Lanalor spake to the Chaos spirit, saying: If the Unykorn cannot be slain,
what power would bind it against its will?
The Chaos spirit replied: If you desire it, I will gift you with
matter from the Void, that is Unmade.
With this you can fashion a prison
which nothing made by the Song will ever break.
LEGENDSONG OF THE UNYKORN
Ember looked about her with a feeling of wonder. She had expected the main hall of the citadel palace to be as dark and brooding as Tarsin’s private audience room. Instead, it was a long airy corridor running along the side of the palace and overlooking the sea crashing onto the cliffs below. On the wall facing the water was a glimmering, pastel-toned tile mosaic that offered a surreal seascape which appeared to waver. Closer, Ember realised the rushing sound that she had taken for the waves was a constant stream of water running down the mosaic. On the other side, the whole apartment was open to the sea and air, with only spiderweb-soft drifts of waving cloth hung to flap and coil at regular intervals. There were no formal seating arrangements. People were sitting or reclining on low stools or on piles of cushions. They rose to serve themselves from tables laden with food, and servitors carried glasses of cirul or juices on trays. In the very centre of the room was a huge white aviary, filled with the chittering, red-plumed and beaked butterflies the Keltans called flyts. Somewhere out of sight, musicians played softly.
The effect of the whole together was light and airy and unexpectedly beautiful.
Those assembled reminded her of butterflies as well, in their loose silky draperies and dazzling head-dresses shimmering with jewels and flowers, with their chatter and peals of laughter. Her own purple and violet dress seemed harsh against this pastel-hued court, though it suited her sombre mood.
People stared at her when she entered on Tarsin’s arm, but their eyes were avid with fascination rather than hostility. The Holder had changed into a loose scarlet toga, edged in gold, but he had clearly not bathed. There was grease on his chin, his hair was a matted nest, and his body odour was horrendous. Yet he must have some aesthetic sense, for he had frowned at Ember’s attire, commanding Asa to send dressmakers to produce a wardrobe fitting an honoured guest of the Holder.
She had thanked him, trying to maintain the sort of distracted look she imagined an unworldly visionweaver would affect, and hoping fervently she was not in the apartment when the dressmakers arrived since it would mean their plans had failed.
Tarsin brought her to an alcove where there was a low couch draped in scarlet silk. He handed her to the seat, before sitting down beside her. This gesture met a buzz of talk, and Ember guessed it must be a mark of special favour that she had been seated first by him.
Immediately people had begun to come up and bow to Tarsin, and to her, and present themselves and their children and friends. Ember had smiled and nodded, knowing she could be seen only faintly through the veil. It was all she could do not to shudder when she saw people kissing Tarsin’s filthy, black-nailed fingers.
Her eyes found Anyi and Feyt, and she was comforted to see them, though she knew she must not go to them. Safer for them all if it were thought a coolness had sprung up between her and the soulweaver. The night before, they had decided Feyt would retire early with Anyi, so that neither would be present when the subject of Bleyd arose. Aside from anything else, Feyt had thought it a wise idea to keep the volatile Anyi from hearing any discussion of his brother’s supposed crime, though he had promised to control himself.
She caught sight of Kerd talking animatedly to a man with a wave of sapphires on his head. Looking for Unys, she found the girl seated with her stepmother, and was chilled to see Coralyn watching her like a cat eyeing a mouse. She was fervently glad that Alene had agreed that she should wear both mask and veil. What she really wanted was a brick wall between herself and this blue-eyed woman with the glittering head-dress and gown of shimmering blue.
But another part of Ember wanted to tear the veil aside and look at everything: the mural and the sea and the fluttering butterflies that sang like birds, even Coralyn who was as lovely as she was vicious. She wanted to eat everything up with her one hungry eye, because she was beginning to fear that she would not see anything for much longer, not this world, and not her own.
That brought back, with a sickening spasm of fear, the memory of the terrifying period of blindness she had suffered that morning. Feyt and the soulweaver had been talking about freeing Bleyd, and Ember had fallen blind without warning.
In the eternity of those minutes when she could see nothing, she had understood starkly that time was running out.
Bad, her mind whispered. Very, very bad.
The darkness had seemed to widen like a mouth, and she let herself drift into it, alone and floating as she had been in the beginning of her life on this world; her only life, since the other remained lost to her. Drifting on a sea of shadow, she let herself be carried into the blackness, from which the sound of tortured horses, and the touch of the hand and lips of a beast who was partly a man, had once kept her.
