Crusader. Sara Douglass
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DragonStar nodded.
DareWing refocused his gaze on DragonStar’s face. “No wonder you wanted to bring me back as one of your five.”
“The Strike Leader. Yes.”
DareWing breathed in deeply, filled with such joy he could hardly believe it. The Strike Force!
“But first we must negotiate Spiredore,” DragonStar said, “and find out if its stairways are still safe.”
They walked the remaining distance to the chasm in silence, and it was only once they were there that DareWing came out of his reverie enough to ask how they were going to get across. “Didn’t you use the bridge to cross into Spiredore?”
“Not exactly,” DragonStar said. “I used it as a focus for my own enchantment. I don’t actually need the bridge to cross, but I do need something to focus on in order to return us —” he hesitated slightly over that word, and DareWing glanced sharply at him, “— to this point. But a bridge we do not actually need.”
DragonStar reached behind him and drew an arrow out of his quiver. In one powerful movement, he thrust it into the ground before them.
Its blue feathers and its shaft quivered slightly with the residual force of DragonStar’s action, then it stood still.
“And so,” DragonStar said, unsheathing his sword and drawing the doorway of light, “now Spiredore.”
StarGrace climbed higher and higher through the crazy world of Spiredore, her temper increasing with every step.
Where was this tower leading her? She’d climb to the sun before she ever reached a destination!
Suddenly she halted, and her entire body stilled.
There was something else in the tower. StarGrace didn’t know in what other manner to describe the feeling, only that in the space betwixt one heartbeat and another something else had stepped into Spiredore.
Qeteb? One of the other Demons?
No. This presence had a different feel about it.
There! Above her! StarGrace crouched under an overhang of a balcony and peered upwards.
DragonStar paused in their passage through Spiredore. “It is not as safe as it once was,” he said. “We must be careful.”
She narrowed her eyes, searching the gloom above, then paused. Two men, one Icarii, one not, walking down a stairwell.
StarGrace almost panicked, for they were coming directly towards her, but just before they turned the curve of stairs that would have brought them face to face, the two men turned into a balcony, and vanished down a tunnel of blue mist.
StarGrace waited a few minutes until she was sure they were gone, then she resumed her climb.
Within two turns of her stairwell, Spiredore presented StarGrace with another blue-misted tunnel.
They emerged onto a plain blasted with an icy northerly wind. Wind-driven snow stung at their faces and eyes before it hit the ground and disappeared into the numerous cracks and chasms that wove their demented way across the flat, barren surface.
“Where are we?” DareWing gasped, wrapping both arms and wings about himself in a vain attempt at protection against the wind and snow.
DragonStar looked about, as uncomfortable as was DareWing. “Somewhere in the northern Avonsdale Plains, I think. See? Those must be the southern Western Ranges. Or maybe even a bit further west towards the Andeis coast … I’m not too sure.”
Frankly, DareWing didn’t give a damn about their precise location, and wished he hadn’t asked. “How will you get us to the Field of Flowers?”
DragonStar turned to look at DareWing. “Oh, I am not. I think you should.”
“Me? How am I going to do it?”
“Look within yourself, DareWing. You have been in the Field before. You have been through the gate. This time you must open it for yourself.”
DareWing tightened his arms, wondering if he would freeze solid in four breaths or five. “Why couldn’t you have told me this while we were still in Sanctuary? I could have thought about it before. I could have had it all worked out before we got into this —”
“DareWing. Do it!”
DareWing almost cursed before he realised he’d have to open his mouth and expose himself to more of the freezing air in order to do so. He contented himself with a hard glare in DragonStar’s direction, then he concentrated on the problem at hand.
This was the first time since DragonStar had transformed him that he’d been well enough to even contemplate exploring the newly-resurrected Acharite power within himself.
Let alone use it to propel both of them into the Field of Flowers.
“Think,” DragonStar whispered underneath the howling wind. “Think … what do you remember most about the Field?”
DareWing frowned. Flowers. He remembered flowers. Then he almost smiled, for he remembered the feel of the sun on his back, and the peace of the Field, and then he did smile, for those were things he’d enjoy feeling right now.
Instantly he was overwhelmed with the scent of the billions upon billions of flowers that existed within the Field, and then they were there.
DareWing leaned back his head and laughed.
StarGrace smirked. She stood at the edge of the blue-misted tunnel, still safe within Spiredore’s power. Beyond her lay a chasm, and beyond the chasm a road wended its way through a plain dotted liberally with flowering shrubs. Far away rose a line of blue and purple mountains, cradling the entrance of a valley. With her powerful sight, StarGrace could see the shapes of Icarii spiralling above the valley entrance. The hidden souls had been found.
Her smiled widened momentarily, then she stepped back into Spiredore.
“See,” said DragonStar, and from the infinite sky above them floated down DareWing’s warriors.
The Strike Force, and yet not.
That these warriors were Icarii was easy enough to see, for together with their human bodies they had the wings and the chiselled facial features of the Icarii.
And yet they had been changed. Every one of them had wings of a different colour — purple wings, another bronze, yet another gold, until all the shades of the rainbow had been represented — and each warrior had jewel-coloured eyes that matched the particular shade of his or her wings.
But it was their bodies that were the most amazing. Every one of them was diaphanous, almost completely translucent. They glowed with a silvery hue, and as they floated down by the score the outlines of individual bodies were lost in the collective rainbow-coloured shimmer of wings and flashing eyes.
DareWing had never seen anything so beautiful, nor so