to take advantage of a s in to say t.”
“I’ll just look like a necromancer,” Sabriel replied. “A salty, unwashed necromancer.”
“I don’t knooucone, Sabriel into ty, or ay alive, in—”
“In your day,” interrupted Mogget, from e post on t t necromancers and uncommon sights in Belisaere.”
“I’ll arted to say.
“If you say so,” toucone said, at time. Clearly, believe t. Belisaere al, a y, o at least fifty toucone couldn’t imagine it fallen, decayed and in te kno t totle different from two-hundredyear- old images locked in his memory.
t confidence took a blooe srait.
At first, to grealler as toelescope, Sabriel sa tiful, rosy-pink stone t once must . Noy vanis top torys, from seven; Boom ood as tall as ever, but sunligerior to be a gutted ruin. toll collector, hing alive.
t boom-cill stretcrait. , rose green and barnaclebefouled out of ter and up into eaco could be seen in trouger of the deep.
“e’ll o go in close to t toep t and ro rises,” toucone declared, after studying tes telescope, trying to gauge even ively s boat, it oo risky, and t for ide, late in ternoon. At some time in t, peroo its maximum tension. t iceable slippage.
“Mogget, go to t for anyter. Sabriel, could you please coo guard against attack.”
Sabriel nodded, pleased t toucone’s stint as captain of t to remove t nonsense out of , for , jumped up to t protest, despite t occasionally burst over diagonally across toriangle of opportunit