chapter xxi
“te,” said toucone. “e be able to move him.”
“Yes. I kno t of o tones. “I to go into Deatc back.”
“!” exclaimed toucone. ter, as the echoes rang, “here?”
“If our oection . . .”
Sabriel continued, t danger at bay.”
“Most danger,” toucone said grimly, looking around, trying to peer past tigtle globe of light.
“It rap us it, so close to tones. I kno I couldn’t do it alone, at t.”
“e so combine our strengths.
t keep ch, we should manage.”
“ do you t?” asked toucone, turning ttle animal on his shoulder.
“I roubles,” grumbled Mogget.
“And I trap. But since o be done.”
“I don’t like it,” woucone.
Just standing to tones took most of rengto enter Deatempting fate. migal made by tones? For t matter, ansion, studying ter. toucone folloantly, forcing o move in s steps, minimizing the splash and ripple of his wake.
Sabriel snuffed out it t, t her open palm.
“Put your s did not invite conversation or argument. toucone ated—
boter. Instinctively, tle tigo give h.
“Mogget—keep cructed.
So visualize t mark, t of the four cardinal wards.
toucone took a quick look around, too, draion.
Pain s to Sabriel’s. to focus. t spread up above ing tic pains. But o just one tion of a diamond of protection.
Finally, t mark floook root in the reservoir floor.
it opening to face t mark.
till, and boting and s finally began its gloence.