Eleanon stood in the pre-dawn, looking at Elcho Falling glimmer in the last light of the full moon.

A week, no more, and it would be his.

Seven days.

“The magic is all worked?” Falayal said quietly at Eleanon’s side.

Eleanon gave a terse nod.

“And the One? He absolutely is vanished? You are certain?”

“The Twisted Tower now drifts many lifetimes away from this world,” Eleanon said. “The One is,” his mouth lifted slightly at the pun, “quite out of the equation now, Falayal. Is everyone ready?”

“Yes,” Falayal said, “and anxious and excited all at the same time. You are sure this will —”

“It will work!” Eleanon said fiercely. He took a calming breath. “Everyone knows what to do?”

“Yes. When will we start?”

“In an hour. When the light is good. If anyone trips over a shadowed pebble then the day’s work is lost. Falayal . . . I need a little peace and quiet. I need to touch the Dark Spire.”

Falayal bent his head in respect, moving away into the dim light. Eleanon stood a few minutes longer, staring at Elcho Falling, waiting for Falayal to make his way back to the nearest Lealfast camp, then he took a deep breath, then another, then closed his eyes.

Friend, he called, and the Dark Spire responded.

An hour after dawn the Lealfast moved. They gathered first in massive groups in a clear space just beyond each of their twelve encampments. Everyone save the infirm, the youngest children, and the disabled. They did not speak; they kept their eyes downcast; they seemed unaware of each other.

Eleanon stood on a small rise to the north, perhaps fifty paces away. Once all the Lealfast had gathered into twelve huge groups, and were still, Eleanon raised his hands, paused, then gave a resounding clap.

The Lealfast began to move, very slowly, but with precision and purpose. Long lines of Lealfast wound out of the twelve groups, some moving in lines westward about the lake, some in lines going eastward. As they moved, Eleanon kept up a slow, rhythmic clapping, and all the Lealfast moved in time to his beat.

As they marched, they kept their eyes turned downward.

Line after line emerged from the twelve camps until, well over an hour later, the lake was encircled by twelve concentric lines of Lealfast, alternate lines moving in different directions.

As soon as the lines had formed, Eleanon stopped his clapping, and the lines fell still.

“What are they doing?” Axis said, keeping his voice muted for no reason that he knew of, save that this was, at the every least, an awe-inspiring sight. Now he could see why the Lealfast had needed the shoreline kept clear, and why they’d needed to dam the channel.

Eleanon had wanted to complete the circle.

The dam had been finished off with soil and trampled reeds, and the reed beds to either side had been beaten down to create a solid surface.

Isaiah didn’t answer. He took a step forward on the balcony (they watched from the north face of Elcho Falling this morning), put his hands on the railings and narrowed his eyes.

“Isaiah?” Axis said.

One of Isaiah’s hands came up briefly. Wait.

Axis looked back to the circles of stationary Lealfast, then past them to where Eleanon stood on his rise.

As if he knew Axis had shifted his regard to him, Eleanon raised his hands again, and recommenced his clapping.

Now it was a slow, powerful beat. On the fifth clap, the rings of Lealfast moved, instantaneously, and all in step. Each circle moved forward, each alternate circle moving in a different direction. They marched, not as an army, but with a slight spring in each step, so their feet slapped down absolutely in time with Eleanon’s clapping.

“Shetzah,” Isaiah murmured.

Axis thought that Isaiah spent way too much time muttering curses these days and little enough time on explanations.

“Isaiah?” he said, his voice edged with frustration.

All the circles were moving, springing up and down in perfect time with Eleanon’s slow, heavy clapping.

“Look at the lake!” Isaiah said.

Axis looked. The surface of the lake rippled with thousands of tiny wavelets, emanating in perfect circles from the shoreline and running toward Elcho Falling.

Then Isaiah grabbed Axis’ hand and rammed it down on the balcony railing. “Feel!”

The railing vibrated under Axis’ hand with tremors perfectly attuned to the marching dance of the Lealfast and Eleanon’s hands.

Axis raised his eyes and stared at Isaiah.

“When I led an army,” Isaiah said, his voice low and intent, “my army never marched over a bridge. They walked, all discordant. They did not march, on my orders. Did you ever march a large cohort of men over a bridge, Axis StarMan?”

“No,” Axis said, feeling sick to his stomach.

“No,” Isaiah echoed. “No. Never. Army commanders know how dangerous it is to march men in rhythm over a bridge because of the risk the rhythm will set up a fatal reverberation through the bridge and bring it down.”

Axis pulled his hand away from under Isaiah’s. “What can we do?”

“We meet in the command chamber, with Georgdi and Insharah and StarDrifter, and we stay there until we have a solution!”

Ishbel and Maximilian stood at the edge of their eyrie, looking down.

Like Isaiah, they well understood the significance of what Eleanon attempted.

“We’re going to have to leave Isaiah and Axis to try and do what they can,” Maximilian said. “We still have so many levels to work through.”

Ishbel laid a hand on his arm. “Then we’d best get to work,” she said.

Maximilian gave her a faint smile. They’d worked through the night redrawing designs and diagrams, remembering the levels they’d already been through. It had been easier and quicker this time and currently there were diagrams for fully one-third of the Twisted Tower, but there was a long way to go.

“Indeed,” he said, and together they turned away from the view and went back to their work.

The Lealfast continued their slow marching dance about Elcho Falling. Everyone in the citadel could feel it — a slight tremor under their feet or hands. It was only the slightest of tremors, yet still it unnerved everyone in the building.

