As Clara’s screams echoed eerily from the depths of her prison cell, the wolf circled the hole in the floor undecidedly but the prince, knowing the ferocity of the snow worms, unhesitatingly threw himself into it, feet first. He shot down the chute and, landing with a thump, quite successfully flattened the rearing snow worm that was threatening Clara.
Clara, pressed fearfully against the wall of her cell, looked at the old man in startled wonder, recognizing him immediately. The school janitor, she thought in utter amazement. What on earth was he doing here? She wasn’t quite sure if his arrival improved the situation or not.
The snow worms, however, had no such doubts. They knew a magician when they smelt one and, backing swiftly into their holes in the ice, slithered swiftly off. Clara watched them go and relaxed, her legs trembling under her as shock set in.
“Sit down, Clara,” the old man said, kicking the dead snow worm to one side. “You’ve had a bad fright but it’s all over now. The snow worms won’t come back.”
“They might,” Clara observed, her voice shaking. “They looked hungry and there are two of us now.”
Kalman almost smiled. “Ah, but I’m not a prisoner,” he said. “I’ve come to get you out of here.”
Hope flared in Clara’s heart but her eyes were puzzled as she looked at him. “Who are you?” she asked. “I don’t know you but … but you seem to know me.” Then she met his eyes and stiffened in fear. Recognition was instantaneous. “Prince Kalman?” she whispered fearfully, shrinking backwards.
He bowed abruptly and then glanced at the shoes she still held in her hands. “Better put those on,” he said shortly and turning to look up at the entrance to the chute called out. “Vassili,” he shouted. “Vassili, are you there?”
There was no answer.
He called again, but there was silence.
“Vassili?” Clara repeated, hardly able to believe her ears. “You mean Herr von Grozny is here as well?”
The prince looked suddenly tired. “He was here,” he said. “I hope he’s gone to find a rope but I might well be mistaken.”
Clara looked at him in sudden understanding. “Of course,” she muttered, “he’s after the talisman as well, isn’t he?”
The prince nodded, his lips pressed together in disappointment. “It’s my fault. I should have known better than to trust him.”
It was then that Clara realized that her feet really were freezing. Bending down, she took off her sopping wet socks and used the end of the long, black skirt she’d worn for the play, to dry her feet before pushing them awkwardly into the heavy leather shoes.
“I hope the daemons didn’t injure you very badly,” Clara asked, seeing the lines of pain on the prince’s face. “I’m really sorry,” she apologized, tying her shoe laces firmly. “I should never have cast that spell.”
“No, you shouldn’t!” he agreed sitting up straight and looking at her coldly. “Where the devil did you get it from?”
“From The Book of Spells,” she answered.
He looked at her very oddly indeed. “The Book of Spells,” he repeated slowly, his eyes widening incredulously. “Er … do, please go on,” he said, waving a hand invitingly. “Don’t stop there! May I ask where you stumbled upon this … this treasure …”
“I don’t think it’s a treasure exactly,” Clara said slowly. “There are a lot of good spells in it, of course, but there are awful spells, too.”
“So I gathered,” the prince said dryly. “Like conjuring up daemons!”
Clara looked shamefaced. “To tell you the truth, I really wish we’d never stolen it,” she muttered.
“May I ask who you stole it from?” Kalman regarded her coldly but with a tinge of grudging admiration in his glance.
“The Earth Witches,” she confessed.
“So that’s what you were up to that night,” he said, looking startled. “If I’d known you were carrying The Book of Spells I might well have behaved differently.”
“You were there?” she looked at him in astonishment. “At Witches’ Wood? I don’t believe you!”
He froze her with a look of contempt. “I don’t lie,” he said, “and you have cause to be grateful to me, you know. You left a trail of footprints across that field that would have put the witches right on your trail.”
“You helped us?” she looked at him directly, still unable to think of him as the prince. “Why would you do that?”
