chapter xxiv
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The sunshine was harsh to their eyes, for it was surprisingly only a little past noon. They stumbled out onto the marble steps of the cave, blinking like noal animals prematurely flushed out of an underground warren.Sabriel looked around at the quiet, sunlit trees, the placid expanse of grass, the clogged fountain.
Everything seemed so normal, so far removed from the crazed and twisted chamber of horrors that was the reservoir, deep beh their feet.
She looked at the sky, too, losing focus in the blue, retreating lines of clouds just edging about the fuzzy periphery of her vision. My father is dead, she thought. Gone forever . . .
“The road winds around the south-western part of Palace Hill,” a voice said, somewhere near her, beyond the blueness.
“What?”
“The road. Up to the West Yard.”
It was Touchstoalking. Sabriel closed her eyes, told herself to trate, to get a grip on the here and now. She opened her eyes and looked at Touchstone.
He was a mess. Face blood-streaked from his bleeding lip, hair wet, plastered flat, armor and clothes darkly sodden. Water dripped down the sword he still held out, ao the ground.
“You didn’t tell me you were a Prince,” Sabriel said, in a versational tone. She might have been enting on the weather. Her voice sourange in her own ears, but she didn’t have the energy to do anything about it.
“I’m not,” Touchstone replied, shrugging. He looked up at the sky while he spoke. “The Queen was my mother, but my father was an obscure northern noble, who ‘took up with her’ a few years after her sort’s death. He was killed in a hunting act before I was born . . . Look, shouldn’t we be going? To the West Yard?”
“I suppose so,” Sabriel said dully. “Father said there will be a Paperwing waiting for us there, and the Clayr, to tell us where to go.”
“I see,” said Touchstone. He came closer, and peered at Sabriel’s vat eyes, then took her uing and oddly floppy arm, and steered her towards the line of beech trees that marked a path to the western end of the park. Sabriel walked obediently, increasing her pace as Touchstone sped up, till they were practically jogging. Touchstone ushing on her arm, with many backward glances; Sabriel moving with a sleepwalker’s jerky animation.
A few hundred yards from the oral caves, the beeches gave way to more lawn, and a road started up the side of Palace Hill, switchbag twice to the top.
The road was well paved, but the flagstones had pushed u<u>..</u>p, or sunk down, over two decades without maintenance, and there were some quite deep ruts and holes. Sabriel caught her foot in one and she almost fell, Touchstone just catg her. But this small shock seemed to break her from the effects of the larger shock, and she found a new alertness cutting through her dumb despair.
“Why are we running?”
“Those sgers are following us,”
Touchstone replied shortly, pointing back through the park. “The ones who had the children at the gate.”
Sabriel looked where he pointed and, sure enough, there were figures slowly moving through the beech-lined path. All nihere, close together, laughing and talking.
They seemed fident Sabriel and Touchstone could not escape them, and their mood looked to be that of casual beaters, easily driving their stupid prey to a definite end. One of them saw Sabriel and Touchstog and used a gesture that distance made unclear, but robably obse. Laughter carried to them, borne by the breeze. The men’s iions were clear. Hostile.
“I wonder if they deal with the Dead,”
Sabriel said bleakly, revulsion in those words.
“To do their deeds when sunlight lends its aid to the living . . .”
“They mean no good, anyway,” said Touchstone, as they set off again, building up from a fast walk to a jog. “They have bows and I bet they shoot, uhe villagers of owe.”
“Yes,” replied Sabriel. “I hope there is a Paperwing up there . . .”
She didn’t o expand upon what would happen if it wasn’t. her of them were in any shape fhting, or much Charter Magid nine bowmen could easily finish them off—or capture them. If the men were w for Kerrigor, it would be capture, and the knife, down in the dark of the reservoir . . .
The road grew steeper, and they jogged in silence, breath ing fast and ragged, with o spare for words. Touchstone coughed, and Sabriel looked at him with , till she realized she was coughing too. The shape they were in, it might not take an arrow to finish matters.
The hill would do it anyway.
“Not . . . much . . . further,” Touchstone gasped as they tur the switchback, tired legs gaining a few seds of relief on the flat, before starting the ine.
Sabriel started to laugh, a bitter, coughing laugh, because it was still a lot further. The laugh became a shocked cry as something struck her in the ribs like a sucker punch. She fell sideways, into Touchstone, carrying both of them down onto the hard flagstones. A long-shot arrow had found its mark.
