On the fourth day, the sleet finally faltered and then stopped altogether. The wind died down, too, and the air became still. They made faster progress, and within a few hours they came to something that had to be the fallen pyramid mentioned on the bone tablet.
They first saw it when it reflected their lights, and for a heart-stopping instant, both thought themselves face-to-face with the eyes of some huge creature. But as the reflection multiplied, it became clear that what lay ahead was not a living thing.
Trudging wearily up the road, they saw that it was a pyramid. A pyramid of blue crystal, three times as tall as Milla. It must have slid down the mountain long ago, because it no longer stood upright. The point now angled back into the mountain, rather than up at the dark sky.
"The entry to the heatway tunnel must be close," said Tal. "Within a hundred stretches, the tablet says."
"Does it mention that?"
asked Milla, raising her lantern. The green light spilled forward, and reflections from the pyramid swam back.
Right in front of the pyramid the road simply wasn't there anymore. It had fallen away, leaving a frightening gap.
"Oh," said Tal. "No, it doesn't."
Cautiously, Tal and Milla crept to the edge. They could not see any bottom.
"Can we climb up and over?" asked Tal, looking at the mountainside.
Milla moved her lantern across, noting the loose rock and signs of recent slippage. Then she shook her head.
"The rock face is too loose," she announced. "We will have to jump the gap."
CHAPTER
FIVE
"Jump?" exclaimed Tal. "Impossible. It must be ten… even twelve stretches!"
Milla tilted her face mask back and looked at the chasm again.
"No, we can jump it," she said. "Even you."
"There has to be another way," Tal said desperately. He went over to the side of the road against the mountain and tested his weight against an outcropping of rock above his head.
The rock came free, with a lot more besides, nearly braining Tal. Milla was right. It was too loose.
Tal looked down at the gap again. It would be suicide to try to jump over it. He couldn't even see the bottom. They were almost at a turn in the road, so it would be a straight drop to the road below. That had to be at least five hundred stretches!
He looked back. Milla was strapping the toothy jawbones they used as spikes onto her boots. She had also taken out something Tal hadn't seen before. Gloves of thin Selski hide, with long curved claws of reddish bone.
"You will have to help me with the claw-hands," Milla said as she finished strapping on her boot-teeth. She then tried to hammer a bone piton into the road, but it wouldn't go through the sections where there was metal, and the stone crumbled everywhere else.
Finally, Milla shrugged and put the piton back. She left her pack lying on the ground and strapped her Merwin-horn sword onto her back instead. She slipped on the clawed gloves. Tal saw that they had to be tied onto her wrists, so he helped her, patiently following her instructions on how to do the right knots.
"Move the lanterns to the edge," said Milla. She had not put her mask back on. Tal saw her eyes move calculatingly to the far edge.
"Shouldn't you be tied to a rope?" he asked. "I could hold it…"
"There is nothing to secure it to," said Milla. "You would only be dragged down."
She hesitated, then said, "If I fail, Tal, you will try to go on? You will fulfill the Quest and get a Sunstone for my clan? Then I may become a Shield Maiden, even after death."
Tal looked at the dark gap and was tempted to say that if Milla couldn't jump it, he would have no chance. But she had used his name, and hadn't looked at him with her usual scorn. "I will try," he said, with a gulp.
"I would not ask, normally," said Milla. "But I am still not at my full strength."
"Great," Tal muttered under his breath. He looked at the gap again, then reached out to touch Milla's claw-hands.
"All right, I'll jump first," he said.
"What?" Milla was suddenly angry again. "Do you doubt my courage?"
She took her hands away and stalked back twenty or so steps, out of the light of the lanterns.
"I'll show you a Shield Maiden's courage!" she shouted angrily.
"No, Milla!" shouted Tal. "Wait! I didn't mean… take your time -"
Before he could finish, Milla came sprinting out of the darkness. She passed Tal in a blur, her arms and legs pumping. Two paces from the edge, she threw herself forward, arms outstretched.
"Yaaaahhhhhhhh!"
Tal rushed to the edge. There was a clatter of rocks. He couldn't see Milla on the other side. He raised one of the lanterns, a sick feeling in his stomach.
Nothing moved in the small pool of light.
Tal shouted, his voice echoing into the emptiness.
No answer came, but one small movement caught Tal's eye. A clawed hand, reaching up over the lip on the far side.
Another followed it, then Milla's head. With a choking grunt, she pulled herself up over the edge and crawled a few paces forward. Anyone normal would have collapsed gratefully then, but Milla staggered to her feet and looked back at Tal.
As their eyes met, Tal realized that now he had to jump. Without the claw-hands.
But at least there was no wind.
"Throw over a rope," Milla yelled. "I will secure it to the pyramid."
Tal rummaged out a rope with relief. At least he would have a rope. If he did fall, it would only be… well, far enough to be seriously hurt instead of killed. If he was lucky.
When he turned to throw the rope over to Milla, she was bent over, her hands on her knees, obviously in pain. As soon as he moved, she shot back upright, as if she had never felt the slightest twinge.
Tal didn't say anything. He just threw over the coiled rope. He really didn't understand these Icecarls.
Milla cut through the laces on her claw-hands, removed them, made a loop with the rope, and easily flipped it over the top of the pyramid. It seemed secure enough, though she inspected the edges to make sure the crystal would not cut the rope. Once the edges might have been sharp, but long exposure to wind, snow, and rain had rounded them off.
Tal caught the end she threw back.
"Tie a pack on," Milla instructed. "And one of the other ropes, so we can lower it down and then back up."
Tal quickly did as he was told. Passing the second rope behind his back, he lowered the pack down till Milla's rope was taut, so she could swing it across and pull it up. They then repeated the process with Tal's pack and one of the lanterns. The other lantern had a rope tied to it, but it would be left till last, so Tal could see where to jump.
Tal was glad that all this delayed his own crossing. He was still trying to work out another way to get across, though there didn't seem to be any alternative. Once again he walked to the edge and looked down. A momentary dizziness hit him, and he stepped back suddenly. So suddenly he almost fell.
There had to be another way! Ignoring Milla, he backtracked down the road, holding the lantern up to look at the sheer face of the mountainside. If he could find solid rock, he could climb higher and then across, to get past the gap.