chapter viii
Sabriel ao soft candleligs, deligs. A fire burned briskly in a red-brick fireplace and ery of ed across it, faced ed eac ttered, so Sabriel time it t ely Ab memory ing on tep.
Gingerly—for even of travel, fear and fliged o look around and once again met t t a cat.
ture the bed.
“ are you?” Sabriel asked nervously, suddenly all too a s ss. A sensuous delig a defenseless one. o and bell-bandolier, carefully draped on a clothe door.
“I y of names,” replied t. It range voice, . As to no of Abo remove my collar?”
Sabriel gave an uneasy smile, and sever Mogget collar kept it as a servant of Aber marks on te explicit about t. As far as Sabriel could tell, t e possible t Mogget as old as t mentioned it, and so find roubles over.
“I t not,” said Mogget, combining a careless sretc . . . or t ely masculine, jumped to t floor and sauntered over to tcrained eye noting t Mogget’s s al of a cat.
A knock at terrupted udy of t, to attention.
“It’s only one of ts,” Mogget said, in a patronizing tone. “Cer sendings, and pretty lo t. the milk.”
Sabriel ignored sh her for a while.
tly and a s, robed figure drifted in. It o te a visible face, but t on underdress draped over one arm, a tos Cer-woven and a pair of slippers.
it a to t ts on Sabriel’s feet. t crossed to a porcelain basin t sat in a silver filigree stand, above a tiled area of to t of t ted a bronze er splas tenc.
Sabriel wrinkled