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His eyes were adjusting, too. It was not quite as dark as he had first thought. He could make out the shapes of his companions. He could see the dense shadow of rock on either side of them. He could see that the wall ahead was lighter than the rest.

He dipped his fingers into the brown bag. As he touched the light crystal the bag lit up like a lantern, and even before he had drawn the crystal out his companions were sighing in relief.

They were not in a tomb but in a narrow cave, its mouth masked by a thick curtain of vine.

Dirk reached the vine curtain in three strides, and began tearing it away. Sonia and Rye were close behind him.

‘Take care!’ Sholto warned.

But already there was a large hole in the barrier, and as far as Rye could see nothing was lurking on the other side.

The vine was thick and its stems were tough, but soon its ruins lay in a heap on the floor of the cave, and the four companions were stumbling into a magical world of soft light and damp, tangy air.

Gigantic trees rose before them. Rain-wet vine studded with purple flowers clothed the mighty trunks and hung in great swags from the trees’ lower branches. Running water sang and gurgled on every side. Mist rose from the forest floor and drifted up to the dripping green canopy that hid the sky.

‘The Fell Zone,’ Sonia whispered.

Rye looked quickly around. Rain-spangled spider webs sparkled here and there, but there were none of the sagging, stringy nets of the Fell dragons. It was deliciously cool compared to the stuffiness of the cave and the stale warmth of the Keep. The flowery vine veils, gleaming with damp and wreathed in mist, were beautiful. But the odour of death still drifted in the air, and no birds sang.

‘I remember this,’ Sholto said quietly. ‘In the part where I was it was very dim because great mats of vine stretched from tree to tree, blocking all the light from above. But I remember vast trunks like these, caves like the one behind us, giant rocks, some hollow and some solid. And—yes!’

He spun round.

Rye turned to see what he was looking at. Behind them, rock sloped steeply upward, striped with twisting rivulets of water and dotted here and there with bushes and trees. The cave gaped at its base, still thickly fringed with vine.

‘I formed the theory that Weld was actually inside a hollow mountain-top—inside the crater of a dead volcano!’ Sholto exclaimed. ‘I remember writing about it! Ah, if only my notebook had not been destroyed!’

He was speaking much faster than usual. There was warm colour in his face and a light in his eyes that Rye had not seen for a very long time.

‘If I am right, the Wall began as a simple shell of natural rock,’ Sholto went on, striding back to the cave and squatting to examine it. ‘The first settlers began coating the rock with bricks on the inside—to seal holes and cracks at first, no doubt, then to strengthen thin patches, and then—well, if our Warden’s ancestors were anything like him, perhaps just to make Weld look tidy!’

Dirk was shaking his head in amazement, but Rye was finding it harder and harder to concentrate. Something had begun pushing at the edges of his mind. A feeling of dread was growing within him. He found that he had crossed his fingers and his wrists and slowly uncrossed them. Simple charms would not protect him here.

The bag of powers hanging around his neck seemed to warm against his skin. He gripped it and fought the dread down.

‘This must be the Fell Zone, Rye,’ Sonia said in a low voice. ‘It can be nothing else! But it is so different from the part we saw beyond the golden Door!’

Dirk shrugged. ‘The Fell Zone fills the whole of Dorne’s centre, Sonia. It is so deep that Weld has been hidden in its heart for a thousand years. You cannot expect it all to look the same.’

‘But this place does not just look different,’ Sonia said, biting her lip. ‘It feels different. It feels … angry.’

Rye shivered. Sonia was right. The rage in the forest was like a living thing.

And then the whispering began, hissing in his ears, mingling with the sound of dripping leaves and running water.

Leave this place, Rye of Weld!

Fellan! There were Fellan here, watching and listening. They were the source of the anger that was weighing him down.

The nine powers are of no use to you here. Go!

The hissing voices were strange to him. These watchers were not the Fellan who had given him the bag of powers. But they knew of him—knew his name! And it seemed to Rye that their anger could mean only one thing. These Fellan must have learned or sensed that he had caused the tyrant Olt’s death and opened the way to the Lord of Shadows.

Begone, Rye of Weld!

Sweat sprang out on Rye’s forehead. ‘We are not wanted here,’ he heard himself say, and he saw Sonia nod.

Dirk looked at them keenly. Once he might have scoffed and told them to stop imagining things. He knew better now.

‘Then we had better leave while we can,’ he said grimly. ‘We—’ He broke off, staring at Sholto.

Sholto was crouched at one side of the cave entrance, carefully pushing loops of vine aside with a thick strip of bark. He had found the source of the smell. Entangled in the vine was the dead body of a skimmer.

‘I remember this!’ Sholto said, glancing up at his companions before turning his attention back to his grisly find. ‘I remember finding dead skimmers. I remember examining them!’

He prodded one of the skimmer’s wings, which was twisted and broken, then uncovered the head.

‘Pale eyes,’ he said, with a sigh of relief. ‘Not one of the Master’s new breed, then. No doubt this specimen had stayed out too long and was blinded by the sun. It crashed against the rock face, slid down and was entangled in the vine.’

Go! Go! Leave our place!

The whispering in Rye’s mind was so loud now that he felt his head must burst. He had begun to shiver. His legs ached with the urge to run.

‘Perhaps it is from this part of Dorne, not from the Harbour, that the beasts are being sent to Weld!’ he heard Sonia exclaim. ‘Perhaps the Master has another stronghold somewhere here! That would explain last night’s attack.’

‘I have been thinking the same thing,’ Sholto agreed. ‘The workers at the Harbour are not aware that any other base exists, but they are isolated and know only what they are told.’

‘Then what are we waiting for?’ Dirk snapped. ‘If there is another base, let us get out of these cursed trees and find it!’

With shaking hands, Rye pulled the hood over his head. As his companions gathered around him and he took the feather from the brown bag, the voices in his mind swelled to a triumphant clamour. He gritted his teeth and tried to ignore them. He told himself that the Fellan had not won. They were not driving him away. He was leaving the Fell Zone because he wished it.

But as he rose with his companions through the misty air, and the whispers slowly faded from his mind, the relief was so intense that he felt dizzy. Only then did he admit to himself how much his resistance to the Fellan had cost him. Only then did he wonder if he could have stood against their will for much longer.

And only then did he wonder, with a prickle of fear, what would have happened if the Fellan had lost patience and decided to rid their forest of the unwelcome visitors by doing more than simply sending them away.

Before the companions reached the treetops the sun came out, transforming the mist into a shining golden haze. It became very difficult to see anything at all, but once they were above the muffling trees they did not need their sight to tell them which way to go. They could hear sounds coming from below, not very far away.