was nothing cold and calm about them now. No sound came through their safety screens, but Rye could see their mouths moving as they babbled and exclaimed, their faces twisted with amazement, excitement and fear.
Kyte and the guards were still looking around the floor in bewilderment.
THERE!’ Brand howled. ‘THERE ABOVE YOU, KYTE, YOU DOLT! GUARDS! STOP THEM!’
Rye! Sonia’s voice clamoured faintly in Rye’s whirling mind. Take us up! Up!
But Pepper was sobbing, clinging to Rye’s back, the hood pinned beneath him. ‘I’m sorry, Spy!’ he was wailing. ‘I’m sorry. I’ve killed us all! Oh, Chub …’
‘Hold on, Pepper!’ Rye gasped. ‘Just hold on! We are out of their reach! Far out of their—’
The words stuck in his throat as there was a violent jerk. He looked down and his jaw dropped in disbelief. A guard had leaped for the trailing end of the rope, and had caught it.
But it was impossible! No one could jump so high!
And then Rye remembered. The jump would have been impossible for an ordinary man, certainly. But the Master’s guards were not human. Not human! How could he have forgotten?
Up, Rye! Higher! Rye, listen to me!
The guard was clawing at Pepper’s feet. But Pepper was protected by the armour shell, and the guard’s stubby fingers could not take hold. Rye’s skin crawled as another guard leaped, springing straight up from the floor like a huge insect, and catching the first guard’s ankles. A third grey figure followed him. The fourth did not have to jump. He merely reached up, seized his brother’s legs, and tugged till the veins stood out on his low brow.
The guards were heavy. They were enormously strong. They were dragging the rope down. The rope was becoming taut, thinning dangerously as Dirk and Sholto hauled on it with all their might.
The rope will snap, Rye thought dully. Out of the corner of his eye he saw movement further along the wall. Kyte’s remaining guards were running up the stairs to the empty balcony that hung below the bars.
One by one the guards hurled themselves at the prisoners dangling from the stretched, motionless rope. One by one, repelled by the armour shell, they bounced back and fell, screaming, to the paving below.
And then Rye saw Kyte almost directly beside him. She had vaulted to the balcony roof. Her quell weapon was in her hand. She grinned and pointed it at him.
‘STOP, KYTE!’ Brand bellowed. ‘THEY ARE TOO CLOSE TOGETHER! IF YOU QUELL ONE YOU WILL QUELL THEM ALL. THE TEST MUST GO AHEAD ON TIME—I SWORE IT TO THE MASTER!’
‘The Master will not care if the test is delayed when he hears I have captured two enemy spies!’ Kyte shrieked. ‘Spies and sorcerers, Brand! Stinking copperheads! Look at them! And how else am I to catch them but—’
‘LOOK HIGHER, YOU FOOL! NEAR THE ROOF! THE TWO PULLING THE ROPE!’
Kyte looked up. Her eyes narrowed and her lips drew back from her teeth as she recognised Sholto. She thrust the quell back into her belt and snatched another weapon—the stubby black tube she had used to smash the rock at the Diggings.
With a stab of pure terror Rye saw her swing the weapon up and aim it at his brothers who were both in clear view, flooded in sunlight and still straining at the rope.
‘Dirk! Sholto! Beware!’ he shouted.
At the same moment, Kyte fired. But something had gone wrong with her aim. Instead of the charge hitting Dirk and Sholto, it blasted into the wall beside them, shattering the bars and blowing a gaping hole in the smooth grey material below.
Snarling, Kyte fired again. And again. And each time, incredibly, her wrist twisted, so Dirk and Sholto were unhurt, while another great hole was blasted in the wall.
‘Let the rope go!’ Rye roared. ‘Dirk, Sholto! Get away!’
The testing hall was echoing with thunderous sound. The giant birds were screeching. Great chunks of the grey wall were crashing onto the paving, and the air was swirling with grey dust. Brand was bellowing at Kyte, his voice rising higher every moment, while beside him the skimmers flapped and fought, clawing at the glimmering walls of their cages.
And still Dirk and Sholto stood, bent to the rope, bathed in sunlight. And still Kyte aimed, fired and missed, her whole body shaking now, her face a mask of rage and disbelief.
It was a nightmare. A nightmare from which there was no escape.
Rye felt Sonia’s hand grip his fiercely. He tore his eyes from his brothers and looked at her.
Sonia’s hair was standing out around her head like a mass of copper wires, so bright in the sunlight that it seemed to be shooting sparks. Her face was sharp with exhaustion, her shadowed eyes like deep green pools.
‘Witch!’ cried Bean, shrinking back from her.
‘Save us, Witch!’ shouted Bird through chattering teeth.
‘I am not the one who can save us,’ Sonia said huskily, holding Rye’s gaze.
Rye, you have the power. Use it!
The voice in Rye’s mind pierced the nightmare, sharp as a blade. He felt Sonia’s fingers tighten over his hand—the hand that wore the armour shell and the speed ring. The hand that still bore the scar of the sea serpent scale …
The hand that clutched the red feather.
Rye thought of the feather, warm against his skin. He thought of what it meant, what it promised, what he needed. He forgot the skimmers. He forgot the guards, forgot Kyte, forgot Pepper’s sobs and Brand’s roars. He forgot his brothers’ peril. He thought only of the power he had been given by the Fellan Edelle—the power he alone could use, not just to save himself, but to save them all.
Up! he thought.
And felt himself soaring. Felt dusty air blowing in his face. Saw the roof rushing down to meet him. Heard Kyte’s startled yell from below, and the explosion of sound as yet another of her charges went wild. Heard the shouts of the guards clinging to the end of the rope as they were jerked upward, their strength and weight nothing to the power of the tiny charm gripped in his hand.
Then he was standing on the narrow ledge where the bars began, blinking in the fierce sunlight pouring through the grating, with Sonia sagging against him and Pepper’s arms still locked around his neck. Below him, the guards still swinging on the rope were roaring and snatching uselessly at his heels. Sholto, sweating face filmed with grey dust, white-knuckled hands clinging to the bars for dear life, was at his shoulder, edging gingerly away to give him more room.
And on Rye’s other side, separated from him by a swarm of prisoners who had abandoned the rope, was Dirk.
Moment by moment the swarm was shrinking.
Dirk was seizing the prisoners and swinging them high—up towards the hole in the grating, into the enormous hands of Bones. And Bones, his death’s head face grinning down through the gap, his impossibly long, thin arms pumping up and down like a tireless machine, was hauling one small, stocky figure after another out onto the roof.
‘STOP THEM!’ Brand’s voice, cracking with panic, echoed through the testing hall. ‘STOP THEM OR I SWEAR IT IS DEATH TO YOU ALL!’