“I didn’t want the witches to catch you,” he said simply. “I wanted the talisman myself.”
Clara looked at him seriously. “Why? Haven’t you enough power?”
His lips twisted in a wry smile. “Not enough to cure the spell that is killing me,” he said.
Clara blushed. “I … I’m sorry,” she muttered, feeling dreadful.
He rose to his feet and walked slowly up and down. “I told you,” he reminded her. “It was when I was in the Great Hall of the Giants,” he muttered. “Malfior hexed me.”
“I thought it was Cri’achan Mor,” Clara looked at him in surprise.
“Malfior was looking at me through Cri’achan Mor’s eyes,” returned the prince.
“But Malfior died,” Clara frowned. “And,” she added, “so did Cri’achan Mor. Wouldn’t their spells have died with them? Isn’t that the rule?”
The old man stopped and nodded slowly.
“Then it must have been someone else who hexed you,” Clara pointed out reasonably, “someone who had merged with Cri’achan Mor, perhaps.”
Kalman smiled sourly. “Forget it,” he advised. “Only a great magician could get close enough to Cri’achan Mor to be able to merge with him and I don’t believe that any of the Lords of the North would punish me in this way.”
“There are other magicians,” she pointed out, looking worriedly at the shambling figure. “There’s the Sultan in Turkey although I’m sure he would never hex you like this.”
“I don’t believe that either,” he admitted.
“Then what other magicians do you know?”
“Well, some in China and a few in India but I never heard of any of them travelling so far from home …”
“What about Lord Jezail?” enquired Clara.
“Lord Jezail?” the prince looked at her and shook his head with a thin smile. “No, Jezail would never hex me like that. Why, my father and I have known him for years. We used to stay with him in the citadel at Stara Zargana when we were on our way to Turkey to buy magic carpets. He’s a friend of the family. Besides which, he hasn’t been in Scotland for years.”
“Oh, but he has,” Clara looked at him in surprise. “When Neil and I were in Morven last year I heard Lord Rothlan and the MacArthur talking about Lord Jezail and the giants.”
“Are you sure?” Prince Kalman frowned.
“Positive,” Clara said. “I wasn’t eavesdropping, you know,” she added, anxious that he shouldn’t get the wrong impression, “I just happened to hear a bit of their conversation when I was passing. Of course, I’d never heard of him then.”
“Jezail?” the prince repeated, shaking his head doubtfully. “I can’t believe it!”
“He was with the giants,” she said firmly. “I heard them say so.” Clara’s eyes, clear and honest, met his quite openly and he could not but believe her.
“So Jezail was there all the time,” he muttered, his face darkening as realization dawned. “He was there all the time,” he repeated, “in the halls of the giants. He hexed me!”
“Are you all right, Prince Kalman?” Clara asked anxiously as he suddenly swayed on his feet, groped for the bench and toppled forwards. “Prince Kalman!” she shook his shoulder and fear curled inside her as there was no response. His body was sprawled half on and half off the bench and with an effort she managed to lift him onto it and pull the blanket under him so that at least he wasn’t lying on ice.
The prince looked dreadful, she thought, but, thank goodness, he was still breathing.
It was then that she thought of using her firestone to help him. But would one be enough to have any effect? Mind you, the MacArthur had loaded hers with extra magic and that might make a difference. She unfastened the chain that held her firestone and lifting the old man’s head, for she couldn’t think of him as Prince Kalman, she looped it round his neck, fastened it and pushed the firestone under his shirt.
The results weren’t instantaneous but after a while she noticed that his breathing had eased and later, when she was walking up and down, flapping her arms about to keep warm, she saw him move. He rolled over onto his side and with relief she realized that he wasn’t unconscious any more. He was asleep.
Again she looked up at the entrance to the chute. “Herr von Grozny!” she called. There was no answer and she turned despondently away. Why did nobody come? Where were Neil and the MacArthurs? Surely they should have come to rescue her by this time?