chapter xxiv
to t tle past noon. tumbled out onto teps of turnal animals prematurely flus of an underground warren.
Sabriel looked around at t, sunlit trees, tain.
Everyted c .
S too, losing focus in treating lines of clouds just edging about t. Gone forever . . .
“tern part of Palace he blueness.
“?”
“to t Yard.”
It oucone talking. Sabriel closed old o concentrate, to get a grip on t toucone.
reaked from , plastered flat, armor and cloter dripped doill , angled to the ground.
“You didn’t tell me you ional tone. S ing on trange in s o do anyt it.
“I’m not,” toucone replied, s t my fatook up er ’s deating accident before I o t Yard?”
“I suppose so,” Sabriel said dully. “Fating for us to tell us wo go.”
“I see,” said toucone. Sabriel’s vacant eyes, took ing and oddly floppy arm, and steered orees t marked a pato tern end of tly, increasing oucone sped up, till tically jogging. toucone was pusion.
A feo more laarted up tco top.
t tones maintenance, and te deep ruts and in one and s fell, toucone just catc to break s of tness cutting through her dumb despair.
“hy are we running?”
“those scavengers are following us,”
toucone replied sly, pointing back t te.”
Sabriel looked alking.
t Sabriel and toucone could not escape to be t of casual beaters, easily driving tupid prey to a definite end. One of toucone cure t distance made unclear, but entions were cle