This time it was Alene who drew her back.
‘Ember, I cannot do this alone. I am too weak. You must fight …’
The soulweaver’s voice had come to her like a dream, woven with music, and that thought had stilled her deadly descent. For it was the music of the dream wood, bringing her to light and the knowledge that this blackness was not a blindness of the eyes, but of the mind. A withdrawal that, in her world, would be called catatonic.
The song and Alene had brought her back. She had opened her eyes to see Alene swaying over her. The soulweaver looked brutally ill, black bruises under her burning eyes accentuating the pallor of her skin. Ember stared into her own Dorian Gray portrait, knowing that all she saw in the face of this thin, blind seer was hers.
Feyt had helped Alene to sit and for a minute or two the soulweaver had dry-retched.
‘She cannot do this again,’ Feyt had said to Ember, almost accusingly.
‘I know,’ Ember had whispered back.
I’m frightened! she had wanted to scream. The blackness seemed to hover over her, red-tinged as the shadow that had swooped on the red-haired singer in the dream glade.
Feyt knelt before her, and Ember had felt how wrong it was that this strong proud brave woman should kneel to her. Pity and compassion showed in the amazon’s eyes.
‘I do not presume, Lady, to know what you can be feeling and I am no balladeer with words. A moment past, Alene reproached me because I spoke of using you to bring Bleyd from the cliff cells, when I had not asked if you were willing. Forgive me. But I ask it, even now after what has happened. I ask it for Bleyd, who loves you no matter that you do not love him, and who will surely die without your help; for Anyi, who loves his brother and whom I think you care about. For the sake of this world into which you have been drawn and which harms you so deeply, even so do I ask: will you help us before you go from this island tomorrow?’
Even with fear lying heavy as a red-tinged stone over her heart, Ember was moved by the grace of the amazon’s words. She was so very afraid of what was happening to her, but truly what was she being asked to do? Very little, really. To suggest a thing that might or might not be agreed to. Nothing more, and tomorrow, no matter what happened, she would be at sea, bound for Darkfall and a healer who would cure her.
She had taken a deep breath and found a shred of courage in the thought that if Alene could bear the killing weight of her sickness, she could bear the weight of this one small task.
‘I will do as you ask, though I think you have lied to me.’ She had made herself smile a little. ‘You said you were not a balladeer, Feyt, but I think your words were worthy of a balladeer’s song.’
For the first time since Ember had known her, the amazon looked taken aback. But almost at once, she had regained her composure, rising and bowing. ‘Thank you. This is no small thing, Lady, and if ever you ask a boon of me, I swear it will be granted.’
No small thing to offer in return, for all it was unlikely Ember would ever call that promise in.
Feyt had turned to Alene then, still diffident, to ask another thing. ‘Soulweaver, it is in my mind that you should leave the citadel when Ember does, and go with her to Darkfall on the Stormsong. Tareed and I can take care of Anyi. What more can you do when Tarsin will not heed you, and with the Draaka arriving at any moment? Especially weakened as you are now.’
‘I would abandon honour if I went, Feyt. The oath I made as soulweaver to the Holder was not to a man but to Lanalor’s Charter and I would die before breaking it. Do not speak of this again. It ill becomes a myrmidon to talk of flight when there is danger.’
Feyt had coloured. ‘Forgive me. I am a myrmidon, but I am a person too, and I fear for you.’
Alene rose and lifted her fingers to the amazon’s cheek. ‘My dear, dearest protector. I cannot leave this isle, but if it please you, I will leave this day for the soulweaver’s hut.’
‘Tarsin will not permit …’
‘He will, if I explain I need herbs to treat Ember.’
‘It … would please me,’ Feyt said humbly.
Alene smiled. ‘Then I shall go. It may well be thought that I am jealous of the visionweaver who has replaced me in Tarsin’s favour, and that is all to the good. You will remain here, and Tareed will accompany me. Tarsin will take your presence here as surety that I mean to return. You will see that Bleyd is freed and hidden, and ensure Ember goes to the Stormsong. Then you will come to the hut to let me know what has transpired. If all is well, we will return to the citadel and I will explain that I did not come back at once because I was ill.’
None of them had spoken of what would happen if all was not well.
‘What about Anyi?’ Feyt had asked, only moments before the boy had returned with Tareed.