“Sabriel!” Touchstone shouted, voice high with fear and anger. He shouted her name again, and then Sabriel suddenly felt Charter Magic explode into life within him. As it grew, he leapt up, and thrust his arms out and down towards the enemy, towards that ifted marksman.
Eight small suns flowered at his fiips, grew to the size of his ched fists, and shot out, leaving white trails of after-image in the air. A split sed later, a scream from below testified to their finding at least oarget.
Numbly, Sabriel wondered how Touchstone could possibly still have the strength for such a spell. Wonder became surprise as he suddenly bent and lifted her up, pad all, cradling her in his arms—all in one easy motion. She screamed a little as the arrow shifted in her side, but Touchstone didn’t seem to notice. He threw his head back, roared out an animal-like challenge, and started to run up the road, gathering speed from an ungainly lurch to an inhuman sprint. Froth burst from his lips, blowing out over his and onto Sabriel. Every vein and muscle in his ned face corded out, and his eyes went wild with unseeing energy.
He was berserk, and nothing could stop him now, save total dismemberment. Sabriel shivered in his grasp and turned her fato his chest, too disturbed to look on the savage, sn face that bore so little resemblao the Touchstone she knew. But at least he was running away from the enemy . . .
On he ran, leaving the road, climbing over the tumbled stones of what had once been a gateway, hardly pausing, jumping from one rock to another with goat-like precision. His face was as bright red as a fire engine now, the pulse in his neck beating as fast as a hummingbird’s wings.
Sabriel, fetting her own wound in suddehat his heart would burst, started shouting at him, begging him to e out of the rage.
“Touchstone! We’re safe! Put me down! Stop! Please, stop!”
He didn’t hear her, his whole tratio on their path. Through the ruined gateway he ran, on along a walled path, nostrils wide, head darting from side to side like a stfollowing hound.
“Touchstoouchstone!” Sabriel sobbed, beating on his chest with her hands. “We’ve got away! I’m all right! Stop! Stop!”
Still he ran, through another arch; along a raised way, the stones falling away under his feet; down a short stair, jumping gaping holes. A closed door halted him for a moment, and Sabriel breathed a sigh of relief, but he <samp>?99lib?</samp>kicked at it viciously, till the rotten wood collapsed and he could back through, carefully shielding Sabriel from splinters.
Beyond the door was a large, open field, bordered by tumbledown walls. Tall weeds covered the expanse, with the occasional stunted, selfsown tree rising above them. Right at the western edge, perched where a wall had long since crumbled down the hill, there were terwings, one fag south and the other north—and two people, indistinct silhouettes bordered with the flaming e of the afternoon sun that was sinking down behind them.
Touchstone broke into a gait that could only be described as a gallop, parting the weeds like a ship ploughing a sargasso sea. He ran right up to the two standing figures, gently placed Sabriel on the ground before them—and fell over, eyes rolling back to whiteness, limbs twitg.
Sabriel tried to crawl over to him, but the pain in her side suddenly bit sharp and deadly, so it was all she could do to sit up and look at the two people, and beyond them, the Paperwings.
“Hello,” they said, in unison. “We are, for the moment, the Clayr. You must be the Abhorsen and the King.”
Sabriel stared, dry-mouthed. The sun was in her eyes, making it hard for her to see them clearly. Young women, both, with long blond hair and bright, pierg blue eyes. They wore white linen dresses, with long, open sleeves.
Freshly pressed dresses that made Sabriel feel extremely dirty and uncivilized, in her reservoirsoaked breeches and sweaty armor. Like their voices, their faces were identical. Very pretty.
Twins.
They smiled, and k down, one by Sabriel’s side, the other by Touchstone’s. Sabriel felt Charter Magic slowly welling up in them, like water rising in a spring—then it flowed into her, taking away the hurt and pain of the arrow.
o her, Touchstone’s breath became less labored, and he sank into the easy quiet of sleep.
“Thank you,” croaked Sabriel. She tried to smile, but seemed to have lost the knack of it. “There are slavers . . . human allies of the Dead . . . behind us.”
“We know,” said the duo. “But they are ten minutes behind. Your friend—the King—ran very, very fast. We saw him ruerday. Or tomorrow.”
“Ah,” said Sabriel, laboriously pushing herself up onto her feet, thinking of her father and what he had said about the Clayr fusing their whens. Best to find out what she o know before things got really fusing.
“Thank you,” she said again, for the arrow fell on the ground as she fully straightened up. It was a hunting arrow, narrow-headed, not an armor-pung bodkin. They had only meant to slow her down. She shivered, ahe hole between the armor plates. The wound didn’t feel healed exactly—just older, as if it had struck a week ago, instead of minutes.
