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Which corridor? What direction? There must be hundreds down there. The Lord of the Nexus had explored the catacombs beneath the castle in Necropolis. It was a maze worthy of the Labyrinth, a rat’s warren of tunnels and corridors—some naturally formed, others burrowed into the rock by magic. It might take a man a lifetime to find the right one.

But Haplo knew the right one. If he escaped from the Labyrinth. Xar brushed the ashes of the scroll from his hands.

“And I am trapped here! Unable to help. A ship within sight. A ship covered with Sartan runes. The mensch can break the runes, they broke them to enter here. But they’d never reach the ship alive because of the tytans. I must...

“Alive!”

Xar drew in a deep breath, let it out slowly, thoughtfully. “But who said the mensch need to be alive?”

33

The Labyrinth

The path through the cavern leading into the Labyrinth was long and torturous. It took them hours to traverse, inching their way slowly forward, each of them forced to test every step, for the ground would shift and slide beneath the feet of one person after another had passed over it safely.

“Is the damn rock alive?” Hugh the Hand asked. “I swear I saw it deliberately throw her off.”

Breathing heavily, Marit stared down into the black and turbid water swirling beneath her. She had been negotiating a narrow section of rock ledge that ran along the sheer wall of the cavern when suddenly the ledge beneath her feet gave way. Hugh the Hand, following close behind her, caught her as she started to slide down the wet walls. Flattening himself out on the ledge, the assassin held fast to Marit’s wrist and arm until Haplo could reach them from the opposite side of the broken ledge.

“It’s alive. And it hates us,” Haplo answered grimly, pulling Marit up to the relative safety of the section of path on which he stood.

Hugh the Hand jumped across the gap, landed beside them. This part of the trail was narrow and cracked, winding through a jumble of boulders, beneath a curtain of stalactites.

“Maybe that was its last jab at us. We’re near the exit...” Only a few feet away was the cavern opening—gray light, straggly trees, fog-damp grass. A heart-bursting dash would take them there. But they were all of them bone-weary, hurting, afraid. And this was only the beginning. Haplo took a step forward.

The ground shivered beneath his feet. The boulders around him began to wobble. Dust and bits of rock fell in cascades from the ceiling.

“Hold still! Don’t anyone move!” Haplo ordered.

They held still, and the rumbling ceased.

“The Labyrinth,” Haplo muttered to himself. “It always gives you a chance.” He looked at Marit, who was standing on the path beside him. Her face was scratched, hands cut and bleeding from her fall. Her face was rigid, her eyes on the exit. She knew as well as Haplo.

“What is it? What’s the matter?” It was Alfred, quavering. Haplo turned his head slowly. Alfred was behind, standing on the narrow ledge that had already tried to throw Marit into the roiling black water. Part of that ledge was missing. He’d have to jump for it, and Haplo remembered clearly what a wonder Alfred was at leaping across chasms. His feet were wider than the ledge he would have to traverse. Hugh the Hand had already saved the clumsy and accident-prone Sartan from falling into two pits and a crack. The dog remained near Alfred, occasionally nipping at his heels to urge him along. Cocking its head, the dog whined unhappily.

“What’s wrong?” Alfred repeated fearfully when no one answered.

“The cavern’s going to try to stop us from leaving,” Marit said coldly.

“Dear me,” said Alfred, amazed. “Can it... can it do such a thing?”

“What do you think it’s been doing?” Haplo demanded irritably.

“Oh, but come now.” Alfred took a step forward to argue the point. “You make it sound as if—”

The ground heaved. A ripple passed through it, almost—Haplo could have sworn—as if it laughed. Alfred gave a cry, wavered, twisted. His feet slid out from under him. The dog sank its teeth into his breeches and hung on. Arms flailing wildly, Alfred managed, with the dog’s help, to regain his balance. Eyes closed in terror, he flattened himself against the rock wall, sweat trickling down his bald head.

All inside the cavern was suddenly still.

“Don’t do that again!” Marit ordered, grinding the words through clenched teeth.

“Blessed Sartan!” Alfred murmured, his fingers trying to dig into the rock. Haplo swore. “It was you blessed Sartan who created this. How the devil are we going to get out?”

“You shouldn’t have brought me,” Alfred said in a trembling voice. “I warned you I would only slow you down, put you in danger. Don’t worry about me. You go on ahead. I’ll just go back...”

“Don’t move—” Haplo began, then fell silent.

Ignoring him, Alfred had started to walk back, and nothing was happening. The ground remained still.

“Alfred, wait!” Haplo called.

“Let him go!” Marit said scornfully. “He’s slowed us up enough already.”

“That’s what the Labyrinth wants. It wants him to go, and I’ll be damned if I’ll obey. Dog, stop him.”

The dog obediently caught hold of Alfred’s flapping coattails, hung on. Alfred looked back at Haplo piteously. “What can I do to help you? Nothing!”

“You may not think so, but the Labyrinth does. Strange as it may seem, Sartan, I’ve got the feeling that the Labyrinth is afraid of you. Maybe because it sees its creator.”

“No!” Alfred shrank back. “No, not me.”

“Yes, you. By hiding in your tomb, by refusing to act, by keeping ‘perfectly safe,’ you feed the evil, perpetuate it.”

Alfred shook his head. Catching hold of his coattails, he began to tug at them.

The dog, thinking it was a game, growled playfully and tugged back.

“At my signal,” Haplo said beneath his breath to Marit. “You and Hugh the Hand make a run for the opening. Be careful. There may be something waiting for us out there. Don’t stop for anything. Don’t look back.”

“Haplo...” Marit began. “I don’t want to—” She faltered, flushing. Startled, hearing a different tone in her voice, he looked at her. “To what? Leave me? I’ll be all right.”

Touched, pleased by the look of concern in her eyes—the first softness he’d seen in her—he reached out his hand to brush the sweat-damp hair back from her forehead. “You’re hurt. Let me take a look—”

Eyes flaring, she pulled away from him. “You’re a fool.” She flicked a disparaging glance at Alfred. “Let him die. Let them all die.” She turned her back on him, fixed her eyes on the cave’s opening. The ground trembled beneath Haplo’s feet. They didn’t have much time. He held out his hand across the broken ledge. “Alfred,” he said quietly, “I need you.” Alfred lifted a haggard, drawn face, stared at Haplo in amazement. The dog, at a silent signal from its master, released its hold.

“I can’t do this alone,” Haplo continued. He held out his hand, held it steady. “I need your help to find my child. Come with me.” Alfred’s eyes filled with tears. He smiled tremulously. “How? I can’t...”

“Give me your hand. I’ll pull you across.”

Alfred leaned precariously over the broken ledge, reached out his hand—bony, ungainly, the wrist protruding from the frayed lace of his too-short cuffs. And, of course, he was blubbering. “Haplo, I don’t know what to say...” The Patryn caught hold of the Sartan’s wrist, clasped it tightly. The ground heaved and buckled. Alfred lost his footing.

“Run, Marit!” Haplo shouted, and began to work his magic. At his command, blue and red sigla burned in the air. He spun the runes into a blue-glowing rope that snaked from his arm to wrap around Alfred’s body. The cavern was collapsing. Risking a quick glance, Haplo saw Marit and Hugh running madly for the exit. A rock plummeted down from the ceiling, struck Marit a glancing blow. The runes on her body protected her from harm, but the weight of the rock knocked her down. Hugh the Hand picked her up. The two dashed on. The assassin looked behind him once, to see if Haplo was coming. Marit did not look.