chapter xxii
peal, mixing togetions overheard in a crowd.
Sabriel rang t -tc toure, o t peal. Sound seemed to envelope ter, circling around its ed mouth.
t could try and sound of its o once, and so the bells.
t to find a foolisrained necromancer, but even so, tcantly, like a c ouch.
ture’s mout ongue, a e fles it spoke he voice of Abhorsen.
“Sabriel! I both hoped and feared you would come.”
“Fat rapped spirit rature.
“Father . . .”
Sarted to cry. Sroubles, only to find rapped, trapped beyond y to free even kno it o imprison someone e! “Sabriel! er! e ime for tears. here is your physical body?”
“In t to yours. Inside a diamond of protection.”
“And the Dead? Kerrigor?”
“t Kerrigor is somew know where.”
“Yes, I kneered Ab move quickly.
Sabriel, do you remember o ring taneously? Mosrael and Kibeth?”
“t time? S was possible—or hpiece. “Remember.
the Dead.”
Slo came back, pages floating doo conscious memory, like leaves from a sree. ter combinations, if enougo ter . . .
“Yes,” said Sabriel, slowly. “I remember.
Mosrael and Kibethey free you?”
the answer was slow in coming.
“Yes. For a time. Enougo do be done. Quickly, now.”
Sabriel nodded, trying not to t ruly live again.
Consciously, so barricade this knowledge from her mind.
Sion than alone.
Silled ying and emotion, concentrating solely on them.
Mosrael ser circle