‘I will take him with me to the hut.’
In the end, perhaps predictably, Anyi had refused utterly to go with Alene, saying, with that thread of steel that seemed to be part of his nature, that he would not leave the citadel until he knew his brother was safe. Feyt, unexpectedly, had suggested it might be as well for all of them if Anyi did stay, for if he went with the soulweaver, it would give the court more cause than ever to speculate on the connection between the green and the misty isle over the poisoning.
Besides which, Anyi had pointed out, he had to attend the dusk festivities organised to honour Ember. Fortunately for their plans the Draaka, who had been expected to arrive that afternoon, was late. There were rumours of a wild storming from Vespians whose ships had limped into port having been lashed by the edges of it. Now no one knew when the Draaka and her entourage would arrive because calls could not be made to or from ships blown off course by stormings.
‘Nevertheless,’ the servitor had announced in ringing tones, ‘nevertheless my Lord Holder decrees that the celebration planned for this night will honour the visionweaver, Ember.’
Feyt had feared that Tarsin would refuse permission for Alene to go to her hut, but he had not, and the soulweaver left the palace without fanfare just before dusk, accompanied by Tareed. Ember had been reminded not to raise the subject of bringing Bleyd from the cells until the very end of the evening when Alene was far away and everyone was tired and somewhat the worse for cirul. She was to say her visions came most often in the early morning, and to suggest Bleyd be brought to her then, in the hope that seeing him would enable her to vision the accomplice. She was to mention a vision she had experienced during which a woman had held the bottles of poison. She was to imply the woman might have been a soulweaver, but she must make it clear that the vision had been ambiguous.
That would protect her from Coralyn.
Let someone else suggest where Bleyd should be examined, Feyt warned, so long as it was out of the dungeons. It must not look as if Ember had set Bleyd up to be taken. If their plot worked, the Shadowman’s people would be informed at once, and they would come under cover of the night and conceal themselves in readiness for the abduction of the Fomhikan. Already, outside the palace grounds, another of the Shadowman’s people waited with a carriage to bring Ember to the Stormsong the moment her part was over. Revel had been alerted to be ready for immediate departure.
A diversion had been planned within the grounds, to attract any legionnaires on duty at the time of the abduction, and a false trail laid into the thick forest on the south side of the citadel to give the impression that Bleyd had been taken to one of the casting settlements to prevent the possibility of the Edict bell being rung. This was to ensure that the Stormsong could depart unhindered. It would also create maximum confusion so that the ruffians could get Bleyd deep into the citadel, and hide him before a search of the settlement was initiated. Later he would, if necessary, be smuggled onto a ship for Fomhika.
The possibility that the Edict bell would be rung too soon was the weakest part of their plan, for if it rang before the ship cast off from the shore to halt all travel to and from the island, Revel would be bound by it, and would not go. That frightened Ember, but she told herself sternly that hers was not the only life at stake. She had more chance than Bleyd to survive. Unless he could escape by Kalinda’s zenith, he would be judged and, soon after, executed.
With a start, Ember realised Tarsin was offering her a goblet. She accepted it, trying to shake off the dreaminess that had come over her. She must not let her mind drift away. Not here where she was being watched by too many eyes. Lifting the veil, she drank sparingly.
She noticed Coralyn whispering into the ear of an exquisite young man with long golden curls and clear blue eyes. One of his arms was caught up into a silken sling and this told Ember he was Coralyn’s other son, Kalide, who had been gored by some animal on the hunt.
He bore himself with a proud haughty air, yet he deferred so obviously to his mother that Ember did not wonder Coralyn would prefer this son on the throne.
Ember felt again the dizzy drawing away from the world that preceded a vision. Then she was soaring through the swirling darkness towards a glow of light, buffeted by eldritch winds. She hummed softly, and was surprised to find that it stabilised her motion.
She found herself looking at Kalide, but a much-changed Kalide. He was older and little remained of his good looks. Sitting in the corner of a stone room, he wore clothes that were stiff with grease, his hair was matted with sweat and his skin grey with ingrained filth. The sunlight fell full through a window onto his face as he laughed, a mindless cawing, blue eyes aglitter with insane glee.
He’s mad! Ember thought.
Then with a gut-wrenching lurch she was back at the hall, gazing through the smoky folds of her veil at Kalide, throwing his head back and laughing merrily. Her vision must have lasted bare seconds and miraculously no one had noticed anything.
