chapter xiii
mean disaster. So find him soon.
A Mordicant, S oo clear t some terrible enemy boter.
t enemy rapped o be a very poer Dead creature. Perhis Kerrigor . . .
“I’ll get my pack,” srudging back, Mogget slipping backen, almost tripping al getting out of t to inexplicable catness, and didn’t comment.
As Mogget unnel long, and its eps and cross-c tle cat exactly across tones, to avoid a cleverly concealed pit.
it Mogget’s guidance, Sabriel knew she would have fallen in.
too. Old, inimical spells lay like motunnel, ing to fly up at o surround and c somet reaction and ttled again. A feimes, Sabriel experienced a gly touc to bruser mark on at tunnel, sing into tips of ting in before too, merged into stone.
“ of t visible means of propulsion.
“Anot said, matter-offactly.
“It is w Blood . . . ach . . .”
ence rat is interesting.”
“ do you mean—” Sabriel began, but s as tugging at , t of ’s fur stood on end, and ated s oill ter marks of binding and clearly readable, brig ther.
t, standing at ttom of anoture twilighe sinkhole rim.
t— per. Despite its size, tire vast pit , o t a quarter of t a even so, Sabriel o use elescope to see te diamond-pattern looked flimsy, but ted bird-corpses indicated considerable strengtunate birds o t, eyes greedily intent on food below.
In tself, tation—mostly stunted trees and malformed bus Sabriel tle attention to spare for trees, for in betced a ship.