Isaiah and Axis met with StarDrifter, Georgdi and Insharah in the command chamber. None of them sat. None wanted to sit and feel the floor and chairs vibrate. Instead, they all remained on their feet, moving restlessly about the chamber, trying, uselessly, to escape the sensation felt through their feet.

“We need to do something!” StarDrifter said.

“What?” Axis said. “Send out the army? They’d be slaughtered as they issued down the causeway, and Maximilian does not want to risk a transference. Should we rain arrows down on the Lealfast? We tried that, and look what happened. Send in the Strike Force? Oh wait, the Strike Force is useless.”

“Axis .” Georgdi murmured.

“Well, you tell me what we can do!” Axis shouted, frustrated beyond measure. Oh stars, to be on horseback and riding the plains, not stuck in this tower of death!

“How long will it take?” Insharah said to Isaiah, and it took Isaiah a moment to realise what he meant.

“To destroy Elcho Falling?” he said. “Not in a day, nor in several days. But a week or more of this . . . and, I wager, with an escalation as that week progresses? Any building will have cracked and fallen to its destruction by then. With Elcho Falling, I just don’t know.”

“We need to inform Maximilian about this,” StarDrifter said.

“Maxel will be well enough aware of it,” Axis said. “He knows. He and Ishbel have their own concerns. We need to deal with this.”

He turned to Isaiah. “Isaiah . . . we can discuss trying to physically stop the Lealfast. Would a counter-rhythm help? The danger is that a regular, rhythmic beat will shudder Elcho Falling apart . . . but what if it was arrhythmic? Can we turn it from a regular beat to a discordant one?”

Isaiah stared at Axis. “By the gods, Axis, you may have some —”

He was interrupted by StarHeaven, who was in such a rush she almost stumbled in the door.

“Isaiah, Axis,” she said. “Come see. Now . . . please.”

They hurried out of the chamber after StarHeaven. She led them down two flights of stairs, then into a chamber that backed onto the external wall of Elcho Falling.

“Look,” StarHeaven said, pointing at a spot on a wall clear of any furniture.

There was a dark splotch on the wall from where lines of fracture radiated outward.

With every succeeding tremor, so the fracture lines spread a little further.

Axis stared, then hurried to a nearby window, hanging out to inspect the exterior wall.

“They’ve gone right through,” he said. The outer wall was sheer water here, but the fracture lines manifested themselves as bloodied lines in the water.

“It is one of Ravenna’s ‘eggs’,” Isaiah said. “Georgdi, Insharah — organise your men. I want an inspection of every wall in this citadel.”

As they hurried away, Isaiah turned to Axis. “Are you certain Maximilian wants Ravenna kept alive?” Isaiah said. “Because if I had the option of laying my hands on her right now, I would tear the traitorous bitch from limb to limb.”

Three hours later Isaiah and Axis had the results of Georgdi’s and Insharah’s search.

There were almost one hundred and fifty “eggs” embedded in the walls, all in the lower third of the citadel where the walls of water merged into the walls of crystal, and all were breeding fracture lines.

The Lealfast continued their slow, rhythmic circling of Elcho Falling until dusk when, the moment Eleanon stopped beating his hands, they too stopped, broke out of their lines, and walked wearily back to their camps for a good evening meal and a night’s rest.

Darkglass Mountain #03 - The Infinity Gate
cover.html
titlepage.html
dedication.html
contents.html
map.html
prologue.html
unknown.html
part01.html
chapter01.html
chapter02.html
chapter03.html
chapter04.html
chapter05.html
chapter06.html
chapter07.html
chapter08.html
chapter09.html
chapter10.html
chapter11.html
chapter12.html
chapter13.html
chapter14.html
chapter15.html
chapter16.html
chapter17.html
chapter18.html
chapter19.html
chapter20.html
chapter21.html
chapter22.html
chapter23.html
chapter24.html
part02.html
chapter25.html
chapter26.html
chapter27.html
chapter28.html
chapter29.html
chapter30.html
chapter31.html
chapter32.html
chapter33.html
chapter34.html
chapter35.html
chapter36.html
chapter37.html
chapter38.html
chapter39.html
chapter40.html
chapter41.html
chapter42.html
chapter43.html
chapter44.html
chapter45.html
chapter46.html
chapter47.html
chapter48.html
chapter49.html
chapter50.html
part03.html
chapter51.html
chapter52.html
chapter53.html
chapter54.html
chapter55.html
chapter56.html
chapter57.html
chapter58.html
chapter59.html
chapter60.html
chapter61.html
chapter62.html
chapter63.html
chapter64.html
chapter65.html
chapter66.html
chapter67.html
chapter68.html
chapter69.html
chapter70.html
chapter71.html
chapter72.html
chapter73.html
chapter74.html
chapter75.html
chapter76.html
chapter77.html
chapter78.html
part04.html
chapter79.html
chapter80.html
chapter81.html
chapter82.html
chapter83.html
chapter84.html
chapter85.html
chapter86.html
chapter87.html
chapter88.html
chapter89.html
chapter90.html
chapter91.html
chapter92.html
chapter93.html
chapter94.html
chapter95.html
chapter96.html
chapter97.html
chapter98.html
chapter99.html
chapter100.html
chapter101.html
epilogue.html
LandofNightmares.html
glossary.html
abtauthor.html
copyright.html
atp01.html