chapter xv
groo power.”
“You’re cleverer t,” commented Mogget. “Not t t’s saying much.”
“A child,” said Sabriel. “hy would a child know?”
“If you’d ion, you’d knooo,” said Mogget. “A e of good silver, t school of yours.”
“Per no I kno being at scierre saved my life. But enoug. hich way do we go now?”
toucone looked at t visible above trees, per of its noon-time zenitoucone looked from it to trees, ted: “East. ter Stones, leading from o tern edge of tcones.”
tones ill ter t, some sort of animal track t meandered from one stone to t. It pleasant, tant presence of ter Stones a reassuring sensation to Sabriel and toucone, wrees.
tones in all, and none of t a stab of nervous tension every time t to anotark picture alone of Cloven Crest.
t stone stood on t, atop a granite bluff ty or forty yards ’s eastern edge and the end of high ground.
tood next to tone and looked out, out toe-crested, restless, alo shore.
Belo, sunken fields of Nestoained by a netself lay ters of a mile a of sigher side.
“toucone, in a puzzled tone, as if believe w he was seeing.
Sabriel folloually silt and er, sitting tepidly where food once grew.
indmills, poood silent, trefoil-sill atop scaffolding to-laden breeze blehe sea.
“But ter-spelled,”
toucone exclaimed. “to folloo care . . .”
“t added, elescope in Sabriel’s pack.
“Nestoone must be broken,”
Sabriel said, moutigain stenche village.”