By late afternoon, they had crossed the Streleheim and flown through the lower wall of the Knife
Edge into the jagged landscape of the Skull Kingdom. She felt a change in the air long before she
saw one on the ground. Even aboard Chaser, several hundred feet up, she could sense it. The air
became dead and old, smelling and tasting of devastation and rot. There was no life here, not of a
sort anyone could recognize. The mountain was gone, brought down by cataclysmic forces on the
heads of those who had worked their evil within it, reduced to a jumble of rocks within which
little grew and less found shelter or forage. It was a ruined land, colorless and barren even now, a
thousand years later, and it was likely to be a thousand more before that changed. Even in the
wake of a volcano's eruption, in the path of the resultant lava flow, life eventually returned,
determined and resilient. But not here. Here, life was denied.
Ignoring the look and feel of the place, even though it settled about them with oppressive
insistence, they circled the ruins in search of the site where the fires and the flashes had been
observed. After about an hour they found it at one end of a long shelf of rock balanced amid a
cluster of spikes that jutted like bones from the earth. A ring of stones encircled a fire pit left
blackened and slick from whatever had been burned. When Grianne first saw it from the air, she
could not imagine how anyone could even manage to get to it, let alone make use of it. Rock
barriers rose all about, the crevices between them deep and wide, the edges sharp as glass. Then
she amended her thinking. It would take a Shrike or a Roc or a small, highly maneuverable airship
to gain access, but access could be gained. Which had been used in this instance? She stored the
question away to be pondered later.
Guiding Chaser to one end of the shelf, they dismounted and walked back for a closer look.
"Sacrifices of some sort," Kermadec observed, glancing around uneasily, his big shoulders
swinging left and right, as if he were caged. He did not like being there, she knew, even with her.
The place held bad memories for Trolls, even after so long. The Warlock Lord might be dead and
gone, but the feel of him lingered. In the history of the Trolls, no one had done more damage to
the nation's psyche. Trolls were not superstitious in the manner of Gnomes, but they believed in
the transference of evil from the dead to the living. They believed because they had experienced it,
and they were wary of it happening again.
She closed her eyes and cast about with her other senses for a moment, trying to read in the air
what had happened here. She tracked the leavings of a powerful magic, the workings of a sorcery
that was not meant to heal or succor. A summoning of some sort, she read in the bits and pieces
that remained. To what end, though? She could not determine, though the smells told of
something dying, and not quickly. She looked down at the fire pit and read in the greasy smears
dark purpose in the sacrifices clearly made.
"This isn't good," she said softly.
He stepped close. "What do you find, mistress?"
"Nothing yet. Nothing certain." She looked up at him, into his flat, expressionless features.
"Perhaps tonight, when darkness cloaks the thing that finds this dead place so attractive, we shall
find out."
* * *
She tethered Chaser some distance away, back in the rocks where he couldn't be seen, giving him
food and water and speaking soothing words to steady him against what might happen later.
Afterwards, she ate a cold dinner with Kermadec, watching the light fade from the sky and the
twilight descend in a flat, colorless wash that enveloped and consumed like smoke. There was no
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