A gust of wind shocked Samlor as his head lifted above the floor of the reception hall Fabric, a curtain or a counterpane, had been snatched from a room on the upper floor and was flapping from the railing
Star was calm as molten glass as she watched her uncle struggle up the ladder with the other man clamped to his side At his first wild glance, Samlor thought the whorl of white hair on the child’s temple was one of the creatures of light which pulsed through the reception hall It was so bright
He couldn’t bend over to balance with his palm on the floor as he neared the top of the ladder, so the caravan master mounted the last three rungs at a quickened pace Toppling backward would mean the floor killed them if the demon didn’t, but if Samlor sprawled on his face the result would be no better He’d seen the creature start to move, it would be on them in an instant if Khamwas were flung out of his concen- tration.
Samlor stepped from the top rung to the marble floor, sucking in his lips as he strove to move as smoothly as a duck gliding on water He set the Napatan down, conscious of the man’s weight only after he was free of it, and with the same motion strode for the wall and the latch mecha- nism.
Khamwas’s voice was audible again, breaking with strain as he chanted over and over again a dozen or so words Sweat from the Napatan’s face had splashed Samlor’s left forearm as he climbed
The caravan master’s boot skidded when he tried to slide back the piece the marble which was half withdrawn beneath the molding Instead of trying again with his hobnails, Samlor knelt and scrabbled at the black stone with both sweaty palms It moved into position with the same greasy certainty with which it had opened