Snaff's eyes lit. "That'll be fun!" He began pumping his arms and stomping his feet, and Sandy marched excitedly away across the ridge.
Zojja glowered like a teenager watching her father dance. "You're enjoying this too much." Reluctantly she began marching as well, and Big Zojja pounded out after Sandy.
The two golems had crossed about a quarter mile of icy ridge before anything happened-but it happened all at once.
A thunderous boom! shook the ice, and a crack shot like black lightning along the ridge. The whole face of the ridge broke free. It slid down as one thick ice sheet, grating over the cliff face. A network of cracks raced through the ice, and it shattered into huge boulders. They stampeded down the side of the mountain and swarmed over the labyrinth. House-size ice chunks flattened the defensive works. Walls smashed and spikes shattered. Whatever icebrood might have lurked in those defenses were crushed. Hundreds of thousands of tons of ice wiped the barriers from the world.
"Perfect!" Rytlock said.
"Not quite," Eir replied, pointing toward the ridge.
Sandy had had one foot on either side of the crack when it gave way, and now the sand golem was struggling not to tumble down the slope. Already, its legs had stretched to twice their usual length. Big Zojja grasped Sandy's hand and tried to pull it back up.
"It's no good!" Snaff yelled. "Let go!"
"Too late," Zojja replied.
In the distance, Sandy toppled, dragging Big Zojja after it. They rolled together down the ice-ravaged rock face.
Little Zojja shook with each impact, eyes glazing.
Snaff grasped her. "Separate your mind!"
Down below, Sandy's head crashed into an outcrop of stone.
Snaff staggered, "Wow! That smarts."
Out across the ice field rolled Sandy and Big Zojja, clinging together like a giant, dirty snowball. They held each other a moment more before limbs of sand broke away from limbs of steel. A battered and gritty Big Zojja staggered back and toppled to the ground while Sandy shuddered as it reformed itself.
Meanwhile, on the ridge, Snaff released Zojja. "Are you all right?"
"Feel like I got run through a gearbox," Zojja said.
"Do you need to rest?" Eir asked them.
"Not me," Zojja replied huffily, "but I'd say the Big me is out of service."
They all stared down at the tableau, where Big Zojja lay twisted with smoke rising from her joints.
"That's not good," Eir said.
"Sandy's fine," Snaff put in hopefully, seeming to check his pockets.
The sand golem was meanwhile reshaping itself. It gave a massive wave.
Eir reached down and hoisted Zojja to her shoulders. "Phase One is complete, but we're down to a single golem. Someone grab Snaff. Let's move!"
Rytlock picked up Snaff, slung him onto his shoulders, and growled, "Don't touch the horns."
The asura sheepishly released them. "Sorry. They look like handlebars."
"I don't need to be steered," Rytlock said.
"Can't steer a steer," Snaff quipped.
"Shut up."
"Right."
Rytlock ran after Eir, with Logan and Caithe following. Garm brought up the rear, his black head turning from side to side to make sure they weren't followed.
Moments later, the group reached Big Zojja. She was, indeed, beyond repair. One leg was shattered outright, and the conduits had been ripped from the knee of the other.
Zojja leaped down from Eir's shoulder. "That's a wasted night." She turned to Snaff. "I told you you put too much trust in metal."
Snaff was too grieved to reply.
Eir scowled at Zojja. "You seem almost gleeful that the golem is wrecked."
Zojja grinned. "I almost am."
Eir huffed. "Good luck fighting without it."
"I've been expanding my portfolio of spells for this," Zojja said with a grin. "Fire spells. You'll see how magic can trump machine."
"I hope," Eir said, watching Zojja march jauntily away.
Snaff stepped up beside Eir. "You must forgive her. She's a genius in the rough."
"She won't follow orders, she won't listen to others," Eir muttered.
"You're both strong-willed," Caithe broke in. "You're not followers."
Eir and Snaff gaped at her.
Caithe was wide-eyed. "Well, look, she's leading the charge."
They turned to see that Zojja had broken into a run.
"Let's go," Eir said ruefully, turning and charging after her. All the others followed. It took only a few moments for them to catch up to Zojja and pass her.
The group ran to the ice cave. It yawned darkly before them, a thousand icicles hanging overhead.
"Wouldn't like to get one of those down the back," Rytlock said.
"Rytlock and Logan, you'll take the fore," Eir said. "Garm and I will back you up. Sandy will back us up and give cover for Snaff and Zojja. Caithe, you're the rear guard. Weapons, everyone."
The group shifted into position. Sohothin roared from its scabbard, and Logan's war hammer spun in circles around him. Zojja cracked her knuckles and sent flames leaping into the air, while Sandy remolded one stretched-out leg. Behind them, Caithe scanned the rubble field, her daggers whirling.
Eir nocked three arrows. Their heads sparked with arcane energies prepared by Zojja.
Rytlock eyed the arrows. "More nets?"
"You'll see." Eir drew the bow until the string pinged with tension and then let fly. The three shafts whistled away into the cave, diverging from each other. Simultaneously, the arrowheads burst into three red fireballs. As they flew, the flames intensified to orange and yellow and white and blue.
They lit up a ceiling crowded with giant icicles. Among them lurked dragon minions in the form of ice bats.
"Whoa!" Rytlock said.
Another explosion came from each arrow. Shock waves cracked the icicles loose, and blue flames melted the wings of the bats. Giant icicles and watery bats plunged, crashing side by side on the icy floor of the cavern.
"Awesome," Logan said.
"Phase Two complete," Eir noted, then shouted, "Charge!"
Logan and Rytlock broke into a run, leading the rest into the ice cave. Ahead lay shattered icicles and bats flailing in their death throes. The flaming sword and the war hammer ended their torments.
As they ran on, Rytlock called over his shoulder, "What's ahead?"
Eir replied. "More dragon minions. They might be transformed norn, or more ice bats. I expect something much bigger, though. Stay sharp."
The team passed beyond the killing fields, rushing down a smooth throat of ice into a deeper, darker chamber. Eir fitted another shaft to her bow and let fly. The flaming comet soared through a deep, broad ice cavern with a smooth ceiling. There were no icicles, no lurking bats-only a colonnade of frozen pillars lining either wall.
"It doesn't feel right," Logan said.
Rytlock barked a laugh. "Course not. It's a monster's lair."
Together, they ran down the center of the chamber, between the pillars of ice.
A groan echoed up the cavern, as if the glacier itself moaned in pain. The floor shook beneath their feet.
A splintering sound came from a pillar to one side of Rytlock. He swung his flaming sword toward it, seeing the shaft pull free from the wall.
It wasn't ice, but an icy giant.
It lunged toward Rytlock, hurling a mace at him. He ducked, but the icy spikes bashed one shoulder. "Damn!" he growled. "It would have been nice to know about these!"
Eir nocked another shaft and loosed it, point-blank.
The arrow cracked into the ice giant's chest and exploded in its transparent heart. Red flame evolved to orange and yellow, melting ribs. The fire turned white and beamed from the giant's astonished eyes. Then the wretched figure toppled.
Eir scrambled back as the massive warrior struck ground. It burst open, its melted heart gushing across the ice.
"Help!" shouted Logan from across the chamber.
Eir and Rytlock looked, seeing that he had been snatched up by another frozen giant. The thing had lost an arm, which lay in shattered ruins on the floor, but its other arm hoisted Logan toward a mouth that bristled with fangs.