Barker, Clive – Imajica 01 – The Fifth Dominion. Part 9

“The Cradle Lady knows you’re here,” Huzzah said.

“Does she?”

“She told me she almost drowned you, but you wouldn’t let her.”

“Why would she want to do that?”

“I don’t know. You’ll have to ask her, when she comes in.”

“You’re not afraid of her?”

“Oh, no. Are you?”

“Well, if she tried to drown me—”

“She won’t do that again, if you stay with me. She likes me, and if she knows I like you she won’t hurt you.”

“That’s good to know,” Gentle said. “What would she think if we were to leave here tonight?”

“We can’t do that.”

“Why not?”

“I don’t want to go up there,” she said. “I don’t like it.”

“Everybody’s asleep,” he said. “We could just tiptoe away. You and me and my friends. That wouldn’t be so bad, would it?” She looked unpersuaded. “I think your papa would like us to go to Yzordderrex. Have you ever been there?”

“When I was very little.”

“We could go again.”

Huzzah shook her head. “The Cradle Lady won’t let us,” she said.

“She might, if she knew that was what you wanted. Why don’t we go up and have a look?”

Huzzah glanced back towards the wall, as if she was expecting Tishalull6’s tide to crack the stone there and then. When nothing happened, she said, “Yzordderrex is a very long way, isn’t it?”

“It’s quite a journey, yes.”

“I’ve read about it in my books.”

“Why don’t you put on some warm clothes?” Gentle said.

Her doubts banished by the tacit approval of the Goddess, Huzzah got up and went to select some clothes from her meager wardrobe, which hung from hooks on the opposite wall. Gentle took the opportunity to glance through the small stack of books at the end of the bed. Several were entertainments for children, keepsakes, perhaps, of happier times; one was a hefty encyclopedia by someone called Maybellome, which might have made informative reading under other circumstances but was too densely printed to be skimmed and too heavy to be taken along. There was a volume of poems that read like nonsense rhymes, and what appeared to be a novel, Huzzah’s place in it marked with a slip of paper. He pocketed it when her back was turned, as much for himself as her, then went to the door in the hope that Aping and Scopique were within sighting distance. There was no sign. Huzzah had meanwhile finished dressing.

“I’m ready,” she said. “Shall we go? Papa will find us.”

“I hope so,” Gentle replied.

Certainly remaining in the cell was a waste of valuable time. Huzzah asked if she could take Gentle’s hand, to which he said of course, and together they began to thread their way through the passageways, all of which looked bewilderingly alike in the semidarkness. Their progress was halted several times when the sound of boots on stone announced the proximity of guards, but Huzzah was as alive to their danger as Gentle and twice saved them from discovery.

And then, as they climbed the final flight of stairs that would bring them out into the open air, a din erupted not far from them. They both froze, drawing back into the shadows, but they weren’t the cause of the commotion. It was N’ashap’s voice that came echoing along the corridor, accompanied by a dreadful hammering. Gentle’s first thought was of Pie, and before common sense could intervene he’d broken cover and was heading towards the source of the sound, glancing back once to signal that Huzzah should stay where she was, only to find that she was already on his heels. He recognized the passageway ahead. The open door twenty yards from where he stood was the door of the cell he’d left Pie in. And it was from there that the sound of N’ashap’s voice emerged, a garbled stream of insults and accusations that was already bringing guards running. Gentle drew a deep breath, preparing for the violence that was surely inevitable now.

“No further,” he told Huzzah, then raced towards the open door.

Three guards, two of them Oethacs, were approaching from the opposite direction, but only one of the two had his eyes on Gentle. The man shouted an order which Gentle didn’t catch over N’ashap’s cacophony, but Gentle raised his arms, open-palmed, fearful that the man would be trigger-happy, and at the same time slowed his run to a walk. He was within ten paces of the door, but the guards were there ahead of him. There was a brief exchange with N’a-shap, during which Gentle had time to halve the distance between himself and the door, but a second order—this time plainly a demand that he stand still, backed up by the guard’s training his weapon at Gentle’s heart—brought him to a halt.

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