She heard Coralyn’s throaty chuckle mingle with Kalide’s laughter and, studying the pair, she puzzled over her vision. What had she seen? The future? A possible future?
A wave of nerve pain rose in her neck and shoulders and she sat trembling and enduring. Then, as swiftly as it had come, the tide of pain ebbed. She lifted the goblet and drank. Over the rim she saw that both mother and son were looking at her now, and neither of them was smiling. She repressed a shiver at the chill weight of their regard, knowing what it would mean if either of them guessed who and what she really was.
And who and what am I? she wondered, looking out to the night sky and the alien stars. She had become part of the fabric of this world, and yet she was not of it. Not Songborn, for all that music meant to her.
Which brought her to the farewell gift Alene had given her. The a’luwtha. That and the name of the healer who would cure her.
‘There is a soulweaver on Darkfall called Signe whose healing powers are very great,’ she had said. ‘She will be able to help you. The voyage will be bad, but Signe is at the end of it.’ Then she had held forth the a’luwtha.
‘Carry this with you to Darkfall and perhaps some day, by the grace of the Song, I will return there to claim it. I think you will find a use for this when there is pain, Ember, for music has great power in our world,’ she had said very gently.
‘In my world as well,’ Ember said and, although she wanted to refuse, she took it and had not been able to help her fingers caressing the lovely thing. In a way the a’luwtha was a promise.
‘Farewell, Ember,’ Alene had said finally, weariness deep in her face. No tears, though.
Tareed had given her a bone-crushing hug and the young myrmidon, very young in that moment, had wept. ‘Song keep you safe and … Oh Ember, I wish I had heard you play the a’luwtha.’
She had been both friend and sister to Ember in the short time they had known one another. For that, Ember had mustered what little kindness she possessed in the grip of her fears to say, ‘I will play for you one day. I promise.’
‘I will hold you to that,’ Tareed said, brushing her tears away. ‘Something tells me I have seen only half of you until you do, and I would like to know the whole of you.’
They had bid Feyt and Anyi a less intense farewell, because they would be joining them in a few days. Watching them go, Ember wondered if she would ever see them again.
‘They have a long way to go and it is late,’ Anyi worried.
‘There is a cave stocked against such a moment as this,’ Feyt assured him. ‘They will spend the night there and go the rest of the way tomorrow.’
She had gone on to say that the Shadowman’s agent had been elated to learn that Alene had sanctioned the request for help. Never could it be said again that the Shadowman did not serve the misty isle.
Feyt had taken Anyi to his rooms to prepare for the evening festivities, leaving Ember to make her own preparations. She had sat for a long time with the a’luwtha in her arms, but she had not played it. Something stayed her hand because again she sensed her forgotten self hovering; a ghost, waiting to be summoned by the voice of the instrument. And with it, whatever had caused her to forget in the first place. Something that included the music from the dream, and the blonde-haired girl and her own mysterious sickness. Something dark.
Soon, she promised the ghost. Just let me get away from Ramidan. Once I am on the boat and out to sea, I can bear anything.
She had laid the instrument aside gently and begun to make up her face. Feyt had returned with a resplendent Anyi in a blue silk tunic and red hose to escort her to Tarsin’s chamber.
Now the evening was drawing to a close. Ember felt her nervousness increasing.
‘Are you enjoying yourself?’ Tarsin asked suddenly, looming over her.
‘I am not used to such luxury …’ Ember answered, trying not to look into his vacant gaze. She focused her senses on the delicate fragrance of her veil, mentally blessing Feyt for scenting it, and wondered if it was not late enough yet. Anyi and Feyt had departed unnoticed, as had Kerd of Fomhika. Many of the guests were lolling back with vacant expressions or laughing too loudly.
‘It must … seem very gay to you here, compared to barren Sheanna,’ Tarsin was saying, stumbling over his words as if his brain stumbled over his thoughts.
It occurred to Ember that it would be foolish to leave what must be said until Tarsin was drunk.
‘It is not like Sheanna here,’ she said, trying to think of a way to bring Bleyd into the conversation. It would be perfect to do it now, when no one else was listening, and she did not want Tarsin to question her any more about Sheanna. There was still a danger she might inadvertently reveal that she had never set foot there.
‘I have heard it said Sheanna is fearful dull,’ Tarsin droned on.