“Father said you would be here . . . that you have been watg for us, and watg for where Kerrigor has his body.”
“Yes,” replied the Clayr. “Well, not us exactly.
We’ve only been allowed to be the Clayr today, because we’re the best Paperwing pilots . . .”
“Or actually, Ryelle is . . .” one of the twins said, pointing at the other. “But since she would need a Paperwing to fly home in, terwings were needed, so . . .”
“Sanar came too,” Ryelle tinued, pointing back at her sister.
“Both of us,” they chorused. “Now, there isn’t much time. You take the red and gold Paperwing . . . we pai in the royal colors when we knew last week. But first, there’s Kerrigor’s body.”
“Yes,” said Sabriel. Her father’s—her family’s— the Kingdom’s enemy. For her to deal with. Her burden, no matter how heavy, and how feeble her shoulders currently felt, she had to bear it.
“His body is in Aierre,” said the twins.
“But our vision is weak across the Wall, so we don’t have a map, or know the plaames.
We’ll have to show you—and you’ll have to remember.”
“Yes,” agreed Sabriel, feeling like a dull student promising to deal with a question quite beyond her. “Yes.”
The Clayr nodded, and smiled again. Their teeth were very white and even. One, possibly Ryelle—Sabriel had already got them fused— brought a bottle made of clear green glass out from the flowing sleeve of her robe, the telltale flash of Charter Magic showing it hadn’t been there before. The other woman—Sanar— produced a long ivory wand out of her sleeve.
“Ready?” they asked each other simultaneously, and, “Yes,” before their question had everated Sabriel’s tired brain.
Ryelle unstoppered the bottle with a resonant “pop,” and in one quick motion, poured out the tents along a horizontal line. Sanar, equally quickly, drew the wand across the falling water—and it froze in mid-air, to form a pane of transparent ice. A frozen window, suspended in front of Sabriel.
“Watch,” ahe women, and Sanar tapped the ice-window with her wand. It clouded over at that touch, briefly showed a se of whirling snow, a glimpse of the Wall, then steadied into a moving vision—much like a film shot from a traveling car. Wyverley College had frowned on films, but Sabriel had been to see quite a few in Bain. This was much the same, but in color, and she could hear natural sounds as clearly as if she were there.
The window showed typical Aierran farmland—a long field of wheat, ripe for the harvest, with a tractor stopped in the distas driver chatting with another man perched atop a cart, his two draft-horses standing stolidly, peering out through their blinkers.
The view raced closer towards these two men, veered around them with a snatch of caught versation, and tinued—following a road, up and over a hill, through a small wood and up to a crossroads, where the gravel intersected with a macadamized route of <dfn>.99lib.</dfer importahere was a sign there, and the “eye,” or whatever it was, zoomed up to it, till the signpost filled the whole of the ice-window. “Wyverley ? miles,”
it read, direg travelers along the major road, and they were off again, shooting down towards Wyverley village.
A few seds later, the moving image slowed, to show the familiar houses of Wyverley village; the blacksmith-cum-meic’s shop; the Wyvern public house; the stable’s trim house with the blue lantern. All landmarks known to Sabriel. She trated even more carefully, for surely the vision, having shown her a fixed point of reference, would now race off to parts of Aierre which were unknown to her.
But the picture still moved slowly. At a walking pace, it went through the village, and turned off the road, following a bridle-path up the forested hill known as Docky Point. A nice enough hill, to be sure, covered by a cork tree plantation, with some quite old trees. Its only point of i was the regular upon the hilltop . . . the . . . The image ged, closing in on the huge, grey-green stones, square-cut and tightly packed together. A relatively ret folly, Sabriel remembered from their local history lessons. A little less than two hundred years old. She’d almost visited it once, but something had ged her mind . . .
The image ged again, somehow sinking through the stone, dowween the lines of mortar, zigzagging around the blocks, to the dark chamber at its heart. For an instant the idow went pletely dark, then light came. A bronze sarcophagus lay uhe , metal crawling with Free Magic perversions of Charter marks. The vision dodged these shifting marks, peed the bronze. A body lay inside, a living body, wreathed in Free Magic.
The se shifted, moving with jagged difficulty to the face of the body. A handsome face, that swam closer and closer into focus, a face that showed what Kerrigor once had been. The human face ir, his features clearly showing that he had shared a mother with Touchstone.
Sabriel stared, sied and fasated by the similarities between the half-brothers—then the vision suddenly blurred, spinning into greyness, greyness apanied by rushing water. Death.
