Sabriel forced o o to a screaming run. Lots of soldiers could see ill placing lanterns out in lines, radiating out from teps, and several soldiers ing to bounce it out. t her as she passed.
t slipping off to t it, but sed outside, looking out. After a moment, s anding next to by terns, half in shadow.
“t at tes,”
soo quickly to be calm.
“I kno firing . Six men and a corporal.”
Sabriel nodded. S t puncomac to notice, to .
Suddenly, s somet a deat tood bolt uprigruly dohe fog!”
S a second later. ty looked around, startled, ted for teps and teams cocked tripodmounted mache newly made sandbag walls.
“Second floor, stand ready!” ed, and above s of fifty rifles of ts step back outside, and take up position beo snatc came to t . . .
In tant quiet, t. ind in trees out past tarting to rise as ts beginning to c—ts, no longer joined by gristle; t, bones like ic flesh.
“hands,” she said, nervously. “hundreds of hands.”
Even as s tes, t second’s crasoly parody of a war cry.
“Fire!”
In tant’s delay after t terrible fear t t out a terrible, barking roar, red tracer rounds flinging out, ricocing from terrible violence. Bullets tore Dead flesered bone, knocked t still till terally torn apart, broken into pieces, he wire.
t before it could entirely cease, anotumbling, craeumbling over till t of t t of t steps. Some, still vestige of elligence, retreated, only to be caug gouts of flame fr