‘I find it peaceful,’ Ember said softly.
‘You have powerful soulweaving tendencies. Did you never think of offering your skills to Darkfall?’
Ember considered her words carefully before uttering them. ‘It is not a life I would choose.’
The whole court knew that Tarsin was determined to find a cure for Ember’s illness, for on the same day as her audience in his private chamber he had sent out scrolls to announce a great reward to anyone who could cure her. Potions and remedies of all description had already begun flowing in, and had been sent to Ember in the soulweaver’s apartment. Many of these Alene had pronounced harmless if also useless, but quite a few of the potions and unguents offered were addictive drugs that would steal her wits away, and two contained virulent poisons. Of course, these, like many of the offerings, came anonymously.
‘You might have healed yourself if you had become a soulweaver,’ Tarsin said now. ‘Does not a soulweaver draw on the healing power of the sacred Horn?’
‘Not all soulweavers can heal,’ Ember said softly, wondering what the sacred Horn was. ‘I have no power of healing and only a little visioning ability.’
Tarsin’s eyes drifted before they came to rest on her again. ‘You saw a vision of two traitors plotting murder and that was true, yet the soulweavers claim that only they see the truest visions.’
‘Soulweavers when they vision recognise truth,’ Ember said, repeating what Alene had told her. ‘I do not.’
Tarsin thumped at his knee impatiently. ‘Your vision saved my life. That’s truth enough for me. Now I have tasters eating my food exactly as I do so that such a plot would not succeed again.’
‘That is wise,’ Ember approved. She willed Tarsin to raise the subject of Bleyd. He was not so far from it, she sensed, and it would seem much less suspicious if he mentioned it first.
Tarsin scowled. ‘Since I ascended to the throne six tasters have died, and four more were poisoned while I was yet a mermod.’
Ember wondered who had made the other attempts. Surely not all had been at Coralyn’s instigation.
Tarsin went on. ‘Once, a mermod chosen by Darkfall Decree was regarded with awe, for all believed that the seers worked for the good of Keltor. Poisonings were uncommon, because it was seen that their choices were wise and untainted by greed since they did not concern themselves with worldly things. Now they dabble in politics and interfere in my domain, claiming that is their province, too. My mother thinks I should cut myself off from them since they have grown so unpopular with the people.’
‘Perhaps,’ Ember said slowly, resisting the urge to remind him it was partly his fault that the soulweavers had fallen into disfavour. She decided to speak now, before someone approached and broke the moment of intimacy. ‘I have heard the poisoner is to be judged tomorrow.’
Tarsin’s disintegrating mind drifted, but at last he appeared to take in her words. Then he grinned wolfishly, leaning near. ‘Judged and executed before Kalinda sets.’
‘He has confessed, I suppose,’ Ember made herself remark casually.
Tarsin scowled. ‘He confesses nothing. But he was seen entering my apartment with the bottles he collected from the Nightwhisper. I have yet to determine how much Poverin had a hand in this.’
‘No doubt this poisoner’s accomplice can tell you, if the Fomhikan refuses to name his father.’
Tarsin scowled. ‘The accomplice has not been found.’
Ember opened her mouth to ask Tarsin if he was not afraid the accomplice would try again, but it occurred to her the Holder was too disturbed mentally to be afraid. But mad or not, Tarsin was proud.
‘No confession from the poisoner and no accomplice to name the father, and all proofs circumstantial according to the palace gossip,’ Ember mused. ‘That must concern you, for people will find it troubling.’
‘The whole point of being the Holder is that Tarsin needs not care about what troubles people,’ Coralyn said coldly.
The Iridomi chieftain had come silently to stand beside them. More than ever, Ember was glad of the veil.
Tarsin grinned nastily. ‘So you would advise me to ignore my subjects’ opinions, mother? I wonder how much you would have regretted my death if Ember had not saved me from swallowing the poison sent to me by one of those subjects about whom I need not trouble myself. And should I hear your advice or care about your opinion, if I am Holder?’
In that moment it seemed to Ember she had been wrong, that they all had. Tarsin looked exhausted, but he did not look mad. Then he laughed, and his wild cackle made her skin crawl. Suddenly she wished more than anything in the world to get away from the citadel and its insidious currents of evil, hidden under smiles and sweet words, and its faces that concealed everything from madness and despair to murder.
The show must go on, Ember thought, and forced herself to continue.