Something huge and monstrous was wading against the current, a jagged cutting of darkness, formless aureless, save for two eyes that burned with unnatural flame. It seemed to see her beyond the ice-window, and lurched forward, two arms like blown storm clouds reag forward.
“Abhorsen’s Get!” screamed Kerrigor. “Your blood will gush upoones . . .”
His arms seemed about to e through the window, but suddenly, the ice cracked, the pieces collapsing into a pile of swift-melting slush.
“You saw,” the Clayr said together. It wasn’t a question. Sabriel nodded, shaking, her thoughts still on the likeness between Kerrigor’s inal human body and Touchstone. Where was the fork in their paths? What had put Rogir’s feet on the long road that led to the abomination known as Kerrigor? “We have four minutes,” announced Sanar.
“Till the slavers e. We’ll help you get the King to your Paperwing, shall we?”
“Yes, please,” replied Sabriel. Despite the fear- some sight of Kerrigor’s raw spirit form, the vision had imbued her with a new and definite sense of purpose. Kerrigor’s body was in Aierre. She would find it aroy it, and then deal with his spirit. But they had to get to the body first . . .
The two women lifted Touchstone up, grunting with the effort. He was no lightweight at any time, and now was even heavier, still sodden with water from his dug in the reservoir. But the Clayr, despite their rather ethereal appearance, seemed to manage well enough.
“We wish you luck, cousin,” they said, as they walked slowly to the red and gold Paperwing, balanced so close to the edge of the broken wall, the Saere glistening white and blue below.
“Cousin?” Sabriel murmured. “I suppose we are cousins—of a sort, aren’t we?”
“Blood relatives, all the children of the Great Charters,” the Clayr agreed. “Though the dwindles . . .”
“Do you always—know what is going to happen?”
Sabriel asked, as they gently lowered Touchstoo the back of the cockpit, and strapped him in with the belts normally used for seg luggage.
Both the Clayr laughed. “No, thank the Charter! Our family is the most numerous of the bloodlines, and the gift is spread among many. Our visions e in snatches and splinters, glimpses and shadows. When we must, the whole family spend its strength to narrow ht—as it has dohrough us today.
Tomorroill be back to dreams and fusion, not knowing where, when or what we see. Now, we have only two minutes . . .”
Suddenly, they hugged Sabriel, surprising her with the obvious warmth of the gesture. She hugged them back, gladly, grateful for their care.
With her father gone, she had no family left— but perhaps she would find sisters in the Clayr, and perhaps Touchstone would be . . .
“Two minutes,” repeated both the women, one in each ear. Sabriel let them go, and hurriedly took The Book of the Dead and the two Charter Magic books from her pack, wedging them dowo Touchstone’s slightly sn form.
After a sed’s thought, she also stuffed in the fleece-lined oilskin and the boat cloak.
Touchstone’s swords went into the special holders , but the pad the rest of its tents had to be abandoned.
“ stop, the Wall,” Sabriel muttered as she climbed into the craft, trying not to think about what would happen if they had to land somewhere uncivilized iween.
The Clayr were already in their green and silver craft, and, as Sabriel did up her straps, she heard them begin to whistle, Char<s>?</s>ter Magic streaming out into the air. Sabriel licked her lips, summoned her breath and strength, and joined in. Wind rose behind both the craft, tossing black hair and blond, lifting the Paperwings’ tails and jostling their wings.
Sabriel took a breath after the wind-whistling, and stroked the smooth, laminated paper of the hull. A brief image of the first Paperwing came to mind, broken and burning in the depths of Holehallow.
“I hope we fare better together,” she whispered, before joining with the Clayr to whistle the last he pure clear sound that would wake the Charter Magi their craft.
A sed later, twht-eyed Paperwings leapt out from the ruined palace of Belisaere, glided down almost to the swell in the Sea of Saere, then rose to circle higher and higher above the hill. One craft, of green and silver, turo the north-west. The other, of red and gold, turned south.
Touchstone, waking to the rush of cold air on his face, and the unfamiliar sensation of flying, groggily muttered, “What happened?”
“We’re going to Aierre,” Sabriel shouted.
“Across the Wall, to find Kerrigor’s body—aroy it!”
“Oh,” said Touchstone, who only heard “across the Wall.” “Good.”
百度搜索 Sabriel (The Abhorsen Trilogy) 天涯 或 Sabriel (The Abhorsen Trilogy) 天涯在线书库 即可找到本书最新章节.