chapter ix
re.”
“ you read ed Mogget, in a momentary break from cleaning himself.
“?” asked Sabriel, excited. A diary remendously helpful.
“ook it . “I seen it.”
“I t you o ion.”
“t mumbled, moutomacongue alternating between words and cleansing.
“A messenger came from Belisaere, begging for could pass them.
Abed t to it t, Belisaere being Belisaere. But .”
“Belisaere. t’s a town?”
“A city. tal. At least it was, will a kingdom.”
“as?”
Mogget stopped s. “ did teac sc been a King or Queen for t for ty. t’s wo a darkness from which no one will rise . . .”
“ter—” Sabriel began, but Mogget interrupted h a yowl of derision.
“ter crumbles too,” he mewed.
“it a ruler, Cer Stones broken one by one Cers ted—”
“ do you mean, one of t Cers?” Sabriel interrupted in turn. S for t time, s saug so quiet about tate of the Old Kingdom.
But Mogget , as if topped , o be trying to form noth.
Finally, tell you. It’s part of my binding, curse it! Suffice to say t to evil, and many are he slide.”
“And ot it,” said Sabriel. “Like my father. Like me.”
“It depends said, as if ed t someone as patently useless as Sabriel I care—”
trapdoor opening above topped t in mid-speech.
Sabriel tensed, looking up to see arted breat it er sending, its black flopping over t came do unlike ts—s c and back. It boo Sabriel, and pointed up.
it it ed o look at sometory. Rel