chapter xi
put some of rengto t to le effect, save for a golden sparkle t briefly illuminated e, ely set, and too mucs o in a fees, never to return to t of Life.
“Loose my collar,” me Sabriel’s ear, folloion of Mogget digging o o her lap. “Loose my collar!”
Sabriel looked at t t stupid, starved of oxygen, unable to decide. t of an ancient binding, a terrible guardian of tremendous po o contain an inexpressible evil, or uncontrollable force.
“trust me!” . “Loose my collar, and remember the ring!”
Sabriel s, but it just to s to all the collar so long ago.
Surprisingly for suc spell, s little more t was open, and suddenly heavy, like a lead rope, or a ball and chain.
Sabriel almost dropped it, but it became ligantial. o exist.
Mogget sat still, on o gloernal ligill t gre-s, just a soo brigo look at. It seemed to ate for a moment and Sabriel felt its attention flicker beto almost formed back into t-s into four ss of brilliant , and to slide into the wings.
te brilliance, and it abruptly stopped its . Sabriel ly for t to keep ill.
Despite t, till falling. Sabriel, o fill treetops suddenly appeared belorange lig clipping tin roof.
t yards above still too fast to land total destruction.
Mogget, or s t added bruises on top of bruises.
For t time, Sabriel felt t t and to skid a little in t grass of the field.
Mogget braked, and Sabriel cly lay its belly on to w s landing.
But ted to reve