chapter ix
uctantly, s over to t rapdoor, carrying toucal rungs.
Emerging into tory, till lit by t, red ligting sun, giving an illusion of . S t s it otally . tiled roof rested on transparent iced toget t, complete draft t reduced its perfection to a more human level.
A large telescope of gleaming glass and bronze dominated tory, standing triump on a tripod of dark all observer’s stool stood next to it, and a lectern, a star c still spilled across it. A toe ing carpet lay under all, a carpet t , colorful constellations and hick, richly dyed wool.
t to ted out tos pallid, Cer-dra .
Sabriel looked t eye from t-falling sun. e tops of to te an inner quailing about w she would see.
As s ill there.
But so t, Sabriel sensed it , temporarily just an unpleasant statue, a foreground to otive s bustled about in some activity behind.
Sabriel stared a little longer, t to telescope, narro, as srated on w was side.
Unaided, s been certain t elescope, drawn so close s schem away.
to a partner’s leg by an iron c in ting presence of t. t of ts or lengtimber, taking teps to the river.
ts empty, timber left behind.
Sabriel depressed telescope a little, and almost groion and anger as sogetimber, and ts. As eac o bridge to stepping-stone and locked in place by slaves o tone.
ticular part of tion ed by somet lurked eps. A mans of blackest nigte.
A necromancer’s S t scorned the use of a body.
As Sabriel