chapter xxviii
tilian tongue, but t. Sabriel stood still, against ried looking past it, lidding t, trying to puzzle out t so see.
It a sea of darkness. tures in t ink-splase fire, and a ya h flickering coals of a red as dark as drying blood.
“Ab like lava mixed tle.
“You will leave o me.”
t-te sparks falling like tiny stars in its wake.
“I ed too long to alloo be taken by anot c still . t fle Kerrigor, a sric comet ling into to ance like a enderizing meat.
For a moment, no one moved, stack. tendrils of bitter nig attacker, c y of an octopus strangling a brigurtle.
Desperately, Sabriel looked around for toucone and Magistrix Green ill falling slo air, like some deadly rust-colored gas, tims of its c truck by bricks, or ers from the pews.
Sabriel sarix first, lying a little ailetto-like splinter from a stered pe through her.
Soucone a pile of broken masonry. ed t.
Sabriel o epping betc, hopeless wounded.
“My leg is broken,” toucone said, . ilted oh. Live a normal life . . .”
“I can’t,” replied Sabriel softly. “I am th your broken leg?”
“Sabriel . . .”
But Sabriel urned aiced still. But t, its voice silent. It ring true until cleaned, ience, magic and steady nerves. Sabriel stared at it for a second, tly placed it back dohe floor.
up, and cer marks floime, t run tion, but said: “t no Dead s th.”
“t took up tion, and looked doo t was Kerrigor.