‘It is not my place to speak of such matters and this Bleyd deserves to die, of course,’ she said earnestly. ‘But I think you should find his accomplice and force them to implicate him absolutely.’
Coralyn gave her a puzzled look. ‘You believe Bleyd of Fomhika is guilty?’
‘Of course,’ Ember lied solemnly.
‘Why would Tarsin bother himself about getting a confession from the accomplice?’ Coralyn asked suspiciously. ‘Or do you suggest a delay while we seek this accomplice?’
‘Not at all,’ Ember said lightly. ‘I am concerned only that there is no absolute proof of his guilt. It might be said that the Holder acted in cowardly haste to hide the fact that he doesn’t know the identity of the real poisoner. A Holder, surely, must be seen to be all-powerful and all-seeing. It seems to me that Tarsin must show not only that Bleyd is guilty by circumstance, but that his own power is so great he can prove it beyond a shadow of a doubt. That way no one would ever dare try such a thing again. They would be too scared he would find them out.’
‘Ridiculous …’ Coralyn said, but her heart was not in her words. She was clearly confused about Ember’s motives.
‘You are right …’ Tarsin said slowly, ignoring his mother. He leaned nearer and Ember had the terrifying thought that he would reach out and pull the veil and mask from her.
‘Well, I do not see how we can capture this accomplice. You saw hands in your vision and those hands must have belonged to Bleyd of Fomhika,’ Coralyn said, her lashes dropping to conceal the expression in her eyes.
‘I … I did not speak of it because I am not a soulweaver, but I … I have dreamed of the poisoning since …’ Ember murmured as though speaking her thoughts aloud. She trailed off as if troubled.
‘You have seen something more? What did you see? Who worked with Bleyd?’ Tarsin demanded eagerly.
There was a flash of alarm in Coralyn’s eyes.
‘I saw only a little. Hardly enough to condemn someone …’ Ember said, pretending reluctance.
She sensed Coralyn’s stillness.
‘I will be the judge of that,’ Tarsin snapped. ‘What did you see? I command you to speak.’
‘It is only that what I saw was so unclear and Alene has been so kind to me …’ Ember said.
‘Alene? What has she to do with this?’ Coralyn cried, excitement kindling in her vivid eyes as she took the bait.
Ember hung her head. Let them talk you into it, Feyt had said. ‘I think the accomplice was … No, I must not speak against Alene with such a vague dream that it could as easily be false as true. I would need to see the prisoner to clarify the vision. And even then …’
‘You saw Alene?’ Tarsin said incredulously. ‘Have you spoken of this dream to her?’
‘Of course, but she said that I must be mistaken. Or that someone was pretending to be a soulweaver. I think she was upset with me for she has left the citadel. She was good to me, and she healed my pain … I must have been mistaken.’
‘So,’ Coralyn hissed triumphantly. ‘From this visionweaver’s lips comes the very thing I feared. No doubt Alene left the citadel because this visionweaver spoke to her of this incriminating vision. I will send some of my legionnaires to bring her back …’
‘Silence!’ Tarsin said savagely. He glared at Ember. ‘Did you mark the soulweaver’s face in your vision?’
‘I told you. I … I could not see clearly. It may not have been her.’
‘If she saw a soulweaver, who can it be but Alene since she is the only …’ Coralyn interrupted.
‘Shut up!’ Tarsin screamed, stilling all talk.
He rose and suddenly Ember was frightened. She had imagined a casual conversation, and a suggestion. Not this towering rage.
‘I will do nothing without proof, my dear mother, but if it was Alene who sought to poison me, I will have her rent from limb to limb. That ought to satisfy even your bloodthirsty instincts.’ He looked at Ember and his eyes were cold and utterly sober. ‘You will scry and tell me the identity of the accomplice.’
‘I … I told you I couldn’t without seeing Bleyd …’ The fear in Ember’s voice was not feigned.
‘You will be taken to him now.’
‘I vision most often in the mornings, Holder,’ she stammered. ‘Tomorrow if you have him brought to me …’
The Holder said through clenched teeth, ‘There will be no delay.’ He waved an arm at Asa. ‘Alert the key-holder of the cliff cells.’
Ember did not know what to do. There was no time to warn Feyt. None of them had expected Tarsin would act with such dispatch. And she was supposed to have Bleyd brought out of the cells. It was all going wrong!